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I
HumanServices Center
McCormick Inscribed
In BSC History
VICE PRESIDENT for academic affairs Larry Jones congratulates BSC President James
McCormick on his name being announced for the title for the new Human Services Center.
Teacher of the Deaf
Presents Lecture
By THERESA LOZETSKI
The Department of Communications Disorders was
honored with a distinguished
guest speaker, Zhu-li Wang, a
teacher at the Tianjin School
for the Deaf in China. Zhu-li
Wang spoke to some 30 students
of Introduction to Manual
Communications in Navy Hall
in
night,
Wednesday
cooperation with Assistant
Professor Sam Slike.
Wang, the first participant
from China welcomed by the
Philadelphia International
Program (PIP), compared
Chinese deaf education to the
United States' system. She cited
one major difference in the
teaching techniques of the two
countries. "We are concerned
(in China) not to use sign
language a lot so students can
learn to produce sounds and
learn to speak," she said. In the
United States, deaf students
learn to sign at age two.
A typical day at the Tianjin
School for the deaf , the largest
of 300 schools in China, begins
at 8:15 with morning exercise.
"We even exercise our eyes. If a
deaf student loses his sight, he
would have a very hard life,"
she said.
A class in China has about
twice as many students as
American classes have. "We
need to conduct a formal class
because of the size," she continued. "The informal class is
good because students are
allowed to ask questions freely,
but students should also respect
their teacher."
Wang said a positive attitude
is stressed in China. ' We do not
often point out to the students
what is bad. We think the way is
for the teachers to point to what
is good instead." This encourages students to learn more
efficiently.
Mainstreaming programs do
not exist in China. Deaf students
are not integrated into hearing
schools, and are placed in
government-assigned f actory
jobs after 10 years of education.
"After graduation, all students
are assigned to jobs according
to their own interests and the
needs of the country," said
Wang.
From the 300 Chinese schools
for the deaf, Wang was the only
one selected to study in the
United States on a 13-month
program. She is looking forward to the opportunity to
student teach at the Pennsylvania School for the Deaf in
September.
"I
always
remember that I am the first
participant from China. I want
to learn everything possible so
that I can share this when I
return home."
Van stolen
"Sometime between 11:00
a.m. and 11:25 a.m., Thursday,
March 31st, a Weller's Vending
Service truck, a 1976 Tan Chevy
Van, was stolen while parked in
front of the Ben Franklin
building. Although recovered
within an hour 2 blocks on
campus, considerable damage
there to and losses from within
it were experienced. This act
was accomplished during the
Ground Breaking Ceremonies
being conducted on campus at
that time, with a lot of vehicular
and pedestrian traffic on the
(Continued on Pag* 8) -
By DEB BERKLEY
Groundbreaking ceremonies
for the new Human Services
Center here on campus, held
Thursday, March 31, were
highlighted by the official
naming of the building for BSC
President James H. McCormick.
In a surprise presentation,
Board of Trustees President
Robert W. Buehner Jr.
described to the audience the
individual for whom a special
committee of faculty, alumni
and students had approved
naming the building for : a man
of the highest integrity and uncommon decency ; a man with
deep respect and concern for\
the educational processes; a
man with deep affection and
love for the tens of thousands of
students whose lives he has
Representative Assembly
touched; and a man of personal
modesty and quiet wisdom who
has always been committed to,
served, and championed the
cause of public higher
education.
"It is well known among his
staff that President McCormick
Undislikes
surprises.
fortunately, this is one surprise
that will have to be tolerated,"
Buehner said. McCormick and
others did not expect the
building to be named until
completion of the project in
1984.
President McCormick, who
had made legislators in
Harrisburg aware of the need
for the new building, received a
standing ovation from some 100
people present at the ground(Continu*d on pag* 6)
NewCurriculumPassed
By SHARON DEEGAN
A new curriculum in tne
School of Professional Studies,
¦which will train interpreters for
the deaf , was passed at the
April
6
Wednesday,
Representative Assembly
meeting. The program will offer
the option for a Bachelor of Arts
(BA) , Associate of Applied
Science (AAS) , or a Certificate
of Completion. Also, a policy
was passed to designate honor
graduates with the Latin titles
"Suma Cum Laude" (with
highest honors) , "Magna Cum
Laude" (with high honors), and
"Cum Laude" (with honors).
