rdunkelb
Tue, 02/13/2024 - 19:43
Edited Text
BSC offers
work-study

The Off-Campus Summer Work-Study Program provides needy
college students with full-time summer jobs at various nonprofit
organizations throughout Pennsylvania. This summer program is
under contract with PHEAA in Harrisburg and is adm inistered by
the Director of Financial Aid at each state college which participates.
'
' Under this contract , the college provides from federally
allocated funds 70 percent of the students' total earnings; PHEAA
provides 30 percent. During 1977, the pay rat e will be approximately $2.30 per hour for BSC students for a period of approximately 10 weeks depending on the amount of fun ds
available.
In order to qualify, students must submit to . the College
Scholarship Service (CSS) in Princeton, New Jersey, a 1977-78
Financial Aid Form (FAF) to document the amount of their
financial need. (Finan cial Aid Forms and Employment Applicat ions available in theFinan cial Aid Office. ) Wh en the official
evaluation of financial need arrives fro m CSS, the Director of
Financial Aid, in an interview with the student, will discuss the
evaluation to determine the degree of need. Students have the
greatest need will be placed on the employment list on a firstcome, first-served basis as long as thelimited funds last.
Since evaluation of the Financial Aid Form (FAF ) takes approximately six weeks in Princeton , it is advisable for interested
students to submit the FAF now and to apply in the Financial Aid
Office. Deadline to apply for this program has been extended
from February 1 to February 18. Interviews will then be conducted by the Director of Finan cial Aid in February an d March or
as soon as the evaluation of financial need is received.
Any questions about the program should be directed to Robert
L. Duncan, Director of Finan cial Aid, Room 19, Benjamin
Franklin Building, phone 389-3908.

20g raduated
with honors
BLOOMSBURG — Twenty
honor graduates were among
the over 200 seniors who
received their, diplomas at the
mid-year commencement
exercises at Bloomsburg State
in
Haas
College held
Sunday,
Auditorium
on
December 19, at 2:00 p.m. The
commencement address was
delivered by Dr. James Creasy ,
Professor of Business Administration at BSC.
Those who graduated with
honors were: Highest Honors
(3.75 or higher) — Rebecca
Adams , Box 1200, Pitman ,
Special Education ; Beverly M.
Brady , Center St., Bethlehem ,
Business Education ; Priscilla
V. Dunn , 601 Old Berwick Rd.,
Bloomsbur g, Elementary
Education ; Elizabeth A. Miller ,
4009 N. Warner Rd., Lafayette
Mill , Arts and Sciences; Barbara A. Pagnotti , 403 S. Hickory
St., Mt. Carmel, Communication Disorders ; Judith
M. Spotts, Dana St ., Pottsvllle,
Elementary Education ; Anne
E. Zachariason , 172 North view
Dr., Lancaster , Arts and
Sciences.
High Honors (3.60 to 3.74) —
Sylvia J. Crooks, RD 1, New
Hope, Arts and Sciences ;
Barbara E. Foley, 115 Harry
Rd., Eaglcville , Elementary
Marian ' K.
Education ;
Rodriguez , W. Center St.,
Elysburg, Public School Nursing; Donna M. Spengler, 4 E.
Paoli St., AUcntown, Secondary
Education .
Honors (3.50 to 3.59) ' —
Pamela S. Blair , 176 Lakeview
Terr., Morrcstown, N.J.,
Communication Disorders ;
Kathleen G. Caragher , 2222
Fifth St.,, Bethlehem, Special
Education ; LeAnn R. Gogel, 2
N. Ninth St,, Coplny, Business
Education; Louise J. Kilkenny,

53 Canaan St., Carbondale,
Public School Nursing ; Betty A.
Saini, 16 N. Park St., Carroll
Park , Arts and Sciences ; Gary
R. Schwarz, 2912 Westminster
Rd., Bethlehem, Arts and
Sciences; Thomas J. Stiner, 321

