Condom reaction favorable by Karen Reiss Editor-in-Chief Students at Mansfield University responded favorably to the distribution of condoms in Thursday 's issue of the student-run newspaper, the Flashlight , according to staff members. Public Relations Director of the newspaper Lorcna Beniquez thought of creating a special issue dedicated to AIDS awareness about six months ago. "We used the condom as an attention getter," Beniquez said. "Then people would read the issue. The condoms added the human factor." Beniquez pointed out that the staff was not trying to make a statement condoning sex, but for students who choose to engage in sexual activities, condoms should be used. "Students seem to be responding with a mature attitude," she added. Flashlight Editor-in-Chief Corbin Woodling said at first he was hesitant about the idea because he is conservative. "I had the idea we could do the issue if we did it right," Woodling said. He added that they considered every point of view, from the churches' to the students'. Kathy Galeo, news editor of the Flashlight, said she conducted a poll of approximately 150. Of that group, three-fourths admit to engaging in sexual activity. "If we can help one person protect themselves against AIDS, I think we have done our job," Galeo said. The condom s for the issue were contributed by the North Penn Health Service in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Health Department. North Penn is contracted by the university to provide health service to the students. The university has no on-campus facility. "We called national condom com- panies, but they said they could not help us," Woodling said. "At first, North Penn said they could not help us either." Woodling and Beniquez agreed that the project , which al first seemed would fail „tumed out successful. Mansfield University's Vice President for Student Affairs Joseph R. Maresco said his first reaction to the staffs plans was one of surprise. "I cringed a little at the idea," Maresco said. "I anticipated a mixed bag of reaction from the community." Staff members shared their plan with Maresco one week before the issue would appear on campus. The staff worked with the administration on press releases to be sent to the media. "We received a lot of media attention ," he said. He added that wire services picked up the story and at least five different TV stations had visited the campus , including Bloomsburg University's own Bloom News. Maresco said the student reaction he received on Thursday was supportive to the idea. The student body was not aware of the newspaper's plans until the issue was distributed that morning. Mansfield University's AIDS Task Force has been in affect for two years and the response to AIDS awareness programs in the residence halls "has been mediocre , according to Maresco. "We have been struggling to get the word out," he said. "Students will sit up and take note of what the newspaper has done. I'd like to think they will read the articles also." University President Rod Kelchner agreed that the Flashlight ' s actions will spark interest and awareness. "I think thuFlashlight staff is trying to call attention to a very serious health problem that has society con- fused. It is very complex," Kelchner said. Kelchner said that he received three negative reactions as. of Thursday afternoon. "I received a phone call from a student expressing embarrassment ." he said. Kelchner also received an unsigned letter from a Mansfield resident and a parent who was angry because the university allowed the newspaper to follow through with their project. "I do not censor the press," Kelchner said. "To be honest, if I could have, I'm not sure I would have." Kelchner said he has also received some positive feedback. "The president of our Alumni Association said he thinks it is a good idea and he will endorse it," he said. At present, Mansfield University does not distribute or sell condoms on campus. Flashlight Public Relations Director Lorona Beniquez and Editor-in-Chief Corbin Woodling answer questions about the Ph °'° & wi°™"" decision to run a condom in each issue of the paper. State p olice raid f r a t ernity mixer Ronald K. Barto, state police in Wil- alcohol consumed registers on the by Susan Brook liamsport. Press-Enterprise staff machine, Barto said. Three beer kegs and taps were State police, making their first The arrested have been summoned major raid here since last fall's bust confiscated in the 11:30 p.m. bust. to appear before District Justice that caused a riot, arrested 30 under- Barto said there were about 50 people Donna Coombc of Bloomsburg. age drinkers at a fraternity party, au- at the party , which he described as a Barto said the change in tactics this "mixer" held by invitation, rather than time was not because of the earlier thorities said Friday. None of the mayhem caused by the a party widel y advertised to campus demonstration. He said the bus was earlier raid, in which a record-number as a whole. used because the fraternity house was 141 people were arrested, was reHe characterized it as "not really slightly out of town. "It was just as peated. This time, officers switched any louder than any other college easy to bus them to the state police," tactics, using a bus to transport sus- party." he said. pects to state police barracks. Barto said that after the arrested He said those arrested "behaved In the earlier raid, officers used were taken to Bloomsburg state police like ladies and gentleman." Twenty cruisers and took suspects in pairs to headquarters, about 10 people asked law enforcement officials were inthe police station. During that lengthy for Breathalyzer tests. volved. Town police accompanied process, an unruly crowd formed. Several were released because the the state officers, Barto said. Thursday night's raid at Lamda Chi tests showed they weren't drinking, Town officers also helped out durAlpha fraternity house, 918 W. Mam he said. ing the first raid, Nov. 19 at Beta More initially requested tests, but Sigma Delta along Lightstreet Road. St , was staged by Bloomsburg state police and the Bureau of Liquor Con- changed their minds when an early During that raid, as students were trol Enforcement, according to Sgt. round of tests showed that even a li ttl e taken to the town police station, hun- dreds massed along Lightstreet Road, leading to brief skirmishes and some property damage. University spokeswoman Sheryl Bryson said the fraternity raided Thursday was on good standing with the administration, but had been on probation one semester in 1986. The house had been subject to internal discipline at that time for "an alcohol problem" which did not involve arrests, she said. She said the college's StudentLife office is setting up an informal hearing that is the first step in any disciplinary action. The university has a three-stage process which calls for progressively stiffer probation measures depending on the number of violations. Major violations of thecollege's off-campus alcohol policy can result in suspension or revocation of a frat's charter. by BridgetSullivan Staff Writer The Inter-Sorority Council has permitted Phi Sigma Sigma, an international sorority, to begin a pledge colony at Bloomsburg University. Phi Sigma Sigma is "scholarship, social, and service oriented," according to Phi Sigma Sigma President Lisa Cellini, a BU sophomore. Cellini said the sorority is "nonsectarian...we will not deny any woman membership because of race or religion." Cellini says the interest in forming a new sorority on campus was originally shared by two different groups of women in the spring of 1987, who "were unaware of each other." The groups asked 23 national sororities to give them presentations. Cellini said, "Phi Sigma Sigma was the only sorority that informed us that there were two groups on this campus interested in forming a sorority." The two groups merged last fall , and the colony currently has 36 members. "Phi Sigma Sigma asked the ISC for permission to pledge on this campus, and to have representatives sit on ISC so that we could open communication lines between our group and sororities currendy established on this campus," Cellini said. She added, "We have not yet received our probationary requirements...we do not know exactly what they will be." She said they will be receiving those requirements within the next two weeks. When asked why a group of girls would want to form a new sorority on a campus where nine are presently established, Cellini said, "It was a personal goal within each of us. We wanted to found a colony. Our strength has brought us this far, and with patience, we will achieve our ultimate goal of becoming a chapter." Cellini added, "BU has one of the strongest Greek systems in the state and we would like to become a part of that with the support of the sororities and fraternities currently on campus." Gretchen Highland, Phi Sigma Sigma national representative, said, "I am very impressed with the group. They seem very motivated and very strong." Highland added, "They have also been very patient in forming this colony." ISCPresidentMaryannPatton said, "Phi Sigma Sigma has a long way to go (before they become a chapter)...but we're behind them all the way." Greek Coordinator Lori Barsness said, "The girls and I have worked a long time...(and) the sororities have been supportive." Barsness added, "With 175 women going through Rush , it shows that it's time for expansion. It's pretty exciting." by Dawn M. D'Aries for The Voice Bloomsburg University has implemented several energy conservation programs that have saved thousands of dollars, according to Don McCulloch, director of Physical Plant and Energy Management. McCulloch said that a computer obtained in 1985 has improved maintenance control of BU grounds. BU was the first state university to obtain the computer which has over 600 pieces of equipment connected to it and is capable of setting the temperature in all campus buildings. University administration has set building temperatures of 70 degrees for winter,and 75 degrees for summer - except for Kehr Union at 72 degrees. The reason for Kehr Union's lower temperature is because of increased activity in that building. McCulloch said that maintenance conducts a holiday program over break during which the temperature in the dormitories is set at 55 degrees. Two or three days prior to reopening, the temperature is returned to a comfortable 70 degrees. There is also a night set-back program which sets temperatures lower in such buildings as Waller Admini- stration, which is rarely occupied at night. If a group is conducting an evening activity in a night set-back building, an evening activity form must be filled out and submitted to maintenance for night set-back postponement. Another energy conservation program involves turning off soda machines during student breaks. Soda machines in such buildings as Ben Franklin are shut off when the building closes. A recycling program, which is run by the Management Office, encourages students to separate trash into recyclable and non-recyclable products, contributing to energy conservation. "We are continuing to look at energy management. It is a continual, ongoing process," McCulloch said. "The inevitability of another energy crisis is only a matter of time." McCulloch used McCormick Human Services Center as an example of energy conservation which has tremendous paybacks. "There was not an increase in the budget when it came to heating McCormick. McCormick heats on a system which generates heat from machines in the building, such as computer terminals." This heat is transferred to a space between the third floor ceiling and the roof and acts as an insulation for the building, retaining heat. In addition, hot-water pipes are built into the structure of the building and provide an additional source of heat. Another building which conserves energy by conserving heat is Nelson Fieldhouse. By utilizing a dehumidification process through the use of heatpumps in the swimming pool area, heat is conserved. These processes not only conserve energy but have paybacks in the thousands of dollars. "It's important to the student. If we were not saving money, tuition would have to be higher," McCulloch said. This summer, maintenance plans to replace all windows in Columbia Hall because of poor ventilation complaints. The project will cost approximately $150,000, but there will be a payback in four years. McCulloch said that the window replacement will not only enforce energy conservation and savemoney , but will also improve the comfort level for students. Plans for installing new heating systems are also underway. McCulloch said that the university plans to ask the Governor's Energy Council for a grant to pay half of the $90,000 project. New colony premitted to begin pledging fmm^^mm ^^^MS ^^^SS Ssm ^ wB™BBlfflll ^^ Vice President for Student Affairs Joseph R. Maresco explains his first reaction to I (he Flashli Photob) TJjkmmmr j ght's method of awarenessas one of suptise. Conservation programs save money Index Political factions believe the Waldheim affair to be an international affair. Page 3 Olympics filled with political undertones. Page 4 Bloomsburg Huskies defeat H I Cheyney in Saturday's contest. H Pa ge 8 Commentary Features Comics I page 2 I page 4 I page 6 ¦ Commentary Facing the condom issue by Karen Reiss Editor-in-Chief Welcome to National ConJom Week. It's no joke. While we »TO celebrating Valentine' j Day yesterday, we were also cckbrat-i.'