Education maj ors suggest improvements at meeting by Karen Reiss Editor-in-Chief Nearly 100 education majors gathered last Monday to voice their concerns about the required field studies courses. The meeting, moderated by Professor William O'Bruba, chairperson of curriculum and foundations , was called in response to the letters to the editor run on two different occasions in The Voice . O'Bruba said he wanted to allow students the chance to vent their frustrations with the courses. "We took notes and recorded the session," he said. "We will compile the information and distribute it throughout the department." O'Bruba added that another meeting with students will be held late this semester or first thing next semester to discuss what changes, if any, can be made to make the courses more agreeable. "I don't think we'll have enough time this semester," he said. Education major Theresa Creasy said she expected the negative before the meeting but was pleased with the outcome. "I went into the meeting with a pessimistic attitude, but once he (O'Bruba) let us know reasons for implimenting the field studies courses, I felt better about what was going on," Creasy said. "Just the open communication was very helpful." One of the main points O'Bruba made was that the committees responsible for reviewing the curriculum for education majors stress the Reed for more practical experience. "They don't feel student teaching is enough," he said. According to Dr. Howard Mac Cauley, dean of professional studies, the two bodies that review the curriculum specifically for teacher education are the Pennsylvania Department of Education and the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education. "Both groups will be visiting the campus in 1990 to make sure we offer field experience early for freshmen end sophomores," he said. One student chose not to attend the meeting because she was informed it would "just be a grievance session." Junioreducation major Kathy Moyer she-didn 't feel like hearing all the complaints again. "You can complain all you want but westill have to put up with the courses, Moyer said. "We're the guinea pigs." Moyer said one of the. major problems with the Field Studies I and*fl classes is that most students are unable to schedule them until their jun ior or senior year. "They would be much more beneficial if taken as a freshmen ,"she added. Other concerns aired at the meeting were the lack of participation from area schools, limited space for the trips to the schools , cancelled trips , and miscommunications about rescheduling the trips. According to Moyer, students miss other classes at times because of the trips. She added that the local schools are sometimes disturbed when the field studies students show up at the wrong times. "They are say ing Bloomsburg University is basically a nuisance," Moyer said. "We set a bad example." O'Bruba said he thought the students at the meeting handled themselves very professionally. "I was very impressed with the way the students conducted themselves," he said. "We will try to react to the concerns." Volunteer students (from I. to r.) Rob Gould, Bob Duthaler, and Lisa Landis man the control booth of the telethon.. 'Telethon of Hope 1 falls short of monetary goal Photo by Jim Btttendorf ^ by Karen Reiss Editor-in-Chief The Telethon of Hope, spon sored by the Columbia County unit of the American Cancer Society, raised a total of $11,590 yesterday, falling short of last year's total by approximately $13,000. According to Mary Ann Boyer, multi-unitexecutivedirectorofthe Columbia County Cancer Society, technical problems prohibited certain areas in the region from viewing the telethon. "We were not reaching some areas with the cable television," Boyer said. MiUville and parts of Berwick were a few of the areas unable to tune into the show. Despite the low contributions, Boyer said she was very happy with the telethon. *1t was wonderful. The talent was tr em endous and I was p leased with the overall production,"She said. Boyer said she is counting on more donations to come in within the next few days which will boost the final tally. Broadcast live on Channels 10 and 13 from the TV facilities in the McCormick Human Services Center, the telethon featured local TV and radio personalities, regional talent, and taped massages from national celebrities. Professor William Acierno, coordinator of the 11-hour show , said there was no actual goal, however, the group had hoped to earn at least $1 more than last year. Acierno also attributed some of the decline to the telethon's move completely from Berwick to the BU campus. "We couldn 't have done it without the students. About 25-30 students put in long hours today. " -William Acierno Last year, Acierno said, the large portions of the telethon were broadcast from a restaurant in Berwick. Celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, the American Cancer Society is striving to find a cure so it will not have to celebrate many more, Acierno explained. One of the major themes stressed was finding a cure so the society can "go out of business." Other themes the telethon focused on were volunteerism and the survivor. Thoughout the show, cancer survivors from the Columbia County and surrounding areas shared their experiences with cancer. Many of the volunteers also told about their personal bouts with cancer and explained why they donate their time to the cause. Chairman of the Columbia Country Cancer Society Wayne Yorks, who lost his larynx to cancer 21" years ago, said he has live 21 good years cancer free. "Even withcancer, we still have a future," Yorks said. "The only way to keep going is to look to the future. If I can help the people of the Columbia County, I feel I'm accomplishing something." According to William Kelly, vice president and station manager of WVIAChannel44, approximately 100 volunteers donated time yesterday as well as days before the telethon. "We couldn't have done it without the students,"Acierno added. "Unfortunately it was only a small number. About 25-30 students put in long hours today." The Smoking Dragon and Roger Rabbit join TV personality Joan Murray and two nursing students during the American Cancer Society Telethon of Hope. For the story and details see Page 5. Photo by Jim Btttendorf Survey examines campus opinions Majority would vote republican by John Risdon Ne ws Editor ' In a survey of political attitudes conducted last week by sections of Basic Social Statistics classes, a total of 41 percent of students replied that if they were to vote today, they would vote for the Bush/Quayle ticket, while 34 percent supported the Dukakis/ Bentsen ticket. The survey examined a cross section of 324 students, representing members of each of the university's three colleges of study. The information was collected between Oct. 25 and Nov. 1. It revealed that 14 percent were undecided on which presidential candidate they would vote for as of last week and 11 percent of the students would not vote in tomorrow's election. Student political apathy was reflected as a total of 35 percent surveyed were not registered to vote and 20 percent responded that they were not registered to vote because they were not interested at this time. The issues of greatest student concern were homelessness/poverty, protecting the environment, negotiating defense treaties with the Russians, the size of the deficit, restoring student aid, and abortion. A total of 19 percent of the students believed that solving the problems of homelessness and poverty was the top student concern. Protecting the environment was second at 16 percent followed by 15 percent favoring negotiating nuclear arms treaties with the Russians. Restoring student aid was the fifth highest student issue, backed by 13 percent. Only 5 percent of the students surveyed believed that abortion was an issue of personal concern. Other questions reflecting student viewpoints supported the ranking of issues according to personal concern. A total of 80 percent were in favor of cleaning up the environment, even if it requiressome some sacrifice to industry or the economy. Some 74 percent were in favor of the government funding education so that acollege education is within reach for everyone who wants one. Social program increases were favored by 44 percent surveyed, even at the costof raising taxes. Opposed were 18 percent and 39 percent were undecided. Defense spending cuts in order to fund social programs were supported by 51 percent and opposed by 14 percent with 35 percent surveyed undecided. Dr. Anne K. Wilson, who instructs the Social Statistics classes commented on the results, "When we made up the survey we picked out four Bush issues and four Dukakis issues and two which were neutral at the time. "It seems that the students are going to vote for Bush , but feel strongly towards 'liberal' issues. This represents inconsistency between the candidates and issues supported. I was surprised that Bush had a seven-point lead." Bush battles exhaustion by David Hoffman L.A. Times-Washington Post Service Clark, N.J., - Almost at the end of the long campaign, tired from the travel and uncertainty, Republican presidential nominee George Bush Saturday attempted to rally his troops from the East Coast to the heartland, fighting off his exhaustion with quips and even some door-to-door vote-seeking of his own. Explaining why Bush's rapidly changing schedule no longer includes a visit to Fresno in California's Central Valley this weekend, press secretary Sheila Tate quoted Bush as joking, "I didn't want to see those damn dancing raisins again." He was referring to the costumed mascots of the California raisin industry, which appeared at a Sun-Maid raisin factory Bush visited in Kingsburg, Calif.,Sept. 14. The Central Valley is a critical swing region in the state with the largest number of electoral votes - one where Bush has fervently courted the agriculture industry. Barbara Bush , flying on the chartered plane carrying the media this morning, said the Bush entourage is struggling with exhaustion. "We are all very tired," she said. "Tired of she began, then paused - "and tired." At Bush's campaign headquarters in Washington, exhausted aides breathed sighs of relief Saturday, saying overnightpollingindicated the vice president's lead was holding steady and improving in some critical states, such as Ohio and New Jersey. Campaign chairman James A. Baker III acknowledged that the race "may have narrowed a little bit" in recent days, but said that was occurring in traditionally Democratic states that Democratic nominee Michael S. Dukakis should have locked up long ago. Tate said Friday's schedule, from the East to the Midwest and back to the East again, had been especially arduous for Bush. She said the schedule was being trimmed back, but Bush officials in Washington disputed that. "There is some desire not to overschedule him ," she said. "The whole thing is just a little too much. He was just feeling real tired yesterday. If you schedule smart, you don 't have to schedule heavy." Bush , however, told reporters the opposite - that he was going ahead full steam. He said there were no lastminute schedule changes, just "finetuning" for tactical