Senate passes massive spending bill: includes aid to Contras by Sara Fritz LA-Times Washington Post Service The Senr.te Thursday passed a record $576 billion omnibus spending measure that funds all government agencies in fiscal 1987 and provides President Reagan with military aid to the Nicaraguan rebels for the first time in nearly three years . The mammoth House-passed measure cleared the Senate by voice vote, but did not immediately go to the president's desk because of a number of lingering, minor disputes between the two chambers—including a bitter , parochial battle over whether the government should continue buying the T-46 trainer plane, manufactured in Long Island , N.Y. A filibuster by Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato, R-N.Y., seeking' to preserve the T-46 threatened to delay final enactment of the bill Bloomsburg University's 1986 Homecoming Sweetheart, Debbie Porter and her escort Brad White, both representing Tau Kappa Epsllon, enjoy their victory ride at Saturday's foot ball game. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans) Women's Conference to be held at Bu scheduled for spring Plans are already underway for the seventh annual ColumbiaMontour Women's Conference, to be held on the campus of Bloomsburg University on Saturday, April'll , 1987. The day-long event, featuring over seventy workshops, films , and speakers on a varity of issues, is eagerly anticipated each year by hundreds of area women of all abges and interests . The conference provides a unique opportunity for participants to examine new perspectives , exchange ideas, and develop new skills. "Women On The Move" has been chosen as the theme for the '87 conference by the Steering Committee, led by Sherry Williams, in her second year as Conference Coordinator. The committee is responsible for planning and running the day 's activities. Members are all volunteers, ranging from the "founding mothers" who envisioned and created the first conference in 1980 to women who first attended last year and had such a good time they signed up to help out this year. The steering committee members and subcommittee chairs are: Marilyn Brill (Outstanding Women Awards), Carol Ciampi (Sponsors), Sharon Clemson (Exhibit s),m Sandy Crique and Shirley Raminez (Schools Program), Laurie McCants (Program and Publicity) ; Mary Ann McLaughlin (Facilities), DJoan Mosier (Registration and Finance), Carol Rein (Duplication and Design), Linda Badami, Moira Creasy, Nancy Dennis, Terry Jacques, Roberta Kistler, Margaret Long, Gina Onushco, Florence Thompson , Arlene Varner , and Cathy Zarillo. Any one wishing to join the Steering Committee is still welcome . Contact Sherry Williams, 387-0391, for further information. Any one wishing to offer a workshop on a topic of interest to women may call Laurie McCants, 784-5530. Nominations are now being accepted for the Outstanding Women Awards to be presented at the conference in April. Women from the Columbia and and further postpone final adjournme nt of the 99th Congress. It was the biggest single spending measure in the history of the country, amounting to more than the U.S. government spent in all the years from 1789 through 1949. The 1,200-page, eight-inch thick bill weighs more than 18 pounds and is designed to take the place of all 13 separate funding bills that Congress normally passes to fund individual agencies. While it contains many items Reagan opposes, the president is expected to sign the measure in large part because it gives him the $100 million he has long sought for the Nicaraguan rebels , known as contras. It is the first military aid that Congress has approved for the contras since learning in early 1984 that the CIA had mined a Nicaraguan harbor. Opponents of contra aid made no effort to block passage of the bill, even though many of them were furious about the apparent involvement of Reagan administration officials—including Vice President George Bush—in a private effort to supply the contras. Instead , Sen. Tom Harkin , D-Iowa, offered a resolution requiring Reagan to report to Congress on the extent of U.S. involvement did not come to light until last week, when the Nicaraguans shot down a contra supply plane and captured an American survivior , Eugene Hasenfus, who announced that he was working for the CIA. The spending bill authorizes the CIA to run the contra-aid program, which has also been prohibited by Congress since 1984. Although lawmakers joked about the size and weight of the omnibus spending bill, many saw it as a symbol of their failure to control costs and reduce the federal deficit. It was the first Reagan endorses wide-ranging immigration law revision would provide amnesty to illegal migration bill in more than 20 aliens who moved to the United years. LA Times-Washington Post Service Simpson said the president States before 1982. Senate leaders pulled the measure from the floor agreed to back the bill after beWASHINGTON- President temporarily but said final passage ing assured a provision to prohibit job discrimination against legal Reagan endorsed a wide-ranging is likely Friday . U.S. residents who are not Chief Senate sponsor Alan K. revision of the immigration laws Thursday as the Senate moved Simpson, R-Wyo., met Thursday citizens would not be used to slowly toward completing «on- morning with Reagan , White harass American employers or Montour counties are eligible for gressional action on the House chief of staff Donald T create a new class of civil-rights the awards in eight fields: Ad- legislation. Regan and Attorney General Ed- lawsuits Simpson said the bill cannot be vancement of Women, Art/ComThe Senate debate stalled after win Meese III after rumors that munication, Community Service, Phil Gramm, R-Tex., began an the administration was consider- used as a vehicle by "activist see page 3 extended talk on provisions that ing a veto of this first major im- groups on the wings , slathering, waiting " to find a new area in which to expand civil rights laws. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said later that Reagan supports a "thrust of the bill" but needs clarification on some points . The compromise legislation, approved Tuesday by a HouseSenate conference , was passed Wednesday by the House , 238 to 173. Besides the amnesty program, the bill provides civil and criminal penalties for employers who knowingly hire illegal aliens, a larger enforcement budget for the Immigration and Naturalization Service, a guaranteed supply of farm labor for U.S. growers and legal protection for farm workers and newly legalized aliens. Gramm attacked the amnesty provisions as rewarding persons who entered the country illegally and being unfair to the 1.9 million foreigners who have applied for U.S. visas and "who go to bed every night and dream of coming to America." Simpson agreed that the amnesty provisions are unpopular , sayA run-away security vehicle struck this first-floor room of Elwell Hall Saturday night. Room 117 was unoccupied at the time of the Incident. The vehicle was unattended when It struck the ing: "It's legislation that seems building. There were no Injuries. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans) to stick iin the craw of America.. .1 ask, are you going to be part of the group that goes to the Mexican American in Brownsville, Tex., and says, 'Are you deportable?'" Without an amnesty program , BLOOMSBURG-There are still sessions); Basic Photography, Oct. 28 (three sessions). he said, ' 'the hunt would go on." openings in a variety of mini /:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m . Thurs' Exercise-Swimming, ' all Simpson said he did not concourses offered for area persons day beginning Oct. 23 (five ses- levels) 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Monthrough the School of Extended sions); Self Defense, 7 p.m. to days beginning Oct. 20 (four ses- sider Gramm's criticism to be a Programs at Bloomsburg Univer- 8:30 p.m., Wednesdays beginn- sions); Physical Fitness: The filibuster, should it become one, sity starting in October. ing Oct. 22 (six sessions); Begin- Nautilus Way, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Simpson said he thinks that he has The listing is as follows: ning Songwriting, 7 p.m. to 9 Mondays and Wednesdays begin- enough votes to pass the cloture petition that he filed Wednesday Business and Professional p.m., Wednesdays beginning ning Oct. 22 (six sessions). night. courses-Salesmanship, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 23 (six sessions); Writing for To register for courses or to Nearly 1.8 million illegal aliens to 8:30 p.m., Mondays beginn- Publication, 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 obtain more information, call ing Oct. 20 (eight sessions); Basic p.m. , Thursdays beginning Oct. 389-4420 or stop in the Office of were apprehended last year, and Bookkeeping for Small 23 (five sessions). Extended Programs in Waller the administration has pushed for Businesses, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Creative Arts and Crafts- Adminstration Building. The of- a major revision of the laws. But Wednesdays beginning Oct. 29 Stenciling in Country course, fice is open 8 a.m.to 7 p.m., immigration legislation has died (seven sessions). (new session) 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday and in the final days of the two Self Improvement-Inv sting beginning Nov. 4 (four sessions); from 8 a.m. to4:30 p.m., Friday. previous Congresses because of with Savvy , 7p.m. to 9 ;> .m., Basket weaving II, 6:30 p.m. to unresolved differences between Mondays beginning Oct. 20 (five 9:30 p m., Tuesdays beginning different factions. by Mary Thornton BU mini-courses remain op en time that Congress has entered into a new fiscal year without passing even one of the 13 separate appropriations bills that normally fund agencies of the government. Since fiscal 1987 began Oct. 1, Congress has passed four stopgap spending bills while trying to complete work on the long-term measure. The last of those measures was to expire at 12:01 a.m. Friday, leaving the government technically unfunded thereafter. At the same time , the lawmakers claimed to be making some modest progress in the battle of the budget. Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, released a study showing that total federal spending as adjusted for inflation would be cut 2.3 percent between fiscal 1986 and 1987~the largest drop since 1955-under the terms of this bill. But the reduction could be eliminated if, as expected , Congress passes supplemental spending measures next year, or if economic conditions change. The final spending bill provides about $290 billion for defense , or just slightly less than the Congress authorized in a separate Pentagon measure Wednesday . The most serious disagreement between the two bills involved the T-46 trainer. The Pentagon measure eliminated funding for the T-46 trainer plane; the larger bill restores the money, even though it was not requested by the Air Force. When Senate Armed Service Committee Chairman Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz. moved to delete the T-46 money from the larger bill , D'Amato promptly launched a filibuster designed to save his home-state project, a product of Fairchild Industries. Many senators facing reelection Nov. 4 were angered that the D'Amato filibuster was delaying final adjournment, prohibiting them from going home to campaign. But D'Amato, himself up for re-election, was undeterred by his colleagues' hostility . After two hours of filibuster , the Senate rejected, 69-21, an effort by Mark D. Hatfield, ROre., chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, to halt the filibuster. Weather & Index Alcohol Awareness Week starts today. For a complete schedule of events, see page 3. Children 's theater can be enjoyed by adults also. See page 6. Huskies Bloomsburg trounce Mansfield Mounties for Homecoming victory, 51-26. See page 8. Today's forecast: Fair and sunny, afternoon temps near 60. Tuesday: Continued sunny, temps in the low 60s. WednesdayFriday: Fair and cold throughout the period , afternoon temps around 60. Commentary Classifieds Comics Crossword Sports page 2 page 7 page 7 page 7 page 8 Commentary Nuclear-f ree world: a practical vision The overwhelming threat facing America is Soviet nuclear weapons Guest Column by Richard J. Barnet LA Times-Washington Post Service The Reykjavik summit collapsed because President Reagan refused to see his vision of a defense in the sky for an agreement to reduce nuclear arms on Earth. The United States surely would have been more secure had the Soviets cut half their missiles and bombers within five years in return for a similar cut in our own strateg ic forces and a mutual promise to confine research on the Strateg ic Defense Initiative to the laboratory for 10 > ears. Moreover, the Soviet ' s moved to the president ' s position by agreeing to the principle urged on them to get rid of all means of delivering nuclear weapons in 10 years . The president ' s vision of a world without nuclear weapons that would be protected by SDI has insp ired considerable skepticism. .American politicians , generals and strateg ists term the idea '"just propaganda. " The hard-line president , they say , was merel y preempting for himself and his party the public longing for an end to nuclear terror. The skepticism is justified. It is hard to believe that a president w i t h such great faith in technology and so little trust in the Soviets means what he says. But his vision of a nuclear-free world is not wrong. The conventional wisdom is that we are doomed to live forever with nuclear weapons because "the bomb cannot be uninvented " and the world would be "instable" if we did not live under instant nuclear terror. Somebody could cheat. The overwhelming threat facing the United States is Soviet nuclear weapons. Because of the destructiveness of even one such weapon , national security is not possible until the Soviet stockpile virtuall y is eliminated. This issue is not whether such a world would be absolutely safe—it would not be—but whether the risks of real disarmament would t , ... .,. . ., _ .. ., reduction. _ .. .. .. It,. ..literall , for . radical . ,. y be less than the present risks and the horrendous world of Buck Rogers weapons on the horizon. However , it could be a far safer world if the president 's vision were broadened to deal with the pracitical objections: We need thousands of nuclear weapons to balance Soviet conventional superiority in Europe. The way to deal with that problem is to negotiate mutual balance reductions in Europe , with Europeans taking greater responsibility for their own efense by conventioanl means. The United States could help by negotiating the denuclearization , troop and tank reductions and a generally lower state of mobilization on both si,des. Europe cannot rely on nuclear threats for security, for the threats guarantee an arms race and alarm the population.The president 's vision requires the United States to come to terms with reality : Nuclear weapons are not weapons in either a military or political sense, for they cannot be used without destroying what they are