Marathon

Dance your heart away

The final registration has
begun for the third annual
dance marathon which is to be
held at Bloomsburg State
College on January 21, 22, and
23, 1977, announced Sue Ann
Sagan , President of the
Program Board. This year the
proceeds from the annual dance
marathon sponsored by the
Kehr Union Program Board will
be given to the Columbia County
Heart Fund.
Sagan announced that this
year 's marathon.will be a dual
marathon. The main marathon
will be fifty hours in length and
will last from 8 p.m. January 21
to 10p.m. January 23 and will be
held at the Kehr College Union
at BSC. The theme of this year's
marathon will be "The Greaser
Days of the Fifties."
E. Fourtn St., Berwick ,
Business Administration ; Keri
L. Wells, 112 Rockwood Ave.,
York, Elementary Education ;
Raye D. Whipple, 707 Desmond
Education .
St., Athens, Special
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The second part to the
marathon which will be a mini
dance marathon which will be a
12 hour marathon from 9 a.m. to
9 p.m. on January 22, 1977,
which will be for high school
students. The competition will
consist of high school students
from various schools in
Columbia County.
"The dancers will be seeking
pledges from various people at
the college and in the County at
large," said Sagan . "I hope that
the community will pledge as
much money as they can to the
people who will be dancing for
the benefit of the Columbia
County Heart Fund."
John Trathen , Assistant
Director of Student Activities,
Chairman of the Columbia
County Heart Fund for 1977, has
volunteered to dance in the
marathon . It is also rumored
that Dr. David Revak will be

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dancing in his second dance
marathon , and that Joe
Darlington of WCNR and Bob
Sweppy of WHLM will also be
dancing for the benefit of the
marathon.
Music for the marathon will
be provided by many bands
throughout the area as well as
by local disc jockeys.
Registration for the marathon
will continue through January
18, 1977. If anybody wishes to
register or has any questions
concerning the marathon ,
contact the Kehr College Union
information desk at 389-3902or
call John Trathen at Bloomsburg State College at 389-2918.
Tentative List of Bands
(subject to change )
Jan. 21 Friday
8 p.m. - 10 p.m. One Way
Street
10 p.m. -1 a.m. Pendulum
Jan. 22 Saturday
1 a,m . - 3 a.m. Hybrid Ice
12 noon - 2 p.m. Sunshine
2 p.m. - 4 p.m. XYZ
6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Meadows
8 p.m. - 10 p.m. Topaz
10 p.m. - 12 midnight Undercurrent
12 midnight - 2 a.m.
Strawbridge
Sunday Jan. 23
12 noon - 3 p.m. Tundra
3 p.m. - 6 p.m. Peach
6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Kicks
8 p.m. - 10 p.m. Juice

Penny
a
p in
Tickets now on sale for the BSC special performance of "Ode to academic ," running
for the next 17 weeks.
(Photo by Pedersen)

REAL job training

If you 're eligible for your
college 's federal work-study
program , there 's a , new
program sponsored by the
Pennsylvania Department of
Education (PDE) that can give
you academic credit , money
and work experience in your
chosen career field.
It's called REAL, "Relating
Experience to Academic
Learning." Now in operation
about six months under the
PDE' s Office of Lifelong
Learning, REAL offers students
internships in public and

nonprofit
agencies.
It' s
available to all except those in
nursing, student teaching and
religion-oriented activities .
"All colleges are in the
program if they have federal
work-study funds," said C. K.
Moore, REAL director. State
money is used to pay half the
student's wages. The college,
using work-study money, pays
the other half.
Students earn at least the
minimum wage, now $2.30 an
For further inforamtion ,

students should see their
financial aid officer , college
counselor or contact Director,
REAL Program, Pennsylvania
Department of Education , Box
911, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
17126. Phone 717-787-9602.
hour and work at least 10 hours
a week. The college determines
how much credit to offer for an
internship, which must cover at
least one semester or term.
Jobs must be associated with
the student's career goal or
aimed at general career exploration .