reasons. "I prefer to leave these technical questions on scheduling and polls to our experts," he said, vowing not to "lighten up." Asked whether he is the chief strategist, Bush grinned and joked: "No. That's one of the reasons we're doing reasonably well." Earlier, visiting a sign-painting effort by 11 children at Bush-Quayle headquarters here, Bush was asked to cross off day No. 4 on the countdown calendar. He hesitated. "Let's see, I got to put a big X through it, that means," and he paused again, as if counting the days backward from the election. "Is this Saturday or Sunday?" he asked. "Wait, I got to figure this out I made a mistake yesterday." (Bush Friday vowed to fight right down to the wire - "Nov. 4.") Finally,Bush crossed of f Day No. 4 on the calendar. The nominee, sticking with a frontrunner's strategy of trying to fire up his supportersduring the critical weekend before the election, also spent time today on his hands and knees. He got down to sign one of the handpainted posters. Barbara Bush urged him to sign them all. "Once you start, you can't stop," she said. Bushcomphed .crawlingaroundlike one of the schoolchildren who painted the signs. "That's a beauty," he said. "These homemade ones are much better," he added, noting that one boy used colors with "a little shading ac- Index See Husky Notes to know what is happening on campus. Page 3 'Select rocution' debuts at Cheers. Page 4 Field hockey advances to next level of nationals. Page 8 Commentary Matures Classified Sports Page 2 Page 4 Page 6 Page8 Bloomsburg students receive swiss cheese education To the Editor I agree with Ms. D'Aries' views expressed in her letter to the editor on Nov. 3. It is time we stood up and spoke out. Whether the administration likes it or not, we are consumers, and as consumers, we have the right to object to goods when they are shoddy, illmade, or falsely advertised. As a student who intends to go on to graduate school, I am dismayed at my lack of knowledge in my chosen field. And while I admit, Harry, the flowers are pretty, the new carpet is soft , and it 's nice that the sidewalk in fron t of McCormick was dug up and re-laid three times last winter, I personally would have preferred to have courses which are generally offered only once every two or three years available on a yearly basis. But I understand that the flower beds are more important lhan hiring additional faculty or speeding up the approval process on relevant new courses. After all , parents don 't see classes. Hence, as I apply to Harvard and other highfalutin institutions, I know my education looks like a slice of swiss cheese, translucent and full of holes. And although I attempt to compensateby extensive supplemental reading,itbarely equates with in-depth classroom discussions led by one of the many thoug ht-provoking professors we are lucky to employ. So.if Harvard does casta benevolent eye upon my humble acaccmic beginnings , I'll be there a year or more longer than most of my peers, transforming swiss into solid sharp cheddar. But hey, what do I,a40-yearold single parent, care if it takes me longer than average to earn a Ph. D? Meanwhile, I'll be wondering how things arc progressing at my alma mater. Will the administration actually enact the high ideal s stated in the student handbook? Will they, in the interest of community service, stop the department power moguls and upper-level "who 's the boss" games? Will students at Bloomsburg learn how to grasp a wide range of knowledge and, better still, use what they have gained as a foundation for discernment and rational judgem ent based on logical thought? Will the young and old who sit in these buildings come lo value the principles of a crosscultural perspective and a concerned mind? Will the adminstration (who must instigate and set the tone for change) make the degrees we earn more meaning ful than the proverbial stamped ticket, leading to a mindless job and a mindless following of the preva lent consumer mentality expressed by slick Fifth Avenue advertising? I wonder. It 's up to you , Harry. It 's your choice if (after all is said and done and you are long gone), the university 's annuals record you as the president who planted flower beds along the parking lots, or whether you 're considered responsible for elevating the university '? educational and intellectual standards. If you prefer the former , why not plant more ivy—that would create the proper illusion . If the latter is more appealing, you might want to reconsider the Young Democrats issue. For a bipartisan atmosphere is, after all , an "Amcrican " ideal , one our fore-fathers believed would foster freedom of thoug ht choice, for each individual. You sec, the general idea was to ensure that no one person , political party, or rcl igious sectcould ever usurp the right of the individual to have access to a full range of information , thereby insuring that the individual could makean indcpendcntjudgemcnl on any given issue. About now , some of you might be play ing with the idea that I'm some sort of crazy left-wing liberal. But consider this: When a citizen takes the time to up hold the rights and ideology set forth in the 200-year-old plus Constitution of the United States, that makes him traditional, conservative, and perhaps even status quo. And when a student points out to the administration that they should be concerned with the availability of knowledge and bipartisan thought, it should trigger some recognition to the effect that students prefer not to be regarded as sheep waiting to be led to a holding pen. Sincerely C.S. Clare Leadership needs to be p roven LA. Times-Washinton Post Service The 1988 presidential campaign comes down to a question of leadership. Not competence, not ideology, but leadersh ip. How a president connects wi th the American people and how the American people feel about his judgment , his values, his character, his vision of the future, his ability to guide and inspire this noblestof nations —that is what the 1988 election is about. On the day after , all the maneuvers of the candidates and their managers will be subject to the historical revisionism that onl y final results permit. Then it will be the task of George Bush or Michael Dukakis to take charge in a world of turbulence. Until Uicn , in thislastpregnantmoment of the cafnpaign , the decision still lies widi the American people. They wi 11not be choosing the perfect model of a president, but between two men whose strengths and imperfections have been vividly exposed during the past four months. The most dishearteningevent of this political year was Bush's selection of Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle as his Republican running mate. If a voter is looking for a reason to reject Bush , this is it. The GOP standard-bearer had any number of running mates available who were eminentiy presidential, which is what is needed in a vice president. Instead he chose a senator of limited experience, a man with little depth or intellect. Given this same opportunity, Dukakis selected Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen. Of course he did so in hopes of winning Texas for the Democratic Party. But the fact that Bentsen is rated higher than any of the other threemen on the national tickets confirms the wisdom of Dukakis' choice _ and the appeal of a conservative Democrat. Against this singular blunder by Bush stands the ineptness, insularity and incoherence of the Dukakis campaign. "Well, look, you 've got to find your rhythm , youknow,"Dukakis said as the final week began. This admission hardly reflects well on a three-termgovernor who had two years on the hustings to contemplate his presidential message. Instead of welcoming the liberal tradition of his party, and defining it to reflect his own doctrines, he allowed himself to be intimidatedby conservative taunts into running away from his own beliefs. In our view, the two candidates are morecentristthan the highly polarized mood that now prevails. They inherit a nation that has been taught to be more distrustful of government, more selfcentered in its pursuit of wealth and less concerned about the environment it will leave to future generations. America at the end of the 20th century is indeed the success story that turns Ronald Reagan misty-voiced. The first requirement for the next president will be to deal with budget and trade deficits piled up by the Reagan administration . Bush has constricted his future course of action (or his credibility) by asserting he will never raise taxes. Dukakis has been only slightly more candid about the need to bring the nation 's consumption more in line with its productivity . For many of Ihe reasons that have denied Dukakis a warm rapport with the electorate, he probably would be more ready than Bush to impose austerity. But his problem would be Democratic constituencies demanding larger government social spendingthan the budget will permit. Voters therefore have to ask which candidate would be able to rein in the Pentagon and yet maintain American security interests worldwide. While Mr. Dukakis ends the campaign in a better position to fight the deficit , Mr. Bush continues to hold the edge in international diplomacy. He has fewer illusions than his opponent about what goads the Soviet Union toward a less expansionist path , even in the Gorbachev era. His party has notjoined the Democrats in embracing protectionism and all the xenophobia it connotes. As this campaign ends, it is evident the public is unenthused about either candidate and unhappy with the TVoriented tactics of both political parties. To this extent, the leadership of the next president is already crimped. Nonetheless, both Dukakis and Bush have the potential to rise to presidential responsibilities. Dukakis, late in the campaign, has displayed some welcome flexibility to go with his stubborn singlemindedness. Bush has shown a toughness that has eliminated the "wimp" factor and demonstrated he can be a man of purpose. In many ways, however, presidents are like new Supreme Court justices. They come to their jobs with resumes, ideologies and programs, but there is no way either they or the voters know how they will perform under pressure. Their leadership remains to be confirmed. ^ I cotfrTHE KNOW WHO ^ WORSE LACK w ^CWED » OF OUDGNCNT.BUSH FCJR W ~ DWAJK& RDR SrSmN& IN Hfc /) <=S^&N T\^ i ^M^ocrnRPD t r Voice Staff: ^ Please plan to attend a staff meeting Thursday, Nov. 10 at 7 p.m. in the office. It is mandatory for all. / M ^* Part-time help may take pre ssure off To the Editor a consultant. Well liked by students, Your Nov. 3 issue suggested the he had become very active and need for a solution in the mass involved from the date of his communications program. appointment (about 1978) until he Many students may not be aware retired. that a former mass communications He is well qualified with an earned professor who was very active in the doctorate from Ohio State, several program until his retirement, and who publications, with more being readied has remained closely connected with for submission, a play which was read BU through participation in plays, by BTE, and his continued interest in involvment in community events, and the campus