rdunkelb
Tue, 05/07/2024 - 18:40
Edited Text
T|

Inside:
Wrostlors WIn I
I

Due To New Systems
Directories
Are Incomplete

By JOE ALLISON
Have you seen the new
campus directories recently? If
you'll take a minute and leaf
through it, you'll find that
despite two minor catastrophes,
it's not a bad little directory.
Not only is the cover simply
gorgeous and the ads on the
back are no less than
breathtaking. But be warned
against judging this book by its
cover.
It appears that once again the
directories fail to list students'
off-campus address or dorm
and room number. As a new
added attraction, the faculty
and staff are missing office
numbers on campus as well.
Robert Norton, Dean of Student
Life said that grievances were
sent to the Public Information
Office last year in hopes that
this, year's directory would be

better.
The Public Information Office
has been making the necessary
arrangements for the directories for the past five years.
According to Ken Hoffman,
special assistant for College
Relations, the mix-up was due
to the new Dimension phone
system installed on campus last
semester. Number changes
and-or office changes had to be
sorted through and matched.
The Administration numbers
were finally matched, but the
faculty numbers were still out
of reach. Mr. Hoffman said it
was impossible to present the
necessary information for the
faculty because it would have
pushed the copy date back even
further than it was. The usual
copy date is September 14, but
after doing the best they could,

By TAMMY CLEWELL
Interest in the controversial
Solomon Amendment, which
prohibits 18-24 year-old males
from receiving federal financial
aid unless they can prove that
they are registered for the
draft, brought the television
media, to BSC last Tuesday.
Michele kessler, BSC coordinator of the Commonwealth
Association of Students , the
organizational link between
students and their legislators,
and Gary Miller, a BSC junior ,
were interviewed.
The amendment, attached to
the Defense Authorization Bill,
easily passed both the House
and Senate in May, 1982. The
Public Interest and Research
Group (PIRG) brought the
constitutional question of the
bill's potential violation of due
process to a Minnesota Federal
District Court. It was ruled that
PIRG could not argue the case
because the organization, in
connection with the amendment, had no "compelling interest" (a prerequisite of a

federal court before deciding a
case) in the consequences of the
policy. Currently, however, two
separate cases are pending
which seek "restraining orders" that would abolish the
policy nationwide. The case
should be decided in the upcoming week.
When interviewed, Miller
opposed the bill by saying, "It
would take the burden off
Selective Service and place it on
the Department of Education
the two should not mix. The
main concerns of the Dept. of
Education should not include
that of policing its students. "
Current registration laws
provide for appropriate judicial
procedures to try suspected
offenders, who if convicted,
face a maximum sentence of 5
years in jail. Kessler,
vehemently opposed to the bill
stated "the bill is unnecessary,
discriminatory, a regulatory
nightmare,
and
unconstitutional in its denial of
due process."
She went on to urge students
to contact their senators and
representatives with their
views. CAS, maintaining the,
link between legislators and
students, will be providing
stamps and envelopes as an
incentive for student participation.
Carol Lutter, assistant
coordinator for CAS, said, "In
light of our legislators voting
record on the amendment,
active student participation is
greatly urged." She instructed
students to place their lettersin
the box outside the CAS office,

S— Directory peg* 3

CAS Speaks Out
On Amendment

Student
Missing

Steven P. Murray, a freshman
residing in
Northumberland Residence Hall,
has been missing since January
19. Anyone with information as
to the whereabouts of this
student can call his mother at
717-234-1242, the Student Life
Office at 389-4065
, or the Center
for Academic Development at
:V ,:.-.
3894492 : ,

-

.,., . • ., SMCAS fag* ';, *

Scheduling Policy Hopes To
Guarantee Seniors Courses
By SHARON DEEGAN
A new student scheduling policy, which according to Ken Schnure, registrar, will
"guarantee that seniors have the courses they
need" was passed at the Representative
Assembly's first meeting of the semester last
Wednesday.
Important features of the new policy include a
scheduling period based on seniority, a plan to
"block-schedule" all incoming freshmen, and a
change in the drop-add procedure.
During the initial week of the scheduling
process, juniors and seniors will meet with their
advisors, select a complete schedule and receive
an "appointment card" designating a specific
time (based on credits earned) for the student to
schedule at the computer terminal. "Students
will have instant response," explained Schnure.
"They will be able to see what they have
scheduled."
Following this period, advisors will be supplied
with a complete computer readout of open
sections for sophomore advisement to be
scheduled in the same manner.- The last period,
for enrolled freshmen, will follow the same
pattern.
"Block-scheduling", a freshman procedure,
will aim to schedule courses in the major, along
with general education, prior to orientation
sessions.
President McCormick told Dr. Barrile.
chairperson of Rep. Assembly, that in order to
attract and retain good students, efforts will be
made to place the best professors possible in
those block courses.
The new drop-add procedure will allow
students to drop courses within schedule change
periods (except for first semester freshmen) but may add courses only under "extenuating
circumstances", specified below:
1. When a student repeats a course in which a
grade of D or E has been recorded the previous
term.
2. When a student has withdrawn from college
and re-enters the following term.
3. When a student has decided after the
registration period to change the major or
program of study.
4. When a student had received an incomplete

schedule.
5. When changes are made in the master
schedule (e.g., courses-sections deleted or added) .
6. When a student decides or is chosen to
participate in legitimate co-curricular activities
after the registration period but before the end of
the schedule change period. (Social obligations
do not constitute a valid reason for a schedule
change.)
7. When a student receives transfer of credit
evaluation after the previous registration period.
8. When other circumstances are deemed valid
by the appropriate chairperson.

Another policy specification requires that all
students complete English Composition I and II
(or their equivalent) by the end of the sophomore
year.
Commenting on the policy, Dr. Larry Mack,
chairperson of the Coordinating Committee on
Academic Affairs, said, "Advisement is going to
have to be more active." He added, "We've all
got to do our homework and do it on time." Also,
Mr. Schnure hopes that the policy will combat a
problem that currently plagues the system "students made 8,3% schedule changes in
November and January for the Spring
Semester." He noted, "we only have 4,800 fulltime undergraduates."
There will be several unofficial reviews
followed by an official review, one year from the
policy's implementation, hopefully correcting
any problems that might arise, according to Dr.
Larry Jones, vice-president of Academic Affairs.
In other Rep. Assembly matters, refinements
of existing policies, including late registration
fees, multiple degrees, graduation requirements
and registration, passed the assembly after a
lengthy deliberation. Several faculty and student
vacancies were filled, with Dr. Mark Melnychuk
elected to the Coordinating Committee on
Academic Affairs , (CCAA) student Diana
Ingersoll to the Coordinating Committee on
Student Life (CCSL) (with a faculty appointment
yet to be filled) , and Dr. Robert Rosholt, along
with student Joe Ward, appointed to the Campus
Wide Committee on Planning ( CWCP).