intended to defend . Their use is irrational , and threats to use them therefore are incredible. If , after the years of hullabaloo about the intermediate-range missiles in Europe, both sides at Reykjavik appeared willing to take all of them out , why should significant agreements to reduce conventional arms be out of reach? After nuclear weapons have been cut 50 percent, further reductions should be tied to progress in conventional arms reduction. Someone could hide a bomb . That is true now. A nation with borders passable enough to let billions of dollars of illegal drugs slip through each year would be vulnerable to nuclear weapons smuggled in a packing case, even if the Astrodome in the sky worked perfectly. But there is a difference between a world of 60,000 nuclear weapons or even a world of 30,000, and a one in which a few weapons might escape the verification system that would surely be a part of any agreement is the difference between life and death for the nation , and probably for the planet. The whole purpose of arms reduction is to create new incentives that would transform the political relationship between the superpowers. The Soviets would have a powerful stake in maintaining a far-reaching agreement that was fair to both sides, for it would mean that they were no longer minutes away from total devastation. Of course a madman could come to power anywhere, but concealing a few bombs for blackmail would be an unpromising strategy for the Soviets. They could not be sure, indeed , might well assume, that the United States had cheated , too. The knowledge for making bombs would remain , along with the threat of retribution. Zero stockpiles would , of course , be premised on the other nuclear powers joining in. Real disarmament would create the best possible political climate for discouraging non-nuclear powers from making bombs. In a world free of nuclear weapons the security problem would look different . The mutual fear of the superpowers would dissolve only when they reestablish an alliance, not against the Martians , as Reagan suggested to Gorbachev at Geneva , but to take on the specter of environmental pollution , mismanagment of planetary resources and a deteriorating world economy , which threatens the two nations slong with everybody else. Against the clear advantages of a world without nuclear stockpiles , the h ypothetical nightmares should not paralyze us to further drift to nuclear war but should challenge our imagination to think of incentives and nonnuclear detterents to keep peace. In a nuclear-disarmed world a truly non-nuclear version of SDI might make sense. That would be the only situation in which it would. wra. , PRBSN1OT! MLLTHE CUENT^ C rtUSBWD WTNESS re Reagan made arms-control proces s almost palatable by George Will Editorial Columnist WASHINGTON~It was the President 's finest hour. In an odd place, at an inauspicious moment, he gave a watching world the most important moment of presidential decisiveness since President Truman picked up Stalin 's gauntlet and committed the nation to the policy of containment. And he gave the nation a clinic in leadership: With his mind on future generations , not the next election , he spurned the shortterm applause that comes automatically to any President who signs any arms-control agreement. Iceland , where surveys reveal that $5 percent of the population believes in elves, was a suitable place for a summit clamored for by people who believe in arms control as the key to taming the Soviet Union. The Iceland summit ;was the; most successful U.S. summit. Although the air is thick with lamentations from armscontrol enthusiasts, the president may almost have made the armscontrol "process" palatable to people who are skeptical about its utility and even its safety . He did this by demonstrating something that there were abundant reasons for doubting : He demonstrated that a President can go to a summit and dare to return without an agreement. Summitry is a part of the armscontrol "process." Summits have Columnist labels bidding article 'ill-conceived' by Tom Miller Editorial Columnist The latest bit of "investigative reporting " by the one-man Woodward and Bernstein at The Voice, reports on the awarding of a contract for lighting equipment in Mitrani Hall. The problems with this article beg in with the by-line and are compounded throug hout the story . The writer , who obviously has not the slightest notion of the mechanics of competitive contract bidding, begins by making a ludicrous statement that competitive bidding has been "eliminated" and proceeds then to make the case for the other side. The fact is , as the reporter admits , that invitations for bids were sent to five firms. Moreover , the names of the firms were supplied not by the supposedly biased consultant who helped to prepare the specifications but by Don McCullough , director of Physical Plant and Energy Management. The author of this ill-conceived article claims the ' 'writing of the specif; cations... resulted in the elimination of all but one manufacturer." In fact this often happens. When the U.S. Navy wants a nuclear aircraft carrier , there is but one shipyard in the world which can fill the contract. The people in charge of the theater department wanted a particular kind of lighting equipment. A single theater student apparently disagreed with their choice and therein I humbly suggest, lies the origin of this tale. ' 'Student at Large1 ' reported he interviewed spokesmen from several firms invited to bid . They cite various reasons for declining the invitation but their remarks are most noteworthy in that at no time do they mention that their decision not to bid had anything to do with specifications. Why, if it thinks it really had something here , did The Voice GUje TBaitz Kehr Union Building Bloomsburg University Bloomsburg , PA 17815 . .717-389-4457 Christine Lyons Executive Editor Managing Editor Jean Bihl News Editors Elizabeth Dacey, Kristen Turner Features Editor Rebecca Solsman Jeff Cox, Ted Kistler Sports Editors Carl Huhn , Alex Schlllemans Photography Editors Darlene Wicker , Maria Libertella Advertising Managers Terri Quaresimo, Ben Shultz Business Managers Filomena Simeon, Thomas Sink, Ellen VanHorn Typesetters Sue Backer Circulation Manager John Maittlen-Harris Advisor run its most recent scoop below the fold and second lead to a fourday-old wire story about a sunken submarine? One chairman of an academic department approached me on the afternoon this "story" broke and asked me to explain it to him as he felt that he may have read through it too quickly . I reassured him that his problem was that he had not read it quickly enough. "But why ," he asked , "had The Voice run a picture of President Ausprich when he had nothing to do with the story?" Because, I explained , the submarine story was not long enough and they had three inches of space to fill. Persisting , he asked: "Are they on a vendetta against President Ausprich?" I considered this carefully and was obliged to admit that no, The Voice was not Voice Editorial Policy The editorials in The Voice are the opinions and concerns of the editorial staff , and not necessarily the opinions of all members of The Voice staff , or the student population of Bloomsburg University. The Voice invites all readers to express their opinions on the editorial page through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must be signed and include a phone number and address for verification , although names on letters will be withheld upon request. The Voice reserves the right to edit and condense all submissions. All