and department. in Ihe faculty union lives less than a Surel y the adminstration could offer block from campus. him an emergency appointment on a This professor may be very willing short-term or part-time basis, and thus to return on an emergancy basis, and in meet students ' needs. abortionpill is their most potent enemy. addition to opening course sections, Name Withheld That is the reason behind the pressure would be an asset to the department as Upon Request on the drug companies. Once there are no clinics to protest, no fetuses to photograph , no clinic staffs to blame, abortion is most obviously, most completely, a private matter. Kehr Union Building Bloomsburg University The right-to-lifers don 't want Bloomsburg, PA 17815 abortion to be easy, or painless, or a Editor-in-Chief. Karen Reiss choice. Managing Editor Glenn Schwab But even if this opposition manages News Editors John Risdon, Dawn D'Aries a legal ban, the abortion pill will Features Editors Bridget Sullivan , Melissa S. Menapace becomeavailable. These pills are what Sports Editors Kell y Cuthbert, Sean Ryan, Lincoln Weiss they call in the trade "bathtub" drugs; Photography Editors Jim Bettendorf, Jennifer Moon they are easy to make. You can get Production/CirculationManager Alexander Schillemans such pills over a drug counter in Advertising Director. Susan Sugra Thailand today. Advertising Manager Amy Crimian Anyone who believes we could Assistant Advertising Managers jim PiIla Lisa Mack, control their import hasn t checked > David Marra, Jodi Donatelli the cocaine business recently. Business Manager RU-486 and its copycats are " ' Adina galek Assistant Business Managers Kris DaCosta carol Yancoski nevertheless powerful drugs that can Sales Managers Bob Woolslager, Vince Verrastro be dangerous if they aren 't carefull y Copy Editor. David Ferris made and prescribed and monitored. Contributing Editor Lynne Ernst So in this final debate about abortion, Advisor John Maitden-Harris we come down to the same familiar argument. Voice Editor!^ pft |;n , Not abortion versus birth. Not Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice are the opinions and abortion versus adoption. Rather legal 0r 'ChiCf and d 0t neCessari " z r:nr TH v , W r ° * "*«*«"opinions versus illegal abortion. ° 'he S'UdCnt P0pu,a,l0n of Bloomsburg UnStT Faye Wattleton, an old hand in this The Voice invites ail readers to express their opinions on the editorial page field, says of the abortion pill: "It's £dU °r "** 8UCSt C°'U mnS A »bmtarfon. »».tbS *-. - " coming. The question is whether it d 21 llTZ !°nh K on ^^be S will come unsupervised and unsafe or Submissions should be sent to The Voice office, supervised and safe." Kehr Union Building, Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at the office in the gamJroom. The And that's what the debate has been Voice reserves the ri ght to edit, condense or reject all submissions about all along. Pill would make abortion a private act BOSTON—In my town, there is a women 's health clinic. To go there, whether you need a papsmear or pregnancy counseling, you have to run a gauntlet of anti-abortion picketers. I have something in common with that crew. I would also like to close down the abortion business of that clinic, send their vaccum aspirators and surgical tools to some museum of medical history. In my fantasty, the abortions would be phasedoutbecauseevery pregnancy was a welcome one. But in the real world of imperfect and sometimes desperate human experience, I put my hopes on a new pill to replace the surgery. The pill called RU-486. These are two distinct ways to close an abortion clinic. Make it illegal or make it unnecessary. And right now they are in a conflict that is generating extraordinary heat. In the course of one dramatic day last week, the pill RU-486 was abruptly taken off the world market by its European drug maker. Roussel-Uclaf did this under intense pressure from anti-abortion groups. The very next day, it was ordered back on the market by theFrench government Theofficial called it the moral property of the women of France. On the day after that, in the United States, pro-lifers by the hundreds targeted clinics all over the country in a planned protest against abortion. If the international conflict over the pill was explosive, if the sidewalk demonstrations in America were especially intense, it is no wonder. The abortion debate is no w in a new and climactic phase of conflict , revolving around technology and law. Can a law stop the technology from spreading? Can the technology make an end run around any law? RU-486 and its look-alike drugs make abortion as private as a prescription pad, as personal as swallowingapill.Forthisreason, Faye Wattleton , the president of Planned Parenthood, says: 'The right-to-lifers are fighting the last gasp. If thesedrugs get to the market it is really all over." Chemically, this pill prevents the cells in the lining of the uterus from getting progesterone. Without progesterone the wall of the uterus breaks down just the way it does for menstruation. RU-486 can prevent a fertilized egg from ever implanting in the uterus, or it can ensure that an implanting egg sloughs off. And it can do this in the earliest days and weeks of pregnancy, before a surgical abortion is possible, before a fetus is even formed. In short, the drug makes abortion easier, safer, less traumatic, less expensive. To some, there is good and bad news buried in that simplicity: RU-486 could also increase the number of women using abortion as birth control. B ut the doctors who created a storm of protest over the brief banning of RU-486, reminded the world that 200, 000 women die every year from botched abortions in countries where doctors are few and facilities are far between. In addition , this pill may be used in treating breast cancer and ectopic pregnancies. But today, RU-486 is available in the United States. The large American drug companies that aren 't intimidated by "controversy" are terrified by liability suits. Anything to do with reproduction sends them skittering. Inevitably though , a small drug company will ask to market this drug. When that happens, we will see the last major battle over reproductive rights. This fall , almost against the candidates' will, abortion became a campaign issue. In the aftermath of the first debate, we learned the Bush way to close an abortion clinic: by making criminals out of doctors, though not their female "victims." What would be the effect of the new technologyon this old argument? Once the abortion pill is available in the black market,could we call the woman who buys and takes these pills a "victim" or would she be a criminal? What of the mother who smuggles a pill in to that 12-year-old? What of the 12-year-old? The right-to-lifers know that the %tf)t Poitt TZll Crippling computer virus linked B attery of educational tests for to Cornell graduate student coming year and next summer commence later this month by Earl Lane source of the virus. "We are preserving all pertinent A Cornell University graduate computer tapes and records," Lynn student who has been linked to a said. runaway "virus" that crippled Sources have told The New York computers nationwide was described Times that Morris was the author of Saturday as a quiet, unassuming the virus , a renegade computer student who shares his father's interest program. But Robert Morris Sr. in computer security. refused to comment on whether his Robert T. Morris Jr. is the son of 23-year-old son concocted the virus Robert Morris Sr., chief scientist for that clogged an estimated 6,000 the National Computer Security military and university machines. Center in Bethesda, Md., an arm of At any rate, he said, the episode the super-secret National Security may prevent a security breach in the Agency. future. "It's going to be remembered The elder Morris has published fora long time,"theeldcr Morris said. widely on methods to protect "And I think we'll see a substantia] computers from outside attack. He is improvement in the way computers considered an expert on UNIX, the and networks arc administered." computer operating system that was Morris also said he felt ambivalent vulnerable to the runaway virus. about the incident. A virus is a set of computer "I'm close to this in two ways," he instructions that can enter a computer said. "I myself am a computer user, surreptitiousl y through telephone but I'm also a father. That makes it hookups or an exchange of software difficult to separate the two roles, disks. The virus can command the although , of course, they have to be infected computer program to make separated." copies of itself, which can then be Morris said he is convinced die virus spread to other computers. In the case was unleashed accidentally. last week, the virus invaded thousands 'It seems there was no malicious of computers hooked up to a network intent in vol vcd. No harm was intended used to exchange non-classified data or actually done in the host computers, among researchers in the military, other than overload , and that appears military contractors and universities. lo be a design error," he said. M. Stuart Lynn , the vice president However, he said he and his son are for computer technologies at Cornell, taking steps to obtain legal said preliminary investigations have representation. shown that the younger Morris' Cornell officials, meanwhile, said computer files contained unauthorized that die son had returned home, an d passwords, or keys, for computers at they have yet to talk to him. Earlier, the Ithaca, N.Y school and possibly Lynn said he had talked briefly wilh Stanford University in Palo Alto, the elder Morris. Calif. "He is not confirming, nor are we, "We also have discovered that that his son is responsible," Lynn Morris' account contains a list of said. * passwords substantially similar to Lynn said Morris faces possible those found in the virus," Lynn said. disciplinary charges , including But he said there was no evidence yet expulsion from school, if it can be to link Morris directly with the virus. proven that he obtained the Lynn said the university's probe unauthorized access codes. could take weeksand thatilmay never The FBI, the Department of Defense determine whether Morris was the and the National Security Agency also L.A. Times-Washington Post Service are investigating. Unlawful access to a government computer is punishable by fines and up to a year in ja ilJohn Hopcroft, head of Cornell's computer science department , described the younger Morris as "a very brilliant student We admitted 30 Ph.D. students this fall out of an application set of 500." Hopcroft, who met the elder Morris when Morris worked for Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill,N.J., said it is unlikely that the father knew anything of hisson 'sallegedactivities. He also said there was no indication that the son had any intention to harm his father 's work or reputation. He described the father as "a very caring, very sensitive person , a first-rale individual ." While the elder Morris was at Bell Labs, he was among a small group of researchers whopursucd the possibility of viruses attacking computers. They played an after-hours game called "Core