.-..; t.Ne beginning of a newl y-p,avi:u:'.vei.i w«i to recognize fhc^ise o»" condonw. Mansfield University ' s student newspaper staff be^a-'1 celebrating condom week a little early. Last Thursday, they taped condoms to 2,500 issue of the newspaper to deliver a message. Their message was plain and simple , "If you are going to have sex, use a condom. " To some, their method may seem a bit risque. However , they were not condoning sex. It is not a newspaper's responsibility, or even its place, to condem or condone anything. They were, however, providing valuable information to a group of people who need to be informed. College students. We can be nieve and say that things like that don 't happen here. Or wecan face the facts - some students choose to engage in premarital sex with one partner or multiple partners. They need to know the facts. Mansfield' s president expressed honesty on the subject of AIDS. He said he has not had to deal with this issue on his campus yet, but he knows he will. It is just a matter of time. He also admitted , with some regret and some embarrassment, that he could not speak intelligently about the AIDS policy his university employs. He did admit , though , that some changes will have to be made regarding attitudes towards AIDS. And they must be made soon. Relating the AIDS epidemic to a health problem of the past, he said that today nobody ever thinks about polio. Yet, when he .was our age, in his early twenties, polio was a life-threatening disease. "Today we are scared to death of AIDS ," he said. "I was scared lo death of polio." Many people, he said, were not aware the Franklin D. Roosevelt was crippled by polio. He was never shown from the waist down to the public. The fact was hidden . "Some people say hide AIDS . Our students are saying, 'no, don 't hide the facts , expose the fact. ' " At present, Mansfield University does not have condoms available on campus. Yet there have beenefforts to do so. Many argue that there is no need for condoms on campus. For students at BU, town is just a few minutes away. I don't think the reason for the big push for condoms on campus is convenience only. I think it has to do with visibility.If they are seen, they may be used more often. This is not to say that people who abstain from sex will be tempted, but people who do have sexual encounters will be more aware of using condoms. Presently, our campus has no policy for issuing condoms on campus , either. Some administrators believe they will be seen as condoning sex and they have a big problem with this. The condom issue is highly charged and highly controversial. When the university 's image is at stake, the right and wrong of the issue must be weighed carefull y. However, I don 't believe the university should look at it as an argument of right and wrong, they must see it as an issue of life and death. Should I stay or should I go? Since last semester, when I finally became a senior, I have been asking myself this question on a dail y basis. Do I want to go to grad school and brave a few more years of this life, or am I ready for the real world? College has been a great experience for me. The times I've shared with my friends in Bloomsburg have been some of the best in my life. I've done fairly well grade-wise with minimum effort , and my responsibilities have been few (or at least post-poned.) Some days I think I could stay here forever. But they are the days when everything just happens to go right, or when I'm still recovering from a great weekend on Wednesday. The days that I ache to get out are usually at the end of the month when my credit card and utility bills roll in , and my meager paycheck rolls out. I think to myself, "Someday I'll drive a car that has both headlights, and was built in this decade." Then my fear of the real world kicks in and I think, "Someday I'll have even bigger bills. Someday I'll be paying for a car that will cost more than the house my parents bought when they were my age." What a decision. On the academic side, if I do the grad-school thing, I could pursue my newfound interest in broadcasting. If I go, the chances that I'll return to do so are slim. On the money side, iflstay I'll need to take out more student loans. I've already got half of the national debt racked up at the bank now. But, if I go, I'll have to get a car loan, then a morgage, an IRA , a financial consultant...the deliberation continues. Since the GRE exams were held a few weeks ago, I guess I'm off the hook for the fall semester, at least. B ut then what? I think I'm going to ignore the possibilities and consequences and enjoy my last (?) semester in college. And the only time I'm answering the "stay or go" question is when my roommate asks me to go to the Paddock. Contemplations of a senior Jennifer Thrasher ANY QUESTIONS?.. In ventive ideas f or 1989 by David Ferris Staff Troublemaker There seems to be a distinct lack of new things in the universe, particularly new ideas. I first realized this when I saw a sneak preview of the new cars for 1989. The car companies have run out of new names. For instance , the ACTMC (American Company That Makes Cars) has announced its new line of economy compacts called the ACTMC Mud. The other national companies, Shickshinny Motors and TMD (Those Manufacturing Dudes), have announced the new Breadbox mid-size and Tedious wagon, respectively. The Japanese firm Notsoshuri will be releasing its sporty new Ornery Goat. This sudden dearth in things new has something to do with the theory of entropy. This states that the universe has a limited amount of energy in it , and that when people run out of new ideas they write situation comedies for television. Last week a few individuals on campus came up with a novel idea. They were using a Macintosh computer and laser printer to attempt to duplicate Pennsylvania driver licenses. Some people suggested that the culprits should be given credit for ' innovative thinking; that is one of the few things I can think of that the Mac would be good for. It 's certainly a worthless piece of machinery from the programmer's viewpoint. However, others suggested that the credi t be taken away again since the alleged forgers were dumb enough to try such a stunt in a crowded student laboratory. The idea of a fake ID is a bit backward to begin with. I realize the idea is for a 19-year-old to pass as 21, so that they can consume large quantities of a liquid that will have the primary consequence of making them act like a complete fool before throwing up. Five years from now this person will probably wish they were 19 again. By then they've discovered that rites of passage are way overrated. I've come up with a much more profitable idea. I'm going to make At Laree^ Today* s love is for now. not forever by Ellen Goodman They are in their twenties and in love. Not in love forever. In love fornow. They haven 't said this exactly. But as a certified FOF (friend of the family) I have heard it in their silences. Certain words don 't come up when we talk. Words like "our failure" or even "next year." The are sharing their plans with me. B ut theseare not shared plans. She has applied to East Coast graduate schools, he has been interviewing for West Coast jobs. They tell me this casually, their limbs familiarly entwined on the sofa on the sofa in the position they adopted a yearago to tell everyone they were in love. As an FOF, I quietly take in this scene. Have my young friends mastered the ability to love in the now? I ask myself. Or are theymissing the romantic glue of futurism? I wonder if this is what it's like to beyoung lovers today. Sitting with them , I am reminded of my reading trip through this year's Valentine cards. I flipped through dozens of messages. The poetic pledges of forever love were almost all marketed for old lovers. The mush quota was highest for the cards marked: To Grandma. But the Valentines for young lovers were, by and large, carefull y cool. Some risque, some even raunchy, but not emotionally risky. The Valentines I read carried no promises that would last longer than flowers or chocolate. They were about love fomow. The woman who dubbed me the Friend of this Family stands beside me. At her son 's age, she had been married for two years. She was the example she didn 't want her two children to follow. Married at 22, divorced 10 years later. "We were too young." How many times had she said so to the two children of this marriage and divorce. Children who had watched her start a career at 32. Children who had watched their father start another family at 40. My friend had told her sons, "Wait a while. Get to know several people, including yourself." This young man had listened. His whole college generation had listened to some variation on that parental or societal advice. They had learned to put reason over romance. This young couple were like the graduates in that Dow Chemical ad last year. They were able to say - "I am going to miss you next year" - and accept parting as the given at their stage of life. "So what?" I ask my friend when we retreatto privacy. "Do you think of this reasonableness now? Is it not just what you wanted?" "Yes," she says, but slowly, and goes on. "I think they are doing the right thing. There are too many changes ahead for them. They are too young to limit their options - jobs, school , cities - for each other." Then she adds quietly, "But what about the potion to have each other"? We sit quietly with each other, thinking about the dramatic reversal of life patterns in two decades. The young people we know have a passion for finding the right work. And caution about finding the right relationship. Those in their twenties pursue careers whole-heartedly. And embrace love half-heartedly. The half that is missing may be the part that pulses with the idea of a future, the desire for forever. My friend and I, FOFs for a dozen or more young people, figure that on average these began their first love affairs between 18 and 20. If our small statistical sample holds up, they are likely to be single until 28 or 30. The time lapse between intimacy and commitment, between first love and marriage, has expanded enormously from our twenties to theirs. In the interim these young may become very good at conditional love, love "until," love fomow. But it seems to us that it is hard to love fully in a limited time zone. Love without a belief in a future is like a chocolate heart made of skim milk and Sweet n ' Low. The timing of our revisionist notion is probably lousy. This is the Love Carefully era. A balanced life is more prized than a sudden disorienting fall into love. On campuses , this