The "Interpreter Training
Program" will make Bloomsburg the fourth school in the
country to offer a B.A. in this
course of study and the third in
the state for the AAS (the other
programs in the state are at
two-year colleges).
"Teachers of the deaf are not
well-versed at being interpreters," said Samuel Slike,
Assistant Professor of Communication Disorders and
creator of the BSC program.
"We're dealing with a language
— you need to be very good at
it," he said. The curriculum will
also train oral interpreters for
the deaf who read lips, but don't
know sign language.
The program, targeted to
begin next fall, proposes an
additional nine or ten courses.
There are also plans to hire two
new professors, one next fall,
and the other by the fall of '85. A
projected 30 students, full and
part-time, will be eligible fort
The Solomon Amendment has
been effectively overturned
according to information gained
from the April 7, issue of The
Philadelphia Inquirer.
According to the Inquirer ,
several students , with the aid of
The American Civic Liberties
Union, contested the provisions
of the amendment in court.
On March 9,. a Minneapolis
U.S. district j udge 's ruling
prohibited the government from
enforcing the amendment. The
judge based his ruling on his
belief that the amendment was
unconstitutional.
According to the Inquirer,
officials of the U.S. Department
of Education were not
demanding colleges to request
information from students
regarding their adherence to
draft registration.
The Solomon Amendment to
the Select Service Act was
signed into law by President
Reagan last September.
Copies of the Minnesota
decision have been sent to Pa.
college Presidents by Parry
Steinhardt, executive director
of the Philadelphia branch of
the ACIU, reports the Inquirer.
John Morris, financial
director for Temple University,
was quoted by the Inquirer
stating that his office was not .
requiring aid applicants to
answer any questions on their
aid forms regarding draft
registration.
Solomon Amendment
EffectivelyOverturned
he program.
BSC
has
Currently ,
notetakers, counselors, and
non-certified interpreters for
the hearing-impaired on
campus. Slike sees his interpreter training as eventually
"providing experience for
students in the program, as well
as a service for hearingimpaired students."
Also, following discussion and
compromise, new quality point
( OPA) designations and Latin
titles will honor graduates who
have excelled academically .
Cum
Laude"
"Summa
graduates will need a 3.95 to 4.00
QPA, "Magna Cum Laude,"
3.75 to 3.94_ QPA, and "Cum
Laude", 3.50 to 3.74 QPA.
Athletic Conflict
In other matters, there was a
long and somewhat heated
discussion concerning
a
proposal for a Campus-wide
Committee
on Athletics
(CWCA). Opponents of the
committee argue there is a
conflict of charge between the
CWCA proposal and the existing
Ethletics Advisory Group (a
sub-committee under the
College Committee on Student
Life) . For now, the proposal
(which has been an issue since
September) will return to the
Executive Board for further
review.
Finally, President McCormick
and
APSCUF
President
Julius
R.
Kroschewsky informed the
assembly that a study group
will be forming a charge for a
proposed faculty committee to
review faculty role in governance. The eight-member
elected body will be obligated to
(Continueden Pag*7)
Pledging
rationale
Dear Editor :
We disagree with several
points mentioned in the recent
article about pledging. For
instance, how can the author
suggest that Greeks are
"buying their friends?" True,
some people pledge to gain
friendships, but others pledge
because they see unity and love,
not only for the members of the
organization, but for what the
organization stands for itself.
With this in mind, pledging is a
matter of personal taste.
However, the argument about
not having enough study hours
is invalid. The issue is not
whether there is ample time for
studying, but how the pledge
budgets his or her time. Pledges
are given three hours each night
during the week for studying.
Now how many people can
honestly say they study for
three hours a night? It is the
pledge's discretion whether or
not he or she chooses to take
advantage of this time:
The reason sororities and
fraternities ask pledges to carry
paddles, pillows, and manuals
is because they are representing a particular Greek
organization. Carrying these
items is like wearing a sorority
or fraternity jacket or sweatshirt. Greeks ask pledges to
carry these items' because it-is
the start of instilling a feeling of
pride in an individual fraternity
or soroity. Greeks wear their
letters with pride, so they ask
pledges to carry their letters
with pride.