MkhoUKottlor , CAS coordinator, spokoto Mil Longworth, WME TV now* WIHcosBam,
voktng «trong oppos
ition to tho Solomon Amon
dmont. Gory MiHor, eontor, wb*
•boirrtorvtowodwhiloCora) Luttor.osst.coordiiiatorfor CASIookodon.

Editorial

Move and Expansion

The Campus Voice, once located in what is now the
Community Activities office, moved to its current location
down the hall, where it has been for the past 10 to 12 years.
Due to an increase in production, from twice weekly to
three times a week, the Campus Voice staff has greatly increased, causing cramped conditions and flaring tempers
on work nights. Editors, assistants, reporters, and business
people were forced to jam into the small outer office for infrequent all-staff meetings. There was barely room to
stand, let alone sit. Therefore, many interested staff
members failed to attend the meetings. As a part of their
course load, journalism and editing classes have been required in the past to attend work nights to observe first-hand
layout techniques. This requirement seemed almost impossible to fill when there was hardly room in the office
for those editors preparing their pages.
What did this lead to? Logically, to new quarters — a
bigger office. Easy, right? Wrong. Many preparations and
plans detained the necessary move. It was hoped that the
new office arrangements would be completed in October.
Then November. And December.
Now, in February, after a full semester's publishing three
times a week , the Campus Voice staff has gotten that
bigger office.
The new office is now located on the ground floor of Kehr
Union, in the games room. With 225 additional square feel
of space, the staff of the Campus Voice hopes that all those
who may have once been frightened by the crowd
will reconsider and stop by the office.
Natually, the staff regrets the repeated delays of its
move, but it is grateful to all those who recognized the
need for expansion and room to breathe. The administration, the maintenance, and of course, our advisor, Mr.
Savage, need to be commended and thanked for all their

help.

Although "better late than never" is a bit of a cliche, that's
all we can say right now. We sincerely hope that the
efforts that have been made to serve us will result in increased efficiency of the newsoaoer.

Campus Voice Staff
Ho»mib<.rt IW. ColWq*. »A 17SU Sox »T KU, 1W-31QI

Executive Editor
Managing Editor
Senior News Editor
News Editors

Debbie Berkley
Betsy Wollam
Patrick Murphy
Stephanie Richardson,
Ninette Friscla
Tammy Clewell , Ylndra Stanley
Mike Yamrus
Charles Pennypacker
Wendy Bittner ,
JeM Bachman,
Jo Ann Bertollno
Wade Douglas
Dan Loughlln
Mary Hassenplug
Tony Crouthamol
Lisa Novella , Maggie McHugh

News Assts
Senior Feature Editor
Feature Editor
Feature Assts

Senior Sports Editor
Sports Editor
Sports Asst
Ad Manager
Asst. Ad Managers
Senior Photo Editor
Photo Editor
Copy Editors
Asst. Copy Editors
Business Manager
Asst. Managers.
Circulation Manager..
Advisor.

Kent Hagedarn
Heidi Van Scoy

'
MegHoney, Lori Zlegenfus ,
Oo#// Noreen Frlel, Pattl Marcavaga
ron Renaldl
Nell

^^

Heckel, .
•••p
Maggie McHugh
Mr. Richard Savage

'
Th* Vole* It gammed by tho Editorial Board with th* final rnpondbillty for
all moMrlal rotting with th* oxocutiv* odHor at ttotod In th* Joint StatMMnt
' otft**o^.MoM*artdlte»pon>lttmiMofitud *nta
.tt»SC.
¦ ¦
Th* Vale* r*»»rv*» th* right to *dit all l*1t*ri and copy tubmlttad. A maximum
;
of 430 worth will b* placid on all l*M*r* to th* *dltor with an allowanc* for
m. All (Mian mutt b* •ign*d and hov* an addrati and phon* numtxr
»«c*ptlo
farvarHlcatlon.Nam** wHI b* withholdupon r*qu*it.
Th*' opinion* volcad In th* column*. orMd** and notion ar* not n*c*»orily
honorad by th* *ntlr* MaH. An umigrwd mtf •dllorlol d*nat*t a major *ditorlal

Letter to the Editor

Professor's Plea

Dear Editor :
Please consider printing this
letter of protestation in light of a
huge misunderstanding that is
taking place.
Concerning the article by
Miss Dot litis on the CGA
Budget sub-committee meeting,
I feel I should straighten out the
whole matter.
I am sure that any committee
in its highest degree of honesty
and sanity will NOT fund any
organization on the basis of
what was in the article. That
was simply a scandalously
distorted reporting on the real
intention of the dialogue. And
because of it an individual is
being*hurt beyond measure.
My intentian was to build a
positive case for the Bloomsburg Players as a newly appointed director of theatre. Both
Jim Huffman, a student, and I
went to the committee with a
belief tha t ideas and productions that we were going to put
into effect were constructive
enough to ask for more funds.
Because out annual musical
was taken off of the calendar by
the parties concerned, it meant
that the Players had to ask for
more funds in order to finish the
year, as a musical carried a
different budget. I therefore
requested for the committee's
invitation to present my case.
The quote, which in itself had

a grotesque implication, was
not used as a tool to attack a
colleague, rather as an explanation of the distribution of
budget
original
the
management, coupled with my
own feeling about the wisdom of
such a distribution. I hardly
believe that I chose such an
expletive to express my private
feelings.
The Bloomsburg Players are
serious about their intent to
reach the community by taking
entertainment off of the campus; already such a move
exists, as our Clown Lab will
visit some community nursing
homes, to start a Find-A-NewPlaywright campaign by
sponsoring a student play
written, directed and designed
by students, and to reflect
better the taste of the student
body by doing more off-beat
productions such as The
Hostage, which I am currently
directing, rather than the socalled stiff-collared
theatre "
"e d u c a t i o n a l
materials. The organization is
geared more toward the cocurricular nature of the play
productions and I as the
director decided to take that
course. And for that, we will do
our best to save and save be
even "printing our scripts" and
yet maintaining the quality that
my predecessors have achieved
over the past years. And that is

what I told the committee.
And for this positive planning
and attitude, I would like to
think the budget was allocated
to us. The meeting therefore
was NOT about attacking a
colleague , as the article
misleads the readers ; but
because of the innuendoes that
may be implied in the style of
writing, the referred colleague
is extremely hurt. I want this
college community to know the
enormou s talent that this
colleague has shown to our
stages, through outstanding
productions of so many plays.
In my opinion, speaking as a
practicing man of theatre, NO
ONE has created more perfect
a production of Shakespeare's A
Midsummer Night's Dream
than this colleague. It far
surpassed that of Joseph Papp's
in Central Park. BSC was
fortunate to experience such a
production.
Please let us not resort to
sensationalism at the expense
of individuals; and the
"public 's right to know "
phraseology is far abused by
reporters today. I, on my part,
therefore publicly apologize for
the strain I might have indirectly caused .,. to my
colleague. We, .Jhe ,,progr,am,
need you, .dear^Eiren^. please
come back, -; ¦• .:. • ¦,, r, ,- .- T.;;ck;
Hitoshi Sato
Director of Theatre
The Bloomsburg Players

New Approach to Public Speaking

The ability to speak before a group can often
make the difference between getting or not
getting a promotion, being hired or losing an
opportunity, closing or not closing a sale, and
feeling a sense of self-esteem or feeling like a
failure. We all speak "in public" much more
than we realize, claims Natalie H. Rogers, a
behavioral psychotherapist, whose new book
TALK-POWER: How to Speak Without Fear is
based on her revolutionary method that has
proven successful for hundreds of Talk-Power
clients and students.
A program which took ten years to develop
through her work with major corporations and
universities, the Talk-Power technique is unique
in that it focuses on the fear response itself while
also introducing new training exercises that can,
in a matter of weeks, reverse the thoughtblocking, rapid heartbeat and panic reaction
that result from fear of speaking in public.