War,'' in which players tried to insert self-replicating "organisms " into the computer memory of their opponents' machines. Colleaguesand instructors at Cornell said Saturday that Morris had interests beyond (lie computer lab and that his reputation as a great "hacker " had preceded his admission to Cornell. Robert Constable, a professor of computer sciences, said Morris, a Harvard graduate, has been particularly interested in computer security for at least a year, even before arriving at Cornell this fall. Dexter Kozen , graduate faculty representative for the Department of Computer Sciences at Cornell , said that while Morris is a "bright student , he is no more so than any of the other students in his class. Obviousl y, if what they say he did is true, it took a great deal of cleverness. But he never displayed anything that put him beyond his classmates. " Kozen said that Morris is very quiet and "appears to be a loner." Precious hours left for Dukakis by T.R. Reid L.A. Times-Washington Post Service Lansing, Mich. — The hours have dwindled down to a precious few. And Democratic nominee Michael S. Dukakis, determined to squeeze every last drop of campaigning out of the time he has left , came running - not jogging, but running - across a rain swept tarmac here in his black baseball jacket to greet several hundred hearty souls who had waited two hours in the chilling drizzle just to see him. "Three days to go - so much to do!'' the chipper underdog shouted to the roaring crowd. And then he went running - not jogging, but running - off again, plunging ahead on a whirlwind final weekend of cross-country campaigning that seems to be driven by three rules: No media market is too small, no airplane trip is too long, and no polling gap is too great. Back at headquarters in Boston , Dukakis campaign staff seems suffused in gloom and the internal backbiting is in full swing. But on the Boeing 737 campaign jet, spirits are sky-high and the constant talk is of an upset. The over-extended candidate has lost his voice but he has found a message. When he croaks out his trademarkpledge- "V m on your side'' - his audiences thunder tiieir approval. Dukakis' endgame schedule is in a state of constant revision as the candidate triesto shoehorn in one more stop. Saturday found him in Chicago, Detroit, and Denver - but also Rock Island , 111., Lansing, Mich., and McAllen,Texas. The tentative itinerary for Monday takes the candidate on an around-the-clock trek across the breadth of the nation, with a midwa y rally in Des Moines penciled in for 3:30 a.m. on Election Day. At the center of it all is the hyperenergized Dukakis, no longer the cerebral champion of competent management but rather a happy liberal warrior who clearly believes that he can still win the election, polls or no polls. "Mr. Bush is coasting, and we're fighting," Dukakis said here in a mocking singsong. "He's slipping, and * "" '*' we're surging." The political experts might call it whistling in the dark, but the ordinary people showing up by the thousands at every Dukakis stop this weekend seem to feel differently. They jam sardinestyle into ihe union halls and school gyms and airportwaitingrooms where rallies are scheduled, carrying tired toddlers who stare wide-eyed at the encircling hullabaloo. And they insist defiantly lo any inquisitive reporter that Dukakis can win. "He's going to win it, I'm telling you ,'' argued Larry Brand as he batted away a cascade of falling balloons at the end of Dukakis' triumphant appearance in Rock Island, 111., this morning. • • * * ."?""* ^ £"TT"" transfers* hotel accom. based on four to a room. (Triple/doublerates are available on request) Stay in the best hotels, parties, hotel tax's and tips FREEPORT-BAHAMAS--4 NIGHTS > f DURDACH BROS., INC. DEPART MAR. 1 3 DISTRIBUTORS OF FINE BEVERAGES L HOLIDAY INN BEACH-S439-FREEPORT INN-S369 J PAXINOS,PA 17860 ST. THOMAS-VIRGIN ISLANDS--? NIGHTS T ^S (717) 648-5706 DEPART MAR. 12 ^VIRGIN ISLE HOTEL-$729~FRENCHMANS REEF-S899 J Available local at: CANCUN-MEXICO--7 NIGHTS-DEPART MAR. 11 Uni-Mart CASA MAYA BEACH HOTEL-$659 Stop-N-Go V DOS PLAYOS BEACH-S579 J Macs Hoagies f NASSAU-BAHAMAS-4 NIGHTS-DEPART MARCH 13 Fay Drugs NASSAU BEACH HOTEL-$549-BRITISH COLONIAL-$479^ IGA PARADISE ISLAND HOLIDAY INN-$549 Ames Department Store TOWN HOTEL-$389 L Laubachs Sub Shop / *S ARUBA-7 NIGHTS-DEPART MARCH 12 7 I TALK OF THE TOWN-$599 ^ X *%! I CONCORD BOARD AND CASINO HOTEL-$729 \ . HOLIDAY INN BEACH AND CASINO HOTEL-S739 J "fcSsisi •I" _J **£%lvl Tags* i (f^s <1 *JS'MI i t The Institutional Testing Services of the Center for Counseling and Human Development at Bloomsburg University has announced a battery of tests that will be administered at the university throughout the 1988-89 academic year and during the summer of 1989. The College Level Examination Program (CLEP) will be given Nov . 14 through 19, Jan. 16 through 21, March 13 through 18, April 10 through 15, May 15 through 20 and June 12 through 17. The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is scheduled for Dec. 10 and April 8.The National League of N urses (NLN) will give exam inations on Nov . 14-15, Jan. 9-10, March 6-7 and May 8-9. The Pennsylvania Teacher Certification Testing Program (PTCTP) will be giving die Professi onal Knowledge and Specialization Area exam Nov. 19, April 8 and July 15. The National Teachers Examination (NTE) will be given in two parts with the Battery core exam on Oct. 22, March 4, and June 17, and the Specialty Area exam on Nov .12, April 1 and July S.The Miller Analogy Test (MAT) is scheduled for Nov . 12, April 1 and July 8. Applications for MAT are available from Bcrnice Long, Room 6, Ben Franklin Building, Bloomsburg University (717) 3894263.Registration forms for examinations are available from the center for Counseling and Human Development , Room 17 , Ben Franklin Building, Bloomsburg University, (717) 389-4255. % ! A M E R I C A ' S C O L Date:NOV. 28-29-30Time: 10am-4p m Place: UNIVERSITY STORE L E G E R I N G™ Deposit Required: $10.00 Payment Plans Available BB BB Meet with your Jostens representative for full details. See our complete ring selection on display in your college bookstore. ... „^___ B8-5063is ••••••••••••• J " »-. ~?v .- 'HSF"" ™v ^ HAAS ~ " D A .NCE MlNI CONCERT" J> featuring S.f l.MJ.R -F3 SAT 11/12 AT 8:0© IM THE OJBQQ J> „,»,, ,, SUN 11/13' NOQN KUB v. ¦ _ J Reggae band S.W.A.M.M.R brings its unique beat to BU Sound, Wisdom , and Many Musical Powers is not only an excellent description of this group 's vibe, but is also what S.W.A.M.P..P. stands for literally and spiritually. The band who took this acronym for its name is more than just a group of guys who have a common interest in reggae music. Behind their musical talents lies a concept based upon their spiritual beliefs. S.W.A.M.M.P. describes their music as a combination of AfroJamaican rhythms, which is something one cannont merely write musically, but which has to be felt from the heart. They call their style of reggae a heartbeat music, which is not only for dancing, but also for the mind. This feeling comes across loud and clear in the group 's live performance of their distinctive blend of throbbing reggae rhythms, roots and rock with a strong Caribbean seasoning. The band brings their authentic reggae sound from Jamaica, where they were one of the most followed and reespected bands at Jamaican clubs and resorts in and aroundNegril , Ocho Rios, and Montego Bay. Their popularity and musical proficiency earned them gigs with reggae giants such as Third World and Bob Marley and the Wallers. Now based in Pittsburgh , the band has become quite popular on the college and nightclub circuit on the East Coast and in the Midwest. S.W.A.M.M.P.'s musical message is chanted out by Rastafarians. Many of their lyrics reflectthebasic tenets of Rastafari, but what is communicated to the audience is that this group is socially, politically and spirituall y aware. Some say the music is soothing; some say it is political; ' some say it is controversial, but the band says it is basically the roots music from Jamaica. With a showmanship derived from more than 10 years' professional music experience, S.W.A.M.M.P . plays most of their own original compositions. Popular cover versions include selections form the reggae greats with an occasional treat of rock and roll-tune reggae-style from favorites such as Phil Collins and Bill Withers. Each member of the group is capable of taking a vocal lead, which mades for tight harmonies and illustrates the diverse talents of each musi- cian. S.W.A.M.M.P. consists of Errol "Froggie" Francis on percussion , and Delroy "Zap" Clarke on keyboards, which provide for the major part of the group 's vocal work, with Lloyd "Cookie" Willacy on lead guitar taking vocal lead on occasion. The hard rhythms are put out by Patrick "JJ" Smith on drums , with the newest member, Peter "Curley" Richards, providing the solid bass lines for the group. S.W.A.M.M.P.'s loyal and enthusiastic fans are eagerly awaiting the release of their first album , titled, Love, which is expected soon. Produced independentl y, the album features orginal material from Cookie Willacy and Froggie Francis, the band' s most prolific songwriters. This debut album promises to communicate their message and style in the same hard-hitting manner as thenstage performances. S.W.A.M.M.P.willperform on Saturday, Nov. 12between 8:30p.m. and 11:30 p.m. in Kehr Union. Admission is free with a valid Bloomsburg University I.D., and $1 for all others. The concert is sponsored by the Program Board . Heros and legendsfor sale New shop deals cards and comics Comic book, sports, entertainment legends are at home in this store, recently opened in downtown Bloomsburg. p hoto by JimBc ucndorf by Melissa S. Menapace Features Editor Superman, Marilyn Monroe, Babe Ruth: figures such as these are the business of Heros and Legends, which opened in Bloomsburg last week. " We deal in anything having to do with a hero or legend," Ron Martin said, "whether that is fantasy, sports or entertainment. We're going more into sports merchandise." But Heros and Legends deals mainly in comic books. They receive 40 to 70 comic books a week, for a total of roughly 350 different titles a month . A selection of nearly 60,000 back issues is available. Comic collecting supplies like storage boxes and protective plastic bags and other comic related items. In the last several years the audience for comic books h as been dominated by college students and people in their twenties. Martin says comic books have an even wider appeal. " You should see the people in their forties and fifties who come in here," he said. Access to that audience is what prompted Martin and his partner, Sam Chairge, to open a branch of their business in Bloomsburg. "We felt there is a need that wasn 't being served. With a large university here we thought it would pull in a lot of people and serve the three city area of Bloomsburg, Danv|Jle and Berwick," Martin said. The new store is an extension of two successful businesses in WilkesBarre and Scranton. ? Decision 88-the year of poll proliferation L.A Times-Washington Post Service By Nancy J. Schwerzler The 1988 presidential campaign