submissions should be sent to The Voice office, Kehr Union Building, Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at the office in the games room. on a vendetta. I suggest that the editorial staff of The Voice pull in their horns now and get back to the nuts and bolts of running a campus newspaper. Rather than run pathetic editorials complaining petulantly that no one will stick with them and work consistently , The Voice should consider the origins of its personnel problems. Dissent is ruthlessly suppressed ; advice is taken from virtually no one. Men , except for the sports editors , have been driven or otherwise excluded from the editorial board. Five women occupy the top five editorial positions and the inevitable henhouse atmosphere which prevails at The Voice reveals a lack of pluralism which seriously detracts from the paper. File photos and endless column inches of dated wire-copy are no substitute for hard work and good management. The Voice is still looking for circulation managers. If you are interested and are 21 years or older, like early mornings and driving, contact The Voice at 389-4457 or stop by the office located on the ground floor of the Kehr Union Building. come to be regarded as events where arms-control are consummated . A dangerous asymmetry in this process is that Western public opinion is the only public opinion that matters in this process , and Western publics have never met an arms-control agreement they did not like . (Never mind that they have never met an arms-control agreement that seriously controlled arms.) It may be the case that , by venturing to Iceland for that fast-food summit, the President strode into what the Soviet side fancied was a clever trap~a heads-wewin , tails-you-lose situtation. They would either kill the Strategic Defense Initiative of vilify it as the only impediment to arms reductions so comprehensive as to constitute the termination of the Cold War. However , it is almost certainly wrong to think, as many even in the administration may think , that important agreements really were within reach regarding intermediate-range and strategic missiles. It is probable that the Soviet offers and expressions of interest were designed in large measure to contribute to the orchestrated euphoria , the collapse of which was counted on to deepen resentment of SDI. And if the President had , to the Soviet 's surprise , killed SDI to get Soviet agreement to cuts, it is probable that many of the cuts would have been vitiated in years of negotiations about details , in cheating, and in deployments of new weapons not covered by any Iceland agreements . One reason for believing that the Iceland outcome was the one the Soviet side aimed for is that their crucial demand was an act of brazen overreaching. They sought a revision of the ABM treaty—a "strengthening" of the treaty that would have suffocated SDI by confining research to the laboratory. The Soviets could not seriously have expected the President to eviscerate his presidency by suddenly scrapping a program that he has advocated with the most intense moral and prudential arguments. But , then, brazenness is not in To the Editor short supply in the Soviet regime that speaks of "strengthening " an ABM treaty it is flagrantly violating, a reg ime that stigmatizes SDI as highly imprudent and immoral , yet has spent far more on defensive systems than has the United States. Certainly the Iceland outcome will enable Gorbachev to fan the flames of anti-Americanism among the European left. But it is equally certain that no President can make policy hostage to the hopeless and squalid project of trying to dampen Europe's appeasement reflex. In the network 's rush to judgment on Iceland , the editorializing was as clear as it was unconscious. The outcome was called a "collapse" of the summit, a collapse that dashed hopes of "progress " and knocked U.S.Soviet relations "off the rails. " The word "collapse" implies calamity; the word "progress" is defined exculsively in terms of the; achievement ,of agreements . And 'what is one to "make of the rails metaphor? What rails were the relationship on before Iceland? "Collapse " implies disorder . The Iceland outcome was an orderly result of an orderl y assessment. That is progress of the highest sort-progress toward realism. Perhaps the Iceland outcome will confer the ancillary blessing of putting an end to the nonsense about the President and the First Lady being mesmerized by armscontrol agreements as guarantors of his "place in history. " Both he and she know that every President since the onset of the U.S.Soviet arms-control process 17 years ago has achieved an armscontrol agreement (counting , as one should , the Ford-Brezhnev agreement at Vladivostok) . Mr. and Mrs . Reagan know that it is nonsense on stilts to say that arms-control agreements sealed for Nixon , Ford and Carter enviable "places in history." The arms-control "process " has indeed now given this President the high place in history that was waiting for the first President who would show that it is possible to "just say no. " Honest living requires expression of feelings Dear Editor, After reading an article in the last issue of The Voice, "Toleration plays key role... ", I have come to realize, upon reflection, how much I agree with the importance of freedom of expression. Freedom of expression is not only a constitutional right, but a necessity for an honest human experience. I'm sure all of us have experienced the many oppressing , expression-squashing double binds found too abundantly in our society. ''You will eat your peas and like them. " "You have to love me. I'm your whoever. " What if you find yourself in these situations? What are your alternatives? Can you make yourself eat your peas? Can you make yourself love someone? Or can you just stand your ground and shout "I don't like my peas, I hate my peas, and I never loved Uncle Fred!" This second alternative would most assuredly hurt someone 's feelings , especially Uncle Fred. But what would be the good in pretending? You'd probably .end up loving your peas or you Uncle Fred less. Instead of keeping all these1 incongruities pent up inside us, let the other guy know. At least this way, we'll all understand each other. So we get into good, wholesome fights every now and then. It 's the price that must be paid for living an honest life. Greg Estadt Alcohol Awareness Week schedule Monday, Oct. 20 Alcohol Awareness-McCormick Forum, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Neil Murphy, Executive Director White Deer Treatment Center Tuesday, Oct. 21 Driving Awareness-McCormick Forum B, 7:00-8:30 p.m. Bob Thomas, Drug and Alcohol Specialist, Columbia, Montour, and Snyder County Drug and Alcohol Program Movie "Kevin 's Story " and discussion Wednesday, Oct. 22 Recovery Awarness-Multi-Purpose Room A, 7:00-8:30 p.m. Sherry Moore, Clinical Services Coordinator for the Employee Assistance Program at the Bloomsburg Hospital. ' i A panel of recovering alcoholics will speak about their addiction and recovery. Chuck Ayers, Counselor, Green Ridge Counseling Center will sing songs about recovery Thursday, Oct. 23 Legal Awareness—Multi-Purpose Room A, 7:00-8:30 p.m. Arthur Shuman, The New Pennsylvania Laws: Driving Under the Influence , Underage Drinking, and College Sponsored Parties. Sponsored by BACCHUS and the Counseling Center Math department establishes Actuarial Science program mainder of the 10 tests after being employed by a company. There is no grade point average requirement, but students must have completed several math courses. Students