In TALK-POWER, Ms. Rogers approaches
this fear scientifically through planned training
based upon the synthesis of behavior
modification, acting, and speech crafting. "The
sequence of exercises which I've designed trains
each speaker to develop coping mechanisms that
will support him or her from the nervous
moments before a speech, to the point where heshe has to stand up and face the audience,
through the delivery of the entire presentation ,
up until the final moment when the speaker
returns to his-her seat."
Natalie Rogers contends that there is a
tremendous difference between conversation
and speaking in public. According to her, "in
order to be a good public speaker , orie must train
systematically- just as a ballet dancer trains or
as a tennis player would need to do to perfecthis
game."
With the Talk-Power system , Natalie Rogers
challenges many major principles of the
traditional public speaking methods. Debunking

the theory that willpower and deep breathing can
help a speaker overcome terror, Rogers
demonstrates that the fear response is so
powerful and automatic that willpower can no
more help to combat it than it can for a drowning
man who is afraid of water.
Ms. Rogers also .denies that relaxation^.the
key to good public speaking. She explains, "First
you need to train someone to do a-task, then train
them to relax while doing it. ' All other approaches that stress out-guessing your audience
with persuasive strategies are ineffective
because they do not deal with the fear response.
It is the fear response that really stands between
people and their speaking in public successfully."
Finding your internal rhythm , slowing down
the pace, using moment-to-moment training are
all important in learning to speak well, as
outlined in TALK-POWER. Eye contact, an
important factor in some other techniques, is a
no-no according to Ms. Rogers. She expalins,
"When you first begin to speak, your high level
of excitement causes your pupils to dilate.
Trying to focus on any specific person at a
distance will cause enormous strain and tension
on your eyes."
Walk briskly to the podium with energy, most
speaking courses will tell you. That's another
myth in Rogers ' opinion. "Slowing down the pace
is the only way to get control," she claims.
Where others stress breathing exercises to calm
down, Rogers calls for body awareness exercises
instead, since she believes that breathing
exercises don't work for this problem. And while
other systems tell a beginning speaker not to
read a speech, Rogers advises doing just this if
you have to. "The idea is to avoid panic, she
says. If reading your speech does that, then it
acts as a tool not a detriment."
"Because of the traditional theories and
assumptions have gone unquestioned for years,"
says Rogers "Americans have not made an
appreciable leap in learning to speak, a talent
which is essential in our 'high-tech' society." By
using a totally new approach to deal with the
(Continued on page 7)

Campus Shorts

Summer Camps

PBL

cooking. The camps attending
include the PA Easter Seal
camps . YMCA Camp Hugh
Beaver, Camp Canadensis,
Camp Akiba. Boy Scout camps,
and several Girl Scout camps to
name a .few. .. ._
This is an excellent opportunity for those majoring in
Liberal Arts and Secondary
Education to gain experience.
So, feel free to go ask questions,
and save yourselves the trouble
of having to search for a
summer job over the spring
break.

By RENE FITE
If any students are interested
in exploring summer job
openings,
the
Career
Development Center is sponsoring a Summer Camp Day on
February 15, 1983. It will be held
from 1:00-4:00 p.m. in multipurpose rooms A and B of the
KUB Students are urged to go
and see the program, which will
feature approximately twenty
residential camps from the
Pennsylvania and New York
areas. Camp recruiters will be
taking applications for jobs
ranging from counseling to

By NOREEN FRIEL
Phi Beta Lambda , the
business organization , is
making plans for the upcoming
State Leadership Conference,
which will be held March 18-20
in Monroeville.
The State Leadership Conference gives students the
chance to compete in different
areas of business, such as accounting, computer science,
and management. Tests will be
given on campus February 15 in
order to determine the students
who will represent BSC at the
conference.

Art On Display
By DENISE EYES
A combination of weaving and
painting with an emphasis on
landscape is shown in a colorful
exhibition by LynnDavies in the
Presidents' Lounge.

Not only are there competitions, but students can also
go and attend various
educational workshops. The
State Leadership Conference
has always been an educational
and fun weekend, and all
members are urged to attend.
Anyone interested in attending
can contact one of the officers
for more information.

Davies has participated in
various art shows. Among them
were the Central Pennsylvania
Art Show, the Harrisburg Art
Festival and the ShareEd
Gallery.
This is Lynn Davies' second
exhibition at Bloomsburg State
College, but her first one person
exhibit. Her recent work will be
on display in the Presidents'
Lounge, Kehr Union on the
Campus of Bloomsburg State
College until February 12.

Ms. Davies, a resident of
Bloomsburg, is a mother of
three and is the wife of Paul
Davies, the Director of Career
Development and Placement at

February, PBL month, will be
the time our chapter will be
accepting new members.
Anyone interested in joining
should attend the orientation
meeting which will be held on
February 7 th.

] Jj mf W I
I
?
1

I

!
>

.

f l™111
|llli,
jp
; SB * "
S_
^g^L

I

,
>
\


*tff

!

„.3™1

'

__

^ .

NAQQAII C9QQ*
IvflOwflU
¦«»ws»
*e -w

WflaW
w *7
w
^

.

In I'm Ready to Party!

|J

¦
? Almost ready. Send

!<

i
*

more info

'Add $40 from O.C., Hartford,
Philadelphia, Boston

212 355-4605 J -*—
-. ._ _

- ^- ^g—

*Plus 15% tax and service

City -

INCLUDES

•Round Trip Airfare (N. Y.)
•7Nights Accom odation
•Parties
•SDOrtS
"
•A
n t i l l i t ip S
"VICKI7MMH*

¦

¦Address

*

¦

.

(Continuedfrom Page 1)

the final list of corrections was
sent to the company on
November 3. Thus, explains our
receiving them in January,
instead of the second week of
October.
According to Hoffman, The
Directory Company in Plains,
Texas, publishes the first 1500
copies at no cost to the college.
CGA fronts the remainder of the
bill for additional copies,
shipping and handling.
nnMfnM m wrtsfrnwm 'T ~~ *~r —

asked to remain anonymous,
said Gunther was having
problems keeping his lecture to
the class in logical order. "He
was talking about Hitler, then
he started talking about
Mussolini, with no logical
connection to link two
thoughts."
Gunther's classes are being
taught by other members of the
history department, and all of
his classes will finish the
semester.

