rdunkelb
Fri, 02/23/2024 - 14:22
Edited Text
Gatnpus Elections Slated
BY DEB BERKEY
At Tuesday night's Executive
CGA meeting, topics such as
campus elections and concert
losses were discussed.
Elections for Coljege Council,
Representative Assembly, and
Freshman class officers will be
held September- 21 and 22.
Petitions are available at the
information desk and are due
today by 4 p.m. On campus
vote in the
students may
at meal
hours. Off
^Commons
/campus students may vote in
;kehr Union from 11 a.m. to 4
p.m.
'
. ., _ ¦/
;- .
) Another topic discussed at the
meeting was the turnout at the
Ian Hunter-Gary US Bonds
concert held Thursday, Sept. 10.
CGA allows a budget loss of
. $16,500 per year for a total of
four concerts. At the recent
...elections for College Council,
Representative Assembly, and
Freshman class officers will
be held September 21 and
22...
concert, the loss was $11,000.
According to CGA president
Karen Chawaga, this may hurt
the quality of future concerts.
Volunteer Fair Offers
Opportunity and Growth
Now . that you have experienced the academic atmosphere of BSC, why not
expand your knowledge to include things other than classes,
reading, laboratories and
exams?
A VOLUNTEER FAIR WILL
BE HELD ON TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 22', 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. AT KEHR UNION. It is
being sponsored by the Office of
Student Activities.
-As individuals, we all possess
special talents. Opportunities
for growth, both academically
and socially/, exist by using
these talents in helping
members .. of the Bloomsburg
community. In addition to the
personal satisfaction gained by
helping others , volunteers will
realize other benefits such as
career experience, a chance to
meet new people and expand
interests, and a better community image.
A job description booklet
listing agencies in need of
volunteers, within walking
distance of BSC , will be
available on the 22nd. If you
Ballet Cours e
Comes to
BSC Students
A non-credit mini-course m
Ballet for Children and Adults
will be offered this fall at
Bloomsburg Sitate College
through the Office of Extended
Programs.
,. , The course will be held on
Saturdays beginning on Sep£,tenjber 26 and will run through
Slay 1982. Two times are
available, 11:00 -12:00 and 12:00
iJtj OO. The instructor is MarCella Stella of Scranton .
Students will be instructed in
classical technique stressing
alignment ,
proper body
and
classical
positions ,
movements. The course is
designed and instructed to
accommodate the proficiences
of - ther- participant while encouraging correction and artistic growth .7
The dancer with experience in
ballet will be offered sj?ecjaj
classes. Interested persons can
contact the BSC Office of
Extended Programs afi .309-3300^
have the interests and talents
that they need, why not come
meet them? This type of
community service will benefit
you as well as the volunteer
agencies !
—
The following agencies from
the Bloomsburg area will be
participating in the volunteer
fair :
1. Area Agency on Aging
2. Bloomsburg Hospital
3. American Cancer Society
¦ ¦.' ..• .
•4. Easter Seals
5. Children's Services
6. Emergency Management
7. Columbia Day Care
Program , Inc.
8. American
Diabetic
Association
9. Family Planning Services
10.
11.
Home
12.
PA State Health Centers
Columbia-Montour
Health Services
Juvenile Probation
13. American Red Cross
• 14. American Association of
Retired Persons
15. S o c i a l
Security
Administration
16. Conservation District of
Columbia County
17. Suncom Industries
18. Telephone Access Progrm
(TAP-LINE). ¦ ¦: " •
19. United Way, Inc. of
Columbia County
20. Women 's Center
21. M e n t a l
Health
Association of Columbia County
Public
22. Bloomsburg
Library
23. Bloomsburg Area School:
District
24. C o m m u n i t y Friends;
School
I
25. Magic Carpet Pre-School
26. Maple Crest Nursingl
Home, Inc.
,
27. Volunteer .Recycling
28. Boy Scouts
29. Girl Scouts
30. Bloomsburg Volunteer
Ambulance Association
31. Federal Soil Conservation :
Service
32. Susquehanna
Humani
¦
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SORORITY RUSH BEGAN this week with over 94 rushees signing up in the
Presidents' Lounge. Here, Beth Childe and ' Mary Jaques greet rushees with
a big smile.
(Photo by Nancy Schaadt)
Board of Trustees Approves
Personnel Changes, Outside Relations
Institutional ^ advancement
and external relations will be
given increased emphasis at
Bloomsburg State College
through changes in . the administrative organizational
structure endorsed by the
college's Board of Trustees last
week.
Planning and development,
public relations, alumni affairs ,
institutional research and affirmative action - desegregation
will be assigned to the
Executive
Director
of
Institutional Advancement in
the Office of the President.
These functions have been in
General Administration or the
Office of the President and are
being brought together to
provide coordination of all
external relations and institutional advancement efforts.
BSC President Dr. James H.
McCormick explained that the
revisions are intended to improve further the college 's
continuing efforts to respond to
changing needs of the institution and the individuals it
serves. He said the changes,
which will be implemented
during the Spring semester,
were agreed upon following
discussions and consultations
instigated early this year.
The Director of Planning and
Development
will
have
responsibilities for the college 's
long-range planning and the
development
of
nonCommonwealth funding
sources. The position will
replace that of the Director of
Grants, currently filled on an
interim basis by Peggy O.
Bailey ,
following
the
resignation of the director
earlier this summer. Planning
leadership has been provided by
Dr. Lee C. Hopple, a faculty
member on a half-time
assignment since 1973 when the
Planning Commission was
established. Dr. Hopple is a
Professor in the Department of
Geography, Earth Science and
Geology.
The changes will become
effective following
Vice
President for Administration
Boyd
F.
Buckingham 's
retirement on December 25.
Responsibilities for personnel,
physical plant, safety and law
enforcement , the computer
center, administrative services , ,
and comptroller will remain in
General Administration.
Dr. Frank S. Davis, assistant,
vice president
for
administration , is serving on a
temporary assignment as
associate vice president for
academic affairs for the Fall
semester. His former position is
being filled by Paul L. Conard ,
director of administrative
services , and Director of
Budget Donald E. Hock is
serving as director of administrative services. These
administrative changes will
terminate when Vice President
(Continued on Pag* 4)
Husky Singe rs Continue to Grow
HUSKY SINGERS HAVE 41
MY HICK DILIBERTO
BSC's male choral group, the
Husky Singers, are enjoying
perhaps the most successful
year in the history of the
organization . The first semester
enrollment of forty-one men is
"the most we've had since I can
remember," according to Dr.
William K. Decker, advisor and
conductor of the group;
The group consists of men
from' the ' College community
who have an interest in singing
and music. No prior musical
knowledge is required . While a
few of the members are music
majors, the great majority of
the group represents nearly
every other , major , including
accounting, ' mass
communications , elementary
education , business, and
chemistry .
The officers of the group are
Hick DiLiberto, president, Jeff
Wilcox, • ' , vice-president,' , Gregg
Gianuzzi , secretary, Randy
Beaver, treasurer, and Scott
Righter, librarian.
Anyone interested in participating in the group should
contact Dr. Decker at 389-3107 ,
or go to Haas Center for the
Arts . The group
meets
Tuesdays and Thursdays, from
2-3 p.m.
Dr. Decker will unveil the
group in their first show this
year at the Homecoming Pops
Concert on Oct; 11.
"BLOOM COU1VTY
With Style
¦.
v / / ^¦ \ V- .by-Heirf«-Bi(wtIi^
by Bob Sti les
Americans have an obsession for labels. They gladly
pay $30 or more for jeans so that they can have
the words "Jordache " and "Sasoon" written on their
"
bottoms. They buy certain shirts — not because the
shirt might be the best made shirt of its type, but
because they want to have alligators and foxes displayed on their chests. In short, Americans want the
"look" as on advertiser calls it.
But there is one particular " group in America which
has always wanted the "look" , (pennyloafers and jeans
in the past.) It is to this group which advertisers —
the people who help tell us what is fashionable —
direct their commercials. This group is the 14-25 age
group.
The advertisers have two strong reasons for their
emphasis on this age group: one, this group possesses
the largest disposable income in the nation , and two,
it is this age group which cares most about what their
peers think about them—in this case, how they dress.
Wearing the same types of clothes makes acceptance
by others much easier. Subconsciously, some even seem
to form their own little circle where the only requirement for admittance is that every one looks much
the same.
In itself , this willingness to buy higher priced products
when there are cheaper priced goods of near or equal
quality already on the market , just shows to what
extent people will go to be . accepted by their peers .
In actuality, the purchasing of these higher priced
goods is probably of little consequence; there is no
apparent harm.
However , it can be harmful when this group begins
to judge others by how they dress. When this happens ,
something of importance is lost: individuality.
And ail this time , the manufacturers and advertisers
sit back and rake in the dough.
ft
No Gripes with "Stripes"
By RICK DiLIBERTO
A film currently playing
downtown at the Twin Capitol
Theatre is leaving its "stripes of
laughter " on the ribs of BSC
students. Yes , the long awaited
Bill Murray comedy, Stripes,
has arrived in town with a roar
similar to that of Army tank.
After so-so performances in
Meatballs , and Where the
Buffalo Roam , he puts his
sensational comedy process to
work in this film.
Director Ivan Ritman sets the
scene with Murray as a
sometimes - working cab driver ,
looking for a future and sense of
responsibility, or, as the poster
advertisement puts it , "a
chance to keep the world safe
for democracy, and meet
girls. " After losing his
girlfriend and job , Murray
decides to join the army with a
buddy. Upon arriving the first
day, he realizes that army life is
not quite as glamorous as the
TV ads make it seem. He introduces himself to his peers at
bootcamp as a man who women
can 't resist, mostly "because I
don't wear underwear, and
when I do , it' s usually
something really wild." He
meets one of his fellow enlistees
named Francis, but referred to
as "Psycho." He makes it clear
that anyone who calls him
"Francis," or touches him , or
touches his stuff will be killed. A
pleasant greeting ....
Murray wins the respect of
his peers when they are
awakened at dawn for a fivemile run , and he says, "I think I
speak for the whole group when
I suggest that "this run be postponed until we are fur ther
rested." The sergeant then
increases the run to ten miles.
John Candy, the new sensation of Second City TV and
Network 90, also spices the film
with his performance as "Ox."
Incidentally, he joined the army
to lose weight rather than pay to
lose it through an exercise
class.
The film progresses through a
futile basic training for the
group until the night before
change. Among the issues will
be: the raising and slaughtering
of animals for food , the use of
animals in research and testing,
the destruction of wildlife, and
pet overpopulation. Tactics to
be
discussed
include :
organizing, research and
documentation , media liaison ,
lobbying,
boycotts ,
and
demonstra tions. Several task
forces and a coordinating
structure will be formed to
carry on the work beyond the
Conference.
Movement
speakers, orientation sessions,
free discussion , and light entertainment will round out the
three-day program.
The
setting
for
the
Mobilization Conference will be
the Francis Scott Key Lodge in
Ocean City, MD. Costs of
registration ($35) and of accommodations
are , very
modest. Transportation from
Washington will be provided on
request. All inquiries should be
directed to the Animal Rights
Network , P.O. Box 5234 ,
Westport , CT 06881.
Sincerely yours ,
Doug Moss,
Coordinator
Mobilization for
^
Animal Rights
to have a winning season this
year. One very important thing,
however, is stopping the team
from beating the opponent - lack
of student support.
As I looked around the stand
at Saturday 's game t saw only
band members, cheerleaders,
and a few other people
cheering. Where was your
school spirit? Even if the team
was losing by a few points, we
should have cheered even
more; we should have shown
the players that we care.
Our cheerleaders and the
band need support from
everyone to cheer for the
players. Instead of students
being apathetic, we should be
proud of Coach Boler and his
team. We can have a winning
season with student support!
Cindy Herzog
President M&G Band
Letters to the Edi toi
AnimalRights
Dear Editor:
Your readers will be interested in learning that hundreds of students and other
individuals dedicated to advancing
animal
rights ,
vegetarian , and other lifeenhancing objectives will be
gathering on October 10-12 in
Ocean City, Maryland , to
establish task forces and a
coordinating structure for
grass-roots action. Mobilization
for Animal Rights: Conference
'81 represents a cooperative
effort of over 30 animal rights
and vegetarian organizations ,
including the American AntiVivisection Society , American
Association for Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals , Animal
Protection Institute , Animal
Rights Network , the Fund for
Animals , National
AntiVivisection Society, Vegetarian
Information Service , and
Vegetarian Times.
The program will provide
workshops dealing both with
animal rights issues and with
tactics for promoting social
THE CAMPUS VOICE
Bloomiburg Stoto College, Blobmtburg, PA 17815 Box 97 KUB 309-3101
VOL. LX „ 4
N
Executive Editor
Ad Manager.....- _. : 111
Now* Editor
Foaturo Editor
Sports Editor
Sports Ant.
Photo Supervisor
Business Manager
Advisor
Roberta Clomons
Brian Dyart
Brondo
Friday
.
Virginia Rood
Kovln Kodlsh
¦
. .. . . . . . . . .'.. Joff Brown
Pat Murphy
Karon Troy
Richard
Savago
•••
The Vole* U governed by the Idltorial toard with the final reiponilbllty for all
material ratting with the executive editor ai ttated In the Joint Statement of
Freedom, ftlghtt and Responsibilities of student! at BSC.
The Voice reserves the right to edit all letter* and copy submitted. A maximum
of 400 word* will be placed on all letter* to the editor with an allowance
for exception*. All letter* muit be signed and have an addrei* and phone
number. Name* will be withheld upon request.
The opinion* voiced In the column*, artlcl** and notlcei are not necessarily
shared by the entire staff. An unslgnsd staff editorial denote* a major
consensu* of the editorial board.
Football Support
To the Editor:
Those studen ts who attended
the Bloomsburg vs. Shippensburg football game know
that .our team has, the*potential
inspection , when they realize
their deficiencies and decide^ to
"train themselves." They do
this successfully to music and
due to their "spunk," and arej
chosen by a general to guard a
secret army weapon.
This leads to adventures
which decorum prohibits this
writer, from mentioning here,
but are hilarious anyway.