who become actuaries can go into top management positions in an insurance company . by Jennifer Brelsford for the Voice Many new programs are being established in the math department, according to Dr. James Pomfert, chairman of the Math Department. The Actuarial Science Program is a new minor which is applied to the insurance industry. It involves determining how many people with health insurance will die in a given year, and how much to charge for a certain policy. A series of 10 tests are required before a student can become an actuary. Bloomsburg University teaches enough math to enable students to take the first three tests. Most people take the re- by Ann Pavkovic Staff Writer A "Students for Kanjorski" committee is getting ready for a month of activity to help in the re-election campaign of Congressman Paul E. Kanjorski, says Lynda Fedor , Bloomsburg University contact person ...The committee was formed to emphasize the importance of this election, Fedor says. She is working with Tom Bleich , a sophomore at King's College and chairman of "Students for Kanjorski" to organize student support for Kanjorski in the Bloomsburg area. "In this year's race for congress, students in the 11th Congressional District have a clear from page 1 Education , Government, Health Services, Industry/Business, and Social Services. Judging will be by members of the conference Steering Committee and previously named outstanding women. The deadline for nominations is February 15, 1987. For nomination forms and further information , contact Marilyn Brill, 275-5537, or Carol Rein, 275-8903. 9« 9W^ ** »» $2.00 each '• i : Orders may be taken Mon. Oct. 20 through Fri. Oct. 25. i L K We 'll deliver them to you fresh on Mon. Oct. 27. ** «• «— J0 ^?$X m New York City NewarkAirport, Lehigh Valley or Penn State University? *y «i\ Call the house (784-9712) or uf uer through a sister. choice," Bleich says, adding "Congressman Kanjorski has protected student federal aid which, in th light of tuition increases, allows many of us to attend college. We are supporting him to ensure the future of higher education. " An upcoming Halloween rally for Kanjorski is one of the events being planned by the student committee. The rally will be held 8 to 11 p.m., October 29, at the Sheraton Cross-Gates Hotel in Wilkes Barre, and transportation will be provided. Anyone interested in the rally or in helping with the campaign can contact Lynda Fedor at 3556 or Ann Pavkovic at 389-1257 (off-campus). Going to: I , Theta Tau Omega ' HOAGBE SALE! ! •••••• for math. " Students for Kanj orski ready to help re-elect Congressional candidate Women's Conference — ""Another growing area in the math department is secondary education. Many students are taking up secondary education and leaving the computer science field . Dr. Pomfert also adds, "What I see around the state, I feel Bloomsburg is one of the best . : Bloomsburg University is offering a special mini-course for adults thinking about taking a college course. The mini-course will address such questions as what courses to take, how to study and financial aid available. Two sessions of , the minicourse, The Returning Adult Student: "Can/Should I Go To College?" are offered on Oct. 25 and Nov. 15. The courses will provide adults an opportunity to find answers to questions, to meet other adults who share the same concerns and to talk with adults who are currently students. Call 389-4420 for more information. =^p IHSHS f^" v^^2^"" COAC ^ ^^ ^^ • — -H 1 Carter's Cut Rate 422 East Street | SEE TOMORROW'S STARS TODAY S : NATIONAL TOURING COMPANY \ : Past Second City Cast Members : 784-8689 M A N' S ~\ REP CALLTOHFREE (800) 992-3773 Mini course offered for returning adults Call or Stop in for information: Adding Some ¦BDHI ^BBHHB i Harry Haigler, a former student of Cohen's and now an assistant professor at the University of California , Irvine Medical Center. Levi-Montalcini , who is popularly known in Italy as "signora of the cells," holds both Italian and American citizenship. She returned to Italy after retiring from the university in 1977 . She is the fourth woman to win the Nobel Prize in medicine, since it was first awarded in 1901. She never married and lives with her sister, and artist. "She is a very tough lady , all steel from one end to the other ,'' said Ralph A. Bradshaw, chairman of the department of biological chemistry at the University of California , Irvine Medical Center, who is a friend and colleague of both LeviMontalcini and Cohen. "She did a lot of this research at a time when women had a hard time succeding in science. " Cohen, described by colleagues as a modest, soft-spoken man who smokes a corncob pipe and paces for hours while trying to solve research problems , is married and has three children. ' 'Stanley does science the way you are taught to do it in the textbooks," Bradshaw said . "Most of his seminal observations would have been missed by somebody else who wasn't as careful. " Lehighton, Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Penn State, Newark Airport and New York City AREA REP MANAGER CAMPUS » An American biochemist and an Italian-American neurobiologist were named cowinners of the 1986 Nobel Prize in medicine for discovering proteins, known as "growth factors, " that play a key role in regulating cell and organ development in animals and humans . In naming Stanley Cohen, 63, of Vanderbilt University Medical Center , and Dr. Rita LeviMontalcini, 77, of the Institute of Cell Biology in Rome, the Nobel Assembl y of Stockholm 's Karolinska Institute said their research "may increase our understanding of many disease states," such as Alzheimer's disease and cancer. The study of such growth factors has increased understanding of one of the enduring mysteries of life: how individual cells develop into complex organ systems. The two, who last month also won Lasker basic medical research awards , will share a record prize of 2 million Swedish kroner , or about $290,000. The awards are all the more poignant because of the personal obstacles each researcher has had to overcome. Levi-Montalcini, a Jew, carried out experiments in her bedroom while hiding from the Nazis during World War II, after being forced to quit her university post in Turin , where she grew up. Erling Norrby , professor at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, which awards the medicine prize, said that she "made a laboratory out of her bedroom, sharpened the knives herself and once in a while the eggs she used became scrambled eggs after the experiment." The results of her clandestine research in developmental biology were published in Swiss medical journals and came to the attention of Viktor Hamburger of the Washington University in St. Louis. Hamburger , who studied the nervous system of chick embryos, invited her to join his laboratory in 1947. Cohen suffered from polio as a child and continues to walk with a limp. "It feels good to get world recognition for something you 've been working on for 30 years," Cohen said in a telephone interview from Nashville, Tenn. "When we started, we were following a little trail of interesting observations. We had no expectation it would open up a whole field of research ." It was at Washington University that Levi-Montalcini met Cohen, and the two worked together for seven years in the 1950s. Levi-Montalcini had been trying to isolate a nerve growth factor , or NGF, which she had found in mouse tumor cells, and she asked Cohen to help. The two researchers subsequently isolated and purified more potent nerve growth factors from snake venom and the