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Edited Text
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Though for the Day
"Good judgement come from experience, and experience - well, that
comes frompoor judgement"
Anonymous
Inside the Voice
Concert Review
Organizations request financial support
Finance Committee
Gives Money
By FRAN LUBIN
The Finance Committee of
CGA budgets the money that is
distributed between different
clubs and organizations.
All organizations - which
request financial support from
CGA must submit their requests
to the Financial Committee.
Decisions are made by College
Council and President McCormick.
Funds for supplies, phone
calls, and stationery are not
provided to organizations.
Additional allocations for
"budget items" (such as
uniforms and equipment) will
be provided by the Budget
Committee only.
No organization is allowed to
use CGA . funds for banquet
purposes. It is recommended by
CGA that the organizations
have an "all-out fund raising
effort" to raise money for such
an activity.
For athletics, the requested
budget and the approved budget
were the same for 1981-82. It
was $177,465.
For recreation, the budget for
1981-82 was $10,479.75. This
budget covers men 's and
women' s intramurals , and
recreation.
For the Artist and Lecture
Series, the requested budget for
1981-82 was $231,548, but
received $210,925. Community
Arts Council is part of this
organization.
Publicity
received
the
requested allotment for 1981-82.
That figure was $7,000.
Publicity covers radio and
television, pictures and film,
and press and publications.
The dorm fund requested
$19,427 and received $15,377 for
1981-82. This includes all the
dorms, commuters, and the
dorm equipment.
Community Activities got
$24,800 as they requested. This
is composed of ambulance,
summer theatre, secretarial bookkeeping, and reserve for
funds.
The Finance Committee tries
to give what is requested to all
the clubs and organizations on
campus.. They do, however,
have to keep to a limited budget
so they, try to divide the money
as fairly as possible.
By BRENDA D. MARTIN
Students were evacuated
from Hartline Science Center
for approximately a half an
hour Tuesday after an
anonymous bomb threat was
reported.
Security
received
an
anonymous phone call at approximately 8:30 a.m. reporting
that an alleged bomb was to go
off at 9:30 a.m. in Hartline.
Students and faculty were
evacuated from the building
from 9:15 to 9:45 a.m. to ensure
their safety.
"The college must always be
aware of the safety of the
students, and we took every
possible precaution we could,"
said Vice President for
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , Boyd
Buckingham.
According to Buckingham ,
the administration h as three
prime obje ctives in nciderits
For the music department;
the requested and approved
budget for 1981-82 was $23,965.
This includes such activities as
band day, concert choir, Husky
singers and studio band.
Bloom Theatre Ensemble
Holds Gala Benefit
Hurry, hurry, hurry and get
your red hot tickets to the entertainment event of . the
season ! The Bloomsburg Ensemble is back with its highly
successful musical comedy
e x t r a v a g a n z a TA-RA-RA
BOOM-DE-AY ! AN OLD TIME
AMERICAN MUSIC HALL. On
November 6th, the BTE will
hold a grand evening of
boisterous fun at the Briar
Heights Lodge in Berwick. The
evening is a Gala Benefit for the
BTE as the company proudly
begins its fifth year of providing
the region with quality
professional entertainment.
''Ya-Hoooo'' and . "Hip-HipHooray" for TA-RA-RA BOOMDE-AY, shouted the critics
when the show premiered in
October. "The individual acts
Bomb Scare a Hoax
such as this : to protect the lives
of students and faculty, to not
blow the incident out of
proportion , and to apprehend
the person who made the bomb
threat.
The administration also
follows a set procedure in this
kind of incident. They evacuate
the building for approximately
a half an hour, they complete a
search for the bomb, and they
follow leads to apprehend the
person making the bomb threat.
CAD Strives to Increase Student Po ential
By JANET BEAVER
The principal goal of the Center for Academic Development,
CAD is to "increase possible potential of success of every student
enrolled in college, according to Dr. Jesse Bryan , director of CAD.
"The CAD program was conceived to provide access to higher
education for those students who were denied access in any substantial numbers (minority). The program was exapnded to include academically and economically disadvantaged students.
"This enabled us to enroll students from any ethnic background,"
said Irving Wright , assistant director of CAD.
To get into the CAD program one must have marginal grades,
and show a potential for success. They must also meet the minimal
income level. Wright stated that is not necessarily true, some
perennial incomes exceed this level.
The CAD has several special components to try to give education
assets and beneficial to all. The reading lab is directed by James
Mullen, the math lab by Vincent DeMelfi, the writing lab is under
Harry Ackerman, and Ron DiGiondomenico heads the tutorial
service. These programs have and will continue to extend to
students in regular admissions in need of support.
Wright would like to "mainstream into the system here and erase
the negative stigma attached to minority students." There is a
prevailing myth on this campus that minority students receive
financial aid over and above the amount students in regular admissions receive. Wright would like to dispell this myth by in-
Buckingham
Receive s
Citation
A citation by the House of
R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s and
resolutions by the Bloomsburg
Area Chamber of Commerce
and the Bloomsburg State
College . Board of ; Trustees
highlighted the activities at the
retirement dinner of Boyd F.
Buckingham, Vice President
for Administration at Bloomsburg Sta te College , held
recently in the Scranton
dicating that student: who are eligible must follow the same
procedure in filling 6i l students do. They mus lso meet the same eligibility guidelines as
other students.
Filing for Financial Aid is a complicated procedure so another
goal for CAD is to help students to understand the application and
provide assistance in completing the form.
According to Bryan, "CAD doesn't assume a student is
anywhere. They take him where he is and build to where he should
be." The CAD wants to provide students enrolled in this program
with basic academic development skills to achieve success at the
college level. This consists of bringing students to academic levels
from the time of enrollment in reading, writing, and to some degree
logic that has a place in higher institutions.
Fifty-five percent of the students are black, forty percent are
white and the other five percent are hispanic or Vietnamese. Many
come from ethnic Philadelphia and are moving to a "rural,
homogenous *( white), provential community," said Wright, "The
adjustment for many of the students is difficult during the first
year. CAD tries, to help supply reasonable support and role
models."
Wright feels the most important personal goal is to "see students
from a point of dependence to independence, and to prepare
students to move, into the world of competitive and successful
employment."
Commons on campus. His
retirement
is . effective
December 25, 1981.
Representative Ted Stuban of
the 109th Legislative District
and Carmel Sirianni , a BSC
alumna and representative of
the 111th Legislative District,
jointly submitted the following
Citation signed by the Speaker
of the House Mat.t , Ryan , and
Page 4
Chief Clerk John Zubeck :
WHEREAS ,
Boyd
F.
Buckingham is retiring as Vice
President for Administration at
Bloomsburg State College after
many years of distinguished
service;
AND WHEREAS, a United
States Army Air Corp veteran
of World War II, he was
educated at Bloomsburg State
are gems, each one sparkling
with its own singular humor...".
The Music Hall "kept the
audience alternately cheering
and convulsing with laughter".
For the Gala Benefit at Briar
Heights, the BTE presents all of
the romping, foot stamping fun
of the October show, plus more.
At 8:00 p.m. the evening begins
when a white-gloved doorman
shows you and your friends to
your reserved table. A cash bar
provides drinks and lively
vendors promptly *visit your
table with delicacies. With your
thirst and appetite appeased,
the curtain raises at 9:00 p.m.
and the fun begins !
The entertainment, directed
by Whit MacLaughlin, has a
dash of everything. Introducing
the Music Hall and lording over
its antics is the . one and only
"Dr. Whipple", the master of
ceremonies. With the clean, fast
talking confidence of a circus
huckster,
Whipple sells
everything on the stage —
comedy tragedy, song and
dance - as well as the
mysterious and infamous "Dr.
Thipple's CURE-ALL". From
the moment "Dr. Whipple"
steps on stage its non-stop
entertainment. The actors sing,
they clown, they reach the
heights of the tragic arts and
they dance the kick line and the
old soft shoe with a vengance. A
highlight of the evening is a
talent competition where three
brave souls compete with one
another for the audience 's
approval and for a case of "Dr.
Whipple 's CURE-ALL".
"The curtain raises at 9
p.m. and the fun begins"
Because this grand event is a
Gala Benefit for the BTE tickets
are priced at $15.00 for singles
and $25.00 for couples. There is
a 10 percent discount for groups
of eight or more. The proceeds
from the Benefit will help' to
assure BTE 's continued growth
as a not-for-profit theatre
company serving Northeastern
and Central Pennsylvania.
So run , don't walk, to your
phone to reserve your tickets to
the event of the season. Call the
BTE Box Office Monday Friday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. at 7848181.
College, Bucknell University
and the Pennsylvania State
University . His long and
distinguished career of more
than 36 years in the field of
education includes more tha n 28
years of outstanding service at
Bloomsburg State College in
teaching, public relations , and
development and fiscal administration. As Associate Vice
(Continued on pap* 3)
Edito rial
BLOOM COUNTY
fry Berke Breathed
Concerts?
by BOB STILES
With the BSC Concert Committee 's budget now running
$3,000 to $4,000 in the red, one thing seems obvious:
something is going wrong and measures must now be
taken to insure that the Committee's budget never
goes in the red again.
Perhaps the mistake is in the Committee's outlook.
To rationalize that concerts are no longer of interest
to most BSC students is ludicrous. Within the last
year how many BSC students have traveled hundreds
of miles to see rock groups? The number is larger
than you may think , or rig htfully expect. These students ,
in most cases , are gladly traveling the distance because they are going to hear groups they want to
hear. And that seems to be the key !
Though "Ian Hunter ,'' "Gary U.S. Bonds ," and "Todd
Rundgren and Utopia" deserve recognition , they onl y
appeal to a select group of followers. Not the majority
of students ! On the other hand , "James Taylor ,"
"Hall and Oates ," "America ," and "Beatlemania ," past
successful concerts here, appeal to a wider range of
students. "Top 40" and other big name groups draw
crowds not groups who appeal only to select audiences !
Of course, the committee could probably not afford
to get 'Styx " or "Foreigner ," groups who draw big
crowds , but , there are other less costly groups that
students will pay $10 or more to hear. And perhaps
if the committee pooled all its money together and had
only one big concert , it might have enough money
to attract one big group !
Another mistake seems to be the manner in which
the groups are selected. Perhaps a new booking agent
is needed. Or perhaps a way must be found so that
there is more time to book artists.
What do you think?
"HaUoween ll, " the Night "He"
Came Back Again
By RICK DiLIBERTO
On Halloween night, strange
things happen. Ghosts, goblins,
and ghouls prowl the streets,
witches and bats fill the air, and
people pay a $3.50 admission
price to see a film during which
they cover their eyes 75 percent
of the time. One can only
wonder. Well, after all, it is
Halloween.
Halloween II, a John Carpenter - Debra Hill production
playing at the Capitol Twin
Theatre, had this strange effect
on the majority of viewers this
writer observed.
Using every worn-out false
shock known in the horror
genre,
including
boxes
falling out of closets, and cats
jumping out of garbage bins,
director Rick Rosenthal turns
out a disappointingly predictable movie.
Jamie Lee Curtis, the young
Letters To The Editor
Reply to Inquisition
Dear Editor ,
I see that the Spanish
Inquisition got out his jumbo
box of Crayolas once again to
comment on one of the important social issues here at
BSC (Letter to the Editor , Oct.
28). Still , one can't blame the
editors for printing his letter ;
it's hard to resist a letter
written in 64 differen t colors.
Too bad he 's so insecure he has
to hide behind a pseudonym, as
I'd like to know just who (or
what)
I' m
addressing.
Spaniard , your uninformed and
inaccurate attacks on my
person have nothing to do with
the argument I presented in my
letter (Oct. 21). I suppose you
just couldn 't find enough wrong
with my position to attack it
directly.
Now , to address some of the
rarnblings of the Spaniard's
THE CAMPUS VOICE
Bloomsburg Stol»Coll»g«. Bloomtbura. PA 17815 Box 97 KUB 389-3101
VOL. IX No. 17
Ex«cutiv« Editor
Ad Manager
Asst. Ad Manager
Mows Editors
Now* Associate
Roberta Cl*m«nt
Brian Duort
Inga Eissman
D*b B*rtcl*y Br»nda Martin
Angol Grasso
Jim Lyman, Patti Martin
Foatura Editor.
Virginia Rood
Footuro Astt
Mik» Yamrus
Sports Editor ..
.'
Kevin Kodiih
Sports Astt .
Dan Campbell
Photo Editor
. Pat Murphy
Editorial Editor
v.
..Bob Stilos
Copy Editors
Nancy Barg, Karon Haldsrman.
Circulation Managers
Sua Hicks, Hllarle Runyon
Business Manager
Karen Troy ' ,
Advisor....,.,.
......
Mr. Richard Savage
!
TIM Vole* It fov«m*d by Ik* Editorial Soard with th* final r«ipomlbllty for all
material ratting with th* *K*cutlv* editor at itot*d In th»- Joint Stat*m*nt of
Freedom, Rights and R*iponilbllHI*iof itud*ntt at ISC.
Th* Vole* r*i«rv*< th* right to *dlt all l*tt*r« and copy iubml(t*d, A maximum
o» 400 wordi will b* placed on all letters to th* editor with an allowone* '
for exception!. All letter* muit b* tlgn*d and hav* an addreii and phon*
number. Nemetwill b* withheld upon request.
Th* opinions volc*d In th* columns, articles and notices or* not necessarily
¦har*d by th* entire ktuff . An untlgn*d stall editorial denotst o major •
consensus of th* tdltorial board.
letter. Concerning the drinking
age (by the way, PA's a commonwealth, Spaniard) , though
I'm not 21, I have no personal
objections to it. But, when one
considers that Pennsylvania is
surrounded by states that have
lower drinking ages, and further , that many of BSC' s
students come from these
states, a social problem arises.
The number 21 is arbitrary ;
there is nothing sacred about it.
When you add to this the inconsistant and sporatic enforcement of this law , one has a
considerable argument against
the drinking age. Ever hear of
civil disobedience , Spaniard?
No , I suppose not; Thoreau and
M.L. King, Jr. don 't show up in
the comic books too often.
As to why I am here at BSC,
the answer is to get an
education , something the
Spaniard seems to be sadly
lacking. I :don 't go to private
schools anymore because of
their costs — seven to ten
thousand a year. But just
because I and a lot of other
people here at Bloomsburg
State can 't afford the cost of a
private school doesn't ' mean
that we should give up our right
to have a say in any of the
policies of the school. The
writers of the Constitution
considered it to be not only the
right , but also the; -duty of
citizens to examine their
government. Of course, who is
Thomas Jefferson to question
the wisdom of the Spaniard.
The Spaniard also brought
some of the problems caused by
babysitter from the original
Halloween , is still on the run in
this one, trying to avoid an
escaped psycho who'd like to
see what she 's made of ,
literally.
Curtis performs naturally
with horror . No wonder, since
she is the daughter of Tony ( the
Boston Strangler) Curtis, and
Janet Leigh, who took a blood
bath in the shower in Psycho.
The 22 year-old actress had a
great deal of exposure this
weekend. Friday night was the
premiere of Halloween on TV;
Halloween II also opened
nationwide on Friday, and on
Sunday; she starred in the made
- for - TV movie, "Death of a
Centerfold : The Dorothy
Stratten Story. "
Besides Curtis ' performance,
the film rates a big zero. Donald
Pleasence, as the killer 's
psychologist, is overbearing.
The plot, with the killer loose in
a hospital, is quite choppy and
unbelievable, and the twist
Carpenter uses to tie together
the original and the sequel,
using Curtis as the killer 's
sister, who was adopted . by
another family, is lukewarm.
If you intend to see Halloween
II, at least try to keep your eyes
uncovered. You 'll lose out
enough with them seeing
everything.