Anyone needing a good laugh
at army humor should march
right down to the Twin Capitol
Theatre to see Stripes.
Jamboree
Schedule
Saturday
September 19
A fun-filled day is planned to
entertain both - the local and
college communities. The
jamboree begins at 11a.m. .and
lasts until 5 p.m. on September
19. Crafts and entertainment
will be featured throughout the
day , and everyone is invited to
attend. As is customary, the
jamboree will take place on the
lawns outside of the Kehr
College Union. In case of rain ,
all events will be moved into the
Union facility . Don't miss it!!
OPEN MIKE
11 a.m. - Noon — A , talent
show hosted by Dave Murphy is
sure to be a hit , as Bloomsburg
State College welcomes you
with a multi-attraction show.
JOHN MANION
John is a blossoming, young
singer
songwriter
from
Jackson , N.J. Along with his
rock n ' roll originals. John also
includes interpretations of other
songwriters , such as Steve
Forbert and James Taylor , who
are major influences on him.
John plays both guitar and
piano.
ROLLY BROWN
1:15-2:15 p.m. — If you enjoyed^ !•
Roily last night at the Cdf*«<>
feehouse, you 'll like him ev$P ia
more at the Fall Jamboree. !«l ni
¦ ¦'.'•'
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BOB DOYLE AND ,
nr
THE ALLEGHENY ^
, vi7 :
STRING BAND
.' ;.. •,,,<,;,
Bob Doyle on guitar. Ta4, , .
Marks on fiddle , Rick Lytic on
banjo. Dennis Ricker :"on i
mandolin and Arch Warhock oh
bass compose this , kneeslapping bluegrass band. The
originality of the band rcfists in
the fact that their material in
many cases is so old that it.
remains brand new especially
to young people. Also, be ready
to put on your dancin * shoos and
hop to some square dancing
tunes'.- ' . • .V.7. ' .'. ' 7
. ...
Get Involved at BSC!
BY KATHY WALSH ¦_;
College
is
commonly
described as the time and place
to broaden your horizons. This
learning and growing process
does not only pertain to
classroom studies. It also takes
place-by way of involving one
self in student organizations.
The questions" one should ask
are "How can I become involved?" and "what activities
and associations are open to
me?" The first step is to consult
the pilot and-or stop in the
secretarial office of Student
Activities in the KtJB to pick up
the listing of over 100
organizations .here at BSC. By
CAS
consulting
these
two
publications, a group or activity
may catch your attention.
What to do then? Don't make
it a deadend thought. Most
organizations
post
announcements of scheduled
meetings on the bulletin boards
which are scattered all around
BSC dormitories and classroom
buildings. Many organizations
actually try to recruit members, such
as the Campus Voice,
1
which did so in their first fall
edition . Involvement in intramural sports begins with just
a simple signature on a team
roster (found in most residence
hall wings). Fraternities and
News Brief s
New Staff Appointments
Made
HARRISBURG — Three
appointments to the Commonwealth Association of
Students (CAS ) staff in
Harrisburg are announced by
president Sandi Johnson.
Joyce Cheepudom, formerly
of Denver, Colo., has been
appointed executive director of
the association, which serves as
a lobbying group for Pennsylvania's state-owned colleges
and university. Ms. Cheepudom
has served as the director of
development for the United
States Student Association in
Washington , DC.
A graduate of York College,
she majored in elementary
education and served as vice
president of the Student Pennsylvania State Education
Association.
"CAS will -be involving
students in fighting for their
rights and helping them gain
access to quality education in
Pennsylvania at the lowest
price," she said recently .
As executive director , she will
for \ adbe responsible
ministering and executing
office policy, and will serve as
liason with state agencies involved in education . She also
will serve as a liason with
national and state student
groups and will disseminate
information from those groups.
Brenda ' Burd, a native of
Reading, has been appointed
legislative director for the
association . A graduate of
Dickinson College, she majored
in political science with a minor
in psychology. Ms. Burd served
an internship with the Pennsylvania House of Reprensentatives Consumer Affairs
Committee and also had an
internship with the Cumberland
County Commissioners.
Her responsibilities include
lobbying in the state capital to
show students' views on bills,
and to persuade legislators to
vote favoring students.
Barbara Fahey, a native of
Taylor, has been appointed
public relations director . A
graduate of Bloomsburg State
College , she earned her
bachelor 's degree in English.
Ms. Fahey formerly was employed as a bureau reporter
with the Scranton TimesSunday Times.
She will be repsonsible for
maintaining state-wide and
campus media relations for the
association.
Ms. Johnson also announced
that Connie Sloan, a student at
Slippery Rock State College,
has been granted an internship
with CAS for the fall semester.
Ms. Sloan, is secretary to the
CAS executive board and is
majoring in business administration
and
public
relations. She will assist the
staff with organizing and public
relations work.
sororities are now holding
public meetings in order to brief
any interested student;
For those of you who haven't
found that "something " you 've
been searching for , you just
may decide to initiate your own
group. This can be done by
merely stopping in the Student
Activities office to obtain the
necessary forms. Just keep
your eyes arid ears open to all
that is happening in the BSC
community and get involved!
Since the accident of May 17,
1981, when a CGA car was
unofficially used , there have
been important changes in the
procedure for acquiring CGA
vehicles.
In the past, the procedure was
for the student employees to go
to the information desk and sign
out the vehicles from maintenance. Now they must go to
could be held responsible for the
accident. The system itself was
inefficien t, and thus the system
was really to blame. "
Azar also commented that the
student employees in charge of
maintenance overall are very
responsible and mature enough
to carry out their duties efficiently.
If there are any questions
about the CGA vehicles or the
process of acquiring one ,
contact
the
Community
Activities Office.
...the system itself was inefficient, and thus the system was really to blame..."
the Community Activities office, to acquire a vehicle. The
Community Activities office has
now , taken over the entire
operation .
Mike Azar, Comptroller for
BSC, now oversees the entire
operation from signing out to
signing in. He commented "I
don't think anyone involved
with the previous process ( Info
desk, Community Activities)
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tified BSC student got his legs
caught between his car and the
wall of an apartment building
located behind Elwell Hall to
the rear of the rescuers home.
The victim, according to Miss
Conway; was trying to start his
car, while the gears were in
neutral. While he was in front of
the car, the vehicle slipped and
rolled down an incline, pinning
his legs to the wall.
According to the rescuers, the
unidentified victim began
screaming desperately for help.
The girls ran from their second
floor apartment bedrooms in
their pajamas and pushed the
car up the hill just enough to
release the trapped man 's legs.
Miss Hughes commented, "I
thought I was dreaming."
Thanks to the efforts of three
BSC seniors, a BSC student
escaped serious injury early
Mon. morning when his legs
became lodged between his car
arid the cement wall of a
building.
Mari Conway, Deb Shultz and
Kathy Hughes were sleeping in
their house on E. 3rd St., when a
call for help wakened ' them at
approximately 1:15 a.m.,
Monday morning. An uniden-
Vehicle Sign-Out
Policies Change
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Student Escapes Injury;
Rescued by BSC Seniors
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at9:00 p.m. in
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Trustees Emphasize Institutional Advancemei*t
(Continued from Pag* 1)
Buckingham retires, and Dr.
Davis will assume the duties of
interim vice president for administration until a search is
completed and a permanent
appointment is made. Mr.
Conard and Mr. Hock will
return to their former positions,
and the position of assistant
vice . president for administration will be assigned to
the Office of the President for
reclassification as "assistant to
the president."
The quarterly meeting: of the
Board of Trustees also approved the retirement request
of Dr. Tobias Scarpino and the
appointment of nine new faculty
members for the 1981-82
academic year.
Dr. Scarpino, a native of
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Shenandoah , came to Bloomsburg in 1958 after teaching four
years at Millcreek Township
High School , Newmanstown. He
will retire at the end of the first
semester of the 1981-82 college
year , completing twenty-seven
years in the field of education,
twenty-three of which were at
Bloomsburg State College. He is
a professor of physics.
Scarpino received
his
Bachelor of Science degree in
Education from Kutztowh State
College in 1940, his Master of
Science degree in Education
from Bucknell University in
1955, and his Doctorate in
Education from Penn State
University in 1971.
Dr. Scrapino has enjoyed an
excellent rapport with;- liis
students^ Most recently he has
been involved in teaching
physics
for ¦ medical
technologists and other science
majors, as well as physical
science: for elementary majors
and non-science students.
He has ^ served on many
college committees including
that of Graduate Council and
the Advisory Committee to the
Learning Resources Center and
the college-wide Merit . Committee, along with serving on
several departmental com-
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Dr. James McCormlck explained thai the revisions
are to Improve efforts
The appointments include :
Dr. ¦' Mary" , K. . Badahw-of
Shorewood , Wisconsin as
Assistant Professor of Speech,
Mass Communication , and
Theatre: She had been an
Assistant Professor at the
University of Wisconsin.
Dr. P. James Moser of
Vienna, Virginia, as Assistant
Professor of Physics. He has
been an analyst with the United
States
Government
in
Washington.
Dr. Edward Poostay of
Lincoln, Nebraska , as Associate
Professor of Reading. He has
"
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been an Assistant Professor at
the University of Nebraska.
Sandra G. Richardson of
Bloomsburg as Assistant
Professor of Nursing. She. was
Associate
formerly
an
Professor at Wor-Wic Tech
Community College, Cambridge, Maryland.
Appointed as , instructors of
Nursing were : Judith K.
Gaudiano of Danville, formerly
an instructor at the Geisinger
School of Nursing: Helen' R.
Robertson of Rowayton, Connecticut, an Executive Director
of the Greenwich Health
Greenwich ,
Association ,
Connecticut ; Christine Santangelo of Upper Darby, a staff
nurse at St. Christopher 's
Hospital for Children in
Philadelphia; Barbara
Synowrey'bf Danville, a staff
nurse at Geisinger Medical
Center ; Patricia Torsella of
Berwick, a Staff Development
Instructor at the Selinsgrove
Center .
In other personnel action, the
Board
approved
the
retirements of the following
non-instructional employees:
Homer H. Beaver, grbundskeeper supervisor, effective
July .24, i981, with 14 years
service at BSC; Jane S. Brbbst,
mittees, some of which he
chaired as senior member of . the
department. He has been deeply
involved each year ¦:• with
Physical Science Day for high
school students.
Dr. Scrapino has been supportive of community services,
having given talks on. Lasers
and Bubbles to the Rotary and
Torch Clubs. He has judged
science exhibits at the
Bloomsburg Fair and the Junior
Academy of Science.
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Thursday Sept. 24 Kuster
E '10>
Aud. (HSC) 9.00 p.m. Re- ' H|M|i^S^i
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g§ / *&&
freshmenfs and rides to oor , 9^
^H
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f inal Kusn:
house will follow
¦ ¦-
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Hall for the period of Augustus, ¦,' ' 1.,
1981 throujgh May is, 198:2. He is ,'< v .^\
a former juni qr high .school . , ,
teacher in the Central /Bucks .' .7,,";
School District, poylestowrii He .,
replaces Joseph A. DeMelfi , ; \
Dr. Frank S. Davis Is seroh a Temporary
ving
Asslgmerit.
who was appointed Assistant
Director of Financial Aid for the
' '¦•r ' ;
same time period.
William A. Proudman of
Henryyille, PA, as Director ipf
Outdoor Experiential -Learning
for a 12. month appointment
beginning July 25, 1981. He is a
former Outward Bound School
Instructor and replaces Ms.
Carolyn Birmingham who
resigned effective July.24, 1981.
Michael E. Sowash as
Assistant Dean of Student Life
in Luzerne Residence Hall for
the period of August 24, 1981
Scrapin o
received
his
Bachelor of Science Degree in Education.
through May 28, 1982. He is a
former Assistant Director of
Student Activities in Kehr
Union and replaces George
Kirlin, who transferred to ' a
position in the Office of Budget
and Administration in the
Governor 's Office effective
June 27, 1981.
Ms. Carol A. Barnett , formerly Assistant Director of
Financial Aid at BSC, has been
appointed Assistant Director of
Placement, effective August 22;
1981.
fe
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custodial worker, effectiye July v^ ;.
10,. 1981, with 16 years 9 months y service; Elizabeth C. Brooking, .. >
' '
clerical supervisor II, effectivev .' .£¦
July 24, 1981, with 18 years 3 ;
,
months service, and Eleanor
Devanney , custodiar worker, ,
effective July 10, 1981, with l?, r ;n5
years 3,months service. ; .-., 5 ,.., .
review
and .^
Following
recommending procedures^.,, ,
involving State College :.J^ 'mi)
University ,. Admihistra, tipn ^ \
appointments, the following „ (>;
^ ri:
individuals • were. ^approved 4$bzsu
appointment J beginning, as Jf rf awoi
cheated :
m a -yMichael J. Ford of West¦Jslip^'^."••." ¦
New York,, in the capacity ^6f ,^.;",
Assistant Dean of Student^Lue^ .^,
in Northumberland Residence ,(,1, 1
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Women s
Center-:%:
Schedule
schedule a Women 's Center
presentation , call 784-1656, or
572-5701.
The Women's Center's fall
schedule " of? support groups,
open to all women of Columbia,
Montour; Northumberlandisand
as
lower Luzerne counties^
follows :^
Mondays — Mothers' Sharing
Bloomsburg 10 a.m. - noon ;
Midlife ^ansitioh Bloomsburg
7:30 p.rSf^ 9;30 p.m.,.
Tuesdays1 •— ' Abuse Victims'
Growth"Btoomsburg 7:30 p.irii 9:30 p.m. . . ,
Wednesdays — Mothers'
Sharing -Berwick 10:36 a.m. noon ; Cbhscioushess - Raising
Bloomsburg 7:io p.m. - 9:30
p.m.; Consciousness - Raising
Berwick ' 7:00 pin. - 9':00 p.m.;
Divorced and ".'Separated
Bloomsburg 10 a.m. - noon.
Also, the Wonien's Center; as
part of its outreach ' services,
provides speakers * on • domestic
violence and the work of the
Center. There is a slide-tape
program on battered women
that is available for showing as
part of the Women's Center's
representative's presentation.