salivary gland of mice. That lent credence to their belief that such factors play a crucial role in the maturation of nerve cells. In 1962, while studying nerve growth factor from mice, Cohen accidently detected another growth factor that stimulates cells to divide . He found that extracts of the gland , when injected into newborn mice, caused their eyelids to open sooner than usual. Subsequently, he purified mouse "epidermal growth factor " and , in 1975, isolated its human counterpart. Initially, such research received skeptical reviews, and some even suggested that growth factors did not exist or were of trivial importance. But in the last decade, the role of the growth factors has become increasingly accepted. Scientists have studied those growth factors, and more than a dozen others, to learn how cells communicate with each other. Such research has led to better understanding of the molecular basis for cancer and degenerative diseases of the brain. It has also been found that growth factors are structurally related to other important hormones, like insulin. In the early 1980s, British scientists, studying animal tumor viruses, discovered a structural relationship between another growth factor and proteins involved in the development of some cancers, a finding that has stimulated additional interest in the field . Growth factors have now been found in a variety of human tumor cells as well, according to We serve Bloomsburg University every Friday and Sunday to: I S N E I D Earn commission and free travel.Market ski and beach tours on your campus. Call Michael DeBoer at 914682-1795 or write to American Access Travel, 141 Central Park Avenue South , Hartsdale . NY 10530 by Robert Steinbrook LA Times-Washington Post Service Co with Trans-Bridge Lines POSITIONS AVAILABLE Earn salary,commissionand free travel Position involves management of area campus reps for a national college travel and marketing firm. Approximately 20 hours per week, , ideal for senior or graduate student. Scientists share Nobel prize for discovering growth factors To your curriculum. Sneidman's is at your service for all your jewelry needs. You'll find affordable quality in all our watch pins, pendants and rings which ar prerequisite to your lifestyle. u> i The Jewelerwho offers A, more than just the ordinary. T SNEIDMAN'S " l) J E W E L R Y STORE 130 East Main St. • Bloomsburg, PA • 784-2747 Dan Akroyd,Alan Arkin, Jim Belushi.John Belushi, Shelley Berman, Peter Boyle. John Candy, Catherine O'Hara, Severn Darden,Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Joe Flaherty. Mary Gross, Barbara Harris, Valerie Harper, Tim Kazurinsky. Robert Klein, Linda Lavin, Eugene Levy, Shelley Long, Andrea Martin, Elaine May, Ann Meara, Rick Moranis, Bill Murray, Mike Nichols, Gilda Radner,Harold Ramis, Joan Rivers, David Steinberg, Martin Short , Jerry Stiller, Betty Thomas, Dave Thomas. George Wendt , Fred Willard • • • • c • • • • I • • J : __; — i. — ¦- ¦- . . Monday Oct. 27 8 p.m. - Haas Auditorium Free with B. U. Activities Sticker (all others $3.00) * Tickets at—Inf o. Desk ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ I . . , ... ¦ ... i/ —- . . . . . \ • « • J • £ • * % ••••••• • .2 -K.MU „» MQ^ j; u \L : , . . Bloomsburg Univer sity - -v ™) A ^ ••••••••••••••••• o a««*«e« •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• The first place float was won Zeta Psl, Phi Delta and probationary sorority Chi Theta Pi. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) Assistant Director of the Kehr Union Jimmy Gllllland gets Into the spirit of this year 's Homecoming Parade. (Voice photo by Imtlaz All Tah The 1986 Homecoming Sweetheart Debbie Porter. (Voice photo by C.J. Huhn) General Macrone gives game ball to Parade Grand Marshall Frank Colder ,prior to opening klckoff. Jrc- The Bloomsburg University Maroon and Gold Twlrlers perform In Saturday's Homecoming Parade. (Voice photo by Beverly Home) . ,-*» .. ¦•¦ ¦ -. «-. ¦¦¦ ¦ Glna Vlcarlo and Angle Bistline enjoy clowning around on the Program Board float. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) iLMHin i TO»Mj>g'§8gBgiwaai»i«i»«»8pn«»iw^^wsmi7r^ One of the Maroon and Gold Band' s star twlrlers performs during halftlme activities at Saturday 's game. (Voice photo by C.J. Huhn) President Harry Ausprich addresses the Homecoming crowd during halftlme activities. (Voice photo by C.J. Huhn) The Maroon arid Gold Band performs during the pep rally held Friday night. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) ¦" A Bloomsburg University cheerleader smiles happily as she walks in this year's Homecoming Parade. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) Freshmen Sweetheart Renee Everllng. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) ¦ wmmmm WA £ ^ > ."»-af^„- -. • Last year 's Homecoming Sweetheart Janet Yescavage before she gives her crown to this year 's sweetheart. Theta Tau Omega sister Kelly Decker does her part for this yecr's homecoming parade. (Voice photo by Imtiaz All Taj) Head football Coach Pete Adrian looks on as the Huskies trounce the Mansfield Mountles 51-26. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans) Bloomsburg University 's 1986 Homecoming Committee. (Voice photo by Imtiaz All Taj) The Bloomsburg Maroon and Gold Band perform during Saturday 's Homecoming Parade. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) Bloomsburg University's Army ROTC led this year's Homecoming Parade through downtown Bloomsburg. (Voice photo Jay Kase) Husky Bloomsburg Cheerleaders excite the crowd with their routines. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans) The Bloomsburg Cheerleaders take a break during this Saturday 's Homecoming game against Mansfield. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans) Lady Liberty and Uncle Sam walk In Bloomsburg 's annual Homecoming Parade on Saturday. (Voice photo by Heather Kelly) Bloomsburg University 's 1986 Homecoming Sweetheart Debbie Porter and her escort Brad White take their official ride around the football field during halftlme at Saturday's game against Mansfield. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans) < Student at Large Children's theater for adults too Too many channels my makeshift corner , I was half buried under paper when a nearby boy and girl tagteam decided to play a scene from some poap, combining elements of Miumi Vice and The Waltons. I felt the sudden need for a General Hospital , but there was no one around save a couple AH Star Wrestlers grappling with some blonde. Lacking any patience, I gave up trying to play Father Knows Best and shifted gear into The Equalizer. But it was too late . The ATeam, 'A' having nothing to do with academics, suddenly attacked from the right , pretending to be pledges from some fraternity. I, now in the middle of what appeared to be a Family Feud from the Twilight Zone, clicked my heals three times and landed in May berry . Gomer Pyle , who sat across the table from me, was more than I could stand.