rdunkelb
Wed, 02/21/2024 - 17:29
Edited Text
Blackout :;i^aK^probl^iiili
By WILLIAM V. PARKER
The power failure that - cut
lights, stopped air conditioners,
cancelled evening classes and
routed dorm residents last week
can be blamed on the state
legislature, -Their failure to appropriate
sufficient funds in the budget
proposal has left" BSC maintenance holding the bag without
enough money to make the
necessary parts replacements.
Power to more than .-brie-third
of the buildings on the lower
campus was stopped when
feeder cable 1203 collapsed last
Thursday. This forced elec-
The blackout kept
BSC electricians busy
at the break site, pul ling them f r o m all
other electrical jo bs
on camp us f o r two
days/ '
tricians to crawl underground
through manholes to get to the
break. Air had to be pumped
into the manholes so workmen
could breathe, and this required
portable generators to power
the- fans and tools used. The
blackout kept BSC electricians
busy at the break site, pulling
them from all other electrical
jobs on campus for two days.
Workmen had to shut down
power to -another third"-'of the
campus. buildings in order to
make repairs. The work crews
were on the job around the
clock , splicing three new
cables, each 275 feet long, into
the underground tunnels to
carry the 12,000 volts of feeder
1203.
.BSC maintenance does not
have the proper test equipment
"...the cable system
under the campus is
out-of-date , and even
though the recent
break is now repaired,
the cable f r o m the
splice outward are
just as old, and another
break could occur at
any time. "
for this much voltage,, so
technicians from the Penn State
Advisory Service had to be
called in to test the new cables.
According to Robert Campbell, BSC maintenance, the
cable system under the campus
is out-of-date, and even though
the recent break is now
repaired , the cables from the
INSIDE THE
CAMPUS VOICE...
Bollydancing ..'.
.p. 2
Poetiy C o n t e s t . . . . . . 7 . . . . . . '.... p.. 3
Exporienco Beatles.
Ziggy's iiko us
Field Hockey .
... p. 4
p. 4
p 8
.................. .
splice outward are just as old,
and another break "could occur
at any time. Campbell said the
wiring needs to be totally
redone, but Harrisburg, has not
yet allowed for it in the budgetOne ironic note after this
power failure : The new Human
Services building for the
Department of Nursing will use
power from feeder 1203.
Off campus
students
costly bills
exp lained
BSC students living off
campus should be very interested in knowing that their
rising electricity bills are a
result of the rapid and overwhelming increase in Pennsylvania's, electric use.
Pennsylvanians'
use of
electricity increased 42 percent
in the most recent ten-year
period , the Pennsylvania
Electric Association (PEA)
reported recently. PEA also
predicted that use of electricity
will be about 34 percent greater
in 1989 than in 1979.,
According to a statewide
study on electric energy, normal populatibh growth and
industry expansion contributed
to the increase in usage of
electricity.
Residential usage now accounts for about 30 percent of
electricity consumption in the
state, PEA said. In 1979
residential use was 29.4 billion
kilowatt-hours, compared to
19.2 billion a decade earlier.
PEA study states that Pennsylvania will need about 25'
percent more generating
capacity in 1989 to meet anticipated increases in demand
for electricity over the next ten
years. To meet this demand,
PEA said, nearly $14.5 billion
will be required to build new
generating facilities. Since it
takes from 10 to 15 years to
build them, the decisions must
be made promptly .
(continued on page three)
Zeta JPsihasHbuse
By MICHELE IJANFORTH
¦
.
-- - and" ¦¦"
CYNDI ULRICH
The local, chapter of Zeta Psi
is currently renovating the
house they acquired in May.
The house, located at 114 North
Street, is the first house officially owned by the Zeta Psi
since 1975.
The Zeta Psi new residence
will house 17 brothers. The last
house burned down after two
days occupancy . Since then the
brothers of Zeta Psi have been
forced to share residency with
other people as a result of low
membership. Two years ago,
the membership dwindled to
eight members. Presently the
fraternity has . grown to 67
members, ranking it the largest
and second most outstanding
chapter in North America ,
Placement
Center
aids job
searching
BSC graduates found job
hunting last year the best since
1973. The annua}: report v of
Thomas A. Da vies, director of
Career Developm ent and
Placement, lists 84.09 percent of
the 1979 graduates as currently
employed, in graduate school,
or in military service. Last year
the placement percentage was
80.3 and in 1973 it was 85.6.
Of the 1136 who received
baccalaureate degrees in the
three 1979 commencement
convocations, 231 have teaching
positions and 570 are employed
in other fields-. There are 116
full-time graduate students, and
19 are in military service.
Twenty-three are listed as not
available for employment and
34 could not be located. The
report lists 143 as underemployed or still seeking jobs.
ZETA PSI BROTHER , Craig Smith, shown putting finishing
touches on new Zeta Psi house after a very successful
work weekend.
Campus Voice/Jeff niet*
Nationa l teacher exa ms scheduled
Students completing teacher
preparation programs and
advanced degree candidates in
specific fields may take the
N a t i on a 1
T ea c her
Examinations on any of three
different test dates in 1980-81.
Educational Testing Service,
the nonprofit , educational
organization that administers
this testing program , said today
that the tests will, be given Nov.
8, Feb. 21, and June 20, at test
centers throughout the United
States.
Results of " the National
Teacher Examinations are
considered by many large
school districts as one' of several
fa ctors -in *the selection of new
The brothers are holding
work - week-ends on the house
and anticipate completion by
Homecoming.
Gerald Brazil is the house
fraternity
A
manager.
spokesman said they anticipate
the purchasing of the house with
additional funds from the Zeta
Psi Alumni and the Zeta Psi
National Organization.
Mark Shipman is the current
president of Zeta Psi and Pat
Wodis, assistant professor of
the mathematics department, is
the current advisor.
The .brothers of Zeta Psi
welcome all visitors.
teachers and used by several
states for the .credentialling of
teachers or licensing of advanced candidates. Some
colleges require all seniors
preparing to teach to take the
examinations,
On each full day of testing,
registrants may take the
common examinations, which
measure their professional
prepara tion and general
educational background , and-or
an area examination that
measures their mastery of the
subject they expect to teach.
Prospective r e g i s t r a n t s
should contact the school
districts in which they seek
employment; state agencies in
which they seek certification or
licensing, their colleges, or the
a p p r o p ri a t e
educational
association for advice about
which examinations to take and
when to take them.
The NTE Bulletin of Information contains a list of test
centers and general information
about
the
examinations, as well as , a
registration form. Copies may
be obtained from college
placement officers , school
personnel departments , or
directly from National Teacher
Examinations, Box
911,
Educational Testing Service,
Princeton , New Jersey , 08541,
"The steady improvement
in BSC's placement rate over
the past three years, from 69.32
in 1976 to 84.09 percent this past
year , reflects Bloomsburg 's
continuing effort to respond to
student needs and interests,"
Davies said. "The general
improvement in the job market
over those three years has been
a strong factor of course, but
Bloomsburg's shift of emphasis
into areas of higher employment opportunities gives
our graduates a better chance
in that job market. Propsective
employers .continue to respect
the quality of our academic and
support programs:"
Graduates in the health
services field had the highest;
placement rate, 98.18 percent
for 56 students who earned
Bachelor of Science degrees in
nursing, 100 percent for those
who received degrees in public
school nursing and dental
/Xcoi^thiued on pagc three)
^
f
,
Jamboree craft
"spice up" campus
BY KAREN PETRUZZI
It's that time of year again
when the leaves start ,changing
their color and the temperature
drops a few degrees. And what
would fall be without the
starting of classes and a jamboree?
The Fall Jamboree always
seems to spice up campus after
everyone has moved into their
dorm rooms and apartments.
Why ? Because many crafts
displayed at the jamboree
capture . an autumn mood that
enlightens our spirits. Local
craftsmen even sell their
original creations so you can
stay in this mood forever.
Consider adding a few pictures to your walls. You will be
able to choose from string art ,
dried flower pictures, painting s
and more. Just think what a few
fluffy decorations and patchwork pillows will .do for that
ordinary chair.
If you're a plant person, you'll
be. able to pick up houseplants plus macrame hanging plant
holders and wheel-thrown
pottery in which to plant them.
Other crafts to be displayed
are: needlework, craft cards,
dolls, beanbags, woodworking,
scrimshaw, lucite etching,
sculpture, miniatures, silver
smithing, cbrcheted items and
more.
So, come to the jamboree
Friday and Saturday and find
something to enhance your
room. While you are shopping,
local artists will be singing and
dancing to entertain you.
Outdoor equipment
to he auctioned
Due to the purchase of new
equipment , certain used items
will be auctioned to B.S.C.
Students by sealed bid. The
items and minimum bids are as
follows :
4 - Four-man tents, $20.00
each
1 - Eight-man tent , $50.00
3 - Canoes , $75.00 each.
Items must be bid separately,
and all bids must be submitted
to Mike . Sowash, KUB Games
Room , by Oct. 1st. Equipment is
on display at the Outdoor
Equipment Room located in the
Games Room . In the event that
no student bids are received by
the Oct. 1st. deadline, it will be
permissible for other members
of the college community to bid
on the above-mentioned items.
Please note that these items
are not new items and may be
slightly damaged — (ei., broken
zippers , small tears , dents ,
etc.).
Roberta Clemens
Executive Editor
.'
'
Brorida Friday
News Editor. .
Joan Kraus
Feature Editor
Kevin Kodish .
Sports Editor
J©*f Brown
Assistant Sports Editor
Karon
Troy
Sholhamor,
Carol
Copy Editors
Lorry
Buola
. . . . . . . . : . . ....
Photo Supervisor.
Pat'Murphy, Joff Niotz
Photo Editors
David Stout
Advertising Editor .. .. . .;. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . .
Brian Duart
Advertising Assistant ' .
.Mark
Hauck
"
Business Manager..
..
Lawrence
Fuller
. . . . v . .; . . . . . . . . . .; . . . . . . . . .i . .
Advisor
STAFF: Wayno, Beakley, Jane Blauch, Hilary Brown, Donna Campbell , Roger Cheney, Mary Constantino , E. Renee Grouse, Michele
Danforth , Suzanne DelVecchio , Christy Domansky, Rick Diliberto,
. Peggy Flynn, Bruce Goisler , Mary Hassenplug, Harry James, Kathy
Kashner , Beth Mays, AJ Mclvor , Carole Meckling, Dorothy Messe ,
Todd Mover , Kelly Obert, William V, Parker , Karen Petruzzi ,
Michael Pucillo, Judy Ralston ,. Giriny Reed, Pam Sanderson , Michael
Yamrus. Cindy Ulrich.
,
Tho Volco li governed by tho Editorial Board with tho flnol roipomlblllty lor all material
rotting with tho executive editor o« itatod In tho Joint Statement of Freedom, Right* ond>
Rotpontlbllltlos of tludonti ot BSC.
Tho Voleo rotorvoi the right to odlt all letter* and copy lubmltlod, A maximum of
400 word* will bo placed on all letters to tho editor with an allowance for oxcopflon*.
All leHort muit bo ilgned and have an addrot* and phono .numbor. Name* will bo withheld upon requoit.
The opinion* voiced In the column*, article* and notice* are not noco»»arlly ihared
by the entire itaff. An un»l(jrtod staff editorial denote*' a ma|or con»on»u* of tho editorial
' board.
-•. , ¦
i
¦
'¦
'
EDITOR'S NOT E: Letters
must be typed on a 60-character
line and be in the Voice Office
no later than 6 p.m. Tuesdays to
be included in Friday 's edition.
All letters must be signed, with
a phone number enclosed.
Names will be withheld upon
request , al the discretion ol the
editor.
Profs substitute
To The Editor :
I am very disgusted with the
substitution
system
of
professors which seems to be
'
'
'
'
happening quite frequently this
year..Some professors teach the
course much better than others
and the student has the right to
know who will be teaching the
course he has paid for. This
substitution process only slowt,
down the registering system,
which is bad enough as it is.
What can be done about this?
Why is it happening? It must
come to an end.
Frustrated
Beer Talk
Your past time: Beer
Following are more-answers to selected questions about most
college students ' perennial favorite subject — beer.
What is the percentage of alcoholic content of beer?
"The average domestic beer contains approximately five percent alcohol by volume," according to Dr. Klaus Z.astrow , vice
president of brewing technical services for Anheuser-Busch"; Inc.
He adds levels in beer are frequently registered .by volume.
Another way to measure alcohol content in beer is by weight.
Anheuser-Busch's Budweiser , for example, is approximately four
percent by weight;'
Also, contrary to.popular belief , higher-priced foreign beers are
usually very little if any higher in alcoholic content than domestic
'
'
brews.