CAS

(Continued from Page 1)
located on the third floor, Kehr
Union.
While Rep. Fank Harrison,
newly elected for the Bloomsburg district, was not in office
at the time of the vote, according to his legislative
assistant, Ron Ungvarski,
Harrison does support the
amendment on the grounds that
a person should not be eligible
for educational benefits if that
person is in violation of a
federal law.
Sen. Arlin Spector, according
to a member of his Washington
staff , voted for the passage of
the Military Authorization Bill,
thus supporting its amendment.
Sen. John Heinz also supported the bill, according to his
Washington
D.C.
press
secretary, Lv-n Pearson.
—*-~
^TBI

JJHrWiti.wwwiwt^

j Q MAR 06-MAR 13 H MAR 27-APR 03 ¦|
13-MAR 20 CI APR 03-APR 10 ~ <
R ? MAR
MAR 20-MAR 27 D APR 10-APR 17
Ia
|

FREEP0RT $259* ! »«-[ j
»

I

^

By PATRICK J. MURPHY
Dr. Hans K. Gunther, history
professor at BSC, was reported
in satisfactory condition
Thursday evening at the
Geisinger Medical Center, after
having collapsed in a class he
was teaching.
Gunther received emergency
cardio-pulmonary resuscitation
(CPR) from a male student
Doctors at Bloomsburg Hospital
said that the emergency
treatment may have saved his
life.
Gunther was taken to
Bloomsburg Hospital for
emergency treatment, then
transferred to Geisinger. At this
time, doctors have not released
information on what may have
caused Gunther to collapse.
A student in his class, who

Directory

Bloomsburg State College.
Davies studied art at Bloomsburg State College and is a
member of the Bloomsburg
Faculty Women Club. She is
also involved in communication
workshops.

Ms. Davies work reflects her
interest in the emotion found
within nature.' -As an explanation of why Daviesfocuses
on nature she says, "I find a
response to nature, and I
particularly enjoy the outdoors."

History Professor
Collapses In Class

;

State

J Zi P
p
"°"e .
j
¦
Departure City
j

m
I
"
i

pj sj ^

wm*couiouatnouommc.
501 Madison Avenue
New Ybrk. NY. 10022
(212)355-4705 (800)223 0694

B

*

I

¦
a

I

I

_j

,

-

¦
I
m

'

"

:

~. . *

PLUS

|

¦
1
¦

¦
J

MTLJ A.\ ^
KLI l^gw^
f ; ^^^^ P^

FREE
DELIVERY

'



This Week's Specials Feb. 7-13:

.

Mod- Tu**"

]CT _
JT tf l

w*d.-

:!.

[

Hon*y Mpp*d Chldlfl or Olktc*nCocdooori
wtrhSaootwrrlorFrto
S.*S
AII **MSId,tonrha ro<>ca"Ml
2M
Coraon#i Buy MM ( Vt MM IMH prtct
Ukmi BgWonl AH* Proriiltll*.
.S.7S
Spogh*ttl«na' M**....3.4a'

I

1
Hum.. CWdiwiPwmlglwio or ST ¦OB**Wfc*
4.W
%mtati Combo H«rti.
.S.W
M. il
!
!
¦
III ,jwf^^L^
iMH^a
i in
H> ..¦¦¦¦•¦...4.^9
K -\JU
* •*
UM^m.^n*mco

"Vgflil*
J. \J%A/W

*"•-

T>lt>a«nrg >
Mriva&urv
-m

Son.

^

^

'

^^^^^

«-» i^»"».o*«"^"»»»~
tn«i»Hnor»)ii>*..

Cfckfc*nHn**nwMfcS*aa}i*tHorMM

SmrtSTromboBi

j V it t L

Convenience

¦

.„>.»*

S.4S

..a.W

•«*»»<)
(Alldtnnir. lnrfc.». lr*M
*»«

———¦

j

Sato Applies
New Inspirations

HITOSHI SATO, (Abovt> and balow left) gives direction* to Bloomsburg players Involv
ed in his productions of "The Hostage".

SIGMA IOTA OMEGA

MEETING
RUSH
(The First Social Fra ternity At BSC)

TUESDAY
FEB. 8th _ ^

^^JEHANNA
UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
I PRESENTS
IShakespeare's

8:00 P M.2Ui
KUSTER

By JEFF BACHMAN
Art and art forms are the
expressions of man's creativity.
Creativity in turn is the product
of ideas. Hitoshi Sato, the new
director of the Bloomsburg
Players, is a man with many
ideas. As the director of the
Players Sato will have a venue
in which to bring his ideas to
life .
This is not to say that Sato has
not been creative. He has taught
set design and technical
directing at BSC since 1972 and
worked with the Players, in
those capacities. Bor n and
raised in Japan. Sato alone was
picked from over 8.000 students
to study in the United States as
a Sankei scholar. He received
undergraduate
and
his
graduate degrees at the
University of North Carolina.
As a new director Sato has
several ideas on changing the
Players
as
a
theatre
organization. "I think that any
time you take a leadership you
have a vision. The vision is
always based on what you
couldn't do before because you
didn 't have the leadership. "
Sato commented. He would like
to see more student participation as an audience. In
order to spark interest and
increase student attendance
Sato plans to do more "offbeat"
productions. The next Players
production "The Hostage",
which is currently in rehearsal ,
is an example.
Sato also wishes to have more
student involvement at the
directing and design level. In
the past these areas of
production have always been
handled by faculty. He would
like to work with the Mass
Communication Department to
promote this kind of practical
learning for students.
In order to foster this Sato

^^

AUDITORIUM

Pl
5

f|
XS
,

IN HARTLINE

^
^
^ Sg^
^
^ l

H. gggSgBS

1 784-5962, . ^H—HI

I "KING
1 HERRY

f\\\ &

/^ lllll
T^/
*
|PART ONE"
(J

wants to form a selection
committee to choose the best
students script submitted in
either theatre, film, radio, or
TV. This script would then be
designed,
directed.
and
produced by students.
Like any college town
Bloomsburg has its share of
animosity between townspeople
and students. Sato may or may
not have had this in mind when
he was thinking through his idea
to start a summer program for
children 's theatre in the park, to
be performed by the Players.
Children, would have the opportunity to participate. He
feels that many children have
idle time during the summer
and that such a program would
help them constructively occupy this time.
• Sato described a similar
"scheme" in which a troupe
made up of members of the
Players would perform mime,
song, dance, and skits, for
groups who don't normally have
access to such forms of entertainment. As examples Sato
mentioned homes and hospitals.
As a native, born Japanese
living and working in the U.S.
Sato views himself as a
"bridge " between the two
cultures. In the next 5 years he
would like to present two plays
of Japanese origin which he
plans to translate himself. He
feels that universal theme is
important in any play and. will
use this criterion when choosing
the Japanese plays so that they
will be pertinent and understandable to American
audiences.
Sato has one goal , as both a
teacher, and a director of
educational theatre. He stated it
this way, "It is to teach them
(students) how to discern a
quality and when they have
grasped it for them to say : how
can I achieve it" . Sato however
feels the Bloomsburg Players
should not be limited to just
educational theatre.