- So I pretended to be invisible and ended up on Soap, let alone drugs. Completely burned out and running out of places to hide, I left the library once more in search of strength, but neither she nor Leonard Nemoy were anywhere to be found. Back in my apartment, I kicked the television , turned on my stereo and sat for a short rest before attempting to study. The next thing I knew it was the following day and Good Morning America was standing in my doorway, asking if I had any idea what time it was. I said something about Howdy Doodv and went back to bed. Don Chomiak Burned out! One Caucasian male brain. Lately it seems as I finish one project , another even bigger plants its ugly self on my doorstep. What I would give for the opportunity to go, to a single party and enjoy standing in a sardine can , fighting for a beer and taking that spectacular brewery bath. The chance seems to always escape me. Fortunately, this situation also leaves me with no time to endure television. In my constant search for knowled ge, truth , and a free meal, there is no time to waste. Having to navigate the incredible undertow of bodies and withstand the constant static of voices buzzing around me, I fight my way through the library, searching for that treasure known as a quiet corner. Finall y, sitting in the closest thing to a corner I could find, which happened to be in the center of the room , I unpacked my heavyweight bag. I then began to dig into the clay 's worth of work I had accumulated , having told myself I'd do it in the morning and having slept 'till the afternoon. Settled in and comfortable with Extra curricular activities to be awarded by the CGA Attention all December Graduates! Have you been active in organizations or attained leadership positions during your years here at BU? The CGA awards committee invites you to fill out an application for a Service Key award . This award is given to seniors who have earned at least 30 points for being involved in extra curricular activities. Points are awarded according to the organization and the position you ^ hold in it. Applications are available at the information desk, Kehr Union Building, beginning Monday , Oct. 20 and are due back Monday , Nov . 10. The recipient is awarded a lifetime community activities card. Anyone who wants to know more about the awards should contact Dr. John Trathen or Laurie Reed at 389-4199. Apply now! We want to recognize your endeavors. Abortion Services Harrisbure $ | Reproductive I Health I Services I *m* * FIRST & MIDTRIMESTER ABORTIONS $ f § llT * GYNECOLOGICAL CARE * PROBLEM PREGNANCY COUNSELING * EDUCATIONAL SERVICES * PREGNANCY TESTING I CKsf A representative from the Great Bloomsburg Bicycle Co. rides up Main Street In Saturday's Homecoming Parade. (Voice photo by Beverly Home.) Program Board gives experience to students Over 200 events were brought to Bloomsburg University last year courtesy of the Kehr Union Program Board , an organization designed to provide BU with entertainment and student activities. The group is an organization that allows students to have a say in what entertainment and programs are brought to campus. It is open to all students who are interested. Not only does Program Board provide opportunity to choose the programs , but it also provides a learning experience that one can 't get in the classroom. Students can learn how to deal with all types of people: other students , faculty, and even professionals; how to organize ideas , and how to develop responsibility and leadership skills. Program Board consists of an advisor , four officers , and ten committees. Each committee is headed by a chairperson who keeps the committee organized . Each member of the committee is responsible for carry ing out the ideas produced. The ten commit- tees that make up Program Board are : Bingo, Dance/Mini Concert , Film/Widescreen , Hospitality , Minority Affairs , Public Relations , Publicity , Recreation , Soundstage, and Special Events . Program Board consists of "students programming for students ", says Jimmy Gilliland , Program^ Board' s Advisor. He says "You learn a lot about yourself as well as the people you work with ," and one can even have fun doing it. It can also provide students with "concrete evidence that you have a background in a particular field" says Stephanie Simmons , chairperson of Public Relations committee. Program Board provides you with practice in working in a business oriented atmosphere. Mike Harvey, chairperson of Minority Affairs , says it enables students to "strengthen your decision-making skills arid learn how to budget your time. It provides you with a challenge and new insights about the work scene. " To page 7. by Karen Reiss drugs in his or her lifetime. This person could be your roommate, your boyfriend , or it could be you. Most people who drink have abused it at least once or twice, probably more . What happens, though , when the abuse becomes more frequent and that person is left to deal on his own? Alcohol Awareness Week is geared toward educating students about the effects of alcohol , responsible decisions one should make for himself , and the legal aspects of drinking. More than this , though , Alcohol Awareness Week is a time to reach out and support each other and respect each other 's choices about drinking. Alcohol beg ins Today Awareness Week at Bloomburg University as well as at college campuses across the nation. It is a week for college students to learn all they can about the effects of alcohol because a large number Alcohol affects Most people have one of those party experiences they would like to forget , even though it is not remembered too clearly. It starts off with one beer , then two , then nine, then 15. Soon it is two days later and loud noises still crush the skull and the guys in biology snicker when you walk by. We can all laugh when we think of our embarrassing moments while drinking. What isn 't funny however , is one out of seven college students will become addicted to alcohol or Reproductive Freedom, Individual Choice j Staff Writer Staff Writer 10° Chestnut Street Suite 106 ' Harrisburg , PA 17101 (717) 232-9794 DfOqrQm ~ | Toni g ht H nU nIrr^ l UU L Skating Party — \ 0,00^,, «„,,, *_ /^ ^ ,.„., ^ i%y T . ckets a{ Info ^^ - 9 p.m. (available until bus leaves) Bus leaves from Elwell Film of the Week: "St. Elmo's Fire" Thurs. Oct. 237 JP n.3/i •, ^v. oc >:JU p.m. ~ | STELMOSFmE i.ttvi^.^.K^. ,.„„«^SS Ms Ii i[ffpspssa i| ^""1—^ I--""--~~- Ii —"_ 2z ¦-"•sg y. Saturday Oct 25 \ ll JarnboreeX j £ *Volleyba oilfe^ Y'"y ') ^^^^301^ sA^ A 7 p.m^Centennial Gym \ V ^$>%r ^ ^* puhjic performances for. We also do special school matinees ;where the children are bused in from area schools during the sChoolday, " Woodruff adds. In the Spring , the program includes a small children's tour that performs in schools within a 50-60 mile radius. Woodruff says the touring usually for are shows kindergardeners through , third graders, but some, like this Fall's mainstream production , will play for all ages. Woodruff says that usually people majoring in theater are the ones that act in the shows, put audititions are always open to the entire university community. "Good theater always has to entertain. Always! That's the bottom line. But I have a real committment to doing plays that have a theme, or that have some kind of social relevance to what's going on in a child' s life, " says Woodruff. An example is Step on a Crack, a play the theater performed their first year, and later took on tour to Japan. The play is about a To page 7. by Ellen Jones AU are we^°me \ \ AIDS questionaire Here is the chance to test yourself on your awareness of the facts concerning AIDS. The best way to prevent yourself from getting AIDS is to arm yourself with all the facts regarding the syndrome. Ignorance of the facts can cause unnecessary fear. At the same time, using your knowledge, and applying it in social situations is the best protection you can provide for yourself. Circle (T) if the statement is true and (F) if it false. There are ten statements, therefore if you score 90-100 your knowledge of AIDS is excellent, 80 good , 70-79 fair , but below 70, you had better brush up on your AIDS education. Pamphlets and educational materials on AIDS can be found at the University Health Center. 