The recent Council for Exceptional Children Penny-a-Pin
Bowling service project was a
great success. Thanks to
everyone that participated. The
proceeds will be divided
among: Sun come Industries
and Rehabilitation Center,
Heart
Fund ,
Muscular
Dystrophy, United Fund , and
the Diabetes Association.
Trophies will be awarded to the
following participants :
High Average Men Ronnie
Roark
High Average Women Ms.
Colleen Marks
High Sponsor Men Mr. James
Reifer
High Sponsor Women Jane
Sutter
Crying Towel Sara Mills
Door Prize Barb Cantrelle

The devil's i^i

Something of value

Literacyand passion
When we moved to fourth and Wood Streets recently, I opened
some boxes of books stored for the last six years. In these crates I
found my favorite books fro m childhood, the remains of a set
published in Chicago which has been in our family since my oldest
brother was born . They are called Bookhouse Books and were a
literat e graded reader assembled by one Olive Beaupre Miller
about 1920.
Since I am a little kid at heart I started reading them and
quickly fo und myself inundated by waves of fond memory : the
discovery of "the little engine that could", the laughter of "the
teeny tiny women", the marvelous moral of Tolstoy's "the cobbler". I found myself unable to put the books down! Moving to
stories older children I read The Kaleval a , that gran d Icelandic
epic poem, then moved to the story of Frithjof the Viking.
I had made these stories min e again by passionately entering
into them as I had when, as a child, I would read for hours on end,
developing in the bargain a wide vocabulary which for years I
would not understand. But , like the passionate Hugh of How
Green was My Valley when confronted by a mocking
schoolmaster chiding him for mispronunciation, I too thought the
languag e beautiful and "didn 't think it was bad to have read more
words in it that I understood."
What this language and this body of literature did for me was to
enable me, vicariously at the first , to engage in the world of ideas
and people and situations in such a way that engag ement itself
mattered , and that is to me the essence of passion. If (an d I underline that word, "if", so as to set it off as a genuine surmise
rather than the beginning of an accusation) persons in higher
education, and anywhere else, are today apathetic (hated word!),
then perhaps rather than spending time in useless put-downs we
ought all be asking one another, "what matters to you? " "What
engages your mind, your spirit, your soul in such a way that you
become passionate? " I am only suggesting a link between good
literature, the kind that moves your soul, and passion ; there
might well be other things, like the sight of a beaten child or the
smell of newmown hay. There may be a thousand things like this;
literat ure at its best reflects the human condition and its passions
like an unobstructed mirror so that the worst in us is held up for
inspection had the best for emulation and admiration.
But it is simultaneously a kind of passion wh ich brooks ho
escape, which allows no exit from the mysteries of life, only a
wrestling with their ultimate significan ce for your life. And it is a
passion which allows no cheap answers, religious or otherwise, tb
rob us of the ful l weight of our oneness with human ity.
Such is the passion I learn ed fro m literature as a child; it is a
passion summed up in the. biblical portrait of the Christ as one
who, by passion, ends violence in his own body. Wh ere do you get
the energy for that kind of passion?
Jay C. Rochelle
Protestant Campus Pastor

A TTENTION:
There will be a
Campus Voice staff
meeti ng f o r all
members of the
staff both new and
old members.
Thurs day , Jan. 20
at 7p.m. in the
Campus Voice

office.

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TIMES FOR
CV STAFFERS!
Sunday - 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday - 6:00 p.m.
(this is the change!)
Be Prompt with your
copy.

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J Executive Editor
jf Business Manager
| Managing Editor
|| News Editor* .,
1 Feature Editor .
j Sporfi Editor
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| Photography Editors......... *, f
§ Copy Editor
| Circulation Manager
I Advertising Manager
|§ Advisor
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NEW DEADLINE

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DUANE LONG

The Horror of the Campus
Introduction

by DUANE LONG
H. P. Lovecraft once wrote
under the pseudonym of Abdul
Alhazred , the famous couplet :
That is not dead which can
eternal lie
and in strange aeons even death
may die
What if this strange and
inexplicable couplet applies to
certain aspects of Bloomsburg
State College? Could the
nethermost minions of marvels
strange and terrific, of gods of
elder myth be using this
campus for their hellish
playground?
In the corning weeks I plan to
answer these questions. The
upcoming HORROR OF THE
CAMPUS is a study of what a
Lovecraftian treatment.of BSC
might reveal. BSC stands like a