For more information about
any of the support groups, or to
Jewish
Holiday
Observed
Common Meal Schedule
SUNDAY
Brunch .
Omelette
¦
French Toast - .
Fried Eggs .
Frizzled Ham on Roll
Dinner =:
El Rancheros .
Roast Lamb with Gravy
MONDAY
Lunch
Meatball Hoagie Hot Turkey Sandwich !
Dinner
Veal Cutlet Parmigiano
Pried Filet of Fish i < ;
The following is a schedule of
services for the H igh Holy Days
for the year of 5742, to be held at
the Ohey Shalom Synagogue,
Vine Streetj Berwick. ( Off
Third Street).
Services this year will .. be
conducted by Rabbi .. Reuben
Greenwald' and will be open to
TUESDAY
all . members of, the Jewish
Lunch
Community.
Rosh Hashanah .will i commence on September 28,
Monday evening at 7 P.M.:
September 29, Tuesday mor:
The ninth, annual Lewisburg
ning services at . 9:30 A.M ,;
Tuesday evening services at 7 . , Craft Fair will be held on
October ,2, 3, and 4 in the
P.M.: Septeniber ; 30, WedLewisburg Armory building,
nesday morning services at 9:30
one mile south of Lewisburg,
A.M.
Pennsylvania, on U.S. Route 15.
Yom Kippur will be on
Wednesday, October 7, starting ,.' . Amid Central Pennsylvania 's
autumn splendor , oyer . 75.
at 6:30 P.M. Kbl Nidre services.
professional craftspeople and
October 8, services at 9:30
artists will gather from a sixA^M. Yizkor services at 11 A.M.
state area to exhibit, demon(Break period l P.M. -5P.M.);
strate, and sell their handmade
Neilah services beginning at 5
creations
. Many new. par r
P.M.
Bar-B-Q Chicken
Country Style Steak
FRIDAY . '
Lunch
"¦•;" ;' Eggburger
Beef Noodle Casserole
Dinner
Cubed Steak with Gravy
Baked Lasagna , ; ¦ ' ¦:
WEDNESDAY
Lunch
•; ¦'
Italian Hoagie
Grilled Ham and Cheese
•'
Dinner
Baked Pork Chops
Chicken Chow; Mein -
Beef Bar-B-Q on Roll
Tuna Noodle Casserole
'*'*'
Dinner :
SATURDAY ; J
':
Brunch ;
Scrambled Eggs
Assorted Cold Cuts
Hot Dog on Roll
;
Dinner ';^' - ;::-'- '. '- ' :
Baked .Meat Loaf
Pizza ""'
ticipants . ; will join favorite
exhibitorsT from, previous years
to offer an .array of unique
crafts and, art "in the .following
media categories gunsmithing,
c o r ns h u c k e r y , designer
fahsions, potpourri, patchwork,
paper cutting, .wheat weaving,
etched eggs, briar pipes,
stained glass sculptures, lamps;
and frames; tole painting, rag
dried
flower
rugs,
arrangements, wooden toys ,
artistic carvings, and functional
pieces ; ' fiber * weavings,
macrame, leather items, clay
sculpture, dough figures ,
paintings , watercolors ,
d raw in g s, p h bio g r a ptiy,
Raggedy Ann and porcelain
dolls; candles, Christmas ornaments, silver, pewter, coin,
and mixed-metal jewjelry, and
an exquisite collection of . fine
stoneware, porcelain , and
,
pottery.
_ _
Hours for the 1981 LeSyisburg
Craft Fair are TFriday, October
2,' l p.m. to 9 p:mi; Saturday,
October 3, 10a.m. to9p.m.; and
Sunday, October 4, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. general admission is $1.50
for adults and $.50 for children
under" 12. Parking is free;
THURSDAY
;I
¦¦
Lunch •'• - •' "'- '•
Graft Fair. OcC2, 3. 4
collegiate camouflage
Can you\ find the hidden
college ..courses? ,
ACCOUNTING
:-¦ ANATOMY
A ANTHROPOLOGY
'ART ;
BlO-SCi
BOTANY
CALCULUS
CHEMISTRY
DANCE
ECONOMICS
FINANCE
GEOLOGY
HISTORY
LAW
LINGUISTICS
LITERATURE LOGIC
MATH
MUSIC
/ PHYSICS
PSYCHOLOGY
RELIGION
• RUSSIAN
SPANISH
.
SPEECH
THEATRE
ZOOLOGY
Answers on Page 2
BEGINNER OR ADVANCE D - Cost Is about the same as a
semester In a U,S. college: $2,089. Price deludes jet round
trip to Seville from Now York , room, i >ord, and tuition
complete, Government'grants and loans citable for eligible
, students, i
Live^with o Spanish family, attend classes four hours- a day,'
four days a wook , four months, Earn 16 hrs, of credit (oqulvalant to 4 semesters-taught In U,S, colleges over a two
¦
Cheeseburger
. ' ¦;¦' .; '
Pierogies with Butter
Dinner
Baked Manicotti ;
Sauerbrauten
year time span). Your Spanish studies will be enhanced by
opportunities not available in a U.S. classroom. Standardizod tests show our students ' language "skills superior to
students completing two.year programs in U.S.
FULLY ACCREDITE D •
A program of Trinity Christian College,
.
"
SEMESTER IN SPAIN
2442 E, Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506
(A Program of Trinity Christian College)
CA LL TO LL FREE for full information i-800-253-9008
(In Mich., or If toll free lino Inoperative call 1-616-942-2541 collect.)
tip StoreWide ^f i
I ¦ Record&Tape
-:
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Sale
Friday and Saturday ;
10:3°
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Sb0QsA^
II Old Berwick Rd. '" """*
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Bloomsburg
784-9643"'
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Friday 10:30-9:00
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HENRIE
Prin ting and Silkscreening
TEE SHIR
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Rear 40 West Main St.
Across from The Salvation Army
Bloomsburg —784- 1633
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International I
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Kenwood 500 Grand Prix
¦
¦ RACE AND TICKET INFORMATION:
I¦
Phone (717) 646-2300
I
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¦
Hello sports fans ! This issue
of the Voice marks the beginning of my own personal
column !
You can look for this feature
in every Friday's edition. I'm
going to try my hand at calling
several college football games
each week. I might not get
many correct , but you should
have fun looking at the matchups each week.
To go with my collegiate
forecasts, I will also list my top
fifteen teams in the country.
This year 's season should be
an interesting one. In the
opening week of action ,
Alabama
and
Michigan ,
Nebraska all tasted defeat.
Upsets are on the increase, and
look for the next few months to
be no different than last week.
Has anyone noticed Florida
State's schedule the next five
weeks? If you haven't, the
Seminoles' slate consists of
Rd. contests with Nebraska ,
Ohio State, Notre Dame, Pitt ,
and LSU.
FSU coach Bobby Bowden
had this to say about that
scheduling : "I'm not going to
worry about it.one bit. I knew
that schedule was here when I
took the job . Of course, I didn 't
know I'd be here that long."
If you're wondering what
game will be televised by ABC
television this week, it will be
the Notr e Dame-Michigan
battle from Ann Arbor. The
network has also announced
that the game between USC and
Oklahoma will be telecast Sept.
26.
Well, here goes with my first
week of forecasts :
GEORGIA AT CLEMSON:
national
defending
The
champion Bulldogs are off to a
great start , and Clemson won't
have quite enough to stop the
Walker express. Georgia will be
a 21-17 winner .
NOTRE
DAME
AT
MICHIGAN : This is a real clash
of the titans. These teams might
be the two best in the country.
The Irish cruised to a 27-9 win
over LSU last week, while the
Wolverines were stunned by
Wisconsin. Look for the
Michigan team to come out
fired up and score early. The
Wolverines will make the Irish
go home 24-20 losers.
GEORGIA
TECH
AT
FLORIDA : The Yellow Jackets
derailed the Crimson Tide last
week, but this time they will
play more on their level.
Florida , 32-13.
USC AT INDIANA : The
Trojans are a very good football
team. The home field advantage will be of no help to the
Hdosiers in this clash. USC will
fly home with an easy 38-10 win.
ALABAMA AT KENTUCKY :
It's too bad the Wildcats have to
play Bear Bryant's boys after
they lost ! Look out , Kentucky !
The Tide will roll by a 35-10
count.
MICHIGAN STATE AT OHIO
STATE : The Spartans don't
have a bad team this year. The
Buckeyes have a very good
team , though. Look for the
visitors to give OSU a good
battle the first half before
;V '' ;
succumbing 31-14.
STATE
AT
FLORIDA
NEBRASKA : The Seminoles
behind their road haul at Lincoln. The Cornhuskers will be
licking their chops this week.
Losses don 't make teams
happy, and Nebraska will be in
a foul humor because of last
week's game. Nebraska * will
come out a 21-16 victor ;*'t -s
PURDUE AT MINNESOTA.
The Boilermakers are: looiuhg
good , and the Gophers woW^t be
able to move the ball witfr'^ry
consistency. Purdue is - your
Winner , 24-6. .
The Rest: Arkansas 31 Northwestern 10; Cornell 14 Penn 10;
Missouri 28 Rice 9; Maryland 24
West Virginia 23; Miami 27
Houston 20; Iowa State 10 Iowa
7: UCLA 17 Wisconsin 13.
KEVIN'S TOP
FIFTEEN
1. NOTRE DAME
¦
. .;\ • ' .
. 2. USG
3. GEORGIA
4. OKLAHOMA
5. OHIO STATE
6. PENN STATE .
. 7. PITT
8. FLORIDA STATE
9. TEXAS
10. ALABAMA
_ ° !'
11. MICHIGAN
12. MIAMI (FLA)
13. NORTH CAROLINA
14. UCLA
15. NEBRASKA
';.. -
How could
I have
forgotten ? Bloomsburg 27
Lock. Haven 23!
Soccer Team Among Best in State
I
I
I
I
I
BUKKS
CHEVROLETS
DATSUNS
MAZDAS
RENAULTS
Coming off its first rebuilding
season since 1977, the Bloomsburg State College soccer team
appears to be ready to return to
its spot among the leaders in the
Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference.
The graduation of three
outstanidng seniors creates a
void , which
Coach Lou
Mingrone, now in his seventh
year at the helm , will seek to fill
from a group of talented first
year players. Gone from a year
ago are tri-captains Toby Rank ,
a four time All-PSAC eastern
division selection, midfielder
Brian Farrell , and goalie . Greg
'
Malloch.
I
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Sparkplug I
Cnalletifie I
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The finest racing sedans foaturing familiar '
I
¦
makes
specially tuned .for the demands of the ' ¦
.
¦
toughest road race courses ,,, and competition ¦
¦
I sill *
!^H
CHAM
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SpMPin'sC6nipuny *Tbloclo , Of 1 4' Mil r'Hf'
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The boosters enter the season
with a six year mark of 48-27-3.
After four consecutive winning
seasons, BSC slipped to a record
of 5-12-1 in 1980, but in the
process, a young squad gained
valuable experience and is
anxious to rejoin other top notch
regional contenders in the
battle for a post season tournamen t berth .
Leading the list of returnees
Become Active
on the 1982 Obiter BSC's yearbook
We need students who can.;.
*P '
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just
wr e»
'% ' Q&: Wi'*
1
photograph,
rS
the answer
. ^^^^
or
Firs
A^^r^
phone. "
SSKT^^
t organizational
^
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•
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m eeting on
^Z^ ^%^
Wednesdayj Sept. 2$i at 7:30\p.m.
in the Qf oter Qffice <$#ff cor KVB)
\,
(
]
is junior Luke Sakalosky, who
was chosen to the All-PSAC
eastern division team along
with Rank last season. He also
was the team 's second leading
scorer a year ago with six goals.
Mingrone expects the midfielder "to lead the younger
players by exampl e and in the
process will be a great help to us
offensively. " Also returning are
backs Roger Stetler and Gary
Gallagher , who have been
chosen as the captains for this
year 's team . After contributing
four goals last season as a
freshman ,
striker
Fred
McCaffrey is also back fpr ' his
second season , as are Terry
Gross , Lou Mickley , and ' Steve
Whaley . Senior Ken '.N'eub'^
will move from halfbacTk1( , to
fullback to help bolster\pe
defense , while Rod Kpc^i, iyill
move into the goal w^e£e,^e 'll
battle with three others!
fo^|he
¦
... '" ' "' , ',„„.„ " .,
starting role;
Junior Bill Sypawka will add
experienced depth to the striker
position , while Jim Byrne, and
Mike Keller , both juniors , '.are
the base on which Mingrone will
build his midfiold .
"Wo will Htill be very 'young
compared to most of our < opponent , but Bkillwisc this is the
best, yroup I've ever had , "
c o m m e n t ed Mingrone , "The
Buys have boon working ' vony
hard aw a team and with all this
,
(Continued on Pago 7)
Linemen; Key Gear of Football Machine
By DAN LOUGHLIN \ v .
The trenches — that's where
the tough battles are fought.
This is the place where a
football team needs big, strong,
and aggressive offensive
»
linemen.
The offensive line has the
huge responsibility of creating
holes in the defensive line for
running; backs and protecting
the quarterback on pass plays.
Therefore , the success of
almogt every offensive play
depends^ on the performance of
'
"
•
t^f
t ' .¦• ¦ •
Moving up in any level of any
sport is challenging, to say the
least. But moving up to the
intercollegiate level from the
high school level requires not
only physical size and
toughness, but also maturity
and a sound knowledge of the
game's finer points. The latter
can only be acquired through
actual playing time in real
games, which leads us to that
old, familiar sports term experience.
Experience is a key word to
the offensive line of the
Bloomsburg State College
football team . As of right now,
the entire starting line consists
Hockey Team Finishes Second
by MARY . HASSENPLUG
The B.S.C. field hockey team
officially opened the season last
weekend with an exceptional
performance at the Trenton
Tournament. The Huskies
finished second with a 2-1
record for the weekend.
In the opening game, BSC
soundly defeated defending
champion Salisbury State by a
score of 2-0. The Huskies outshot Salisbury 16-12 in a very
well played game.
According to coach Hutchinson, "The Statistics were
basically even, but we played a
great defensive game. We
marked better in the circle than
we have all year." At the end of
the first half , Linda Turnbull
turned a pass , from Jane
Seislove into the initial goal.