season may be recorded as a year of poll proliferation. Never have so many pollsters asked so many questions so often. And the uses and misuses of polls may be altering the nation 's political debate. With more polls being conducted, there has been an increased emphasis in poll results in news coverage of Ihe campaign, according to independent analysts, and polls have themselves become an issue. Democrat Michael S. Dukakis, trailing Republican George Bush in most opinion surveys, complained that "polls drive the process" after he was forced to respond for days to one poll that put him much farther behind than in other surveys. But thatpollhas subsequently been dismissed as flawed by most political and polling experts. While polling is generally reliable if conducted carefully, polling by nature an inexact science. But even accurate poll data can be misinterpreted , or given undue emphasis, and some analysts believe that can alter the choices voters make. This year, there have been as many as 150 polls in the general presidential campaign and still more private polling by the candidates , in comparision with just 10 national polls 10 years ago, according to Michael Traugott, senior project director for the Gallup organization. "There are too many polls, too much poll reporting; it 's become too inportant in the dynamics of the campaign ," said Cliff Zukin , professor of political science and director of the Center for Public Interest Polling at Rugters University. Zukin not only studies the Trie Talk of BCoomsburg by James aettendorf Staff Writer The dorms on campus are named for counties in Pennsylvania. There 's Schuy lkill , Montour ,N o r t h u m b e r l a n d , Luzern e, Elwell... Elwell? I realize that American students don 't excel in geography, but even I know that Elwell is not a county. It is the only residence hall not named after a Pennsylvania county. Why is it called Elwell? I asked a receptionist. She told me the building was named in Honor of Judge George G. Elwell, a former Board of Trustee from 1837 to 1903. He was one of the first three graduates of the college, and his family was important in the growth of the college. Elwell was meant to be two buildings, b ut the state ran ou t of money it allocated for the project. It originally Served as a men's residence hall, which explains the urinals in the bath rooms. Correction : The article on the Anthropology Club in the Nov. 3 issue contained incorrect references to the president. His name is Pat Andrews, as stated in the first few references, not Williams as in later references. The error occurred in editing, and is not the fault of the writer. Melissa Menapace most importantly, "it changes the declared Bush the winner. "Pollsters tone of the campaign debate and puts should know, or do know, that public the candidate on the defensive' by opinion takes few days after an event forcing him to answer questions of to settle'" and instant polls are "bad "why are you behind and what are you science," Zukin said. This year there has also been an going to do "' instead of campaigning earl y emphasis on poll-based on his message, Zukin said. That is exactly what happened to predictions of the electoral college Dukakis after a Wall Street Journal/ vote. A poll benchmark this year was NBC News poll released within days an ABC News-Washington Post of the final presidential debate survey that sought to project the concluded that the Democrat was status of the campaign in terms of running 17 percentage points behind electoral votes and concluded that held a commanding his Republican rival. No other Bush survey, before or now, had the margin advantage.That poll was conducted during a volitile three-week period of that high. "The business of polls is really in the race, and Dukakis aides prohaving a terrible effect. ... Now you tested that the unusuall y long poll have got a new set of numbers that has period skewed the results. Traugott, of the Gallup organizaabsolutely no relationship to , said that although more than tion anything we have or other people 1,000 voters were interviewed, in have, so you spend two or three days responding to questions about it," individual slates the survey was based on an average of 200 Dukakis complained. But even Bush was affected by the interviewees. A 1,000-member polling, saying he had to guard sample is needed for reasonable against overconfidence and that accuracy, he said, but the cost of such anyone on his staff caught easing up a large survey in 50 states would be prohibitive. would "history"' in the campaign. was "good." The Post used the survey carefully, However, the Journal-NBC poll Why are there so many polls this pointing out its pitfalls and using the year? Competitive pressure among was"abad poll, they got bad sample," data with other information. But the news organizations is a major reason, said, a view that is widely shared now. television account, in effect , "said both Kalb and Zukin suggested. The "You can get a bad poll even if you do four weeks before a that Bush won, major television networks, as well as everything right,"he said, explaining be cast," Kalb said. ballot would local newspapers and television that even beyond the margin of error "It's that grabs you'" in the picture stations, compete to have the latest reported with a poll, that margin can television , and even though to poll result to lead the evening only be assured at a 95 percent "put in anchorman, Peter Jennings, newscast or the daily paper, making confidence level. In other words, in the qualifiers later in the broadcast," news out of the surveys they five percent of cases even a carefully it was the picture of a color-coded commission. conducted poll can still be dead map that gave the electoral vote to And with all those poll results to wrong. Bush that stuck with viewers, Kalb But the press seized on the first be reported, poll news can obliterate said. messages" of the candidates major poll after the debate to justify "Television news is not serious themselves or even dictate what the the impression that Bush had won, news, by definition , most of the time candidate says. according to Kalb, with the poll Kalb said, because the image is The greatest impact is on the numbers providing "the appearance "paramount" and"inescapable." candidate who is behind in the of fact." What is the impact on voters of polls/'lt really hurts fund raising and One network did an "instant" poll polls for the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers. "Polls are being used by journalists in 1988 in a way that they have been used before," said Marvin Kalb, the former television network news correspondent. Kalb is now director of the Joan Shorenstein Barone Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University. "This year, for the first time, major newspapers ... are using polls regularly on the front page and polling data regularly as a staple of the news stories," Kalb said. The reliance on polls seems to be a sign of "laziness and a substitution for "oldfashioned Iegwork" by reporters, he said. Even those being polled, the voters, are concerned with the effect of polling. A recent Gallup survey for the Times-Mirror company, which owns The Sun and other newspapers, found that 45 percent of those polled thought coverage of who is ahead in the presidential race is "bad"' for the country while 38 percent thought it election is over before the ballots are cast? "You are in effect participating in the emotional disenfranchisemenet of the American people, you are robbing them of the excitement' of the contest, Kalb said, and voters are "turned off by the notion of preknowledge ... of what they are going to do." There is some evidence that the "it's over"impression may alter voter toumout or influence some voters' choices. Michael Delli Carpini,professor of political science at Barnard Coin New York , studied the 1980 presidential race when the television networks, based on exit polling, declared RonaM Reagan the winner and Jimmy Carter conceded defeat while the voting booths were still open on the West Coast. He concluded there was a shortfall in West Coast state voter turnout of about two to three percentage points, although other researchers conclude no impact or ' as much as 10 percentage points. There is also another factor, the bandwagon effect or, in a theory of research in Germany, "the Spiral of Silence," Delli Carpini said. At the end of the election season, there is "a surge toward the pert people predicted would win ," especially among previousl y undecided voters. "Their tendency is to move in the direction of the consensus," Delli Carpini said. But awareness of poll standings does not seem to alter the basic vote. Recentpolls have shown that as many as 70 percent of the respondents think that Bush will win, but the same voters split their own preferences between Dukakis and Bush at nowhere near that rate. Heros and Legends stocks thebaseball cards of all four major companies in complete sets and wax packs, as well as collecting supplies and price guides. A large selection of tee shirts fill the center of the store. Most of them are comic book related, or feature Walt Disney movies such as Cinderella. Posters, mostly of Marvel Comics characters and Garfield, postcards and an assortment of magazines and college sports merchandise complete the bulk of their inventory. They expect to be accepting credit cards within the next few months. The store is next to the monument on Main Street, next to the Post Office. Heros and Legends is open 11a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Telethon helps f i ght smoking by Dave Marra Staff Writer At the American Cancer Society Telethon of Hope, broadcast this past weekenda presentation detailing the Great American Smokeout was given by The Smoking Dragon ( a symbol of the bad "dragon breath" of smokers), Roger Rabbit, and two senior community health nursing students, Nadine Kowalsky and Debbie Reed. On Thursday, November 17th, the day of The Great American Smokeout, all American smokers are urged to give up smoking for the entire day. The Student Nursing Association will sponsor events to help smokers kick the habit. Education booths in the McCormick Center and the Kehr Union will educate smokers about the dangers of smoking. Also, "survival kits", containing helpful tips on how to stop smoking, carrot sticks, popcorn and pretzels to stop the urge to light up will be made available to smokers. An"Adopt-A-Smoker"program shall be initiated. In this program, a caring non-smoker will "adopt" a smoking friend for the day to encourage the smoker to refrain from cigarettes, and the smoker will be able to turn to this friend should they be tempted. An open coffin will be set up in the Kehr Union, into which all smokers will be asked to toss their cigarettes. To offer realistic, straightforward, and honest approach, this should be an effective method to get people to stop their deadly habit. Composers offered chance to participate in BMI contest NEW YORK — The 37th annual Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) Awards to Student Composers competition will award $15,000 to young composers, BMI President and CEO Frances W. Preston announced. She