Valentine's Day was celebrated by distributing condoms, not commitments. Yet my friend and I, harbingers of realism, proponets of caution, survivors of one or more disasters, have discovered that we are more romantic than the young lovers in the next room. We wish them whole-heartedness. And the rich flavor of forever. myself a fake ID that will let me pass for 18 years old. This will aliow me to live with my parents indefinatcl y, to live off other peoples' income, and to avoid getting any sort of job. No one will expect me to be responsible for anything and I can while away my time in high school classes and video arcades. Of course, I'll have to doctor the photo so my beard and moustache look like a bad case of acne. This new idea of mine has caught on like wildfire . I've already got orders from hundreds of adults who want to be 18 again. Soon you will see the shopping malls filled with gangs of 40-year-olds wearing T-shirts and sneakers. I've heard a few other new ideas recently, some of which arc better than others. One friend of mine suggested that since it 's a well-known fact that wars improve a nation 's economy, we should declare war on Canada. It 's close by and we wouldn 't have to spend much on gas to get there. The Canadians and Americans have always gotten along well together, so there's no need for a dangerous sort of war. Each side would send a few squads of men out into a field, everyone would fire their rifles into the air for about ten minutes, then everyone would break for coffee and donuts from the Red Cross. The newspapers could then run headlines like, "Massive Casualties fro m Latest Enemy Breakthrough" and "Hundreds of Atrocities Reported on Border" and so on. Another equally viable idea came from an American friend of mine I knew in England. Steve was from Boston. According to him , the United Stales should be completely reorganized. New England , Pennsylvania, Florida, and California would remain the same.Therestofthecountry would be called the Dead Zone collectively, since Steve claimed no one important came from there anyway. Be that as it may, I'd like to counteract this universal loss of new ideas by leaving you with a few random points to ponder while you peruse the remaining pages of this prestigious paper. -1 think we should have a mandantory death penalty for anyone who insists on setting up blind dates. - Did you know that Dr. Who, the British television show, was and always has been produced as a childrens' show? Seriously! - The next person who calls me "Dave" instead of "David" or "Ferns" will have their kneecaps ripped off and their eyeballs shipped via Parcel Post to Mozambique. It's "David". - We should have a university-wide grading standard of 90 percent for an A, 80 percent for a B, etc., so that an A in Dr. Kooldood' s class isn 't a C minus in Dr. Goering's class. - Why is it that whenever you meet someone from another planet, they always have a name like George or Tim? - Supermarkets should have special passing lanes in the middle of the aisles to make it tougher for old ladies to strategically park their carts where they can block all traffic. - Never smoke a cigar after eating an orange. -Whenever a communist says "the will of the people", he means "the decisions made by the party leadership". When he says "for the good of the masses", he means "it will benefit those who support me politically". When he says "enemy of the people", he means anyone who makes more than $20,000 a year. - Does anyone know how to change a differential housing on a 1986 Renault Alliance? - I'm wondering what I' m going to tell my kids when they ask what I did when I was in college. Tune into Night Talk , BU f s own talk show, this Wednesday at 9 p.m, WBUQ FM-91 George Mitchell, the Affirmative Action Officer at B V, will be withWilUam Acierno to discuss Black Awareness Month. Listeners can p hone in questions at 389-4687* Stye Bmce Editor-in-Chief Karen Reiss Managing Editor Tom Sink News Editors Lisa Cellini, Tammy J. Kemmerer Features Editors Lynne Ernst, Glenn Schwab Sports Editor Mike Mullen Photography Editor Christopher Lower Assistant Photography Editor. Chrissa Hosking Production/Circulation Manager Alexander Schlllemans Advertising Manager Susan Sugra Assistant Advertising Manager Kim Clark Business Manager Richard Shaplin Assistant Business Managers Jen Lambert , Adina Saleck Copy Editors David Ferris, Chris Miller Illustrator David K. Garton Advisor John Maittlen-Harris Voice Editorial Policy Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice arc 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, condense or reject all submissions. Vienna 's Waldheim pressured to resign by Misha Glenny L.A. Times-Washington Post Service The Air Band Competition held on Friday in Carver Hall hailed "The Village PhoiobyTJKcmmcrcr People " as winners of the contest. The Howard Beach trial Speculation grew in Vienna Thursday that the two partners in Austria 's governing coalition , the Socialist SPO and the Conservative OVP, are bringing pressure on President Kurt Waldheim to resign. Government sources said that on Monday the president had threatened to use his constitutional powers to dismiss the government if it accepted the historians' commission report on his wartime past. The report published earlier this week by the international commission included a number of damning comments about Waldheim 's integrity. In 'a striking statement, the general secretary of the OVP, Dr. Herbert Kukacka, said Thursday that the report of the commission had undermined Waldheim 's authority. This represents a marked shift in Kukacka's position. He has maintained until now that those parts of the report which incriminate Waldheim can be ignored Kukacka added that the president must take steps to restore his authority. The leading conservative daily,Die Presse, published a report Thursday Youth, 17, gets lighter sentence by John J. Goldman L.A. Times-Washington Post Service After apologizing in court and begging the judge for mercy, Jason Ladonc, the last of three defendants convicted in the Howard Beach racial attack case, was sentenced Thursday to five to 15 years in prison. The sentence, although substantial, was lighter than those given to previous defendants, Jon Lester, 18, and Scott Kern , 18. State Supreme Court Justice Thomas Demakos had sentenced Lester to the maximum of up to 30 years in prison and Kern to six to 18 years for their part in attacking three black men and pursuing one, Michael Griffith , to his death in traffic in December 1986. But when Ladone, 17, their companion in the attack, appeared before Demakos for sentencing he was nervous and apologetic. Reading from a prepared statement, Ladone addressed his remarks directiy to Griffith' s mother, Jean, who sat in the courtroom. "I am sorry.-Mrs. Griffith , for your senseless loss," Ladone said, before telling his own parents, "I'm sorry, Mom and Dad, that your lives have been so violendy overturned." Ladone, who was 16 at the time of the attack, the youngest of the three convicted white teen-agers, added he had done "some serious growing up" since. Ladone said he had no desire to hurt anyone the night he went to the birthday party before the incident. After the party, a group of white teen-agers encountered three black men whose car had broken down near Howard Beach. First epithets, then violence ensued. Griffith was chased onto a highway by youths brandishing tree limbs and a baseball bat, where he was sjruck by a car. Later, Cedric Sandiford , 37, who had been a passenger in the car, was severely beaten. Demakos said that Ladone's character had been "exemplary" before the Howard Beach incident. But the night of the attack, the judge added, Ladone showed a mind "that was criminal and bent on violence." "This cannot go unpunished," Demakos said, noting that the youth had participated both in the pursuit of Griffithand the beating of Sandiford. The judge then sentenced Ladone, who had been found ¦ guilty of assault and manslaughter, tovtwo consecutive ; terms of 2 years to 7 years in prison for each felony." -"l""> Of his apology, Mrs. Griffith said, "I hope that he said it from his heart and not just from his lips." Teacher *s snow policy revised Faculty who wish to cancel classes due lo inclement weather will be responsible for making arrangements lo notify their students, according to the revised snowstorm policy, no. 5205. Robert J. Parrish, vice president for administration, said the previous policy - with faculty calling the Law Enforcement Office with notification of class cancellations - proved to be too cumbersome when many classes were cancelled. Under that procedure, the Law Enforcement Office called university relations with each class cancellation, which called a list of radio stations that had agreed to carry the announcements. When the list of cancelled classes became too long on Jan. 26, the radio stations could no longer announce the entire list , according to Sheryl Bryson, director of university relations. The revised policy states that when the university is not officiall y closed, the following procedures should apply: -When classes are maintained under snow conditions where commut- Cultural lecture will be given Bruce Bridges is scheduled to speak at 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 15, in the Presidents' Lounge of the Kehr Union Building at Bloomsburg University. Bridges was scheduled to speak on Jan. 25, but because of inclement weather, the lecture was postponed. Bridges' lecture, titled "African American contributions to civilization," will focus on the positive impact of African American conttributions to the evolution of civilization . The lecture, sponsored by the Kehr Union Program Board, is free and open to the public. For more information, call 389-4344. ing students may face hazardous driving conditions, it should be clearly understood that those students should be excused from attendance without academic penalty. -Where outlying faculty face hazardous driving conditions to get to campus, they should either notify their students of class cancellations directly, or have an understanding with the class that when the weather is hazardous the class will not be held. The university will reimburse faculty members for any long distance charges incurred. -Off-campus class meetings under snow conditions also are left to the discretion of individual faculty members. The faculty member should make a special effort to phone students in the class, or have an understanding that hazardous snow conditions mean the class is cancelled. The university will reimburse faculty members for any long distance charges incurred. suggesting that negotiations between leading members of the SPO and the OVP behind closed doors were aimed at agreeing on a replacement for the president The moves indicate that the unswerving support for Waldheim typified by the head of the OVP, ViceChancellor Dr. Alois Mock, is coming under pressure from the party's liberal wing. The parliamentary leader of the SPO, Dr . Heinz Fischer, went further than his colleague, Chancellor Franz Vranitzk y, has been prepared to go by admitting that the controversy surrounding Waldheim had become a burden for the country. He said that "no one official is more important than the Austrian Sta'"." The president met Thursday with the chancellor , vice-chancellor and Fischer during a lunch given in honour of Jordan's King Hussein who is on a state visit here. The president's press secretary, Dr. Gerald Christian, denied that Waldheim's position was discussed at the meeting but he did say that the president was preparing a statement to the nation to be televised on Sunday or later. According to government sources, the coalition leaders reacted to Waldheim's threat to dismiss them by issuing a short statement that said nothing about accepting the commission's report. Meanwhile in Belgrade, Dr. Dusan Plenca, the Yugoslav historian who claimed to have found the so-called Spiegel Telegram, finally admitted that he had never seen the original document. The