•Say it with

i

send a

j

for

I

"" PANACHE!

IFEB.9, 10, 11,12
1 at 8 p.m.

I, Benjamin Apple
Theatre
SelinsgroveU. Campus
Selinsgrove, Pa.
Adults %Students «1"
Groupsof 15 or more
receive15% discount
For advance tickets
call 374-0101
Mon.-Fri. 4-6 p.m.

Poeticgrarri
Valentines
:
Day

or any occasion;

Personal - Original |
; For Further Information
Call 784-8307
Ask for Bob
!
Best times:
Tues. & Thurs.
I Between 11:00 & 3:00

Fres hma n Has
Unique Hobby

following that . Dave pursued
another chance to get involved
in a group-type atmosphere. He
was successful , as he landed in
a fivesome. Fryday.
Fryda v was without a doubt
Dave's moat pronperous act.
They p erf ormed at various
' u. f rom f air ,* and
events rann m
carnivals to da new.and private
parties. Additionally, Fryday
recorded in a studio with aeven
original songs co-written by the
entire band. Unfortuna tely.
Fryday disbanded when the
drummer quit, and they
recruited a drummer from the
band Sorcerer , the band Dave is
currently a member of.
In Sorcerer , Dave and his
fellow band members specialize
in hard rock music, termed
heavy metal. Their music
ranges from blues ( Hendrix ) to
the thrashing guitar sounds of
today, such as the Scorpions
and Judas Priest. Sorcerer does
a lot of performing and would
like to get something lined up to
play in the Union later in the
semester. To obtain performing
dates, they sometimes submit
newspaper ads or simply call
the owner of the establishment
to get an audition date. The
amount of money Sorcerer
takes in for a gig varies. The
most they've made in one night
has been $300.
One might wonder , does
Dave's attending college interfere with his practicing
schedule with Sorcerer ? "No,"
says Dave, "I usually go home
every weekend so we can stay
sharp as a group, and I practice
alone every day while here at
school. " For the future, Dave
intends to continue working in
his band in Lebanon. After
college, Dave rates a musical
career over anything else and
will fall back on his degree if
necessary.
For the novice guitarist, Dave
contributes some good advice:
"Keep practicing every day and
have patience. The ability to
play guitar is not going to come
overnight. Also., you must
believe in yourself , confidence
is a must."

By PATWOOLFORD
Dave Hockley is not .iust your
average BSC student. This
freshman History major occupies his time with a hobby
tha t a good number of people
can only dream about. While
others are lifting weights. playing racquetball , twisting
their minds in their books, or
whatever else they get enthused
by, Dave , from Lebanon, Pa. is
j amming with his Panther
black Fender Stratocaster
electric guitary.
He originally began playing
guitar on a regular basis at the
end of his ninth grade year - age
14. At that time, he was given
his first guitar, an imitation Les
Paul. This guitar was minimal
in price, a mere $130. compared
to the $700 guitar Dave now
owns.
Dave received his first inspirations to play guitar from
the music he listened to at the

He received his Inspirations fo play from
the late Jimi Hendrix.
time, mainly Jimi Hendrix, the
great black guitarist, and
Jimmy Page, of the legendary
Led Zeppelin. "Other inspirations," Dave continues,
"came from pure desire and
will to learn." As for practice,
when yet a beginner, he was
putting in 1-2 hours a day. But
as improvement progressed,
the amount of practice increased.
Following a good year of
consistent practice and lessontaking, Dave got involved in his
first organized band. Voyager
was the title and was formed
with three high school friends.
Dave's main functions in
Voyager were to keep rhythm,
occasional back-up vocals, and
a few leads. A lead refers to a
guitar solo, usually in the
middle of the song. Because of
age. Voyager did not really
expect anything to materialize
in the performing aspect, j ust to
gain experience. Voyager
played together for a year, and

From Mon. 7th to Sun. 13th

I COUPON

I Purchase
I of$4

|

!
j

I
|& uuimwo |L
"™T sj- v '"' " '"JM per
-i ££
|m '¦;v;g
j ?' iwiT^ *i~ *T ' nffll order
^

'I
'

¦,

Kf

m customer

felft

,..M»
MOK> All lrCownoi oiidHo€»jto«
H^»e^...V4a«MKiwWifci««' Saoe«Onl«it...1U»
»•«
1\m.- CWckwi Hue*r»with FHo.
--2-M
Cahon.
VWD. . Seafood Combo Mottor. Coiwltt of don». olirtmp.
ofid.colloo»...wlHi Frio« oii *•* .
THUH.- SmollPtao
SwWSlromboll
*•*»
Urooflotorprieootunoll
PH.»'75
lorooStfomboU..
....3.7S
' "*• ""*'¦¦—-¦*
SAT.- Uiijii s -«UH. . A«l Alt Wook UMJ..AW o-io toff* «¦*«. ••» •
I
tfooojfcWietw fa wMfc swr«**»»• ' - ¦

"
£0
• B
E V
l# F
R

C C
,

1

A
L
*

.

Wmmm&SWXWm&.
ffi
'iffl
OFF
W^
wJgp ""'"'""""'*Sif""*"^ iww«ii, ?mM VALUE

If.

j
'-Must




.

'
¦
¦ ¦ .
.

..

'
¦

• ¦¦ ¦-





-

' ¦'

¦

'

'

"-

'

¦

'



,

:



Business Dept . Spawns Subsidiaries

By KIRSTEN SMITH
The Business Department has
recently undergone some
changes, breaking from two
departments into five.
Previously there were two
the
main
departments.
Business Education-Office
Administration Department
and
the
Business
Department.
Administration
The Business Admin. Dept. has
now been broken down into
four: the Accounting Dept. the
Computer and Information
Systems Dept'., the Finance and
Business Law Dept., and the
Marketing-Management Dept.
Previously, one chairperson
was presiding over 35 faculty
members. Now each new
dep artment has it' s own
c h a i rp e r s o n . A s s o c i a t e
Professor, Robert Yori, has
been named the Accounting
Dept. chairperson. Professor

Harold Frey will be the Computer and Info. Systems
chairperson. Professor Bernard
Dill will be the Finance and
Business Law chairperson, and
Professor Melvyn Woodward
has been named the MarketingManagement chairperson.

Division of the department will allow faculty
members
to
have
stronger
identification with their specialties.
A main reason for the change
was to increase the efficiency of
the department, because it is
seeking accreditation from the
American
Assembly
of
Collegiate Schools of Business,
which is an international accrediting body.

This division of the department will allow faculty members to have a stronger
identification
with
their
specialties, and therefore, will
allow students to identify better
with their professors. In making
the recommendation for the
change . Business Dept. Dean ,
Emory Rarig, stated that ,
"This organization structure
will greatl y facilitate the
student advisement process, the
pre-scheduling and scheduling
of students in high demand
classes, and generally improve
the services to all students in
the School of Business."
While
the
Business
Administration Department has
now been changed, the Business
Education-Office
Administration Dept. will remain the
same, under chairperson .
Associate Professor Ellen
Clemens.

theDevils!
tvtih
GO
)
(
The Tazmanian Devils

of

TFT A

Jbnln I r%.

l^-f^'i'

P^l

_^
A
WSBmma
'^ 'nhA\ii\£ix ^ssmas§9}»y
TZS

I Good for

'
¦¦
¦*
> ¦

Guaranteed %
hoyr delivery or
order free !