added that the deadline for entering the 1988-89 competition , which is co-sponsored by the BMI Foundation, will be Friday, Feb. 10, 1989. BMI established the award s program in 1951 in cooperation with music educators and composers. The contest is designed to encourage young composers in the creation of concert music and, through cash prizes, to aid in continuing their musical education . The prizes, which vary from $500 to $2,500, are awarded at the discretion of the final judging panel. To date, 333 students, ranging in age from 8 to 25 have received BMI awards. The 1988-89 competition is open to students who are citizens or permanent residents of the Western Hemisphere including North, Central and South American and Caribbean Island nations, and who are enrolled in accredited secondary schools, colleges or conservatories or are engaged in private study with recognized and established teachers anywhere in the world, contestants must beunder 26 years of age on Dec. 31, 1988. There are no limitations as to instrumentation, stylistic consideration or length of work submitted. Students may enter no more than one composition, which need not have been composed during the year of entry. Compositions entered under pseudonyms, are considered by a preliminary panel of judges before going to a final panel. Last year's preliminary judges were Louis Karchin, David Leisner, and Jalalu Kalvert Nelson with Ulysses Kay as Consultant, the final judges were Jane Brockman , Ainslee Cox , Corey Field, David Felder, Frank Lewin, Karen Larsson-Pone, and Harvey Sollberger, with Ulysses Kay as presiding judge. William Schuman and Milton Babbitt are cahirman emeritus and chairman, respectively, of the judging panel. Two recent additions to the current advisory board of the program are composers Lalo Schifrin and Joseph Schwantner. In the I987r 88 competition, 12 young composers from 13 to 25 were presented awards at a luncheon reception at Tavern on the Green in New York City on May 20, 1988. Seven previous winners of BMI Awards to Student Composers have won the coveted Pulitzer Prize in Music. Broadcast Music, Inc. is the largest music licensing organization in the world,representingmore than 82,000 writers and publishers. More than 50 percent of the music played on American radio station in the past year is licensed by BMI. It also has reciprocal agreements with 39 foreign performing rights licensing organizations around the world, making its music available there and representing foreign music in this country. Each year BMI sponsors a variety of workshops and seminars designed to encourage participation in all areas of music. BMI Foundation, Inc., was established in 1984 to support individuals interested in furthering their musical education and to assist organizations involved in the performance of and training in music. Theodora Zavin, BMTs senior vice president and special counsel, is president of the BMI Foundation. Official rules and entry blanks for the 1988-89 competition are available form Barbara A. Petersen, Director, BMI Awards to Student Composers, 320 West 57th St., New York, NY 10019. muK m " Y cms "'''\ sfg if Wff l *?a4iUtnt \ $&3%M$\S : Sp a, ¦ ¦ featuring : Vintage Clothier ¦ " (1860-1960) - Come experience the optimum in relaxation, •WINTER COATS I sound and tanning in the privacy of your I» vmen' s and women's ¦ ¦ own cabana suits * ¦ ¦ ?Indiv idual AM-FM cassette stereo •furs « » Tan for any special event •party wear and B M ¦ ¦ costumes *Makes you feel more confident ' " •hats and look so much better with a healthy tan! ¦ ¦ •jewelery and accessories I¦ *Give something unique to someone special... B «¦ New Stock weekly a Gift Certificate from Tahitian Tan Spa! Will take trade-ins Z CORNER OF EAST & . Featurine the f I Thurs - Sat (1-5 p.m,} ¦ B or by appointment MAIN-HUSKY HOUSING WOLFF SYSTEM 4210 miles from BU" ; Rt. BUILDING j ±£ 784-4337 THE FRR SIDE Bloom County by Berke Breathed by GARY LARSON this is just not effective . . . We need 1o get some chains." The crepes of wrath Bombardier beetles at home Don't encourage him, Sylvia collegiate camouflage To Glen Ave 6— "Anchors away my boys..." Hey Chicken-Here's a big ThnakYou. I had a great time and I do LIKE you! As for our bet, much to my regret, it hasn't happened yet. But good things do come to those who wait and when you're alone, we'll call it a date. If we have as much fun as before , you'd better hide the key and lock the door. For when all the lights go out , Nancy will come out, and that is only for you and me to see. For J.3. female-What's up, hotstuff??-From K.F. male. SPRING '89 ROOMMATE NEEDED. Share apartment with 7 other girls. One block from campus. Laundry, dryer facilities. $550/semester excl. electric, cable, phone. Possible reservations for following year. CALL 387-1639 Can you find the hidden l i t e r a ry terms? ALLITERATION ANAPEST ANTITHESIS COMEDY EPITHET EPODE HYPERBOLE IRONY LITOTES LAMPOON MALAPROPISM METAPHOR MOTIF OXYMORON PARABLE PARADOX PARODY PLOT POETRY PSEUDONYM RHYTHM SIMILE SPOONERISM STANZA SYNECDOCHE TRAGEDY Tie-dye tee-shirts, HIGH QUALITY, all colors, styles. Only $8$10. Call 784-6563. "CAMPUS REPS NEEDED" earn big commissions and free trips by selling Nassau/Paradise Island , Cancun, Mexico and Ski trips to Vermont and Colorado. For more information call toll free 1-800231-0113. • e o * a « e a « a « a « « a o* For rent Spring of '89-One female needed for an apartment located at 102 W. Main St. $150/month. Call 784-3186. College Housing for Spring '89. Five Students. Also, many openings for Fall '89. Three to ten Students. Call 1-286-6630. SPRING BREAK TOUR PROMOTER AND ESCORT. Energetic person (M-F) to tape sign-ups for our FLORIDA Tours . We furnish all materials for a successful promotion. Good PAY and FUN. Call CAMPUS MARKETING at 1800-777-2270. Storm-Long live The Turtles! For rent Spring of '89~One MALE needed for a house. Six others, 3 bedrooms , $650/semester—includes all utilities. 48 N. Iron St.— Call 784-4481. Michelle N.-You ARE beautiful... "no I'm just KIDDING!!" • • •e a o a a s a e a s a a a s Walt—the condom is on top of the stereo speaker.-Sara. Otis-Rutgers may be slumping a bit, but does the score "21-16" ring a bell. I guess that means Penn State is really bad!!—RA Dave Sauter. Spring '89 apartment need two females to share with one other. Five month lease-$150/month each, plus share electricity. Heat furnished. Parking. Espy area. Call Laura at 784-8553. SMOKING IS SUICIDE-KICK THE HABIT TODAY!! HAPPY BELATED B-DAY MUMAMA-Love, MU, Jr. To WHOM it may concern-With a salesman such as myself, the possibilities are endless... a a a a a a e a a a a a a a a a a Kinger (TKE)--Get off your ego kick, Mr. Executive CGA. Too bad you didn't earn that position! To WHOM it may concern, Part II-What? Define possibilities? That's up to your imagination, and you are up to mine. a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a e SPANDEX TIGHTS-Long and short, B.U. Colors and Logo. Group designs also available. $18$22. Call 387-1290. From the world of 2481-"! asked for clever, and I got it. P.S. Time spent not calling back...is time wasted. ••••••••••••••••a Jennifer T.~How'd y'ou like the last poem? Just curious. ESSAYS & REPORTS Hot Hams-Congrats for a job well done. Keep those feet moving!Love, Sue. Young Stallions—No matter what you do, we will still top you!--Princess and Smurf. P.K. and L.S.--1-2-6 lately??-C.Z., D.K., P.B. To all SBFer's-What's theobjectof Nov. 11th??? TO GET ALL FUEYED UP!!! I love you all!— Your Butty 1t£78 todMOM horn— «lsublets On* Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COO HA 800-351-0222 mBBSmBr in caiii. eis) 477422s Or, ruah $2.00 to: Essay* A Reports 11322 MaDoAve. «06-SN. Los Angeles, CA 9002S . J t . CuSBtnrestart* alsc avallat*—ill lewis \ j Dear Kristen-Happy 20th Birthday. I hope this one's your best ever and that I can share it with you.— Love, Scott. HAPPY 21st AMY CAPECI!!Love, Carole and Terry. Stan-You're the best BIG a little could ever have!!-Love, Chris. WAYNO-Congratulations on the "Resident of the Week Award"Love, your admiring fans, B and R. • • • • • • • • •• • • • oaae Carolyn and Afsoon-Nothing like toast and tequila! Ugh!-Sparky. Michelle-For some action, come see us~Bothe Brothers. SAFETY SHORTS-Boxers with a Condom Pocket. Various colors and styles available. S/M/L. $15/ pair. Call Tim at 389-3570. Needed-Photographer for Santa's Cottage. Starting Nov. 18, through Christmas Break. For more info, please call Terri at 784-4533. GET RESUL TS ! ANNOUNCEMENTS Bich and a Short Pledge. I To the CARDINAL-Weall should party together again soon! VOICE CLASSIFIEDS~ I JS 5S P.K.--IS she a Pro?--C.Z., D.K., I PERSONALS | P.B. I Rates: 50 per word. I 100 per Bold-Faced word. Yo Belch! -To the best roomie and greatest D-town buddy. HAPPY | I have enclosed $ for words. 20th BIRTHDAY! .'-Love, Liz Everyone's gettin' fat except for Mama Cass (and Lizard Ken)! Happy B-lated B-Day Filomena "Finally Legal" Simeone! Love, a former 5th South groupie, alias tater-tot-woman. 5— Send to: Box 97 KUB or drop in the VOICE __ . . mail slot. ... ~ Deadline: Wednesdays by 12 P- m - for MONDAY'S paper . Monda ys b? 12 P-m- for THURSDAY's paper . — Too Much Football for plot p hoio by JimBcucndorf These students attempt to stay in shape at an Aerobics class held in Centennial Gym. BU Soccer loses in overtime by Jamie Calkin Staff Writer The Bloomsburg men's soccer team finished out the 1988 season on Saturday with a loss to the Division I, University of Delaware. The Huskies were defeated in overtim e by a score of 2-1. With the advantage of the wind at their backs, BU dominated the first half of play. Off a pass from John Marshall , Jack Milligan knocked in his last goal of the season midway through the first half. The second half of the game was even more physical than the first, as the momentum switched to Delaware. The score remained 1-0 until the last minute of regulation time. After continuous pressure on BU's goalie, Delaware tied up the game. The Delaware Blue Hens kept up the pressure through the beginning minutes of overtime and were rewarded with the winning goal. It was scored halfway through the first overtime. Coach 's Corner: L.A. Times Washington Post Service "Everybody ' s All-American " eventuall y shapes into a pretty good fil m.'Itis the first hour that tires, and that may be because director Taylor Hackford ("White Nights") gives us too much football. Yes, the movie is about a football player, but Hackford apparently ha s not learned that if you do a film about football , you should spend very little time on the field. It's the same with baseball and basketball movies. If you spend too much time with the game, you lose the audience, and that's what happens during the first half of "Everybody 's All-American." The second half is much better because there is less football and bee ausc one of the princi pal characters has disappeared. He is the very close friend of the hero, a co-player, and when he's around , the film plays like so much locker-room time. When he leaves, "Everybody's AllAmerican " (Rated "R") gets down to Ihe business of plot, and it 's a rather good one. Dennis Quaid plays the lead, an AU-Amcrican