telegram, published in the West German news magazine, Der Spiegel , 10 days ago, purported to prove Waldheim's direct involvement in the deportation of civilian prisoners in Yugoslavia during the summer of 1942. The district public prosecutor in Belgrade has called for an investigation into Plenca's activities. The historian gave a sworn affidavit to Der Spiegel attesting to the document's authenticity, but now officials in Yugoslavia have agreed with West German investigators that the telegram was a forgery. During a press conference in the Yugoslav capital Thursday,a spokesman for the foreign ministry announced a dramatic reversal of the government's position concerning Waldheim. Contrary to all official statements hitherto, he said Yugoslavia does not consider Waldheim 's past to be a purely internal Austrian affair. The spokesman also pointed out that since allegations about Waldheim's war time role first emerged two years ago, Yugoslav officials had avoided all contact with the Austrian president. The Society for Collegiate Journalists will hold a membership meeting Tuesday, Feb. 16 at 7 p.m. in the Coffeehouse, KUB. Songwriter Kevin Moyer will be presenting a state-of-the-art performance in the President's Lounge on Thursday, Feb. 25 at 8 p.m. He will be using multiple keyboards, guitar, drum machine and vocals. The concert is free and open to the public. QUEST is offering a star gazing workshop at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 16, at Nelson Fieldhouse. The workshop is free and open to the public. Participants will learn how to identif y Orion-the-Hunter, Perseus, the Seven Sisters and more. On Wednesday, from 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m., QUEST is offering a kayak rolling clinic in Centennial Gym pool. Cost is $35 ($25 for BU students) and includes instruction, kayaks and accessory equipment. For information, call QUEST at 389-4323, or stop by the QUEST office located in Simon Hall. Students interested in participating in the annual phonathon, held March through April , should contact the Development Office at 389-4213 to sign up. A short training session will be provided. The CGA 1988-89 Budget Request forms have been mailed to all organizations on campus. All requests for funds must be submitted to the Community Activities Office on or before Feb. 26. If your organization is eligible to submit a request but has not received a form, please contact the Community Acitivities Office as soon as possible at 3894461. j Kehr Union i ^a n n n M n H n Qroqrann board x I Bloomsburg Univers ity ^— Anyone interested in performing in next fall's BU Marching Band Front should sign up on the bulletin board outside Haas 114. For more information come to Haas 225 or call 4284. ® Community Activities card holders may pick up their tickets at the Kehr Union Information Desk for the Feb. 24 Alvin Alley Repertory Ensemble performance. All tickets are limited and are available on a first come, first served basis. ^ ^ %L -y ^ p re s e n ts . . . ^ Lecture: Bruce Bridges " Afric an American Contributions to World Civilizations " TONIGHT!! ™ 8 p.m. President's Lounge KUB Open to the public! TONIGHT!! T Mlm: I " BRAIN BUSTERS ' «A H e r o A i n 't N o t h i II '! WANTS TO PICK YOUR BRAIN! But A S a n d w i c h " / > ^/C^O^'f^lr^/? The men's LaCrosse Club will meet in McCormick lobby Tuesday, 7 p.m . Members should bring jersey money and dues. New members are invited to attend. Tues: 7 & 9:30 p .m. . Caruer Hall Wed: 2:30 p.m. Thurs: 9:30 p .m. Caruer Hall | I I # Sign up your team of 4 NOW at the Info Desk!!! This College Bowl Quiz Competition is to be held on Tues - 2/23 ! [ L And other majors that don't guarantee jobs after graduation Getting the job you want isn't easy. Especially for recent college grads. Very few majors will prepare you for a specificcareer, and guarantee you get hired right out of college. For the rest of you, finding something you like won't be simple. You could contemplate grad school. Or law school. Two or three more years of school, and student loans comparable to the national debt. There are very few jobs out there that require little or no experience. Jobs that you would enjoy, where the only requirement is a college degree. The Federal Aviation Administration is now hiring Air Traffic Control Specialists. Over 3,000 of them. All you need to qualify for testing is a college degree. Any major is welcome. You don't even need any aviation experience. Consider the benefits: •Salaries to $50,000 plus »Up to 26 days vacation a year 'Special retirement plan "Locations nationwide "Equal Opportunity Employer. Graduation will be here soon enough. Consider a civil service career with the Federal Aviation Administration. For more information about a career as an Air Traffic Control Specialist, including an application, send your name and address on a postcard to: Federal Aviation Administration, Dept. 769 P.O. Box 26650, Oklahoma City, OK 73126. PROGRAM BORRD Officer and Chairperson positions auailable for 88-89 school year! Pick up an application at the Info Desk!! *** Join In The Fun *** Political games figure in the Olympics by Lynne Ernst Features Editor The year was 1969. After a series of soccer matches between El Salvador and Honduras in the qualif ying rounds for the World Cup, El Salvador broke off diplomatic and economic relations with Honduras. The serious ended in a tie - one win for each country, but after each match , riots among the crowd sparked enmity among the countries. And soon after a playoff in Mexico City which Honduras lost, war broke out between the two states. This example shows how sports can exhibit a state's sense of political and economic strength through prowess on the field. Nowhere is this more prevalent in the history of sports than in the Olympic Games, where the emphasis on the athlete has been overlooked . In 1896, Baron de Coubertin revived the Olympic Games after a span This rocker gave 2 solo puitar pcrformsn.-r si is. :_ . (Italy) :ho Univers ity of Florence 'Ail: . v sityin Montreal. "The Odyssey " . ~ :50 r .rv. T J :.>.-L-> . Oxford University, and has taught at mankind. Instead , the Olympics often mirror the international struggle Feb. 16 at Susqaehar.ra I '-•.-. ;r> ::\ ' > McGill since 1966. among the nations. Seibert Hall Auditorium. The public is invited to attend. Scholar discusses Homer 's 'Odyssey ' t i t j I _ _ _ _ _ _. _ „ _ _ * y ^^^^^^^^-t-f * * u. 7v a i s ^^^^^^ M p*' ^'? «¦"* !^* i %8ng>&&v#&zf * * ' ii/ " ¥r ^^^^^ S w^Mf j i -c * j^tSSJffi^tt^toVttj-M^ .^.^^i^iMMBflBB ^BMflBHH ^B^B^^* sSaHH: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ by Patty Loeb Staff Writer "Markers ready, get set, draw!" could be heard in Kehr Union last Wednesday evening as Program Board held it 's first "Win, Lose, or Draw" tournament. According to John Guenter, Pro* gram Board recreation committee chairperson, 16 teams signed up to play. "We originally were only going to have 10 teams,but the participation was so good, we didn 't want to turn any teams away," Guenter said. Each team consisted of four.members. Teams alternated drawing pictures for three rounds and then played the speed round. The group with the most points at the end of the rounds is the winning team. Hosted by comedian Pat O'Donnel, "*; the tournament narrowed down to "? four teams who will participate in the K final rounds of "Win , Lose or Draw on Wed., Feb.,17 at 8 p.m. in Multi C in the Kehr Union building. The final four teams are: Team 1: Robin Hoban,Joe Peterlin, "^ John Derdarian and Tom Haflett Team 2: Bill Sunski, Jerry Hybki, Kevin Kundratic and Paul Nicolo Team 3: Tony Dunn , Peg Weik, Art Sweeney and Donna Ciero Team 4, Gigi Davison, Bob Finch, Gerry Moore, and Mark Simmons Approximately 120 BU students showed up to play or support players in the game, which is ju st part of the Program Board Winterfest activities. Guenter says, "The whole idea behind Winterfest is to give the students something to do in cold *3 weather." "And last semester," Guenter " added,"the 30 members of the recreation committee got together, brainstormed, and realized the "Win, Lose, or Draw" would do ju st that." % ^B^LWXli ^K^SSBmSfm&ff Lm^S^& * J«9Bs& j n |n » ^J^w* &L ^ v '*^B SS^B^S^Hi^^^SS^^^ EB ^^ ^^^^^^H K^^BI^BJ^HBL 'JHIB ¦*^1 > «* %, ^ v N ^ii_B&BnB -9HuBa9HH IfiBBnfflWSBB iffllffS^ H_B_____nk' ^^^8S^^R9^^ntifl^B^K^ *w)vlf(99V^^fl^B^^^P"*V_||f2___ ^BBBB^BSIU^HHB^^^B&BPIS^' / * s "* ^ A cott, the '76 Olympiad showed the United States and Russia vying for selection of the site for future Olympics. This time Los Angeles and Moscow were the only bidders for the 1980 Games , but events at the World University Games held in Moscow had sent much protest against Moscow as the choice for the 1980 games. At the University Games the Israeli athletes were harrassed by Russians. It was reported that Soviet officials did little to restrain the mobs that harried the Israelis. The Soviet government had a problem. On one hand they wanted to show they could handle major international events. On the other hand they, felt they could not tolerate such open support of the Israeli presence by the Russian Jews. As a result they invited Yassir Arafat to the Games, the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization. In the beginning, the Soviets allowed the Israeli athletes and the Soviet Jews to socialize, but then Soviet officials isolated the Israeli team, citing security measures as justification. Yigon Allon, the Israeli foreign minister, called the Soviet action "racism and anti-Seminism" and said the Soviet Union should not hold the 1980 Olympics. Similar remarks were being made in the United States where 40 members of congress sent a letter to IOC See GAMES page 5 Drawing | game show f a success j | j a*^gMNHH |W AMB M* {^Bs ^Stm ^^Henw ^^^KKifflHH ^^Hn^nttHi ^ls^iHgSP^ ~ ^SMK iwmWvmsKiiJillilf ^^KtBafliftitnBBi^HB^^BI^BBHp TS^BWW ¦? * 4 " * *¦ <, ** since they had not competedin the Olympics since 1912. Instead, Russia had competed mainly in their own country. But by 1948, Russia was interested in taking part in the world of international sports. The question of Soviet participation in the Olymp ics was involved with the question of Eastern European participation. Beyond that, the real issue was the presence in the Olympics of Communists and the Communist countries. The fear of mixing politics with sports was apparent. But for the 1948 Games, the issue of Soviet participation solved itself. The Soviets, failing to form a national Olympic committee, and not asking for recognition, simply did not participate. Politics has also been extremely apparent in the Olympic games in the past 15 years. In the 1976 Games when the American world-record holding discus thrower Mac Wilkens embraced the second place East German instead of his fellow teamatc who took third, the American public and media condemned Wilkin 's act as "treasonous." The reason: politics. In the same year, South Africa threatened to boycott the Olympics stating that the United Nations had violated resolutions condemning South African racial policies. Also, South Africa and New Zealand were at odds. In addition to South Africa's boy- _. „ _¦ „¦ . , vMWBHSBPaB^^BHBS HBWfc. xaBl^^^ K* 66 Mom says the house just isn't the same withoutme, eventhough it's alotcleaner.99 _.. f ..",*•* In the summer of 1931,when the XI Olympiad were awarded to Berlin, a conflict arose with the Nazi' s, who were only months away from coming to power in Germany. And while the Los Angeles Olympics of 32' were underway, the Nazis, under the leadership of Hitler denounced the games as an "infamous festival dominated b'y Jews" and said that the new Germany would have nothing to do with them. But during the next four years, a struggle developed inside of Germany for control of the Games. It was evident that the Nazis did not understand the nature of the Olympics. The Nazis insisted that the 1936 Games be controlled by the German government. Luckily, this was never allowed to happened. Also, the Olympic Games of 1948 showed stugglc among the nations as the location for the games was a heated controversy. London, devastated by the war, was in short supply of housing and transportation. Critics of the London location questioned the ability to hold such an extravaganza under adverse conditions. Others said the Games in London would promote world amity. The London Olympic games controversy showed postwar conditions that exceeded the scope of sports. One problem the International Olympic Committee (IOC) also had to deal with during '48 was Russia 's participation in the Olympic Games, jif^rrM^BHBMBB^^HI^^BBBHBIrf BTE offer s new class f *. B^BH^HHHHH& AV ____ H ______H_______|B ^Lt t, HH^KH^^^I^^l^H^^HH_|___________&VI____fl___^_________^^ A ¦ ¦¦9n«v ^BIB^BMn_ HATC * $&iJMi$m&x sP ^^tli ^im^BrWBmBSKBlL ^ L ^S ^^^^^^H^H^^^^^^^H^iflH^H s ^ScHlHBcHSfia ^.uJ{&£t^^^l^ H^^^^B^^^^^H^HH^ _H^^^HH^^^H^ H0BHBMI i 1 1•* i •i nP^ir fn^it ^rif0 l i K r °Q fh p ii^i*^&Hm\WMriiMmm\\W ^m\^Um\&w\^ fl^^^^^^M^9g9H^^B9H^H^^^HMS2^^H_______ Hfl|^^^^^^^^^ B___B_____B___^_^____flH|_ H__Hj ¦ HHI ' - —— ¦—.. ¦ ¦ i ¦ ¦-!