QUICK FLICKS: You might
remember Miss Curtis from
thrillers like Prom Night, Road
Games , Terror Train , and The
Fog ... The suspenseful "Body
Heat," which played at the
Columbia last week, rated an
"A plus." Unfortunately, it was
yanked from the theatre in
favor of "Mommie Dearest"
before this writer 's review
off-campus . parties. I hardly
think that the job of this school's
administration is to run around
handing out citations for littering and indecent exposure.
That is the job of the local police
force and , as I stated in my first
letter , the town residents can
call the police anytime a civil
law is broken. I firmly believe
that the residents of Bloomsburg should protect their
rights, but not at the expense of
the students '..rights.
As I said in my first letter , my
main concern is not with the
issue of drinking, but instead
with student rights. The administration seems unwilling to
present the new alcohol policy
for debate before it' s implication. Perhaps the Spaniard
will let anything be . shoved
down his throat (including
Commons' food) , * but I. don 't
believe that most of the students
here at BSC are as suppliant to
authoritarianism as he.
Finally, I feel justified in
writing this reply because of the
large number of students who
have approached me in support
of my position . In fact , the
editorial staff of the Voice
published an editorial in support of my position in the very
same issue that the Spaniard's
letter appeared. Also, I was
contacted by one of the CGA
officers and was asked to be on
an ad hoc committee examining
the new policy. It seems that the
Spaniard is in the minority .
Nonetheless , I believe it is
everyone 's right to express
their opinions in theaters of
public discourse, even if they do
so in an inaccurate and childish
( "Pooh?") manner.
,
'
(Continued on Page 7)
Sincerely,
Frank E. Brock
A Movefo ra N ey olEmi
By FAITH PETR0VICH
Ah exciting arid;fun new .way
to get into shape, is being offered
to the- residents of Elwell ;Hall.
Sherri , Wilson and, Natalie
Laubach?. ane( }.ins|;rucj ;ing ,an
aerobjC/ 'dancti "iclass . everjy
9j:30
Tuesday ancf :tfhursday\at
,
p .m'. tp^.l^O . ' **0':S""4n¦ the
multipurpQse.'roqm' of, the Kehr
Union Building. ;: . „ '" ¦ ,.;;;V
Wilson holds , a.rr i!instructor 's
certificate frorrv the YWCA and
Laubachv also.', has two years,
experience- •; in. - ' the area;
Maureen Mulligan , resident
deari ';of Elwfil^r^:;?\^v.is6r-tq,'1,b0
'
. ¦. .r , :^J>J. ?;H
program-: _
;. „
Wl?a.t .began ,as,a ;smal|ij fJ,Qpp.-i i
prqj qct was .spon open to .the,. hall; ;
due to feedbackv fcpm girjs ,pn : >
other ,floors ,who, were also . in- ;
terested in, , attending. .There is • ' •¦
currently, a very j arge turnout. When asked what prompted , ;
the girls ,,to .begjn, . such ; an ef- \
fecttye, .' .. prpgrani, . Wilson , ¦j,
commented ' that it was afifun ¦ „¦> ;
way to. get into shape, an$ greak »i
way riq meet people, . ' :¦ . <. < «,¦¦.; oi/t
Laubach added ! that it -wa s u>•
also a . great , way . to prevent,-*,
gaining tfie :freshmen ''i5" v, , i , -- , (Contlnvtd.Pii Pago .3)' , ;v\,: •;?
Students Speak
By ALLEN McCOLLUM
There has been a lot of talk recently about the new party policy
put into effect. Students are continually being annoyed by the way
the parties have been stopped by Robert Norton, dean of student
life.
I recently interviewed Norton and he presented me with a copy of
the 1981-1982 Pilot. He showed me the ordinance code regarding the
buying, selling, and consumption of alcohol by students. Norton
said, "all students should read this, section so they thoroughly
understand where they stand. "
Norton went on to say that he has been receiving many calls from
BSC alumni saying that "they are hearing rumors that Bloomsburg
is getting a reputation of being a party school." He then added that
this is not what he wants the school to be known for . What Dean
Norton says he is doing is simply enforcing the school's policy on
alcohol.
If Dean, Norton should get word of a party going on, he may
contact the L.C.B. to go out and bust the party: If someone returning from a party would be arrested, then the person who had the
party would also be subject to an arrest.
Here are the rules that Norton plans to enforce. For on campus
students, the first offense will result in a written warning, of which
a copy will be sent to the student 's parents, upon a second offense
the student may be put on probation, and the third offense may
result in a suspension. All of these penalties are subject to change
depending on the severity of the offense.
Fraternities and sororities will not be able to have parties except
for date parties and banquets. For those who do have a party, the
penalties are as follows: The first offe nse will mean probation for
the offender. Should a second offense occur , the offender will no
longer be permitted to have Date Parties or Banquets. A third offense will result in the revoking of their charter. These penalties
may vary according to the circumstances. These rules also apply to
clubs and any other college organizations. What Norton wants to do
is treat students off-campus the same as bn-campus students in
regards to alcohol.
In talking with students I found most of them disgusted with the
new policy. They feel there will be nothing to do on weekends. Most
said weekends are the only free time they have and that parties are
the only place to spend it. Parties give students a chance to go out
and get wasted. They also help us get rid of our tensions or any
anxieties; we get to relax and be ourselves.
I called the Bloomsburg Police Department and asked if there
had been an increase in the number of arrests. The officer said,
"No, there have been fewer arrests this year." If there are fewer
arrests then why are parties being talked up so bad?
There will be meetings held by Dean Norton explaining the
policy; also, at these meetings will be guest speakers. Students are
invited to these meetings; they will only last about an hour. If
anyone wants to find out more about these meetings they should get
in contact with the Information Desk. During these meetings, ideas
on how to spend free time will be discussed.
Allen McCollum
Forensic Team Places 4th
This past- weekend the
Bloomsburg State Forensics
Team placed ,4th in the 1981
College Forensic Association
fall speech tournament held at
the New Jersey Institute of
Technology (NJIT) in Newark.
Placing 3rd in Interpretation
of Literature was Bonita Hull.
Tim Talarico placed 4th in
Impromptu Speaking, and John
Chapin placed 3rd in After
Dinner Speaking.
In Lincoln-Douglas Debate,
Sue Stanton placed 2nd and
Robert Jones Jr. placed 5th .
Also contributing to the team
victory in Extemporaneous
Speaking
were
Karen
Halderman and Talarico.
Competing in Prose and Poetry
Interpretation were Gregg
Gianuzzi , Karen Howley,
Stanton , Halderman , and
Chapin. Impromptu speakers
were Lora Mumbauer, Stanton,
Halderman , and Jones.
Persuasive speakers included
Mumbauer, Hull , and Gianuzzi.
Hull also competed in Informative Speaking. Dramatic
Duo teams included Haiderman-Hull and Chapin-Talarico.
Also competing in Lincoln Douglas Debate were Iris Hall
III and Mary Brinkeiv
Also traveling with the
students were
Graduate
Assistants Susan Waters and
Rob Novell!; debate coach,
Professor Jim Tomlinson ; and
Director
of
Forensics,
Professor Harry C. Strine III ,
newly elected President of the
Collegiate
Forensic
Association.
According to Coach Strine,
"This weekend was a team
effort preliminary round , finals,
and debate all determined our
4th place win. Everyone should
be commended. "
Buckingham Receives Citation
(Continued from page one)
President for Development and
External Relations, Mr.
Buckingham was involved in
the greatest fiscal plant expansion in the history of the
college— when 19 new buildings
and other projects were added
at a cost of approximately $21
million. Under his direction as
Vice President' for Administration during the past
seven years, Bloomsburg has
been cited for its efficient
handling of fiscal matters.
Actively involved in numerous
community,
civic, .,.: and
professional organizations, Mr.
Buckingham has received
many awards and honors including the Distinguished
Service Award by the Bloomsburg Area Chamber of Commerce and the 33rd degree by
the Supreme Council Scottish
Rite Free Masonry.
NOW , THEREFORE , the
House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania extends special
commendations to Boyd F.
Buckingham for his invaluable
contribution to Bloomsburg
State College, congratulating
him on his retirement; and
wishes him the best in his future
Remembrances of the evening covered the past , pre sent, and future .
endeavors ; and further directs
that a copy of this citation be
delivered to Four Kent Road ,
Bloomsburg.
In a resolution of the
Bloomsburg Area Chamber of
Commerce, Ralph Dillon, a
member , of the board of
directors and a past president ,
pointed out the 15 consecutive
years Buckingham had Served
on the Board of Directors and
the fine year the Chamber had
under
B u ck i n g h a m 's
presidency in 1968, plus his
service to the many other
Bloomsburg organizations and
his 28V2 years with the Commonwealth and BSC.
Joseph Nespoli, chairman of
the college's Board of Trustees,
the
Remembrances
of
evening covered the past,
present, and future. Mrs. Peggy
Bailey, acting director of grants
spoke of several happenings in
Buckingham's past, including
his military service as a pilot in
the, U.S. Air Corps and
presented him with a limited
edition print of a B-17 Flying
Fortress, the type of plane he
flew: '.
William
Williams,
Dr.
director , of personnel, dwelled
on the present and concluded by
presenting a gift of a set of golf
clubs.
In speaking about the future
activities of the honored guest,
Bruce "Nick" Dietterick,
director of public information,
presented Buckingham with art
supplies and a certificate for art
lessons, plus a 35 mm camera
and accessories. All the gifts
were from the persons present
at the dinner.
The program concluded with
a response from Buckingham
which included both humerous
and serious references. Over
250 friends and colleagues were
in attendance. Music during the
evening was furnished by the
BSC Studio Band under the
direction of Stephen Wallace.
spoke of the resolution to be
presented at the November
board meeting which commends Buckingham for his
service and
outstanding
achievements in education and
administration, naming him
Vice President Emeritus on
retirement.
Offering appropriate remarks
were President James H.
McCormick and two Presidents
Emeritus, Dr. Harvey A. Wilson of Cheyney State
College. All three spoke of the
fine relationship they enjoyed
working with the honored guest
over the years.
r
Other prominent persons
giving remarks were Warren A.
Ringler, former commissioner
of higher education; Faculty
Emeritus Elton Hunsinger, who
with
closely
worked
Buckingham as Director of
Grants; Edward D. Sharetts,
BSC Alumnus and classmate of
Buckingham in the early 1940 s;
daughter Gail Buckingham
Worthington and son Boyd F.
Buckingham, Jr. ; and toastmaster John E. Hoch, dean
emeritus and a fellow administrator with Buckingham
for many years.
Anyone interested in being an
Olympian Staff . -^
Member?
JiH^^t r^^
There will be an
organizational
meeting,
T
ffiSj \A
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^ ^^nfrw
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* *-: —
STl^S
Thurs. Oct. 5 at 6 p.m./
in Campus Voice
OffW
3rd Floor, KUB
ATTENTION
GRADUATING
SENIORS;
Dec. 81, May 82 and Aug. 82
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our
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for 1981-82 Obiter
They are be/ng taken Nov. 9-13 and Nov. 16-20
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OLYMPIAN
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W&yji
Singing Telegrams Enlighten teasians ^
ACTOR SINGS TELEGRAMS. Daniel Socket* , a member
of the Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble , provides singing '
telegrams for all occasions. (Photo by Pat Murphy.)
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By NANCY BARG
A young man of slight build
steps into the crowded party.
Clad in vest, shirt with puffy
sleeves, bow tie and snappy
French beret, he holds a bottle
of beer with a vivid red ribbon
and a scrawled sign that reads
"HAPPY 21." He approaches
the speechless birthday girl,
romantically kisses her hand ,
and croons, ala' Bill Murray
style, "Happy birthday ... to
youuuuuuu ... Happy birrrthdayyy ... tooo YOUUU ... "
With a magnificent flourish,
he presents her with the beer,
bows neatly, and quickly exits
without a word, as the party
guests burst into laughter.
"It was the most original
birthday present I have ever
received... I loved it'." said BSC
student Lori Andreacola of her
surprise singing telegram.
A member of the Bloomsburg
Theatre Ensemble (BTE ) , Dan
Sackett renders a singing
telegram service for any occasion. Standing five feet, nine
and one half inches , Dan
Sackett can transform himself
into an English butler, flashy
circus
barker , low-class
English drunk and the nightclub
performer who made an appearance at Lori's 21st birthday
party.
"I play mostly comic
characters, which I enjoy," said
Sackett, a 25-year-old native of
Berwyn, Illinois. "1 ha^fr a
repertoire of four characters
right now, but I'd like to develop
more.
Sackett tries to make each
singing telegram as special as
he can and to stage it as if it's "a
little show." He explains that
his wife works with him and
gives him suggestions —¦ such
as bringing Lori the beer.
"The more personal information I get about someone,
the more I can work it into the
telegram ," said Sackett. Upon
learning that a particular client
was a Beatles fan , he sang a
medley of Beatle songs, ending
with the famous "Birthday. "
Danny Sackett first got bit by
the acting bug when he performed as a youngster with his
brother and sister in summer
shows that his parents produced
in their backyard. He went on to
act in high school, community
theatre , and then at Northwestern University, where he
majored in theatre.
With an/ undergraduate
degree in theatre, certification
Are you unhappy with Common's Food?
If so, Come to the Food Service Meeting
/^K
I C^L)
Thurs. Nov. 5 at 5:30 p.m.
»" the Common's Faculty
Dining Room
If you want results , come and
I
Voice your opinions to the management.
A _/N
f |
^
Lef Your °P mt°ns b& heard.
WfrMdfo
Everyone is welcome.
^
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m education and a masters
degree in theatre and speech
communication under his belt,
Sackett eventually wound up
joining the Bloomsburg Theatre
Ensemble.
The BTE has been in
opera tion for four years ;
Sackett joined two years ago.
"We are a not-for-profi t ,
professional theatre company, "
explained Sackett. "We 're
funded both federally and
through Pennsylvania Council
of the. Arts. "
The BTE is a year-round
company with 12 full-time
members, plus "associate
members " who work part of the
year, for a total of about 25
actors ,
directors
and
playwrights in all.
"We run the company ourselves, which is rather unique,"
said Sacket, who also does
public relations work for the
BTE . "It was started by a group
of artists who wanted to get
together , which is usually not
the way companies get started. "
Sackett teaches theatre
through the BTE ; the courses
occur during the summer and
are open to the public. He
taught directing at Benton High
School and presently substitute
teaches at area high schools.
How did he get into performing singing telegrams? "I
organized an auction this
summer ; we auctioned off our
services, as well as goods. One
service was the , singing
telegram.
"After the auction , someone
called up for another singing
telegram 11 j ust took them on as
a way to supplemen t my income. If things work out well,
other people in the company
could make some extra money
with it ," he said.
Charging a $25 fee for a
telegram, with a 20 percent
discount for BSC students ,
Sackett presently performs two
or three singing telegrams a
week. Although he - has
developed certain characters ,
Sackett is willing to assume
new, different roles to fit the
occasion. "I want to really
develop this. In terms of time,
it's more flexible for me to do
this ... and a lot more fun ."
Sackett's flyers , which are
posted in dormitories and
downtown businesses, advertise
the musical messages for birthdays, anniversaries , serenades
and other special occasions.
Sackett thinks that the requests
he's received for telegrams so
far have been "pretty much
traditional — mostly birthdays ." He commented ,
"What I would like to do
sometime is a
r serenade!" .
"I've dbne several signing
telegrams at the Commons
during dinner ," chuckled
Sackett. "The ones at / the
Commons are really fun to do.,.,
they all seem to get really
. . < ; ;.
embarrassed!"
Has Sackett performed any
unusual singing telegrams?
Yes, for a doctor at Geisinger
Hospital in Danville: "First of
all, I had to take a shuttlebus
from the parking lot to the
hospital with ,my loud circus
barker costume on, complete
with top hat and cane !