Off on a tangent
A few things to say

by JOE SYLVESTER
With the inauguration of
Jimmy Carter on January 20
the former Georgia governor
will officially be the new., chief
executive of the United States
and even before he is settled in
the White House, Carter must
deal with a number of issues.
One of these, the amnesty issue,
is certain to be among the
major ones he will face when he
takes office ,.perhaps even one
of the most important ones he
will face during his whole
career as president.
The forces have gathered and
even now the issue is being
banged around , with each side,
not searching for an answer for
the most part (for each feels
that they have the solution ) , but
trying to convince others of why
their answer is the right one.
Because of the different interests throughout the country
not everyone obviously, is going
to be satisfied when Carter
finally decides.
President Ford has already
said that he would not grant a
blanket pardon to draft evaders
D«l« Myers
Jerry Eisonhart
Poggy Moron
Barb Hagan, Bill Troxoll
Ed Hauck
Al
Schoeh

Wayno Palmer, Al Paglialunga
Vickie Moars
BUI Dennis
Craig Winter*
Mr. Richard Savage

Reporters! Jack Furnace, Tim O'Loary, Stuart Dunbar, George Shaloka, Bob Sehlaelor, tourlo Pollock , Duano Long. Tom Yuracko , Joy Jortoi,
Lou Hunslnger, Jim Polfley, Ann Jelfert, Eric Ynroooh, George Boshlnl, Joo Sylvester , Denlso Rath, Kerry Hlckoy, Sandy Myors , Rick Sltlor ,
Bonnie Bplett , Holly Millar, Eileen Callahan, Lenoro Finning, Julio Stamots, Kim Dlillplano,
Photograp hy) Bob Shields, Alan Poderson, Pamola Mono , Alborf Oussoren, Alan Musior , Ron Troy, Jo Wllllard, Bonnlo Eplott, Craig Rboio ,
Debbie Germain. '
Darkroom Assistant! Tim Hough
Cartoonist! Stove Wetiel
Copyreaders and TyplstsfPam Vaelna, Tarry Sweeney, SUM Wright , Stephanie Snyder, Steve Smith.

l

shore.
With next Friday's issue of
the Campus Voice, the story of
the HORROR OF THE CAMPUS-will begin. If it pleases you
to regard what appears there as
fiction , then you may consider it
so. There will invariably be
those, however, who will be able
to find the truth that resides in
the story. Officially there is
none, although some characters
have real names.
Before starting this project, I
wish merely for those who read
it to know that there is no truth
in the plot or characterization
which ? represents the atmosphere at BSC. The nemesis
of student apathy is far more
real and terrible than any
creature of . malign intelligence...Or is it?

JOE SYLVESTER

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The Campus Voice offices are located on (ho second floor of the Kehr Union Building. Tito phono mimbor Is 389-3101, The V OILJ It governed
by the Editorial Board, with tho final responsibility for all material resting with tho executive odltor a» stated In tho Joint Statomont of Freedoms .
Right* and Responsibilities of students of Bloomiburrj Stato College, The Campui Voice reserves tho right to odlt all letters and copy tub.
mltted. A maximum of 400 wordt will bo placod on all letters to tho odltor with an allowance for special exceptions, All letters to tho odltor
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,
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must be signed and have a telephone number attached, Names will be withhold upon request,
*
NOTE) Tlio opinions voiced In the columns, featuro articles and editorials of the-Compus Voice are not necessarily shared by tho ontlro
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"Pennsy lvania Miskatonic
University ", and is a pproached
in a similar manner in the story.
Though removed from witch
haunted Arkham and sea swep t
Innsmouth there is something
which Bloomsburg has in
common with these regions of
nefarious evil.
In the gambrel roofed New
England villages, and in the
cement covered streets of
Victorian cobble, which form
the nebulous byways of
Bloomsburg, there exist the
remnants of cosmic contagious.
They seethe about the town and
its college, creating a vast
ocean of fear which bathes the
countryside- with its noxious
tide—much like the sea's unwholesome spray prunes and
stunts , the trees around her