Diane Imboden, at 14:30 of the
second half , assisted Turnbull
for "her second goal of the game.
The Huskies lost their second
game to eventual tournament
champions Trenton State, 2-0.
Bloomsburg outshot Trenton 9-7
in a defensive battle. The
majority of the game was
fought at midfield with Deb
Long, Joan Mahoney and
Jeanne Fetch carrying most of
the ball-handling duties.. Hut-
Announcements
"THE , TALL BLOND MAN WITH A
film with
BLACK SHOE;" French
In
color—Kuster
English^ubtltles
;
boarid 5:O0 p.m., SeptAudHorJumSi:
'
omDW ^WBl .' Required of all
s
OB
in French
stuaent8 regl8tered
courses .EveryoneWelcom e. Contri1
bution? Wibbi For furfher information cb'tttqct ' Dr. A. Foureman, Department ;'of Languages and Cul'
tures ,extension 2508.¦
¦
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•¦ ,.i iiivv . V- - , ¦ ., ¦;
.-(. . .
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ALL GUYS' welcome at the Sigma
Iota' Omega rush meeting on Thurs.
Sept. 24 at 7:00 p.m. In Kuster
Aud.' (HSC)."GET OUT AND RUSH".
CGA COLLEGE COUNCIL and Rep
Aosembly petitions are available a*
the Info Desk. They are due today
by 4 p.m. Elections will bo hold
Mon. Sept.,21 and Tues., Sept. 22.
ATTENTION ALL ELEMENTARY AND
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
chinson was pleased with her
team 's performance, "It was a
very even game throughout.
Everyone did very well. Also,
Laurie Snyder did a great job in
the goal during- the weekend."
In the final game , BSC
trounced the University of
Scranton 2-1-. The Huskies
dominated the entire first half
by staying on the attack and
making numerous shots on goal.
Finally, with ten seconds left in
the half , Karen Nilson knocked
in the game 's first goal.
Scranton moved the ball
better in the second half , and
scored their only goal on a
penalty stroke past goalie
Kerry. Arnold.
The Huskies again took
control and continued to attack
the Scranton defense. With one
minute left .in the game, Jane
Seislove centered and knocked
in a goal with help from Polly
Dougherty. The statistics
clearly show the Huskies '
dominance as they made 12
shots on goal as compared to
Scranton 's two.
/ Coach Hutchinson commented on the tournament ,
"Overall , we performed very
well. As always , our midfield
line did a great j ob. They are
Bloomsburg Soccer
:'.. (continued from Page 6)
young, fresh talent it should be
brutal! We open on the road at
"
an exciting year.":
New Jersey Tech then come
The roster includes just two
home to play Lock Haven , the
seniors and 10 juniors to go
defenidng Division II natinal
along with 12 sophomores and . champs, and after them we
six freshmen . "Once we beocme
haveto travel to Shippensburg ,
accustomed to each other, I
who because of our rivalry is
think we're going to be a pretty
always tough , and then
good soccer team . It may take
Scranton comes here and they
us one more year to be an
lost in the Division III national
outstanding team, but we are'
finals: So when that stretch is
inalleviating . all ' the
over, we should be playing some
dividualistic, play and working,
sharp soccer ."
as a team and right now that's
The schedule is as'follows : 9what matters most to me,"
19, at Shippensburg ; 9-23,
stated Mingrone.
Scranton ; 9-26, Millersville ; 9The Huskies have picked a
30, at University of Marylandtough way to open the season.
Baltimore Co.; 10-6, Indiana
Coach J. Malcolm Siman's New
(PA) ; 10-10, Lycoming; 10-14,
Jersey Tech squads are anBuckriell ; 10-17, KutztOwn ; 10nually among the top teams in
20, West Chester ; . 10-24, at
the country and have posted a
Cheyney ; 10-28,, Juniata ; 10-31,
fine 168-97-19 record during his
Wilkes ; 11-2, at East Stroud25 year tenure at the school.
sburg ; 11-4, at Susquehanna; 11"Our first four games are
11, PSAC Championships.
our strength and played very
well. Our two freshmen, Jackie
Griffin and Bev Sprout, played
a couple of great games. They
played nearly every minute this
weekend and came through for
us. Although we have to work on
our attack, we played very good
hockey."
On Monday the Huskies
battled a very tough Lock
Haven team to a 1-1 deadlock.
The first half was primarily art
even fight at midfield. Neither
team had any type of scoring
opportunity.
The second half , however,
was entirely dominated by Lock
Haven. Hutchinson stated ,
"They are a stronger team than
they were,last year. They outplayed us even in the first half.
We weren't in the game until the
last ten minutes. Only then did
we finally penetrate and make
good inside passes.'-'
Late in the 'second half , Joan
Mahoney made a fine pass to
Turnbull who converted it . into
her team 's lone score. The tie
raised the Huskies record to 2-11. They meet tough opposition in
Kutztown and I.U.P. this week.
The team hopes that their play
this past weekend is indicative
of things to come.
MEN'S TRACK & FIELD 1981-82
Candidates ) Important organizational meeting - Sept. 24, 7:30 p.m.
KUB. All candidates are urged to attend. For further info, contact Carl
¦
Hlnkle 389-3712. -
Wonted
WANTED: Baseball cards, football
arid non^ sport gum cards.'.Cash
paid for good condition cards and
other baseball items, Call J.J.,
¦
7frrfl?lu . • ' ' : | ¦
For Sale -
FOR SALE: Refrigerator In excelled
condition. 1.5 cubic foot. Call Mat!
PERSONALS
MARIA,Have you checked your mail
box lately?
Your Loving Roommate I
HILARIE, HICKSIE, & CHERYL, Yous
are the best ,roommates I could'vo
asked for. Thanks , Love, Jeanne
Fetch.
•
DEAR NICK the professional student
- teacher — Has Randy co-ed gotten
any answers to his advertisement
;since he left France , the .Girls from
• - ¦ Shikellamy, Sue, Deb,and Bette.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY CHERYL SEDLAC
;. Oats much?
¦¦
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MATT,To my F.P., the one and only. I;
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Thanks for making my summer I !" .
Ilove you I P.P. No. 2 (Karon)
!
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STARR, How Bees you?
.
Day Sails
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Sunset d
Rodney Ross :
^SSfe^iffl ^.
Mckmligh t
Reservations:
^^ISSISISP ^
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Cruises.
774-35 78
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ATLANTIC NAVIGATION COMPANY
Long Wharf , Commercial Street , Portland
or Steve at 784-3943.
Services
ELECTRONIC EARRING AND PIN Hot, red LOVE LITE comes complete
with a mini-Battery. Guaranteed to
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TRADING, Box 1007-A,, Warwick ,
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IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research
catalog — 306 pages — 10,278
topics -1 Rush $1.00 Box 25097C
Los Angeles,9002S.(213V 477-8226
¦;¦¦ . -¦
-¦
dja^wsas^te.
¦
¦
< AW» Ibl A
MAJORS There will be a meeting
to sign up for sfudenf teaching for
the academic year 1982-83 on
September. .24, 1981 pt 4 p.m. in
Kuster Auditorium. It is Imperative
that you attend this meeting if you
plan to do your student teaching
at that time. This includes all K-6,
N-K-3,and Dual majors.
Some of these .youngsters
include sophomores Dan
Brennan and Bill Feiser. Freshmen Keith Bolton; Bill Covert,
Mike Galantino, Dave Glenwright, Mike Jupina , Bill Koch
and Joe Lihcaiis round out the
offensive line roster .- »
The line will play a major roll
in the success or failure of this
year's team ^Sproule said, ''If
they play togetherT as one,
opening holes and protecting
the quarterback , we'll be
alright. If you don't do those
things , you don 't win ball
games;"
-
sophomore John DeMartino.
Senior Mike. Cerone can also
expect to see plenty of action.
Beyond > ' this experienced
group lies young .^ahd unseasoned players, which brings
a little concern to Coach
Sproule; "Physically ," I have no
qualms about? the yqung
recruits. They work hard at
practice and show great
determination^ However, they
aren 't quite ready mentally.
But I'm confident that when
they get some playing time
under their, belts, they'11 get the
job done."
of returning lettermen. ' Bill
Sproule is the offensive line
coach for the second straight
year . Sproule feels that this
experience is very valuable. ''I
think one of the strengths of the
line is their experience." The
first unit is back from last year .
They are cohesive and I expect
them to play a large part in
team leadership. " •' . -.'
The Huskies will . look to
seniors Dave Montagna and
Jim Zaccheo to provide
leadership. The rest of the
starting unit consists of juniors
Mike Balik, Dave Gillis, and
I """
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PATTI, BUDAWINSKI , RHONDA, |
BARB,MOLLY...Have Fun 11 Love Reo. |
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BSC Football...
Lock Haven Next Foe for Huskies
The
Bloomsburg State
College football team (0-2) will
be seeking its initial win of the
1981 campaign when the
Huskies travel to Lock Haven
State on Saturday, September
19th. The clash with the Pennsylvania Conference western
division member Bald Eagles is
set for LHSC's Hubert Jack
Stadium at 2:00 p.m., and will
be part of the Community Day
celebration at Lock Haven.
Coach Clark Boler's squad
held the lead at half time against
Shippensburg last Saturday, but
the Raiders used 19 third
quarter points to thwart BSC's
upset attempt.
Following a Shippensburg
fumble on its first possession of
the game, the Huskies took the
early lead when quarterback
Kurt Werkheiser hit runningback Harry James with an
11 yard scoring toss. The Raiders closed the gap early in
the second period on a 3 yard
run by halfback Dave Friese,
but SSC missed the extra
point attempt, and the Huskies
still led by one. On the ensuing
kickoff , BSC's Steve Meszaros
took the ball in his own endzone
and raced a school record 101
yards for a touchdown to build
the advantage. Doug Berry
added his second extra point of
the day and the score stood at
14-6. Meszaros ' return broke the
old BSC mark of 99 yards, which
he set last year against the
same team. Shippensburg
scored again before the half , on
a Tim Ebersole to Ed Noon 6
yard pass, but again failed on
the conversion and the Huskies
held a 14-12 lead at the intermission .
Berry 's 35 yard field goal in
the third quarter added to the
lead before SSC scored three
times in the quarter , and once in
the final stanza to make the
final score 38-17 . Ebersole
threw, for 296 yards and two
touchdowns, and Friese gained
83 yards rushing while scoring
three times. For the day, the
Raiders gained 308 yards
passing and 298 yards rushing,
for the school record of 606
yards in total offense. Against
the tough SSC defense,
Bloomsburg only managed a
total offensive output of 130
yards.
This loss, combined with a
season opening 35-0 defeat at
Ithaca, dropped BSC to 0-2.
Lock Haven opened the
campaign with a hard fought 7-0
victory at Lycoming last
Saturday. The teams battled to
a scoreless tie after one half of
play. The Bald Eagles finally
put the lone score Of the day on
the board after an interception
by defensive back Lance
Lehner . On the next play,
sophomore quarterback Ben
Pavalko tossed a 33 yard touchdown pass to wide receiver
Bobby Lynn, who made a
spectacular one handed grab in
the endzone for the touchdown.
A highly touted defense kept
Lycoming out of the Lock
Haven endzone despite several
»
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t
¦
have the task of protecting
quarterback Pavalko. The
signal caller completed 50 of 113
passes for 713 yards and eight
touchdowns last year. The
return of 1979 All-PSAC
selection wide receiver Lynn , a
junior who missed the 1980
campaign because of injuries
scoring opportunities by the
Warriors. The Bald Eagle effor t
was aided by two interceptions,
two fumble recoveries (including one on the LHSC four
yard line) , and four quarterback sacks.
Lock Haven 's defense is
headed by a veteran recordbreaking secondary, which
picked off 29 passes in 1980.
Seniors Tony Garzione and
Dave Zielinskie join Lehner in
the defensive . backfield. The
threesome combined for 16
interceptions a year ago ' and
Zielinskie and Garzione were
named to the All-PSAC western
division team .
All PSAC choice Tony Tillar,
who contributed 103 tackles last
season, and the team's leading
tackier with 128, Carl Dean,
lead the linebacking corps.
The defensive line is anchored
by ends Dave Price, a senior,
and junior Brian Sekerak.
Defensively, the Bald Eagles
allowed only 10.5 points per
game last season .
Sekerak doubles as the punter
and was named to the All-PSAC
western division team while
averaging 39.3 yards per kick in
71 attempts.
The offensive unit returns five
starters on the line, which will
...,
•
For All Education Majors
(near the State Store)
•
Tacos
Hot Dogs
Clam
Chowder
Munchies
: ^fe , N .
! S^Nj^x.
\J^SK^
^S/^ifc
--^ :
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COLLEGE POETRY REVIEW ]
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November s
ANY STUDENT attending either junior or senior college is eligible to submit
his verse. There is no limitation as to form or theme. Shorter works are pre*
ferred because of space limitations.
Each poem must be TYPED or PRINTED on a separate sheet, and must
bear the NAME and HOME ADDRESS of the student, and the COLLEGE
ADDRESS as well.
'
MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the OFFICE OF THE PRESS.
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Box 218
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NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
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Agoura, Ca. 91301
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The closing date for the submission of manuscripts by College Students is j
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The NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
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(Early Child, EL Ed., Sp. Ed. ,
Bus. Ed., See. Ed. , etc.) j gK i^^V
^v
ww V W W V V V V W W V V V V V W V V V V V V W V V V V V VVVVVVVV VV VVVVV v v w w v v v v w v v v v v v e,
r *V V V * V W VV vww ^ww v w » » v w w
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HUSKY HANDOFF. BSC signal-caller Kurt Werkheiser
gives the ball to runnlngback Clayton Work during
last week's game.
(Photo by Patrick J. Murphy)
•
International Dogs
*
suffered in a motorcycle accident, will enhance the^passing
game. .
/
Lock Haven won last jjnear's
meeting in Redman Stadii|m by
a 16-6 count and now leads the
series with 30 wins .to the
Huskies' 25 victories. There
)
have been three ties.
