CGA senators begin the year by Susan Sheridan Staff Writer The newly elected CGA senators attended an orientation dinner Monday night, allowing them to get aquainted with each other and the administrators they will be working with throughout the year . The dinner, which is held every year, followed a brief meeting in the Coffeehouse. At the meeting, the executive board , senators and administrators introduced themselves and stated the positions they hold in the senate. Elections for the senate positions took place last Thursday. According to CGA Vice President Jim Fritchman only 10 percent of the student body turned out to vote. "The number of off-campus students running for the senate was the most we've had in years," Fritchman said. "Thirty candidates petitioned for the 18 available seats." A total of 36 senators were elected to the senate. Also, various organizations on campus appoint members to represent them on senate. The CGA Executive Council for 1987-88 consists of Ed Gobora, president; Jim Fritchman, vice president; Mark Beaudoin , treasurer; James Rohrbach, recording secretary; David Gerlach, executive assistant; Marie Graziano , project coordinator; Kristine Rowe,parlimentarian; James Sopko, historian; Karen Cameron, student trustee; and Maria Mazzenga, corresponding secretary. Representing Elwell Hall on senate are Donna Adgie, Lisa Markel, Sharon Siegrist, Jennifer Tober, and Jennifer Guthier. Columbia Hall representatives are Kelly Burkholder and Darlene Johnson. Daniel Dimm and Mike Bailor are the senators from Schuylkill Hall. Representing Luzerne and Montour Halls are Jeff Kearns, Bruce Shriner, Charles Walker, and Michael Mihoban respectively. North Hall representatives are Tom Kuntzleman and Howard Liberman. Senators representing off-campus students are Stephen King, David Siegfried , Chad Stevens, Beth Powers, Darrin Love, David Ward , Mary Dougherty, Robert Frankel, Donna Criqui , Taras Somak , Kathleen Petrucelli, Kevin Bennett, Jeff Rciterman, Michael Spano, Matthew Maturani , Greg Pugusi, Joh n Nestro, and Timothy Kurtz. Maria Makowski and Lisa McDonald are representing commuters. Freshman class officer elections were also held last week. Kris Dautsch was elected freshman class president. Secretary and treasurer are Samir Qureshi and Ann Marie Ryan , respectively. The vice president position was not filled. "There were three write-in votes, Community Government Association senators attended their first meeting Monday, beginning their 1987-88 term. Monday 's meeting allowed the new senators to meet the which means there was a three-way Photo by Karen Rciss . .. . . and. to. get to ¦ . administrators know each other. tie," Fritchman said. CGA is presently consulting with Bloomsburg University President Harry Ausprich concerning the vice president position. The first senate meeting is scheduled for Monday, Oct. 12, at6:30p.m. Wright aides said late Tuesday that In the Senate, Finance Committee stead of the $5.9 billion they estiin the Kehr Union. by Spencer Rich Chairman Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, mated for the Democratic bill aphe had made no decision on the L.A. Times-Washington Post Service Michel request. according to aides, would prefer to proved by the House Ways and House Republican Leader Robert However, handle the issue as a free-standing Means Committee. an aide to Ways and , R-Ill H. Michel ., notified Speaker In recent weeks, Democratic lead- Means Chairman Dan Rostenkow- measure instead of in the reconciliJim Wright, D-Tcxas, Tuesday that Republicans strongl y oppose a ers have made clear they are consid- ski, D-I1L, said the chairman thought ation bill. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan , DThe 1987-88 edition of the Pilot Democratic plan to bring a multibil- ering putting the Democratic version it made more sense to include the N.Y., the sponsor of a major welfare in an omnibus reconciliation bill , Ways and Means bill in the omnibus has an ommission in the Code of lion-dollar Democratic welfare bill where, reconciliation measure, which would bill costing $2.3 billion over five among other things, it would Contact printed on page 54. The sec- to the floor as part of an omnibus recalso include the money to pay for the years that has 55 co-sponsors, said, "I be less vulnerable to a veto. , onciliation bill which includes huntion on physical abuse was missed. would very much look forward to Rep. Thomas Downey , D-N.Y., welfare changes. Students are urged to be aware that dreds of other issues, rather than as a He added that Rostenkowski felt seeing just what version the House chairman of the Ways and Means this remains a regulation of the uni- separate measure. that even as part of the reconciliation members put in reconciliation , but subcommitttee on public assistance, "Welfare reform is too important versity. told a National Alliance of Business bill , a full debate on the welfare issue this shows their seriousness, and The section should read: "Physical to be included in any legislative meeting two weeks ago that if it were could be arranged. that's good. package," said Michel and 20 other abuse of any person on university, the president would a separate bill House Republicans involved in welowned or controlled property, or at any university-sponsored or super- fare issues in a letter to Wright Tues- clearly veto it, so we are not going to by Tom Sink it will go off soon'," Bryson said. She run that risk." vised activity, or conduct which day. Ne ws Editor said the person calling did not elabothreatens or endangers the health and "We urge you to bring welfare Dazed students were forced out of rate on when the bomb was set to go The Democratic and House GOP reform to the floor prior to the end of safety of any person." the (1987) session separately and not versions of the bill include major their Montour Hall rooms at 1:30 a.m. off. Bryson added that the receptionist as part of any other omnibus legisla- training, remedial education and this morning when a bomb threat was who received the call was not the tive package," they told Wright in the work requirements for welfare moth- phoned into the office of Resident same person who worked on the night of Sept. 16, when the first threat was ers, but the Democratic version also Dean Don Young. letter. Mike Morrissey, a Montour Hall received. includes a number of major improveAfter the call was received, sturesident advisor, said the call was They said the issue deserves full ments in welfare benefits. The Republicans contend these received around 1:20 a.m. while he dents in Lycoming Hall were immedicongressional debate" and opportunity for the House to consider the improvements would make it more and a group of students were studying ately evacuated and remained in the Kehr Union Building while a search GOP's welfare bill , which they said desirable for people to stay on wel- in Young 's office. "Someone called and said there is a was conducted. fare and therefore discourage welfare would be more effective and cost bomb in your building," Montour "A thorough search was conducted clients from seeking to work. only $1.1 billion over five years inR.A. Phil Peterson said. and no bomb was found," Bryson Montour residents were immedi- said. She added that the students reately evacuated and sent to the Kehr turned to their dorm rooms a half an Union for 30 minutes while a search hour after the call was received. LA. Times-Washington Post Service was conducted. Officer John Pollard Bryson said university officials do ish priest now says. After centuries of pronounce"When I was baptising a baby, I of BU Law Enforcement said there not know why the calls are being ments, that most often were pro- was the mother. Once a handicapped was no bomb found in Montour, but made to Lycoming. She said the poshibiitions or condemnations, the girl, seated on the steps of my church, added that only "public areas," such sibility of placing voice-activiated Vatican has an entirely new dilemma and seeing me in my cassock, called as restrooms, stairwells and lounges recorders on the phones are being on its doorstep. examined. me mama. I had to flee to hide my were allowed to be searched. It is the case of a 50-year-old or- feelings." The bomb scare is the second this dained Italian priest who has "There are tracing devices already The Vatican experts who usually week and the third in the last two changed sex and has been authorized rise to the bait when there is a routine weeks. The first and second bomb on phones at the reception desks in by two Italian courts to change his controversy, are shying away en- scares occurred in Lycoming Hall. each dorm," Bryson said, "but they Dean of Student Life Robert Norton Photo by Bob Finch name, and his gender, on all official tirely, or demanding anonymity if Director of University Relations are activiated only if the call is made documents. Father Paolo has become quoted . Sheryl Bryson said Lycoming Hall's on-campus." Bryson added that since Sister Paola, while remaining a A Jesuit has said that the priest's reception desk received the call con- the device in Lycoming was not actipriest, and living in the shadow. surgical operation "did not change cerning the second bomb scare at vated, the person who placed the call by Karen Reiss there shouldn't be any problem with She told Turin 's La Stampa that the gender, because it touched only 11:25 p.m. on Sept. 28. must have Dhoned from off-camnus. Senior News Editor this activity because it relates di- while keeping a low profile, the form external organs. It therefore was a "The caller told the receptionist The question and answer session rectly to the organization. erparish priest still thinks "Icould be superficial change and not enough to 'There's a bomb in your building and concerning the university hazing The final draft of the hazing policy of some use to people." turn a man into a woman. Bloomsburg University is policy planned for last evening was has not yet been completed, howShe lives now on a pension in a To him , Paola is just another transuneventful considering only one or- ever, Norton explained that it is small, unnamed town , and Paolo- vestite. considering the construction ganization representative attended. "close". Paola may not be the real name. of a new library. That superficiaial difference once In a memorandum to all presidents The original draft was sent to the The existence of the Roman was of supreme importance to the Page 3. and advisors of organizations on university's regional attorney and he Catholic Church's first female priest Vatican. After the tenth century campus, Dean of Student Life Robert had "no problem with it," according in modem times is known to the scandal of "Pope Joan," or so the enBiographer and historian, Dons Read about the horrors Norton urged those organizations to Norton. Vatican. So far, they have avoided suing legend goes, before a new Kearns Goodwin , will be the first other than Inter-fraternity and Inter- , Greek Advisor Lori Barsness has comment and there is no canon law pope could be crowned, one of the speaker for the fall segment of the of date rape. sorority Council members, which re- been reviewing the pledging calen- that deals with such cases. cardinals in the conclave was as- Provost 's Lecture Series at Page 4. quire initiation activities as a condi- dars of some of the sororities. AcThe Vatican conceivably could signed to manually explore the geni- Bloomsburg University, Thursday tion of acceptance, to attend. cording to Norton, "She has tons of rule that the person ordained 25 years tal zone, to verify that they had cho- Oct. 22. "Hopefully everyone understands ideas...a lot have to do with projects ago was already not a male, but that sen a male. Goodwin will speak at 8 p.m. in Soccer team routes Susquehanna and is in compliance," Norton said where they work together with the would be seen as false, or unacceptThis act was done before the as- Carver Hall Auditorium. The lecture 4-0. of why no one came to the meeting. actives (members)." able, under several aspects. sembled cardinals, while the just- titled "Inside the Presidency," is open "Hopefull y pledging activities Mike Jams, a member of the math The Roman Church's only re- elected pope was seated in a special to the public. Page 8. fraternity, attended the meeting to will guaranteethe continuation of the quirements for the priesthood are chair. Friday, Oct. 23, 11:45 a.m., Goodinquire about pledges obtaining sig- groups," Norton said. that the candidate be an adult , bapThe unwelcomed fact is that the win will address the Journalism InstiCommentary page 2 He said that during pledging, tised, male. Paolo met those three re- Vatican has a validly ordained priest tute in the Forum of the McCormick natures from faculty members to Features page 4 prove that they visited the profes- pledges should learn as much as quirements at the time. in its midst who for the rest of the Human Services Center. She will dispossible about the purpose and the sors: Classifieds "When I was officiating at a wed- civil world is now a valid female as cuss the topic "Qualities to Look for page 6 I Norton explained to Jams that history of the organization . ding, I was the bride," the former par well. in Presidential Candidates." .. L L House divided on issue Section omitted Republicans want separate welfare bill Bomb scares continue Priest becomes nun Hazing meeting unattended Index Lectures beginning UX*S L\KEBDENWS If SNEAKY,WSIRUOTULPND > DISHONEST..! WTBEUDfE HEV PUlLCUroF-mE PRESIDENTIAL R&CE.