~
4 - Man Tents - bad zippers ,
not completely waterproof
8 - Man Tent - holes in floor ,
bent poles
3 - Canoes - bent , one has
small tear
Bloomsburg, PA 17815 Vol LIX No. 3
_
Editorial Letters
In the event that there is more
than one bid of the same amount
for a particular item , the bids
on that item will have to be resubmitted.
THE CAMPUS VOICE
¦
\)0£? HSI#N6 ^
What is the most popular beer in the world?
Known as the "King of Beers", Anheuser-Busch 's Budweiser has
been the world's best-selling beer for many , many years. Fact is,
Anheuser-Busch's flagship brand probably is the most popular beer
ever brewed.
Tone hips:
Beilydance
Hey ladies ! Are you looking
for a truly enjoyable form of
exercise that will help you tone
up those muscles and take inches off your waist?
T
Well, BSC's School of Extended Programs may have just
the thing for you. ,
Starting Sept. 18, the school
will be offering a course in belly
dancing. The non-credit course
will meet five times from 6:00
p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Cost is $22.50.
Mrs. Patricia Culver , a
former model and professional
dancer will be instructing the
class. To date Culver has taught
some 600 women to dance.
Future courses to be offered
include : intermediate belly
dancing, stained glass art, and
popular photography.
For more information contact
the
office of
Extended
Programs at 389-3300.
In 1876, farsighted Anheuser-Busch President Adolphus Busch
collaborated with his close frien d, Carl Conrad , to create a new
beer — Budweiser — using time-consuming Old World brewing
methods and only the finest barley malt , costly imported hops , and
rice instead of corn. Today, more than 100 years later , Bud is still
brewed to the same time-honored and exacting standards .
Since college students probably do more toward raising the per
capita consumption of beer in the U.S. than any other single
category of society, Rolling Stone College Papers recently
published the results of a collegiate beer-tasting test to determine
which beers are most preferred: The world's best-selling beers and
popular domestic regional brews were served in arbitrary fairs' in
identical glasses marked X and Y to college students* representing
eight schools. When the last foamy mustache had been wiped away,
the panel of judges voted Budweiser
number
in ' the field of 26
¦ ¦" ¦
¦ "• ' ; • ¦ ' one
/ ¦; ' ' '
:
' : " "'
•;
beers tested.
;•
How fattening is beer?
"Beer is not the caloric villain that many people have been led to
believe," says brewmaster - author John Porter, Porter explains
regular U.S. beer averages 160 calories per 12-ounce bottle or can,
and about 90 of those calories are in (he form of alcohol. Hence; one
12-ounce beer is approximately the same in caloric count as a
martini or an equal serving of a nondietic soft drink. '
"If sometimes you feel bloated after a brew or two , it may well be
that you're full of gas bubbles," says Porter. To those people, the
author of All About Beer recommends "trying a beer that is
naturally carbonated during storage — like Budweiser or
Michelob "
N.F .S. selects graduate fellowships
The National Research
Council will again advise the
National Science Foundation
(NSF) in the selection of candidates for the foundation 's
program
of
graduate
fellowships. Panels of eminent
scientists and 'engineers appointed by the National
Research Council will evaluate
qualifications of applicants.
Final selection of the fellows
will be made by the foundation ,
with awards to be announced in
March 1981.
Eligibility in the NSF
Graduate Fellowship Program
is limited to those individuals
who, at the time of application
have not completed more than
20 semester hours~30 quarter
hours, or equivalent, of study in
any of the science fields listed
below following completion of
their first baccalaureate degree
in science. Subject to the
availability of funds , new
fellowships awarded in the
spring of 1981 will be for periods
of three years, the second and
third years contingent on
certification to the foundation
by the fellowship institution of
the student' s satisfactory
progress ""toward an advanced
degree in science.
These fellowships will be
awarded for study or work
leading, to master's or doctoral
Electricity bills
explained
to off-campus
students
( continued from page one)
The study noted that rising
^
electricity prices partially
reflect a 374 percent increase in
the tax bill paid by utilities
since 1969. The greatest increase was in the gross receipts
tax paid to the Commonwealth,
which has gone up 692 percent in
10 years.
The PEA represents all 12
investor-owned electric utilities
which supply 98 percent of the
power used by Pennsylvania
customers.
The complete study is
reported in a booklet entitled,
"Facts you should know about
electric energy in Pennsylvania^'The booklet '.. is
available on request from the
PEA Harrisburg Information
Center, Pennsylvania Electric
Association, 301 APC Building,
800 North Third Street ,
Harrisburg, PA 17102.
B & W Associates
261 W. Main St.
Bloomsburg
^..^—^..^M—MMM—i
i in
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n i ri:iini:i) s
Btl|||
m i n -Tinn
tnwmiwi i n
» HIIHMHI
T
784-4016
after 5 p.m.
—V-
¦
"" ' "
~ . ..—m.—
r""
-
degrees in the mathematical,
physical ,
biological ,
and
social
engineering,
sciences, and in the history and
philosophy of science. Awards
will not be made in clinical, law,
education, or business:fields, in
history or social work, for work
leading to medical,,.. dental, or
Applicants will be required to
take the Graduate Record
Examinations designed to test
scientific
aptitude
and
"
T.h e
a c h i e v e m e n-t .
examinations, administered by
the Educational Teisting Service, will be given on Dec. 13,
1980 at designated centers
throughout the United States
and in certain foreign countries.
"These fel lowship s
will be awarded for
study or work leading
to master's or doctoral degrees in the
mathematical, p hysical, biological, engineering, and social
sciences, and in the
history and p hilosophy of science. "
The deadline date for the
submission of applications for
NSF graduate fellowships is
Nov. 26, 1980. Further information and application
materials may be obtained
from the. Fellowship Office,
National Research Council, 2101
Constitution
Avenue ,
^Washington , D.C. 20418.
public health degrees, or for
study in joint . scienceprofessional degree programs.
Applicants must be citizens of
the United States, and will be
judged on the basis of ability.
The annual stipend for graduate
fellows will be $4,800 for a
twelve-month tenure with
allowdependency
no
¦ '*
ances.
.
Does anyone remember the
former home of Delta Omega
Chi, (also known as the DOC
house) , on Main Street next to
the Moose? It seems the landlords of the building refused to
make necessary repairs to the
structure and the town code
$7 ,000
offe red
for best
poem
A $1,000 grand prize will be
awarded in the poetry competition sponsored by the World
of Poetry, a quarterly
newsletter for poets.
Poems of all styles and on any
subject are eligible to compete
for the grand prize or for 49
other cash or merchandise
awards.
Says contest director, Joseph
Mellon, "We are encouraging
poetic talent of every kind, and
expect our contest to produce
exciting discoveries."
Rules and official entry forms
are available from World of
Poetry, 2431 Stockton Blvd.,
Sacramento,
Dept,
N,
California 95817.
PP&L
offers
workshop
PP&L - Susquehanna Energy
Information Center in Berwick
plans on sponsoring an "Environment Education Teacher
Workshop
or
Outdoor
Teaching".
If interested in attending, call
Dr. Frederick Hill (ext. 3514) or
stop by his office (Hartline 124).
)f ba5 d if ts i
boxes
y
' Allentown
Women's Center
1-215-264-5657 •
.^»^___^_ _^___».
Ri. VI between Bloomsburg and Berwick
:
i
784-5994
-XZ::I.JJL„.'I ^LJI .' :
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"
"
wallets
"For the Best Selection of
Needle-Art in the Area"
'7fCoJiqaK> '4> ty vtH, S&f rfo
•Needlepoint •Rug Supplier
•Crewel Kits •Yarns
Stop on in:
Open Daily 10:30 - 5:00; Closed Wod.
251 W. Fifth St. , Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
CAPITOL TWIN THEATRE
Bloomsburg, PA
NOW PLAYING
MID-NITE SHOW
FRIDAY S SATURDAY
I -
P^K
Fffi
" feB^ '. '
A
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) t &\
baskets . Prisma ) ndi<\ Yriit Sp reads A
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(behind. ShiiWiw. waUawsiV. I
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Confidential Counseling
Pregnancy Testing
the area arid they have converted the once-condemned
dwelling into a Jewish pizza
parlor called "Two Boys from
Jerusalem." The business is
planned to open, as soon as the
brothers can get a restaurant
license and pass a health inspection.
^Gue PasaW
Pregnancy Termination
Everything Lighted
.=
Davies pointed out that if the
34 who could not be located for
employment information were
excluded from the report, the
overall placement rate would be
2.65 percentage points higher.
He said also that employment
totals do not include graduates
who are working in jobs not
related to their college
preparation.
officer condemned the building.
The fraternity was forced to
move, the landlords still refused
to make the repairs , and the
building was locked.
Well, those two enterprising
landlords , Mike and Steve
Arcus, have decided to compete
with the Italian restaurants in
PREGNANT?
NEED HELP?
•Driving Range ,
•9 Hole Par 3 Golf
•18 Hole Mini Golf
•Baseball Batting Range
f
percentage points over/last
year.
/
The 231 arts and sciences
graduates, with a percentage of
73.99 fared better in the job
^ their counterparts
market ^than
of a year ago when 68.75 percent
were placed.
Old DOC H ouse now restaurant
Open 9 a.m. -10 p.m,
~.w
( continued from page one)
hygiene, and 95.45 percent for
medical technology. In special
education the percentage is
94.52 and in communication
disorders, 91.42.
Business administration had
the largest number
of
graduates , . 393,
with a
placement rate of 85.97 percent,
an increase oyer last yean The
placement percentage for
business
education 's
58
graduates is 85.96, a drop from a
year ago. For the 259 who
received degrees in early
childhood , elementary and
secondary education , the
placement percentage was
78.65, an increase of three
Wolf Hollow Golf Center
m
"
Placement Center
aids in job searching
'
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1
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in
We identify with Ziggy
If Ziggy registered for
college, it would be one of those
Ziggy days. He'd have to extricate his clothes from the
tangle of hangers in his closet,
he'd squeeze the toothpaste out
the back of the tube and he'd
burn the toast for breakfast.
Once in the registration line, he
would probably find his favorite
class — underwater basketweaving — closed. He would
turn, fix you in the gaze of those
beady little eyes and say, "I
have been folded, spindled and
mutilated in the computer of
life."
Although Ziggy's education
comes from the school of hard
knocks, college students
nationwide identify with the
hapless little guy created by
Tom Wilson, and syndicated in
nearly 300 newspapers all over
the world. And that special
empathy helps explain the
popularity of Ziggy door
openers (Andrews and McMeel,
$4.95) , already into its third
printing before publication. A
collection of 20 spiral-bound
messages suitable for hanging
on a door, Ziggy door openers
are fast becoming a communications medium in college
dormitories. They are 20 perfect
Ziggy answers for those approaching a door such as
"C' mon in! . . . anyone who feels
at home with loud music and
clutter is always welcome!!"
Or , "Welcome — especially if
you owe me money . . . are
returning my records or are a
member of the opposite sex."
For keeping the door closed :
"Knock three times, then go
away." Or, "Do not disturb . . .
I' m hitting the books. .. and the
^¦¦¦^¦¦¦miHnBBBaKBiaHHBwaKiaauuaaMiMnisii
books are winning."
Despite Ziggy 's image as a
lovable loser, Wilson, Ziggy 's
creator, is quick to protest that
Ziggy is not a loser. "He is a
survivor —'*onewho copes and is
there the next day, " Wilson
asserts. Wilson set out to create
a cartoon character who could
have a special one-to-one
relationship with his reader in
their common struggles . with
adversity . . Ziggy looks the
reader in the eye and talks
directly to him.
"This goes back to the time
when I was a kid, watching all
those Laurel and Hardy films,"
says Wilson. "Whenever Laurel
did something outrageous ,
Hardy would look at the
audience arid exclaim, 'This is
another fine mess he's gotten us
into.'" Wilson said he tries to
establish an emotional rapport
between Ziggy and the reader:
"I don 't want them just to laugh
at him — I want them to love
him, to care about him. " Ziggy learns from his experiences and passes along
pearls of wisdom to his readers.
"Never eat your pizza under a
tree unless you like it with
everything on it. " He may be
naive enough to buy the
Brooklyn Bridge, but he optimistically keeps on wishing on
stars and trying to catch
rainbows in a butterfly net.
Ziggy goes on.
Especially popular with the
college crowd are Ziggy
notebook s, and the ZIGGY'S
"What' s Happening With Me"
16-month appointment book ,
which begins in September and
^MJwiB ^^BiaHMa
"I'MA COLLEGE
GRADUATE'.'