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PA State Education Association
•Professional Publications
liability Ins urance f or
Student Teachers
•Speakers on Current
Ed. Trends K
•A chance to meet others
in the f ield.
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Organizational Meeting;
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TuesM Sept. 22 - 7:00
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KUBrMuiti-Rrn . A
BY DEB BERKEY
At Tuesday night's Executive
CGA meeting, topics such as
campus elections and concert
losses were discussed.
Elections for Coljege Council,
Representative Assembly, and
Freshman class officers will be
held September- 21 and 22.
Petitions are available at the
information desk and are due
today by 4 p.m. On campus
vote in the
students may
at meal
hours. Off
^Commons
/campus students may vote in
;kehr Union from 11 a.m. to 4
p.m.
'
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;- .
) Another topic discussed at the
meeting was the turnout at the
Ian Hunter-Gary US Bonds
concert held Thursday, Sept. 10.
CGA allows a budget loss of
. $16,500 per year for a total of
four concerts. At the recent
...elections for College Council,
Representative Assembly, and
Freshman class officers will
be held September 21 and
22...
concert, the loss was $11,000.
According to CGA president
Karen Chawaga, this may hurt
the quality of future concerts.
Volunteer Fair Offers
Opportunity and Growth
Now . that you have experienced the academic atmosphere of BSC, why not
expand your knowledge to include things other than classes,
reading, laboratories and
exams?
A VOLUNTEER FAIR WILL
BE HELD ON TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 22', 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. AT KEHR UNION. It is
being sponsored by the Office of
Student Activities.
-As individuals, we all possess
special talents. Opportunities
for growth, both academically
and socially/, exist by using
these talents in helping
members .. of the Bloomsburg
community. In addition to the
personal satisfaction gained by
helping others , volunteers will
realize other benefits such as
career experience, a chance to
meet new people and expand
interests, and a better community image.
A job description booklet
listing agencies in need of
volunteers, within walking
distance of BSC , will be
available on the 22nd. If you
Ballet Cours e
Comes to
BSC Students
A non-credit mini-course m
Ballet for Children and Adults
will be offered this fall at
Bloomsburg Sitate College
through the Office of Extended
Programs.
,. , The course will be held on
Saturdays beginning on Sep£,tenjber 26 and will run through
Slay 1982. Two times are
available, 11:00 -12:00 and 12:00
iJtj OO. The instructor is MarCella Stella of Scranton .
Students will be instructed in
classical technique stressing
alignment ,
proper body
and
classical
positions ,
movements. The course is
designed and instructed to
accommodate the proficiences
of - ther- participant while encouraging correction and artistic growth .7
The dancer with experience in
ballet will be offered sj?ecjaj
classes. Interested persons can
contact the BSC Office of
Extended Programs afi .309-3300^
have the interests and talents
that they need, why not come
meet them? This type of
community service will benefit
you as well as the volunteer
agencies !
—
The following agencies from
the Bloomsburg area will be
participating in the volunteer
fair :
1. Area Agency on Aging
2. Bloomsburg Hospital
3. American Cancer Society
¦ ¦.' ..• .
•4. Easter Seals
5. Children's Services
6. Emergency Management
7. Columbia Day Care
Program , Inc.
8. American
Diabetic
Association
9. Family Planning Services
10.
11.
Home
12.
PA State Health Centers
Columbia-Montour
Health Services
Juvenile Probation
13. American Red Cross
• 14. American Association of
Retired Persons
15. S o c i a l
Security
Administration
16. Conservation District of
Columbia County
17. Suncom Industries
18. Telephone Access Progrm
(TAP-LINE). ¦ ¦: " •
19. United Way, Inc. of
Columbia County
20. Women 's Center
21. M e n t a l
Health
Association of Columbia County
Public
22. Bloomsburg
Library
23. Bloomsburg Area School:
District
24. C o m m u n i t y Friends;
School
I
25. Magic Carpet Pre-School
26. Maple Crest Nursingl
Home, Inc.
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27. Volunteer .Recycling
28. Boy Scouts
29. Girl Scouts
30. Bloomsburg Volunteer
Ambulance Association
31. Federal Soil Conservation :
Service
32. Susquehanna
Humani
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Services. ¦;¦ , ¦. • . , . , ,, :; ' , , ",' ... • .
5HB8»> '-. . ' ".
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SORORITY RUSH BEGAN this week with over 94 rushees signing up in the
Presidents' Lounge. Here, Beth Childe and ' Mary Jaques greet rushees with
a big smile.
(Photo by Nancy Schaadt)
Board of Trustees Approves
Personnel Changes, Outside Relations
Institutional ^ advancement
and external relations will be
given increased emphasis at
Bloomsburg State College
through changes in . the administrative organizational
structure endorsed by the
college's Board of Trustees last
week.
Planning and development,
public relations, alumni affairs ,
institutional research and affirmative action - desegregation
will be assigned to the
Executive
Director
of
Institutional Advancement in
the Office of the President.
These functions have been in
General Administration or the
Office of the President and are
being brought together to
provide coordination of all
external relations and institutional advancement efforts.
BSC President Dr. James H.
McCormick explained that the
revisions are intended to improve further the college 's
continuing efforts to respond to
changing needs of the institution and the individuals it
serves. He said the changes,
which will be implemented
during the Spring semester,
were agreed upon following
discussions and consultations
instigated early this year.
The Director of Planning and
Development
will
have
responsibilities for the college 's
long-range planning and the
development
of
nonCommonwealth funding
sources. The position will
replace that of the Director of
Grants, currently filled on an
interim basis by Peggy O.
Bailey ,
following
the
resignation of the director
earlier this summer. Planning
leadership has been provided by
Dr. Lee C. Hopple, a faculty
member on a half-time
assignment since 1973 when the
Planning Commission was
established. Dr. Hopple is a
Professor in the Department of
Geography, Earth Science and
Geology.
The changes will become
effective following
Vice
President for Administration
Boyd
F.
Buckingham 's
retirement on December 25.
Responsibilities for personnel,
physical plant, safety and law
enforcement , the computer
center, administrative services , ,
and comptroller will remain in
General Administration.
Dr. Frank S. Davis, assistant,
vice president
for
administration , is serving on a
temporary assignment as
associate vice president for
academic affairs for the Fall
semester. His former position is
being filled by Paul L. Conard ,
director of administrative
services , and Director of
Budget Donald E. Hock is
serving as director of administrative services. These
administrative changes will
terminate when Vice President
(Continued on Pag* 4)
Husky Singe rs Continue to Grow
HUSKY SINGERS HAVE 41
MY HICK DILIBERTO
BSC's male choral group, the
Husky Singers, are enjoying
perhaps the most successful
year in the history of the
organization . The first semester
enrollment of forty-one men is
"the most we've had since I can
remember," according to Dr.
William K. Decker, advisor and
conductor of the group;
The group consists of men
from' the ' College community
who have an interest in singing
and music. No prior musical
knowledge is required . While a
few of the members are music
majors, the great majority of
the group represents nearly
every other , major , including
accounting, ' mass
communications , elementary
education , business, and
chemistry .
The officers of the group are
Hick DiLiberto, president, Jeff
Wilcox, • ' , vice-president,' , Gregg
Gianuzzi , secretary, Randy
Beaver, treasurer, and Scott
Righter, librarian.
Anyone interested in participating in the group should
contact Dr. Decker at 389-3107 ,
or go to Haas Center for the
Arts . The group
meets
Tuesdays and Thursdays, from
2-3 p.m.
Dr. Decker will unveil the
group in their first show this
year at the Homecoming Pops
Concert on Oct; 11.
"BLOOM COU1VTY
With Style
¦.
v / / ^¦ \ V- .by-Heirf«-Bi(wtIi^
by Bob Sti les
Americans have an obsession for labels. They gladly
pay $30 or more for jeans so that they can have
the words "Jordache " and "Sasoon" written on their
"
bottoms. They buy certain shirts — not because the
shirt might be the best made shirt of its type, but
because they want to have alligators and foxes displayed on their chests. In short, Americans want the
"look" as on advertiser calls it.
But there is one particular " group in America which
has always wanted the "look" , (pennyloafers and jeans
in the past.) It is to this group which advertisers —
the people who help tell us what is fashionable —
direct their commercials. This group is the 14-25 age
group.
The advertisers have two strong reasons for their
emphasis on this age group: one, this group possesses
the largest disposable income in the nation , and two,
it is this age group which cares most about what their
peers think about them—in this case, how they dress.
Wearing the same types of clothes makes acceptance
by others much easier. Subconsciously, some even seem
to form their own little circle where the only requirement for admittance is that every one looks much
the same.
In itself , this willingness to buy higher priced products
when there are cheaper priced goods of near or equal
quality already on the market , just shows to what
extent people will go to be . accepted by their peers .
In actuality, the purchasing of these higher priced
goods is probably of little consequence; there is no
apparent harm.
However , it can be harmful when this group begins
to judge others by how they dress. When this happens ,
something of importance is lost: individuality.
And ail this time , the manufacturers and advertisers
sit back and rake in the dough.
ft
No Gripes with "Stripes"
By RICK DiLIBERTO
A film currently playing
downtown at the Twin Capitol
Theatre is leaving its "stripes of
laughter " on the ribs of BSC
students. Yes , the long awaited
Bill Murray comedy, Stripes,
has arrived in town with a roar
similar to that of Army tank.
After so-so performances in
Meatballs , and Where the
Buffalo Roam , he puts his
sensational comedy process to
work in this film.
Director Ivan Ritman sets the
scene with Murray as a
sometimes - working cab driver ,
looking for a future and sense of
responsibility, or, as the poster
advertisement puts it , "a
chance to keep the world safe
for democracy, and meet
girls. " After losing his
girlfriend and job , Murray
decides to join the army with a
buddy. Upon arriving the first
day, he realizes that army life is
not quite as glamorous as the
TV ads make it seem. He introduces himself to his peers at
bootcamp as a man who women
can 't resist, mostly "because I
don't wear underwear, and
when I do , it' s usually
something really wild." He
meets one of his fellow enlistees
named Francis, but referred to
as "Psycho." He makes it clear
that anyone who calls him
"Francis," or touches him , or
touches his stuff will be killed. A
pleasant greeting ....
Murray wins the respect of
his peers when they are
awakened at dawn for a fivemile run , and he says, "I think I
speak for the whole group when
I suggest that "this run be postponed until we are fur ther
rested." The sergeant then
increases the run to ten miles.
John Candy, the new sensation of Second City TV and
Network 90, also spices the film
with his performance as "Ox."
Incidentally, he joined the army
to lose weight rather than pay to
lose it through an exercise
class.
The film progresses through a
futile basic training for the
group until the night before
change. Among the issues will
be: the raising and slaughtering
of animals for food , the use of
animals in research and testing,
the destruction of wildlife, and
pet overpopulation. Tactics to
be
discussed
include :
organizing, research and
documentation , media liaison ,
lobbying,
boycotts ,
and
demonstra tions. Several task
forces and a coordinating
structure will be formed to
carry on the work beyond the
Conference.
Movement
speakers, orientation sessions,
free discussion , and light entertainment will round out the
three-day program.
The
setting
for
the
Mobilization Conference will be
the Francis Scott Key Lodge in
Ocean City, MD. Costs of
registration ($35) and of accommodations
are , very
modest. Transportation from
Washington will be provided on
request. All inquiries should be
directed to the Animal Rights
Network , P.O. Box 5234 ,
Westport , CT 06881.
Sincerely yours ,
Doug Moss,
Coordinator
Mobilization for
^
Animal Rights
to have a winning season this
year. One very important thing,
however, is stopping the team
from beating the opponent - lack
of student support.
As I looked around the stand
at Saturday 's game t saw only
band members, cheerleaders,
and a few other people
cheering. Where was your
school spirit? Even if the team
was losing by a few points, we
should have cheered even
more; we should have shown
the players that we care.
Our cheerleaders and the
band need support from
everyone to cheer for the
players. Instead of students
being apathetic, we should be
proud of Coach Boler and his
team. We can have a winning
season with student support!
Cindy Herzog
President M&G Band
Letters to the Edi toi
AnimalRights
Dear Editor:
Your readers will be interested in learning that hundreds of students and other
individuals dedicated to advancing
animal
rights ,
vegetarian , and other lifeenhancing objectives will be
gathering on October 10-12 in
Ocean City, Maryland , to
establish task forces and a
coordinating structure for
grass-roots action. Mobilization
for Animal Rights: Conference
'81 represents a cooperative
effort of over 30 animal rights
and vegetarian organizations ,
including the American AntiVivisection Society , American
Association for Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals , Animal
Protection Institute , Animal
Rights Network , the Fund for
Animals , National
AntiVivisection Society, Vegetarian
Information Service , and
Vegetarian Times.
The program will provide
workshops dealing both with
animal rights issues and with
tactics for promoting social
THE CAMPUS VOICE
Bloomiburg Stoto College, Blobmtburg, PA 17815 Box 97 KUB 309-3101
VOL. LX „ 4
N
Executive Editor
Ad Manager.....- _. : 111
Now* Editor
Foaturo Editor
Sports Editor
Sports Ant.
Photo Supervisor
Business Manager
Advisor
Roberta Clomons
Brian Dyart
Brondo
Friday
.
Virginia Rood
Kovln Kodlsh
¦
. .. . . . . . . . .'.. Joff Brown
Pat Murphy
Karon Troy
Richard
Savago
•••
The Vole* U governed by the Idltorial toard with the final reiponilbllty for all
material ratting with the executive editor ai ttated In the Joint Statement of
Freedom, ftlghtt and Responsibilities of student! at BSC.
The Voice reserves the right to edit all letter* and copy submitted. A maximum
of 400 word* will be placed on all letter* to the editor with an allowance
for exception*. All letter* muit be signed and have an addrei* and phone
number. Name* will be withheld upon request.
The opinion* voiced In the column*, artlcl** and notlcei are not necessarily
shared by the entire staff. An unslgnsd staff editorial denote* a major
consensu* of the editorial board.
Football Support
To the Editor:
Those studen ts who attended
the Bloomsburg vs. Shippensburg football game know
that .our team has, the*potential
inspection , when they realize
their deficiencies and decide^ to
"train themselves." They do
this successfully to music and
due to their "spunk," and arej
chosen by a general to guard a
secret army weapon.