\NITH THD5E QUAUHOT0NSJ J Soviets luring Iran in by Paul Mellon Staff Columnist Finally. After yearsof bitter frustration we finally stuck it to the Ayatollah. Caught red-handed laying mines in the Persian Gulf, Iran was given a little demonstration of the enormous power the U.S. military wields when it sees fit. Granted, the crushing of a small Iranian mine ship by two of the Army 's most sophisticated helicopters is not in and of itself a major military blow to Iran. But it is crucial in that Iran knows this country is fully prepared to thwart terrorism by military might. Naturally, Khomeini and his loonies have vowed revenge against the "arch-Satan." In light of the fate that befell Colonel Khadafy in Libya after his little bombing in West Berlin , however, it should become readily apparent to Iran that the "arch-Satan" is full y capable of turning their country into the biggest parking lot in the ramifications of our actions. Iran must be made to understand that although we will not tolerate any terroristic attacks against"U.S. citizens, we are not trying to lure Iran into a showdown. Our goal in the Gulf is to ensure the free flow of commercial shipping as well as the end of the Iran-Iraq war. To further isolate Iran from the world community would be a grave mistake on our part because of the strategic importance of Iran in the Gulf. At present it seems that as Iran goes farther from the world it draws closer to the Soviet Union. In the last few weeks the Soviets have been bending over backwards to accomodate Iran. Only last month the two countries signed trade agreements which increase the amount of oil Iran exports to the U.S.S.R. Last week, Soviet Foreign Minister Shevardnadze delayed a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for an arms embargo against Iran. Then the Soviets backed a major demand of world. Iran by calling for a committee to be Even though the Iranian incident is created to find out who is to blame for being hailed as a textbook operation , the war. The Soviets have more than a casit is vital that we understand the full ual interest in Iran. Back in the 1950' s, President Truman was confronted with the fact that the Red Army had practically occupied Tehran and refused to leave, having been there since the end of WWII. Only after Truman let the Soviets know that the U.S. military would move into Iran did the communists depart, thus depriving diem of their coveted "warm water port." Presendy, the Soviets share a border with Iran that is patrolled by over 300,000 troops and, of course, there are the 100,000 Soviet troops in Afghanistan, who are still busy slaughtering what is left of the Afghan people. In lieu of this situation the U.S. must walk a thin line. On one side we cannot let Iran run amok in the Gulf by escalating the war with Iraq through terrorism on innocent shipping. The other side shows that we must be careful not to push Iran unnecessarily into the waiting paws of the Russian Bear. How the Reagan administration walks this line depends largely on the actions of Iran in the coming weeks. President Reagan argues that the Central American peace plan is "fat ally flawed," and that the response of the Sandinista government of Nicaragua is "only show." We think that he is wrong. We are encouraged in our view by his failure to provide substance to support his contention. Indeed, he seems to be interested primarily in wrecking the plan before it can have a fair test. His eagerness to find fault and the relish with which he anticipates failure have raised doubts throughout the hemisphere as to his commitment to peace. The president launched his latest attack on the peace plan of the five nations of Central America just three days after President Oscar Arias Sanchez of Costa Rica had, in a personal visit to the White House and in an eloquent appeal to a joint session of Congress, asked for time to test the initiative. He was its principal architect. He leads the oldest of the Latin democracies. "It is time to focus on the positive," Arias told Congress. "War signifies the failure of politics. Let us restore faith in dialogue and give peace a chance." If Arias' counsel was not heeded in the White House, it was heard and understood in Managua, where the Sandinistas accelerated in succeeding days the implementation of the reforms that are required by the Aug. 7 peace plan. And it was heard in San Salvador, where a new dialogue to end the civil war in El Salvador will commence next weekend. The events of the weekend were instructive. Nicaragua opened its border with Honduras to permit exiles to accept the amnesty now offered them . Few came, but some came. Through the streets of Managua itself , 3,000 opponents of the Sandinistas marched in a peaceful demonstration authorized by the government. Final preparations were made for La Prensa to resume publication without censorship, and for Radio Catolica to return to the air. All that, of course, falls short of the American-sty le democracy that White House staff members say is now what Reagan wants for Nicaragua. This is a test that, of all Central American nations, only Costa Rica could pass. But it also appears to be a convenient device for Reagan to use in trying to eliminate the Sandinistas, whom he sees solely as Marxist allies of Havana and Moscow. In his determination to do that, Reagan appears troubled by the peace proposals while remaining curiously confiden t that the kind of Nicaragua that he wants can be achieved only with Contra bullets and continuation of a war that has already taken 30,000 lives. His visible distrust of what the Central Americans themselves are trying to do makes it all the more difficult for them - leaders like Arias to tame the extremism of the Sandinistas. The tentative, timid steps being taken along the path to peace in Nicaragua will be paralleled in El Salvador during the weekend with another meeting between President Jose Napoleon Duarte and the rebels. This confrontation also will test the potential of the peace plan to replace warfare with negotiations. The agenda, according to an official of the Roman Catholic Church , "will be everything that has to be done to arrive at an end to hostilities." Six weeks remain before the first important deadline in the peace process. Those leading the way, like lonely soldiers making their way through a minefield , need encouragement, not disparaging cynicism. That is why those genuinely concerned about peace are on their side. - The Washington Post by Jeff Bingaman weapons systems was produced at a rate below the Defense Department's own calculated minimum economic rate for the system. We have been buying weapons by the armful per year while still paying the whole overhead cost to produce them at far higher rates. Billions of dollars have been wasted in the process. tempts to implement his statutory mandate. From the start , the deputy secretary's staff continually rewrote Godwin's proposed internal regulations to undercut his authority. Where the statute clearly states that the undersecretary shall have authority to "establish" acquisition policies for the department, the deputy secretary's staff changed the word to "develop." Though the statute says that the undersecretary shall have the power to "direct" the service secretaries and shall "have precedenceover" all service secretaries on acquisition matters, early regulations (since rescinded because of congressional objections) suggested that the undersecretary had to secure the prior agreement of the service secretaries for his directives. The deputy secretary also ordered the deletion, without proposing substitute language, of a provision outlining the extent of the undersecretary's participation in the department's budget deliberations. To Reagan: Give peace a chance to Diagnosing the desk clutterer by George Will Editorial Columnist The Divinity (a.k.a. Victoria Will) will soon be seven, which philosophers call the age of wisdom. Fat lot philosophers know about young girls. I have shared a small desk with one for several years and now am sharing a huge desk, and she and I are wrestling with the intellectual problem of desktop tidiness. For the Prodigy (a.k.a. the Divinity) and me this is a problem, because some afternoons after school we now sit across from each other at an old (new to me) "partners desk," one of those enormous constructions with drawers on each side. The top, on which an F-15 could land, can hold a lot of clutter. Father favors tidiness. Daughter finds clutter congenial. And it turns out she is correct: Science proves that it is rational to have a messy desk. In Discover magazine Hugh Kenner, professor of English at Johns Hopkins and a confirmed advocate of chaos, last year wrote a spirited defense of the messy desk. Kenner considers tidiness not only evidence of an unattractive character ("clean-deskers measure their vermouth with an eyedropper, walk their dogs by the clock, succor their spouses by the calender"), but also a practice invalidated by the 80-20 rule, a.k.a. Zipf's Law. Kenner says: Consider my desk. I take a reference book from a shelf and, knowing I will refer to it again soon, I leave it on my desk for now. And this letter inviting me to a conference. I'll leave it next to the book for now because I'll be referring to it when I make travel arrangements. These notes for the essay I'm writing -1 turn The $600 toilet seat may he here to stay LA.Times-Wash ington Post Service After listening last week to 4 hours of testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee from Richard Godwin, the resigning undersecretary of defense for acquisition , and from Deputy Secretary William Taft IV about the causes of Godwin 's resignation, I can come to only one conclusion: that serious reform of the deTo deal with these and other probfense acquisition system is not a prior- lems, the Packard Commission recity of this administration or this secre- ommended the creation of a new positary of defense or his deputy. tion in the Defense Department hierarchy, an