TWO BOYS
¦i»w# vi i
FROM
ITALY
r-tm.

lQA ldQt\
/ Oft-lDOU

*d°rn

DAVE HOCKLEY, a freshmen, it shown here exibitlng his "Panther Black Fender 9
Stratococster" electric guitar.

(Uv

r -tuAJh

^T^^J^jfc ^^r^
\,

*=&'
mk
?? -vs7
^AJRL
*
^=> {

MEETING
\ WU
TONIGHT . y%^^ ;

Kehr Union
•"
V&r ^Vf
:
II' )$ L__
Multl-A
' *%¦>
8:00 P.M. t9P*l.
"

'

43
47
48
50
51
52
53

excuse (2 wds.)
Short opera solo
Grotto
Part of the hand
Made do
Prevents
Alte
U.S . caricaturist

54 Farm storage place
DOWN

1 Conservatives ' foe
for short
2 Go
length
(ramble)
3 Famous volcano
4 Moves jerkily
5 Hollywood (.jpulace
6 Sheriff Taylor
7 "Golly "
8
as an eel
9 Size of some
want-ads (2 wds.)
¦
10 Regretful one _
11 Vanderbilt and
Lowel1
13 Acquit
14 "The Lord is My

1 Movie mogul Marcus

28 Devilishly sly
31 Decline
32 Devices for
refining flour
33 Teachers organization
34 Shore protectors
(2 wds.)
36 Machine part
37 Type of music
38 Doesn 't eat
39 The Sunflower State
40 Part of APB , to
police
41 All-too common

5 Heroic tale
9 Song syllable
12 The state of being
undamaged
15 Pal
16 Its capital is
Dacca
17 Nobel chemist
18 The art of putting
on pl ays
19 Pearson and Maddox
21
Vegas
22 Drink to excess
23

Veal —
Extends across
Turkic tribesmen
Mr . Guinness
Spanish for wolf
Retrace (3 wds.)
Disproof
Ends , as a
broadcast (2 wds.
29 Like Felix Unger
30 Head inventory
32 Hurt or cheated
35 Glided
36 Lead minerals
38 Coquette
40 Take
(pause)
41 Finished a cake
42 Football trick
43 "Rock of
"
44 Anklebones
45 Work with soil
46 Too
49 New Deal organization

Collegiate CW7/-2
26 Italian painter
27 Screenwriter Anita

© Edward Julius
ACROSS

I

15
20
22
23
24
25
26
28

Hiss

$25 Off

anyJostenfc gold ring
See yourJosten's representative

/\

Jf tM
DATEFeb. 7-8-9
TTMF. 10-4 ) L UJ
.
^
^j
|
nO.OODeposit


Campus Diges t News Service

Campaigns usually rise and
fall with election years , but
one recent campai gn is rallying year-round -across the nation against America 's most
sociall y acceptable killer—the
drunken driver.
Drinking and driving have
been associated for years since
both became accessible to
large numbers of people, and
throughout the history of this
dread association many victims have been left sprawled
across our highways. In just
the past two years, more
Americans were killed by this
deadl y combination than died
in Vietnam. Over the last
decade, a quarter of a million
people have lost their lives in
alcohol-related accidents.
Now the parents and friends
of the innocent victims who
have fallen prey to the
drunken driver are fighting to
put an end to the carnage.
They are attempting to slow
the death rate which claims
three Americans and injures 80
more every hour of every day
by the intoxicated motorist.
State legislatures are beginning to listen to the outcry from
individuals and organized
groups such as Mothers
Against Drunk Drivers
(MADD) and Remove Intoxicated Drivers-USA (RID).
The state lawmakers are no
longer ignoring the figures
from safety experts which indicate one out of every two
Americans will be Ihe victim
o f . a drunk driver sometime
during his or her lifetime.
In the past , most steps
against drinking and driving
have been safety measures
such as installing air bags and

'?

^
^^&£3F^k **j &/jP !> p\ ' >

;>
', <

'
Valentine's Day is
• '
Monday, February14. 1 ;

:;
<|
', ;
;?
l '

The beautiful look of fresh'
flowers. The beautiful <
scent of Arpegc.All in the '
FTD®Fragrance'n
Flowers™ Bouquet !

¦J r

1t

PLACE The College Store
r

Drunk Driving
Drying Up

I VISA' I !"•*««*)

'.

_

$17.50 or $20.00 _

One of Many
Valentines
At:

;

;

'3SEt*tiL,'S i
^\L
I

FLOWERS

^_

<

THE HOME OF ,'
^^
PETAL PBtrtCT GIFTS

-x^,„„.„

®

;

by a 150-pound person.
Penalties are often more
strict for convicted drivers
who refuse to take a sobriety
test. At the, same time this
tough stand* against drunken
driving is working, in some
cases it is not.
After new legislation passed, alcohol-related fatalities
declined by 20 percent in
Mary land , 47 percent in
Maine and 35. percent in
Oregon. South Dakota has
more than 600 death sites
marked on its highways with a
si g n :
"X . m a r k s
the
spot...THINK!" Maryland
and Massachusetts police
monitor sobriety check-points
and Maine has cracked down
further with a new li quor tax.
Twenty states have increased the legal drinking age
because statistics have indicated a link between deaths
caused by drunken driving
and offenders aged 16 to 24.
Despite all these efforts,
however, the new laws are
proving tough to enforce.

Draft resister
is sentenced
Campus Digest News Service

Mark Schmucker did not
register for the draft because
he believes Jesus Christ was a
pacifist. But he did write the
Selective Service and told
them he would not mind serving his' country some other
way tha n 'militaril y.' '-'"-'V' **" ;
That other- way was decided ;
by a U-.S. District judge io^ be'
two years of work in EmmausHouse, a live-in hospital for
retarded adults in Marthasville , Mo.
Schmucker, a Mennonite
from Alliance , was sentenced
to Emmaus for two out of his
three years of probation. And
he ws levied a $4,000 fine.
The fine, Jud ge Ann Aldrich ,
said , was given to deter other
young persons from failing toregister for the draft . A fiveyear sentence which promises
parole in a .short time is not
taken as seriously as a fine, she
said.
Schmucker has no complaints. He will be receiving
some compensation for his
work at Emmaus House-about $50 a month plus room
and board .
The Mennonite, who also is
a senior biology major at
Goshen College, Indiana, is
really pleased with the work
sentence. He said it is giving
him the chance to serve as he
wanted to.
Schmucker is the third draft
resister to be prosecuted since
the Selective Service System
was reinstituted . More than
500,000men have failed to added their name to the national
list for a possible draft .