THATHASA NICE
RINGTO IT.
runs through the following
December. Also noteworthy are
Ziggy poster cards and - two
large collections of Ziggy
cartoons: A Ziggy Treasure,
and Encore ! Encore!!
The entire line of Ziggy books
for spring and summer 1980 has
gone back to press, bringing the
total number printed by Andrews and McMeel in 1980 to
600,000. Ziggy's popularity also
has triggered a multi-million
dollar merchandising explosion
of Ziggy products such as bean
bag dolls , games, T-shirts ,
knee-socks, shorts, sweatshirts,
linens, tableware and many
more.
If sales and numbers mean
anything, Wilson has accomplished what he set out to
do. Everybody loves Ziggy.
Exp erience the Beatles now
... and understand
Improve your
grades !
DATF.
September 15th & 16th , 1980
TIME iO a^. -A pk Pi Af:F College Store
JOSTENS,
THE RING PEOPLE
Along with the visual aspects
of the show, it is also an experience in _ the sound of the
was
so
decade , which
dominated by the "Fab Four. "
The music is taken from every
point in their tenure, and it
provides one with a chance to
imagine what it would have
been like to have seen them in
person.
So if you would like a chance
By J. MAYNARD LYMAN
On Sunday night, the students
of BSC will have a chance to reexperience a part of their lives
which they may not have fully
understood because of their
youth. The sixties will be
brought back to life for the
evening by Beatlemania. This is
the same production which
played to packed houses in New
York' s Winter Garden Theater
and in the past year has been
repeating that success on the
road.
By combining live actors,
different stage sets and a series
of nearly 2 ,000 slides, the show
chronologically traces the
career of the Beatles in conjunction with the passage of the
decade. Beginning with the
"mop top, " dressed alike
Beatles of the - She Loves You
era, to the socially conscious
"hippie " Beatles who produced
Revolution and Helter Skelter ,
the show presents images of the
sixties' important events as
reflected in the music.
COLLEGE
STUDENTS
It's been tough. A lot of work. But you'll make .it.
And nothing tells the world "I made it " better than
a Jostens College ring on your finger. It's your
lifelong symbol of achievement and your constant
reminder of your total college experience. See the
great selection of Jostens rings , available in 10K gold ,
14K gold and Lustrium. From $78.00 -
MERCHANDISE FEATURING ZIGGY have become popular
selling Items today. Anything from T-shirts to shorts to
notebooks feature Ziggy.
Send $1.00 for your
306-page, researc h paper
catalog. All academic
subjects.
Colleg iate Researc h
to see and hear what you may
have missed as a child , or, if
you' re just a fan who would like
to see ah elaborate presentation
of the Beatles' music, make
plans to attend Beatlemania.
The performance starts at - 8
in
Haas
p.m. - ~ Sunday
Auditorium. Tickets are on sale
at the Information Desk' for
$6.50 with BSC ID, and $7.50
without.
Kappa Delta Pi
wa nts Ed majo rs
Are you an education major
(el. ed, sec. ed., special ed.,
communication disorders)? If
you are and have a cum of 3.4 or
better, and have at least a
junior class standing-you are
eligible for membership in
Kappa Delta Pi.
Kappa Delta Pi is an honor
society in education whose
purpose is to recognize outstanding contributions to
education and to encourage
high professional and personal
standards.
[ NATURE'S
GARDEN !
Health Food
j
I
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[
j
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Store
225 Center Street
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Phone 387-0357
SPECIALIZING IN
HEALTH FOODS &
NATURAL VITAMINS
J.
I
|
!
I
|
j Comploto Uno Of Body But Idlngl
& Barfaall Plates atl
J Equipment
P.O. Box 25097H
A
Pound~Al»o
Food and)
40*
I• Protein Supplement* by Weldarj
Los Angeles, Ca. 90025
¦
land Bob Hoffman
'
Hrs,
• Daily 9:30 • 5 .
"j
I
!
Fit 'till 7
I
'
j
Enclosed is $1.00.
I
All
HSC
students
•
| Please rush the catalog.
¦
receive
10% discount
|
.
j Name __
l.P,
with
i Address
: I
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Our chapter at Bloomsburg
would like to offer an invitation
to anyone who meets the abovem e n t i o n e d m e m b er s h ip
requirements. Anyone interested in joining Kappa Kelta
Pi may contact Dr.4 Shahbski in
his office in " the Kehr Union.
¦ '_^^:v^Lv
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Speakers to discuss
Communication topics
• Attention! All communication
disorders majors and minors, the firs t meeting of the Student
Speech Language and Hearing
Association will be held on Sept.
17 at 7 p.m. in the Navy Hall
Auditorium. This will be an
organizational meeting and it
will- offer students an opportunity to meet their faculty.
During this school year, we
will have .some very interesting
speakers who will discuss topics
relative to speech pathology,
audiology and education of the
hearing impaired. We will include all three interes t groups
in every meeting. We want to
serve your needs.
The monthly meetings will be
held on Wednesday nights. Any
student unable to * attend for a
reason such as a night class can
receive a newsletter containing
information on the meetings
and the activities planned. On Sept. 21, there will be a
departmental -picnic at the
Bloomsburg Town Park at 5
p.m. This picnic will be for
speech pathology and audiology
majors, and for EHI ...minors
only. A sign up sheet will be in
the Navy Hall . Clinic on the
SSLHA bulletin board. Please
sign up so an estimate of the
number of students planning to
attend can be made. (Signing
the list is; not an obligation to
attend, so please sign if you are
even considering coming to the
picnic!) A donation of .50 is
asked to help pay for the expenses of the food and refresh-
ments served at the park. This
will be an excellent opportunity
to spend time with the members
of your department and to get to
know them better. ,r ~
There will be a new "program
starting this year also. -The
SSLHA will be assigning "big
sisters" to each of the incoming
freshmen of our department.
These "big sisters" are asked to
please contact the student to
whom they are assigned and to
help them with their courses in
any way they can. We need the
cooperation of all students to
make this program a success.
Please do your part. .
Everyone is welcome to attend
our first meeting and get involved ! For more information
contact any SSLHA member or
check , the bulletin hoard in
Navy Hall.
DEMISE ANTOLIK (left) and Donna Keleshian watch as two more girls sign up for sorority
rush. About 117 girls signed up for ISC rush this semester.
CARE
East Africa disaster worse
"A steady, silent disaster
much larger than the plight of
Freshmen receive
achievement-award s
Twenty BSC students received certificates recognizing outstanding academic achievement in their freshman year from the
BSC chapter of Phi Kappa Phi. the national interdisciplinary honor
society, at a ceremony Sept. 16 in the Kehr College Union.
All the students had averages higher than 3.75 at the end of their
freshman year in May,, 1980, with a few earning 4.0 averates.
The awards were presented by Lawrence B. Fuller, presiden t of
the BSC chapter , at the first of a series of Phi Kappa Phi forums
which are being held during the course of the 1980-81 academic
year . Each forum will explore topics of academic and intellectual
interest.
'
•
Those recognized were Judy M. Angstadt , Thomas P. Evans,
Jennifer A. Guild, Cindy E. Herzog, Mark A. Karpinsky , Rhonda L.
Kohler , Patricia J. Larock , Kelly A. Lapashinsky, Julie A. Miller,
Shelley Y, Pierson , Diana L. Pietkiewicz, Theresa M. Racek, Leslie
H. Reisz, Beth A. Rohrbach , Nancy A. Royer, Stephen M. Slampyyak, Brenda L. Snyder, Maryann B. Wolk , Regina G. Zanpetty
and Nancy E. Zebraitis.
H itter 's Office
Supplies
Cambodian refugees or the boat
people has been spreading
across East Africa and taking a
horrible toll on people, animals
and * crops," Dr. Philip Johnston ,
CARE
Executive
Director, said. He was announcing expansion of CARE
assistance programs to that
drought and hunger stricken
.;
region.
Johnston called this disaster
"a stark reality for millions
living on the edge of existence."
The CARE executive pointed
out that the lives of several
million people are "at risk" and
that drought , hunger and
disease have already killed
( continued on page six )
REACH
OUT
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Phone Toll Free T ¦ 'WL ' 1
and talk to former! H J
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Help Prevent
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of Dimes
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Scholars hips crvaildbl^
to College composers
INTRAMURAL BOWLING teams were formed and league action began this week in the
Kehr Union Bowling Lanes. Johnny Burke, a league participant , exhibits his bowling
Campus Voice/Jeff Nietz
talents .
Insurance important to students
There is one item which is just
as essential to college students
as the clothes, books and furniture they just packed and
carted off to school ; It's insurance.
Under most homeowners and
renter policies, students who
are still members of a
household are insured at their
new residence under the
parent's policy, according to
Lou Runge, Kemper Group
pers onal lines underwriting
manager. If a loss occurs at
school, the students can collect
up to 10 percent of their parents'
personal property coverage, or
$1,000, whichever is greater.
"For example," Runge ex-
plained , "a family with a
homeowners policy for $60,000
normally would have $30,000
personal property coverage. If
the daughter's apartment at
school is burglarized, she could
collect up to $3,000 for personal
property loss."
A move to college may affect
a family's auto insurance costs.
For example, if a student attends school 100 or more miles
from home, many companies
offer significantly reduced auto
insurance premiums, because
with less access to the car, the
student' s accident risk is
reduced. The lower rate does
not apply to families with a teen
driver still at home, however.
Full-time college students
who earn a B average or
equivalent can even further
reduce their parents' premiums
by qualifying for good student
rates.
To put these discounts in
perspective , consider an
average Illinois family with a
20-year-old son who regularly
drives the family car. The
family pays a semi-annual
premium of about $331 for full
auto insurance coverage. But if
the son attends school 100 miles
from home, the premium will
drop to $236. If he also qualifies
for the good student rating, the
family pays only $209 for the
same coverage. (Rates and
reductions vary by state and
company, along with factors
such as age, sex, base rate and
residence. )
/ (j z coS cS
BLOOMSBURG'S MOST COMPLETE ALL MEN'S SHOP
Levi' s Stra ight Leg & Boot Cut Jeans
Reg. $22.50 - NOW $16.99
Lee Straight Leg & Boot Cut Jeans
Reg. $23.50 - NOW $17.99
Wrangler Jeans
Reg. $21 .00 - NOW $15.99
Lee & Levi Cords Straight & Boot Cut
Runge also urged students to
etch their identification on such
things as bicycles, stereos and
portable radios.
"We have found this reduces
the risk of theft significantly
and improves recovery chances
if the property is stolen," he
said.
than one composition which
need not have been composed
during the year of entry .
A total of $15,000 is available
to young composers in the 29 th
annual BMI Awards to Student
C o mp o s e r s c o m p e t i t i o n
sponsored by Broadcast Music,
Inc., the world' s largest performing rights licensing
organization.
Established in 1951 in
with
music
cooperation
educators and composers, the
BMI Awards project annually
gives cash prizes to encourage
the creation of concert music by
student composers of the
Western Hemisphere and to aid
them in financing their musical
education. Prizes ranging from
$500 to $2,500 will be awarded at
the discretion of the judges. To
date, 254 students, ranging in
age from 8 to 25, have received
BMI Awards.
The 1980-81 BMI Awards
competition is open to student
composers-who are citizens or
permanent residents of the
Western Hemisphere and are
enrolled in accredited secondary schools, colleges and
conservatories, or engaged in
private study with recognized
and established teachers
anywhere in the world. Entrants must be under 26 years of
age on Dec. 31, 1980. No
limitations are established as to
i n s t r u m e n t a ti o n , stylistic
considerations, or length of
works submitted.
Students may enter no more
The permanent chairman of
BMI judging panel is William
S c h u m a n , d i s t i ng u i s h e d
American . composer and
educator.
The panel of preliminary
judges for the 1979-80 contest
consisted of George Costinesco,
Gerald Warfield and Frank
Wigglesworth , with Ulysses
Kay serving as consultant. The
final judges were Roque Cordero, Harold Farberman,
Priscilla McLean, Roger
Reynolds, Allen Sapp, Joseph
Schwantner, Elliott Schwartz,
Joan Tower , David WardSteinman and Philip G. Winsor,
with William Schuman as
presiding judge.
The twelve winners in the
1979-80 contest, ranging in age
from 10 to 25, were presented
cash awards at a reception at
the St. Regis-Sheraton, New
York City, May 15, 1980.
The 1980-81 competition closes
Feb. 16, 1981. Official rules and
entry blanks are available from
James G. Roy, Jr., Director,
BMI Awards to Student Composers, Broadcast Music, Inc.,
320 West 57th Street, New York,
N.Y. 10019.