In regard to interrogations,
their sole purpose is not to
embarrass
or
belittle
Letters to the Editor
the
pledge.
They
are necessary in order to
teach pledges about the sorority
a teacher didn't care whether a
student got good grades, he
wouldn't test you. Likewise, if a
fraternity or sorority didn't
care about the principles of
their
organization ,
they
wouldn't try to establish the
values and concepts their
organization was founded upon.
Therefore, we feel it is an
unfair assessment for someone
who is not a part of the Greek
system to pass judgment about
certain activities Greeks ask
pledges to do. Everything has a
purpose, although people who
aren't involved in the Greek
system may misinterpret it. GO
GREEK!
Seven Proud XEP
Sisters
Two's too few
Dear Editor:
We, the students of BSC, have
a complaint. Maybe it seems
like we are asking a lot, but I
personally think that two
typewriters for hundreds of
students are not quite enough.
Call me selfish if you like, but I
feel we need more than two
typewriters.
It is not only that there are
only two typewriters , but
usually one of them is out of
order. So a nice line forms
behind the one typewriter ,
-making the-typist at the time
very uncomfortable and
making the other students,
impatient "
The annoying thing is that we
all know about all those
typewriters sitting in Sutliff , but
we are not allowed to use them.
Unless, of course, you have a
pass, and to get a pass you have
to be a business student.
The students of this school
paid for those typewriters, so
we should be allowed to use
them. I am not asking you to
disrupt typing classes for my
sake, just set aside time for
students—any students — to be
able to use those typewriters,
with or without pass.
Ann Saloum
Parkina
squeeze
Dear Editor :
What is all this "BULL"
about reserving the parking
places for faculty and staff , and
the students — paying students
— having to do their best to find
a parking place in an already
over-crowded hospital parking
lot or elsewhere?
I'm afraid that this school has
its priorities backwards. Since
when is faculty royalty? Since
when is staff royalty? This is a
democracy, or at least I thought
it was. We have no royalty!
I don't expect all the parking
space to be reserved for the
students either. In actuality, the
only spaces that should understandably be reserved are
the spaces for the handicapped.
It would be better for all
concerned if the faculty and
students had to share whatever
spaces are left after the handicapped spaces have been
designated. If faculty is caught
parking in any handicapped
parking spaces, they should get
whatever penalty is normally
assigned.
Whoever thought up the
brilliant idea of giving the
Bakeless and Waller parking
spaces over to the faculty is
qualified to park in handicapped spaces too, because
tha t person is truly mentally
handicapped.
It would serve the faculty
right if commuter students
staged sit-ins , wrote their
congressman and the governor,
or did something drastic such as
a protest, until the proper adjustments have been made. No
violence , please. That only
causes problems.
Remember that the school
and faculty are working for us.
Security is also wroking for the
students. Campus police should
not be used to enforce a
bourgeois caste system.
Don't let this place drown us.
in red tape again. Do
something. Flood the administration with letters. Flood
the governor with letters, if
need be. There will be no
royalty on this campus.
Rob Sweeney
Rick Zakin
Charles Warner
Draft debate
Dear Editor:
A response to Ernie and
Harry's rebuttal of the "Draft
Debate" that appeared in the
Monday, March 28 issue of the
Campus Voice...
Dear Ernie and Harry:
I must confess, I was impressed with your reply to my
outlandish attack on the liberal
values you hold so dear to your
heart. The opening three
paragraphs were great! They
say, "IMITATION is the
HIGHEST form of FLATTERY!" Yes, I'm flattered.
I must admit, I'm also confused about the issues at hand.
How can you separate the issue
of draft ' registration from the
issue of draft resistance? The
two
are
interwined!
Registration resistance IS the
issue! The government is using
the financial aid departments of
all colleges to police resistors.
The ONLY people affected by
this
law
are
DRAFT
RESISTORS !
(And
the
financial aid departments.)
Those registered have nothing
to worry about. I see the
Solomon Amendment as a way
to enforce the law at a minimal
cost to the taxpayers. The cost
of initiating a special draft
registration enforcement
agency would be astronomical.
What better way to ensure
maximum compliance with the
law without spending millions of
tax dollars.