"The doctor had finished with
a~ patient, and other doctors,
nurses, arid his wife and kids
and they were all standing in
the corridor. I just launched
into this happy anniversary
song and did a little dance. The
doctor was frozen 8 he just
stood there and stared...but I
think he liked it."
Sackett has performed all of
the singing telegrams, except
for one. "They wanted a woman
to do one for a man who was
running a booth at the
Bloomsburg Fair. Betsy Dawd.
(BTE naember) wore an
overcoat and opened it to a
French maid costume underneath , and proceeded to sing
"Happy Birthday."
Sackett gets a kick but of
performing
the
singing
telegrams and acting with the
BTE . His goal right now is to
help develop the BTE. He explains that one problem the
company has is that most
people associate the BTE with
BSC. "To establish ourselves as
professionals, it just takes that
much more effort. Everyone
assumes
we're
college
students," he said.
The BTE is presently located
on the third floor of the Town
Hall and is open from 10:00 a.m.
to 4:00 p.m. weekdays. Sackett
can be reached there c-o Box 66,
Bloomsburg, or at 784-5530. He
can also be contacted at 7845428.
"I can be reached at any time
— the day before or the day of a
performance ," said Sackett.
"But with more notice, the
more I can do!
¦
•
¦
'
.
•
'
'
.
¦•
¦•
:Kehr Union Progra m Board and
j
: Scarpati Productions present 4ML I
.
j A COMEDY CONCERT^^^ j
• Sunday , Nov. 8
W^^^
8
P.M.
in
KUB Coffeehouse l
•
j
j^\\)
• Come on out and
• tickle your ribs!!
'
'
l ^
j S a B BB
J
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. „, ;¦ ; •
9...... *............ *...... ...... .....„..t
•
Front theArchives
By R. W. FROMM
A recurring theme among
students in higher education is
their difference with faculty in
regard to the fairness of tests
and examinations. Frequently,
the less a student is prepared
the more inclined he is to find
some ; unfairness in the test
situation. However, no doubt
some complaints have been and
are legitimate. Apparently one
such complaint was registered
by an unhappy Bloomsburg
student in October, 1949; the
following is a letter sent to .the
Dean of Instruction.
Dear Sir— : ;I was always under the impression that State Teachers
Colleges were for the purpose of
teaching us how to become good
teachers and show us the best
methods of preparing our
courses and presenting tests to
show the progress of students in
class.
So why is it a certain teacher
in
prepares the
SAME test????? for 3 sections
and thus makes it easy for
students in the later classes to
get the answers from the early
class — 8:00 — and thus punish
those "simple simons" who did
not have the "teacher college
cheating sehse" to dp likewise.
I was one of those foolish
students in a later class who did
not have access to previous
information and hence all but
flunked the test because of the
high scores of people I know had
the test.
I personally saw four students
studying from a copy and know
of another who had all but 5 of
the answers on a bit of paper
under the cuff of his sleeve.
As a result of the above occurrence I have decided to
make sure I have inside information on future tests?????
arid to h- - - with the other
students (suckers). It seems
that the administration inthis
directly encourages
practice anyhow and as they
say ---You can't beat city hall.
Sick and
tiredingiy yours,
A letter with the same
complaint was sent to the
President, and the Dean of
Instruction reported receiving
more of the same. The upshot of
the matter was that new tests
were given and the instructor
agreed to prepare differen t
tests for the separate sections in
any future testing.
Students Fight Paying Fee
Campus Digest News Service
Three students at Rutgers
University are planning to fight
a decision by a federal judge
that the university can collect a
refundable $2.50 fee used to
support the New Jersey Public
Interest Research Group.
The three students claim it is
unconstitutional to make the
. Although at present , the fee is
mandatorily collected, students
can be refunded the $2.50 on
request. The three students
plan to appeal the decision, by
the federal court.
Wednesday - Lunch : Hoagie
and Grilled Ham ; Dinner : Pork
Chops and Chow Mein; Thursday ' ' - Lunch : Bar-b-q and
Tuna , Dinner : Chicken and
Country Steak; Friday - Lunch:
Beef Casserole and Egg Burger,
Dinner : Lasagna and Cube
Steak; Saturday - Brunch : Eggs
and Cold Cuts , Dinner: Meat
Loaf.
November 11 — Cider and
Cheese Nite
November 18 — Cookie Nite
November 24 — Thanksgiving
Buffet
student body support what they
call a partisan lobbying
organization.
Commons Menu
Commons Festive Meals
Faculty and staff are invited to
attend the following festive
meals in the dining hall at a cost
of $3.10 per person.
A NEW
"\7^kT T(Contlnu«d
from Page 2)
J[ \J\^J
Each class is structured into
three parts, beginning with a
warm-up period followed by the
body of the routine, and finally a
cool-down relaxation period.
The class is starting out with the
basics so no prior experience
with aerobic dance is needed.
: "WE'VE
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Cancer
Society asks every
smoker in America
to give tip cigarettes
for a day. Give it a
try. You might find
you cairquit forever."
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SMOKEOUT , .
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, This space contributed by the publisher.' ,
TODD RUNDGREN APPEARS. Todd Rundgron , leader of the group Utopia, rocks
on at their recent concert.
(Photo by Bnice Geisler)
Utopia Unites Rock With Perfect State
By JIM LYMAN
The dictionary defines
"Utopia " as an "ideal or perfect
state." This concept carries
with it the implication that the
individuals comprising this
state are united under the same
cause.
When looking at the band,
U topia , these same ideas could
be applied. Made up of Todd
Rundgren , Roger Powell ,
Kasim Sulton, and John Wilcox,
the four members combine to
produce some of the most
challenging as well as accessible music today.
This music, which Rundgren
once classified as "power pop,"
mixes bouncing, memorable
melodies with a characteristically strong rock beat.
The results are pop songs which
are not "gooey " and rock songs
without boredom or pretentiousness.
Performing last week to a
disappointing less than half-full
Nelson Fieldhouse , Utopia
demonstrated this sound with a
concert that was full of life and,
at times, virtually spellbinding.
While their 24 song set concentrated mainly on the more
recent Utopia material , including six selections from their
as of yet unreleased "Swing to
the Right," they also delved into
Rundgren's own solo career .
Going back to his early years
with "I Saw the Light" and
"Cliche " along with "Time
Heals " and "Healer " from last
year's "Healing " album , the
——
!
'
¦
"Utopia sound" provided a new
dimension to the songs, particularly "I Saw the Light",
which was far superior to its
original recorded version.
This could also be said of the
performances of many of the
band's own compositions. "The
Road to Utopia ", "Back on the
Streets," "Love In Action" and
"Last of the New Wave Riders"
were all much stronger live
than in the studio. "New Wave
Riders" was especially of note,
when Rundgren, at the end of
his guitar solo, forced himself
against the speaker cabinets
trying to pull every ounce of
energy from his instrument to
bring the song to a final,
awesome crescendo.
Individually , each band
member gave an equally strong
showing. Whereas Rundgren is
undoubtedly the leader, (though
not necessarily "Godd", as one
banner at
the
concert
proclaimed) , the other three
lack nothing on their respective
instruments.
Roger Powell is an electronic
keyboard whiz, John Wilcox is a
powerful yet subtle drummer,
and Kasim Sulton provides a
rh ythmic bass line , while
possessing one of the finest
voices in rock. All three share
harmony vocals as well as each
taking turns singing lead.
Visually, however, Rundgren
was the centerpiece. From the
opening chords of "One World"
to the closing solo of "Just One
Victory, " he continuously
_,. _ -
A short note about the future
of concerts at BSC this year.
Due to the poor ticket sales for
the Ian Hunter and Utopia
shows, the Bloomsburg Student
Concert Committee now has a
deficit budget. Because of this,
it appears to be highly unlikely
that there will be anymore
Concert Committee productions
during the remainder of the
academic year.
_ _ __
The Record & Jeanswear Co.
Album Specia ls This Week !
I
The Police - "Ghost in the Machine "
I
v.
Queen - "Greatest Hits"
Diana Ross - "Why do Fools Fall in
f
»
jumped, danced and kicked his
tall, thin body about the stage.
- The lighting of the show was
another aspect that contributed
to the visuals. There was really
nothing fancy about it,-but there
was nothing missing either. The
fanciest it got was in the use of
projections on a backdrop
during
"Healer " _ and
"Caravan ," and a few moments
of strobe light during "Couldn't
I Just Tell You. "
"Just One Victory, " the
traditional set-closer, and, as
Rundgren introduced it, "the
Utopian national anthem ,"
showed the band at its best though. At the end of the song,
with Sulton , Powell and
Wilcox's layered vocal harmonies forming a counter
melody to Rundgren 's singing,
one could not help but be
transfixed by the sound. The
song surely ranks with "Won't
Get Fooled Again " and "Free
Bird" as one which would
almost be impossible to follow .
Surely, anything else would
have been anti-climatic.
.
^^
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. " - ^^—W0^L. '
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As always Bloomsburgs largestX
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V record selection I Lee & Wrangler \
^^^^^Ej/mmm Ji HH
Y Jeans at toe lowest everyday Y
\ price anywhere!
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j The Record & Jeanswear Co. \ i/
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I Main $treet Bloomsburg
J
Journ alist Speaks
on Job Market
Delta Pi Epsilon , National Honorary Professional Graduate Fraternity in Business
Education holds installation ceremony. Left to right in Row 1: D. Frederick ,
E. Dahlgren , D. Carl, S. Byers , E. Saladyga; Row 2: K. Griffiths , G. Harmon ,
R. Hameerman, H. Griggs , Jr.; Row 3: C. Mowery , C. Hinkel , J. Keil, M.
Klemkosky, D. Kissel; Row 4: E. Rang Jr. , L. Shoop, D. Pino Jr. , R. Mullen;
Row 5: D. Sneidman, B. Taylor , J. Scheffey, P. Snyder; Row 6: A. Zeigenfuse , E. Wassel , E. Clemens, M. Woodall , B. Seldon , C. Lindquist , W. Rygiel,
H. Andruss , J. McCormick.
(Photo by Dan Maresh)
Delta Pi Epsilon Established at BSC
An installation ceremony to
establish a chapter of Delta Pi
Epsilon at Bloomsburg ' State
College was held in the
President's Lounge of Kehr
Union last week.
Delta Pi Epsilon is the
NationalHonoraryProfessional
Graduate
Fraternity
in
Business Education. The
Gamma
Xi Chapter at
Bloomsburg is the 86th chapter
of the Fraternity, the 18th
chapter in the Eastern region,
and the 6th chapter in Pennsylvania.
Special guest will be
President Emeritus Harvey A.
Andruss , who founded the
Department of Commerce at
BSC in 1930 and served as
director until 1937. Other invited
guests include retired business
education faculty members :
Willard A. Christian, Clayton H.
Kinkel, Dr. Cyril A. Lindquist,
Mrs. Margaret E. McCern , and
Walter S. Rygiel. Representing
E *7/te
the
Pennsylvania
State
Department of Education will
be native Berwickian Dr.
William Selden , Supervisor ,
Vocational Business Education .
Miss Ann Demelfi , Vice
President of Alpha Delta
Chapter of Pi Omega Pi, the
undergraduate
National
Business Teacher Education
Honor Society will bring
greetings to the chapter.
Dr. R. DerMon t Bell, Delta Pi
Epsilon National President ,
from
Brigham
Young
University (Provo , Utah) , will
be the installing officer.
Assisting in the installation
services will be the Beta
Lambda Chapter from Shippensburg
State
College.
Officers and members assisting
Dr. Bell include : Dr. Max G.
Cooley and Dr. Ruth D. Armstrong, Advisors : Barry Schwilk , Beta Lambda President ;
Patricia E. Brandt , Jean C.
Goldthorpe , and Anna L.
Strawmyre, former presidents ;
and Marion A. Beaudoin ,
0i^0tf 2dO4t
ON SALE
MORGAN'S YARN & CRAFT SHOP
AT THE KUB INFO DESK
•Counted Cross Stitch
•Crewel
•Needlepoint
•Instruction Books
•Oodles of Buttons
The OLYMPIAN is the
Bloomsburg State College Magazine
251W. 5th St
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Contributions are accepted from any person associated with the BSC community.
Contributions for next year's issue are now being
accepted at Box 16 KUB.
'
E
1 «nn
—-~ — — —¦ — —¦»*—
.
Chairperson, Research Committee.
Representing the college
administration
will
be:
President James H. McCormick, and Deans Charles H.
Carlson , Graduate Studies;
Howard K. Macauley , Jr.,
Professional Studies ; and
Emory W. Rarig, Jr., Business;
along with Dr. Francis J.
Radice of the Business
administration Department.
Members of the Department
of Business Education-Office
Administration to attend are :
Dr. Ellen M. Clemens, Chairperson ; Dr. Virginia Demand,
Miss Janice Keil, Dr. James
Kincaid, Dr. Ellen Lensing, Dr.
Margaret Long, Jack Meiss,
Mrs. Elizabeth Gensemer, Lynn
Shoop, and D. Bruce Sneidman.
The officers of Gamma Xi
Elaine
are:
President
Vice
Saladyga , Danville;
President Dominic Pino , Jr.,
West
Hazleton ;
Record
Secretary Ann E. Ziegenfuse,
D anville; Corresponding
Secretary Mrs. Mary Anne
Klemkosky, O r w i g s b u r g ;
Treasurer * Denise Kissel ,
Shamokin ; Historian Clayton H.
Hinkel ; National Council
Delegate Mrs. Rosalie Mullen,
Jim Thorpe; and Sponsor Dr.
Clements.
By CAROL TEITELBAUM
Mr. Carl E. Beck , Jr.,
executive editor of the Press
Enterprise, Inc., Bloomsburg,
led the "Careers in Journalism" workshop at th»»12th
Annual Journalism Institute
held in BSC's Kehr Union on
Friday October 23rd.
Beck, a newspaper veteran
for 18 years, explained that the
job market for a journalist is
very tight. "Many are looking
for a job , but so few are
available ," he said to an
audience of many interested
high school and college
students.
Newspapers are the number
one industry in the United
States today, with steel being a
close second. There are over 100
daily newspapers in Pennsylvania alone.
Beck mentioned several
important points newspaper
editors look for when hiring.
First, one must have an attractive resume. Beck considers the professionally
written ones "out" and resumes
that are composed by ' the
prospective employee "the
best."
"This tells me what kind of
person you are without having
met you. I like neatness and
accuracy. If- there is a fingerprint on the resume, that person
was careless. This does not
impress me, " Beck said.
Secondly, experience is
crucial. A good bacKground ,
shows involvement with the
high school or college. "I
recently hired a girl from Penn
State whose only experience
was being editor of her college
paper," he said.
Thirdly, a candidate is asked
about their hobbies. "The best
qualified person is a wellrounded individual. They are
down-to-earth and can easily
write stories the average reader
can understand," Beck commented.
Courses in journalism are
important as well as good
grades. Beck said that the
person should be conscientious,
sincere, and hard-working.
"You must live for the
professon ; " he stressed, "the
editor looks for that. "
The candidate must be a goaloriented
individual.
"If
someone comes in to me saying,
"I want to work at the Press-
— ._. _ ...
-
i
i
Stop In and Browse
- No motor to Feed
'
¦
¦
¦
• '
'
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•Latchhook Rugs
•Knitting
•Embroidery
•Crocheting
•Christmas Crafts
¦ ,
®?*r7,V)
^^& S) i£
Mon. - Sat 10:305
^fci ^ '
Closed Wed.
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;
:
Enterprise for the rest of my
life,' I know he is not a goaloriented person. If he says, 'I
hope to work for the Wall Street
Journal , or The New York
Times ,' then he has a goal,"
Beck said.
The starting salary for a
beginning reporter is about $150
to $225 a week with no previous
experience, depending on tne
size of the newspaper, according to Beck. A top reporter
receives $300-$400 a week.