East Africa disaster
( continued from page.. five)
thousands of people and
decimated tens of thousands of
animals and acres of cropland.
"CARE is currently on the
scene in three of the hardest-hit
nations — Uganda, Kenya and
the Sudan. We are assessing the
needs of hundreds of thousands
of drought victims in all three
countries, and have begun plans
to expand resources and staff to
meet increasing needs . At
preseint CARE is feeding more
than 300,000 people a month in
Uganda. Meanwhile in Kenya
CARE is constructing water
systems and health clinics as
part of comprehensive community
development
programs,"
Johnston
said.
,
"^\
Expressing
CARE' s
obligation to aid those in
greatest need, Johnston called
upon "concerned
people
throughout the United States to
support the CARE East Africa
Appeal. " Donations may be
sent to CARE , 660 First Avenue,
New York, N.Y. 10016, or to any
regional CARE office.
THE PRESS BOX LOUNGE &
STUBBY'S SALOON
Main Street, Bloomsburg
Reg. $21 X )0-NOW $14.99
Friday — Country Rock
"NUANCE"
Short Sleeve Knit Shirts — *8" & *9"
(JBJjlJfc , ;
• l„ .^^
^^^
^
^
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'¦
VISA'
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Open Daily 5:30 Friday 'till 9:00
is
in
The
|V5
Tunnel
located
JE
the
JJ^||T
lower level of Racusins.
^JiUMi^
Sunday - Susquehanna River
and Blues Band
"
"
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FOOTBALL ACTION. Husky running back Ed W rub el (above) heads for daylight against
(Photos by Buela and Nletz.) .
Ithaca. At right, Bentz Tozer carries for BSC.
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ALL WRESTLERS: Physicals will be given
on Thursday, September 18 at 7:15.
You are to report to Room 255 in the
Nelson Field House. Anyone who has
a conflictioh this date must see Mr.
Paul Siocum about making arrangements to get your physical examination. No one will be permitted to
start practice until he has a physical.
ATTENTION : BSC Sororities , Fraternities ahd ;all( campus organizationsHomecoming is around the corner!
Participate and enter.your Sweetheart
Contestant.
•
¦
:¦
¦
>
I WOULD LIKE to fake this opportunity
to thank publicly the maintenance
staff of BSC. For those of us who
remained here, for the summer - and
now into the Fall season - it was , and
continues to be, a daily delight to
walk the campus. The well-tended
' lawns and beautiful floral arrangements are obviously the result- of
much planning, preparation and daily
work ;Thank you, maintenance people!
" W e appreciate it. (Rev.) Thomas F.
Langan, OSFS Catholic Campus Minister.
YOUTH - ARC's Arts and Crafts Program will begin Wednesday Sept!
17, at 6 p.m. Sign up at CARC Chat¦¦' "¦
ter in Navy.
;' f
*
,
\ \
¦
-
i
'
¦
TALI KAPPA EPSILON'S social fraternit/ rush meetings will be held
Sept. 22nd and Oct. 2nc|, in Kuster
Auditorium - Hartline Science building.
IN LINE WITH earlier agreements and
because of the lack of utilization,
the second shift buses to Nelson Fieldhouse are being canceled. This means
there will bo no bus after 3:00 p.m.,
effective Monday, September 15, 1980.
'
'
.
•
¦
¦
THE DELTA PI social fraternity rush
meetings will be September 16th and
?8th at the KUB-Coffeehouso at 7:30
p;m. Rides will be provided to the
house.
BOY'S 26" 10-SPEED bicycle. Excellent
condition. $65. Call Linda: 784-4923.
STEREO FOR SALE JVC Turntable,$80.
JVC Receiver $250. Col I Dave -' for
details. 784-3289.
j
FREE: Gray male kitten. Call 7592662 After 5 p.m.
FREE: Very-unique female.., kittenpotentially loveable! Call 784-6840.
TEXTBOOKS for sale: Biology V & II,
US History (Col), Political Science , US
Government , Criminology , Physical
Geograp hy, Journalism , Comp. I & II
All good - CHEAP ! Contact WV Parker , Campus Voice.
SERVICES
ACADEMIC RESEARCH - All fields.
Save time and improve your grades.
Send
$j
for
. , catalog of over 12,000 topics. Authors '
Research, Suite 600-A, 407 S. Dearborn
St., Chicago, III. 60605.(312) 922-0300.
PERSONALS
DEE, Let us know when the first
Playgirl comes in?
DEXTER , SLIDE! You must sacrifice
for the team.
RANDY , Did you wake up in time for
the 7th inning Monday night?'
BROWNIE , Iknow swimmj ng isn't your
favorite thing, but you don't have to
get sick!
TEE - It's been one" helluva year but
we've only just begun. 9/10/79 1LY Di
BALES, How about ND? We could
have /football and basketball titles
this season.'
.,
HEY DEX , Whatever you do, don 't
name your son Howard....
' "
DEM & DEB, Well we blew It again.
Lot 's try to bo friendly maybe they'll
return the favor, DKO.
GEORGE , Young Cramer will prevail!
STEVIE, Vikings power this weekend !
IN REPLY to the "Cool-Headed" News
Editor - After Sunday night ,you may
want to return to the back room.
OTTO ,, What gesture was that you
gave tho umpire?
•
,
/
¦•
"-—*~^\
CjBp
; mti Our
*4r \:
, / *^\ read ers
L Ineeck your
VM Mp • dome.
•y1
¦\
¦ ¦ ¦ hand
,
~L ' ' ;• ^:;
to
place a
I wish
*C«
^J
/I
IV VCldSSII Igg : "nder the headirrg:
I .
Announcements
¦
^
¦
"
"
"
"
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""'
.
•
!'"
"
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•
Lost and.found
.:
]. '_/ •
¦• . .
'
'
'I. ' .. .
For Salev>
•
' ''
'
. Personal ^
I ¦¦— -.¦¦¦— —«n .
. Services
|'
•
'
¦:.'
• :Wanted '.' : ' .
[: .
• . ,
j / ^A
|
J
I
I
CMF AND OTTO bongs , Why weren't
you both in the game?
'
¦
r-r -\ - -
, ¦.
CRAZYHORSE, How come you are
blowing off D.M.'s this year? And why
are you always Ipading in the Union?
¦
/'
¦
•
NEWS EDITORIST - Your olue shorts
turn me on!
KEDL EMPLOYEES ... Fraternizing and
sp inning the bottle ... It wasn't that
great... L and L.
•
'
¦
'
BRENDA, Your hair is out of this world !
Can I get mine done like that?
Iwould be honored !
GROSSY , So, you only explode when *
you drink , huh?!?
PGA - Your brown-haired , blue-eyed
man waits for you in tho union
Friday at noon. Look for a black
baseball cap,,-WVP
•'
DKO Caught any live game latel y???
LINDA , What kind of games are going
"' »
on?
PEG & DIANE - Done any window
shopping lately? A Fellow Shopper
COED — Any offers latel y - Gary.
- BILLY, This one's just for you, Porker.
Keep swimmin ' those laps. Love,
Pamie.
Je t'aime, A.J. DJH
NEJL,Swishers are excellent!
WBSC 640 am
ROBERTA , Is Janet coming ' up .this
weekend or next weekend?
HEY TERRY , Have a nice time in the
woods !
J.D.FZ:M., — Keep those cute "Grad,"
•. hats in place, & don't let clyhjcal
get you synical. M.C.S.
DEM, Do you still have that problem??
1 \4 jTliTf? I m W rtlllB B/^lV,
J
"————
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i
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Other
I enclose $„
classified
' .'
ad
..
!
j
I
'I
¦
: ' ¦ '* \
._ for
letters
(At 2* a letter)
Sond to: Box 97 KUB or drop In tho Campus Volco mall slot , 3rd
floor Union boforo 5 p.m. on Sunday or boforo 6 p.m. on Tuoo*
' ¦/....¦' " . ,;'; ;1v.' v.
day. All classifieds must bo pro-paid. .
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]
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Tourney preps hockey team
:
HEADING' THE^BALL.1iusky™lHf|yp^wka hits the ball in
soccer action against Lebanon Valley. The team is in a
tournament this weekend at Elizabethtown .
(Photo by Doug Long)
Marathon Saturday
The Gettysburg, Pennsylvania Chamber of Commerce has announced plans for
the running of the third annual
Historic Gettysburg Marathon
on Saturday, Sept. 13, 1980. The
chamber will again be joined by
the Gettysburg Jaycees and the
Gettysbur g Travel Council in
co-sponsoring this event.
Last year Todd McAllister led
over 600 runners from 18 states
with a time of 2:32:55, the
course record. There are two
events: the 26 mile, 385 yard
marathon and a Fun-Run of
approximately 3 miles. The
starting gun for the marathon
will be sounded promptly at 8:00
a.m. and the Fun-Run will start
at 8:30 a.m.
This year there will be a
complimentary hospitality
room and runners clinic for
those who check-in on Friday.
Check-in will be in the lobby of
the Gettysburg Junior High
School on Friday evening, Sept.
12, from 4:00 p.m. until 9:00
p.m. and on Saturday morning
from 6:00 a.m. until 7:30 a.m.
The awards will be made
starting at 1:00 p.m.
The marathon , which is
certified, is run, for the most
part, on the macadam roads of
the scenic Gettysbur g National
Military Park which is mostly
shaded with some hills. This
year the course has been
revised and will pass by the
Eisenhower Farm , and a
historic covered bridge. This
change will eliminate some of
the steeper hills and the
congested turn-around used in
the past.
For compete details contact
Mara thon
Joe
Cornett ,
334-6274.
Chairman at
By MARY HASSENPLUG
This past weekend the BSC
field hockey team began the
season with an exhibition
tournament in the Poconos. The
Huskies participated in six
informal scrimmages as
preparation for the official
season opener on Sept. 15, a
home game against Lock
Haven. "
The squad posted shut-out
victories over Widener, 1-0, and
St. Joseph's, 2-0. The offensive
attack was led by Polly
Dougherty and Jeanne Fetch.
Dougherty, a freshman, scored
both goals against St. Joseph's.
Sophomore Fetch notched the
lone goal against Widener.
In six games, the Huskies
scored five goals and gave up
six tallies. According to coach
Jan Hutchinson, "Our scoring
has been too inconsistent. It is
sometimes
strong " and
sometimes weak. It is improving, however. The girls did
a lot of good passing and showed
they were thinking on the field.
It's a young team but they are
making good progress."
The strength this year lies in
an excellent halfback line. In
fact, says Hutchinson, "It's
stronger than any halfback line
I've seen in three years." The
line is comprised of: Fetch,
left; Debbie Long, center ; and
Joan Mahoney, right back. In
the opinion of their coach:
"They are three of the best
halfbacks around. They are
hard to beat at their positions."
Freshman goalies , Kerry
Arnold and Laiine Snyder ,
looked impressive in their
debuts for BSC. The defense
appears to be fairly strong.
Hutchinson suggests the only
exception, "On occasions when
we did not mark man to man
well in the circle we were hurt.
That is when they scored off us.
This, too, should improve as the
season progresses."
After a weekend of scrimmages, a coach tends to look
towards the fast approaching
season with either great anticipation or dread. But Coach
Hutchinson's sentiments lie
somewhere in the middle:
"Every game is a toss-up. We
can win any of them. With our
defense, we shouldn 't be
overpowered by anybody. Being
a young team, the girls haven't
played together for very . long.
We could have a very good year,
it just depends on how well they
work together."
The field hockey team has one
more . weekend to blend
everything together. Sept. 12-13
they will participate in the
Trenton Tournament in New
Jersey. They will oppose
Trenton State, Salisbury State,
Md., and Elizabethtown ( not
Slippery Rock, as .previously
reported) . The past weekends of
tough scrimmaging culminate
on Monday against Lock
Haven; it's then that all the
hard work must come together.
f
WATCHFUL EYE: Hockey coach Jan Hutchinson looks over
her squad's practice session. The regular season opens with
a home game ori Monday against Lock Haven.
-
(Photo by Doug Long)
HUGESAVINGS
|
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^
nri^y^v N THROUGHOUT I
THE ST0RE
'
ZdTv®Jk^S"
Jp^^
J
j^
^^
^^
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" x/
FIRST ANNI VERSARY SALE 'F
THIS THURS. FRI. & SAT.
10-9 p.m. "' .
15% off ALL records
and pre-recorded tapes
All
^^v
. ^^^B
^
^
^ ¦: '
Jeans
Just valued
off of
and
Cords
at $35.00
Market
St.