undersecretary for acquisiFor all practical purposes this tion, who would manage the defense means that the sensible recommenda- acquisition system full time. Contions of the Packard Commission on gress agreed and gave the new underDefense Management will not be secretary responsibility for supervisimplemented and the potential in- ing the defense acquisition system , creased efficiency in the use of our establishing acquisition policy and defense dollars will have to wait at directing its execution by the military least another 16 months. services. But it didn 't work. Godwin's efOur defense acquismon system, a forts to assert his authority were $180-billion-a-year enterprise, has fiercely and for the most part successgrown intolerably inefficient and fully resisted by the services and by wasteful. The $600 toilet seats, that elements of the defense secretary's have grabbed the headlines are, in own office. fact, minor examples of waste compared with the far higher costs of startThe Defense Department s ing many more weapons programs fiefdoms were unwilling to cede than can possibly be efficiently pro- Godwin the power that Congress and duced at likely future defense budget the Packard Commission intended levels. him to have. To paraphrase Godwin, the service secretaries and their suborIn fact, even over the five years in dinates and other officials in the this decade when defense budgets secretary's office were willing to were growing rapidly, major weapons cooperate with him only if it meant no systems used just half of the efficient change in the status quo. Last week's hearing pointed up the production capacity planned and paid for by the taxpayer. Over this five- strength and depth of the unrelenting year period, one of every four major resistance that met Godwin's at- Deputy Secretary Taft testified at our hearing that the Department of Defense had faithfully implemented all the recommendations of the Packard Commission that were not inconsistent with the law. It was this alleged commitment that Godwin perhaps naively relied upon when he took the job. But when each service secretary was instructed to appoint a full-time acquisition executive in accordance with the Packard Commission recommendations, the response was hardly encouraging. For example, then-secretary of the Navy John Lehman made 1> LV a mockery of the process when he prompdy appointed himself to the "full-time" acquisition executive position for the Navy. All of us involved in the statutory changes expected such resistance . Change is threatening to any organization, and the changes proposed by the Packard Commission are especially threatening to those who stand to lose power over the acquisition process. But that is no excuse. The secretary and deputy secretary should have done what Godwin testified they never did. They should have called in the service secretaries and their own staff and told them that resistance to the directives of the undersecretary for acquisition would not be tolerated. If they had just been committed to the Packard Commission changes, they would have spent sufficient time, energy and political capital to insist that the service secretaries and their own staff work to implement those changes. They have not done that. Until we get a new secretary and deputy secretary who will do those things, Congress will be forced to act on the margin. We will review Defense Department regulations to determine whether they comply with the clear letter and intent of the statute. We will question department representatives for any signs of progress. We will carefully review the qualifications and experience of the person nominated to succeed Godwin. (Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., is chairman of the Armed Services subcom mittee on defense industry and technology.) to them frequently so I'll leave them here for now. The "for nows" accumulate and so does the stuff. For Kenner, a messy desk is a matter of principle, not sloth. The principle is: What you need now you're apt to need again, and again. That is why the paring knife is left on the kitchen counter, and the nutmeg grater is not. The principle pops up all over the place, as in our use of words. Kenner says we make more than 50 percent of our normal talk by recycling about 100 words. Feel inarticulate? Cheer up. Shakespeare 's works contain 29,066 different words, but 40 words make up 40 percent of the texts of his plays. James Joyce's "Ulysses" contains almost the same number of different words - 29,899 - but just 135 words ("the," "of," "and," "to," etc.) make up half the text Such words are the utility infielders of discourse. We keep them handy on our desktops, so to speak. They illustrate this principle: Most of every activity usesonly a small fraction of available resources. The common words are like paring knives: They perform many functions. The rarely used words (Kenner's example: "colubriform," meaning snake-shaped) can be defined in a few lines. But in the large Oxford English Dictionary, an alipurpose word like "set" (get set to set the table with the dining set, then set the alarm so we can set out...etc.) requires an OED entry two-thirds the length of Paradise Lost. Like die clutter on a cluttered desk, such words are the ones we reach for frequently.The clutter on our desks is the stuff we strew there in accordance with (whether we know it or not) "the principle of least effort." That was expounded in 1950 by George Zipf, a Harvard philologist who became the ideologist of clutter. He established the rationality of the messy desk with this law: Frequency of use draws near to us the things that are frequently used, so some messes accumulate for good reasons. Kenner says that intelligent secretaries have long known that files in heavy use should not be re-filed - that 80 percent of the action involves 20 percent of the files. But the 80-20 rule actually inconveniences clutterologists such as Kenner because, as noted in the 1963 IBM Systems Journal, the 80-20 rule applies, in turn , to the active 20 percent. That is, if you keep 1,000 files , of which 200 bear the most duty, then 20 percent of the 200 - just 40 files - get mostoftheuse,as do eightof those40, and two of those eight Two filesmake for a tidy desk. Victoria gets her way because her father thinks she is perfect in every way and is becoming more so day by day. Unfortunately, Victoria consents only to one application of the 80-20 rule to her 175,000 Crayolas, stencils and other instruments of the serious business of being seven. Got an idea ? A complaint? An opinion? Put it in a L EttET ^ ©Jje Hofe* Editor-in-Chief. Senior News Editor News Editor Features Editors Sports Editor Photography Editors Advertising Managers Business Manager Advisor Kehr Union Building Bloomsburg University Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815 717-389-4457 Don Chomiak Jr. Karen Reiss Tom Sink Lynne Ernst, Lisa Cellini Mike Mullen Robert Finch, Alex Schillemans, Tammy Kemmerer LauraWisnosky, Tricia Anne Reilly Bonnie Hummel, Richard Shaplin, Michelle McCoy John Maittlen-Harris Voice Editorial Policy Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice are the opinions and concerns of the Editor-in-Chief, and do not necessarily reflect 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 Submissions should be sent to The Voice office , Kehr Union Building, Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at the office in the games room.The Voice reserves the right to edit, condenseor reject all submissions. [Plan ahead Shultz: Persuasion key in removing apartheid Mandatory pre-advisement meetings for majors in mathematics; secondary educationmathematics, and aits and science computer and information science are scheduled for the following dates: Juniors and seniors will meet Tuesday, Oct 13, from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in Kuster Auditorium, Hartline 134. Freshman and Sophomores will meet Wednesday, Oct. 14, from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in Kuster Auditorium, Hartline 134. A general meeting of the Economics club is scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 8, at 7 p.m. in the President's Lounge. Present and new members are urged to atttend. Submissions to Bloom magazine are due Oct 23. They can be sent to the magazine in the Kehr Union, box 16 or given to Martha Hartman or Katrina Sheltema in Bakeless 101, Anyone interested in joining the Bloom magazine staff should notify Lisa Hannum at 784-6166. Please give name, phone number, and times you can be reached. Tickets for Lionel Hampton's performance on Sunday, Oct 11, can be pickedup from the Information desk by Community Activity card holders beginning today at 10 p.m. Specially priced tickets for the performance can be purchased for parents who wish to attend this Parent's Weekend event Reduced price is $6. Tickets will be sold on first come, first serve basis. The Atlantic recording group, ENXS, will appear at Bloomsburg University's Nelson Fieldhouse on Tuesday, Oct 27 at 8 p.m. All tickets are general admission and will cost $9 with BU I.D. and $12 without. Tickets are now on sale. For more information and additional sale times and locations, call Jimmy Gilliland at 3894344. The Husky Club will once again host a series of fall football luncheons at the Hotel Magee on Thursdays, beginning at 11:45 to approximately 1 p.m. Cost is $5.00 and includes salad bar, soup, cold cuts and a beverage. Everyone is invited to attend. Anyone interested in entering the pool tournament, scheduled for Oct. 12 at 7 p.m., can sign up now in the games room, KUB. , A $1 entry fee will be collected beginning at 6 p.m. the evening of the tournament The last day to submit applications for December graduation is Friday, Oct 9, at 4:30 p.m.' Nominations for Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges are due Oct 16. Any questions concerning this program should be directed to Dean Robert Norton in the Student Life Office , Ben Franklin Building, Room 11. LA. Times-Washington Post Service Secretary of State George P. Shultz, arguing that South Africa's racial problems cannot be changed by outside pressures, Tuesday night challenged all "South Africans to rise to the test of building a future" based on democracy and an end to apartheid. In a speech here, Shultz gave what amounted to a lengthy restatement of the Reagan administration 's 6-year policy of pursuing change in South Africa through persuasion rather than confrontation with Pretoria 's whiteminority government. "A long-entrenched system of racial oppression must and will be repl ac, |» ij \t i| ]• i| Ji jg 2 •! 