Beck said that when he finds
an attractive resume, he calls
for an interview. During the
interview there are several
important aspects the editor
looks for. First, it's the appearance of the person.
"As a representa tive of . the
newspaper, people judge you.
It's a good idea to be welldressed for the interview,"
Beck said.
Secondly, the editor asks
many questions of the candidate, consisting of trivialities
to such questions as — "do you
mind being edited?"
"The starting salary for
a beginning reporter
is about $150 - $225 a
week."
Beck stressed that a reporter
faces an angry public at times,
so he must have a controlled
temper. ,_
Beck questions objectivity.
"You can't have set views on
any subject. You also must
think straight," he said.
Finally and most importantly, the candidate must
follow directions. There is a
(a
"c h a i n - o f - c o m m a n d "
heirarchy) at every newspaper.
The publisher is the owner of
the paper followed by circulation , advertising, composing and the press room , also
editorial and maintenance.
Mr. Beck emphasized the
technological advancement
within the newspaper market.
Composing rooms are slowly
becoming extinct due to the
highly advanced computer
systems. Cable television ,
according to Beck , is "the
future and it' s where the
money's at." Beck said the
Press-Enterprise is currently
arranging for a cable TV.
channel in which news updates ,
advertising,
and
latest
classifieds are broadcasted. "I
don 't know where the future
lies. We just don 't want to be left
out," he added.
The workshop was concluded
with a miaatinn-nnRwnr sAnsirm.
I Nice, furnished room for I
[ mature/ male student orj
l faculty. Downtown Blooms-1
j
j burg. Call 752-2373.
j Also, op«nlngi for Spring term, j
I $10O-$15O monthly. Includes all j
I utilltU*.
I
for
Poli
nsfer
cy
Ne^ l^
By TINA KLAMUT
If you are a female athlete
considering transferring think
again. The AIAW passed a new
transfer policy at the 1981 Delegate Assembly eld in Detroit, Mich, this past January.
The new policy went into
effect this fall , 1981, and will
make it harder for women
athletes to transfer without
having to sit out a year.
It" is divided into four basic
parts : erid-of-year transfer— on
aid; end-of-year transfer—not
on aid ; mid-year transfer— on
aid and mid-year transfer —not
on aid.
In Paul "Bear" Bryant's head coaching career
dating back to his first with Mary land in
1945, he has had only one losing season ....
name the
team and its record.
^^^
best for the student athlete ,
said Hutchison. "If she isn't
happy here or wants to transfer
for reasons other than sports,
then it is only fair to waiver
them." ¦¦ ; ' ¦
Most of the women's coaches
at Bloomsburg feel the same
toward the new policy. They
feel it is fair to both the student ,
athlete and the colleges,
is a nationally ranked
field hockey player. She
plays on Bloomsburg's field
hockey team. If another team
wanted Long, Hutchinson could
decide if Long was actively
recruited by the school . If so,
Hutchison could deny a release
and Long would have to sit out a
year if she transferred.
"A coach has id look at what's
participate immediately but
without aid for one year, unless
granted an institutional release.
An institutional release is
simply a waiver written by_ the
~
athlete 's present coach .stating
that she was not actively
recruited by the school — a
permission to compete.
The policy is different for a
mid-year transfer student. One
on aid cannot participate until
the succeeding academic year
and will not .be given aid for one
full year, even if released. She
can compete immediately, but
will never receive any aid.
A mid-year transfer not on aid
is eligible to participate immediately without aid for one
year , unless institutionally
released .
Cecil H. Turberville, athletic
director at Bloomsburg, feels
that "as the level of competition
in women's sports increases,"
there is a need for a stricter
policy.
If athlete is on aid and
tranfers at the end of the year,
she can 't participate or receive
aid for one year. However, ' if
she notifies her institution prior
to December l for fall sports ,
January 15 for winter sports,
and February 15 for spring
sports , with intentions of
tranfering she will be allowed to
participate immediatley but
won 't receive aid for one year.
She will also be eligible to
compete immediately
if
released by her present institution.
A transferee not on aid can
Females
Movie Review
(Continued from Page 2)
could go to press. Catch it at
home, if possible ... Here 's a big
hand for BSC' s American
Chemical Society. The group
brought two classic horror
flicks , "Fiend Without a Face ,"
and the' shocking "Night of the
Living Dead" to BSC for
Halloween ... Also, a slap on the
back for the KUB Program
Board for contributing "Th e
Legend of Hell House" and the
3-D (?) "It Came From Outer
Space. " For those of you
wonderingj yes that was The
Professor from "Gilligan 's
Island" in the latter. I guess he
needed a few bucks...
Prior to this new policy,
women athletes could compete
at one instituion , transfer
schools, and be eligible to
compete at the new institution
without having to sit out for a
year.
"With the old policy a lot of
'snaking' was done by some of
the bigger basketball schools,"
said Janet M. Hutchinson ,
women 's field hockey and
Softball coach at BSC.
The new rule protects smaller
institutions from losing good
players to teams that can offer
bigger scholarships , better
urograms, etc.
For instance , Debbie Long
^^ANSWER: :>*
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Campus Information Line:
CI
Call 389-3123
WW—— mTmm
I \K \
Hijmmmmm—mammmammmamammm
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Internship Opportunity, Spring
Semester. Geisinger Medical Center.
Work with development of promotional materials in office of Personnel . Need experience or skills
in working with multi-media equipment and techniques. For further
information , contact Dr, Brian Johnson, Campus Coordinator of Internships , rrn.230i Hartline,389r3600.
ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS ,
Dec. 81, May 82 and Aug. 82.
Sigh 'up' for Senior Portraits in 1981- •
198'5?.''' Obiter. They are being taken
Nov. 9-13 & Nov. 16-20. Sign up
NOWI'I QrdtPloor KUB] Obiter Off Ice.
:\. \
?,&& 'C.-W-"; .
¦:*
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/¦ ' '>, :.U. '. > ¦'
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Campus Weather Station:
""" .
¦^-B ^ Vik
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¦
THERE WILL BE A General Membership meeting of all Phi Beta Lambda
members on Wednesday, November
4th at 9 p.m. in the President's
Lounge. The meeting will last approximately 45 minutes.
bindings w/brakes. MOO. Ski Boots Nordica Elite (women's) Single Buckle. Good condition. MO, normally
?120. Call Heather ,387-0272.
RESPECTABLE GIRLS — Reply box
3873. - Respectable Guys
ENZO, when are you going to notice "me"? Love, Your M-W-F Crush
PEAVY T-60 Electric guitar, w/case,
amp and other accessories. Call
784-5620.
THE MASS COMM CLUB will meet
in room 24 in Old Science, Wed.
evening at 6:30. The Pace trip and
fund raising will be discussed.
TO MY FRIENDS AT BSC: Notre Dame
is great but I do miss BSC. Walt
lelusic (THE BEEMAN)
DON'T MISS OUR 40% off sale till
Nov. 15! Merlite Jewelry , rm. 219
Luzerne. Call 3576
ALL EDUCATION MAJORS:
'
iqsi
Student PSEA will hold Its" monthly .
meeting Nov. l6, Tuesday, ai 8:00
TAN, BLACK and WHITE Stag " Ski
in Multi-Rm. A of KUB. There will , Coat. Lost at Espy Fire Hall. Please
be a speaker from the. State PSEA
call Bob. 389-3335 or. contact any
SIO brother.
!
office to explain the proposed "Six
Ypar Play For Education. " Will ft
PERSONALS
affect vbu?'??' - - ^ . '""{ ' s r. ' ¦• ' r- ' i GLENNA,Lust much or what? - K,S.
INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY , Spring
¦
Semester.^Oeisinger Medical GohV'' : »'
WANTED
ter. Work with development of ,pro,-. j WANTED: Baseball cards, football
motional materials In office per-, ; and non-sport gurri! 'cards.- Gash' paid
sonnelr Need .experience oivskllls ' fdr good cppdlfion ,cards> ,and. other
In working with ^rnult|"rnedl,a,>quip,-; LbtisebalM'tem3Vcairj .J.784-8213!
ment and techniques. For further. ? ? ¦ ¦¦ ¦
FOR SALE
1
Inf^rr^atiorV contact Dri BriaKjJohn- ., ; SKIS-K2-USA II) 160 cm w/Tyrolia'
son, Campus Coordinator of Intern- ' J
150 Bin"dings.^l50 Ski Boots T ' Caber'
ships Rm. 230 Hartline ,389.3600.
; Formqble Bio-Syatern (Racing-rExp..) ¦
Both skis
j Boots. I*l3»r npr^ajjlyi'225.
ANYONE INTlfRESTEDvio becoming a ;' and boots,-usbd ' 'only 'one season!' ¦
member of trie* cortcpHv Band, for .; Call Bill,387Kl"638.^ r ¦
¦ ¦
¦
this year , as /ia (JrumAor,;;clarlnet : ¦ .
-;.' .f;
. ,> ¦ ¦ ' • / ¦
•
player ,"* please call Nancy at 3183
¦ ¦ ; SKIS - . K2 Rider II, 160 cm, used
or* Cindy at"2681v" -•••.>»¦«. •' •« •• - •>•¦• <•- - ¦-¦ ' ohly^ono sedsbh. 'WIth Sbldmbri 444 :
'
¦•
¦
JOE O: Way to go,there buddy
MARV: To our Chief. The photo contest is underway, thanks for the
idea 111 YOUR BOYS IN LUZERNE '
——
¦¦'
1
—^^^^ M«—B—ramimima u— ¦
DEAR HOCKEY TEAM,
The interview has been changed
to NEXT Sunday night. Please wear
your Raisin suits. Friends are forever!! (no hard feelings)
Love, Roberta
DIANE .— Quick , pull my finger.
Thanks for the hole in my comfor :
ter,
CHERYL — Nothing like waking up
to breakfast in bed. Want some OAT*
meal.
G.H. SYNDROME - See any flashes
lately?
¦ ¦ I wish to place a classified
I
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T ..j, ,; ; ^Announcements .•
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IT TAKES A SLY- MAN to escape a
double header
House '¦¦
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-Mi ":., -. : , % ¦ ¦ , , , . Personals
' : ¦' '
"
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TO ALL SIO BROTHERS: Do you know ' I
^
where your sheet is? ,„ '.,
!I
,
,. i ...
Services
¦
' ¦'wanted i: ' *'
' ,
, - r. r •- ¦" !' ; ,' ' r - ' .
j
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F.B. Do you know how ' cold the ' !¦;'
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study lounge really Is? ¦ The In¦
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I enclose $
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fatuated One
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letters.
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AMY M. (Pumpkin, Sizo . Satch) Conr
j ' Send to; Box 97 KUB or drop in the C&mpus ' Voice , mail , sl6t[ ' 3rd
gratulations I Best WishesI" Your the
5 p.m. on Tuesday.
floor Union before 5 p.m. on Sunday , or before
j
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,, ,:
best, love, The Staff ;at Studs &
,
.
'
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Suds & members/of IEta Thltftd ' ' ' ' ' '
|;,..:. AII 1dj^l^inuatlm.'pif«:pal(i«':i T t v-vvv i v * .^ 'v * « ;-- •;• •, : .. . ,ir^.
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Bloomsburg Gridders Bow to Kutztown
Quarterback Greg Gristick
threw five touchdown passes as
the Kutztown State College
Golden Bears remained in the
thick of the Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Division
race with a 48-24 triumph over
the winless Bloomsburg State
Huskies, Saturday, at. Kutztown.
Kutztown stayed within one
game of front runner. Millersville and raised their record to
5-2-1 while the Huskies lost their
fourth P.C. East contest of the
year and fell to 0-8 overall.
The Golden Bears got on the
board on their initial possession
when Gristick hit running back
Dave Keeny on a nine yard
scoring toss to cap a ten play, 70
yard scoring drive. Brian West
added his first of six extra
ten with nine and a half minutes
to go in the third period on a
John Flynn one yard plunge.
But KSC came right back three
minutes later when Gristick
connected on his fifth TD pass of
the day, to running back Dave
Keeny.
Bill Hosco and Greg Brusko
added touchdowns for Kutztown
while BSC, freshman Tim
Stanton scored on a 29 yard run
to make the final count KSC 48BSC 24.
points and with 11:27 left in the
firs t quarter it was 7-0 KSC.
. Following a Kutztown fumble,
the Huskies put their first score
of the day on the board when
tight end Mike Blake pulled in a
nine yard pass from quarterback Kurt WterTcheiser concluding a 15play, 65 yard drive.
The kick failed and after the
first quarter Kutztown led 7-6.
The Bears added 21 second
quarter points on Gristick's
touchdown passes of 36, 14, and
13 yards.
Bloomsburg 's only T.D. of the
quarter came when defensive
end Chris Blackburn picked a
Kutztown fumble but of the air
and fell into the end zone. At
half time it was Kutztown 28,
Bloomsburg 12.
The Huskies pulled to within
v Kutztown racked up 443 yards
in total offense for the afternoon
while the Huskies netted 320
yards.
Running back Geoff Johnson
ran 60 yards for an improved
BSC running attack which
gained 153 yards.
Hockey Update
Bad Week for Bloom
By MARY HASSENPLUG
The Bloomsburg field hockey
ieam played two dominating
*ames last week but couldn't
some away with a victory.
In the first game, the Huskies
iverpowered
Scranton
iJniversity, but a chance score
fave SU a 1-0 victory. With five
econds left in the first half ,
Scranton broke through the BSC
tefense and scored the game's
inly marker.
Coach Jan
Hutchinson
rommented , "It was a very
rustrating game to lose. We
bminated the whole game but
>ieir break-away got by us.
hey didn't get anywhere near
lie goal in the entire second
alf ."
The Huskies held an over•helming advantage in shots on
oal : 18-2. Scranton did not
\anage a single corner shot ,
bile BSC had 12 attempts,
espite
their
complete
nminance throughout the
:ime, Bloomsburg could not
ill out a win.
The Huskies next opponent
as Marywood College. Again
HC controlled the game , but
;uld not chalk up a victory,
arywood managed a 1-1 tie
.th a score late in the game.
Bloomsburg m a i n t a i n e d
;ssession throughout the first
GOOD-LUCK
IN THE
iOFTBALL PLAYOFFS
MARAUDERS!!
The 4th year will
be the cltarm!
period and used fine, precision
passing to keep play on their
offensive end of the field. But an
improved Marywood defense
held the Huskies attack and the
first half ended in a scoreless
tie.
With just over six minutes
played in the second period ,
Polly Dougherty knocked in the
Huskies only score off a corner
shot. Linda Hershey assisted
the goal.
BSC continued to control play,
but with four minutes left in the
game, Marywood rushed the
Husky goal and came away with
the score.
Coach Hutchinson , "We
played very well, and especially
did some good passing. Their
goal was a tough one ; it
eventually went off one of our
sticks. It' s too bad we had the
j
:
•
•
;
• •
ROLLERSKATING PARTY j
•"
at Skatetown
.
:
•
•
:
•
•
•
.
Sponsored by Fellowship
for Christian Athletes
: Monday,Nov. 9
•
week that we did, but we re
still looking to get a bid to
regionals." ¦
Hutchinson believes the
Huskies have a very good
chance of getting a fairly high
seeding in the regional tournament.
The first round game will be
played ort Tuesday, November
3, at the home field of the higher
seed.
Junior Jeanne Fetch is confident that the Huskies are
going to regionals, and "then
we 're going to Nationals!"
Fetch added , "All of us have a
special talent and when we put
it all together - we 're
awesome!"
The Huskies have the talent
and the potential to go very far ,
and with luck they'll put it all
together at the right time !
7:00p.m. to 10:00p.m. •
•
For more info Call Dan 3579
•
I
Tickets 'l.OO admission
.75 for skates ,
•
All Welcome
t§B^\
¦ '^JsP
I
*ff?f!^
I
•
••'
•
SHAKING LOOSE. BSC running back Geoff Johnson
carries the ball in the loss to Kutztown.