^—
r^
: lL
'f
i $&98 list NOW ONLY $5.52
: " ' ¦ ¦ - ' $7- 98 lis t NOW ONLY $5.06
j f w e0^
t
L—————'—*
*some new releases slightly higher
——————*—————
262.....Iron;
Street - 784-8712
..
__
By WILLIAM V. PARKER
The power failure that - cut
lights, stopped air conditioners,
cancelled evening classes and
routed dorm residents last week
can be blamed on the state
legislature, -Their failure to appropriate
sufficient funds in the budget
proposal has left" BSC maintenance holding the bag without
enough money to make the
necessary parts replacements.
Power to more than .-brie-third
of the buildings on the lower
campus was stopped when
feeder cable 1203 collapsed last
Thursday. This forced elec-
The blackout kept
BSC electricians busy
at the break site, pul ling them f r o m all
other electrical jo bs
on camp us f o r two
days/ '
tricians to crawl underground
through manholes to get to the
break. Air had to be pumped
into the manholes so workmen
could breathe, and this required
portable generators to power
the- fans and tools used. The
blackout kept BSC electricians
busy at the break site, pulling
them from all other electrical
jobs on campus for two days.
Workmen had to shut down
power to -another third"-'of the
campus. buildings in order to
make repairs. The work crews
were on the job around the
clock , splicing three new
cables, each 275 feet long, into
the underground tunnels to
carry the 12,000 volts of feeder
1203.
.BSC maintenance does not
have the proper test equipment
"...the cable system
under the campus is
out-of-date , and even
though the recent
break is now repaired,
the cable f r o m the
splice outward are
just as old, and another
break could occur at
any time. "
for this much voltage,, so
technicians from the Penn State
Advisory Service had to be
called in to test the new cables.
According to Robert Campbell, BSC maintenance, the
cable system under the campus
is out-of-date, and even though
the recent break is now
repaired , the cables from the
INSIDE THE
CAMPUS VOICE...
Bollydancing ..'.
.p. 2
Poetiy C o n t e s t . . . . . . 7 . . . . . . '.... p.. 3
Exporienco Beatles.
Ziggy's iiko us
Field Hockey .
... p. 4
p. 4
p 8
.................. .
splice outward are just as old,
and another break "could occur
at any time. Campbell said the
wiring needs to be totally
redone, but Harrisburg, has not
yet allowed for it in the budgetOne ironic note after this
power failure : The new Human
Services building for the
Department of Nursing will use
power from feeder 1203.
Off campus
students
costly bills
exp lained
BSC students living off
campus should be very interested in knowing that their
rising electricity bills are a
result of the rapid and overwhelming increase in Pennsylvania's, electric use.
Pennsylvanians'
use of
electricity increased 42 percent
in the most recent ten-year
period , the Pennsylvania
Electric Association (PEA)
reported recently. PEA also
predicted that use of electricity
will be about 34 percent greater
in 1989 than in 1979.,
According to a statewide
study on electric energy, normal populatibh growth and
industry expansion contributed
to the increase in usage of
electricity.
Residential usage now accounts for about 30 percent of
electricity consumption in the
state, PEA said. In 1979
residential use was 29.4 billion
kilowatt-hours, compared to
19.2 billion a decade earlier.
PEA study states that Pennsylvania will need about 25'
percent more generating
capacity in 1989 to meet anticipated increases in demand
for electricity over the next ten
years. To meet this demand,
PEA said, nearly $14.5 billion
will be required to build new
generating facilities. Since it
takes from 10 to 15 years to
build them, the decisions must
be made promptly .
(continued on page three)
Zeta JPsihasHbuse
By MICHELE IJANFORTH
¦
.
-- - and" ¦¦"
CYNDI ULRICH
The local, chapter of Zeta Psi
is currently renovating the
house they acquired in May.
The house, located at 114 North
Street, is the first house officially owned by the Zeta Psi
since 1975.
The Zeta Psi new residence
will house 17 brothers. The last
house burned down after two
days occupancy . Since then the
brothers of Zeta Psi have been
forced to share residency with
other people as a result of low
membership. Two years ago,
the membership dwindled to
eight members. Presently the
fraternity has . grown to 67
members, ranking it the largest
and second most outstanding
chapter in North America ,
Placement
Center
aids job
searching
BSC graduates found job
hunting last year the best since
1973. The annua}: report v of
Thomas A. Da vies, director of
Career Developm ent and
Placement, lists 84.09 percent of
the 1979 graduates as currently
employed, in graduate school,
or in military service. Last year
the placement percentage was
80.3 and in 1973 it was 85.6.
Of the 1136 who received
baccalaureate degrees in the
three 1979 commencement
convocations, 231 have teaching
positions and 570 are employed
in other fields-. There are 116
full-time graduate students, and
19 are in military service.
Twenty-three are listed as not
available for employment and
34 could not be located. The
report lists 143 as underemployed or still seeking jobs.
ZETA PSI BROTHER , Craig Smith, shown putting finishing
touches on new Zeta Psi house after a very successful
work weekend.
Campus Voice/Jeff niet*
Nationa l teacher exa ms scheduled
Students completing teacher
preparation programs and
advanced degree candidates in
specific fields may take the
N a t i on a 1
T ea c her
Examinations on any of three
different test dates in 1980-81.
Educational Testing Service,
the nonprofit , educational
organization that administers
this testing program , said today
that the tests will, be given Nov.
8, Feb. 21, and June 20, at test
centers throughout the United
States.
Results of " the National
Teacher Examinations are
considered by many large
school districts as one' of several
fa ctors -in *the selection of new
The brothers are holding
work - week-ends on the house
and anticipate completion by
Homecoming.
Gerald Brazil is the house
fraternity
A
manager.
spokesman said they anticipate
the purchasing of the house with
additional funds from the Zeta
Psi Alumni and the Zeta Psi
National Organization.
Mark Shipman is the current
president of Zeta Psi and Pat
Wodis, assistant professor of
the mathematics department, is
the current advisor.
The .brothers of Zeta Psi
welcome all visitors.
teachers and used by several
states for the .credentialling of
teachers or licensing of advanced candidates. Some
colleges require all seniors
preparing to teach to take the
examinations,
On each full day of testing,
registrants may take the
common examinations, which
measure their professional
prepara tion and general
educational background , and-or
an area examination that
measures their mastery of the
subject they expect to teach.
Prospective r e g i s t r a n t s
should contact the school
districts in which they seek
employment; state agencies in
which they seek certification or
licensing, their colleges, or the
a p p r o p ri a t e
educational
association for advice about
which examinations to take and
when to take them.
The NTE Bulletin of Information contains a list of test
centers and general information
about
the
examinations, as well as , a
registration form. Copies may
be obtained from college
placement officers , school
personnel departments , or
directly from National Teacher
Examinations, Box
911,
Educational Testing Service,
Princeton , New Jersey , 08541,
"The steady improvement
in BSC's placement rate over
the past three years, from 69.32
in 1976 to 84.09 percent this past
year , reflects Bloomsburg 's
continuing effort to respond to
student needs and interests,"
Davies said. "The general
improvement in the job market
over those three years has been
a strong factor of course, but
Bloomsburg's shift of emphasis
into areas of higher employment opportunities gives
our graduates a better chance
in that job market. Propsective
employers .continue to respect
the quality of our academic and
support programs:"
Graduates in the health
services field had the highest;
placement rate, 98.18 percent
for 56 students who earned
Bachelor of Science degrees in
nursing, 100 percent for those
who received degrees in public
school nursing and dental
/Xcoi^thiued on pagc three)
^
f
,
Jamboree craft
"spice up" campus
BY KAREN PETRUZZI
It's that time of year again
when the leaves start ,changing
their color and the temperature
drops a few degrees. And what
would fall be without the
starting of classes and a jamboree?
The Fall Jamboree always
seems to spice up campus after
everyone has moved into their
dorm rooms and apartments.
Why ? Because many crafts
displayed at the jamboree
capture . an autumn mood that
enlightens our spirits. Local
craftsmen even sell their
original creations so you can
stay in this mood forever.
Consider adding a few pictures to your walls. You will be
able to choose from string art ,
dried flower pictures, painting s
and more. Just think what a few
fluffy decorations and patchwork pillows will .do for that
ordinary chair.
If you're a plant person, you'll
be. able to pick up houseplants plus macrame hanging plant
holders and wheel-thrown
pottery in which to plant them.
Other crafts to be displayed
are: needlework, craft cards,
dolls, beanbags, woodworking,
scrimshaw, lucite etching,
sculpture, miniatures, silver
smithing, cbrcheted items and
more.
So, come to the jamboree
Friday and Saturday and find
something to enhance your
room. While you are shopping,
local artists will be singing and
dancing to entertain you.
Outdoor equipment
to he auctioned
Due to the purchase of new
equipment , certain used items
will be auctioned to B.S.C.
Students by sealed bid. The
items and minimum bids are as
follows :
4 - Four-man tents, $20.00
each
1 - Eight-man tent , $50.00
3 - Canoes , $75.00 each.
Items must be bid separately,
and all bids must be submitted
to Mike . Sowash, KUB Games
Room , by Oct. 1st. Equipment is
on display at the Outdoor
Equipment Room located in the
Games Room . In the event that
no student bids are received by
the Oct. 1st. deadline, it will be
permissible for other members
of the college community to bid
on the above-mentioned items.
Please note that these items
are not new items and may be
slightly damaged — (ei., broken
zippers , small tears , dents ,
etc.).
Roberta Clemens
Executive Editor
.'
'
Brorida Friday
News Editor. .
Joan Kraus
Feature Editor
Kevin Kodish .
Sports Editor
J©*f Brown
Assistant Sports Editor
Karon
Troy
Sholhamor,
Carol
Copy Editors
Lorry
Buola
. . . . . . . . : . . ....
Photo Supervisor.
Pat'Murphy, Joff Niotz
Photo Editors
David Stout
Advertising Editor .. .. . .;. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . .
Brian Duart
Advertising Assistant ' .
.Mark
Hauck
"
Business Manager..
..
Lawrence
Fuller
. . . . v . .; . . . . . . . . . .; . . . . . . . . .i . .
Advisor
STAFF: Wayno, Beakley, Jane Blauch, Hilary Brown, Donna Campbell , Roger Cheney, Mary Constantino , E. Renee Grouse, Michele
Danforth , Suzanne DelVecchio , Christy Domansky, Rick Diliberto,
. Peggy Flynn, Bruce Goisler , Mary Hassenplug, Harry James, Kathy
Kashner , Beth Mays, AJ Mclvor , Carole Meckling, Dorothy Messe ,
Todd Mover , Kelly Obert, William V, Parker , Karen Petruzzi ,
Michael Pucillo, Judy Ralston ,. Giriny Reed, Pam Sanderson , Michael
Yamrus. Cindy Ulrich.
,
Tho Volco li governed by tho Editorial Board with tho flnol roipomlblllty lor all material
rotting with tho executive editor o« itatod In tho Joint Statement of Freedom, Right* ond>
Rotpontlbllltlos of tludonti ot BSC.
Tho Voleo rotorvoi the right to odlt all letter* and copy lubmltlod, A maximum of
400 word* will bo placed on all letters to tho editor with an allowance for oxcopflon*.
All leHort muit bo ilgned and have an addrot* and phono .numbor. Name* will bo withheld upon requoit.
The opinion* voiced In the column*, article* and notice* are not noco»»arlly ihared
by the entire itaff. An un»l(jrtod staff editorial denote*' a ma|or con»on»u* of tho editorial
' board.
-•. , ¦
i
¦
'¦
'
EDITOR'S NOT E: Letters
must be typed on a 60-character
line and be in the Voice Office
no later than 6 p.m. Tuesdays to
be included in Friday 's edition.
All letters must be signed, with
a phone number enclosed.
Names will be withheld upon
request , al the discretion ol the
editor.
Profs substitute
To The Editor :
I am very disgusted with the
substitution
system
of
professors which seems to be
'
'
'
'
happening quite frequently this
year..Some professors teach the
course much better than others
and the student has the right to
know who will be teaching the
course he has paid for. This
substitution process only slowt,
down the registering system,
which is bad enough as it is.
What can be done about this?
Why is it happening? It must
come to an end.
Frustrated
Beer Talk
Your past time: Beer
Following are more-answers to selected questions about most
college students ' perennial favorite subject — beer.
What is the percentage of alcoholic content of beer?
"The average domestic beer contains approximately five percent alcohol by volume," according to Dr. Klaus Z.astrow , vice
president of brewing technical services for Anheuser-Busch"; Inc.
He adds levels in beer are frequently registered .by volume.