5 The shocking truth about date rap e by Lisa Cellini Features Editor Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part scries concerning the issue of date rape. It is important to note that the following story is true. »• Names have been changed to protect diosc involved. Melanie was exhilarated by the cool sea breeze that blew off the Wildwood beach that summer night. Surrounded by fr iends and a comfortable atmosphere , she had every reason to believe, that this two-week trip would be the peak of her last high school summer. While she and her friends were walking on the boardwalk in aflood of carnival lig hts , they met a group of guys who invi ted them to a party. A little wary, but more excited , the girls agreed to go. That ' s where Me lanie met Larry. Charming, witty, and overwhelming ly handsome , Larry was different from anyone Melanie had ever met. When he asked her if she would take a walk on the beach with him, she was thrilled. Romance at the beach; what better way to enjoy her vacation? Twenty minutes in the cool nig ht air prompted Larry to go to his room to gel a jacket. Melanie forsa w no danger , and agreed to accompany him to his hotel room for a coup le of minutes. When they arrived , he took his time getting his jacket , and asked her to sit down for a while . She fell uncomfortable and self-conscious , but did so. After watching a f e w television shows , he started to kiss her lig htly along the neck. As his persistence continue to build , Melanie timidly asked him to stop, but her pleafell on deaf ears. He seemed to become more excited each lime she resisted. Unable to stop his advances physically or verbahy, Melanie was brutally raped - not by a dark stranger who grabbed her in a dark alley, but by someone she never expected to fear. The trauma she experienced left her with feelings of rage , fear and confusion. Blaming herself for much of what happened , Melanie found it hard to trust even the people she loved most. She literally felt eslrangedfrom society. This scenario isn 't as uncommon as many people would like to believe. According to several studies, date rape is one of die most prevalent crimes in the United Suites today, and yet it is the least reported. In 1985, 87,340 forcible rapes were reported to United Suites authorities , and experts believe this number to be less than one half of die true number . Dale rape is most likely to occur to women in an unfamiliar environment who are between the ages of 15 and 24, making it a crime most likely to happen on college campuses. Although many universities arc reluctant to admit the prevalence of acquaintance rape, some colleges have recognized the need for rape crisis and counseling centers affiliated with the campus, administration and students. Mary Koss, a psychologist at Kent Sui te University, Ohio, studied the frequency of dale rape in a three year research project involving 6,200 male and female students in 32 differ- ent universities across the nation. According to her investigations , 15 percent of the women interviewed recounted experiences that could be defined as rape, and more than half of these were considered date rape. More often than not, these women did not realize they had been raped. Her research disclosed some startling facts about male perceptions of date rape. When interviewed, one male io 13 admitted attempting or committing at least one rape. In 1980, a similar report at UCLA revealed that half of the male students on campus would rape a woman under certain circumstances if they would not be held responsible for their actions. In a study pertaining to this, a team of Texan psychologists interviewed 268 college men approximately 19 years of age. Essentially, they discovered that young men belong to one of two groups: traditionalists and egalitarians. Traditionalists believe ihnt men should be aggressive in society, whereas woman should be passive. They also believe that women have been trained to submit to the wishes of the men. Conversely, egalitarians believe that women and men should respect each other, and that one sex should not dominate over the other. Date rapists often fal l in the traditionalist category. They tend to be more sexually active, domineering, and have a history of antisocial behavior. In the next issue, we will explore the myths associated with sex and rape , communication problems between the sexes, and ways to prevent date rape. by Douglas Kapson Staff Writer II was ten minutes after eleven on a Monday ni ght. As was the usual ritual , my roommate and I were engaged in a conversation of weighty proportions. There was a real tone of reminiscence in my roommate 's voice when he asked me , "I Icy, Doug, remember Schoolhouse Rock?" How could 1 possibl y forget the classic scries that used to be an American standard? How could I forget gelling up at the crack of dawn on Saturday mornings to watch Scooby Doo, The Pink PanUicr , and others? I low many of us were spouting off our times tables long before we even heard about them in school , thanks to 'Little Ten Toes'? I will never forget that "a noun is a person , place or thing " thanks to the folks at Schoolhousc Rock. We all learned how to use conjunctions properly from our buddies down at 'Conjunction Junction ', as they told us we "could go up to the mountain or down to the sea." Everyone has got to remember 'Verb : That 's What 's Happenin '! English was not the only wisdom that the folks at ABC endowed us with. The Schoolhouse Rockers also told us about our grand history. "Well , the shot heard 'round the world was the start of the revolution. The British were already on the move." Can anyone say that they learned the preamble to the Constitution by any other means than Schoolhouse Rock? The Rockers were even into science. They told about the solar system and the planets with the talc of 'Interplanet Janet'. How many of our nursing majors might have originally been inspired by the word s, "Oh, there's a telegraph line; you 've got yours and I've got mine. It's called the nervous system."? So remember, gang, "Next time you go on a trip, remember this little tip. The minute you get back , they 'll ask you this and that. You can describe people, places and things. Simply unpack your adjectives. " Then thank the folks down at Schoolhouse Rock . f Schoolhouse Rock 9 taught us well This blonde appears to be studying dili gently in the Indian Summer sun which graced our campus this week . Photo by Kris djiCosU Photo by H. Kelly Nil Omicron gets down to business R U S S E L L 'S I ^<3= 5^W\ 587 - 1 5 5 2 Marlon faked mental disturbance and fooled the military psychiatrist. Studying drama under Stella Adlcr at the New School , he shared an apartment with his old Omaha classmate Wall y Cox , the quintessential wimp who became TV' s beloved "Mr. Peepers." Later on, when both were big stars, a doctored picture showing them in a homosexual act made the rounds of Hollywood , but Higham claims diere was nothing between them except the odd protective love of a bully for a 90-pound weakling. Throug hout their early New York days, "Wally Cox continued to occupy center slage in Marlon 's life - he was more important to Marlon than any of his women, and Cox returned the favor by imitating Brando , even to the extent of buying a black leather jacket and a motorcycle. John Garfield was everyone's first choice to play Stanley Kowalski in "Streetcar," but his contractual demands were impossible and so were Burt Lancaster's, so Brando got it. It did not hurt his cause that he also fixed Tennessee Williams' overflowing toilet when he went out to the playwright's Long Island cottage for a reading. Higham describes this symbolic scene - Brando's brawny arm plunging into the effluvia as an ecstatic Williams watched. But his descriptions of Brando in die play descend into gush: "...he was at his most authoritative and powerful that night. He was male sex personified," and on and on. The author lays on the noble savage theme with such a tireless trowel that he makes a heroine of Louella Parsons, who said of the hunk: "As far as I'm concerned he can drop dead. He has the manners of a chimpanzee, the gall of a Kinsey researcher, and a swelled head the size of a Navy blimp, and just as pointed." Brando 's highly touted love for dark-skinned , persecuted minorities becomes suspect when viewed against his behavior around a certain female type. Ladies terrified him. He went out of his way to insult Merle Oberon and Jean Simmons on the set of "Desiree" in which he played Napoleon , and took umbrage at Vivien Leigh's good manners, bristling when she said "please" and "thank you." Tallulah Bankhead , who was an American Brahmin despite her foul mouth , triggered his sadistic disdain and , like the proper Englishwomen, left him sexually cold. His preferred bed partners were pliant native girls like the ones he met in Polynesia while filming "Mutiny on the Bounty ." "Tarita," Higham writes, "fulfilled Marlon 's fantasies and became the embodiment of some South Seas goddess." This sort of thing, plus a howler of a mistake in a Shakespearean quotation , make "Brando" the embodiment of a bad book. title: a smooth-talking, charming who can pick up most girls Romeo ¦ ^ with a snap of his fingers. Ringwald is | ¦ the object of his desire. At first , she ¦ resists his advances, but finally suc_ cumbs to his charm and spends a 'passionate moment with him in his ' car. I Afterwards , she doesn 't want to see I him again. Of course, he continues to pursue her and of course, she contini| The first 30 minutes of the movie are light-hearted attempts at comedy; however the rest of the movie is too heavy-handed. If writer/director James Toback would have made either a straight-forward comedy or a straight-forward drama it would have worked. However, the comedy was loo light and the drama too heavy. The two unsatisfied halves never combine to make a satisfied whole. The Nu Omicron chapter of Phi Beta Lambda has three advisors: Dr. Peter Bohling, professor of economics; Janice C. Keil , professor of business education , who was named Past Stale Alumni Lias ion and First State Alumni President; and Dr. Emory W. Rari g, Jr., professor of management, who was designated as "Advisor of the Year" by the State Executive Council of Pennsylvania. Higham 's "Brando " considered a bad book L.A. Times- Washington Post Service Once upon a time, back in the good old days before everybody got sensitive to the needs of others, elementary-school teachers used to break children of certain habits by marking them down in a wonderfully subjective category known as "citizenship. " Thanks to legions of determined Miss Doves, nose-picking, belching, flatulence , scratching, slouching and mumbling had been brought pretty much under control by Dec. 3, 1947, when suddenly they all made a comeback. That was the night Marlon Brando threw a bloody package of raw meat at Kim Hunter in the New York opening of "A Streetcar Named Desire." The Age of the Intense Troglodyte had dawned. Hollywood biographer Charles Higham , author of books on Davis, Flynn and both Hepburns, has now turned his sights on Old Jock Itch. They are necessarily unauthorized because Brando has not been seen or heard from since 1980.Weighing 350 pounds, he has turned into a hermit in his Los Angeles home where he studies philosophy and serves as his own guru. After being expelled from the military school that was supposed to straighten him out, 19-year-old Marlon headed for New York in 1943. The secret behind his 4-F draft status is locked up in the army 's World War II records, but the legend lingers that clip end save Travel with Trans- Bridge B Bloomsburg LehiBhton Allcnlown Bui Terminal BethlehemBus Terminal Lehigh Valley Ind.. Park Easton Bui Terminal 7:50pm 9:20 pm 9:45 pm 10:00 pm 10:15 pm 10:35 pm ¦ New York City 12:20 am ( 1 17 West Main Street Bloomsburg, PA chapters for the quality and quantity of its activities and accomplishments. Presently, the officers are as follows: Wanda Haas, president; Teresa Perry, vice-president; Elizabeth Arnotl, secretary; and Anita Eckhart, treasurer. These people, plus ten committee chairpersons, constitute the management team that makes plans for the year and guides the club to even grea ter accomplishments during this academic year. Bloomsburg University is the home of the world's largest local chapter of Future Business Leaders of America, or Phi Beta Lambda. It is a non-profit educational organization made up of students pursuing careers at the collegiate level. The Nu Omicron chapter of PBL, established on this campus in 1967, promotes the following organizational goals: competent, aggressive business leadership; comprehension of American business enterprise; establishment of career goals; encouragement of scholarship; promotion of sound financial management; development of character and self-confi dence; and simplification of schoolto-work transtions. With more than 220,000 active