(Photo by Patrick Murphy)
Skiing equipment f o r sale
See the Classifi eds
r Printing
V HENRIE
and Silkscreening
TEE
SHIR
v— ^^^^
TS
-\^
~
•Custom
A
>
hsX Lettering
«£t
\A
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•Transfers
\£?
Wk
* JACKETS
jy^rs ^
ff
¦
I ' - 'V WMW ' -" '¦ - ' ¦ I
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;,
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./^^ A--.
: ;; '. ? Rear 40!West Mam St. m^'r ' '
Across from Th6 Salvation Arhriy
;;v/
Bloomsbur| ^ 7844 633^:
bsjj&asl
^HMHMHBH nmMi •
Though for the Day
"Good judgement come from experience, and experience - well, that
comes frompoor judgement"
Anonymous
Inside the Voice
Concert Review
Organizations request financial support
Finance Committee
Gives Money
By FRAN LUBIN
The Finance Committee of
CGA budgets the money that is
distributed between different
clubs and organizations.
All organizations - which
request financial support from
CGA must submit their requests
to the Financial Committee.
Decisions are made by College
Council and President McCormick.
Funds for supplies, phone
calls, and stationery are not
provided to organizations.
Additional allocations for
"budget items" (such as
uniforms and equipment) will
be provided by the Budget
Committee only.
No organization is allowed to
use CGA . funds for banquet
purposes. It is recommended by
CGA that the organizations
have an "all-out fund raising
effort" to raise money for such
an activity.
For athletics, the requested
budget and the approved budget
were the same for 1981-82. It
was $177,465.
For recreation, the budget for
1981-82 was $10,479.75. This
budget covers men 's and
women' s intramurals , and
recreation.
For the Artist and Lecture
Series, the requested budget for
1981-82 was $231,548, but
received $210,925. Community
Arts Council is part of this
organization.
Publicity
received
the
requested allotment for 1981-82.
That figure was $7,000.
Publicity covers radio and
television, pictures and film,
and press and publications.
The dorm fund requested
$19,427 and received $15,377 for
1981-82. This includes all the
dorms, commuters, and the
dorm equipment.
Community Activities got
$24,800 as they requested. This
is composed of ambulance,
summer theatre, secretarial bookkeeping, and reserve for
funds.
The Finance Committee tries
to give what is requested to all
the clubs and organizations on
campus.. They do, however,
have to keep to a limited budget
so they, try to divide the money
as fairly as possible.
By BRENDA D. MARTIN
Students were evacuated
from Hartline Science Center
for approximately a half an
hour Tuesday after an
anonymous bomb threat was
reported.
Security
received
an
anonymous phone call at approximately 8:30 a.m. reporting
that an alleged bomb was to go
off at 9:30 a.m. in Hartline.
Students and faculty were
evacuated from the building
from 9:15 to 9:45 a.m. to ensure
their safety.
"The college must always be
aware of the safety of the
students, and we took every
possible precaution we could,"
said Vice President for
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , Boyd
Buckingham.
According to Buckingham ,
the administration h as three
prime obje ctives in nciderits
For the music department;
the requested and approved
budget for 1981-82 was $23,965.
This includes such activities as
band day, concert choir, Husky
singers and studio band.
Bloom Theatre Ensemble
Holds Gala Benefit
Hurry, hurry, hurry and get
your red hot tickets to the entertainment event of . the
season ! The Bloomsburg Ensemble is back with its highly
successful musical comedy
e x t r a v a g a n z a TA-RA-RA
BOOM-DE-AY ! AN OLD TIME
AMERICAN MUSIC HALL. On
November 6th, the BTE will
hold a grand evening of
boisterous fun at the Briar
Heights Lodge in Berwick. The
evening is a Gala Benefit for the
BTE as the company proudly
begins its fifth year of providing
the region with quality
professional entertainment.
''Ya-Hoooo'' and . "Hip-HipHooray" for TA-RA-RA BOOMDE-AY, shouted the critics
when the show premiered in
October. "The individual acts
Bomb Scare a Hoax
such as this : to protect the lives
of students and faculty, to not
blow the incident out of
proportion , and to apprehend
the person who made the bomb
threat.
The administration also
follows a set procedure in this
kind of incident. They evacuate
the building for approximately
a half an hour, they complete a
search for the bomb, and they
follow leads to apprehend the
person making the bomb threat.
CAD Strives to Increase Student Po ential
By JANET BEAVER
The principal goal of the Center for Academic Development,
CAD is to "increase possible potential of success of every student
enrolled in college, according to Dr. Jesse Bryan , director of CAD.
"The CAD program was conceived to provide access to higher
education for those students who were denied access in any substantial numbers (minority). The program was exapnded to include academically and economically disadvantaged students.
"This enabled us to enroll students from any ethnic background,"
said Irving Wright , assistant director of CAD.
To get into the CAD program one must have marginal grades,
and show a potential for success. They must also meet the minimal
income level. Wright stated that is not necessarily true, some
perennial incomes exceed this level.
The CAD has several special components to try to give education
assets and beneficial to all. The reading lab is directed by James
Mullen, the math lab by Vincent DeMelfi, the writing lab is under
Harry Ackerman, and Ron DiGiondomenico heads the tutorial
service. These programs have and will continue to extend to
students in regular admissions in need of support.
Wright would like to "mainstream into the system here and erase
the negative stigma attached to minority students." There is a
prevailing myth on this campus that minority students receive
financial aid over and above the amount students in regular admissions receive. Wright would like to dispell this myth by in-
Buckingham
Receive s
Citation
A citation by the House of
R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s and
resolutions by the Bloomsburg
Area Chamber of Commerce
and the Bloomsburg State
College . Board of ; Trustees
highlighted the activities at the
retirement dinner of Boyd F.
Buckingham, Vice President
for Administration at Bloomsburg Sta te College , held
recently in the Scranton
dicating that student: who are eligible must follow the same
procedure in filling 6i l students do. They mus lso meet the same eligibility guidelines as
other students.
Filing for Financial Aid is a complicated procedure so another
goal for CAD is to help students to understand the application and
provide assistance in completing the form.
According to Bryan, "CAD doesn't assume a student is
anywhere. They take him where he is and build to where he should
be." The CAD wants to provide students enrolled in this program
with basic academic development skills to achieve success at the
college level. This consists of bringing students to academic levels
from the time of enrollment in reading, writing, and to some degree
logic that has a place in higher institutions.
Fifty-five percent of the students are black, forty percent are
white and the other five percent are hispanic or Vietnamese. Many
come from ethnic Philadelphia and are moving to a "rural,
homogenous *( white), provential community," said Wright, "The
adjustment for many of the students is difficult during the first
year. CAD tries, to help supply reasonable support and role
models."
Wright feels the most important personal goal is to "see students
from a point of dependence to independence, and to prepare
students to move, into the world of competitive and successful
employment."
Commons on campus. His
retirement
is . effective
December 25, 1981.
Representative Ted Stuban of
the 109th Legislative District
and Carmel Sirianni , a BSC
alumna and representative of
the 111th Legislative District,
jointly submitted the following
Citation signed by the Speaker
of the House Mat.t , Ryan , and
Page 4
Chief Clerk John Zubeck :
WHEREAS ,
Boyd
F.
Buckingham is retiring as Vice
President for Administration at
Bloomsburg State College after
many years of distinguished
service;
AND WHEREAS, a United
States Army Air Corp veteran
of World War II, he was
educated at Bloomsburg State
are gems, each one sparkling
with its own singular humor...".
The Music Hall "kept the
audience alternately cheering
and convulsing with laughter".
For the Gala Benefit at Briar
Heights, the BTE presents all of
the romping, foot stamping fun
of the October show, plus more.
At 8:00 p.m. the evening begins
when a white-gloved doorman
shows you and your friends to
your reserved table. A cash bar
provides drinks and lively
vendors promptly *visit your
table with delicacies. With your
thirst and appetite appeased,
the curtain raises at 9:00 p.m.
and the fun begins !
The entertainment, directed
by Whit MacLaughlin, has a
dash of everything. Introducing
the Music Hall and lording over
its antics is the . one and only
"Dr. Whipple", the master of
ceremonies. With the clean, fast
talking confidence of a circus
huckster,
Whipple sells
everything on the stage —
comedy tragedy, song and
dance - as well as the
mysterious and infamous "Dr.
Thipple's CURE-ALL". From
the moment "Dr. Whipple"
steps on stage its non-stop
entertainment. The actors sing,
they clown, they reach the
heights of the tragic arts and
they dance the kick line and the
old soft shoe with a vengance. A
highlight of the evening is a
talent competition where three
brave souls compete with one
another for the audience 's
approval and for a case of "Dr.
Whipple 's CURE-ALL".
"The curtain raises at 9
p.m. and the fun begins"
Because this grand event is a
Gala Benefit for the BTE tickets
are priced at $15.00 for singles
and $25.00 for couples. There is
a 10 percent discount for groups
of eight or more. The proceeds
from the Benefit will help' to
assure BTE 's continued growth
as a not-for-profit theatre
company serving Northeastern
and Central Pennsylvania.
So run , don't walk, to your
phone to reserve your tickets to
the event of the season. Call the
BTE Box Office Monday Friday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. at 7848181.
College, Bucknell University
and the Pennsylvania State
University . His long and
distinguished career of more
than 36 years in the field of
education includes more tha n 28
years of outstanding service at
Bloomsburg State College in
teaching, public relations , and
development and fiscal administration. As Associate Vice
(Continued on pap* 3)
Edito rial
BLOOM COUNTY
fry Berke Breathed
Concerts?
by BOB STILES
With the BSC Concert Committee 's budget now running
$3,000 to $4,000 in the red, one thing seems obvious:
something is going wrong and measures must now be
taken to insure that the Committee's budget never
goes in the red again.
Perhaps the mistake is in the Committee's outlook.
To rationalize that concerts are no longer of interest
to most BSC students is ludicrous. Within the last
year how many BSC students have traveled hundreds
of miles to see rock groups? The number is larger
than you may think , or rig htfully expect. These students ,
in most cases , are gladly traveling the distance because they are going to hear groups they want to
hear. And that seems to be the key !
Though "Ian Hunter ,'' "Gary U.S. Bonds ," and "Todd
Rundgren and Utopia" deserve recognition , they onl y
appeal to a select group of followers. Not the majority
of students ! On the other hand , "James Taylor ,"
"Hall and Oates ," "America ," and "Beatlemania ," past
successful concerts here, appeal to a wider range of
students. "Top 40" and other big name groups draw
crowds not groups who appeal only to select audiences !
Of course, the committee could probably not afford
to get 'Styx " or "Foreigner ," groups who draw big
crowds , but , there are other less costly groups that
students will pay $10 or more to hear. And perhaps
if the committee pooled all its money together and had
only one big concert , it might have enough money
to attract one big group !
Another mistake seems to be the manner in which
the groups are selected. Perhaps a new booking agent
is needed. Or perhaps a way must be found so that
there is more time to book artists.
What do you think?
"HaUoween ll, " the Night "He"
Came Back Again
By RICK DiLIBERTO
On Halloween night, strange
things happen. Ghosts, goblins,
and ghouls prowl the streets,
witches and bats fill the air, and
people pay a $3.50 admission
price to see a film during which
they cover their eyes 75 percent
of the time. One can only
wonder. Well, after all, it is
Halloween.
Halloween II, a John Carpenter - Debra Hill production
playing at the Capitol Twin
Theatre, had this strange effect
on the majority of viewers this
writer observed.
Using every worn-out false
shock known in the horror
genre,
including
boxes
falling out of closets, and cats
jumping out of garbage bins,
director Rick Rosenthal turns
out a disappointingly predictable movie.
Jamie Lee Curtis, the young
Letters To The Editor
Reply to Inquisition
Dear Editor ,
I see that the Spanish
Inquisition got out his jumbo
box of Crayolas once again to
comment on one of the important social issues here at
BSC (Letter to the Editor , Oct.
28). Still , one can't blame the
editors for printing his letter ;
it's hard to resist a letter
written in 64 differen t colors.
Too bad he 's so insecure he has
to hide behind a pseudonym, as
I'd like to know just who (or
what)
I' m
addressing.
Spaniard , your uninformed and
inaccurate attacks on my
person have nothing to do with
the argument I presented in my
letter (Oct. 21). I suppose you
just couldn 't find enough wrong
with my position to attack it
directly.
Now , to address some of the
rarnblings of the Spaniard's
THE CAMPUS VOICE
Bloomsburg Stol»Coll»g«. Bloomtbura. PA 17815 Box 97 KUB 389-3101
VOL. IX No. 17
Ex«cutiv« Editor
Ad Manager
Asst. Ad Manager
Mows Editors
Now* Associate
Roberta Cl*m«nt
Brian Duort
Inga Eissman
D*b B*rtcl*y Br»nda Martin
Angol Grasso
Jim Lyman, Patti Martin
Foatura Editor.
Virginia Rood
Footuro Astt
Mik» Yamrus
Sports Editor ..
.'
Kevin Kodiih
Sports Astt .
Dan Campbell
Photo Editor
. Pat Murphy
Editorial Editor
v.
..Bob Stilos
Copy Editors
Nancy Barg, Karon Haldsrman.
Circulation Managers
Sua Hicks, Hllarle Runyon
Business Manager
Karen Troy ' ,
Advisor....,.,.
......
Mr. Richard Savage
!
TIM Vole* It fov«m*d by Ik* Editorial Soard with th* final r«ipomlbllty for all
material ratting with th* *K*cutlv* editor at itot*d In th»- Joint Stat*m*nt of
Freedom, Rights and R*iponilbllHI*iof itud*ntt at ISC.
Th* Vole* r*i«rv*< th* right to *dlt all l*tt*r« and copy iubml(t*d, A maximum
o» 400 wordi will b* placed on all letters to th* editor with an allowone* '
for exception!. All letter* muit b* tlgn*d and hav* an addreii and phon*
number. Nemetwill b* withheld upon request.
Th* opinions volc*d In th* columns, articles and notices or* not necessarily
¦har*d by th* entire ktuff . An untlgn*d stall editorial denotst o major •
consensus of th* tdltorial board.
letter. Concerning the drinking
age (by the way, PA's a commonwealth, Spaniard) , though
I'm not 21, I have no personal
objections to it. But, when one
considers that Pennsylvania is
surrounded by states that have
lower drinking ages, and further , that many of BSC' s
students come from these
states, a social problem arises.
The number 21 is arbitrary ;
there is nothing sacred about it.
When you add to this the inconsistant and sporatic enforcement of this law , one has a
considerable argument against
the drinking age. Ever hear of
civil disobedience , Spaniard?
No , I suppose not; Thoreau and
M.L. King, Jr. don 't show up in
the comic books too often.
As to why I am here at BSC,
the answer is to get an
education , something the
Spaniard seems to be sadly
lacking. I :don 't go to private
schools anymore because of
their costs — seven to ten
thousand a year. But just
because I and a lot of other
people here at Bloomsburg
State can 't afford the cost of a
private school doesn't ' mean
that we should give up our right
to have a say in any of the
policies of the school. The
writers of the Constitution
considered it to be not only the
right , but also the; -duty of
citizens to examine their
government. Of course, who is
Thomas Jefferson to question
the wisdom of the Spaniard.
The Spaniard also brought
some of the problems caused by
babysitter from the original
Halloween , is still on the run in
this one, trying to avoid an
escaped psycho who'd like to
see what she 's made of ,
literally.
Curtis performs naturally
with horror . No wonder, since
she is the daughter of Tony ( the
Boston Strangler) Curtis, and
Janet Leigh, who took a blood
bath in the shower in Psycho.