Another way to measure alcohol content in beer is by weight.
Anheuser-Busch's Budweiser , for example, is approximately four
percent by weight;'
Also, contrary to.popular belief , higher-priced foreign beers are
usually very little if any higher in alcoholic content than domestic
'
'
brews.
~
4 - Man Tents - bad zippers ,
not completely waterproof
8 - Man Tent - holes in floor ,
bent poles
3 - Canoes - bent , one has
small tear
Bloomsburg, PA 17815 Vol LIX No. 3
_
Editorial Letters
In the event that there is more
than one bid of the same amount
for a particular item , the bids
on that item will have to be resubmitted.
THE CAMPUS VOICE
¦
\)0£? HSI#N6 ^
What is the most popular beer in the world?
Known as the "King of Beers", Anheuser-Busch 's Budweiser has
been the world's best-selling beer for many , many years. Fact is,
Anheuser-Busch's flagship brand probably is the most popular beer
ever brewed.
Tone hips:
Beilydance
Hey ladies ! Are you looking
for a truly enjoyable form of
exercise that will help you tone
up those muscles and take inches off your waist?
T
Well, BSC's School of Extended Programs may have just
the thing for you. ,
Starting Sept. 18, the school
will be offering a course in belly
dancing. The non-credit course
will meet five times from 6:00
p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Cost is $22.50.
Mrs. Patricia Culver , a
former model and professional
dancer will be instructing the
class. To date Culver has taught
some 600 women to dance.
Future courses to be offered
include : intermediate belly
dancing, stained glass art, and
popular photography.
For more information contact
the
office of
Extended
Programs at 389-3300.
In 1876, farsighted Anheuser-Busch President Adolphus Busch
collaborated with his close frien d, Carl Conrad , to create a new
beer — Budweiser — using time-consuming Old World brewing
methods and only the finest barley malt , costly imported hops , and
rice instead of corn. Today, more than 100 years later , Bud is still
brewed to the same time-honored and exacting standards .
Since college students probably do more toward raising the per
capita consumption of beer in the U.S. than any other single
category of society, Rolling Stone College Papers recently
published the results of a collegiate beer-tasting test to determine
which beers are most preferred: The world's best-selling beers and
popular domestic regional brews were served in arbitrary fairs' in
identical glasses marked X and Y to college students* representing
eight schools. When the last foamy mustache had been wiped away,
the panel of judges voted Budweiser
number
in ' the field of 26
¦ ¦" ¦
¦ "• ' ; • ¦ ' one
/ ¦; ' ' '
:
' : " "'
•;
beers tested.
;•
How fattening is beer?
"Beer is not the caloric villain that many people have been led to
believe," says brewmaster - author John Porter, Porter explains
regular U.S. beer averages 160 calories per 12-ounce bottle or can,
and about 90 of those calories are in (he form of alcohol. Hence; one
12-ounce beer is approximately the same in caloric count as a
martini or an equal serving of a nondietic soft drink. '
"If sometimes you feel bloated after a brew or two , it may well be
that you're full of gas bubbles," says Porter. To those people, the
author of All About Beer recommends "trying a beer that is
naturally carbonated during storage — like Budweiser or
Michelob "
N.F .S. selects graduate fellowships
The National Research
Council will again advise the
National Science Foundation
(NSF) in the selection of candidates for the foundation 's
program
of
graduate
fellowships. Panels of eminent
scientists and 'engineers appointed by the National
Research Council will evaluate
qualifications of applicants.
Final selection of the fellows
will be made by the foundation ,
with awards to be announced in
March 1981.
Eligibility in the NSF
Graduate Fellowship Program
is limited to those individuals
who, at the time of application
have not completed more than
20 semester hours~30 quarter
hours, or equivalent, of study in
any of the science fields listed
below following completion of
their first baccalaureate degree
in science. Subject to the
availability of funds , new
fellowships awarded in the
spring of 1981 will be for periods
of three years, the second and
third years contingent on
certification to the foundation
by the fellowship institution of
the student' s satisfactory
progress ""toward an advanced
degree in science.
These fellowships will be
awarded for study or work
leading, to master's or doctoral
Electricity bills
explained
to off-campus
students
( continued from page one)
The study noted that rising
^
electricity prices partially
reflect a 374 percent increase in
the tax bill paid by utilities
since 1969. The greatest increase was in the gross receipts
tax paid to the Commonwealth,
which has gone up 692 percent in
10 years.
The PEA represents all 12
investor-owned electric utilities
which supply 98 percent of the
power used by Pennsylvania
customers.
The complete study is
reported in a booklet entitled,
"Facts you should know about
electric energy in Pennsylvania^'The booklet '.. is
available on request from the
PEA Harrisburg Information
Center, Pennsylvania Electric
Association, 301 APC Building,
800 North Third Street ,
Harrisburg, PA 17102.
B & W Associates
261 W. Main St.
Bloomsburg
^..^—^..^M—MMM—i
i in
I
i¦iliu
n i ri:iini:i) s
Btl|||
m i n -Tinn
tnwmiwi i n
» HIIHMHI
T
784-4016
after 5 p.m.
—V-
¦
"" ' "
~ . ..—m.—
r""
-
degrees in the mathematical,
physical ,
biological ,
and
social
engineering,
sciences, and in the history and
philosophy of science. Awards
will not be made in clinical, law,
education, or business:fields, in
history or social work, for work
leading to medical,,.. dental, or
Applicants will be required to
take the Graduate Record
Examinations designed to test
scientific
aptitude
and
"
T.h e
a c h i e v e m e n-t .
examinations, administered by
the Educational Teisting Service, will be given on Dec. 13,
1980 at designated centers
throughout the United States
and in certain foreign countries.
"These fel lowship s
will be awarded for
study or work leading
to master's or doctoral degrees in the
mathematical, p hysical, biological, engineering, and social
sciences, and in the
history and p hilosophy of science. "
The deadline date for the
submission of applications for
NSF graduate fellowships is
Nov. 26, 1980. Further information and application
materials may be obtained
from the. Fellowship Office,
National Research Council, 2101
Constitution
Avenue ,
^Washington , D.C. 20418.
public health degrees, or for
study in joint . scienceprofessional degree programs.
Applicants must be citizens of
the United States, and will be
judged on the basis of ability.
The annual stipend for graduate
fellows will be $4,800 for a
twelve-month tenure with
allowdependency
no
¦ '*
ances.
.
Does anyone remember the
former home of Delta Omega
Chi, (also known as the DOC
house) , on Main Street next to
the Moose? It seems the landlords of the building refused to
make necessary repairs to the
structure and the town code
$7 ,000
offe red
for best
poem
A $1,000 grand prize will be
awarded in the poetry competition sponsored by the World
of Poetry, a quarterly
newsletter for poets.
Poems of all styles and on any
subject are eligible to compete
for the grand prize or for 49
other cash or merchandise
awards.
Says contest director, Joseph
Mellon, "We are encouraging
poetic talent of every kind, and
expect our contest to produce
exciting discoveries."
Rules and official entry forms
are available from World of
Poetry, 2431 Stockton Blvd.,
Sacramento,
Dept,
N,
California 95817.
PP&L
offers
workshop
PP&L - Susquehanna Energy
Information Center in Berwick
plans on sponsoring an "Environment Education Teacher
Workshop
or
Outdoor
Teaching".
If interested in attending, call
Dr. Frederick Hill (ext. 3514) or
stop by his office (Hartline 124).
)f ba5 d if ts i
boxes
y
' Allentown
Women's Center
1-215-264-5657 •
.^»^___^_ _^___».
Ri. VI between Bloomsburg and Berwick
:
i
784-5994
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wallets
"For the Best Selection of
Needle-Art in the Area"
'7fCoJiqaK> '4> ty vtH, S&f rfo
•Needlepoint •Rug Supplier
•Crewel Kits •Yarns
Stop on in:
Open Daily 10:30 - 5:00; Closed Wod.
251 W. Fifth St. , Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815
CAPITOL TWIN THEATRE
Bloomsburg, PA
NOW PLAYING
MID-NITE SHOW
FRIDAY S SATURDAY
I -
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Fffi
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baskets . Prisma ) ndi<\ Yriit Sp reads A
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Confidential Counseling
Pregnancy Testing
the area arid they have converted the once-condemned
dwelling into a Jewish pizza
parlor called "Two Boys from
Jerusalem." The business is
planned to open, as soon as the
brothers can get a restaurant
license and pass a health inspection.
^Gue PasaW
Pregnancy Termination
Everything Lighted
.=
Davies pointed out that if the
34 who could not be located for
employment information were
excluded from the report, the
overall placement rate would be
2.65 percentage points higher.
He said also that employment
totals do not include graduates
who are working in jobs not
related to their college
preparation.
officer condemned the building.
The fraternity was forced to
move, the landlords still refused
to make the repairs , and the
building was locked.
Well, those two enterprising
landlords , Mike and Steve
Arcus, have decided to compete
with the Italian restaurants in
PREGNANT?
NEED HELP?
•Driving Range ,
•9 Hole Par 3 Golf
•18 Hole Mini Golf
•Baseball Batting Range
f
percentage points over/last
year.
/
The 231 arts and sciences
graduates, with a percentage of
73.99 fared better in the job
^ their counterparts
market ^than
of a year ago when 68.75 percent
were placed.
Old DOC H ouse now restaurant
Open 9 a.m. -10 p.m,
~.w
( continued from page one)
hygiene, and 95.45 percent for
medical technology. In special
education the percentage is
94.52 and in communication
disorders, 91.42.
Business administration had
the largest number
of
graduates , . 393,
with a
placement rate of 85.97 percent,
an increase oyer last yean The
placement percentage for
business
education 's
58
graduates is 85.96, a drop from a
year ago. For the 259 who
received degrees in early
childhood , elementary and
secondary education , the
placement percentage was
78.65, an increase of three
Wolf Hollow Golf Center
m
"
Placement Center
aids in job searching
'
i ¦i
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i
1
1
i
ii
in
We identify with Ziggy
If Ziggy registered for
college, it would be one of those
Ziggy days. He'd have to extricate his clothes from the
tangle of hangers in his closet,
he'd squeeze the toothpaste out
the back of the tube and he'd
burn the toast for breakfast.
Once in the registration line, he
would probably find his favorite
class — underwater basketweaving — closed. He would
turn, fix you in the gaze of those
beady little eyes and say, "I
have been folded, spindled and
mutilated in the computer of
life."
Although Ziggy's education
comes from the school of hard
knocks, college students
nationwide identify with the
hapless little guy created by
Tom Wilson, and syndicated in
nearly 300 newspapers all over
the world. And that special
empathy helps explain the
popularity of Ziggy door
openers (Andrews and McMeel,
$4.95) , already into its third
printing before publication. A
collection of 20 spiral-bound
messages suitable for hanging
on a door, Ziggy door openers
are fast becoming a communications medium in college
dormitories. They are 20 perfect
Ziggy answers for those approaching a door such as
"C' mon in! . . . anyone who feels
at home with loud music and
clutter is always welcome!!"
Or , "Welcome — especially if
you owe me money . . . are
returning my records or are a
member of the opposite sex."
For keeping the door closed :
"Knock three times, then go
away." Or, "Do not disturb . . .
I' m hitting the books. .. and the
^¦¦¦^¦¦¦miHnBBBaKBiaHHBwaKiaauuaaMiMnisii
books are winning."
Despite Ziggy 's image as a
lovable loser, Wilson, Ziggy 's
creator, is quick to protest that
Ziggy is not a loser. "He is a
survivor —'*onewho copes and is
there the next day, " Wilson
asserts. Wilson set out to create
a cartoon character who could
have a special one-to-one
relationship with his reader in
their common struggles . with
adversity . . Ziggy looks the
reader in the eye and talks
directly to him.
"This goes back to the time
when I was a kid, watching all
those Laurel and Hardy films,"
says Wilson. "Whenever Laurel
did something outrageous ,
Hardy would look at the
audience arid exclaim, 'This is
another fine mess he's gotten us
into.'" Wilson said he tries to
establish an emotional rapport
between Ziggy and the reader:
"I don 't want them just to laugh
at him — I want them to love
him, to care about him. " Ziggy learns from his experiences and passes along
pearls of wisdom to his readers.
"Never eat your pizza under a
tree unless you like it with
everything on it. " He may be
naive enough to buy the
Brooklyn Bridge, but he optimistically keeps on wishing on
stars and trying to catch
rainbows in a butterfly net.
Ziggy goes on.
Especially popular with the
college crowd are Ziggy
notebook s, and the ZIGGY'S
"What' s Happening With Me"
16-month appointment book ,
which begins in September and
^MJwiB ^^BiaHMa
"I'MA COLLEGE
GRADUATE'.'