This leads to adventures
which decorum prohibits this
writer, from mentioning here,
but are hilarious anyway.
Anyone needing a good laugh
at army humor should march
right down to the Twin Capitol
Theatre to see Stripes.
Jamboree
Schedule
Saturday
September 19
A fun-filled day is planned to
entertain both - the local and
college communities. The
jamboree begins at 11a.m. .and
lasts until 5 p.m. on September
19. Crafts and entertainment
will be featured throughout the
day , and everyone is invited to
attend. As is customary, the
jamboree will take place on the
lawns outside of the Kehr
College Union. In case of rain ,
all events will be moved into the
Union facility . Don't miss it!!
OPEN MIKE
11 a.m. - Noon — A , talent
show hosted by Dave Murphy is
sure to be a hit , as Bloomsburg
State College welcomes you
with a multi-attraction show.
JOHN MANION
John is a blossoming, young
singer
songwriter
from
Jackson , N.J. Along with his
rock n ' roll originals. John also
includes interpretations of other
songwriters , such as Steve
Forbert and James Taylor , who
are major influences on him.
John plays both guitar and
piano.
ROLLY BROWN
1:15-2:15 p.m. — If you enjoyed^ !•
Roily last night at the Cdf*«<>
feehouse, you 'll like him ev$P ia
more at the Fall Jamboree. !«l ni
¦ ¦'.'•'
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BOB DOYLE AND ,
nr
THE ALLEGHENY ^
, vi7 :
STRING BAND
.' ;.. •,,,<,;,
Bob Doyle on guitar. Ta4, , .
Marks on fiddle , Rick Lytic on
banjo. Dennis Ricker :"on i
mandolin and Arch Warhock oh
bass compose this , kneeslapping bluegrass band. The
originality of the band rcfists in
the fact that their material in
many cases is so old that it.
remains brand new especially
to young people. Also, be ready
to put on your dancin * shoos and
hop to some square dancing
tunes'.- ' . • .V.7. ' .'. ' 7
. ...
Get Involved at BSC!
BY KATHY WALSH ¦_;
College
is
commonly
described as the time and place
to broaden your horizons. This
learning and growing process
does not only pertain to
classroom studies. It also takes
place-by way of involving one
self in student organizations.
The questions" one should ask
are "How can I become involved?" and "what activities
and associations are open to
me?" The first step is to consult
the pilot and-or stop in the
secretarial office of Student
Activities in the KtJB to pick up
the listing of over 100
organizations .here at BSC. By
CAS
consulting
these
two
publications, a group or activity
may catch your attention.
What to do then? Don't make
it a deadend thought. Most
organizations
post
announcements of scheduled
meetings on the bulletin boards
which are scattered all around
BSC dormitories and classroom
buildings. Many organizations
actually try to recruit members, such
as the Campus Voice,
1
which did so in their first fall
edition . Involvement in intramural sports begins with just
a simple signature on a team
roster (found in most residence
hall wings). Fraternities and
News Brief s
New Staff Appointments
Made
HARRISBURG — Three
appointments to the Commonwealth Association of
Students (CAS ) staff in
Harrisburg are announced by
president Sandi Johnson.
Joyce Cheepudom, formerly
of Denver, Colo., has been
appointed executive director of
the association, which serves as
a lobbying group for Pennsylvania's state-owned colleges
and university. Ms. Cheepudom
has served as the director of
development for the United
States Student Association in
Washington , DC.
A graduate of York College,
she majored in elementary
education and served as vice
president of the Student Pennsylvania State Education
Association.
"CAS will -be involving
students in fighting for their
rights and helping them gain
access to quality education in
Pennsylvania at the lowest
price," she said recently .
As executive director , she will
for \ adbe responsible
ministering and executing
office policy, and will serve as
liason with state agencies involved in education . She also
will serve as a liason with
national and state student
groups and will disseminate
information from those groups.
Brenda ' Burd, a native of
Reading, has been appointed
legislative director for the
association . A graduate of
Dickinson College, she majored
in political science with a minor
in psychology. Ms. Burd served
an internship with the Pennsylvania House of Reprensentatives Consumer Affairs
Committee and also had an
internship with the Cumberland
County Commissioners.
Her responsibilities include
lobbying in the state capital to
show students' views on bills,
and to persuade legislators to
vote favoring students.
Barbara Fahey, a native of
Taylor, has been appointed
public relations director . A
graduate of Bloomsburg State
College , she earned her
bachelor 's degree in English.
Ms. Fahey formerly was employed as a bureau reporter
with the Scranton TimesSunday Times.
She will be repsonsible for
maintaining state-wide and
campus media relations for the
association.
Ms. Johnson also announced
that Connie Sloan, a student at
Slippery Rock State College,
has been granted an internship
with CAS for the fall semester.
Ms. Sloan, is secretary to the
CAS executive board and is
majoring in business administration
and
public
relations. She will assist the
staff with organizing and public
relations work.
sororities are now holding
public meetings in order to brief
any interested student;
For those of you who haven't
found that "something " you 've
been searching for , you just
may decide to initiate your own
group. This can be done by
merely stopping in the Student
Activities office to obtain the
necessary forms. Just keep
your eyes arid ears open to all
that is happening in the BSC
community and get involved!
Since the accident of May 17,
1981, when a CGA car was
unofficially used , there have
been important changes in the
procedure for acquiring CGA
vehicles.
In the past, the procedure was
for the student employees to go
to the information desk and sign
out the vehicles from maintenance. Now they must go to
could be held responsible for the
accident. The system itself was
inefficien t, and thus the system
was really to blame. "
Azar also commented that the
student employees in charge of
maintenance overall are very
responsible and mature enough
to carry out their duties efficiently.
If there are any questions
about the CGA vehicles or the
process of acquiring one ,
contact
the
Community
Activities Office.
...the system itself was inefficient, and thus the system was really to blame..."
the Community Activities office, to acquire a vehicle. The
Community Activities office has
now , taken over the entire
operation .
Mike Azar, Comptroller for
BSC, now oversees the entire
operation from signing out to
signing in. He commented "I
don't think anyone involved
with the previous process ( Info
desk, Community Activities)
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tified BSC student got his legs
caught between his car and the
wall of an apartment building
located behind Elwell Hall to
the rear of the rescuers home.
The victim, according to Miss
Conway; was trying to start his
car, while the gears were in
neutral. While he was in front of
the car, the vehicle slipped and
rolled down an incline, pinning
his legs to the wall.
According to the rescuers, the
unidentified victim began
screaming desperately for help.
The girls ran from their second
floor apartment bedrooms in
their pajamas and pushed the
car up the hill just enough to
release the trapped man 's legs.
Miss Hughes commented, "I
thought I was dreaming."
Thanks to the efforts of three
BSC seniors, a BSC student
escaped serious injury early
Mon. morning when his legs
became lodged between his car
arid the cement wall of a
building.
Mari Conway, Deb Shultz and
Kathy Hughes were sleeping in
their house on E. 3rd St., when a
call for help wakened ' them at
approximately 1:15 a.m.,
Monday morning. An uniden-
Vehicle Sign-Out
Policies Change
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Rescued by BSC Seniors
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at9:00 p.m. in
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Trustees Emphasize Institutional Advancemei*t
(Continued from Pag* 1)
Buckingham retires, and Dr.
Davis will assume the duties of
interim vice president for administration until a search is
completed and a permanent
appointment is made. Mr.
Conard and Mr. Hock will
return to their former positions,
and the position of assistant
vice . president for administration will be assigned to
the Office of the President for
reclassification as "assistant to
the president."
The quarterly meeting: of the
Board of Trustees also approved the retirement request
of Dr. Tobias Scarpino and the
appointment of nine new faculty
members for the 1981-82
academic year.
Dr. Scarpino, a native of
PREGNANT?
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ALLENTOWN
WOMEN'S CENTER
215-264 5657
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Shenandoah , came to Bloomsburg in 1958 after teaching four
years at Millcreek Township
High School , Newmanstown. He
will retire at the end of the first
semester of the 1981-82 college
year , completing twenty-seven
years in the field of education,
twenty-three of which were at
Bloomsburg State College. He is
a professor of physics.
Scarpino received
his
Bachelor of Science degree in
Education from Kutztowh State
College in 1940, his Master of
Science degree in Education
from Bucknell University in
1955, and his Doctorate in
Education from Penn State
University in 1971.
Dr. Scrapino has enjoyed an
excellent rapport with;- liis
students^ Most recently he has
been involved in teaching
physics
for ¦ medical
technologists and other science
majors, as well as physical
science: for elementary majors
and non-science students.
He has ^ served on many
college committees including
that of Graduate Council and
the Advisory Committee to the
Learning Resources Center and
the college-wide Merit . Committee, along with serving on
several departmental com-
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Dr. James McCormlck explained thai the revisions
are to Improve efforts
The appointments include :
Dr. ¦' Mary" , K. . Badahw-of
Shorewood , Wisconsin as
Assistant Professor of Speech,
Mass Communication , and
Theatre: She had been an
Assistant Professor at the
University of Wisconsin.
Dr. P. James Moser of
Vienna, Virginia, as Assistant
Professor of Physics. He has
been an analyst with the United
States
Government
in
Washington.
Dr. Edward Poostay of
Lincoln, Nebraska , as Associate
Professor of Reading. He has
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been an Assistant Professor at
the University of Nebraska.
Sandra G. Richardson of
Bloomsburg as Assistant
Professor of Nursing. She. was
Associate
formerly
an
Professor at Wor-Wic Tech
Community College, Cambridge, Maryland.
Appointed as , instructors of
Nursing were : Judith K.
Gaudiano of Danville, formerly
an instructor at the Geisinger
School of Nursing: Helen' R.
Robertson of Rowayton, Connecticut, an Executive Director
of the Greenwich Health
Greenwich ,
Association ,
Connecticut ; Christine Santangelo of Upper Darby, a staff
nurse at St. Christopher 's
Hospital for Children in
Philadelphia; Barbara
Synowrey'bf Danville, a staff
nurse at Geisinger Medical
Center ; Patricia Torsella of
Berwick, a Staff Development
Instructor at the Selinsgrove
Center .
In other personnel action, the
Board
approved
the
retirements of the following
non-instructional employees:
Homer H. Beaver, grbundskeeper supervisor, effective
July .24, i981, with 14 years
service at BSC; Jane S. Brbbst,
mittees, some of which he
chaired as senior member of . the
department. He has been deeply
involved each year ¦:• with
Physical Science Day for high
school students.
Dr. Scrapino has been supportive of community services,
having given talks on. Lasers
and Bubbles to the Rotary and
Torch Clubs. He has judged
science exhibits at the
Bloomsburg Fair and the Junior
Academy of Science.
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Thursday Sept. 24 Kuster
E '10>
Aud. (HSC) 9.00 p.m. Re- ' H|M|i^S^i
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freshmenfs and rides to oor , 9^
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house will follow
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Hall for the period of Augustus, ¦,' ' 1.,
1981 throujgh May is, 198:2. He is ,'< v .^\
a former juni qr high .school . , ,
teacher in the Central /Bucks .' .7,,";
School District, poylestowrii He .,
replaces Joseph A. DeMelfi , ; \
Dr. Frank S. Davis Is seroh a Temporary
ving
Asslgmerit.
who was appointed Assistant
Director of Financial Aid for the
' '¦•r ' ;
same time period.
William A. Proudman of
Henryyille, PA, as Director ipf
Outdoor Experiential -Learning
for a 12. month appointment
beginning July 25, 1981. He is a
former Outward Bound School
Instructor and replaces Ms.
Carolyn Birmingham who
resigned effective July.24, 1981.
Michael E. Sowash as
Assistant Dean of Student Life
in Luzerne Residence Hall for
the period of August 24, 1981
Scrapin o
received
his
Bachelor of Science Degree in Education.
through May 28, 1982. He is a
former Assistant Director of
Student Activities in Kehr
Union and replaces George
Kirlin, who transferred to ' a
position in the Office of Budget
and Administration in the
Governor 's Office effective
June 27, 1981.
Ms. Carol A. Barnett , formerly Assistant Director of
Financial Aid at BSC, has been
appointed Assistant Director of
Placement, effective August 22;
1981.
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custodial worker, effectiye July v^ ;.
10,. 1981, with 16 years 9 months y service; Elizabeth C. Brooking, .. >
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clerical supervisor II, effectivev .' .£¦
July 24, 1981, with 18 years 3 ;
,
months service, and Eleanor
Devanney , custodiar worker, ,
effective July 10, 1981, with l?, r ;n5
years 3,months service. ; .-., 5 ,.., .
review
and .^
Following
recommending procedures^.,, ,
involving State College :.J^ 'mi)
University ,. Admihistra, tipn ^ \
appointments, the following „ (>;
^ ri:
individuals • were. ^approved 4$bzsu
appointment J beginning, as Jf rf awoi
cheated :
m a -yMichael J. Ford of West¦Jslip^'^."••." ¦
New York,, in the capacity ^6f ,^.;",
Assistant Dean of Student^Lue^ .^,
in Northumberland Residence ,(,1, 1
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Women s
Center-:%:
Schedule
schedule a Women 's Center
presentation , call 784-1656, or
572-5701.
The Women's Center's fall
schedule " of? support groups,
open to all women of Columbia,
Montour; Northumberlandisand
as
lower Luzerne counties^
follows :^
Mondays — Mothers' Sharing
Bloomsburg 10 a.m. - noon ;
Midlife ^ansitioh Bloomsburg
7:30 p.rSf^ 9;30 p.m.,.
Tuesdays1 •— ' Abuse Victims'
Growth"Btoomsburg 7:30 p.irii 9:30 p.m. . . ,
Wednesdays — Mothers'
Sharing -Berwick 10:36 a.m. noon ; Cbhscioushess - Raising
Bloomsburg 7:io p.m. - 9:30
p.m.; Consciousness - Raising
Berwick ' 7:00 pin. - 9':00 p.m.;
Divorced and ".'Separated
Bloomsburg 10 a.m. - noon.