The 22 year-old actress had a
great deal of exposure this
weekend. Friday night was the
premiere of Halloween on TV;
Halloween II also opened
nationwide on Friday, and on
Sunday; she starred in the made
- for - TV movie, "Death of a
Centerfold : The Dorothy
Stratten Story. "
Besides Curtis ' performance,
the film rates a big zero. Donald
Pleasence, as the killer 's
psychologist, is overbearing.
The plot, with the killer loose in
a hospital, is quite choppy and
unbelievable, and the twist
Carpenter uses to tie together
the original and the sequel,
using Curtis as the killer 's
sister, who was adopted . by
another family, is lukewarm.
If you intend to see Halloween
II, at least try to keep your eyes
uncovered. You 'll lose out
enough with them seeing
everything.
QUICK FLICKS: You might
remember Miss Curtis from
thrillers like Prom Night, Road
Games , Terror Train , and The
Fog ... The suspenseful "Body
Heat," which played at the
Columbia last week, rated an
"A plus." Unfortunately, it was
yanked from the theatre in
favor of "Mommie Dearest"
before this writer 's review
off-campus . parties. I hardly
think that the job of this school's
administration is to run around
handing out citations for littering and indecent exposure.
That is the job of the local police
force and , as I stated in my first
letter , the town residents can
call the police anytime a civil
law is broken. I firmly believe
that the residents of Bloomsburg should protect their
rights, but not at the expense of
the students '..rights.
As I said in my first letter , my
main concern is not with the
issue of drinking, but instead
with student rights. The administration seems unwilling to
present the new alcohol policy
for debate before it' s implication. Perhaps the Spaniard
will let anything be . shoved
down his throat (including
Commons' food) , * but I. don 't
believe that most of the students
here at BSC are as suppliant to
authoritarianism as he.
Finally, I feel justified in
writing this reply because of the
large number of students who
have approached me in support
of my position . In fact , the
editorial staff of the Voice
published an editorial in support of my position in the very
same issue that the Spaniard's
letter appeared. Also, I was
contacted by one of the CGA
officers and was asked to be on
an ad hoc committee examining
the new policy. It seems that the
Spaniard is in the minority .
Nonetheless , I believe it is
everyone 's right to express
their opinions in theaters of
public discourse, even if they do
so in an inaccurate and childish
( "Pooh?") manner.
,
'
(Continued on Page 7)
Sincerely,
Frank E. Brock
A Movefo ra N ey olEmi
By FAITH PETR0VICH
Ah exciting arid;fun new .way
to get into shape, is being offered
to the- residents of Elwell ;Hall.
Sherri , Wilson and, Natalie
Laubach?. ane( }.ins|;rucj ;ing ,an
aerobjC/ 'dancti "iclass . everjy
9j:30
Tuesday ancf :tfhursday\at
,
p .m'. tp^.l^O . ' **0':S""4n¦ the
multipurpQse.'roqm' of, the Kehr
Union Building. ;: . „ '" ¦ ,.;;;V
Wilson holds , a.rr i!instructor 's
certificate frorrv the YWCA and
Laubachv also.', has two years,
experience- •; in. - ' the area;
Maureen Mulligan , resident
deari ';of Elwfil^r^:;?\^v.is6r-tq,'1,b0
'
. ¦. .r , :^J>J. ?;H
program-: _
;. „
Wl?a.t .began ,as,a ;smal|ij fJ,Qpp.-i i
prqj qct was .spon open to .the,. hall; ;
due to feedbackv fcpm girjs ,pn : >
other ,floors ,who, were also . in- ;
terested in, , attending. .There is • ' •¦
currently, a very j arge turnout. When asked what prompted , ;
the girls ,,to .begjn, . such ; an ef- \
fecttye, .' .. prpgrani, . Wilson , ¦j,
commented ' that it was afifun ¦ „¦> ;
way to. get into shape, an$ greak »i
way riq meet people, . ' :¦ . <. < «,¦¦.; oi/t
Laubach added ! that it -wa s u>•
also a . great , way . to prevent,-*,
gaining tfie :freshmen ''i5" v, , i , -- , (Contlnvtd.Pii Pago .3)' , ;v\,: •;?
Students Speak
By ALLEN McCOLLUM
There has been a lot of talk recently about the new party policy
put into effect. Students are continually being annoyed by the way
the parties have been stopped by Robert Norton, dean of student
life.
I recently interviewed Norton and he presented me with a copy of
the 1981-1982 Pilot. He showed me the ordinance code regarding the
buying, selling, and consumption of alcohol by students. Norton
said, "all students should read this, section so they thoroughly
understand where they stand. "
Norton went on to say that he has been receiving many calls from
BSC alumni saying that "they are hearing rumors that Bloomsburg
is getting a reputation of being a party school." He then added that
this is not what he wants the school to be known for . What Dean
Norton says he is doing is simply enforcing the school's policy on
alcohol.
If Dean, Norton should get word of a party going on, he may
contact the L.C.B. to go out and bust the party: If someone returning from a party would be arrested, then the person who had the
party would also be subject to an arrest.
Here are the rules that Norton plans to enforce. For on campus
students, the first offense will result in a written warning, of which
a copy will be sent to the student 's parents, upon a second offense
the student may be put on probation, and the third offense may
result in a suspension. All of these penalties are subject to change
depending on the severity of the offense.
Fraternities and sororities will not be able to have parties except
for date parties and banquets. For those who do have a party, the
penalties are as follows: The first offe nse will mean probation for
the offender. Should a second offense occur , the offender will no
longer be permitted to have Date Parties or Banquets. A third offense will result in the revoking of their charter. These penalties
may vary according to the circumstances. These rules also apply to
clubs and any other college organizations. What Norton wants to do
is treat students off-campus the same as bn-campus students in
regards to alcohol.
In talking with students I found most of them disgusted with the
new policy. They feel there will be nothing to do on weekends. Most
said weekends are the only free time they have and that parties are
the only place to spend it. Parties give students a chance to go out
and get wasted. They also help us get rid of our tensions or any
anxieties; we get to relax and be ourselves.
I called the Bloomsburg Police Department and asked if there
had been an increase in the number of arrests. The officer said,
"No, there have been fewer arrests this year." If there are fewer
arrests then why are parties being talked up so bad?
There will be meetings held by Dean Norton explaining the
policy; also, at these meetings will be guest speakers. Students are
invited to these meetings; they will only last about an hour. If
anyone wants to find out more about these meetings they should get
in contact with the Information Desk. During these meetings, ideas
on how to spend free time will be discussed.
Allen McCollum
Forensic Team Places 4th
This past- weekend the
Bloomsburg State Forensics
Team placed ,4th in the 1981
College Forensic Association
fall speech tournament held at
the New Jersey Institute of
Technology (NJIT) in Newark.
Placing 3rd in Interpretation
of Literature was Bonita Hull.
Tim Talarico placed 4th in
Impromptu Speaking, and John
Chapin placed 3rd in After
Dinner Speaking.
In Lincoln-Douglas Debate,
Sue Stanton placed 2nd and
Robert Jones Jr. placed 5th .
Also contributing to the team
victory in Extemporaneous
Speaking
were
Karen
Halderman and Talarico.
Competing in Prose and Poetry
Interpretation were Gregg
Gianuzzi , Karen Howley,
Stanton , Halderman , and
Chapin. Impromptu speakers
were Lora Mumbauer, Stanton,
Halderman , and Jones.
Persuasive speakers included
Mumbauer, Hull , and Gianuzzi.
Hull also competed in Informative Speaking. Dramatic
Duo teams included Haiderman-Hull and Chapin-Talarico.
Also competing in Lincoln Douglas Debate were Iris Hall
III and Mary Brinkeiv
Also traveling with the
students were
Graduate
Assistants Susan Waters and
Rob Novell!; debate coach,
Professor Jim Tomlinson ; and
Director
of
Forensics,
Professor Harry C. Strine III ,
newly elected President of the
Collegiate
Forensic
Association.
According to Coach Strine,
"This weekend was a team
effort preliminary round , finals,
and debate all determined our
4th place win. Everyone should
be commended. "
Buckingham Receives Citation
(Continued from page one)
President for Development and
External Relations, Mr.
Buckingham was involved in
the greatest fiscal plant expansion in the history of the
college— when 19 new buildings
and other projects were added
at a cost of approximately $21
million. Under his direction as
Vice President' for Administration during the past
seven years, Bloomsburg has
been cited for its efficient
handling of fiscal matters.
Actively involved in numerous
community,
civic, .,.: and
professional organizations, Mr.
Buckingham has received
many awards and honors including the Distinguished
Service Award by the Bloomsburg Area Chamber of Commerce and the 33rd degree by
the Supreme Council Scottish
Rite Free Masonry.
NOW , THEREFORE , the
House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania extends special
commendations to Boyd F.
Buckingham for his invaluable
contribution to Bloomsburg
State College, congratulating
him on his retirement; and
wishes him the best in his future
Remembrances of the evening covered the past , pre sent, and future .
endeavors ; and further directs
that a copy of this citation be
delivered to Four Kent Road ,
Bloomsburg.
In a resolution of the
Bloomsburg Area Chamber of
Commerce, Ralph Dillon, a
member , of the board of
directors and a past president ,
pointed out the 15 consecutive
years Buckingham had Served
on the Board of Directors and
the fine year the Chamber had
under
B u ck i n g h a m 's
presidency in 1968, plus his
service to the many other
Bloomsburg organizations and
his 28V2 years with the Commonwealth and BSC.
Joseph Nespoli, chairman of
the college's Board of Trustees,
the
Remembrances
of
evening covered the past,
present, and future. Mrs. Peggy
Bailey, acting director of grants
spoke of several happenings in
Buckingham's past, including
his military service as a pilot in
the, U.S. Air Corps and
presented him with a limited
edition print of a B-17 Flying
Fortress, the type of plane he
flew: '.
William
Williams,
Dr.
director , of personnel, dwelled
on the present and concluded by
presenting a gift of a set of golf
clubs.
In speaking about the future
activities of the honored guest,
Bruce "Nick" Dietterick,
director of public information,
presented Buckingham with art
supplies and a certificate for art
lessons, plus a 35 mm camera
and accessories. All the gifts
were from the persons present
at the dinner.
The program concluded with
a response from Buckingham
which included both humerous
and serious references. Over
250 friends and colleagues were
in attendance. Music during the
evening was furnished by the
BSC Studio Band under the
direction of Stephen Wallace.
spoke of the resolution to be
presented at the November
board meeting which commends Buckingham for his
service and
outstanding
achievements in education and
administration, naming him
Vice President Emeritus on
retirement.
Offering appropriate remarks
were President James H.
McCormick and two Presidents
Emeritus, Dr. Harvey A. Wilson of Cheyney State
College. All three spoke of the
fine relationship they enjoyed
working with the honored guest
over the years.
r
Other prominent persons
giving remarks were Warren A.
Ringler, former commissioner
of higher education; Faculty
Emeritus Elton Hunsinger, who
with
closely
worked
Buckingham as Director of
Grants; Edward D. Sharetts,
BSC Alumnus and classmate of
Buckingham in the early 1940 s;
daughter Gail Buckingham
Worthington and son Boyd F.
Buckingham, Jr. ; and toastmaster John E. Hoch, dean
emeritus and a fellow administrator with Buckingham
for many years.
Anyone interested in being an
Olympian Staff . -^
Member?
JiH^^t r^^
There will be an
organizational
meeting,
T
ffiSj \A
J
^ ^^nfrw
^f^S^^^^^^ i
j k £&Ur
* *-: —
STl^S
Thurs. Oct. 5 at 6 p.m./
in Campus Voice
OffW
3rd Floor, KUB
ATTENTION
GRADUATING
SENIORS;
Dec. 81, May 82 and Aug. 82
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Sign Up for Senior Portraits
for 1981-82 Obiter
They are be/ng taken Nov. 9-13 and Nov. 16-20
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OLYMPIAN
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W&yji
Singing Telegrams Enlighten teasians ^
ACTOR SINGS TELEGRAMS. Daniel Socket* , a member
of the Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble , provides singing '
telegrams for all occasions. (Photo by Pat Murphy.)
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By NANCY BARG
A young man of slight build
steps into the crowded party.
Clad in vest, shirt with puffy
sleeves, bow tie and snappy
French beret, he holds a bottle
of beer with a vivid red ribbon
and a scrawled sign that reads
"HAPPY 21." He approaches
the speechless birthday girl,
romantically kisses her hand ,
and croons, ala' Bill Murray
style, "Happy birthday ... to
youuuuuuu ... Happy birrrthdayyy ... tooo YOUUU ... "
With a magnificent flourish,
he presents her with the beer,
bows neatly, and quickly exits
without a word, as the party
guests burst into laughter.
"It was the most original
birthday present I have ever
received... I loved it'." said BSC
student Lori Andreacola of her
surprise singing telegram.
A member of the Bloomsburg
Theatre Ensemble (BTE ) , Dan
Sackett renders a singing
telegram service for any occasion. Standing five feet, nine
and one half inches , Dan
Sackett can transform himself
into an English butler, flashy
circus
barker , low-class
English drunk and the nightclub
performer who made an appearance at Lori's 21st birthday
party.
"I play mostly comic
characters, which I enjoy," said
Sackett, a 25-year-old native of
Berwyn, Illinois. "1 ha^fr a
repertoire of four characters
right now, but I'd like to develop
more.
Sackett tries to make each
singing telegram as special as
he can and to stage it as if it's "a
little show." He explains that
his wife works with him and
gives him suggestions —¦ such
as bringing Lori the beer.
"The more personal information I get about someone,
the more I can work it into the
telegram ," said Sackett. Upon
learning that a particular client
was a Beatles fan , he sang a
medley of Beatle songs, ending
with the famous "Birthday. "
Danny Sackett first got bit by
the acting bug when he performed as a youngster with his
brother and sister in summer
shows that his parents produced
in their backyard. He went on to
act in high school, community
theatre , and then at Northwestern University, where he
majored in theatre.
With an/ undergraduate
degree in theatre, certification
Are you unhappy with Common's Food?
If so, Come to the Food Service Meeting
/^K
I C^L)
Thurs. Nov. 5 at 5:30 p.m.
»" the Common's Faculty
Dining Room
If you want results , come and
I
Voice your opinions to the management.
A _/N
f |
^
Lef Your °P mt°ns b& heard.
WfrMdfo
Everyone is welcome.
^
\ ^W^
m education and a masters
degree in theatre and speech
communication under his belt,
Sackett eventually wound up
joining the Bloomsburg Theatre
Ensemble.
The BTE has been in
opera tion for four years ;
Sackett joined two years ago.
"We are a not-for-profi t ,
professional theatre company, "
explained Sackett. "We 're
funded both federally and
through Pennsylvania Council
of the. Arts. "
The BTE is a year-round
company with 12 full-time
members, plus "associate
members " who work part of the
year, for a total of about 25
actors ,
directors
and
playwrights in all.
"We run the company ourselves, which is rather unique,"
said Sacket, who also does
public relations work for the
BTE . "It was started by a group
of artists who wanted to get
together , which is usually not
the way companies get started. "
Sackett teaches theatre
through the BTE ; the courses
occur during the summer and
are open to the public. He
taught directing at Benton High
School and presently substitute
teaches at area high schools.
How did he get into performing singing telegrams? "I
organized an auction this
summer ; we auctioned off our
services, as well as goods. One
service was the , singing
telegram.
"After the auction , someone
called up for another singing
telegram 11 j ust took them on as
a way to supplemen t my income. If things work out well,
other people in the company
could make some extra money
with it ," he said.
Charging a $25 fee for a
telegram, with a 20 percent
discount for BSC students ,
Sackett presently performs two
or three singing telegrams a
week. Although he - has
developed certain characters ,
Sackett is willing to assume
new, different roles to fit the
occasion. "I want to really
develop this. In terms of time,
it's more flexible for me to do
this ... and a lot more fun ."