This brings up the fact that
draft registration IS a LAW. If it
is a law, those who don't pay
attention to it should be
penalized for disobeying it.
Justice for all. Is it your impression that college students
should be considered ABOVE
the law? If so, why?
Interesting that you should
drag social security, welfare,
and unemployment benefits into
this discussion. No, I doubt the
government will ever require
registration for these benefits.
The government realizes that
the majority of recipients of
those programs are well beyond
the age limits specified for draft
registration.
I question your premise that
people need financial aid, and a
chance for a college education
to enlighten themselves to the
facts of the American work
ethic. How do you explain to
people receiving "free"
education, that they're not
getting anything free? I may
have missed something there please explain.
This brings me to the issue of
"laziness." You call it lazy, I
call it lacking initiative. It's one
and the same,. Our society is
structured in a way that encourages achievers and competition. This fact means
doctors get paid more than
janitors. Why? Because we
recognize that doctors invest
more time and money in their
education and otherwise above
and beyond the level of the
average American. I won't say
(Continued on page 8)
From the Archives
College PR...way back when
By R.W.FROMM
As the numbers of college-age men and women
decline in this country, colleges and universities
have begun to take steps to attract a sufficient
number of students to maintain courses and
programs, and in some cases, just to keep the
doors open. Alas, in the past several years, some
colleges, largely small private ones have failed
and gone out of business.
This concern to attract students, though
perhaps more urgent today, is not a new
phenomenon. When it was still Bloomsburg State
Normal School, our institution advertised its
advantages in 1893. Surrounded by ads for
carpets, fountain pens, "gents" clothes, jewelry,
boots and shoes, hardward, groceries , lumber ,
notions, fancy goods, and laces, the following
"points worth thinking about when choosing a
school" were presented in a June publication of
that year:
1. Our school is larger than ever before - this
means that the public appreciates the good and
faithful work done here.
2. -Our Corps of Instruction is stronger than,
ever before. We keep only live teachers. Really
Jive teachers are scarce and high-rpiced.
. -3. .We. give special attention to music and art.
students - students in these departments are on
the increase. More will come when they find out
what we can give them...
4. Our graduates are being called for faster
than we can supply them - there can be only one
secret behind that fact. We do professional work
that counts. We'd like to show how we do it, but
we can't on paper. Come and see.
5. Our location is unsurpassed - everybody
who has been on "Normal Hill" and looked down
on the beautiful town of Bloomsburg, and out
over the Susquehanna valley, to the winding
river at the base of the mountains, exclaims
"unsurpassed! "
6. Good air, pure water, beautiful scenery,
comfortable rooms - a passenger elevator , good
board , wholesome discipline, and earnest, hardworking, well-behaved students. We have them
all. What more could be desired?
7. Our prospects are brighter than ever before
- we are becoming more widely known, and this
brings us increased and better patronage.
Thirty-three different counties are represented
now in our roll of students, and six different
states also contribute to the list.
Our next term will open Sept. 4th! 1893. Many
are already engaging rooms. Let us hear from
vou....
Cancer: A Personal Experience j
The Toqns a pop vocal group will perform at 9 p.m. April 13.
The Show Goes On
By CHRISTOPHER CARY
"So let the party and the
sound rock on. We're gonna
shake until the life has gone.
Rose-tint my world, keep me
safe from my trouble and pain."
Dr. Frank N. Furter, The
Rocker Horror Picture Show.
The scene could be likened to
Halloween in Greenwich
Village. Forty-five tennagers in
costumes ranging from maids'
uniforms to pajamas and
lingerie ( worn by males as far
as I could tell) , wait to see a
movie.
The movie is The Rocky
Horror Picture Show. I've never
seen it, but I've heard about it. I
want to know why these people
are out in the rain, at midnight,
in drag.
'"Why are you. dressed like
that?", I ask a girl in a maid's
apron.
"I'm Magenta", she says.
"Let's see, that's M-a-g..."
"No, no, Magenta is my
character. My name's Laurie,"
I find out from Laurie that
everyone in costume is portraying a character from the
film. "You've never seen the
show before?" she asks.
"No, I haven't," I reply.
"45 teenagers In cosfumes rang ing from
maids' uniforms to paja mas and lingerie"
"That means you 're a
virgin."