1. T F AIDS is short for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. 2. T F There have been no proven cases in which AIDS has spread by casual contact. 3. T F There is a cure for AIDS. 4. T F You could get AIDS if you give blood for the Red Cross. 5. T F Heterosexuals can 't get AIDS, only homosexuals. 6. T F There is a fool proof blood test for AIDS. 7. T F AIDS is not an easy disease to get. The virus is a frag ile virus. 8. T F AIDS is transmitted by intimate sexual contact and exposure to contaminated blood. 9. T F Condoms have been shown to block passage of the AIDS virus. 10. T F Many of the early symptoms of AIDS are similiar to those of common illnesses such as the "flu. " Answers on page 7. all in some way ¦ I IIMMIWfcJ—MKMMW „ f^ Just because the Theater for Young Audiences is theatre for kids, doesn't mean that the performances don't have to be as good. Marci Woodruff , director of the child drama program on campus, says, "I think children are a much more honest and intelligent audience than adults . There 's no waiting for the reviews to come out . I mean, you know on the spot . If you bore 800 children , you may as well face the wrath of God!" says Woodruff. Children 's Theater , or Theater for Young Audiences is not children performing theater for children , it is adults performing theater for children. "This is a distinction a lot of people aren 't aware of ," says Woodruff. Relatively new to Bloomsburg, the child drama program was started by Woodruff three years ago and has proven to be a real success! "Every fall we do a big mainstage production either in Haas (Auditorium) or Carver (Hall) that we run a series of of the college population chooses to drink . The founder of Alcohol Awareness Week at BU is Shell Lundahl, a counselor from the BU Counseling Center. She plans all of the activities for the week, however Lundahl pointed out that since six years ago when she started the activities, residence life and the health center have been planning numerous programs to compliment those offered by the Center. One of Lundahl's major concerns is that college students are not as knowledgeable about alcohol as they sometimes claim to be. Tonight 's program deals with dispelling some of the myths that are attached to drinking. For example, is it true that people tell the absolute truth while under the influence. Listen to Neil Murphy, the Executive Director of White Deer Treatment Center, for the answer to this and many other questions. Tomorrow mght, the subject of drinking and driving wil be discussed by Bob Thomas, a Drug and Alcohol specialist. For more details and a complete listing of events and programs to take place throughout Alcohol Awareness Week , see the boxed schedule on the top of page 3. This year's Alcohol Awareness Week is being co-sponsored by BACCHUS (Boost Alcohol Conscieousness Concerning the Health of University Students), a student organization which promotes responsible drinking an decision making. BACCHUS will have an Alcohol Awareness booth in the Union starting today until Tuesday from 11 a.m.-l p.m. mama ui^u WIITI HWOT —^¦^ — — ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1987. The Air Force has a special program for 1987 BSNs. If selected, you can enter active duty soon after graduation—without waiting for the results of your State Boards. To qualify, you must have an overall "B" average. After commissioning, you'll attend a five-month internship at a major Air Force medical facility. It's an excellent way to prepare for the wide range of experiences you'll have serving your country as an Air Force nurse officer. For more information, call MILLER'S HALLMARK SHOP 6 West Main St. bloomsburg 784-4473 _ = = . , —_ ~___^__^_ ^^^^^ S5Sf SB^. ^mfcjaj t— am^ . > * ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦ ¦¦¦¦¦i^ ^H B a m H B B n . j Husky Special! I I A small one-item pizza and 2 pepsis f o r $5.95. , j \ I I Customer pays all sales tax and I I bottle deposit. One coupon per I izza. Limited delivery area. p J J SSgt Dick Welsh (814) 237-9885 collect I———am — ¦ *. . —M mam H\. mmmmmmaamm m m j j El fH BH Expires 10/23/86 784-6211 { j Program Board gives experience to students From page 6. Program Board gives students the opportunityto work with professionals. Kerry Desmond , president of Program Board says, "It provides you with experience in the real business world, but in a more relaxed atmosphere. " In a sense students are running their own business. They are in a partnership with the other members on the committee and have a limited budget to work with. They are responsible for providing the student body with entertainment. Each must follow all the steps involved in producinp a .product and getting it out to the public. Sometimes students also learn how to deal with the disappointments that occur. Program Board is a voluntary organization that enables handson experience. It "helps you to grow and learn the things you have to do in the real world,"says Robert Francis, chairperson of Recreation. "You students get out of it what you put in it. " Francis adds that by getting involved in Program Board , students learn alot about themselves and the world around them International artist Will Barnet will arrive on campus October 22 to visit the Haas Gallery where his exhibit will be on display . Barnet is a painter and printmaker from New York City. His collections can be found on display in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: Whitney Museum of American Art. The collection he will show at BU will be choice selections of over 50 works produced in a period of time from the early 1930's to the present . John Cook, assistant professor of art, says that Barnet is/thought to be one of the major graphic artists of his time. In his work Barnet attempts to create and capture life as he would like it to be using a style distinctly his own. He is also well known for his series named "Women by the Sea" which was inspired by his wife.„ While Barnet is on campus, he will present a slide show, talk of his work and meet with any interested students. Children 's theater for adults too Graphic artis t to arriv e THE FAR SIDE AIDS questionaire answers Zeta Psl brother, Ed Ebert, accepts first place float award on behalf of Zetn Psl, Phi Delta and probationary sorority, Chi Theta PI. (Voice photo by Alex Schlllemans.) By GARY LARSON collegiate crossword "Again? What is it with you that as soon as you put one fin on the land you have to go? C o l l e g iate CW84-20 © Edward . J u l i u s ACROSS 44 Large vehicles 45 Tape recorder button 1 Grouches 6 Forceful gush 47 Storage structure 48 High in pitch 11 Antelope leather 13 Water travelers 49 More regretful 51 Tenth wedding 15 Regret 16 Large global region anniversary 52 Food expert , 17 Poisonous snake 18 Former French 54 Food kingdom 56 On the way (2 wds.) 20 The Offensive 57 Agents of retri i s Born " bution 2 1 "A 58 Vane directions 23 Endures 59 Torn places 24 Neat 25 "Love Story" author 27 Permit DOWN 28 Relish 1 President Arthur 29 Shrinks back 31 Physician of old , 2 Wild outbreak 3 I love: Lat. and family . 4 " Free" 32 Franklin 's toy 5 Firm fiber 33 Rabbit 6 Becomes spoiled 34 Poe.'s bird (pi.} 7 Shave off 37 Tiresome teachers 8 Actress Hagen 40 Encourages 41 Trigonometric ratio 9 Uneasy 10 Tested for size (abbr.) (2 w d s . ) 42 Prized music niaker , 11 Stupid for short Randy! Just sit down, eat your cereal and look for that thing later!" — 1 Bloom *" ¦^L,, , - * * Contact Lens Service * * *„*e C ,