¦¦¦ „ i — IBflHn_REflHHBHSHfB-HflOHE9HBHflHH HHH-HHHnlflHHiflHflHHHHflHHBfiHHHBHH HHHHHfl _________E___________R_______________H_R__________|______ HHSHHMBHHH—^EBHBBHHHSKHHHHEHnHHHHMBHnBnHHMBH ^R IHBHHBHRBHBHBHBBHHnBBBHHH ^HKMSHHBHHflHHBHHHnBHB ..._ ..I -.— ¦ I I fl& ¦H n m «_B^_aa_ff ^ T ~~~~^ HUB BB j i^n A n f^ iH™^Wk HI B_flHa*9mm KB ^^ .— vi ^^^9w mw ~\( ~\ I D P C C P S \T ^ The Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble Theatre School is offering a new adult acting class starting Febru.v. A ary 22. LuAn Keller, a Catawissa native and a specialist in child drama, has adapted one of BTE' s most popu*& lar childrens theatre, "Creative Dramatics", into a class for adults."Creative Dramatics for Adults" is a threeweek program, running February 22 through March 9. Classes meet Mondays and Wednesdays, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m., at BTE' s Mitrani Building in downtown Bloomsburg. The fee is 7T <_£. $60. "The class", says BTE Theatre ¦_£ ^ School Coordinator David Moreland, "is meant to teach adults how to play TJv* again." Some class activities will include theatre games, cooperative games, and dramatazations of folk tales and stories from students * lives. For more information call 7845530. V Exp eriments torture animals by Terri Limonge'lli Staff Writer John Doe worries when his pet Rover gets teary eyed. Yet on a typical day, John kisses his family goodbye, pets his dog and leaves for the laboratory. The group Cookies and Cream performed to the song Wipeout and managed to take secon d place m the airband com petition. Photo by TJ Kemmerer ___________ ___________ _^ In October of 1986, he scalded three dogs to determine the precise amount of punishment they can take before losing consciousness. He had already determined the level they would endure, but all of the canines purchased for the experiment were not "used up." The labs are not broken down tenaments. They are very often colleges and universities just like this one. Cornell Uni versity researchers surgically Taylor Dayne a non-conformist singer by Ruch Reih! LA. Times-Washington Post Service Taylor Dayne, whose dance single 'Tell It to My Heart'' is a Top 5 pop hit, is part sophisticated lady and part Dead End Kid. At a recent interview here, the petite singer, wearing a conservative suit, looked elegant and angelic at first. But that was just a veneer. It did not take long for the real Dayne to emerge, the fast-talking, sassy, no-nonsense New Yorker who can cuss like a sailor. "What'd you expect, a nun?" she cracked. "I'm from New York. It's a jungle. If you 're dainty, you die." She was just warming up. "I'm no pushover," Dayne continued. "I can'tafford to be. The record business ain't Disneyland, you know. I've already dealt with people who've tried to rip me off. I don 't have a chip on my shoulder. I'm a nice person. ... Just don 't cross me." Dayne, 25, has been on the road promoting her first Arista Records album, "Tell It to My Heart," which has zoomed to No. 46 on the Billboard pop chart in three weeks thanks to the radio exposure for the single. The LP's success is somewhat suprising because Dayne does not fit the current trend in female dancemusic singers: teen-agers with sweet, yearning, underpowered voices like Debbie Gibson and Tiffany. Dayne sings like she talks, lustily and defiantl y. Basically, she is a white-soul singer. "We signed her because she could really sing,"said Arista's President Clive Davis in a separate interview. "We were impressed with the passion in her voice." Dayne revels in attacking a song with that unbridled passion. A large part of the appeal of her hit single is her fervent vocals. But at first, she recalled , producer Ric Wake wanted her to sing "Tell It to My Heart" softly and sweetly because that was the trendy sound. "I tried but I couldn 't do it," she recalled. "It didn't sound right. Finally, I said I want to sing it with some power, some From the Glovebox guts When I sing, I want sparks to fly. Those leen-aged singers are as exciting as wallpaper* I couldn 't sing the song like that. I had to do il the right way. I didn 't care if it sold onl y 10 copies." Dayne did not record the "Tell It to My Heart" sing le for Arista. She and producer Wake brought the single, already finished , to the label. Then , after making a big splash on the club circuit , the single became a pop hit. That is when Arista signed her to rushrecord an album. "We did it in just six weeks," Dayne recalled with a shudder: "We were working 'round the clock. What a nightmare. " Though it feature s some dance tracks , "Tell It to My Heart" is not a dance album. Arista 's chief executive Davis preferred it to be well-balanced: "We didn 't want to be categorized right away," he said. "We wanted to present a diversified picture of this artist. Just because she had one dance hit, she's not a dance artist. She can sing ballads and in different tem- destroyed the senses of a large number of cats. Over a period of ten years, the cats were subject to electric shock, blows to the head and other minor and major torments. What was learned in these ten years was never clear to researchers. A California university was cited for using improper surgical procedures on dogs while testing a heartlung machine. None of the dogs were given post-operative care. All of the dogs later died. John Hopkins University performed a scries of tests on a single kitten. The kitten 's tail was shaved and moistened. An electrical charge was shot through the tail and then a surgical clamp was applied to it. The The fuelie 283s were good performers. A 250 hp. Corvette would do 0 to 60 in 7.2 seconds and a 283 hp. version easily exceeded 134 mph., according to a 1957 Motor Trend road test But they had more drawbacks than advantages. Street drivers soon found that the fuel nozzles absorbed heat and caused rough idling or became clogged with dirt. Buyers also discovered that the fuelie setup was hard to have serviced because few dealers had mechanics experienced with the system. Only 240 Corvettes and a handful of passenger cars were ordered wilh Ramjet in 1957. Fuel injection was dropped as a passenger car option after 1958 but continued to be used for high perform ance applications in the Corvette until the end of 1965. While Chevrolet was still tinkering with increasingly powerful Corvette F.I. systems in 1962, Oldsmobile, a fellow General Motors division, in- troduced the Jetfire Sports Coupe mid-year. The Jetfire came standard with a 185 hp. 324, but the real news was an optional 215 cu. in. turbocharged aluminum block V8 called the Turbo-Rocket. This engine was misleadingly described as giving "economy when it is wanted and flashing performance when it is needed." Economy was possible but perfomance was less than flashing with a lenghty 0 to 60 time of 8.5 seconds and a 107 mph. top speed. Another drawback was the unreliable turbocharg ing system. Olds had resorted to an unusual technique of injecting a water/alcohol mixture into the engine to cure the problem of excessive carbon buildup on test versions of the Jetfire. This method was shown to be less than successful, which resulted in the engine being dropped from production in 1965. Oldsmobile also led the way in reintroducing front-wheel drive with Olympic Games have a very long and complicated political history from page 4 protesting Moscow as the site of the 1980 Olympics. But this was to no avail. Moscow was chosen. The 1980 Olympics were not without political turmoil. Athletes, sports officials and Olympic enthusiasts were worrying about the fate of the Moscow Summer Olympics. Led by the United States, Western leaders played a type of pinball with the Games as their main response to Russia's invasion of Afghanistan in December of 1979. Unless the Soviet Union withdrew its forces , Western leaders threatened to boycott the MoscowSummer Games. The Soviet Union didn't retreat and Western countrieswere forced to carry through with their threat. The above examples are not a comprehensive list of the political factors that have been important in past Olympic Games. These specific examples just site the prevalence of politics in the Gaines. Count Henri De Baillet Latour once said, "May therebe an overwhelming response of athletes to this call [to the Olympiad].It can betaken for granted that magnificent contests will result when they measurethe sttcngh and suppleness of their bodies against each other, but it is ny atcstcaracal desire that from this encounter of their ideas there may grow a more profound understanding of their varying points of view, so that these peaceful com- __B____ _ _L ffiSjjBBjfiy bats will give birth to enduring friendships that will usefully serve the cause of peace."Let 's hope that this goal can be achieved at the 88' Games. _ysg_§______^___| H^jgj _§_»- __¦HL 1 JH I BHHMHSH A study done by Mel Morse has shown that when one laboratory has established significantfindings,other labs repeat the experiment and thousands of animals are needlessly tortured. For these needless experiments to stop, citizens should write their senators asking them to support the two bills in the House requiring studies of research laboratories. pos. She 's not one-dimensional." Dayne also does not blindly do as she is told. She rejected some of die songs Arista executives wanted her to record . "I' m no puppet," she said. "I fought for what I wanted. On some of the songs, they were right. They were good songs. But on others we had to work miracles to make them sound decent." She explained how she bartered with the label executives, singing some of their selections in return for the addition of some of her choices. "When I heard the demo (demonstration record) of 'I'll Always Love You,' I hated it ," she said. "I said: 'It's a Whitney (Houston) throwaway (Houston 's also on Arista); It's a mayonnaise-type song, with no guts. But I said: 'I'll sing it if you let me sing 'Carry Your Heart.' That 's what happened." Is she pleased with the album now? "Yeah, sure," she replied. "But it would have a little more depth on it if I had done things the way I wanted." Early GM cars were ahead of their time by Glenn Schwab Features Editor The old saying "There's nothing new under the sun" is especially true when applied to automotive history. While developmentslike front-wheel drive, turbochargingand fuel injection would seem to be modern advances, they haveall been used before with varying degrees of success. Ramjet, the first mass-produced fuel injection system, was developed by Rochester Carburetor for Chevrolet's 1957 283 cu.in. engine. A "fuelie" could be ordered in anything from a plain One-Fifty utility sedan to the Corvette. There were two fuel-injected 283s, one rated at 250 hp. and a high compression version that cranked out 283 hp. This allowed Chevy to make the claim of producing one of the first engines to reach the long sought after goal of one horsepower per cubic inch of engine displacement. kitten spat twice and screamedloudly. The kitten also suffered a third degree burn on the tail. After 139 days of torture, the kitten died, leaving us with the knowledge that the feline's tail has a nervous system. This airband called Vixen performed well enough to take third place Friday night. the 1966 Toronado, the first such car since the pre-World War II Cord 810/ 812. ThcToro was an instant winner. Its combination of traditional American big-car power and size with the traction and handling advantages of front-wheel drive enabled it to sell 40,000 units first year out, making a permanent place for itself in the Olds lineup. Though the Toronado was mainly a luxury car, its aggressive design was backed up by an equally aggressive engine. The 1966 model came with a 385 hp. 425 cu.in. motor, giving it more power than most musclecars of the time. The Toro really came into its own in 1970 with the W-34 option. This equipped it with a 400 hp. 455, dual exhausts and a modified TurboHydro transmission, making it one of the best performing luxury cars ever made. fy m ^ Photo by TJ Kcmmcrcr I I f V o ii Hi a n t to b e in t h e " I N E B Q UJ B " Buy fl your Hoa gies from MAC'S 4-11 Mon. and Tues. 10% discount on all hoagies MRC' s 784-1528 Fast Free Delsuerj n 1 / ? ~7>^> WEEKLY SPE |p> SakcsHff lk ^^^ ^^^^ ^y^ MONDAY: LARGE PEPPERONI PIE $6 .50 " 12" CHEESE STEAK W/CHEESE FRIES $3.25 TUESDAY:2 SMALL PAN PIZZA $6.50 12" CHICKEN FARM. 