members in over 10,000 active chapters throughout the world , its on- Soups , Salads and Sandwiches all I^Jllll day...and cocktails 'til 2:00 a.m....7 days r^^^^EHIGH VALLEY, CLINTON a week NEWARK AIRPORT & |^^B^ Stop in and check out our new 6 NEW YORK CITY I i page Late Night Menu or relax on Compare our Prices & Schedule I Sundays and enjoy a Champagne Monday: Lea ves Friday : I Brunch from 10:00 a.m. \ We are now booking our holiday parties,please call and reserve f o r your specia l group. going motto is Getung Involved. Nu Omicron of BU presently has 230 members and is growing. President Wanda Haas' plans to acquire a total of 320 members by the end of the academic year. Club members engage in all kinds of constructive activities and services. In 1987, the Bloomsburg chapter won fi rst, second or third places in over 20 diffcrcnt categories a t the annual Stalc Leadership Conference competitions , thereby earning the title of "Top Club in the State." This is an honor that has been won by the Nu Omicron chapter eight times, including 1987. At the National Leadership Conference, held this year in Anaheim , California , three members of the club placed in the national and international top ten in several competitions. Furthermore, Nu Omicron was again designated a "Gold Seal" chapter, placing it in the top three percent of all by Kim LeFe ver for The Voice Artist could he better EL Ed. Majors : watch for our Pick-Up by Mike Moyer ues to resist him. He discovers that her Staff Writer alcoholic father owes a $25,000 debt series on innovative teaching Robert Downey and Molly Ring- and wants to help. Downey and Ringwald star in The Pick-Up Artist , a wald go to Adantic City to win money of gambling on love. for the debt and finally profess their techniques used in the area!! storyDowney is the pick-up artist of the love for each other. E n 1 o y Fine f o o d a>id s p i r i t s at Serving Dinner 4:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Becky Solsman and Dana Pettinato must be discussing the liner points of academic life in front of McCormick. \I | 8JSI* i?liiipx 12:15 am 1:35 am 2:05 am 2:15 am [ I j i \ g BTE announces autumn sale | | The Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble will hold a rumage sale on Saturday, October 10 from 12-4 p.m. | at the BTE Mitrani Building, located ¦ at Strawberry and Pine Avenues in \downtown Bloomsburg (behind the JB Columbia County Farmers National | I I ¦ | Call or Stop in - Carter Cut Rate 422 East Street/784-8689 III and ask for Trans-Bridge schedule effective: September 11,1987 J J] * ^» nam an ana aaai ana aaa ana am Bar m m aaaaianal aaaai nan Hal warn mm aaaaaaaa aaa mr Bank). Clothes, hats, purses, a few costumes and a broad range of miscellaneous items will be on sale at prices ranging from 25 cents to a dollar. The rummage sale is being held in conjunction with downtown Bloomsburg's Festive Fall. Classics Revisited Pink Floyd's 'Wall' personifies old band Coed basketball looks promising for these two players. rho|o chrlJ bJr ^j Pros and cons ofmotor,turbo power but more lrequently. by Ted Kistler Staff Writer Unbeknownst to many, an automobile's turbocharger refers to the device which charges each cylinder of the motor with air, packed underpressure , by means of a turbine. Here's how it works in a nutshell. Your motor works much like an air pump. The exhaust fumes leave the motor under pressure and at high speed. When the pressure becomes great enough, it forces open a little door in the exhaust manifolds (the things the exhaust pipes are connected to on the motor). This open door allows accelerated gas to pass over a turbine which spins. If you were sitting in a car right now, you would have seen the boost gauge go up as the pressure increased. As the turbo began spinning, power from the motor would have gone up considerably. The power increase is due to a second turbine , connected to the first , which pumps air to your motor under pressure. Simple, right? So, what we have here is an air pump, feeding the motor fresh air, driven by exhaust fumes. The important thing is to understand the principle. Now, let's get to why the turbo has become so popular. Image is part of it. There seems to be a mystique surrounding those badges on the fender. Even more important is that the turbo is an effective means of producing power while still making the motor more efficient. It does this by using otherwise-wasted energy (the exhaust fumes). It also burns the fuel more completely, due to the presence of more oxygen, so a turbo motor produces less pollution. It almost sounds like the perfect option , right? Wrong. Although the turbo has some very important benefits, it also has its drawbacks, the greatest of which is service life. A turbo is a hand-full to own. The turbine spins quickly, meaning that friction is built up. Friction requires lubrication . Few people know that turbos need oil changes, as does the Professor and wife to hold recital William and Mary Decker will present a recital of great German chamber music in Carver Auditorium, Sunday, October 4 at 2:30 p.m. Prelude and Fugue in C# major (WTC II), and three songs from the Anna Magdalena Notebook by Bach; Mozart's Sonata in B Flat for Four Hands; Schubert 's "Shepherd oa the Rock" for clarinet, voice and piano, four part songs by Schubert , operetta selections, and "Frauen Liebe Und Leben," the famous song cycle by Robert Schumann are the evening's selections. Guest performers will include John Couch, piano; Mark Jelinek, cello; Terry Oxley, clarinet; Lucille Rosholt, piano; and Mary Jean Casale and Phil Heizer as singers. The public is cordially invited to attend this event and there will be no admission charge. If maintenance is performed dutifull y, you should expect 40-60,000 trouble-free miles. After that , though, the turbo will probably need to be replaced. I can hear it already. Someone is out there saying, "My Dad has a riceburner with 400 million , billion miles and everything works, even the cigarette lighter." Maybe. Your dad has probably won the lottery six times, too. A second drawback to the turbo is in the way the motor produces its power. Firstly, a turbo works in an off-on-offon manner. This means high power, low power surges. Secondly, it takes a while to accelerate the car. S ince most motors are small-displacement fourcylinders, you won't have a hot rod until somebody in a V-6 has already passed you. The turbo, though , is still a great idea when you consider these aspects: reduction in pollution , the perform ance boost it gives dull motors, and fuel efficiency. Singers to appear in Kehr Union by Mara Uummoe Staff Writer Kim and Reggie Harris, a duo from Philadelphia , perform traditional songs, spirituals, and pop rock originals. They will be appearing on BU's Soundstage in Kehr Union, Sunday, October 4, at 8 p.m. Their combination of acoustic guitars and subtle vocal arrangements with light percussion add versatility to their performance. In 1981, the release of their first single "Stranger in the Shadows" was followed by their first album "Music and the Underground Railroad", both on the Ascension Records label. The album is a scripted concert of songs, stories and narratives associated with the fact and legend of the Underground Railroad. Entertaining at colleges, clubs, and in various concert and festival settings, their warm positive image is sure to be a hit at BU again this year. hording. "One of My Turns" opens with a groupie entering Floyd's dressing room, astounded. "This place is bigger than my whole apartment. Ya wanna take a bath?" she coos. "/ need you babe I to put through the shredder infront of myfriends...to beat to a pulp on a Saturday night. " Side two ends with Floyd's complete loss of sanity, as he contemplates suicide on "Goodbye Cruel World." Sides three and four break into the consequences of Floyd 's disease; even the song lyrics are printed out of order. Personal misconceptions of his disease on "Hey You" are temporarily soothed on "Comfortably Numb," a painfull y realistic account of the addict and his habit. He reflects on married life in "Vera Lynn," recalling for a moment the brief happiness he felt when he was in love. By side four, the Wall i.« complete sjnd Floyd has cut himself off from all reality. He is "waiting for the worms" behind his Wall. The album ends with "The Trial" and "Outside the Wall." Floyd is tried before his peers in condemnation of the way he has lived his life. His old schoolmaster, ex-wife, and mother testify before him , damning him for his maltreatment of those who loved him throughout his life. In the end he is sentenced to life in reality and must tear down the Wall he has built for himself. We wonder then , after all is said and done, is it harder to live behind the Wall, or to be the loving outsider trying vainly to break Features Editor "Does anybody really know what time it is? Does anybody really care?" asked the rock group Chicago in the early 70s. Many Bloomsburg students find themselves asking the same question. To answer the first question, 'Does anybody really know what time it is?' I'd have to give an emphatic no. How can anybody know what time it is when a large majority of classrooms on this campus don 't even have a clock on the wall? Being a time-conscious person, I find it very disheartening to go to look at the time, and find a vast hole with unconnected wires in the place of a clock. We've been back at school for a month now, and these missing clocks creature of habit , I continously find myself looking up only to find-still no clock. It's as if I'm looking for the return of a lost friend. Question: Where did they all go? rffw«?Hiu«p£ Ufflfi ^* 1 HBH^fia^HRSs And what's even worse than the clocks that aren 't on the walls is the clocks that are on the walls. Did you £"¦ Vj V¦. ' ffflnWIjl ever notice that no two clocks on this WsmWMM$ix* $ % JMHSBKaBg^ "^ggL, * f JPfffMIEP campus seem to keep the same time? I've been late for classes where I thought I would be on time simply because the clock in the classroom was set five minutes ahead (either Sttp L42DFO* \, iMKaSSSHKil ."¦".. >a£ l ~\ * ^*J -0' unwittingly or by students wishing to lEffiSr-JUl lwBfff i^JSs3lM&£i >Vil!k,* "* *. ij '' ' ™'&>*JSST3mWEmmn/, reduce classtime). * OEKiBffiWi^gaBaM SBitr j^A a ¦*¦¦ *~v i «oPi fcjni SmEt.Y^KK^MBB&A) , '„ ** **-*ft \ , .iji »>/Fi ^JB» *W«1MHHK?J MES* vsKESiirvl? 