THATHASA NICE
RINGTO IT.
runs through the following
December. Also noteworthy are
Ziggy poster cards and - two
large collections of Ziggy
cartoons: A Ziggy Treasure,
and Encore ! Encore!!
The entire line of Ziggy books
for spring and summer 1980 has
gone back to press, bringing the
total number printed by Andrews and McMeel in 1980 to
600,000. Ziggy's popularity also
has triggered a multi-million
dollar merchandising explosion
of Ziggy products such as bean
bag dolls , games, T-shirts ,
knee-socks, shorts, sweatshirts,
linens, tableware and many
more.
If sales and numbers mean
anything, Wilson has accomplished what he set out to
do. Everybody loves Ziggy.
Exp erience the Beatles now
... and understand
Improve your
grades !
DATF.
September 15th & 16th , 1980
TIME iO a^. -A pk Pi Af:F College Store
JOSTENS,
THE RING PEOPLE
Along with the visual aspects
of the show, it is also an experience in _ the sound of the
was
so
decade , which
dominated by the "Fab Four. "
The music is taken from every
point in their tenure, and it
provides one with a chance to
imagine what it would have
been like to have seen them in
person.
So if you would like a chance
By J. MAYNARD LYMAN
On Sunday night, the students
of BSC will have a chance to reexperience a part of their lives
which they may not have fully
understood because of their
youth. The sixties will be
brought back to life for the
evening by Beatlemania. This is
the same production which
played to packed houses in New
York' s Winter Garden Theater
and in the past year has been
repeating that success on the
road.
By combining live actors,
different stage sets and a series
of nearly 2 ,000 slides, the show
chronologically traces the
career of the Beatles in conjunction with the passage of the
decade. Beginning with the
"mop top, " dressed alike
Beatles of the - She Loves You
era, to the socially conscious
"hippie " Beatles who produced
Revolution and Helter Skelter ,
the show presents images of the
sixties' important events as
reflected in the music.
COLLEGE
STUDENTS
It's been tough. A lot of work. But you'll make .it.
And nothing tells the world "I made it " better than
a Jostens College ring on your finger. It's your
lifelong symbol of achievement and your constant
reminder of your total college experience. See the
great selection of Jostens rings , available in 10K gold ,
14K gold and Lustrium. From $78.00 -
MERCHANDISE FEATURING ZIGGY have become popular
selling Items today. Anything from T-shirts to shorts to
notebooks feature Ziggy.
Send $1.00 for your
306-page, researc h paper
catalog. All academic
subjects.
Colleg iate Researc h
to see and hear what you may
have missed as a child , or, if
you' re just a fan who would like
to see ah elaborate presentation
of the Beatles' music, make
plans to attend Beatlemania.
The performance starts at - 8
in
Haas
p.m. - ~ Sunday
Auditorium. Tickets are on sale
at the Information Desk' for
$6.50 with BSC ID, and $7.50
without.
Kappa Delta Pi
wa nts Ed majo rs
Are you an education major
(el. ed, sec. ed., special ed.,
communication disorders)? If
you are and have a cum of 3.4 or
better, and have at least a
junior class standing-you are
eligible for membership in
Kappa Delta Pi.
Kappa Delta Pi is an honor
society in education whose
purpose is to recognize outstanding contributions to
education and to encourage
high professional and personal
standards.
[ NATURE'S
GARDEN !
Health Food
j
I
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j
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Store
225 Center Street
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Phone 387-0357
SPECIALIZING IN
HEALTH FOODS &
NATURAL VITAMINS
J.
I
|
!
I
|
j Comploto Uno Of Body But Idlngl
& Barfaall Plates atl
J Equipment
P.O. Box 25097H
A
Pound~Al»o
Food and)
40*
I• Protein Supplement* by Weldarj
Los Angeles, Ca. 90025
¦
land Bob Hoffman
'
Hrs,
• Daily 9:30 • 5 .
"j
I
!
Fit 'till 7
I
'
j
Enclosed is $1.00.
I
All
HSC
students
•
| Please rush the catalog.
¦
receive
10% discount
|
.
j Name __
l.P,
with
i Address
: I
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Our chapter at Bloomsburg
would like to offer an invitation
to anyone who meets the abovem e n t i o n e d m e m b er s h ip
requirements. Anyone interested in joining Kappa Kelta
Pi may contact Dr.4 Shahbski in
his office in " the Kehr Union.
¦ '_^^:v^Lv
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Speakers to discuss
Communication topics
• Attention! All communication
disorders majors and minors, the firs t meeting of the Student
Speech Language and Hearing
Association will be held on Sept.
17 at 7 p.m. in the Navy Hall
Auditorium. This will be an
organizational meeting and it
will- offer students an opportunity to meet their faculty.
During this school year, we
will have .some very interesting
speakers who will discuss topics
relative to speech pathology,
audiology and education of the
hearing impaired. We will include all three interes t groups
in every meeting. We want to
serve your needs.
The monthly meetings will be
held on Wednesday nights. Any
student unable to * attend for a
reason such as a night class can
receive a newsletter containing
information on the meetings
and the activities planned. On Sept. 21, there will be a
departmental -picnic at the
Bloomsburg Town Park at 5
p.m. This picnic will be for
speech pathology and audiology
majors, and for EHI ...minors
only. A sign up sheet will be in
the Navy Hall . Clinic on the
SSLHA bulletin board. Please
sign up so an estimate of the
number of students planning to
attend can be made. (Signing
the list is; not an obligation to
attend, so please sign if you are
even considering coming to the
picnic!) A donation of .50 is
asked to help pay for the expenses of the food and refresh-
ments served at the park. This
will be an excellent opportunity
to spend time with the members
of your department and to get to
know them better. ,r ~
There will be a new "program
starting this year also. -The
SSLHA will be assigning "big
sisters" to each of the incoming
freshmen of our department.
These "big sisters" are asked to
please contact the student to
whom they are assigned and to
help them with their courses in
any way they can. We need the
cooperation of all students to
make this program a success.
Please do your part. .
Everyone is welcome to attend
our first meeting and get involved ! For more information
contact any SSLHA member or
check , the bulletin hoard in
Navy Hall.
DEMISE ANTOLIK (left) and Donna Keleshian watch as two more girls sign up for sorority
rush. About 117 girls signed up for ISC rush this semester.
CARE
East Africa disaster worse
"A steady, silent disaster
much larger than the plight of
Freshmen receive
achievement-award s
Twenty BSC students received certificates recognizing outstanding academic achievement in their freshman year from the
BSC chapter of Phi Kappa Phi. the national interdisciplinary honor
society, at a ceremony Sept. 16 in the Kehr College Union.
All the students had averages higher than 3.75 at the end of their
freshman year in May,, 1980, with a few earning 4.0 averates.
The awards were presented by Lawrence B. Fuller, presiden t of
the BSC chapter , at the first of a series of Phi Kappa Phi forums
which are being held during the course of the 1980-81 academic
year . Each forum will explore topics of academic and intellectual
interest.
'
•
Those recognized were Judy M. Angstadt , Thomas P. Evans,
Jennifer A. Guild, Cindy E. Herzog, Mark A. Karpinsky , Rhonda L.
Kohler , Patricia J. Larock , Kelly A. Lapashinsky, Julie A. Miller,
Shelley Y, Pierson , Diana L. Pietkiewicz, Theresa M. Racek, Leslie
H. Reisz, Beth A. Rohrbach , Nancy A. Royer, Stephen M. Slampyyak, Brenda L. Snyder, Maryann B. Wolk , Regina G. Zanpetty
and Nancy E. Zebraitis.
H itter 's Office
Supplies
Cambodian refugees or the boat
people has been spreading
across East Africa and taking a
horrible toll on people, animals
and * crops," Dr. Philip Johnston ,
CARE
Executive
Director, said. He was announcing expansion of CARE
assistance programs to that
drought and hunger stricken
.;
region.
Johnston called this disaster
"a stark reality for millions
living on the edge of existence."
The CARE executive pointed
out that the lives of several
million people are "at risk" and
that drought , hunger and
disease have already killed
( continued on page six )
REACH
OUT
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(9 0 0 )4«2-l559 X - 2 (Pm . onfyj
(8O0J 5230074 X- 2
(Md., W. Va. . D«lew«r» , Kentucky -only)
112 Main St., Bloormbtug
Ml -
Mms
V
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•School Supplies
•Art Supplies
•Decorations
, •Typewriter repairs
Phone Toll Free T ¦ 'WL ' 1
and talk to former! H J
volunteers about I Hi/
Peace Corps and I / %/
Help Prevent
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of Dimes
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Scholars hips crvaildbl^
to College composers
INTRAMURAL BOWLING teams were formed and league action began this week in the
Kehr Union Bowling Lanes. Johnny Burke, a league participant , exhibits his bowling
Campus Voice/Jeff Nietz
talents .
Insurance important to students
There is one item which is just
as essential to college students
as the clothes, books and furniture they just packed and
carted off to school ; It's insurance.
Under most homeowners and
renter policies, students who
are still members of a
household are insured at their
new residence under the
parent's policy, according to
Lou Runge, Kemper Group
pers onal lines underwriting
manager. If a loss occurs at
school, the students can collect
up to 10 percent of their parents'
personal property coverage, or
$1,000, whichever is greater.
"For example," Runge ex-
plained , "a family with a
homeowners policy for $60,000
normally would have $30,000
personal property coverage. If
the daughter's apartment at
school is burglarized, she could
collect up to $3,000 for personal
property loss."
A move to college may affect
a family's auto insurance costs.
For example, if a student attends school 100 or more miles
from home, many companies
offer significantly reduced auto
insurance premiums, because
with less access to the car, the
student' s accident risk is
reduced. The lower rate does
not apply to families with a teen
driver still at home, however.
Full-time college students
who earn a B average or
equivalent can even further
reduce their parents' premiums
by qualifying for good student
rates.
To put these discounts in
perspective , consider an
average Illinois family with a
20-year-old son who regularly
drives the family car. The
family pays a semi-annual
premium of about $331 for full
auto insurance coverage. But if
the son attends school 100 miles
from home, the premium will
drop to $236. If he also qualifies
for the good student rating, the
family pays only $209 for the
same coverage. (Rates and
reductions vary by state and
company, along with factors
such as age, sex, base rate and
residence. )
/ (j z coS cS
BLOOMSBURG'S MOST COMPLETE ALL MEN'S SHOP
Levi' s Stra ight Leg & Boot Cut Jeans
Reg. $22.50 - NOW $16.99
Lee Straight Leg & Boot Cut Jeans
Reg. $23.50 - NOW $17.99
Wrangler Jeans
Reg. $21 .00 - NOW $15.99
Lee & Levi Cords Straight & Boot Cut
Runge also urged students to
etch their identification on such
things as bicycles, stereos and
portable radios.
"We have found this reduces
the risk of theft significantly
and improves recovery chances
if the property is stolen," he
said.
than one composition which
need not have been composed
during the year of entry .
A total of $15,000 is available
to young composers in the 29 th
annual BMI Awards to Student
C o mp o s e r s c o m p e t i t i o n
sponsored by Broadcast Music,
Inc., the world' s largest performing rights licensing
organization.
Established in 1951 in
with
music
cooperation
educators and composers, the
BMI Awards project annually
gives cash prizes to encourage
the creation of concert music by
student composers of the
Western Hemisphere and to aid
them in financing their musical
education. Prizes ranging from
$500 to $2,500 will be awarded at
the discretion of the judges. To
date, 254 students, ranging in
age from 8 to 25, have received
BMI Awards.
The 1980-81 BMI Awards
competition is open to student
composers-who are citizens or
permanent residents of the
Western Hemisphere and are
enrolled in accredited secondary schools, colleges and
conservatories, or engaged in
private study with recognized
and established teachers
anywhere in the world. Entrants must be under 26 years of
age on Dec. 31, 1980. No
limitations are established as to
i n s t r u m e n t a ti o n , stylistic
considerations, or length of
works submitted.
Students may enter no more
The permanent chairman of
BMI judging panel is William
S c h u m a n , d i s t i ng u i s h e d
American . composer and
educator.
The panel of preliminary
judges for the 1979-80 contest
consisted of George Costinesco,
Gerald Warfield and Frank
Wigglesworth , with Ulysses
Kay serving as consultant. The
final judges were Roque Cordero, Harold Farberman,
Priscilla McLean, Roger
Reynolds, Allen Sapp, Joseph
Schwantner, Elliott Schwartz,
Joan Tower , David WardSteinman and Philip G. Winsor,
with William Schuman as
presiding judge.