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MAIN STREET BLOOMSBURG, PA 17815 FREE DELIVERY 784-3385 ^^_ _ $il®fe^ V«£^ Comics BLOOM COUNTY r—— — I I . by Berke Ir II BLOOM COUNTY ffHE FAR SIDE P>«iMiHHwwHawnn bv Berke By GARY LARSON ^naiaBa«MBiiBMHBHMg ALBANIA BAHRAIN BELGIUM BOTSWANA CAMEROON BreathedI CONGO "I ETHIOPIA GAMBIA GERMANY GUINEA l HAITI HONDURAS INDIA v INDONESIA i? KUWAIT ^ LAOS LEBANON LESOTHO | J LIBERIA LUXEMBOURG Breathed1 NORWAY SENEGAL SRI LANKA SURINAM - SWAZILAND TUNISIA THE FAR SIDE ^aHyataaHiMa>> "Ah, yes, Mr. Frischberg, I thought you'd come ... but which of us is the real duck,Mr. Frischberg, and not just an illusion?" By GARY LARSON Dinosaur nerds THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON ffiiBr ^^ MORE sfgMUO>\ f^L^timS U65K/ ~%7 XXf* J^S^ Trauel with Trans-Bridge UHL LEHIGH L EV , CLINTON NELURRK HJRPOR T & NELU VORK CITV our Compare leaves: Bloomsburg ILehighton Hllentouj n Bus Terminal Bethlehem Bus Terminal Lehigh Dalley Industrial Park Easton Bus Terminal Clinton Neuj ark Neuj York City , ^ ^^===3^ - • 2:15 a.m. In the Hall of Fossil Appliances ¦ IT C O U L D N ' T BE RNV S I M P L E R ! Take 1 I The University S T O R E has lost their S T O C K R O O M and must have a big S R L E Hduantage of g r e a t @ JUNIORS, SENIORS, GRADS SUMMER JOBS OCEAN CITY, NJ (RETAIL) $5.00 per hour. The SURF MALL in Ocean City, NJ is looking for twenty (20) highly HOMEWORKERS WANTED! motivated individuals to fill variTOP PAY !C.I. 121 24th Ave., ous retail oriented positions. If you N.W. 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If it seems a little silly, it must be the Winter Olympics by Mike Kupper LA. Times-Washington Post Service ¦ So what's going on here in Calgary? Well, if it's Olympic time, it must be the sill y season. Sure enough, even before the lighting of the Olympic flame, it hasbegun. It wouldn't be the Olympics, otherwise. Going into Saturday's opening ceremony, the leading candidate for the foolishness gold medal is the U.S. bobsled team. This is in the best traditions of the bobsy boys, for whom controversy seems a way of life. In 1980 atLake Placid, for instance, former Olympic hurdler Willie Davenport was a late addition to the team, despite protests that he was not quali- country who would be better sliders than the guys sitting there, who happened to be two-thirds of the U.S. team. So now it's 1988 and Willie Gault, sometime bobsledder and full-time Chicago Bears wide receiver, has been added to the Olympic bobsled team despite protests that he joined the team too late, taking someone else's spot. Gault, however, qualified on the third sled and only the first two are allowed to compete, so if Gault were to ride here, it would be strictly as an alternate. Both U.S. drivers, Brent Rushlaw and Matt Roy, have said any number of times that they have no intention of making room for Gault on their sleds. Even so, Don LaVigne of Albany, N.Y., the young man who was bumped to make room for Gault, after having been in training since October, took such exception to the whole business that he did the American thing. He hired a lawyer. All week long, the controversy raged. First, LaVigne's lawyer asked for binding arbitration. Gault, meanwhile, said that he was a bona fide member of the team , duly elected and sworn, and that the kind of resentment he was feeling from his teammates was nothing compared with the kind of tension he is accustomed to living with as a Chicago Bear. The United States Olympic Committee and the American bobsled federation, finally agreed to "pursue a course of action" to get LaVigne back on the team without disturbing Gault 's place. Thursday, they announced that the international bobsledding federation and International Olympic Committee had given the U.S. team special permission to use an extra slider, 13 instead of the usual 12. What apparently has been going on here is that 'the U.S. federation , given a chance to promote itself through a pro athlete of Gault's stature, chose to make the most of it. Bobsledding, after all, gets precisus little publicity. This time, it got a Utile more than it had bargained for. It's understandable that LaVigne would be upset but the fact is that he wasn't going to ride, either, since he was only an alternate. So this whole siiiy business was about two guys who will get a chance not to compete in the Olympics. Then there was a silver-medal silly observation by Prince Alexandre de Merode, the Belgian who rules the medical end of the IOC. In Los Angeles, there was a recent nurses' walkout. Here in Calgary, the nurses are now on strike. De Merode has taken great offense at that. "I consider it -1 don 't say criminal - but very, very bad," he said. "It shows these people don 't have the interests of the athletes (at heart). ... In my mind , it is crazy to have a (strike) at the moment of the Games. It is unacceptable because they are using the Olympic Games to pressure." Come on, Princey, get real. The athletes are probably the healthiest people here. What about the folks who live here who really need medical help? Besides, people have been using the Games to their own ends for some time now. It's sort of the accepted thing. Or if not quite accepted, at least expected. And commercial excesses have also reached the silly stage. How silly? Wednesday night, reporters returned to the media village and discovered that press releases had been left in their rooms. What could be this important message? How about this? "Looking for the scoop on Calgary behind the scenes? Take a lead from John Lavender, the Garbage Man of the Olympics. Lavender has spent the last two years coordinating the hows, wheres and whens of Olympic garbage. ...Give us a call if you'd like to talk with Lavender. Besides being a garbage pro, he's also an articulate, humorous interview." Just what the world has been waiting for - an articulate, humorous garbage pro. Let the Games begin! by Diane Stoneback Calgary got the bid seven years ago. He noted , "Creating menus and working out the recipes has been going on in earnest for the last three years because the Olympic Committee wanted the material in place 12 months in advance of the opening." Although ordinary, sedate noncompetitors often take breakfast lightly or skip it altogether, John Scanlan, manager of food services for the XV Olympic Winter Games Organizing Committee and vice president of special projects for ARA Services, said, "Olympic athletes rarely miss a meal. As a matter of fact, they attend all the meals and then some." Scanlan bases his statements on a world of experience gleaned from managing food services for some 14 Olympic activities since the Mexico City games in 1968. Indeed, each athlete has to do some serious eating to consume the 5,5 00 calories daily per person (more than double what the average adult consumes) food service personnel expect each athlete to consume. The quantities can be amazing, considering that the athletes are nutri^ tion-conscious and avoid obviously calorie-laden foods that don't supply the nutrients they want. Griffiths commented, "Today 's athletes are highly disciplined when it comes to their diet. Such foods as Danish and doughnuts are not big sellers here, but we still put a few out on the tables." fiths, "They really want the potassium the bananas supply." Griffiths said the menus had been planned to provide varied fare at all three meals, in an attempt to avoid what he calls the "monotony factor." No one will have to eat the same foods time and time again. "We don 't want the pressures of competition to lead to complaints about the food ," he commented. The constant variety of food available is deliberately intended to satisfy the tastes of people from 52 different « countries. Noted Scanlan , "Representatives of the various countries used to want to see all the menus, but our reputation over the years has made it such that when some officials hear we re doing the food service, they don 't even bother checking the menus. "We make sure all the food has a high acceptance level and will prepare national dishes on request." The food service personnel also have all but usurped the function of team chefs. Only a few teams, including the Italians, still have their own chefs to prepare special foods and to cook party fare for medal winners. Just a sampling of the breakfast foods ordered gives one an idea of how monumentalGriffiths ' task is. During the games, he expects the athletes to consume 12,000 gallons of orange juice, 10,500 dozen eggs, 63,000 pounds of beef, 21,000 dozen rolls and 2,500 pounds of Canadian bacon. He noted, Wherever possible, we are trying to spotlight Canadian foods as well as foods contributed by official sponsors. To that end, the athletes will see plenty of Canadian bacon, seafood and turkey as well as buffalo sausage and rabbit pies. The beef for which Calgary ranches are known will be in evidence from the steaks served at breakfast to the beefburgers served at In the all-night snack counters." just one five-day period, eggs will be served poached, fried , scrambled, scrambled with Swiss cheese, hard and soft boiled and in Cheddar cheese, mushroom, western and Creole omelets. Canadian back bacon, beef sausage, fried kippers, grilled sirloin, chopped beefsteak,poached haddock, kidneys, grilled ham , regular bacon, grilled ham, pan-fried trout, veal liver, corned beef hash and finnan haddock will be the breakfast meats served during the same time period. There will also be pancakes, blueterry waffles and French toast on the list of breakfast entrees. In case the lengthy breakfast menus aren'tenough to suit the athletes, there will also be 27 kinds of breads, 17 varieties of cheeses and cold meats and a massive salad bar available all day long. Three kinds of milk, Ovaltine, hot chocolate, cocoa, regular and decaffeinated coffee, two kinds of tea, soft drinks and assorted fruit juices will be available to wash down all the food consumed by the athletes. fied, that he had joined the team too late and that better sliders had been left off the team to make room for him. In what surely must rank as one of the most bizarre press conferences of all time, Gary Sheffiel d, then the coach of the U.S. team, told how he had failed to talk No. 1 driver Bob Hickey out of using Davenport. Hickey, Davenport and the rest of the No. 1 crew, incidentally, skipped that press conference, apparently in protest. It was among other incredible things Sheffield said on that day, when he added that, although Davenport was a talented athlete, it really took no particular athletic talent to be a bobsledder and that there were probably lots of people throughout the ABC's Television Schedule Monday, February 15: 8:00 p.m.