football hero. He is married to Babs Rogers, the campus queen, and together this golden couple looks forward to a golden fulure. Life, however, doesn 't always turn out the way we hope it will , and b cfore long Gav in Grey (Quaid) realizes that he has stayed too long on the field. He's very wise forhisagc.Heknows that he will be feted so long as he can make those touchdowns. He also knows that life is never what we expect it will be. His trouble is that he pays himself no mind. Instead, he listens to his heart and continues to play until he reaches that point when he is no longer wanted.This is about the same timehe leams that his business associate has squandered all his money, so he and his famiiy are penniless. However, he still has the name. He is still "The Gray Ghost," and he can trade on that, which he does. He becomes part owner of a restaurant, but the arrangement is humiliating to him. He is required to fraternize with the patrons. He has become a prisoner of his own legend, and he doesn't know how to cope with the situation . Fortunately, he has a wife who adores him , but will he realize this i n time to save the marriage? Jessica Lange plays Grey's wife. She is the eternal "Magnolia Queen, " but she is no bubblchead. When the family resources have dwindler1., she goes to work and keeps the family afloat. Actually, they sail, with her in command. Lange is an ideal Babs. She is the quintessential campus queen. Quaid is equallyconvincing. Toward the end , because the principals age 25 years, he is visibly heavier than he was. He also lumbers. He may lumber too much, but the changes are otherwise subtle. Timothy Hutton is the nephew of the hero, a young man who is not much younger than his uncle and loves his aunt more than he should. Hackford has very wisely chosen to forgo the heavy makeup. The film b egins in 1956 and ends in 1981, and the aging is soft rather than garish. The director accomplishes all he needs with lighting and a line or two. "Everybody's AU-American" is a film that is almost epic in reach a nd, after the first hour , takes hold. ** f r o m page 8 many a receiver and running back will not soon forget the punishing hits they received from the tough secondary squad. The same goes likewise for two departing Bloomsburg linebackers, WadePickettandGeneStraface.Going into Saturday's game against IUP, Pickett ranked second on the team on defensive points while Straface was eighth. Similarly to the secondary, the Huskies will also be hurt by the graduation of six top lineman in Todd Leitzel, Darryl Richards, Steph Petit, Joshua ' Tex" Lee, in particular, has been dominating and definitely deserves consideration for AllAmerican honors. Last, but definitely not least are punter Jimmy Noye and placekicker Drew Lotsis. Noye has enjoyed an outstanding career punting and is known for his coffin comer kicks. Lotsis performed admirablythis season kicking in place of the injured Mark Weiss. These 23 seniors will be sorely missed by Bloomsburg, but they leave with their heads held high knowing they 've played their best. awful lot of things together, squeeze an awful lot in. I take my kids, Rocco and Zachary, to school eve"ry morning. I do homework with them every morning and that type of stuff. You really only see them on weekends, and then if you win, you 're in a great mood, and if you lose, you just try not to take your feelings home with you. Chris knows that's what I do, and she enjoys it. She loves the game. My two boys help out being ball-boys and the such. It's a good.positivcenvironmentfor them." ^'This 'is Adrian 's ffrst stint as a head coach, having worked as an assistant at Rhode Island before coming to Bloomsburg. Based on his record so far , the 40-year old West Virginia graduate has done a fine job. Through Saturday 's game, he has an enviable 22-8-1 record , including 7-3 so far this year. What is his biggest highli ght so far at Bloomsburg? Adrian said ,"As far as personal thrills, when we beatLock Haven my first year in our homeopener. That was the only game my dad saw us play. He died of cancer later that year, but my brother did bring him up to see that game. So that was a special game." Adrianiikes his teams to have' fun when they play, not even minding a joke on the field for a quick laugh. We re up on these guys and what they do with their girlfriends and this and that. And of course it's a two-way street. The kids say they like to ride Bus #1 with me because it gets better radio reception. That's because of my ears - they 're so big. Of course I act like I' m mad, but it's good that we do things like that." Pete Adrian does a lot for Bloomsburg University football that many people do not realize, from the amount of time and work he dedicates to the program, to his'ways of getting along with playersandkeeping a closeknit group. Adrian is a fine coach which the Huskies are lucky to have. Football Seniors Coaching f ootball not you r typica l nine to f ivej ob by Dave Sauter Staffwriter The job as head football coach of a university is more than just an August through November job. Just ask Bloomsburg's head coach , Pete Adrian, who is wrapping up his third year at the helm of the Huskies. Not many people realize it's a job that runs August through June, taking up huge amounts of time. "When we start pre-season camp in August,"Adrian said,"It's seven day's a week and our average work=week~h? about 85-90 hours per week. We're really involvedin breaking down films, and of course work with a group of about 100 kids and there's a lot of things that go on there. Everything you can think of we have to do." As the regular season gets under way, the long work weeks continue. Adrian explains,"It takes a lot of time to get your game plans right. If you have three game films to break down, that in itself takes about five hours a game. So there's 15 hours of work you have to do before you can even get into talking about how you are going to stop this opponent or how you are going to attack this opponent. Then of course you have to go through organization,practices,and this type of stuff." Adrian continues,"Now, while all that is going on , we are also recruiting. Recruiting never stops. We have to send out mailers, get on the phone, and get recruits to come in and visit us. "After the season is over, recruiUng becomes a full-time job. Basically, we'll have between 200 and 300 athletes visit the campus with their families. That's what you have to do. you have to get a lot of kids to come in and see your facility, meet their parents, and let them see the university . The school really has an excellent academicrcputation , and thatreall y helps. We try to sell that as our big selling point." "That's a lot of time. First of all you have to go out on the road and you have to go to a lot of high schools to see a lot of kids. You have to attend a lot of dinners and be in tl.e families ' homes a lot. When you come home you have to make a lot of phone calls and keep in touch , because all of your c^rx5sitionsis-doing*esame-rlTinfrAir of this really runs the entire months of December, January, February, and March." Recruiting, however, is not all Adrian is doing those four months, as he further explained. "When school come back to start, (after Christmas), we start our offseason program up which is five days a week with agilities, weight-lifting, and working with about a hundred kids. So now you're doing that along with your recruiting at the same time. Our work-week then usually runs about six days a week, about 60-80 hours a week. You have to work Saturdays, and sometimes on Sundays. There's no such thing as coming in at 8:30 a.m. and leaving at 4 p.m., it's usually 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.. Then you have to make phone calls every night to your prospects.That really goes right on through. just about the time we finish up the recruiting aspect, we start running the spring football practice. "This practice usually runs through to three and one-half weeks of regular practice six days a week. When that 's over with we have to finish up with school which is roughly two or three more weeks to go. Then we have to do our spring recruiting, which again you start from the cream from the nexl year's class and that takes up to and including the month of May." The year, though , is still not over for Adrian , as there is yet more work to do. "We have to do a lot of work then, that we call football work, by breaking down our own films-what we did well and what we didn 't do well-which takes a lot of time. Then we study our opponents. We always like to start _ ^ on our first three or four wOTkirrg opponents for next year. At the beginning we get films in from different places, for example the MillersvilleWest Chester game, and we take time to study that. Maybe we can steal something from them that worked good, whether it be on offense or defense, which is a very common practice among the coaching profession." "When all that's finished up, usually about the second week of June, we get to take our vacations.When school is out, our time slows down, and we get to be like regular human beings. Then it starts right back up again in August. With the long hours the job entails, it takes a special kind of family to keep pulled together, the type that Adrian realizes he is lucky to have." He said,"It's tough. There's a very high divorce rate in this business. You have to have a wife and family that really likes athletics, especially the sport you're in. If not,you 're in trouble. I've been very fortunate because I met my wife, Chris, in college and we've gone through everything together. She just understands that during the season, you 're a stranger. But we have what we call quality time. We do an 5.000m Run set for Nov. 12 A 5,000 meter cross country open run will be held on the upper campus of Bloomsburg University at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 12. The event, sponsored by the university's men 's and women 's cross country teams, is open to runners of all ages who will be grouped inot six categories for both men and women. Age groups include 14andunder, 15-18, 19-29, 30-39,40-49, 50 and over. Awards will be presented to the top three finishers in each age group in addition to the plaques presented to the first place overall male and female participants. A special award will also be presented to the first place team consisting of at least four members. Teams must be declared to the race director no later than one-half hour prior to starting time. Registration will be held in the lobby of Nelson Fieldhouse from 9:15-10:45 a.m. the day of the race. Entry fee is $5 per person payable to BU Trust Fund/Cross Country. Persons wishing topre-register should send a check, along with n ame, age and telephone number to Lanny Conner, Cross Country, Bloomsburg University, Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815. For further information on the race, call 389-4563 (afternoons) or 864-3439 (after 8 p.m.). immwrnmrnmtf /zy/ZW/y s/V/V/Vs | | SR HHPPY RNNI^E ooo o o <^ R R YH! m®m art ih MMa^iiE^mY -( ,/ / , , ^ ^ ^ ^ 'j < < ( < < r < ( < < f f < ( r ( < < f ( <- f < < <-<<( ( ^ f r r f r r r r^ f f f f u f^ ^u r -r ^f f^f f f f f f f