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but would consider the issue.
With only a week left in his
administration "there probably
won't be any decision by him.
Therefore, it is up to Carter to
decide this very sensitive issue,
one he will have to weigh very
carefully.
Those that are for a blanket
pardon contend that those who
resisted the war felt it was
unjust and they should not be
punished for something such as
that , especially since it was not
a declared war and a war that
the United States wasn't even
trying to win. To take each
individual that resisted in a
case by case fashion would take
much too long. Some even say
that the resistors better served
the country by resisting and
bringing to light quicker the
senselessness of the war.
Others in favor have come
back on the Nixon pardon
saying that if Ford pardoned
Nixon in order that the issue
wouldn 't be dragged out and to
get to more important matters,
then the resisters should be
most certainly let off.
But then there is the other
side of the matter. Those that
are against any type of amnesty
cite the argument that if amnesty is given to all those who
resisted then it will be tougher

in the future to recruit men ior
the armed forces and keep them
there.
Here they refer not only to
draft resisters but to deserters
also. They cite the disturbing
rate of desertion in the armed
forces and state that if a draft is
again used in the country it will
be much harder to build up an
army.
This, I feel would be a
problem arid it would cause
many a hair to turn gray on the
heads of those that are deathly
afraid of a weak defense.
But I don't think the real
problem is with those who take
issue with the law in these
cases ; It's with the lack of trust
in the government , N
If there were no resistance
during the war , if no one
protested the wrong that was
being done, especially to those
that had to go over and do the
actual fighting, then Vietnam
might still be going on and we
would still be in a stalemate.
We have a democracy and the
way I learned it , in a democracy
the people are supposed to have
a voice in matters.
Those that resisted and
protested were amon g those
that had a few things to say.

Alan Arkin to appear

Catch-22, the film adaptation
of Joseph Heller 's best-selling
novel , will be shown Monday,
January 24, at 12:00, 2:00, and
9:00 p.m . in the multipurpose
room of the Keh r Union . The
film , directed by Mike Nichols
and featuring Alan Arkin , is a
blackly comic treatment of war
and of the society it serves.
Alan Arkin himself will be on
campu s the following Wednesday, January 20, speaking in
Haas Auditorium at 3:00 p.m.
Mr. Arkin , the star of Cntch-22,
is one of America 's major actors , having created other
lending roles in such important

films as The Russians Arc
Coming, The Russians Arc
Coming, Wait Until Dark , Inspector Clquscau, The Heart Is
A Lonely Hunter, and the
currently running Scvcn-PerCont Solution . His stage roles
include Enter Laughing, LUV,
and Criiididc , and he has
directed the New York
productions of Jules Feiffer 's
Little Murders and Neil Simon's
The Sunshine Boys.
Both the film and the lecture
are under the sponsorship of the
Arts Council and are open to
everyone free of charge;

TKE awaitingJFC approval
by JAY JONES
Fraternities are , and always
have been, part of what is called
"college life ". They have been
around so long and have
become such a feature of
campuses around the world that
the words college and fraternity
have
become
almost
synonymous. They are an
important, integral and some
say even necessary part of the
college campus. Yet for awhile
now there has been the feeling
that possibly it's time for one or
two new fraternities (or
sororities ) to form on campus,
some new blood so to speak.

campuses for quite awhile the
faction here at BSC is just
getting started.
The man mainly responsible
for starting the whole program
is John Semiak, the President of
TKE who transferred here from
Albright . It was John who made
all the necessary connections
and contacted the Internal
Fraternity Council to start
things moving towards getting a
TEKE chapter here at
Bloomsburg .