2 iS«. Time has always been intangible, but does it have to be invisible in the classroom? <¦ - - 1\!j^*r3BMB» WfflHE^LLL* r • #1 • * it down? Waters turns in masterful vocal and bass performances throughout the record , bleeding every note out with the same burning passion with which guitarist David Gilmour plays his solos. His vocal spirit becomes a sepcrate instrument within itself , play ing a vital role in conveying the message of the Wall. Withoutthecollaboration of these two genuises the Wall could never have been. What would "Comfortabl y Numb" be without Gilmour 's emotive solo, or "Hey You" without Waters whispering into the mike one second , and singing his heart out the next? In the end . Pink Floyd is Pink Clocks never tell correct time by Lynne Ernst show no signs of returning. But , as a \^^m§^S *"• * * * < -*•"^ ^aSHBB KtfKgb' ' ' r*\ ^Gj^i^iJBH| Peres offers teenagers 'musical prayer ' by Deborah Caulfield cert) would mean a great deal to the LA. Times-Washington Post Service young people. You know, these faIsraeli Foreign Minister Shimon mous names in California are as well Peres, in an unprecedented appear- known in Israel. You would not beance before a group of key recording lieve how popular they are!" industry executives, personal managers, agents and lawyers, said that rock music was "like praying" to some Israeli youth and exhorted them to "come pray with our young people, so they will celebrate our 40th anniversary" in 1988. Peres was joine d by Israeli cultural leader Yakov Agmon who is organizing the celebration."Our aim is peace through rock (music),"Agmon said. "That's the way to get to young people." - -1_„*^j •) 3mmmwmmKtiSmWSBdS>2L.. WS S S S wg ^i" ^Sf j 1 I Attention: "We're a singing country," Peres said. "Although we're often not terribly approving of young people's music, I know that it 's a way of praying." ,— , 1 I NTERNSHIPS IN PENNSYLVANIA STATE GOVERNMENT FOR JUNIORS If your parents have not been noti- : Red about 'Parents \ Weekend', call Jimmy Gilliand at j 389-4344. |j Applications are being accepeted now for Juniors majoring in Computer Science or Accounting for the States' Computer Systems or Accounting Intern programs. In addition to a competitive salary averaging over $7.50 per hour interns may be able to receive college credit for participating and be able to return to a full-time management level job after the completion of the internship and graduation. Additional information on these opportunities is available from your Career Services/Placement Office OR: BENNY MARTINEZ COLLEGE RELATIONS PROGRAM STATE CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION P.O. Box 569 Harrisburg, PA 17120 (717) 787-6652 Benny Martinez will also be conducting a general presentaion regarding these Internships at Bloomsburg University on November 3, 1987. Please contact your Career Services/Placemen t Office for further information. APPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED UNTIL DECEMBER 4, 1987 THE COMMONWEALTH IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER '. —A , ,. ^fz^SQEssSm^D) * - "-* _vr~t& « "*** tJ*e58af» g *Vr When confronted with a mental illness , families experience a wide range of emotional responses. From outrage to shame and denial. They often blame victims for causing worry, embarrassment , famil y strife. And they often blame themselves . But mental illness is no one 's fault. Least of all those afflicted . It 's a serious medical illness that affects one in four families—afflicting 35 million Americans fro m all m XX W ftj W W $ w Recognizing the warning signs and seeking treatment for your loved one can be the first steps to reducing family fears and confusion. And to actuall y healing the sickness. Today, mental illness need not be hopeless. Learn more. For an informative booklet , write: The American Menial Health Fund , P.O. Box 17700 , Washington, D.C. 20041. Orcall toll free: 1-800-433-5959. In Illinois , call: 1-800-826-2336. « W m flj 8J % $ ffi Learn to see the sickness. Learning is the key to healing. THE AMERICAN MENTAL HEALTH FUND fjfljl $ | UNDERSTANDING MENTAL ILLNESS CAMPAIGN NEWSPAPER AD NO. UMI-86-1094—2 COL. ffl 8 I Inviting All Collegians ^7&e ^jPos&f oM \Jkee /Z td.mtS $567.75 Bi-Weekly ^- Floyd. The new Momentary Lapse of Reason tour is a spectacular light show trying to gloss over the fact that the original band is no longer compatible, and hence can 't tour together. The real Pink Floyd is on classics '70's vinyl, on Dark Side of the Moon , Animals, Works , and Wish You Were Here, among others. What once worked as a perfect unit is now fragmented into solo acts which , though creditable efforts in and of themselves, will most likely never be able to reach the pinnacle of the original Pink Floyd. "The band is fust fantastic , that is really what I think/ Oh, by the way, which one ' s 'Pink?'" by Ken Kirsh Staff Writer "So ya, thought ya, might like to , go » to the show..." Well, then, welcome to the show. Rock music's most scathing account of the causes and consequences of schizophrenia and paranoia is, from start to finish , a masterpiece unrivaled. The story of The Wall , based on the life of Pink Floyd songwriter Roger Waters, is of a fictitious character appropriately named Pink Floyd, a strung-out rock star at the end of his rope. This autobiographical angle allows Waters the chance to climb inside of Floyd and present the movie and album from Floyd's point of view. Floyd is basically a man ahead of his time, but he lacks the mental stability to realize and act on it. As a child he loses his father to war and is left to be raised by an obsessed and overprotective mother. "Mama's gonna check out all your girlfriends for you I Mama won ' t let anyone dirty get through." Floyd is torn by the vague images of war he had witnessed as a infant , and the scars they left on him. He is asocial as a child. His school years fleet by like a nightmare. He is an outcast among victims; subject to the cruel whims of a vindictive school system headed by sadistic schoolmasters (pointer sticks and hammerheads). As a young man , his only love relationship a wreck, Floyd the rock star turns to sexual obsession and groupie tA "new concept" in outlets Personalized Service I Up to 50% savings and more everyday on nationally advertised apparel *additional 10% discount with | Bloomsburg University id *Sweaters *Dresses *Shirts *Acid-washed Denim *Formals The Fashion Tree Ltd. 349 E. Bowman Street Berwick 759-2288 fS» ISHB Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5 Fri til 9 |™gf Layaways I | *Suits *Skirts a*Blazers Io [The Fashion Tree! H Ltd. I £ £ n^u^rn Fo7e7 y "> f ^• - g^ 3rd st- fe-— KI . 11 — Experience the fashion outlet of the 80' s, where everyday is a sale day. | collegiate crossword © Edward Julius ACROSS em0 ~ Classified~s & Personals BMYS ft W8RTS ( 16,278 to choose from—all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD WM$%/ 800-351-0222 ranl'lHIIIHty in Calil. 1213)477-8226 Or , rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports 11322 Idaho Ave #206-SN . Los Angeles. CA 90025 Custom research also available-all levels NEED TYPING DONE? Experi enced typist will type term papers, resumes , thesis, etc. Reasonable rate. Call Pat at 784-4437. HOMEWORKERS WANTED! TOP PAY! C.I. 121 24th Ave., N .W. Suite 222 Norman , OK 73069 WILL DO TYPING: Resumes, term papers , etc. Reasonable rates; efficient service. Have access to word processor for special projects. Call Loric at 784-8507. R .N.and L.P.N.Mental Health Nurscs's. Prison Health Services, Inc. is seeking R.N.'s and L.P.N.'s for the Mental Health Unit at the Suite Correctional Institution , Muncy, PA. Part-time and PRN positions available. For information , call Rcnce Shrimp, 546-3171,ext. 395. An E.O.E. TYPING DONE CHEAP!! Call Lisa at 784-8784. Have a Happy Birthday Kimmy!!! Love Ya , Sheri Amy - We enjoyed your visit. You're always welcomed back. Just bring your own cow next time. M + DS LobsteTlovers unite ! Ban Against OLouAnn! H Uork in a restaurant 12 Reply (abbr.) 13 Rocky cliff 18 That: Fr. 22 Sharp turn 24 Potential base hit 25 A Roosevelt 27 French menu item 29 City in Georgia 30 Astronomy prefix 31 War memorials 32 Pig poke 33 Take it very easy 35 Certain votes 37 Sault 39 Letter opener 40 Pepsin and ptyalin 41 Pince 44 More infuriated 46 Miss Arden 48 Change the Constitution 49 Cup for cafe au lait 50 Foreigner 51 Element #30 (pi.) 52 Piquancy 54 Spanish for island 56 Slangy photos 57 Here: Fr. BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed THE FAR SIDE How many more days of clinical? | I'm stressing !!!!!!! KURT : Here is the latest update from Karen ... she misses you. Why not come visit. Come on - GO FOF IT !! Dear Penguin Pilferer, We miss our Opus' on the door. Please return to North , 204 Kyle and Don - You owe me a MAJOR favor. Tricia I By GARY LARSON Scene from a corporate fairy tale collegiate camouflage * THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON "Yes,yes, I know that, Sidney ... everybody knows that\ ... But look: Four wrongs squared, minus two wrongs to the fourth power,divided by this formula, do make a right." THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON To my Favorite Coach Grace, Thanks for all your help - You are the best! I Love You, Mary Ellen! Fl People should think before they say something. It's not always that easy to erase. Your Welcome. Rick Warren, How can I get your attention? I'm still interested! Dirty Dancer Kellie, Congratulations & Good Luck! Love, Lar, Aunt Cath, Ang, Monm , Dad, Tarn , Lynnie, & Poucl Turko Nancy Reagan Tangerine Nicaragua Cincinnati Nose Hairs Happy 21st Birthday, Patti!!! Love your roomies! Happy 21st Birthday Lisa!!! Love your roomies! Brian , We could never forget your 21st Birthday-so here's to it! Have a good one! Love The Pine Street Suitehearts Hey Diana! Have a great 19th Birthday!! You are more special than you'll ever know!!! - Carol & I wish to place a classified ad under the heading: > -Announcements 'For Sale -Personals "Wanted "0ther I enclose p for words. Five cents per word. Nerds in hell THE FAR SIDE J. Deb CLASSIFIEDS I by Berke Breathed C o l l e g i a t e CW8703 ^^ 47 Gaudy exhibition 53 Home for birds 1 Actor Everett , et al . 55 Charlotte 6 Finishes a cake 56 Thin limb 58 Pine extracts 10 Pete Weber 's organization 59 German pronoun majesty 13 Attach , as a bow 60 tie (2 wds.) 61 Entomologist' s " 14 "I Remember specimen 15 Keyboard maneuver 62 Greek letters 16 Gulch 63 Part of B.A. 17 phone 64 Barbara and 19 Amphitheatres : Lat. Anthony 20 Ascends 21 Low-mpg car {2 wds) DOWN 23 Pinball machine word 1 Bow or Barton 26 parade 2 Itchy skin con28 Vegas cube dition 29 Gummy substances 3 Mimicking 34 In an unstable 4 German name for position (2 wds.) the Danube 36 Negative verb form 5 Take lightly (2 wds.) (2 wds.) 37 Pelted with rocks 6 Sudden urge 38 Zone 7 Magic flyers 39 D.D.S. 's field 8 Political refugee 42 Yoko 9 Healthy: Sp. 43 Mortgage bearer 10 Cleveland , e.g. I" VOICE BLOOM COUNTY Send to: Box 97 KUB or drop in ., .. », . the Voice mail slot, in Union before 12 p m on Wed. for Monday 's paper I By GARY LARSON Can you find the hidden Ancient ereeKs / AESCHYLUS AESOP ANAXAGORAS ARCHIMEDES ARISTOPHANES ARISTOTLE DEMOSTHENES DIONYSIUS EPICURUS EURIPIDES HERACLITUS HERODOTUS HESIOD HIPPOCRATES HOMER PINDAR PLATO PLUTARCH PYTHAGORAS THEOCRITUS THUCYDIDES TIMON XENOPHON ZENO or Monday for Thursday's paper. AU classifieds MUST be prepaid. "And always — always — remember this: A swimmer in the water is worth two on the beach." Does the 'natural high' really exist? l ne Bloomsburg University Field Hockey team overwhelmed Indiana university or Pennsylvania iuesaay with a 4-1 victory. IUP managed only 2 shots on goal to the Huskies 43 and BU outcornered IUP 16-1. Sophomore, Sharon Reilly, had two goals in the first half for BU, one on an assist from junior, Alicia Terrizze. With a minute left in the first, junior, Chris Pudloski , scored on an assist from senior, Reen Duffy. Three minutes into the second half, Duff y scored an unassisted goal to end the scoring for the Huskies. IUP's Kim Simion scored ten minutes later. BU's junior varsity team played immediately following and scored a decisive 5-0 victory over the IUP JV. The Huskies next home game is Saturday Oct. 3 against Shippensburg at 1 p.m. Carlo Mahnak Staff Writer Do athletes really experience a "physical high" after working out? Have you ever gone for a long run or bike ride and after you have finished feel 10 times better then when you started out? How about when you've watched the Boston Marathon or the Ironman Triathalons on television, ' did you ever notice that many of those athletes look as if they have just taken some kind of drug that makes them look like they are "high"? For many athletes, who are involved in intense training programs, this state of "euphoria " is not all that uncommon. These feelings of well being that are experienced by these athletes are due to a bodily response to pain. In order to combat this pain , the body secretes a hormone called an endorphin , which moves in and blocks the pain signal that is being transmitted. blood