f s / s s s s l \ \ '\ \ \ BEGINNING TODAY AND ENDING ON SATURDAY NOVEMBER 12 Save 10% on all: Save 20% on all: IMPRINTED CLOTHING NON-TEXTBOOKS IN STOCK i 1 Kif STATIONERY Store Hours: ,^ ^ M ^5l REGISTER FOR PRIZES!!!! ^ay l-4:30 ° Saturday W:30-2:30 (DRAWING FRIDAY NOVEMBER 11 AT 4:00 PM) 3 EMBLEMATIC GIFTS I +++ nco i f NO^imgnTi Y enffimi *** I I \ \ \ \ Field Hockey wins twice and advances From the Cheap Seats ion't expect a sweet ight tonight by Sean Ryan Sports-Editor Tonightat Caesar 's Palace in Las Vegas, 32 year-old , Sugar Ray Leonard , the Welterweight, junior middleweight , and middleweight champion will face challenger , Donny Lamonde, the 28 year-old from Winni peg, Manitoba , who holds the Light Heavyweight tide. The bout will put the WBC super c Indians of IUP dominated the Huskies in the second half en route to a impressive 32-7 victory . Photo by Cris Lov-wr middleweight crown (161-168 lbs), ITIi and the light heavyweight title on the line. Sugar Ray Leonard is a 3 1/2-to1 favorite in this bout and if he should win , he will become the first fighter ever to hold five championships in a career: welterweight, junior middleweight , middleweight, and the two that will be fought for tonight TTie fight can be seen on closed circuitT.V. for $29.95 or tickets are being purchased for $50 for theatre and arena seats. The fighters are expected to divide up about $20 million (Leonard yards on their next series in twelve will supposedly get $15 million , by Dave Sauter Punter Jimmy Noye had a very good plays for a touchdown. Peganick day as he punted ten times for a 35.9 doesn 't seem like much of a divy to Staff Writer Heavy rains on Saturday did more found his tight end Paul Kovel l open yard average with a long of 57 yards. me?) Leonard chose to fight Lalonde than soak football players and fans in the endzone for a three yard touch- He also had one punt that went out of for three reasons: Lalonde is a free alike al Redman Stadium , the torren- down pass. However, the extra-point bounds pining the Indian s about one agent, itgives Leonard the chance to tial downpours also washed away vir- was missed and the Huskies would go foot off their goal line. fight in a heavier division which he tually any hopes Bloomsburg had of into halftime with a 7-6 lead. It was also a rough day defensively The second half was another story for Bloomsburg as Indiana compiled says is a challenge, and finally be- making the national playoffs as the cause he says he can go for those Huskies fell to Indiana University of for Bloomsburg as IUP racked up 26 419 total yards, 240 coming in the air Pennsylvania, 32-7. points in a row to completely stop the from Pehamick. two extra titles. Despite the inclement weather, the Huskies. Pehanick was superb passExperts say that Lalonde will be Linebacker Wade Pickett led the hardly a challenge for Sugar Ray Indians played an almost perfect game ing for two touchdowns in the third Huskies with thirteen tackles, includsaying that he slow he's awkward, moving the ball easily on the strug- quarter, one an eight yard pass to tight ing a sack for minus five yards. Lee end Jerry Langston, and a 25 yard pass had nine tackles along with a tipped and his left-hand is only good for gling BU defense. Meanwhile, the Bloomsburg of- to Kovell, his second TD catch of the pass, and Chris Gross had eight tackswatting flies. He has separated his left shoulder over 30 times, his fense was thoroughly stopped as the day. les along with his interception return. With the rain falling much harder in Ron Sahm, Brian Angney, and John shoulder is able to pop out and he is Paul Venesky led squad could only the fourth quarter , the Indians Hellgren also deserve merit for their able to pop it back in himself. He total 127 yards. Bloomsburg's only score of the switched to the running game to put play. under went surgery where they binded the shoulder with a pin , and game gave the Huskies the only lead the contest out of reach. Tailback Ray Next week the Huskies conclude its given him restricted ability to they would enjoy in (he contest, and it Brown had a big 44 yard sprint and their regular season with an away came as a result of a great defensive fullback Doug Adamrovich scored on game at New Haven of Connecticut raise it. a one yard plunge. Because they are fighting for the PlayThe Chargers are also a former top Early in the second quarter, IUP super middleweight crown, LaFor Bloomsburg offensively, it was twenty team who have had recent londe had to come in at seven picked off the first of three Venesky the same story as all year. IUP com- struggles. The Huskies hope to equal pounds under his championship interceptions and returned it to the BU pletely smothered the Husky attack last year's 8-3 mark with a win on 14 yard line. stopping all aspects of the BU squad. Saturday. weight. However a holding penalty and a Rushing wise the Huskies had a I think that this fight will be a Game Notes: This was much better contest lhan people are Brian Murph y sack for negative 12 total of 77 net yards led by Mike Bloomsburg's first home loss since expecting. Lalonde has a very yards moved the ball back to the BU Medina's 42 yards on twelve carries October24, 1987 against Millersville, and Venesky's 17 yards on ten at- 33-21. powerful right hand which has led 38 yard line. On third and long yardage, Indian tempts. him to 26 knockouts in his 31 victoIUP graduates only eight of 22 startBy way of the aerial attack, Ve- ers this year. ries. His trainer Clancy says that his quarterback Jim Pehanick tried to he has worked very hard on devel- throw long only to have Joshua Lee tip nesky could only complete six passes Joshua Lee remained the team oping a better left-hand punch in the the pass. Chris Gross hobbled it in the in 24 tries for only 50 yards. leader in tackles while Paul Lonergan Tight end Paul Lonergan caught still leads the team in receptions. last few months and there has been air and then stumbled 48 yards for the vast improvement, he feels that he touchdown. The extra point attempt two passes for ten yards, while wide Venesky has passed for over 1,000 will be able to stick it in SugarRay 's by Mark Weiss was good and the receiver Jeff Sparks also caught two yards this season. for 21 yards. Eric Speece and Jon face successfully.Lalonde is young Huskies led 7-0. Scott Walton returned three kickIndiana responded by driving 69 Smith also had a reception apiece. and in good shape,(aftcr his last offs for 52 yards. fight which was 12-round victory, Lalonde tan in the Manitoba Marathon and finished with a time of 3:19:40, 65th overall in a field of about a 1,000). Lalonde was hurting all over his body from previous figh ts, but he was introduced to Ken Balson , who using deep tissue massage, has taken all that pain away Lalonde remarked. Sugar Ray Leonard is much smaller than his challenger and Lalonde has much more power. Leonard is labeled as a finesse fighter, but if Lalonde can stick that right a couple times itshould be able to stun Leonard.Lalonde feels that the fight will be too fast paced for Ray and he will be able to wear him down. Lalondealso thinks that there is little chance that Sugar Ray can knock him down, which I feel is definitely true, knowing he is so much bigger. Lalonde will cut him off in the ring and will not "follow him around like a puppet." Lalonde will feel little pressure. The pressure will be focused more on Leonard.I think that there will be quite an upsetbrewing in Las Vegas BU soccer looks to score here vs.UnlversIty of Dlaware. The Huskies lost in Overrtime, 2-1. Story on page 7 '- .. Photo by Rob Sambrxtn tonight. 1 " * ' ¦ — ¦ ¦ ¦ Playoff hopes lost as Indiana (Pa.) rolls to a 32-7 victory The Bloomsburg field hockey team advanced to the next round of the NCAA Division III national field hockey tournament wilh wins over Calvin and Lebanon Valley by scores of 7-0 and 2-0 respectively. The Huskies dominated their opponents all weekend and played what head coach Jan Hutchinson called the best hockey that Bloomsburg has played all year. "We played top hockey all weekend ," said Hutchinson. "That tells me that our players are playing with the right mental attitude." On Saturday, the Huskies advanced to the next round by dominating Lebanon Valley and winning 2-0. Bloomsburg outshot Lebanon Valley 45-8 and had 21 corners to Lebanon 's four. Sharon Reilly opened the scoring for Bloomsburg at the 33:01 mark of the first half to give the Huskies a 1-0 lead. Cindy Hurst scored at 30:18 of the second half to give Bloomsburg insurance and made the score 2-0. On Friday, Bloomsburg destroyed Calvin by a score of 7-0 in the opening game. Reilly tied a school record with four goals in the Huskies ' victory. Bloomsburg outshot Calvin 52-6 •and had an advantage in corners with 22 corners to Calvins ' five. The two victories now gives Bloomsburg a 21-1-1 record and advances them to the next round of the national tournament. The Huskies will play Cortland this coming Friday at Trenton State. Trenton State a will also play Salisbury State. Since Trenton State 's field is an astroturf field , the Huskies will practice this week at Wilkes Barre. Playing on the turf does not bother Hutchinson. "The kids are really looking forward to it. On the turf you get true bounces and it favors a team who has good stickwork, which we are. It may give Trenton an advantage but the last two times we played them for the national title, we beat them on the turf. The astroturf really flatters our game." Huskies end season with a 4-1 home record Running Back Mike Medina ran for 43 yards on 12 attempts vs. Indiana University Photo by Chris Lower Seniors honored in pregame ceremony by Da ve Sauter Staff Writer Saturday's home game against Indiana's University of Pennsylvania marked the final home contest for 23 talented and dedicated Bloomsburg seniors. As is annual; BU tradition, the 23 players were honored in front of 1,370 fans who braved the inclement weather in pre-game ceremonies. Among ;the graduating are quarterback Paul Venesky and running back Leonard Bluitt, the dynamic duo who stepped in for the graduated Jay DeDea and Tommy Matin. Despite Bluitt's season-ending injury against Cheyney, the two turned in fine season efforts. Also leaving in the running corps are Mike Medina and Eric Speece. Medina played behind Bluitt early in the year and has started since. Speece has been steady all-year in the fullback spot coming through with the tough yardage when needed. By way of receivers, Jon Smith an Dave "Punky" Brewster are receiving their diplomas. Though both have seen limited action this year, their value to the team of experience and knowledge are immeasurable. Offensive lineman Scott Long and Bob Preston will also be leaving Bloomsburg unit. Not much is heard about the offensive line these two have played valuable roles during tenures, as Huskies. On the defensive side of the ball, the Husky defense will suffer greatly from the loss of five tough defensive backs: Delmas Woods, Bruce Linton, Ron Sahm, Brian Murphy, and Dan Shutt, See SENIORS page 7 Scoreboard Football Indiana (Pa.) Bloomsburg 32 7 Field Hockey Bloomsburg Calvin 7 0 Bloomsburg Lebanon Valley 2 0 Soccer Delaware Bloomsburg 2 l(OT)