—
"I beg your pardon."
"Everybody who hasn't seen
the show is a virgin," she says.
"I see."
Once inside the theatre things
really get bizarre. I notice a lot
of people carrying bags and
packages. I ask a man in dark
glasses about what's in the
bags.
cards,
toast,
"Rice,
newspaper," he says, "you
know, all the stuff."
I didn't know, but I'm about to
find out
As it turns out the movie
contains the two elements most
American
to
important
teenagers: Rock n' roll and sex.
Not just normal sex, but every
deviant form , imaginable. For
example, the star of the show is
a bisexual transvestite named
Frank N. Furter.
It becomes immediately
apparent that these kids are not
here to SEE the show, so much
as to BE the show. It seems they
all know the dialogue and song
lyrics and have their own
responses to parts of the
dialogue. The aforementioned
props are thrown on verbal and
visual cues from the movie.
During a wedding scene., the
air in the theatre becomes think
with rice, followed by toast and
"Well,Idon't drink or
smoke, so what else Is
there to do on Saturday night?"
cards on other cues.
The high point in audience
participation comes early in the
film, during a song title "The
Time Warp. " Most of the
audience runs to the front of the
theatre to perform a dance that
is best described as a
suggestive bunny-hop.
From what1could gather, the
plot of the film is this: A pair of
newlyweds stumble upon a
castle inhabited by creatures
from the planet Transylvania.
They are sexually corrupted by
the Transylavanian leader, Dr.
Frank N. Furter. However,
when the Transylvanians revolt
against Furter, the newlyweds
are released and the castle
( which is also a spaceship)
returns to Transylvania.
^
After the show I get some
background information from
theatre manager Steve Giradli.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show
was released in 1975. It starred
Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon,
Meat Loaf , and Richard
O'Brien, the show's creator. It
was hardly a box office smash,
but it developed a cult following
in New York; first among gays,
later some college students, and
has since spread throughout the
tri-state area.
"Now the high school kids
have picked it up," Giraldi
says. "This is an average
crowd, abou t 50 kids." Not a bad
average. The show has been
playing at the Somerville
The show has been
playing at the Somerville cinema for two
years.
Cinema for two years.
As I watch the crowd leave, I
notice an older couple walking
out The woman is trying to pull
rice from her hair. When I
comment that they seem
slightly out of place they explain that they're escoring their
16-year-old daughter. "It's the
last time she'll go," the father
sayd. "It's like somebody told
these kids they could swear for
their birthday."
I catch up to one of the Frank
N. Furter imposters. He is
Brian Miller, a senior at
Manville High School. I ask
"How many times have you
seen this show?"
"About seventeen."
"Why do you keep coming
back?"
"Well, I don't drink or smoke,
so what else is there to do on
Saturday night?"
Good question.
numbness in the fingers and
. By S. BAUGHER
It was a cold February day
toes.
during my senior year in high
The side effects > of the
school when I found out that my
treatments to "combat my
father had cancer.
father 's cancer were very
I recall coming home to hear
harsh. His weight dropped from
the sound of my mother's
215_ lbs. to 135 lbs; He lost much
crying. I was sure someone -in
of his hair and skin on the back
our family was hurt or had died.
of his neck due to the.radiation.
It was a feeling that I could just
He still can not walk normally
sense.
due to the numbness caused by
She told me to sit down. I did.
treatments . that ended more
She explained that Dad had
than nine months ago.
Hodgkin's disease, a cancer of
More dramatic than the
the lymph node system. She
physical changes and problems
also, said that he would need to
go through surgery, radiation,
"the trauma of a close
and eventually chemotherapy,
famil y member having
if necessary, to fight the
disease.
cancer is not to be
My father's illness inspired
taken lightly"
me to do some research into
specifically
cancer
and .
he suffered were the mental
Hodgkin's disease. Reading the
struggles my father fought
pamphlets and brochures was
during, his 14-month treatment
not easy. It was hard to realize
period.
. ~ . . . ' . " . '. . .
that what I was reading was .
barely
write all the
I can.
happening in the body of
father and
emotions
my
someone I cared for.
everyone close to him felt
Though there are over 100
during his treatments. He could
types of cancer, they are all
not work and was burdened by
similar in that the cancerous
heavy medical expenses.
nolle grow
orrau at
rate
very fast rate.
cells
at aa vprv
He could riot eat. most of the
and destroy vital organs around
time. When he . would try, it
them.
almost always, came back up.