The twelve winners in the
1979-80 contest, ranging in age
from 10 to 25, were presented
cash awards at a reception at
the St. Regis-Sheraton, New
York City, May 15, 1980.
The 1980-81 competition closes
Feb. 16, 1981. Official rules and
entry blanks are available from
James G. Roy, Jr., Director,
BMI Awards to Student Composers, Broadcast Music, Inc.,
320 West 57th Street, New York,
N.Y. 10019.
East Africa disaster
( continued from page.. five)
thousands of people and
decimated tens of thousands of
animals and acres of cropland.
"CARE is currently on the
scene in three of the hardest-hit
nations — Uganda, Kenya and
the Sudan. We are assessing the
needs of hundreds of thousands
of drought victims in all three
countries, and have begun plans
to expand resources and staff to
meet increasing needs . At
preseint CARE is feeding more
than 300,000 people a month in
Uganda. Meanwhile in Kenya
CARE is constructing water
systems and health clinics as
part of comprehensive community
development
programs,"
Johnston
said.
,
"^\
Expressing
CARE' s
obligation to aid those in
greatest need, Johnston called
upon "concerned
people
throughout the United States to
support the CARE East Africa
Appeal. " Donations may be
sent to CARE , 660 First Avenue,
New York, N.Y. 10016, or to any
regional CARE office.
THE PRESS BOX LOUNGE &
STUBBY'S SALOON
Main Street, Bloomsburg
Reg. $21 X )0-NOW $14.99
Friday — Country Rock
"NUANCE"
Short Sleeve Knit Shirts — *8" & *9"
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Open Daily 5:30 Friday 'till 9:00
is
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located
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lower level of Racusins.
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Sunday - Susquehanna River
and Blues Band
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FOOTBALL ACTION. Husky running back Ed W rub el (above) heads for daylight against
(Photos by Buela and Nletz.) .
Ithaca. At right, Bentz Tozer carries for BSC.
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ALL WRESTLERS: Physicals will be given
on Thursday, September 18 at 7:15.
You are to report to Room 255 in the
Nelson Field House. Anyone who has
a conflictioh this date must see Mr.
Paul Siocum about making arrangements to get your physical examination. No one will be permitted to
start practice until he has a physical.
ATTENTION : BSC Sororities , Fraternities ahd ;all( campus organizationsHomecoming is around the corner!
Participate and enter.your Sweetheart
Contestant.
•
¦
:¦
¦
>
I WOULD LIKE to fake this opportunity
to thank publicly the maintenance
staff of BSC. For those of us who
remained here, for the summer - and
now into the Fall season - it was , and
continues to be, a daily delight to
walk the campus. The well-tended
' lawns and beautiful floral arrangements are obviously the result- of
much planning, preparation and daily
work ;Thank you, maintenance people!
" W e appreciate it. (Rev.) Thomas F.
Langan, OSFS Catholic Campus Minister.
YOUTH - ARC's Arts and Crafts Program will begin Wednesday Sept!
17, at 6 p.m. Sign up at CARC Chat¦¦' "¦
ter in Navy.
;' f
*
,
\ \
¦
-
i
'
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TALI KAPPA EPSILON'S social fraternit/ rush meetings will be held
Sept. 22nd and Oct. 2nc|, in Kuster
Auditorium - Hartline Science building.
IN LINE WITH earlier agreements and
because of the lack of utilization,
the second shift buses to Nelson Fieldhouse are being canceled. This means
there will bo no bus after 3:00 p.m.,
effective Monday, September 15, 1980.
'
'
.
•
¦
¦
THE DELTA PI social fraternity rush
meetings will be September 16th and
?8th at the KUB-Coffeehouso at 7:30
p;m. Rides will be provided to the
house.
BOY'S 26" 10-SPEED bicycle. Excellent
condition. $65. Call Linda: 784-4923.
STEREO FOR SALE JVC Turntable,$80.
JVC Receiver $250. Col I Dave -' for
details. 784-3289.
j
FREE: Gray male kitten. Call 7592662 After 5 p.m.
FREE: Very-unique female.., kittenpotentially loveable! Call 784-6840.
TEXTBOOKS for sale: Biology V & II,
US History (Col), Political Science , US
Government , Criminology , Physical
Geograp hy, Journalism , Comp. I & II
All good - CHEAP ! Contact WV Parker , Campus Voice.
SERVICES
ACADEMIC RESEARCH - All fields.
Save time and improve your grades.
Send
$j
for
. , catalog of over 12,000 topics. Authors '
Research, Suite 600-A, 407 S. Dearborn
St., Chicago, III. 60605.(312) 922-0300.
PERSONALS
DEE, Let us know when the first
Playgirl comes in?
DEXTER , SLIDE! You must sacrifice
for the team.
RANDY , Did you wake up in time for
the 7th inning Monday night?'
BROWNIE , Iknow swimmj ng isn't your
favorite thing, but you don't have to
get sick!
TEE - It's been one" helluva year but
we've only just begun. 9/10/79 1LY Di
BALES, How about ND? We could
have /football and basketball titles
this season.'
.,
HEY DEX , Whatever you do, don 't
name your son Howard....
' "
DEM & DEB, Well we blew It again.
Lot 's try to bo friendly maybe they'll
return the favor, DKO.
GEORGE , Young Cramer will prevail!
STEVIE, Vikings power this weekend !
IN REPLY to the "Cool-Headed" News
Editor - After Sunday night ,you may
want to return to the back room.
OTTO ,, What gesture was that you
gave tho umpire?
•
,
/
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"-—*~^\
CjBp
; mti Our
*4r \:
, / *^\ read ers
L Ineeck your
VM Mp • dome.
•y1
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,
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to
place a
I wish
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IV VCldSSII Igg : "nder the headirrg:
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Announcements
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Lost and.found
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For Salev>
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. Personal ^
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. Services
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• :Wanted '.' : ' .
[: .
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CMF AND OTTO bongs , Why weren't
you both in the game?
'
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r-r -\ - -
, ¦.
CRAZYHORSE, How come you are
blowing off D.M.'s this year? And why
are you always Ipading in the Union?
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NEWS EDITORIST - Your olue shorts
turn me on!
KEDL EMPLOYEES ... Fraternizing and
sp inning the bottle ... It wasn't that
great... L and L.
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BRENDA, Your hair is out of this world !
Can I get mine done like that?
Iwould be honored !
GROSSY , So, you only explode when *
you drink , huh?!?
PGA - Your brown-haired , blue-eyed
man waits for you in tho union
Friday at noon. Look for a black
baseball cap,,-WVP
•'
DKO Caught any live game latel y???
LINDA , What kind of games are going
"' »
on?
PEG & DIANE - Done any window
shopping lately? A Fellow Shopper
COED — Any offers latel y - Gary.
- BILLY, This one's just for you, Porker.
Keep swimmin ' those laps. Love,
Pamie.
Je t'aime, A.J. DJH
NEJL,Swishers are excellent!
WBSC 640 am
ROBERTA , Is Janet coming ' up .this
weekend or next weekend?
HEY TERRY , Have a nice time in the
woods !
J.D.FZ:M., — Keep those cute "Grad,"
•. hats in place, & don't let clyhjcal
get you synical. M.C.S.
DEM, Do you still have that problem??
1 \4 jTliTf? I m W rtlllB B/^lV,
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Other
I enclose $„
classified
' .'
ad
..
!
j
I
'I
¦
: ' ¦ '* \
._ for
letters
(At 2* a letter)
Sond to: Box 97 KUB or drop In tho Campus Volco mall slot , 3rd
floor Union boforo 5 p.m. on Sunday or boforo 6 p.m. on Tuoo*
' ¦/....¦' " . ,;'; ;1v.' v.
day. All classifieds must bo pro-paid. .
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Tourney preps hockey team
:
HEADING' THE^BALL.1iusky™lHf|yp^wka hits the ball in
soccer action against Lebanon Valley. The team is in a
tournament this weekend at Elizabethtown .
(Photo by Doug Long)
Marathon Saturday
The Gettysburg, Pennsylvania Chamber of Commerce has announced plans for
the running of the third annual
Historic Gettysburg Marathon
on Saturday, Sept. 13, 1980. The
chamber will again be joined by
the Gettysburg Jaycees and the
Gettysbur g Travel Council in
co-sponsoring this event.
Last year Todd McAllister led
over 600 runners from 18 states
with a time of 2:32:55, the
course record. There are two
events: the 26 mile, 385 yard
marathon and a Fun-Run of
approximately 3 miles. The
starting gun for the marathon
will be sounded promptly at 8:00
a.m. and the Fun-Run will start
at 8:30 a.m.
This year there will be a
complimentary hospitality
room and runners clinic for
those who check-in on Friday.
Check-in will be in the lobby of
the Gettysburg Junior High
School on Friday evening, Sept.
12, from 4:00 p.m. until 9:00
p.m. and on Saturday morning
from 6:00 a.m. until 7:30 a.m.
The awards will be made
starting at 1:00 p.m.
The marathon , which is
certified, is run, for the most
part, on the macadam roads of
the scenic Gettysbur g National
Military Park which is mostly
shaded with some hills. This
year the course has been
revised and will pass by the
Eisenhower Farm , and a
historic covered bridge. This
change will eliminate some of
the steeper hills and the
congested turn-around used in
the past.
For compete details contact
Mara thon
Joe
Cornett ,
334-6274.
Chairman at
By MARY HASSENPLUG
This past weekend the BSC
field hockey team began the
season with an exhibition
tournament in the Poconos. The
Huskies participated in six
informal scrimmages as
preparation for the official
season opener on Sept. 15, a
home game against Lock
Haven. "
The squad posted shut-out
victories over Widener, 1-0, and
St. Joseph's, 2-0. The offensive
attack was led by Polly
Dougherty and Jeanne Fetch.
Dougherty, a freshman, scored
both goals against St. Joseph's.
Sophomore Fetch notched the
lone goal against Widener.
In six games, the Huskies
scored five goals and gave up
six tallies. According to coach
Jan Hutchinson, "Our scoring
has been too inconsistent. It is
sometimes
strong " and
sometimes weak. It is improving, however. The girls did
a lot of good passing and showed
they were thinking on the field.
It's a young team but they are
making good progress."
The strength this year lies in
an excellent halfback line. In
fact, says Hutchinson, "It's
stronger than any halfback line
I've seen in three years." The
line is comprised of: Fetch,
left; Debbie Long, center ; and
Joan Mahoney, right back. In
the opinion of their coach:
"They are three of the best
halfbacks around. They are
hard to beat at their positions."
Freshman goalies , Kerry
Arnold and Laiine Snyder ,
looked impressive in their
debuts for BSC. The defense
appears to be fairly strong.
Hutchinson suggests the only
exception, "On occasions when
we did not mark man to man
well in the circle we were hurt.
That is when they scored off us.
This, too, should improve as the
season progresses."
After a weekend of scrimmages, a coach tends to look
towards the fast approaching
season with either great anticipation or dread. But Coach
Hutchinson's sentiments lie
somewhere in the middle:
"Every game is a toss-up. We
can win any of them. With our
defense, we shouldn 't be
overpowered by anybody. Being
a young team, the girls haven't
played together for very . long.
We could have a very good year,
it just depends on how well they
work together."
The field hockey team has one
more . weekend to blend
everything together. Sept. 12-13
they will participate in the
Trenton Tournament in New
Jersey. They will oppose
Trenton State, Salisbury State,
Md., and Elizabethtown ( not
Slippery Rock, as .previously
reported) . The past weekends of
tough scrimmaging culminate
on Monday against Lock
Haven; it's then that all the
hard work must come together.
f
WATCHFUL EYE: Hockey coach Jan Hutchinson looks over
her squad's practice session. The regular season opens with
a home game ori Monday against Lock Haven.
-
(Photo by Doug Long)
HUGESAVINGS
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nri^y^v N THROUGHOUT I
THE ST0RE
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ZdTv®Jk^S"
Jp^^
J
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^^
^^
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" x/
FIRST ANNI VERSARY SALE 'F
THIS THURS. FRI. & SAT.
10-9 p.m. "' .
15% off ALL records
and pre-recorded tapes
All
^^v
. ^^^B
^
^
^ ¦: '
Jeans
Just valued
off of
and
Cords
at $35.00
Market
St.
^—
r^
: lL
'f
i $&98 list NOW ONLY $5.52
: " ' ¦ ¦ - ' $7- 98 lis t NOW ONLY $5.06
j f w e0^
t
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*some new releases slightly higher
——————*—————
262.....Iron;
Street - 784-8712
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