Sackett's flyers , which are
posted in dormitories and
downtown businesses, advertise
the musical messages for birthdays, anniversaries , serenades
and other special occasions.
Sackett thinks that the requests
he's received for telegrams so
far have been "pretty much
traditional — mostly birthdays ." He commented ,
"What I would like to do
sometime is a
r serenade!" .
"I've dbne several signing
telegrams at the Commons
during dinner ," chuckled
Sackett. "The ones at / the
Commons are really fun to do.,.,
they all seem to get really
. . < ; ;.
embarrassed!"
Has Sackett performed any
unusual singing telegrams?
Yes, for a doctor at Geisinger
Hospital in Danville: "First of
all, I had to take a shuttlebus
from the parking lot to the
hospital with ,my loud circus
barker costume on, complete
with top hat and cane !
"The doctor had finished with
a~ patient, and other doctors,
nurses, arid his wife and kids
and they were all standing in
the corridor. I just launched
into this happy anniversary
song and did a little dance. The
doctor was frozen 8 he just
stood there and stared...but I
think he liked it."
Sackett has performed all of
the singing telegrams, except
for one. "They wanted a woman
to do one for a man who was
running a booth at the
Bloomsburg Fair. Betsy Dawd.
(BTE naember) wore an
overcoat and opened it to a
French maid costume underneath , and proceeded to sing
"Happy Birthday."
Sackett gets a kick but of
performing
the
singing
telegrams and acting with the
BTE . His goal right now is to
help develop the BTE. He explains that one problem the
company has is that most
people associate the BTE with
BSC. "To establish ourselves as
professionals, it just takes that
much more effort. Everyone
assumes
we're
college
students," he said.
The BTE is presently located
on the third floor of the Town
Hall and is open from 10:00 a.m.
to 4:00 p.m. weekdays. Sackett
can be reached there c-o Box 66,
Bloomsburg, or at 784-5530. He
can also be contacted at 7845428.
"I can be reached at any time
— the day before or the day of a
performance ," said Sackett.
"But with more notice, the
more I can do!
¦
•
¦
'
.
•
'
'
.
¦•
¦•
:Kehr Union Progra m Board and
j
: Scarpati Productions present 4ML I
.
j A COMEDY CONCERT^^^ j
• Sunday , Nov. 8
W^^^
8
P.M.
in
KUB Coffeehouse l
•
j
j^\\)
• Come on out and
• tickle your ribs!!
'
'
l ^
j S a B BB
J
'
' "
. „, ;¦ ; •
9...... *............ *...... ...... .....„..t
•
Front theArchives
By R. W. FROMM
A recurring theme among
students in higher education is
their difference with faculty in
regard to the fairness of tests
and examinations. Frequently,
the less a student is prepared
the more inclined he is to find
some ; unfairness in the test
situation. However, no doubt
some complaints have been and
are legitimate. Apparently one
such complaint was registered
by an unhappy Bloomsburg
student in October, 1949; the
following is a letter sent to .the
Dean of Instruction.
Dear Sir— : ;I was always under the impression that State Teachers
Colleges were for the purpose of
teaching us how to become good
teachers and show us the best
methods of preparing our
courses and presenting tests to
show the progress of students in
class.
So why is it a certain teacher
in
prepares the
SAME test????? for 3 sections
and thus makes it easy for
students in the later classes to
get the answers from the early
class — 8:00 — and thus punish
those "simple simons" who did
not have the "teacher college
cheating sehse" to dp likewise.
I was one of those foolish
students in a later class who did
not have access to previous
information and hence all but
flunked the test because of the
high scores of people I know had
the test.
I personally saw four students
studying from a copy and know
of another who had all but 5 of
the answers on a bit of paper
under the cuff of his sleeve.
As a result of the above occurrence I have decided to
make sure I have inside information on future tests?????
arid to h- - - with the other
students (suckers). It seems
that the administration inthis
directly encourages
practice anyhow and as they
say ---You can't beat city hall.
Sick and
tiredingiy yours,
A letter with the same
complaint was sent to the
President, and the Dean of
Instruction reported receiving
more of the same. The upshot of
the matter was that new tests
were given and the instructor
agreed to prepare differen t
tests for the separate sections in
any future testing.
Students Fight Paying Fee
Campus Digest News Service
Three students at Rutgers
University are planning to fight
a decision by a federal judge
that the university can collect a
refundable $2.50 fee used to
support the New Jersey Public
Interest Research Group.
The three students claim it is
unconstitutional to make the
. Although at present , the fee is
mandatorily collected, students
can be refunded the $2.50 on
request. The three students
plan to appeal the decision, by
the federal court.
Wednesday - Lunch : Hoagie
and Grilled Ham ; Dinner : Pork
Chops and Chow Mein; Thursday ' ' - Lunch : Bar-b-q and
Tuna , Dinner : Chicken and
Country Steak; Friday - Lunch:
Beef Casserole and Egg Burger,
Dinner : Lasagna and Cube
Steak; Saturday - Brunch : Eggs
and Cold Cuts , Dinner: Meat
Loaf.
November 11 — Cider and
Cheese Nite
November 18 — Cookie Nite
November 24 — Thanksgiving
Buffet
student body support what they
call a partisan lobbying
organization.
Commons Menu
Commons Festive Meals
Faculty and staff are invited to
attend the following festive
meals in the dining hall at a cost
of $3.10 per person.
A NEW
"\7^kT T(Contlnu«d
from Page 2)
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Each class is structured into
three parts, beginning with a
warm-up period followed by the
body of the routine, and finally a
cool-down relaxation period.
The class is starting out with the
basics so no prior experience
with aerobic dance is needed.
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smoker in America
to give tip cigarettes
for a day. Give it a
try. You might find
you cairquit forever."
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TODD RUNDGREN APPEARS. Todd Rundgron , leader of the group Utopia, rocks
on at their recent concert.
(Photo by Bnice Geisler)
Utopia Unites Rock With Perfect State
By JIM LYMAN
The dictionary defines
"Utopia " as an "ideal or perfect
state." This concept carries
with it the implication that the
individuals comprising this
state are united under the same
cause.
When looking at the band,
U topia , these same ideas could
be applied. Made up of Todd
Rundgren , Roger Powell ,
Kasim Sulton, and John Wilcox,
the four members combine to
produce some of the most
challenging as well as accessible music today.
This music, which Rundgren
once classified as "power pop,"
mixes bouncing, memorable
melodies with a characteristically strong rock beat.
The results are pop songs which
are not "gooey " and rock songs
without boredom or pretentiousness.
Performing last week to a
disappointing less than half-full
Nelson Fieldhouse , Utopia
demonstrated this sound with a
concert that was full of life and,
at times, virtually spellbinding.
While their 24 song set concentrated mainly on the more
recent Utopia material , including six selections from their
as of yet unreleased "Swing to
the Right," they also delved into
Rundgren's own solo career .
Going back to his early years
with "I Saw the Light" and
"Cliche " along with "Time
Heals " and "Healer " from last
year's "Healing " album , the
——
!
'
¦
"Utopia sound" provided a new
dimension to the songs, particularly "I Saw the Light",
which was far superior to its
original recorded version.
This could also be said of the
performances of many of the
band's own compositions. "The
Road to Utopia ", "Back on the
Streets," "Love In Action" and
"Last of the New Wave Riders"
were all much stronger live
than in the studio. "New Wave
Riders" was especially of note,
when Rundgren, at the end of
his guitar solo, forced himself
against the speaker cabinets
trying to pull every ounce of
energy from his instrument to
bring the song to a final,
awesome crescendo.
Individually , each band
member gave an equally strong
showing. Whereas Rundgren is
undoubtedly the leader, (though
not necessarily "Godd", as one
banner at
the
concert
proclaimed) , the other three
lack nothing on their respective
instruments.
Roger Powell is an electronic
keyboard whiz, John Wilcox is a
powerful yet subtle drummer,
and Kasim Sulton provides a
rh ythmic bass line , while
possessing one of the finest
voices in rock. All three share
harmony vocals as well as each
taking turns singing lead.
Visually, however, Rundgren
was the centerpiece. From the
opening chords of "One World"
to the closing solo of "Just One
Victory, " he continuously
_,. _ -
A short note about the future
of concerts at BSC this year.
Due to the poor ticket sales for
the Ian Hunter and Utopia
shows, the Bloomsburg Student
Concert Committee now has a
deficit budget. Because of this,
it appears to be highly unlikely
that there will be anymore
Concert Committee productions
during the remainder of the
academic year.
_ _ __
The Record & Jeanswear Co.
Album Specia ls This Week !
I
The Police - "Ghost in the Machine "
I
v.
Queen - "Greatest Hits"
Diana Ross - "Why do Fools Fall in
f
»
jumped, danced and kicked his
tall, thin body about the stage.
- The lighting of the show was
another aspect that contributed
to the visuals. There was really
nothing fancy about it,-but there
was nothing missing either. The
fanciest it got was in the use of
projections on a backdrop
during
"Healer " _ and
"Caravan ," and a few moments
of strobe light during "Couldn't
I Just Tell You. "
"Just One Victory, " the
traditional set-closer, and, as
Rundgren introduced it, "the
Utopian national anthem ,"
showed the band at its best though. At the end of the song,
with Sulton , Powell and
Wilcox's layered vocal harmonies forming a counter
melody to Rundgren 's singing,
one could not help but be
transfixed by the sound. The
song surely ranks with "Won't
Get Fooled Again " and "Free
Bird" as one which would
almost be impossible to follow .
Surely, anything else would
have been anti-climatic.
.
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As always Bloomsburgs largestX
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V record selection I Lee & Wrangler \
^^^^^Ej/mmm Ji HH
Y Jeans at toe lowest everyday Y
\ price anywhere!
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I Main $treet Bloomsburg
J
Journ alist Speaks
on Job Market
Delta Pi Epsilon , National Honorary Professional Graduate Fraternity in Business
Education holds installation ceremony. Left to right in Row 1: D. Frederick ,
E. Dahlgren , D. Carl, S. Byers , E. Saladyga; Row 2: K. Griffiths , G. Harmon ,
R. Hameerman, H. Griggs , Jr.; Row 3: C. Mowery , C. Hinkel , J. Keil, M.
Klemkosky, D. Kissel; Row 4: E. Rang Jr. , L. Shoop, D. Pino Jr. , R. Mullen;
Row 5: D. Sneidman, B. Taylor , J. Scheffey, P. Snyder; Row 6: A. Zeigenfuse , E. Wassel , E. Clemens, M. Woodall , B. Seldon , C. Lindquist , W. Rygiel,
H. Andruss , J. McCormick.
(Photo by Dan Maresh)
Delta Pi Epsilon Established at BSC
An installation ceremony to
establish a chapter of Delta Pi
Epsilon at Bloomsburg ' State
College was held in the
President's Lounge of Kehr
Union last week.
Delta Pi Epsilon is the
NationalHonoraryProfessional
Graduate
Fraternity
in
Business Education. The
Gamma
Xi Chapter at
Bloomsburg is the 86th chapter
of the Fraternity, the 18th
chapter in the Eastern region,
and the 6th chapter in Pennsylvania.
Special guest will be
President Emeritus Harvey A.
Andruss , who founded the
Department of Commerce at
BSC in 1930 and served as
director until 1937. Other invited
guests include retired business
education faculty members :
Willard A. Christian, Clayton H.
Kinkel, Dr. Cyril A. Lindquist,
Mrs. Margaret E. McCern , and
Walter S. Rygiel. Representing
E *7/te
the
Pennsylvania
State
Department of Education will
be native Berwickian Dr.
William Selden , Supervisor ,
Vocational Business Education .
Miss Ann Demelfi , Vice
President of Alpha Delta
Chapter of Pi Omega Pi, the
undergraduate
National
Business Teacher Education
Honor Society will bring
greetings to the chapter.
Dr. R. DerMon t Bell, Delta Pi
Epsilon National President ,
from
Brigham
Young
University (Provo , Utah) , will
be the installing officer.
Assisting in the installation
services will be the Beta
Lambda Chapter from Shippensburg
State
College.
Officers and members assisting
Dr. Bell include : Dr. Max G.
Cooley and Dr. Ruth D. Armstrong, Advisors : Barry Schwilk , Beta Lambda President ;
Patricia E. Brandt , Jean C.
Goldthorpe , and Anna L.
Strawmyre, former presidents ;
and Marion A. Beaudoin ,
0i^0tf 2dO4t
ON SALE
MORGAN'S YARN & CRAFT SHOP
AT THE KUB INFO DESK
•Counted Cross Stitch
•Crewel
•Needlepoint
•Instruction Books
•Oodles of Buttons
The OLYMPIAN is the
Bloomsburg State College Magazine
251W. 5th St
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Contributions are accepted from any person associated with the BSC community.
Contributions for next year's issue are now being
accepted at Box 16 KUB.
'
E
1 «nn
—-~ — — —¦ — —¦»*—
.
Chairperson, Research Committee.
Representing the college
administration
will
be:
President James H. McCormick, and Deans Charles H.
Carlson , Graduate Studies;
Howard K. Macauley , Jr.,
Professional Studies ; and
Emory W. Rarig, Jr., Business;
along with Dr. Francis J.
Radice of the Business
administration Department.
Members of the Department
of Business Education-Office
Administration to attend are :
Dr. Ellen M. Clemens, Chairperson ; Dr. Virginia Demand,
Miss Janice Keil, Dr. James
Kincaid, Dr. Ellen Lensing, Dr.
Margaret Long, Jack Meiss,
Mrs. Elizabeth Gensemer, Lynn
Shoop, and D. Bruce Sneidman.
The officers of Gamma Xi
Elaine
are:
President
Vice
Saladyga , Danville;
President Dominic Pino , Jr.,
West
Hazleton ;
Record
Secretary Ann E. Ziegenfuse,
D anville; Corresponding
Secretary Mrs. Mary Anne
Klemkosky, O r w i g s b u r g ;
Treasurer * Denise Kissel ,
Shamokin ; Historian Clayton H.
Hinkel ; National Council
Delegate Mrs. Rosalie Mullen,
Jim Thorpe; and Sponsor Dr.
Clements.
By CAROL TEITELBAUM
Mr. Carl E. Beck , Jr.,
executive editor of the Press
Enterprise, Inc., Bloomsburg,
led the "Careers in Journalism" workshop at th»»12th
Annual Journalism Institute
held in BSC's Kehr Union on
Friday October 23rd.
Beck, a newspaper veteran
for 18 years, explained that the
job market for a journalist is
very tight. "Many are looking
for a job , but so few are
available ," he said to an
audience of many interested
high school and college
students.
Newspapers are the number
one industry in the United
States today, with steel being a
close second. There are over 100
daily newspapers in Pennsylvania alone.
Beck mentioned several
important points newspaper
editors look for when hiring.
First, one must have an attractive resume. Beck considers the professionally
written ones "out" and resumes
that are composed by ' the
prospective employee "the
best."
"This tells me what kind of
person you are without having
met you. I like neatness and
accuracy. If- there is a fingerprint on the resume, that person
was careless. This does not
impress me, " Beck said.
Secondly, experience is
crucial. A good bacKground ,
shows involvement with the
high school or college. "I
recently hired a girl from Penn
State whose only experience
was being editor of her college
paper," he said.
Thirdly, a candidate is asked
about their hobbies. "The best
qualified person is a wellrounded individual. They are
down-to-earth and can easily
write stories the average reader
can understand," Beck commented.
Courses in journalism are
important as well as good
grades. Beck said that the
person should be conscientious,
sincere, and hard-working.
"You must live for the
professon ; " he stressed, "the
editor looks for that. "
The candidate must be a goaloriented
individual.
"If
someone comes in to me saying,
"I want to work at the Press-
— ._. _ ...