ARRIVAL OF TKE
Well, if everything goes according to plan a new fraternity
will soon be chartered for BSC.
It's called TEKE (or TKE)' and
it's the largest fraternity
chapter-wise in the nation . As of
now TEKE has 90,000 alumni
members and 15,000 under
graduate members throughout
the world! So why haven't you
ever heard of TKE before ?
That's a good question but one
no one seems to know the answer to it. Somehow while
TEKE chapters were being set
up in colleges all over, like
Mansfield and Millersville and
Penn State , BJoomsburg
managed not to have one And
^
so while TKE has been on these

:; ,J\V. '

MONTESSORI

TKE RUSH
Several meetings have been
held and the response was so
overwhelming that now if you
want "to join TKE instead of
simply signing up you'll have to
wait and rush just gs in any
other fraternity. As. it looks
right now there might be a rush
meeting this Spring, but since
TKE is now getting set up, the
rush may not be till next Fall.
Again , this is because the
response was so great that the
number of people who joined at
the introductory meetings
makes it . very tough to accept
even more.
Actually TKE is not a full
fledged fraternity yet. Pending
acceptence by the IFC, TEKE
will set up as a "colony" for one
year. This is sort of a probation
period to see how things work
out here at BSC. If everything is
okay then the colony becomes a
full fledged chapter of TKE at
Bloomsburg.
Since TKE is just getting
organized here at Bloomsburg
there are no plans for the setting up of the habitual Frat;

Teacher Training
Program

Yarns & Accessories
Latch Hook Rugs

APPROVED BY THE
AMERICAN MONfESSORI SOCIETY

Crewel Embroidery

Seventh AERC0 Summer Academic
Program for 8 weeks to be followed
by a nine' month Internship
Experience. Students will be trained
in the Montessori philosophy and
teaching method, chifd development
and learning materials for pfe-school
programs. Now at two locations.
AERC0 Ithaca Program conducted on
the campus of Cornell University
from June 29 to August 19, 1977 and
AERC0 Phila. Program conducted on
the campus of Beaver College from
June 15 to August 5,1977. .

Needlepoint
Beaded Fruits
Instruction Books
Hanging Basket Kits
Candle Making Supplies

Morgan's
251 West Tifth Street

For information and brochure , call or write

Bloomsburg, Pa.

AERCO Montessori Teacher '
.
Training Program
1400 East Willow Grove Ave.
¦
. Philadelphia, Pa.. 19118
(215) AD-3-0141-42

Closed all day
Wednesday
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frats have gotten the reputation
of wanting only " certain
categories of people as members. Rumors have it that this
frat wants only potential Einsteins while others are strictly
for "Jocks" and you can't get in
unless you run the 100 in 9.3 or
less. This is ridiculous and in
most cases totally undeserved
but never the less the
reputations seem to stick
anyway.

Since . TKE is just getting
rolling it's important that
everyone know that TEKE is for
EVERYONE , and everyone is
invited to join. A lot of people
have said that BSC needs a few
more new fraternities and now
one is here. Dr. Helgar is TKE's
advisor and the Vice President
is Lee Lawrence. Al Oussoren is
Secretary and Brian Cox is
TEKE's Treasurer. Let's wish
them luck.

Campus Voice fu nnyman

.When Steve Wetzel was a
student at Eastern York High
School, he spent much of his
class time drawing cartoons on
various subjects instead of
taking notes on what his
teachers were saying. Little did
he know that his cartoons would
one day be submitted for
nationwide newspaper syndication .
The 24-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernell Wetzell, York Rll ,
began drawing as a youngster
and was several times a Cappy
Dick Contest winner, a Sunday
News cartoon . As Steve 's
drawings improved, his work
began to appear in copies of the
"Hilltop Herald ," Eastern
High's weekly newspaper.
After graduation from
Eastern in 1970, Steve's work

Students, get your

Hallmark Greeting
Cards
Party goods & Gifts
MILLER S

OFFICE SUPPLY
18 W. Main St.

was used in the pages of the
York
College
student
newspaper. He is now a junior
at Bloomsburg State College
majoring in special education.
While his studies in special
education are important to him,

Steve Wetzel

Steve's real ambition is to be a
syndicated cartoonist like
Charles Schulz , Hank Ketchum
or Milton Caniff . Having had no
formal art training, Steve is
counting on his natural talents
to lead him into a . career as a
professional cartoonist.
Before enrolling at Bloomsburg this Fall, Steve spent 14
months of his Navy hitch at
Whidbey Island, Wash., where

CAPITOL THEATRE - Bloomsburg, Pa.