Men 's Swimming

Fry , Wade pin

BSC Snaps Losing Streak

By DENNIS FISH
In wrestling action this past
Tuesday, the Huskies got back
on the winning track as they
downed Millersville State by a
score of 29-10. The win was
BSC's first in the Eastern
Wrestling League, against three
losses, and raised their overall
record to 6-3.
Todd Cummings opened the
way for .the visiting Huskies as
he took a 9-3 decision in the 1181b. match. In the 126-lb. match
Woody Fry toyed with his opponent by chalking up an 18-0
score, before winning by a pin in
5:24. At 134, Nelson Fritz came
back in the third period to

Nipped by Monmouth

134 and 142 pounds when Nelson
(Fritz) and Keith (Youtz ) really
came through for us." said
Husky mentor Roger Sanders.
"I was especially pleased with
Keith's performance , and it's
good to get him back on track."

register an 8-7 decision. Fritz
was losing 7-4 coming into the
third period. Keith Youtz kept
the ball rolling at 142 by leading
all the way enroute to a 6-0
victory.
The icing was put on the
match by BSC in the upper
weights. At 177. Tom Gibble
posted his twelfth straight
victory as he recorded seven
takedowns and a 19-7 superior
decision. John McFadden put
the icing on the cake with an 119 decision at 190, and Joe Wade
closed out the match by pinning
his opponent only :47 seconds
into the second period.
"I thought the kevs were at

The Huskies next action is
this weekend as the team
travels to Edinboro for the
Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference championships.
Their next home meet is a big
match aga inst a nationallyranked Penn State squad. Come
out and see the Huskies in their
final tuneup before the EWL
and NCAA tournaments.

By ART CARUCCI
Progress and improvement
were the words used to describe
the Bloomsburg men's swim
team over the past two weeks.
In the first two events against
Monmouth
College,
the
progress and improvement
continued, as Bloomsburg
raced out to an early 15-1 lead.
After that , disappointment
and despair were the prevalent
words, when Monmouth came
from behind to win 59-54.
"I was very disappointed we
didn't leave Monmouth with a
coach
Eli
win , " said
McLaughlin: "I had no doubts
that we were a better team, but
we didn't give the performance
we were capable of."
In the first two events.
Bloomsburg gave the performance McLaughlin has
begun to expect, as the team of
Phil Christian , Matt Thran, Phil
Spampinato and Bryan Quibell
won the 400 Medley Relay with a
time of 3:49:38.
In the 1000 freestyle. Dave
Kenwood and Rick Fenton took
one-two,
with
Kenwood
recording a winning time of
10:35:54.
But after that. Monmouth , led
by Peter Emodi and diver Mike
Paulson , began to pick away at

Bloomsburg 's 14-point lead,
mainly through big victories in
the 200 freestyle and l-meter
diving.
"We really had a poor performance in the 200 free,"
sighed McLaughlin. "I expected
at least a second and third. We
got only a third."
Despite the losses, Bloomsburg still led after six events,
27-25. Finally, Monmouth took
the lead for good with a decisive
one-two finish in the 200 fly:
"I don't think this team has
the confidence to put an opponent away, " McLaughlin
said. "We had a chance to win
this meet in the early going, but
we were - not mentally tough
enough to do it."
There were some good performances for Bloomsburg in
the late stages of the meet. Phil
Christian won the 200
backstroke in 2:08:42, and Dave
Kenwood took the 500 freestyle
in 5:04:44.
But Paulson put the meet
away for Monmouth, by winning the 3-meter diving.
"Monmouth is a . good ,
disciplined
team, " said
McLaughlin, "but I felt we were
the better group of swimmers.
It just never showed."

Public Speaking
(Continued from Pag* 2)

STRETCH. 118 Iber. Todd Cummings applies a half nelson in early season action.

Kent Hagedorn

j^Jg/GJ^

l^^^^^V^Vfe*9^Vb^Pb^FviVl«^F»^*^«
I ¦l^^*^^fe^fe^^»^Pi^^»^P»^P^^^V^*9^V^fej^Sl^Vfe^h^*^^VN^*H^fc^^^V

I

!

j

|
I

j

V

!

!
|!
| j
|

Coupon

fiO* OFF

oL oHzen
Donuts

(One Coupon per doz.)
Exp ires February 28

r^

Coupon

i • _

COOKieS
Buy One Get
One FREE

Expires February

Coupon

i

i

I

!I
j

j

I

.; '--"-"---

(One Coupon per Doz.)
_ Exp!res February 28

j

I
J

Coupon

j

I

(One Couponper doz.)

!

!
¦

Fo r 99<

77>

!

! DONUT HOLES |
j
7§(t
\

1

Expires February 28

j

SMIDGINS |
One Dozen

¦

|

i

One Dozen

!

MUFFINS i
3

Coupon

Exp ires February 28

f

!

J

^iMt
!

y So^ \
— —_

^¦MF ^O.iW

'