Also, the Wonien's Center; as
part of its outreach ' services,
provides speakers * on • domestic
violence and the work of the
Center. There is a slide-tape
program on battered women
that is available for showing as
part of the Women's Center's
representative's presentation.
For more information about
any of the support groups, or to
Jewish
Holiday
Observed
Common Meal Schedule
SUNDAY
Brunch .
Omelette
¦
French Toast - .
Fried Eggs .
Frizzled Ham on Roll
Dinner =:
El Rancheros .
Roast Lamb with Gravy
MONDAY
Lunch
Meatball Hoagie Hot Turkey Sandwich !
Dinner
Veal Cutlet Parmigiano
Pried Filet of Fish i < ;
The following is a schedule of
services for the H igh Holy Days
for the year of 5742, to be held at
the Ohey Shalom Synagogue,
Vine Streetj Berwick. ( Off
Third Street).
Services this year will .. be
conducted by Rabbi .. Reuben
Greenwald' and will be open to
TUESDAY
all . members of, the Jewish
Lunch
Community.
Rosh Hashanah .will i commence on September 28,
Monday evening at 7 P.M.:
September 29, Tuesday mor:
The ninth, annual Lewisburg
ning services at . 9:30 A.M ,;
Tuesday evening services at 7 . , Craft Fair will be held on
October ,2, 3, and 4 in the
P.M.: Septeniber ; 30, WedLewisburg Armory building,
nesday morning services at 9:30
one mile south of Lewisburg,
A.M.
Pennsylvania, on U.S. Route 15.
Yom Kippur will be on
Wednesday, October 7, starting ,.' . Amid Central Pennsylvania 's
autumn splendor , oyer . 75.
at 6:30 P.M. Kbl Nidre services.
professional craftspeople and
October 8, services at 9:30
artists will gather from a sixA^M. Yizkor services at 11 A.M.
state area to exhibit, demon(Break period l P.M. -5P.M.);
strate, and sell their handmade
Neilah services beginning at 5
creations
. Many new. par r
P.M.
Bar-B-Q Chicken
Country Style Steak
FRIDAY . '
Lunch
"¦•;" ;' Eggburger
Beef Noodle Casserole
Dinner
Cubed Steak with Gravy
Baked Lasagna , ; ¦ ' ¦:
WEDNESDAY
Lunch
•; ¦'
Italian Hoagie
Grilled Ham and Cheese
•'
Dinner
Baked Pork Chops
Chicken Chow; Mein -
Beef Bar-B-Q on Roll
Tuna Noodle Casserole
'*'*'
Dinner :
SATURDAY ; J
':
Brunch ;
Scrambled Eggs
Assorted Cold Cuts
Hot Dog on Roll
;
Dinner ';^' - ;::-'- '. '- ' :
Baked .Meat Loaf
Pizza ""'
ticipants . ; will join favorite
exhibitorsT from, previous years
to offer an .array of unique
crafts and, art "in the .following
media categories gunsmithing,
c o r ns h u c k e r y , designer
fahsions, potpourri, patchwork,
paper cutting, .wheat weaving,
etched eggs, briar pipes,
stained glass sculptures, lamps;
and frames; tole painting, rag
dried
flower
rugs,
arrangements, wooden toys ,
artistic carvings, and functional
pieces ; ' fiber * weavings,
macrame, leather items, clay
sculpture, dough figures ,
paintings , watercolors ,
d raw in g s, p h bio g r a ptiy,
Raggedy Ann and porcelain
dolls; candles, Christmas ornaments, silver, pewter, coin,
and mixed-metal jewjelry, and
an exquisite collection of . fine
stoneware, porcelain , and
,
pottery.
_ _
Hours for the 1981 LeSyisburg
Craft Fair are TFriday, October
2,' l p.m. to 9 p:mi; Saturday,
October 3, 10a.m. to9p.m.; and
Sunday, October 4, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. general admission is $1.50
for adults and $.50 for children
under" 12. Parking is free;
THURSDAY
;I
¦¦
Lunch •'• - •' "'- '•
Graft Fair. OcC2, 3. 4
collegiate camouflage
Can you\ find the hidden
college ..courses? ,
ACCOUNTING
:-¦ ANATOMY
A ANTHROPOLOGY
'ART ;
BlO-SCi
BOTANY
CALCULUS
CHEMISTRY
DANCE
ECONOMICS
FINANCE
GEOLOGY
HISTORY
LAW
LINGUISTICS
LITERATURE LOGIC
MATH
MUSIC
/ PHYSICS
PSYCHOLOGY
RELIGION
• RUSSIAN
SPANISH
.
SPEECH
THEATRE
ZOOLOGY
Answers on Page 2
BEGINNER OR ADVANCE D - Cost Is about the same as a
semester In a U,S. college: $2,089. Price deludes jet round
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complete, Government'grants and loans citable for eligible
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Live^with o Spanish family, attend classes four hours- a day,'
four days a wook , four months, Earn 16 hrs, of credit (oqulvalant to 4 semesters-taught In U,S, colleges over a two
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Dinner
Baked Manicotti ;
Sauerbrauten
year time span). Your Spanish studies will be enhanced by
opportunities not available in a U.S. classroom. Standardizod tests show our students ' language "skills superior to
students completing two.year programs in U.S.
FULLY ACCREDITE D •
A program of Trinity Christian College,
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SEMESTER IN SPAIN
2442 E, Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506
(A Program of Trinity Christian College)
CA LL TO LL FREE for full information i-800-253-9008
(In Mich., or If toll free lino Inoperative call 1-616-942-2541 collect.)
tip StoreWide ^f i
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International I
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Kenwood 500 Grand Prix
¦
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Phone (717) 646-2300
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¦
Hello sports fans ! This issue
of the Voice marks the beginning of my own personal
column !
You can look for this feature
in every Friday's edition. I'm
going to try my hand at calling
several college football games
each week. I might not get
many correct , but you should
have fun looking at the matchups each week.
To go with my collegiate
forecasts, I will also list my top
fifteen teams in the country.
This year 's season should be
an interesting one. In the
opening week of action ,
Alabama
and
Michigan ,
Nebraska all tasted defeat.
Upsets are on the increase, and
look for the next few months to
be no different than last week.
Has anyone noticed Florida
State's schedule the next five
weeks? If you haven't, the
Seminoles' slate consists of
Rd. contests with Nebraska ,
Ohio State, Notre Dame, Pitt ,
and LSU.
FSU coach Bobby Bowden
had this to say about that
scheduling : "I'm not going to
worry about it.one bit. I knew
that schedule was here when I
took the job . Of course, I didn 't
know I'd be here that long."
If you're wondering what
game will be televised by ABC
television this week, it will be
the Notr e Dame-Michigan
battle from Ann Arbor. The
network has also announced
that the game between USC and
Oklahoma will be telecast Sept.
26.
Well, here goes with my first
week of forecasts :
GEORGIA AT CLEMSON:
national
defending
The
champion Bulldogs are off to a
great start , and Clemson won't
have quite enough to stop the
Walker express. Georgia will be
a 21-17 winner .
NOTRE
DAME
AT
MICHIGAN : This is a real clash
of the titans. These teams might
be the two best in the country.
The Irish cruised to a 27-9 win
over LSU last week, while the
Wolverines were stunned by
Wisconsin. Look for the
Michigan team to come out
fired up and score early. The
Wolverines will make the Irish
go home 24-20 losers.
GEORGIA
TECH
AT
FLORIDA : The Yellow Jackets
derailed the Crimson Tide last
week, but this time they will
play more on their level.
Florida , 32-13.
USC AT INDIANA : The
Trojans are a very good football
team. The home field advantage will be of no help to the
Hdosiers in this clash. USC will
fly home with an easy 38-10 win.
ALABAMA AT KENTUCKY :
It's too bad the Wildcats have to
play Bear Bryant's boys after
they lost ! Look out , Kentucky !
The Tide will roll by a 35-10
count.
MICHIGAN STATE AT OHIO
STATE : The Spartans don't
have a bad team this year. The
Buckeyes have a very good
team , though. Look for the
visitors to give OSU a good
battle the first half before
;V '' ;
succumbing 31-14.
STATE
AT
FLORIDA
NEBRASKA : The Seminoles
behind their road haul at Lincoln. The Cornhuskers will be
licking their chops this week.
Losses don 't make teams
happy, and Nebraska will be in
a foul humor because of last
week's game. Nebraska * will
come out a 21-16 victor ;*'t -s
PURDUE AT MINNESOTA.
The Boilermakers are: looiuhg
good , and the Gophers woW^t be
able to move the ball witfr'^ry
consistency. Purdue is - your
Winner , 24-6. .
The Rest: Arkansas 31 Northwestern 10; Cornell 14 Penn 10;
Missouri 28 Rice 9; Maryland 24
West Virginia 23; Miami 27
Houston 20; Iowa State 10 Iowa
7: UCLA 17 Wisconsin 13.
KEVIN'S TOP
FIFTEEN
1. NOTRE DAME
¦
. .;\ • ' .
. 2. USG
3. GEORGIA
4. OKLAHOMA
5. OHIO STATE
6. PENN STATE .
. 7. PITT
8. FLORIDA STATE
9. TEXAS
10. ALABAMA
_ ° !'
11. MICHIGAN
12. MIAMI (FLA)
13. NORTH CAROLINA
14. UCLA
15. NEBRASKA
';.. -
How could
I have
forgotten ? Bloomsburg 27
Lock. Haven 23!
Soccer Team Among Best in State
I
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BUKKS
CHEVROLETS
DATSUNS
MAZDAS
RENAULTS
Coming off its first rebuilding
season since 1977, the Bloomsburg State College soccer team
appears to be ready to return to
its spot among the leaders in the
Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference.
The graduation of three
outstanidng seniors creates a
void , which
Coach Lou
Mingrone, now in his seventh
year at the helm , will seek to fill
from a group of talented first
year players. Gone from a year
ago are tri-captains Toby Rank ,
a four time All-PSAC eastern
division selection, midfielder
Brian Farrell , and goalie . Greg
'
Malloch.
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I '
I Ghanujioii I
I
I
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i
:
Sparkplug I
Cnalletifie I
¦
The finest racing sedans foaturing familiar '
I
¦
makes
specially tuned .for the demands of the ' ¦
.
¦
toughest road race courses ,,, and competition ¦
¦
I sill *
!^H
CHAM
QI
' , . . .¦
SpMPin'sC6nipuny *Tbloclo , Of 1 4' Mil r'Hf'
I '
¦
¦ ¦ CIviiTipiph
V.il > mB * •
, , , ,
»
i
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:•
!
!
The boosters enter the season
with a six year mark of 48-27-3.
After four consecutive winning
seasons, BSC slipped to a record
of 5-12-1 in 1980, but in the
process, a young squad gained
valuable experience and is
anxious to rejoin other top notch
regional contenders in the
battle for a post season tournamen t berth .
Leading the list of returnees
Become Active
on the 1982 Obiter BSC's yearbook
We need students who can.;.
*P '
X rV* IS) '
just
wr e»
'% ' Q&: Wi'*
1
photograph,
rS
the answer
. ^^^^
or
Firs
A^^r^
phone. "
SSKT^^
t organizational
^
^
^p,
,
•
^^
Sttk
^^
~*
m eeting on
^Z^ ^%^
Wednesdayj Sept. 2$i at 7:30\p.m.
in the Qf oter Qffice <$#ff cor KVB)
\,
(
]
is junior Luke Sakalosky, who
was chosen to the All-PSAC
eastern division team along
with Rank last season. He also
was the team 's second leading
scorer a year ago with six goals.
Mingrone expects the midfielder "to lead the younger
players by exampl e and in the
process will be a great help to us
offensively. " Also returning are
backs Roger Stetler and Gary
Gallagher , who have been
chosen as the captains for this
year 's team . After contributing
four goals last season as a
freshman ,
striker
Fred
McCaffrey is also back fpr ' his
second season , as are Terry
Gross , Lou Mickley , and ' Steve
Whaley . Senior Ken '.N'eub'^
will move from halfbacTk1( , to
fullback to help bolster\pe
defense , while Rod Kpc^i, iyill
move into the goal w^e£e,^e 'll
battle with three others!
fo^|he
¦
... '" ' "' , ',„„.„ " .,
starting role;
Junior Bill Sypawka will add
experienced depth to the striker
position , while Jim Byrne, and
Mike Keller , both juniors , '.are
the base on which Mingrone will
build his midfiold .
"Wo will Htill be very 'young
compared to most of our < opponent , but Bkillwisc this is the
best, yroup I've ever had , "
c o m m e n t ed Mingrone , "The
Buys have boon working ' vony
hard aw a team and with all this
,
(Continued on Pago 7)
Linemen; Key Gear of Football Machine
By DAN LOUGHLIN \ v .
The trenches — that's where
the tough battles are fought.
This is the place where a
football team needs big, strong,
and aggressive offensive
»
linemen.
The offensive line has the
huge responsibility of creating
holes in the defensive line for
running; backs and protecting
the quarterback on pass plays.
Therefore , the success of
almogt every offensive play
depends^ on the performance of
'
"
•
t^f
t ' .¦• ¦ •
Moving up in any level of any
sport is challenging, to say the
least. But moving up to the
intercollegiate level from the
high school level requires not
only physical size and
toughness, but also maturity
and a sound knowledge of the
game's finer points. The latter
can only be acquired through
actual playing time in real
games, which leads us to that
old, familiar sports term experience.
Experience is a key word to
the offensive line of the
Bloomsburg State College
football team . As of right now,
the entire starting line consists
Hockey Team Finishes Second
by MARY . HASSENPLUG
The B.S.C. field hockey team
officially opened the season last
weekend with an exceptional
performance at the Trenton
Tournament. The Huskies
finished second with a 2-1
record for the weekend.
In the opening game, BSC
soundly defeated defending
champion Salisbury State by a
score of 2-0. The Huskies outshot Salisbury 16-12 in a very
well played game.
According to coach Hutchinson, "The Statistics were
basically even, but we played a
great defensive game. We
marked better in the circle than
we have all year." At the end of
the first half , Linda Turnbull
turned a pass , from Jane
Seislove into the initial goal.
Diane Imboden, at 14:30 of the
second half , assisted Turnbull
for "her second goal of the game.