-ll:00 p.m. 11:30 p.m.-Midnight Cross Country Skiiing: Men's 30 km Luge: Men's singles Alpine Skiing: Men 's combined downhill Ice Hockey: Norway vs. West Germany Ice Hockey: Austria vs. Russia Ice Hockey: U.S. vs. Czechoslovakia Olympic Overview Tuesday, February 16: 8:00 p.m.-ll:00 p.m. 11:30 p.m.-Midnight Ice Hockey: Sweden vs. Poland Luge: Ladies' singles Alpine skiing: Men 's combined slalom Ice Hockey: Canada vs. Switzerland Figure skating: Pairs free skating Ice Hockey: Finland vs. France Olympic Overview Wednesday, February 17: 8:00 p.m.-ll:00 p.m. 11:30 p.m.-Midnight Figure Skating: Men 's compulsory Cross Country Skiing: Ladies' 5 km Luge: Ladies' singles Speed Skating: Men 's 5000m Ski Jumping: 90m team Ice Hockey:West Germany vs. Austria Ice Hockey: Norway vs. Czechoslovakia Ice Hockey: U.S. vs. Russia Olympic Overview Feeding the athletes should be an event LA.. Times-Washington Post Service Feeding the athletes truly is an Olympic event for those in charge of food service for the international event. No strangers to the amount of food required to supply energy for exercise during rugged winter weather, the Canadians have spent years planning to supply the mountain of food that will be available to the 2,000 athletes and their coaches. At breakfast, they'll be eating everything from the Calgary pioneer specialty of pancakes, sausages and steaks to lighter foods , including lots of juices and fresh fruits. The breakfast table lineup for Olympic athletes won 't include Wheaties, the "Breakfast of Champions," but , according to Olympic food service personnel, it will include such other cereals as All Bran , corn flakes, b/an flakes, Raisin Bran , Rice Krispies, Special K, granola, Meusli, tritical flakes and bulgar. Hot cereals will be Cream of Wheat. oatmeal, oat bran and a Canadian brand called Sunny Boy. Even the hungriest of lugers, bob sledders, hockey players, downhill skiers and speed and figure skaters should be able to get all the energy they need to go for gold. Besides the smorgasbord's worth of fare offered at breakfast, lunch and dinner, there will also be ample fare available 24 hours a day. Sampling everything available would be tougher than training for the biathlon . Barrie Griffiths , food services director for the University of Calgary and Olympic Village food service manager, said that planning the food for this event began almost on the day Fresh vegetables and fruits, on the other hand, are best sellers. Although the athletes make quick work of grapefruit , pineapple, cantaloupe, grapes and strawberries, they are particularly fond of bananas. Noted Grif- No fast food j omts for these athletes by Pat Calabria LA. Times-Washington Post Service A walk through the Olympic Village is something out of a storybook fantasy. It's a trip to the Gingerbread House or a journey down the Yellow Brick Road. It 's nestled almost out of sight between frozen slopes on the sprawling campus of the University of Calgary, hidden on one side by the immense speed skating oval, but it's the first Olympic Village contained entirely under one roof. The athletes don't ever have to go outside and some couldn't go if they wanted to. "I've been here three days," said U.S. bobsledder Mike Wasko, "and I haven't found the exit yet." From the outside, the complex has the look of anoffice building, all glass and steel, and inside, there is a labyrinth of corridors still smelling of fresh paint and connecting the dormitories, the video arcade, the amphitheater, the discotheque and the international cafeteria with 17 varieties of bread. "You got food here coming out of your goozaloo," said Michael Aljoe, Wasko's bobsled teammate. Aljoe has a blond Mohawk haircut with the letters USA sprouting in dyed brown hair from the shavedportion abovehis left ear, it gets looks but not as many looks as the cafeteria. There's an international menu, everything from hamburgers to raspberry mousse. Pizza is served in the disco until 10 p.m. and the cafeteria is open 21 hours a day, which the athletes think is almost enough. "Andit'sall greatfood," Aljoesaid. "You can put on some serious calories here if you don't watch it. Man, if we lived here all the time, you'd have a big bunch of fat people on your hands." Beyond the cafeteria are the three cinemas-the Gold, the Silver and the Bronze, naturally - showing "Legal Eagles" and "Blazing Saddles," and behind them are the six gymnasiums, the weight rooms with rows and rows of bicycles, the six-lane running track, the hair salon, a branch of the Royal Bank, the medical clinic, the gift shop and the squash and racquetball courts. In the research laboratory, where athletes can have their performances analyzed by computer, there is a sign that reads, "Gold Luck." There's a photography studio where they can have their pictures taken and sent back home, too. For those who get hungry walking to the cafeteria, there are two snack bars along the route. Beyond the atrium is the corridor that leads past the entertainment cen- ter to the athletes suites - a living room between two bedrooms in dormitories normally occupied by students. "The rooms are terrific , too," British bobsledder Audley Richards said. "Now I feel bad for the people we kicked out." It's quiet all day and all night there, except it wasn't quiet Tuesday night. That's when an unclaimed carton aroused the suspicion of security per- ^\ - sonnel after it stood in a dormitory hallway for several hours. It turned out the box belonged to the Italian Alpine ski team, located in another wing, but no one knew that when Olympic officials ordered the dormitory cleared. "They told everybody to leave," Aljoe said. "I wasn't about to wait around until they let us back in. What could I do? I went over to the cafeteria to get something to eat." ^^^^^^ B U Rates \ / ^=5ll||Siii ^^ ^^ Q UEST Rental Center CENTENNIAL GYM 389-4384 Cross-Country Ski Package $10 Inner Tubes Camping Package: $2 $14 pr^T Tues. 2-4 UJed. 2-4 _ Tnurs 2 4 Fri. 12-5 *Prices are for a two-day rental period | j $; 1 . 0 Q W I I QUEST $ 1 .0 0 renta l e q u i p m e n t O i l * Store H o u r s : 7 days a w e e k / 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Deliuery Hours: 7 days a meek/11 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. 1 50 East Main St., Bloomsburg (71 7)784-41 82 CAMP ECHO LAKE *QNE OF NEUJ YORK 'S OLDEST AND FINESTPRIURTE CAMPS ?LOCATED IN THE HEART OF THE RD I R 0 N D A C K MODNTHINS *SERUES B0VS RND GIRLS AGES 7- 1 6 , FROM ALL ODER THE UNITED STATES , MEHIC0 AND C A N A D A . * PRVS PARTICULAR ATT ENTION TO THE I N D I U I D U A L CAMPEA IN RN ATM0SPHER E0F UJAAMTH AND SUPPORT ?OFFERS CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITI ES IN... GROUP LEADERSHI P , UJATERFR0NT , T R I P P I N G ATHLETICS , CRAFTS , (Ceramics , UJookshop) , G Y M N A S T I C S , UIDE0 , CRERT1UE & D R A M A T I C ARTS RND GE NERAL STAFF * U P P E A C L A S S PERSONS , GRADUATE STUDENTS , AND FACULTY AAE UJELC0ME TO APPLY * UIS1T UJITH US IN THE KEHR UNION ON F R I D A Y , FEBAUARY THE 19th FROM 10-2 221 E. HHRTSDRLE HUE. t HHRTSDHLE ,' N.Y. 10530 914-472 -5858 »Jl *P KXMtflll 1-^— Builough is back , work ethnic and all Los Angeles Times Hank Builough is back in the National Football League as an assistant coach with the Green Bay Packers, and that's good news if you like malapropos. At Buffalo, Builough was establishing himself as the Yogi Bcrra of the NFL before the Bills fired him as head coach in 1986. Sample quotes: -"We'll have a good work ethnic." -"He did it on the spare of the moment." -"He's making improvement throwing the ball where he's » throwing the ball." -"We keep beating ourselves, at but wc^rc getting better it." -"It took the sails right out of our wind." Add Builough: Of Bills owner Ral ph Wilson , he said, "I'm not a yes guy. He knows that when I hired him." Asked to rate the 1985 college running backs, he said, "Well , you 've got that Jackson kid at Auburn and that Bonaparte kid at Navy." Trivia Time: What put a damper on the Soviet Union 's overall medal victory in the 1984 Winter Olympics? (Answer below.) Add 1984: Asked about the biathlon , which combines skiing and shooUng, U.S. biaihletc Don Nielsen said, "Skiing and shooting is a marriage made in hell. It's a physical contradiction of impossible proportions. It's like turning from a rabbit to a rock and back again ." When teammate Martin Hagen finished 53rd in the20-kiIomclcr biathlon , Nielsen said, "His gyroscope went afoul on one of the downhills , and he went on an unscheduled tour of the shrubbery. There is talk of having to file an environmental impact statement on him before the next race." If Michigan makes it to the Rose Bowl in the next four years, it 's hard to say how they 'll do, but don 't bet against them in the pregamc Beef Bowl at Lawry's. Among the linemen headed for Ann Arbor are Joe Cocozzo, 300 pounds, Mechanicville, N.Y.; John Woodlock , 294, Massillon , Ohio; Doug Skeene, 290, Allen , Texas; Bill Schaffer , 280 , Youngstown, Ohio, and Rob Doherty , 270, Sterling Heights, Mich. Would-you-believe-it department: A Japanese newsman, interviewing newly married Mike Tyson, said, "Nothing personal , but which part of your new wife do you like most." Surprisingly, Tyson gave him an answer. "I love all of her," he said, "but she has a special set of legs that are just awesome. That's an American term. In your language, it means fabulous." From Wallace Matthews of Newsday: 'Talk about boxing egomaniacs: George Foreman becamea father for the sixth time. And what did he name his new son? The same as he named the previous five: George." Said publicist Irving Rudd: "He's building his own dynasty, just like Genghis Khan." Trivia Answer: The death of Soviet leader Yuri Andropov. Hall of Famer Willie Stargell, told once that former Pittsburgh Pirates teammate Dave Parker had called him his idol: 'That's pretty good, considering that Dave's previous idol was himself." Bloomsburg keeps slim playoff hopes alive Victory over Cheyney gives Huskies 4-3 mark Bloomsburg University put five players in double figures and held off a 51 point performance by the Wolves' Clarence Green en route to a 102-93 conference victory over Cheyney Saturday night at Nelson Fieldhouse. Green, the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference's leading scorer, tallied 51 points on 17 field goals, including five three pointers, and 12-14 shooting from the free throw line to lead all scorers. But the story of the night was the balanced Husky offense. With Joe Stepanski and Johnny Williams held to only six and two points respectively, it was Craig Phillips and Kevin Reynolds picking up the slack. The duo had 36 points between them. . Also doing some heavy darnage on the Wolves' defense was Alex Nelcha and Dave Carpenter on the inside. Nelcha, who has been playing some incredible basketball his last five games, led the Huskies with 25 points. Carpenter chipped in 14. The other Husky in double fi gures was Jim Higgins with 10. Cheyney hit two more field goals than the Huskies, including four more three-pointers, but Bloom sburg took an amazing 50 shots from the charity stripe and hit 38 of them, compared to just 21-27 for the visiting Wolves. The victory was important for the Huskies as it kept them mathematically in the race for the Eastern Conference playoffs at 5-4. Cheyney dropped to 7-2. by John Feinstein The next year, Nate Blackwell arrived as a freshman guard and the rebuilding process began. Like Chaney, Blackwell was a city kid , a Public League player of the year.One year later, Howard Evans won that award and also decided to go to Temple. One by one Chaney put the pieces together and the victories began to pile up: 25, 26, 25 and then 32 last year. Blackwell has graduatedbut in his place in the lineup is freshman Mark Macon, as gifted a freshman guard as you are likely to find in this or any other year. The Owls are 19-1 and, in this season when everyone is beatable, losses by the top four teams last week landed them