rfB
^
^

a^
^g^

/5N

INTERNATIONAL

(liVMULTIFOODS*

I

^¦—»' M«T lOOOAMOnruULJUltOrvlHM

m

EN7DAYs Bl^
urg \
l
\\ op
5a.m. - l a . m .

~~~"""'"~ """"""

¦"""

784-0108

~~".

'--—}

'

problem of the fear of public speaking, Rogers
has pioneered a program which has been highly
effective among corporate executives, community leaders, political speakers, students and
many others. "TALK-POWER," says Rogers,
"through systematic training, provides a
method for becoming an effective communicator
in a world where, if you're not, you can be left
behind."

CY Classifieds
Announcements

WANTED: The Easter Seal Society is in need of individuals to work with
handicapped adults and children from June 5 through August IS. For further details, contact: Director of Recreation and Camping, The Pennsylvania
Easter Seal Society P.O. Box 497, Middletown, Pennsylvania 17057-0497;
Telephone: (717) 939-7801.
SUMMER JOB OPENING: Camp Akiba has positions available for male
and female general and specialty counselors. A Brother-Sister Camp, Akiba
is located in the Picturesque Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. A
recruiter will be on campus Tues. 2/15/83. Contact the Career Development Center or write Box 400, BalaCynwyd, Pennsylvania 19004,
THE UPWARD BOUND program is now seeking qualified applicants for tutor counselor positions for the 1983 summer program. Interested persons should contact the Upward Bound Office, Room 23, Old Science Hall
(phone 4280) for job description and requirements.
BSC STUDENTS desiring to transfer into the Arts & Science CIS Program
may apply if they have a gpa of at least 2.75 and 15 credits earned
at BSC. Submit a copy of your pink grade sheet with the application form
prior to February 14, 1983 in the office of Mathematics and Computer
Science.
PROCESS MAIL AT HOME: $30.00 per hundred) No experience. Part or
full time. Start immediately. Details, send self-addressed, stamped envelope. Haiku Distributors, 115 Waipalani Rd., Haiku, HI 96708
FOR RENT 6 Seasonal Apts. in Ocean City, M.D. For more info, call
784-4228.
GIRLS interested in receiving instruction on Corrective and Creative Makeup. Will do personal make-ups. Call 784-1783 Weekend hrs. after 8:00.
CLASSROOM CHANGE: Students enrolled in Dr. Huber's Marriage and
Family course 45-331-07. This course will meet in Bakeless 106 for the rest
of the semester. beginning with the Feb. 8, 1983 class.

Personals

MARY BETH, Head down at the U. - J.C.
KELLI A.C., I love you I - BRF?

Red-hot Rams Rip Huskies By 27

By WADE DOUGLAS
Hopeful' to avenge a midseason loss and take control of
their own playoff destiny, the
Husky
basketball
team
travelled to West Chester last
Wednesday night, But , when
they came from the game.
Coach Chronister's troops must
have been wondering what they
did to deserve a 27-point rout at
the hands of the Rams.
The game was supposed to be
a showdown to determine a
possible shot at hosting the first
round playoff game. They had
faced each other less than two
weeks before, with West
Chester rolling to a convincing
79-70 victory. In that game, the
Rams had posted leads as large
as 20 points late in the game
only to watch helplessly as the
Huskies, thanks to a swarming
press, claw back to within five
with two minutes remaining.
West Chester finally composed
itself enough to record a win but
was left shaken by the young
Husky's tenacity. The rematch
was to answer whether BSC
could indeed play with the
nation's 17th ranked team or if
the Rams would again roll and
this time keep their twentypoint lead.
Early in the Wednesday night
match it seemed that BSC could

had little trouble handling the
pressure.
Even
more
depressing for Huskies was that
the opposition retained their
torrid shooting touches.

not only play with the Rams but
beat them. The Huskies jumped
to a 4-0 lead on tap-ins by freshmen Shane Planutis and Glen
Noach, but the host responded
with a tap-in of their own to tie it
at six.

Despite several successful
bombs launched by Terry
Conrad , BSC could get no closer
than seventeen during the
second stanza. The Rams
further destroyed any hope of
another BSC comeback by
spurting to margins of 25 points
with less than eight minutes.
Both teams cleared the benches
with about four minutes left
with the Rams reserves
stretching the lead to as much
as 32 points before settling with
the final score of 98-71.

The team traded baskets and
the lead see-sawed back and
forth several times before the
Rams took advantage of a
Husky turnover to open a 16-13
lead. A Planutis baseline
jumper brought the Huskies
back to within one but that
would be as close as they would
get the rest of the night.
Led by senior guard Rick
Gilliam and junior forward
JJevin Givens. West Chester
reeled off the next twelve points
and twenty-four of the next
thirty-three to take a 40-24 lead.
Gilliam was the biggest thorn in
BSC's side, as he poured in
sixteen first-half markers on 810 shooting from his left-wing
position. As a team , the Rams
shot a red-hot 61 percent from
the floor.
Hoping to quickly make up
theirseventeen half time deficit.
Chronister employed a fullcourt press to open up the
second half. Unfortuna tely, the
Ram's talented ballhandlers,
Sid Jones , Gilliam, and Givens,

For the game West Chester
hit for an amazing 63 percent of
their shots, while the Huskies
shot at a not-so-shabby 47
percent clip. Gilliam and
Givens led all scorers with 22
and 21 points respectively.
Givens also hauled down 12
Conrad
rebounds. Terry
bombed for 18. while Noach
chipped in 15.
An ironic note to the game
was that West Chester , which
entered the game as the
league 's leading free-throw
making team, hit a miserable 818, despite their performance
from the floor.

Do you want
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

Kent Hagedorn

Barry Francisco is set to release a long jumper in
recent action at Nelson Fieldhouse.

HIGHER EXAMINATION SCORES

H|mSports Colander H^H

or

2-7 Men's B-Ball at Mt. St. Mary's
2-7 Women's B-Ball at Wilkes
2-8 Women's Swimming at Bucknell
2-12 Men's Swimming at W. Chester
2-11 Wrestling — PSAC Tourney

HIGHER GRADES ON YOUR TERM PAPERS
I

19B3 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Many suggestions and addresses of 154 corporations,
41 federal agencies and 19 state governments with openings for summer employment
$5.00
or internships. Order now. Publication date February 15,1983.

II

BASIC TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR SCORE ON THE GRADUATE RECORD
EXAMINATION — Proven strategies to increase your score. Many sample questions
$5.00
from previous exams. 228 pages.

III

INSIDERS GUIDE TO AN M.B.A.: IMPORTANT HINTS ON ADMISSION
ADMISSION
PROCEDURES
AND
THE
GRADUATE
MANAGEMENT
EXAMINATION - This guide will helpl It lists schools that accept part-time students,
C+students,those without accounting and the very selective ones. 190 pages. Book$7.00
store price will be $9.95.

IV

BASIC TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR SCORE ON THE LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION
TEST (Multistats Bar Examination) - Written by an attorney. Actual questions from $7.00
past exams. Many hints,144 pages.

V

HOW TO PREPARE FOR THE MEDICAL COLLEGE ADMISSION TESTS - The
$10.00
best in the field. Don't take the M.C.A. without this help. 340 pages.

VI

THE TERM PAPER KIT -413 term papers. Topics from anthropology to zoology.
Each term paper has an abstract. Actual term papers that received a grade of A—or A
during the 1982 academic year at the University of Arizona or Arizona State University.
Ten pages of rules for preparing a bibliography and for proper footnoting. Order the kit,
review the topics and abstracts,then select one actual term paper which will be sent to
you within 10 days. These are not for resale or reproduction. They are for instructional
purposesonly. Order the kit and joewhat top students do to get high grades.
$10.00

IViail yOUr Oraer ¦TO:

Univ ersitv Re search Services
Department 28.
P.O. BOX 7739

Phoenix, Arizona 85011

: A ALFIE'S PLACE

^axinos k.0. 1, Route 61
y^gf
^^^
/ALFIE SAYS:'?OUT THEY GO!
^JMUST MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING
'^
^
^

*U ITF.IYISFIRST QUALITY
v^'

jSkir
tS^-

"

***

**

-I Stndmeltenii
I N""*-:

jy

I I I

,

"

III

IV

——

_

V

¦ , „

VI

£*

v&

f Sweaters!

i^/Slouse ^^

I Order by number. Enclose cash,rociiey ordir or a chtck.(Checksrequire 14diyiadditional
,or
order two or mo™ it«m,we wiu piy aii mining
to c, ,^¦'
*1-°° P0 0*- v°u



* '^W«^:;

j

¦

(Circleyour choice) J

Prieaofcook.

-"?;»—~
_

!

j

:$2
.
qf
^
^^

36
%L$izes
to' Mj' j P f $ $ ^*&
J^uHi^•
B ^ CORD At. ^^ftl^WW^ g
tBLAZERSh., ^NK&% § ??nts ^
£

>L^16 ] ^< WEA: Fri15at 16to* <^L*8

¦^
*
:
-^-¦^^
SoiHtaf,ir
Ol£~2^'\-V' :...-

.to;5>--^-

lirif^^^'>