mmMARATHON
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7 & 9:15 Only

MAN »

DUSTIN HOFFMAN
ML^s^^wK
LAURENCEOLIVIER
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MlfrNITE SHOW SATURDAY

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House yet. The members feel it
is better to wait and get firmly
set up before embarking On a
house hunt.
FRATERNITY
STEREOTYPING
One sad aspect - of the
fraternity scene is the unfortunate stereotyping that
seems toV hang over some
fraternities like , a cloud.
Somehow over the years they
have been in existence, certain

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as an intelligence specialist , he
briefed his commanding officer
each month with a slide
presentation concerning intelligence operations at the
base. Steve often interjected
some humor into his briefings
using cartoons.
Near the end of 1975, Steve
submitted five of his Navy
drawings as entries in the 1975
All-Navy Cartoon Contest. His
comical interpretation of the
chiefs mess won him first prize
in the annual contest - an
original "Half Hitch" cartoon
strip donated by the creator of
Dennis the Menace , exNavy man, Hank Ketchum.
Steve is currently drawing a
weekly cartoon strip for "The
Campus Voice" of Bloomsburg
State College. The column ,
entitled "Harry and Dog,"
depicts a bumbling private
detective whose canine companion is turning out to be
smarter than Harry.
Along with his weekly strip
Steve also . draws political
contenders and campus happenings.
By the end . of the Fall
semester, Steve had submitted
to a total of 39 newspaper
chains, of which he's heard
favorably from four of the
syndicates-NEA-which puts out
Doonesbury Toronto Star, BP
Singer
Associates ,
and
,
Chronicle Features , (San
Francisco Chronicle) of which
the last one seems to be the
most promising. Mr. Stan
Arnol d (General Manager)
expressed how much he liked
"Harry & Dog" and said that he
and his staff agreed that Steve
has. great potential...he also
said, "Don't make any deals
with anyone else without contacting him first" - so they
appeared to be most interested.

V mn wrrm

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¦¦

Cagers keep
rolling on

The Bloomsburg ' State
basketball team did some high
scoring over the Christmas
vacation as they split two
games, losing to Lynchburg in
two overtimes, 97-90 on January
8, and beating Roanoke 84-81 on
January 10.
In the Lynchburg game, cocaptain Jerry Radocha scored a
game high of 46 points, but when
he fouled out in the second
overtime with BSC behind by
only t\vo points, Lynchburg took
command, scoring seven of the
last nine points, to earn a hard
fought win .
The game featured a close
first half , and a big comeback
by the Huskies in the second
half. The game was tied 12
times in the first half before
BSC came out of it with a one
point half time lead at 34-33.
Then Lynchburg went to work.
Lead by Jim Crawford , ' Lynchburg lead by seven with 10
mjnutes to go, and by six with
only three minutes left.
Radocha and Harry Warren got
hot down the stretch as the
Huskies fought back for a 72-all
tie after regulation time. It was
Radocha 's foul shot with 26
seconds remaining that knotted
the score. Both teams scored 10
points in the first overtime, but
Lynchburg outscored the
Huskies 15-8 in the second
overtime for the win.
Along with Radocha 's 46
points, the only other Huskies in
double figures were Al Williams

and Steve Bright, both with 12
points . Crawford lead Lynchburg with 34 points. Wayne
Davis added 29 and Ed
Schechterly scored 12. The
Huskies received strong
rebounding from up front.
Bright pulled down 12 rebounds,
and Williams had 10 boards.
At Roanoke, the Huskies lead
the entire game, once by 13
points, but had to stave off a last
minute rally for the win. After a
2-2 tie, the Huskies went on a
tear for a 17-8 lead after five
minutes. BSC didn't let up and
took a 50-36 halftime lead.
. Roanoke went on a spurt of
their own in the first six minutes
of the second half to close the
lead to five points at 56-51.
Bloomsburg then increased the
lead to. 13 points at 73-60 with
eight minutes left , and held a
ten point lead with a minute and
a half to go. Then Roanoke
scored eight straight points to
cut the lead to two points at 8381. But Rich Evans put an end to
Roanoke's hopes with his free
throw with 28 seconds left.
Radocha again took scoring
honors with 25 points, followed
by Evans with 21 and Warren
with 14. Rick Thomas' and John
Weber paced Roanoke in
scoring, both totaling 16 points.
Along with Monday night's 9363 pounding of Muhlenburg, the
Huskies now have a record of 92. Tomorrow, the Huskies play
West Chester State, which is
now a non-league game.