-
i
i
Stop In and Browse
- No motor to Feed
'
¦
¦
¦
• '
'
- '
•Latchhook Rugs
•Knitting
•Embroidery
•Crocheting
•Christmas Crafts
¦ ,
®?*r7,V)
^^& S) i£
Mon. - Sat 10:305
^fci ^ '
Closed Wed.
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:
Enterprise for the rest of my
life,' I know he is not a goaloriented person. If he says, 'I
hope to work for the Wall Street
Journal , or The New York
Times ,' then he has a goal,"
Beck said.
The starting salary for a
beginning reporter is about $150
to $225 a week with no previous
experience, depending on tne
size of the newspaper, according to Beck. A top reporter
receives $300-$400 a week.
Beck said that when he finds
an attractive resume, he calls
for an interview. During the
interview there are several
important aspects the editor
looks for. First, it's the appearance of the person.
"As a representa tive of . the
newspaper, people judge you.
It's a good idea to be welldressed for the interview,"
Beck said.
Secondly, the editor asks
many questions of the candidate, consisting of trivialities
to such questions as — "do you
mind being edited?"
"The starting salary for
a beginning reporter
is about $150 - $225 a
week."
Beck stressed that a reporter
faces an angry public at times,
so he must have a controlled
temper. ,_
Beck questions objectivity.
"You can't have set views on
any subject. You also must
think straight," he said.
Finally and most importantly, the candidate must
follow directions. There is a
(a
"c h a i n - o f - c o m m a n d "
heirarchy) at every newspaper.
The publisher is the owner of
the paper followed by circulation , advertising, composing and the press room , also
editorial and maintenance.
Mr. Beck emphasized the
technological advancement
within the newspaper market.
Composing rooms are slowly
becoming extinct due to the
highly advanced computer
systems. Cable television ,
according to Beck , is "the
future and it' s where the
money's at." Beck said the
Press-Enterprise is currently
arranging for a cable TV.
channel in which news updates ,
advertising,
and
latest
classifieds are broadcasted. "I
don 't know where the future
lies. We just don 't want to be left
out," he added.
The workshop was concluded
with a miaatinn-nnRwnr sAnsirm.
I Nice, furnished room for I
[ mature/ male student orj
l faculty. Downtown Blooms-1
j
j burg. Call 752-2373.
j Also, op«nlngi for Spring term, j
I $10O-$15O monthly. Includes all j
I utilltU*.
I
for
Poli
nsfer
cy
Ne^ l^
By TINA KLAMUT
If you are a female athlete
considering transferring think
again. The AIAW passed a new
transfer policy at the 1981 Delegate Assembly eld in Detroit, Mich, this past January.
The new policy went into
effect this fall , 1981, and will
make it harder for women
athletes to transfer without
having to sit out a year.
It" is divided into four basic
parts : erid-of-year transfer— on
aid; end-of-year transfer—not
on aid ; mid-year transfer— on
aid and mid-year transfer —not
on aid.
In Paul "Bear" Bryant's head coaching career
dating back to his first with Mary land in
1945, he has had only one losing season ....
name the
team and its record.
^^^
best for the student athlete ,
said Hutchison. "If she isn't
happy here or wants to transfer
for reasons other than sports,
then it is only fair to waiver
them." ¦¦ ; ' ¦
Most of the women's coaches
at Bloomsburg feel the same
toward the new policy. They
feel it is fair to both the student ,
athlete and the colleges,
is a nationally ranked
field hockey player. She
plays on Bloomsburg's field
hockey team. If another team
wanted Long, Hutchinson could
decide if Long was actively
recruited by the school . If so,
Hutchison could deny a release
and Long would have to sit out a
year if she transferred.
"A coach has id look at what's
participate immediately but
without aid for one year, unless
granted an institutional release.
An institutional release is
simply a waiver written by_ the
~
athlete 's present coach .stating
that she was not actively
recruited by the school — a
permission to compete.
The policy is different for a
mid-year transfer student. One
on aid cannot participate until
the succeeding academic year
and will not .be given aid for one
full year, even if released. She
can compete immediately, but
will never receive any aid.
A mid-year transfer not on aid
is eligible to participate immediately without aid for one
year , unless institutionally
released .
Cecil H. Turberville, athletic
director at Bloomsburg, feels
that "as the level of competition
in women's sports increases,"
there is a need for a stricter
policy.
If athlete is on aid and
tranfers at the end of the year,
she can 't participate or receive
aid for one year. However, ' if
she notifies her institution prior
to December l for fall sports ,
January 15 for winter sports,
and February 15 for spring
sports , with intentions of
tranfering she will be allowed to
participate immediatley but
won 't receive aid for one year.
She will also be eligible to
compete immediately
if
released by her present institution.
A transferee not on aid can
Females
Movie Review
(Continued from Page 2)
could go to press. Catch it at
home, if possible ... Here 's a big
hand for BSC' s American
Chemical Society. The group
brought two classic horror
flicks , "Fiend Without a Face ,"
and the' shocking "Night of the
Living Dead" to BSC for
Halloween ... Also, a slap on the
back for the KUB Program
Board for contributing "Th e
Legend of Hell House" and the
3-D (?) "It Came From Outer
Space. " For those of you
wonderingj yes that was The
Professor from "Gilligan 's
Island" in the latter. I guess he
needed a few bucks...
Prior to this new policy,
women athletes could compete
at one instituion , transfer
schools, and be eligible to
compete at the new institution
without having to sit out for a
year.
"With the old policy a lot of
'snaking' was done by some of
the bigger basketball schools,"
said Janet M. Hutchinson ,
women 's field hockey and
Softball coach at BSC.
The new rule protects smaller
institutions from losing good
players to teams that can offer
bigger scholarships , better
urograms, etc.
For instance , Debbie Long
^^ANSWER: :>*
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Campus Information Line:
CI
Call 389-3123
WW—— mTmm
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Hijmmmmm—mammmammmamammm
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Internship Opportunity, Spring
Semester. Geisinger Medical Center.
Work with development of promotional materials in office of Personnel . Need experience or skills
in working with multi-media equipment and techniques. For further
information , contact Dr, Brian Johnson, Campus Coordinator of Internships , rrn.230i Hartline,389r3600.
ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS ,
Dec. 81, May 82 and Aug. 82.
Sigh 'up' for Senior Portraits in 1981- •
198'5?.''' Obiter. They are being taken
Nov. 9-13 & Nov. 16-20. Sign up
NOWI'I QrdtPloor KUB] Obiter Off Ice.
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THERE WILL BE A General Membership meeting of all Phi Beta Lambda
members on Wednesday, November
4th at 9 p.m. in the President's
Lounge. The meeting will last approximately 45 minutes.
bindings w/brakes. MOO. Ski Boots Nordica Elite (women's) Single Buckle. Good condition. MO, normally
?120. Call Heather ,387-0272.
RESPECTABLE GIRLS — Reply box
3873. - Respectable Guys
ENZO, when are you going to notice "me"? Love, Your M-W-F Crush
PEAVY T-60 Electric guitar, w/case,
amp and other accessories. Call
784-5620.
THE MASS COMM CLUB will meet
in room 24 in Old Science, Wed.
evening at 6:30. The Pace trip and
fund raising will be discussed.
TO MY FRIENDS AT BSC: Notre Dame
is great but I do miss BSC. Walt
lelusic (THE BEEMAN)
DON'T MISS OUR 40% off sale till
Nov. 15! Merlite Jewelry , rm. 219
Luzerne. Call 3576
ALL EDUCATION MAJORS:
'
iqsi
Student PSEA will hold Its" monthly .
meeting Nov. l6, Tuesday, ai 8:00
TAN, BLACK and WHITE Stag " Ski
in Multi-Rm. A of KUB. There will , Coat. Lost at Espy Fire Hall. Please
be a speaker from the. State PSEA
call Bob. 389-3335 or. contact any
SIO brother.
!
office to explain the proposed "Six
Ypar Play For Education. " Will ft
PERSONALS
affect vbu?'??' - - ^ . '""{ ' s r. ' ¦• ' r- ' i GLENNA,Lust much or what? - K,S.
INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY , Spring
¦
Semester.^Oeisinger Medical GohV'' : »'
WANTED
ter. Work with development of ,pro,-. j WANTED: Baseball cards, football
motional materials In office per-, ; and non-sport gurri! 'cards.- Gash' paid
sonnelr Need .experience oivskllls ' fdr good cppdlfion ,cards> ,and. other
In working with ^rnult|"rnedl,a,>quip,-; LbtisebalM'tem3Vcairj .J.784-8213!
ment and techniques. For further. ? ? ¦ ¦¦ ¦
FOR SALE
1
Inf^rr^atiorV contact Dri BriaKjJohn- ., ; SKIS-K2-USA II) 160 cm w/Tyrolia'
son, Campus Coordinator of Intern- ' J
150 Bin"dings.^l50 Ski Boots T ' Caber'
ships Rm. 230 Hartline ,389.3600.
; Formqble Bio-Syatern (Racing-rExp..) ¦
Both skis
j Boots. I*l3»r npr^ajjlyi'225.
ANYONE INTlfRESTEDvio becoming a ;' and boots,-usbd ' 'only 'one season!' ¦
member of trie* cortcpHv Band, for .; Call Bill,387Kl"638.^ r ¦
¦ ¦
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this year , as /ia (JrumAor,;;clarlnet : ¦ .
-;.' .f;
. ,> ¦ ¦ ' • / ¦
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player ,"* please call Nancy at 3183
¦ ¦ ; SKIS - . K2 Rider II, 160 cm, used
or* Cindy at"2681v" -•••.>»¦«. •' •« •• - •>•¦• <•- - ¦-¦ ' ohly^ono sedsbh. 'WIth Sbldmbri 444 :
'
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JOE O: Way to go,there buddy
MARV: To our Chief. The photo contest is underway, thanks for the
idea 111 YOUR BOYS IN LUZERNE '
——
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1
—^^^^ M«—B—ramimima u— ¦
DEAR HOCKEY TEAM,
The interview has been changed
to NEXT Sunday night. Please wear
your Raisin suits. Friends are forever!! (no hard feelings)
Love, Roberta
DIANE .— Quick , pull my finger.
Thanks for the hole in my comfor :
ter,
CHERYL — Nothing like waking up
to breakfast in bed. Want some OAT*
meal.
G.H. SYNDROME - See any flashes
lately?
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T ..j, ,; ; ^Announcements .•
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IT TAKES A SLY- MAN to escape a
double header
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-Mi ":., -. : , % ¦ ¦ , , , . Personals
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TO ALL SIO BROTHERS: Do you know ' I
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where your sheet is? ,„ '.,
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Services
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study lounge really Is? ¦ The In¦
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AMY M. (Pumpkin, Sizo . Satch) Conr
j ' Send to; Box 97 KUB or drop in the C&mpus ' Voice , mail , sl6t[ ' 3rd
gratulations I Best WishesI" Your the
5 p.m. on Tuesday.
floor Union before 5 p.m. on Sunday , or before
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best, love, The Staff ;at Studs &
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Bloomsburg Gridders Bow to Kutztown
Quarterback Greg Gristick
threw five touchdown passes as
the Kutztown State College
Golden Bears remained in the
thick of the Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Division
race with a 48-24 triumph over
the winless Bloomsburg State
Huskies, Saturday, at. Kutztown.
Kutztown stayed within one
game of front runner. Millersville and raised their record to
5-2-1 while the Huskies lost their
fourth P.C. East contest of the
year and fell to 0-8 overall.
The Golden Bears got on the
board on their initial possession
when Gristick hit running back
Dave Keeny on a nine yard
scoring toss to cap a ten play, 70
yard scoring drive. Brian West
added his first of six extra
ten with nine and a half minutes
to go in the third period on a
John Flynn one yard plunge.
But KSC came right back three
minutes later when Gristick
connected on his fifth TD pass of
the day, to running back Dave
Keeny.
Bill Hosco and Greg Brusko
added touchdowns for Kutztown
while BSC, freshman Tim
Stanton scored on a 29 yard run
to make the final count KSC 48BSC 24.
points and with 11:27 left in the
firs t quarter it was 7-0 KSC.
. Following a Kutztown fumble,
the Huskies put their first score
of the day on the board when
tight end Mike Blake pulled in a
nine yard pass from quarterback Kurt WterTcheiser concluding a 15play, 65 yard drive.
The kick failed and after the
first quarter Kutztown led 7-6.
The Bears added 21 second
quarter points on Gristick's
touchdown passes of 36, 14, and
13 yards.
Bloomsburg 's only T.D. of the
quarter came when defensive
end Chris Blackburn picked a
Kutztown fumble but of the air
and fell into the end zone. At
half time it was Kutztown 28,
Bloomsburg 12.
The Huskies pulled to within
v Kutztown racked up 443 yards
in total offense for the afternoon
while the Huskies netted 320
yards.
Running back Geoff Johnson
ran 60 yards for an improved
BSC running attack which
gained 153 yards.
Hockey Update
Bad Week for Bloom
By MARY HASSENPLUG
The Bloomsburg field hockey
ieam played two dominating
*ames last week but couldn't
some away with a victory.
In the first game, the Huskies
iverpowered
Scranton
iJniversity, but a chance score
fave SU a 1-0 victory. With five
econds left in the first half ,
Scranton broke through the BSC
tefense and scored the game's
inly marker.
Coach Jan
Hutchinson
rommented , "It was a very
rustrating game to lose. We
bminated the whole game but
>ieir break-away got by us.
hey didn't get anywhere near
lie goal in the entire second
alf ."
The Huskies held an over•helming advantage in shots on
oal : 18-2. Scranton did not
\anage a single corner shot ,
bile BSC had 12 attempts,
espite
their
complete
nminance throughout the
:ime, Bloomsburg could not
ill out a win.
The Huskies next opponent
as Marywood College. Again
HC controlled the game , but
;uld not chalk up a victory,
arywood managed a 1-1 tie
.th a score late in the game.
Bloomsburg m a i n t a i n e d
;ssession throughout the first
GOOD-LUCK
IN THE
iOFTBALL PLAYOFFS
MARAUDERS!!
The 4th year will
be the cltarm!
period and used fine, precision
passing to keep play on their
offensive end of the field. But an
improved Marywood defense
held the Huskies attack and the
first half ended in a scoreless
tie.
With just over six minutes
played in the second period ,
Polly Dougherty knocked in the
Huskies only score off a corner
shot. Linda Hershey assisted
the goal.
BSC continued to control play,
but with four minutes left in the
game, Marywood rushed the
Husky goal and came away with
the score.
Coach Hutchinson , "We
played very well, and especially
did some good passing. Their
goal was a tough one ; it
eventually went off one of our
sticks. It' s too bad we had the
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ROLLERSKATING PARTY j
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at Skatetown
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:
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Sponsored by Fellowship
for Christian Athletes
: Monday,Nov. 9
•
week that we did, but we re
still looking to get a bid to
regionals." ¦
Hutchinson believes the
Huskies have a very good
chance of getting a fairly high
seeding in the regional tournament.
The first round game will be
played ort Tuesday, November
3, at the home field of the higher
seed.
Junior Jeanne Fetch is confident that the Huskies are
going to regionals, and "then
we 're going to Nationals!"
Fetch added , "All of us have a
special talent and when we put
it all together - we 're
awesome!"
The Huskies have the talent
and the potential to go very far ,
and with luck they'll put it all
together at the right time !
7:00p.m. to 10:00p.m. •
•
For more info Call Dan 3579
•
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Tickets 'l.OO admission
.75 for skates ,
•
All Welcome
t§B^\
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I
*ff?f!^
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•
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SHAKING LOOSE. BSC running back Geoff Johnson
carries the ball in the loss to Kutztown.
(Photo by Patrick Murphy)
Skiing equipment f o r sale
See the Classifi eds
r Printing
V HENRIE
and Silkscreening
TEE
SHIR
v— ^^^^
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Across from Th6 Salvation Arhriy
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Bloomsbur| ^ 7844 633^:
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