suddenly and stunningly at No. 1. "I realize this is a great thing for the school," Chaney said after Temple had made its debut as No. 1a dazzling one with a near-perfect98-86 victory over Villanova on a night when the Wildcats would have beaten almost anyone else. "But the last couple of days I ve been hiding out. I can t get any work done because the phone won 't stop ringing. I can't go home because all my neighbors want to congratulate me. It's been impossible." He grinned, loving every minute. "We won tonight, so maybe we'll get to stay No. 1 for one more day." Actually, the Owls may retain their ranking for a while. One major roadblock remains on the schedule - next Sunday's game at North Carolina but beyond that Temple should not lose before the end of the regular season. Which brings up a sore point with Chaney and his team. "People don't want to give us respect," Evans said, "because they say we play a bunch of hash-house teams." Better known as the Atlantic 10. Although Rhode Island and West Virginia have glossy records, those records have been built largely by beating up on other league teams such as Rutgers, Massachusetts, St. Bonaventure, Duquesne and George Washington. Temple cannot be blamed for the imbalance of its league; but the time to silence critics is March. The Owls have yet to do that. March has been a difficult month for Chaney. For four straight seasons the Owls have lost in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The first three losses were understandable: top-ranked North Carolina; topranked Georgetown; second-ranked Kansas. But last year's 72-62 loss to Louisiana State, a team with 14 losses, was both frustrating and baffling. No one at Temple wants a repeat. At least partly because of that, Chaney cut his team off from the media as soon as it became apparent this week that the Owls were going to ascend to the No. 1spot. He felt they had become a little bit of the media darlings last season and didn 't want a repeat.After Wednesday's victory, he lifted "the gag order," as he put it, for everyone but the freshmen. At Temple, "the freshmen" means Macon. . "I have a responsibility to Mark," Chaney said. "He is an immensely Bloomsburg held onto their slim playoff hopes by defeating Cheyney 102-93 Saturday night. They avenged an earlier loss at the Photo by Michoic You . hands of the Wolves, Bloomsburg lost 86-80 at Cheyney . Chaney s discipline big reason why Temple is #1 LA. Times-Washing 'on Post Service John Chaney, the coach who has transformed Temple University from a memberof the Big Five to a member of college basketball's elite, is a man who believes in discipline. To put it mildly. There are many stories here on the city 's north side that illustrate his penchant for cracking down on those who do not do as they are supposed to do. His early-morning practices are legendary; players go to bed hearing that foghorn voice ringing in their ears and wake up at 6 a.m. hearing it all over again. His disdain for those who do not take care of the basketball is such that Owls forward Mike Vreeswyk claims that Chaney will not even speak Isiah Thomas' name since the gifted Detroit guard threw The Pass that Larry Bird intercepted last May. To understand what Chaney has done in taking Temple to the No. 1 ranking in both wire service polls for the first time in school history, one has to know just how seriously his penchant for discipline is taken by everyone at Temple. That's everyone, starting with the man who hired him six years ago, Temple President Peter Liacouras. Last year, we were on the bus riding from the hotel to the arena at West Virginia," Liacouras remembered , "and the bus caught on fire. " Chaney has a strict rule against talking on his bus en route to games . The players are supposed to be concentrating on the task that lies ahead of them and anyone else riding the bus, president or passerby, also adheres to the Chaney edict of silence. "The bus is on fire," Liacouras said, "and John is up front and doesn't notice. The players are coughing, I'm coughing, but no one would dare say a word. If John hadn 't noticed the smoke finally, (point guard) Howard Evans might have choked to death because no one was about to open their mouths." Chaney laughs with delight when he talks about the incident. "Now that," he said gleefull y, "was concentration." And discipline. To people here, Chaney's story is now a familiar one. He was the Public League player of the year here in 1952 and went on to become something of an NAIA legend during his college career at Bethune-Cookman and still tells stories of those days barnstorming through the South playing teams with players old enough to be his father, then getting on the bus to ride six hours to another game. Chaney was 50 before he got a chance to coach Division I. He had built a Division II power during 10 years at Cheyney State, winning 225, losing 59 and winning a national championship in 1978. Liacouras had been Temple's president only six weeks when, to the surprise of most people, he named Chaney to replace Don Casey as the basketball coach. Chaney promptly went 14-15 his first year, the first - and last - time one of his teams finished with a losing record. talented player but I don 't wan t someone coming in and dragging him off in left field somewhere." Actually, Macon may be better equipped lo handle the ballyhoo than most seniors. He is a remarkably poised player, mature beyond his years in every way except for his baby face. "He uses screens like a pro," Villanova Coach Rollie Massimino said after Macon had buried his team wilh 31 points. "I can 't ever remember seeing a freshman have a game like that. He's good but I didn 't think he was that good. But then , I didn 't think anyone was that good." Chaney has pieced this team together carefull y. When Blackwell graduated, he called Evans in and told him after three years as a shooting guard he would have to become a point guard. "I didn't give him any choice," Chaney said. "I figured it was him or Mark and since Howie's heard me scream for three years, he could handle it better." Everything with Temple starts with the point guard , so Evans' transformation was important. "He had to Icam not to act like a bumper car," Chancy said. That is a Chaneyism, one of dozens the coach uses. A bumper car is a player who gets so shot-hungry that he starts bouncing off walls to try to get a shot off. The former bumper car has responded by averaging 8.7 assists a game. Wednesday, he had 20 - two shy of the NCAA record - and one turnover. "You had a turnover?" Chaney said to Evan s in mock horror. "That's ridiculous, Howie. What the hell is wrong with you?" Chaney regards the turnover as something approaching sacrilege. Temple had six in a run-and-gun game Wednesday and averages less than nine a game. In this day and age that is nothing short of amazing. The guards run the game under Chaney 's baton. Vreeswyk is the third outside shooter and shot-blocker Tim Perry and wide-body Ramon Rivas supply the power inside. The question mark is the bench, young and thin. But that is a month away. Chaney knows that is when his most serious work will come. But for the moment, the school on the north side is in the midst of a celebration. After the victory Wednesday, the PA boomed a tape of the song "Celebrate," and students and alumni lingered long into the night to sing it again and again. McGonigle Hall has become THE place to be on North Broad Street so much so that Liacouras' dream of a 12,000-seat arena (McGonigle seats 4,500) might come true. But, although everyone around them basks in all this, the coach and the players change nothing. Practice is still at 6 a.m.; the foghorn voice booms when someone makes a mistake and no one talkson the bus, fire or no fire. "Coach Chaney is never done,"Evans said. "He never relaxes. You do one thing, there's always something else to do. Now that he's seen that we can be No. 1, he's going to want it again and again." Evans paused and smiled. "What's really going to be bad is next year. I really feel sorry for those guys. After this, Coach is going to want it all." Right now,for Chaney and Temple, it isn't that far away. The Bloomsburg University men s and women's swimming and diving teams ended their dual meet season on a positive note on Wednesday by defeating West Chester. The women swam to an easy victory over the Rams by a score of 13078. Sue Rueppel, Tina Wasson, Chris Pierie and Carol Lohr set the pace in the first event of the meet, winning the medley relay with a time of 4:20.75. Taking second in the same event was the Bloomsburg team of Deb Legg, Anne Fritz, Kim Stasko, and Amy Groome with a time of 4:20.78. Throughout the entire meet the Bloomsburg women dominated the events. Kim Nelson swam to three first place victories in the 1000 freestyle, the 200 butterfly and the 400 freestyle realy. Karen Pfisterer dominated the sprinting events winning the 50 and 100 freestyle and the 400 frestyle relay. Tina Wasson was victorious in the 200 individual medley and the 200 breaststroke. Deb Legg was a triple winner adding to the medley with first places in the 200 and 500 freestyle. Wendy Moyer added her diving expertise by picking up victories on both the one and three meter boards. The women sport an 8-3 record going into the conference meet next week at Clarion and according to head coach Dave Rider, the outlook is very positive for the meet. He is hoping his women will display one of their most powerful showings yet and capture the title of conference champions. Beth Roeder is seeded first nationally in the 200 butterfly and is hoping to lengthen the margin at the state meet. Deb Legg, Kim Nelson, Karen Pfisterer and Kim Youndt are also national hopefuls from the women s team. The men's team didn't have it as easy as the women. They began the meet with a victory in the medley relay consisting of Brian Duda, John Schneider, Drew Wallace and Dave Danner clocking in a time of 3:50.83. West Chester finished second and Bloomsburg third. Throughout the entire meet it was touch an go with each event. Winning impressive victories for Bloomsburg were, Duda in the 200 backstroke, Bob Potter in the 1000 freestyle, and Ed McElhiney in the 200 breaststroke. Others adding support to the team with second place finishes were Jack Carr, Todd McAllister, Mark Moore and Andy Savareese, many of whom qualified for the state conference meet. The West Chester meet came down to the wire and the 400 freestyle relay, with Bloomsburg needing a second and third place to win and the Rams needinga first and third to wrap up the victory. Bloomsburg was fortunate to pull out the narrow 99-98 win. The men will also be preparing for the PSAC meet and are hoping to qualify a few for nationals. by Mary Ellen Spisak Staff Writer Heavyweight wrestler Ron Ippolite scored a major decision over Cleveland State's Keith Cameron, 12-3, to capture a heated battle between Eastern WrestlingLeague foes, 19-18, this Saturday. The Huskies characteristically dominated early, wining five of the first seven weight classes. But victories at 177 and 190, one by major decision and one by technical fall, put the Vikings ahead and set up Ippolite's heavyweight heroics. Ippolite was chosen the 'Good as Gold' wrestler of the match for his major decision. With the loss, Cleveland State fell to 6-5, 1-4 in EWL action. The Huskies improved their record to 10-1 overall and a 4-1 EWL slate. Bloomsburg now prepares to face another EWL opponent, Army, tomorrow at 7:00. They will be facing the Cadets at West Point. Men and women end season on winning note, down Rams Grapplers improve EWL record to 4-1 Bloomsburg 19, Cleveland State 18. Weight Class Results: 118-Supsic dec. Dan Donovan 8-4 126-Kennedy dec. Jim Lightner 7-4 134-Gay Fako dec. Reed 9-7 142-Dave Zahoransky pinned Kuntzleman in 2:43 150-Morgan dec. Dave Wlodarz 52 158-Banks dec. Frank McKeon 105 167-Holter dec. Mike Millward 5-3 177-Brandon Adkinson ,maj. dec. Brown 12-2 190-Emie Slone tech. fall over DeFlumeri 18-2 in 6:04 Hwt-Ippolite maj. dec. over Keith Cameron 12-3