and the central nervous system. Much like morp hine , these hormones are the body 's natural means for the blocking of pain. Studies have shown that there are sufficiently increased levels of endorphins in the block immediately after exercise as when compared to the onset of exercise. It is because to these increased levels that many athletes experience mood changes, feelings of well being and/or the feeling as if they are in a state of euphoria. Aside frorri the athletes responses, scien tists have found when endorphin levels are increased in non-athletic people, they tend to help in pain relief, appetite control , reproduction (primarily fertility and impotence) and heat regulation . It is because of these endorphins that some women do not feel any pain during the childbirthing process. In more recent studies, it has been hypothesized that endorphins can be increased through accupuncture , placebos, transcutaneous electrical Endorphins are found primarily in nerve stimulation and mental imthe pituitary gland, adrenal gland , agery. If this is the case, many scientists who are studying depression feel that if the endorphin levels are increased in these depressed people, maybe this depression can be relieved. This stems from the findings of lower endorphin levels in people suffering from depression. Though there are many positive attributes to endorphins, the most prominant negative feature comes about when athletes become addicted to exercise. Many of these athletes exercisejust to achieve these feelings of well being. Unfortunately, when they are forced to stop due to injury or other circumstances, many of them suffer withdrawl symptoms, such as anxiety, depression, and irritability. If these athletes would cut back gradually, and reduce training when injury begins to set in, then these withdrawl symptoms can be decreased. Keep in mind that this does not happen to everyone. For the most part this is only reserved for the intense, and very serious athlete. It is impossible to get any good deals"say team owners by Kenneth Reich The deal under which the Los Angeles Raiders are being given $115 million in financing to move to Irwindale, Calif., and build a football stadium there may seem extraordinary. But the Irwindale-Raider agreement is only one example of the lucrative offers being solicited or made these days to retain or obtain such professional sports teams, according to 120 stadium executives and municipal officials who gathered here Monday and Tuesday from all over the country for a two-day conference. One speaker after another said at the meeting, sponsored by the International City Management Association, that owners of professional franchises are putting unprecedented pressure on public authorities for big giveaways, which many say are unjustified by simple economics. For instance, the assistant New York City comptroller, Steven Newman, told how George Steinbrenner, owner of the New York Yankees, is threatening to move the baseball team to New Jersey's Meadowlandsa move made earlier by the New York Jets and Giants football franchises- unless New York gives Yankee Stadium a commuter train stop that would cost millions of dollars. "Clearly, the most important aspect of sports is not economics," sa id Newman, explaining the city point of view. "Never has been , never will be. It's psychological. It's a question of playing on municipal pride in having a team.... And often , it's political." Quite frankly, Newman said, neither the mayor of New York nor any of the other New York politicians involved want to be accused later of losing the Yankees. So, he indicated , the commuter train station might well be provided. Another speaker, Mike McGee, general manager of the Summit Stadium in Houston , said that even as he spoke the City of Jacksonville, Fla., was detailing a $115-million , 10year offer to lure the Houston Oilers football team to the Florida city. "That's $70 million more than they could receive in Houston during the same time frame ," McGee said. He said he wondered whether the offer would be accepted that day. (It was not). William Waterman, chairman of the Stadium and Building Authority for the Pontiac, Mich., Silverdome, said the experience of his facility is that it must give away so much in services to get big events, such as the Super Bowl , that there is no way it gets a fair return unless a big commercial company, such as General Motors, also comes in to help subsidize the event. These were only a few of the ex- 1South Dakota(4) 2 Northern Michigan 3 Portland St. tie Texas A&I tie West Chester 6 North Dakota St. 7 Val Dosta St. 8 Central Florida 9 Millersville 10 Jacksonville St. 11Tuskeegee 12 Cal-Davis 13 E. New Mexico 14 Indiana, Pa. 15 North Alabama 16 Delta St. 17 New Haven 18 Ashland tie Cal Poly SLO 20 Mankato St. 4-0-0 4-0-0 3-1-0 2-1-0 3-1-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 4-0-0 1-1-0 4-0-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 3-0-0 3-0-0 amples given here. Washington representatives told how the Washington Redskins football team owner , Jack Kent Cook, is threatening to leave for the suburbs unless he is given a new, fancier stadium in Washington. The executive assistant to the mayor of Charlotte, N.C., said his city was willing to build a $47million stadium to entice a National Basketball Association team to Charlotte. Baltimore was said ready to build two stadiums to attract teams. At a panel discussion Tuesday, a stadium expert and Lake Forest College economics professor, Rober^ Baade, said that "more aggressive behavior" by team owners, making ever-greater demands on public offi- cials, is beginning to be balanced by what he termed "greater public awareness of owner extortion." But, he went on, there is still a need for "cities to develop countervailing of power to avoid being used and exploited" by the owners. Ray Ward, executive vice president of the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum in California , had said earlier that the city's position in relations with the owners is a difficult one. "They attempt to deal with the less knowledgeable, more pressurable type of official," he said, and to change what ought to be a business relationship into "an exercise in macho." ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss Ward said that in some cases, officials conclude "that if you have to have a team , you 'd better resign yourself to giving them the office keys." On Monday, the Cincinnati Reds baseball team owner, Marge Schott, opened the conference by mentioning some of her frustrations in dealing with Cincinnati officials. * While expressing devotion to Cincinnati , her hometown , Schott said, "There 's always a chance of a team moving- because that 's where the big bucks are." While the tenor of the conference was mainl y that the professional team owners are usually unreasonable, a differen t point of view was ^ssssssssssssssssss presented by Xavier Hermosillo, spokesman for the City of Irwindale, who told the meeting that Irwindale has found the Raiders owner, Al Davis, "very reasonable and supportive." Irwindale feels that the money it is putting up to secure the Raiders is well within reason because it has concluded that the team will bring in $250 million in business to the city every year, Hermosillo said. Other speakers were skeptical about such projects. 'The economic band wagon may t>e greatly exaggerated," said the Summit's McGee. "It's becoming almost impossible to get a good deal." ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss -r.ioiNew^paperr-Youmay alter ad sizes however you please, however, you must not alter the content in any way! W NCAA Division II Top 20 80 76 68 68 68 60 56 51 49 44 38 34 32 27 25 19 11 9 9 8 1 3 t6 5 t6 8 9 2 1 1 12 15 NR 16 tl7 tl7 20 NR 10 NR NR Intermural News There is no open Recreational Volleyball tonight at Nelson Field House. However, Recreational Volleyball will be run every Thursday from 8to 10 p.m. during the month of October, beginning next Thursday, Oct. 8th. Everyone is invited to attend. There will be Recreational Volleyball for men in Centennial Gymnasium from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Those interested in trying-out for the men's club team are strongly encouraged to play. Tryouts will be held in late October. , > Deadline for entries in the Men's and Women 's Golf Tournament is today at 3 p.m. Entries should be a 2-player team. Play will be conducted during the week of Oct. 12, and a $3 green's fee will be administered. Play must be done in foursomes and the tourney will be "Best Ball". Rosters for Flag Football, Men and Women are due Thursday Oct. 8 at 3 p.m. A video showing rules and how the game is played will be shown throughout all of next week during lunch time(l 1 a.m.-2 p.m.) in Multi-Purpose rooms area. Intramural Office is sponsoring a Punt, Pass and Kick contest on Sunday, Oct 18 in Redman Stadium for both men and women.Monday's Voice will feature detailed information. Weekend hours for Centennial Gymnasium: Open Saturday 12 noon6 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon-4 p.m. and 4 p.m.-6 p.m. with the volleyball net set UD. i A ; I ] 1 j j ! ! i ! I ! \ Call 800-257-1200 * Ext. 1066 After you're done with ;n^ ^«Sfe ^ school, you face one of or mail the coupon-and start your jjj ffl llt#tM-?G the hardest lessons in life: Mag iSlBSS # subscription to The Wall Street Without experience, JHM lBlSftl&i^ &g~~ Journal at student savingsof up it!stough to get a job.And «H8sBilil S?l^ S-1- to $48 off the regular subscripwithout a j ob, its tough to ¦¦HK^S^Sfe^v-:/:^--vl^,i tion price. get experience. ^Hpfe^.lK-#&l;^\/^"'iM522s That's a pretty generous offer. '¦"^llplf IE At The Wall Street ®-llP- Especially when you consider what it actually represents. Journal,werecognizethat expe- llffliEIK^ ¦ '¦ rience is something you don't Tuition for the real world. 3|WiSiW^ ; ^ 'M F start earning until after graduation. &HnBHHg&l^b But whileyou're waiting,we can sBBBBmsmtw i 1 give you a head start by providing S^H^RPv ' To subscribe, call 800-257-1200,* I ' some of the same competitive Ext. 1066 toll-free. 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VA&* And our in-depth analysis helps Jn t $||> ThpWill Strp^t Tnnrnal I S F S vnn yOU fnrmiilnrP lOrmUiate vniir your irWs laeaS fn in aa *»• ,«$! sharper and more persuasive way. gpL/ i w »37 JDm WSmW raf mm WML. 1MIMUU 111C VVOll OU.CCI JUUl Uol. • dtmm. 2000 I |\L2s™ 7<1,,NT\ 77/« daily diary oftheAmerican . 