The Huskies lost their second
game to eventual tournament
champions Trenton State, 2-0.
Bloomsburg outshot Trenton 9-7
in a defensive battle. The
majority of the game was
fought at midfield with Deb
Long, Joan Mahoney and
Jeanne Fetch carrying most of
the ball-handling duties.. Hut-
Announcements
"THE , TALL BLOND MAN WITH A
film with
BLACK SHOE;" French
In
color—Kuster
English^ubtltles
;
boarid 5:O0 p.m., SeptAudHorJumSi:
'
omDW ^WBl .' Required of all
s
OB
in French
stuaent8 regl8tered
courses .EveryoneWelcom e. Contri1
bution? Wibbi For furfher information cb'tttqct ' Dr. A. Foureman, Department ;'of Languages and Cul'
tures ,extension 2508.¦
¦
'
•¦ ,.i iiivv . V- - , ¦ ., ¦;
.-(. . .
. . -,
ALL GUYS' welcome at the Sigma
Iota' Omega rush meeting on Thurs.
Sept. 24 at 7:00 p.m. In Kuster
Aud.' (HSC)."GET OUT AND RUSH".
CGA COLLEGE COUNCIL and Rep
Aosembly petitions are available a*
the Info Desk. They are due today
by 4 p.m. Elections will bo hold
Mon. Sept.,21 and Tues., Sept. 22.
ATTENTION ALL ELEMENTARY AND
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
chinson was pleased with her
team 's performance, "It was a
very even game throughout.
Everyone did very well. Also,
Laurie Snyder did a great job in
the goal during- the weekend."
In the final game , BSC
trounced the University of
Scranton 2-1-. The Huskies
dominated the entire first half
by staying on the attack and
making numerous shots on goal.
Finally, with ten seconds left in
the half , Karen Nilson knocked
in the game 's first goal.
Scranton moved the ball
better in the second half , and
scored their only goal on a
penalty stroke past goalie
Kerry. Arnold.
The Huskies again took
control and continued to attack
the Scranton defense. With one
minute left .in the game, Jane
Seislove centered and knocked
in a goal with help from Polly
Dougherty. The statistics
clearly show the Huskies '
dominance as they made 12
shots on goal as compared to
Scranton 's two.
/ Coach Hutchinson commented on the tournament ,
"Overall , we performed very
well. As always , our midfield
line did a great j ob. They are
Bloomsburg Soccer
:'.. (continued from Page 6)
young, fresh talent it should be
brutal! We open on the road at
"
an exciting year.":
New Jersey Tech then come
The roster includes just two
home to play Lock Haven , the
seniors and 10 juniors to go
defenidng Division II natinal
along with 12 sophomores and . champs, and after them we
six freshmen . "Once we beocme
haveto travel to Shippensburg ,
accustomed to each other, I
who because of our rivalry is
think we're going to be a pretty
always tough , and then
good soccer team . It may take
Scranton comes here and they
us one more year to be an
lost in the Division III national
outstanding team, but we are'
finals: So when that stretch is
inalleviating . all ' the
over, we should be playing some
dividualistic, play and working,
sharp soccer ."
as a team and right now that's
The schedule is as'follows : 9what matters most to me,"
19, at Shippensburg ; 9-23,
stated Mingrone.
Scranton ; 9-26, Millersville ; 9The Huskies have picked a
30, at University of Marylandtough way to open the season.
Baltimore Co.; 10-6, Indiana
Coach J. Malcolm Siman's New
(PA) ; 10-10, Lycoming; 10-14,
Jersey Tech squads are anBuckriell ; 10-17, KutztOwn ; 10nually among the top teams in
20, West Chester ; . 10-24, at
the country and have posted a
Cheyney ; 10-28,, Juniata ; 10-31,
fine 168-97-19 record during his
Wilkes ; 11-2, at East Stroud25 year tenure at the school.
sburg ; 11-4, at Susquehanna; 11"Our first four games are
11, PSAC Championships.
our strength and played very
well. Our two freshmen, Jackie
Griffin and Bev Sprout, played
a couple of great games. They
played nearly every minute this
weekend and came through for
us. Although we have to work on
our attack, we played very good
hockey."
On Monday the Huskies
battled a very tough Lock
Haven team to a 1-1 deadlock.
The first half was primarily art
even fight at midfield. Neither
team had any type of scoring
opportunity.
The second half , however,
was entirely dominated by Lock
Haven. Hutchinson stated ,
"They are a stronger team than
they were,last year. They outplayed us even in the first half.
We weren't in the game until the
last ten minutes. Only then did
we finally penetrate and make
good inside passes.'-'
Late in the 'second half , Joan
Mahoney made a fine pass to
Turnbull who converted it . into
her team 's lone score. The tie
raised the Huskies record to 2-11. They meet tough opposition in
Kutztown and I.U.P. this week.
The team hopes that their play
this past weekend is indicative
of things to come.
MEN'S TRACK & FIELD 1981-82
Candidates ) Important organizational meeting - Sept. 24, 7:30 p.m.
KUB. All candidates are urged to attend. For further info, contact Carl
¦
Hlnkle 389-3712. -
Wonted
WANTED: Baseball cards, football
arid non^ sport gum cards.'.Cash
paid for good condition cards and
other baseball items, Call J.J.,
¦
7frrfl?lu . • ' ' : | ¦
For Sale -
FOR SALE: Refrigerator In excelled
condition. 1.5 cubic foot. Call Mat!
PERSONALS
MARIA,Have you checked your mail
box lately?
Your Loving Roommate I
HILARIE, HICKSIE, & CHERYL, Yous
are the best ,roommates I could'vo
asked for. Thanks , Love, Jeanne
Fetch.
•
DEAR NICK the professional student
- teacher — Has Randy co-ed gotten
any answers to his advertisement
;since he left France , the .Girls from
• - ¦ Shikellamy, Sue, Deb,and Bette.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY CHERYL SEDLAC
;. Oats much?
¦¦
' j-j'
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to
arf !
f\ \ I [ik±k•O ^ ^l Mw^
<**««•*
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MATT,To my F.P., the one and only. I;
JI'
Thanks for making my summer I !" .
Ilove you I P.P. No. 2 (Karon)
!
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STARR, How Bees you?
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Day Sails
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Rodney Ross :
^SSfe^iffl ^.
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Reservations:
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774-35 78
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ATLANTIC NAVIGATION COMPANY
Long Wharf , Commercial Street , Portland
or Steve at 784-3943.
Services
ELECTRONIC EARRING AND PIN Hot, red LOVE LITE comes complete
with a mini-Battery. Guaranteed to
lite up your nite life. Send $6.00
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TRADING, Box 1007-A,, Warwick ,
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IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research
catalog — 306 pages — 10,278
topics -1 Rush $1.00 Box 25097C
Los Angeles,9002S.(213V 477-8226
¦;¦¦ . -¦
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dja^wsas^te.
¦
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< AW» Ibl A
MAJORS There will be a meeting
to sign up for sfudenf teaching for
the academic year 1982-83 on
September. .24, 1981 pt 4 p.m. in
Kuster Auditorium. It is Imperative
that you attend this meeting if you
plan to do your student teaching
at that time. This includes all K-6,
N-K-3,and Dual majors.
Some of these .youngsters
include sophomores Dan
Brennan and Bill Feiser. Freshmen Keith Bolton; Bill Covert,
Mike Galantino, Dave Glenwright, Mike Jupina , Bill Koch
and Joe Lihcaiis round out the
offensive line roster .- »
The line will play a major roll
in the success or failure of this
year's team ^Sproule said, ''If
they play togetherT as one,
opening holes and protecting
the quarterback , we'll be
alright. If you don't do those
things , you don 't win ball
games;"
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sophomore John DeMartino.
Senior Mike. Cerone can also
expect to see plenty of action.
Beyond > ' this experienced
group lies young .^ahd unseasoned players, which brings
a little concern to Coach
Sproule; "Physically ," I have no
qualms about? the yqung
recruits. They work hard at
practice and show great
determination^ However, they
aren 't quite ready mentally.
But I'm confident that when
they get some playing time
under their, belts, they'11 get the
job done."
of returning lettermen. ' Bill
Sproule is the offensive line
coach for the second straight
year . Sproule feels that this
experience is very valuable. ''I
think one of the strengths of the
line is their experience." The
first unit is back from last year .
They are cohesive and I expect
them to play a large part in
team leadership. " •' . -.'
The Huskies will . look to
seniors Dave Montagna and
Jim Zaccheo to provide
leadership. The rest of the
starting unit consists of juniors
Mike Balik, Dave Gillis, and
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PATTI, BUDAWINSKI , RHONDA, |
BARB,MOLLY...Have Fun 11 Love Reo. |
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BSC Football...
Lock Haven Next Foe for Huskies
The
Bloomsburg State
College football team (0-2) will
be seeking its initial win of the
1981 campaign when the
Huskies travel to Lock Haven
State on Saturday, September
19th. The clash with the Pennsylvania Conference western
division member Bald Eagles is
set for LHSC's Hubert Jack
Stadium at 2:00 p.m., and will
be part of the Community Day
celebration at Lock Haven.
Coach Clark Boler's squad
held the lead at half time against
Shippensburg last Saturday, but
the Raiders used 19 third
quarter points to thwart BSC's
upset attempt.
Following a Shippensburg
fumble on its first possession of
the game, the Huskies took the
early lead when quarterback
Kurt Werkheiser hit runningback Harry James with an
11 yard scoring toss. The Raiders closed the gap early in
the second period on a 3 yard
run by halfback Dave Friese,
but SSC missed the extra
point attempt, and the Huskies
still led by one. On the ensuing
kickoff , BSC's Steve Meszaros
took the ball in his own endzone
and raced a school record 101
yards for a touchdown to build
the advantage. Doug Berry
added his second extra point of
the day and the score stood at
14-6. Meszaros ' return broke the
old BSC mark of 99 yards, which
he set last year against the
same team. Shippensburg
scored again before the half , on
a Tim Ebersole to Ed Noon 6
yard pass, but again failed on
the conversion and the Huskies
held a 14-12 lead at the intermission .
Berry 's 35 yard field goal in
the third quarter added to the
lead before SSC scored three
times in the quarter , and once in
the final stanza to make the
final score 38-17 . Ebersole
threw, for 296 yards and two
touchdowns, and Friese gained
83 yards rushing while scoring
three times. For the day, the
Raiders gained 308 yards
passing and 298 yards rushing,
for the school record of 606
yards in total offense. Against
the tough SSC defense,
Bloomsburg only managed a
total offensive output of 130
yards.
This loss, combined with a
season opening 35-0 defeat at
Ithaca, dropped BSC to 0-2.
Lock Haven opened the
campaign with a hard fought 7-0
victory at Lycoming last
Saturday. The teams battled to
a scoreless tie after one half of
play. The Bald Eagles finally
put the lone score Of the day on
the board after an interception
by defensive back Lance
Lehner . On the next play,
sophomore quarterback Ben
Pavalko tossed a 33 yard touchdown pass to wide receiver
Bobby Lynn, who made a
spectacular one handed grab in
the endzone for the touchdown.
A highly touted defense kept
Lycoming out of the Lock
Haven endzone despite several
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have the task of protecting
quarterback Pavalko. The
signal caller completed 50 of 113
passes for 713 yards and eight
touchdowns last year. The
return of 1979 All-PSAC
selection wide receiver Lynn , a
junior who missed the 1980
campaign because of injuries
scoring opportunities by the
Warriors. The Bald Eagle effor t
was aided by two interceptions,
two fumble recoveries (including one on the LHSC four
yard line) , and four quarterback sacks.
Lock Haven 's defense is
headed by a veteran recordbreaking secondary, which
picked off 29 passes in 1980.
Seniors Tony Garzione and
Dave Zielinskie join Lehner in
the defensive . backfield. The
threesome combined for 16
interceptions a year ago ' and
Zielinskie and Garzione were
named to the All-PSAC western
division team .
All PSAC choice Tony Tillar,
who contributed 103 tackles last
season, and the team's leading
tackier with 128, Carl Dean,
lead the linebacking corps.
The defensive line is anchored
by ends Dave Price, a senior,
and junior Brian Sekerak.
Defensively, the Bald Eagles
allowed only 10.5 points per
game last season .
Sekerak doubles as the punter
and was named to the All-PSAC
western division team while
averaging 39.3 yards per kick in
71 attempts.
The offensive unit returns five
starters on the line, which will
...,
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For All Education Majors
(near the State Store)
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Tacos
Hot Dogs
Clam
Chowder
Munchies
: ^fe , N .
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\J^SK^
^S/^ifc
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COLLEGE POETRY REVIEW ]
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November s
ANY STUDENT attending either junior or senior college is eligible to submit
his verse. There is no limitation as to form or theme. Shorter works are pre*
ferred because of space limitations.
Each poem must be TYPED or PRINTED on a separate sheet, and must
bear the NAME and HOME ADDRESS of the student, and the COLLEGE
ADDRESS as well.
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MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the OFFICE OF THE PRESS.
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Box 218
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NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
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Agoura, Ca. 91301
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The closing date for the submission of manuscripts by College Students is j
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The NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
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(Early Child, EL Ed., Sp. Ed. ,
Bus. Ed., See. Ed. , etc.) j gK i^^V
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ww V W W V V V V W W V V V V V W V V V V V V W V V V V V VVVVVVVV VV VVVVV v v w w v v v v w v v v v v v e,
r *V V V * V W VV vww ^ww v w » » v w w
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HUSKY HANDOFF. BSC signal-caller Kurt Werkheiser
gives the ball to runnlngback Clayton Work during
last week's game.
(Photo by Patrick J. Murphy)
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International Dogs
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suffered in a motorcycle accident, will enhance the^passing
game. .
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Lock Haven won last jjnear's
meeting in Redman Stadii|m by
a 16-6 count and now leads the
series with 30 wins .to the
Huskies' 25 victories. There
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have been three ties.
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PA State Education Association
•Professional Publications
liability Ins urance f or
Student Teachers
•Speakers on Current
Ed. Trends K
•A chance to meet others
in the f ield.
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Organizational Meeting;
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TuesM Sept. 22 - 7:00
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