Senior Tina de Vries of
Bethlehem , and sophomore
Tina O'Hora of Clarks Summit ,
have been named by their
teammates as co-captains of the
1976-77 BSC women's swimming
and diving team.
"I am very pleased with the
team's selection of captains as
both girls are fine swimmers,"
said coach Mary Gardner.
"They are also enthusiastic and
dynamic team leaders, and I
feel certain they will do a fine
job this season."
De Vries competes in the
backstroke and freestyle events
for the Huskies. Last spring she
received the Lucy McCammon
Scholarship Award, which is
symbolic of her outstanding
achievements academically
and athletically.

backstroke , and 100 yard
backstroke, the last record a
Nelson pool women's swimming
record.

O'Hora competes in the
freestyle , backstroke and
medley events. She holds three
team records and one pool
record. The records she holds
are 200-yard freestyle, 50-yard

HARTZELL'S
MUSIC STORE

A member of the BSC swimming team glides on to victory in the Giassboro meet. The
next home meet is January 19 with Shippensburg.

Senior co-captain Jerry Radocha
scored 71 points in the Huskies'
two game southern swing and
moved into second place on the
atl-time BSC basketball list.
Radocha's 46 points against
Lynchburg moved him up to
second place from fourth place
past Richard Lloyd and Robert
Herzig. His 25 points against
Roanoke plus his 15 against
Muhlenburg on Monday put him
only 53 points behind all-time
leader John Willis. Radocha has
scored 1,414. points and is averaging 24 points this season.

de Vries and O'Hore
named swim captains

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Specializing in made to
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O'Hora also set a record this
year, teaming up with Jane
Lamon of Warminster , Laurie
Kemmerer of Easton , and Ann
Fadner of Landisville, in the
200-yard medley relay. O'Hora
also was a member of the relay
team that set a record for
women 's, swimming as well as
BSC swimming; men and
women, in Nelson pool, prior to
the season.
In their only meet of the
season, Bloomsburc lost to East

"The Beit For Less"

72 N. Iron St. Bloomsburg
9 a.m. • 9 p.m. MON. & SAT.
•Valentine Cards
cutouts
•Pons
•Calculators
School supplies

RITTER'S
OFFICE SUPPLY
112 E. Main St.
Bloomsburg

Stroudsburg , 69-64. The next
meet for the Huskies is January
25 at Lehigh.

BSC keg lers lose
initial match

by VICKIE MEARS
The newly-formed
but
unofficial BSC Bowling Team
started and finished its fall
season with a losing record. The
only match , against East
Stroudsburg, resulted in the loss
by both the men and women, at
14-5 for each team. The next
match will be against Montgomery County Community
College on Saturday, January
21.
The highest three-game
series reached by the women
was taken by Linda Green of
BSC at 492 while Bill Snyder of
BSC took the series at a high of
522.
Dave Kirchdoefer of BSC took
two points , the most taken by
any one man , while Claudia
Zseir of BSC achieved the same
for the women.
Head coach , Tim Wagner , felt
that due to the lack of ex-

perience and the fact that the
season consisted of only one
match, it proved a detriment to
the team record of no wins and
one loss. "I felt bad about being
a losing coach, but I have great
expectations for the Spring
season, especially if all the
team members live up to their
potentials."
Coach Wagner and his
assistant coach, Mike Sowas,
plan to petition CGA in order to
make the Bowling Team a club
so that they can receive
financial assistance.
"The team gave this fall
season to Coach Wagner as a
Christmas gift ," stated Bill
Snyder, captain of the men's
team. "Too bad we ended up in
last place, but it's the thought
that counts."
The team hopes that they will
receive your support by
audience attendance.

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