1 *In Pennsylvania, call 800-222-3380, Ext. 1066. °198G Dow Jones & Company. Inc. 1 | | | | | $ » | ® i $ $ $ $ 1 u, | « $ $ | | m Y/. yj (f) ® ffi $ og » W. Lineman are key to offense by Troy Hunsinger Staff Writer Most people have heard of Jay DeDea and Tommy Martin because they have broken many of the school records, but how many people have heard of the people that help them ^ct those records. How many people have heard of John Avia or Bob Preston? These arc just two of the Huskies offensive linemen that have opened the holes for Martin and held off the opposing team from getting to DeDea. The Huskic linemen have done a gnj at job and are largely responsible for the team progress but last Saturday's loss to the West Chester Rams was a real "bruiser" for our linemen. Four of the five starting linemen were injured during this game. Right tackle John Avia and left guard David Pysher were both sidelined with "deep contusions." . Offensive right tackle Phil Sallusti ripped a ligament in his right knee and will be out for the season. Offensive line coach Dave Fortunato said that Sallusti was in the process of "having a great season." Sallusti and Jeff Sparks shared in the player of the week honors. Freshman left tackle Robert Grow had a pulled muscle in his neck and shoulder. Freshman Brian Crouthmael has also seen much playing time at this position and filled in for Grow. Center Bob Preston was the only linemen that did not suffer a casualty. All of the linemen except for Sallusti will be suited up and ready to go for this Saturday 's game against East Stoudsburg. Bloomsburg University 's wrestling team has outstanding recruitment The Husky offensive line has bocii seriously hurt by injuries form the West Chester game. One player suffered torn ligaments and underwent surgery on Tuesday. photo by Jim Loch Huskies defeat Susquehanna by Kuskin Mark Staff Writer Susquehanna University was a team the Huskies needed to beat. In a repeat performance of last year, the Huskies came away winners with a 40 margin. Under cool , comfortable conditions the game started with the Huskies taking immediate control of proceedings. Dave Tuscano and Jack Milligan , a fearsome front two from Council Rock H.S., played havoc with the opposing defence and were unlucky on several occasions not to have scored. Ttiscano in particular, had a couple ferocious shots go just wide of the mark , and with any luck could have scored twice within twenty minutes of the first half. Midway through the first half the Huskies had nothing to show for their efforts. However , at the 26 minute mark this all changed when Caribbean-born sophomore Alfred McK- enzic scored on a header off a wellflighted cross from Tuscano. At the half the score was still 1-0, but Bloomsburg by this time had the measure of the opponents. Midfielder Jerry Crick , BU' s other Caribbean import , was very much on top of his game and went about conducting a dribbling-and-ball-control clinic. He repeatedly spun , turned , and weaved his way past opponents , but could not finish off his attempts. He teamed up nicely with fellow midfielders Dave Deck and Karl Alexy and together they went about stamping their authority on the game. With four minute s gone in the second half Crick scored his second goal of the season. He eluded an advancing goalkeeper by delicately slotting the ball through his legs and into the net after receiving a pass from Milli gan. As the second hal f wore on the Huskies continued to do most things well and were justl y rewarded with Bloomsburg tennis goals by co-captain Dave Deck and freshman Eric Pfizenmayer. Deck's goal was unassisted, while Matt Moyer assisted on Pfizenmayer's. Gregg Holgate, John Andronis, and Alfred McKenzie all -had strong games on defense, and were instrumental in beginning several attacks. Goalkeeper Keith Cincotta had a relatively easy day in goal and made only three saves in registering his second shut-out of the season. Bloomsburg out shot Susquehanna 23-5 and with a little luck could have scored close to eight goals. Coach Steve Goodwin must be pleased with his team 's overall performance in this a pivotal game for the Huskies. Most encouraging also , was the amount of quality time the reserves were able to play, and the superb job they did while they were in. The Huskies host Indiana University of Pennsylvania on Saturday at l:oo PM, and hope to continue their winning ways. Women win twice, men work by Mike Mullen Sports Editor The Bloomsburg University men 's and women's tennis teams were busy this past week as the men traveled to mary land to partici pate in the Navy Tournament.. The women's team, on the other han d, played to dual matches against Lock Haven and Kutztown , winning both. Despite the heavy schedule, the women's team was able to defeat Lock Haven 7-2 and Kutztown 9-0. The two wins by the women Huskies raised their record to 5-3 overall and undefeated (2-0) in the Pennsyl- vania Slate Athletic Conference (PSAC). At the Lock Haven match , the Huskies played well , coming up with some hard-fought three-set wins. Against Kutztown , which the Huskies hosted here at Bloomsburg, some of the BU women let some menial lapses gel them in trouble , but still readil y handled the Bears, 9-0. The Bloomsburg University women's team will be hosting East Stroudsburg today at 3 p.m. and Millersville will be invading on Saturday at 1 p.m. These will be the last two matches for the Huskies for the Fall season. Coach "Doc" Herbert is proud of his team and thinks that "it would be nice to finish out this week with two more wins." BU vs Lock Haven Autumn Swisher (LH) d. Megan Clarke (BU) 6-2, 6-1 Wendy Wenhold (BU) d. Lisa Stopper (LH) 7-5, 7-5 Cathy Vonluehrte (BU) d. Becky Boyce (LH) 4-6, 6-4, 6-0 Lindsay McNeal (BU) d. Anne Wolfe (LH) 6-4, 6-2 Nancy Buie (BU) d. Peg Buckmasler (LH) 6-3, 2-6, 6-3 Chris Labosky (BU) d. Johanna Culver (LH)6-2, 6-3 Swisher/S topper (LH) d. Clarke/ Wenhold (BU) 6-3, 6-2 Vonluehrte/McNeal (BU) d. Boyce/ Wolfe (LH) 6-2, 6-3 Buie/Arlow (BU) d. Culver/Chase 64, 6-2 BU vs Kutztown Clarke (BU) d. Kathy Kerin (KU) 6-2, 6-2 Wenhold (BU) d. Carol Frizell (KU) 6-4, 6-4 Vonluehrte (BU) d. Steph Holmes (KU) 6-2, 7-6 McNeal (BU) d. Celia Reber (KU) 75, 7-6 Buie (BU) d.Kathy Hector (KU) 7-5, 6-2 Lance Milner follows through on one of his powerful serves. He was the only Husky to make the finals this weekend in singles. Ph«o by a Kciiy Labosky (BU) d. Virginia Lott (KU) 6-4, 6-0 Clarke/Wenhold (BU) d. Frizell/ Holmes (KU) 6-2, 6-4 Vonluehrte/McNeal (BU) d. Kerin/ Reber (KU) 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 Buie/Arlow (BU) d. Lott/Beblavy (KU) 0-6, 6-3, 6-1 The men's team took on some serious competition at the Navy tournament this past weekend but put on some individual shows that theycan be proud of. In the "B" flight singles, transfer sophomore Lance Milner made itto the finals before falling, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2. In the "B" flight doubles, partners Marc Lupinacci and Mark Billone battled their way to the finals before losing their first match. Tough Division I West Virginia was the winner. by Mary Ellen Spisak Staff Writer "The level of intensity in a Division I school makes the difference." said Stafford , Virginia 's Eric Major . It is definitely a challenge, the level of intensity, as the new group of guys on the mat prepare for a long, hard season. "Working and moves must be in succession ," said John Copeland. "You must think while you wrestle! To be the best, it takes all the elements; dedication , willpower, and God. Basically, takin ' care of business." It is not only a change physically, but also mentally. Technique, style, and moves are more demanding; as are practice time, quick mental thinking, and knowledge of your opponent. (il New Hampshire's Scott Minickiello said , "It is a huge step up mentall y and physically. You have to give your entire you , until you can 't go anymore. Go with what you feel and cancel your thoughts." "There is no compensation for the intensity of wrestling here," said Randy Grant of Maryland, "it is transitions as I begin to practice and these are transitions that must be made!" "It will take a lot of individual time, on our own. Extra hours lifting, running and drilling. " New Jersey 's Anthony DcFlumeri said. In an effort to contend with the immense changes these Freshmen must encounter, they have an excellent coaching staff to train and drill them. "I feel Bloomsburg has the best supporting staff in the nation!" In addition , Randy Grant said, "Coach Sanders' technical knowledge will help me more." The coach and his staff are definitely the driving force behind , what is soon to be an NCAA top competitor. These Freshmen are exposed to the best of the best and are influenced the toughest way— through experience! "Coach Sanders tells us to never give up; to wrestle 7 hard minutes on the mat!" said Eric Nicolla of Claysville. DcFlumeri commented , "The coach tells you to give 100%, walking off the mat knowing you did your hest!" He is definitely a positive influence, cares a lot, sets an excellent example, goes out of his way and gives wrestlers initiative. He wants the best out of you—110%." Anthony Quartararo of New Jersey commented. He projects a winning attitude!" said Eric Major. Minickiello said, "When you 're on the mat, you can never stop; it must be a 7 minute battle. Coach wants 110% from everyone." It is evident that our grapplers have a superb attitude and much potential. It is because of our head coach and his staff that these freshmen are willing to lay it all on the line to be the best. With all this emphasis on being the best, winning and giving 110%, who has time for studying? Wrestlers! "Academics is #1, then comes wresding." said Copeland. Quartararo said, "Academics is a big part of an athlete's life. Your grades always come first/' All Freshmen wrestlers are required to attend a mandatory study hall, in which they are to make good use of their time on their academic subjects. The concern on the part of staff and team should answer the question of which comes first— Academics or wrestling! Bill Harris of Mifflintown added "The Coach is very down to earth; he is interested in you as a student as well as a wrestler!" Craig Katynski of Bethlehem said, "Apart from trying harder and wrestling harded, the most important aspect to consider are your grades!' In the midst of all their goals— starting varsity, being an NCAA competitor, an All American, grades complete the all round athlete. On a quest for the gold, they find their place, and make their mark on the wrestling mat! Linksman put forth best finish yet by Mike Mullen Sports Editor Playing in soggy conditions, the Husky linksmen played what golf coach George Skomsky described as "the best finish this year" and took a fifth place out of ten teams at the Hershey Pocono Intercollegiate Golf Tournament. Bloomsburg hosted the ten team event that was won by SUNY Binghamton with a four-man team score of 309. The teams consist of five players and the best four scores are counted. In the case of a tie then the fifth scores are compared, but only then. It came into play in this tournament when PSAC rival, and defending tournament champion , West Chester also finished their top four with a similar score of 309. But when the fifth men were compared, Binghamton was declared the winner by a 82-97 margin. The individual winner , or Medalist, was Kevin Savage from Binghamton who shot a two-overpar 73. In second place were defending Medalist, Chris Kelly from West Chester and Todd Kramer form Dickinson who both shot 74's. The Huskies did well in their own tournament played in Whitehaven at the Hershey Pocono Resort. Senior Scott Griffis tied for eighth overall with his seven-over-par 78. Sophomore Bob Meyers was the Huskies second man with an 82 while freshmen Jeff Seidel and Jim Lucas finished with an 84 and 86, respectively. Senior Doug Barbacci was one stroke of the pace with an 87. The Huskies finished fifth with a team score of 330 behind Binghamton, West Chester, Dickinson (316), and Elmira (328). The rest of the field ran King's college in sixth (331), Swarthmore (333), Mil'lersviUe (335), York College (345) and Muhlenburg College (349). Because of the weather condiditons, the players were allowed to mark, clean and place their balls in the fairway and the rough. The Huskies didn't fare as well in the tournament the week before though. The linksman finished 15th out of 16 beating only Moravian out of the field. At the East Stroudsburg University Fall Invitational, the Huskies were overpowered. St Johns University was the team champion with a score of 313. Host ESU was second (318) and Dickinson (321) was third. The event's Medalist was Kyle Davis from a Division m school named Ramapo. Davis shot par on the course which was 72, For the Huskies, Griffis shot an 85, Barbacci, 89, Seidel, 93, Lucas, 94 and Meyers, 98. Bloomsburg will now be readying to go to the ECAC qualifyer in Lancaster on Thursday, October 8. Two teams and ten individuals will be selected to go on to nationals.