Hodgin's disease affects the
He was always tired and weak
lumph system. With early
and was frustrated because he
diagnosis and an aggressive
could not move and lift objects
treatment, 90 percent of
that just yesterday seemed very
patients with Hodgkin's disease
light.
can be
cured. Clearly, I
My father's entire life style realized, diagnosis of the
changed within a few weeks.
disease is no longer a death
His only recourse was to show
sentence.
Though the percentage .. of : self;pity and disgust,. I think
complete remissions is high .. .that is.what Hurt me the most I
never had seen that side of my
with Hodgkin's disease, the
father.
trauma of a close family
My mother took a heavy part
member having cancer is not to
of the mental burden. She had to
be taken lightly. The treatments
feed my father and clean up his
and mental strain can cause
messes. She had to cope with
many problems, as I found out.
the thought of his death and
My father's treatment inhaving to run the show. To me it
cluded radiation, surgery (to
seemed she forced the will to
live on my father at times when
"I recall coming home
he had greatself-doubt and was
to hear the sound of
convinced of his own death.
When my mother broke down
my mothers cry ing'
from the strain ( she is only
human), she would throw her
remove the spleen and other
problems on my brother and
vulnerable organs), and finally
me.
She talked about leaving
chemotherapy (this included
Dad. I knew that she never
the injection of two drugs would; she loves him too much.
Mechlorethamine and VinI was lucky. I left for college
cristine).
and heard only parts of what
The Mechlorethamine causes
was happening at home. I don't
nausea, vomiting, and lowered
know if I could have dealt with
blood counts. Vincristine causes
the mental anguish on a daily
hair loss, constipation, and
basis much longer. I was very
[ '"fati^^^^^R
take a closer look at..
WARHURST
APARTMENTS
SUMMER RENTALS $200 A MONTH
Furnished withallutilities paid
784-0816
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relieved to be at school.
However, I felt bad that I
could not do anything for my
father and my family. My
younger brother was at home
and helped out a lot. The stress
on him was great, too. He began
to drink too much and when I
was home for break one time he
even confessed that he thought
about killing himself.
After all these experiences,
there is no doubt in my mind
that cancer is hell. It is hell for
the one who has got it, and it is
hell for those who care for him.
As I end this account of my
personal experience with
cancer, I must say that he is
alive today, and that is all that
really matters.
r
*0 n,
0 e
" W ftft
Ss
"*9
^e.
FRANK1E PACE appeared on Saturday Night Live and conies
to campus at 8:00.
HENRY HOLDEN brings his special brand of humor to the
Union tonight.
8:00 p.m. Tonight
Comics To Perfo rm For Disability-Awareness
By MIKE FORD
What do Henry Holden and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
have in common? According to
Holden, they both married ugly
women. But Franklin Delano
Roosevelt became president.
Henry Holden became funny.
Tonight you have the opportunity to enjoy the
provocative comedy of Holden
in what promises to be the most
hilarious comedy show ever at
BSC.
Tonight at 8 p.m. in the
President's Lounge, Kehr Union
the Association ' of Resident
Sudents (ARS) will present
Holden and three other New
York City comedians. The show
is in conjunction with the
Disability-Awareness Day,
entitled "Attitudes are the Real
Disability."
The master of ceremonies for
the evening is Larry Covington,
a former sportscaster from
Washington, D.C., who has been
working as a stand-up comic in
New York for the past three
years. He has appeared in the
movies "Ragtime" and "Fort
Apache, the Bronx."
Also on the bill is Randy
Credico, who came to New York
just one year ago from Las
Vegas where he played for three
consecutive years, opening for
such stars as Buddy Hackett,
Ann Margaret, Shecky Greene,
and the Pointer Sisters. He is an
talented
imextremely
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Rules of Contest are posted
outside WBSC studio.
WBSC...WHERE GREAT
MUSIC LIVES ON!
pressionist doing over $00
vocies. He holds the dinstinction
of being the "official Ronald
Reagan voice" for Warner
Bros. Pictures. He has been
performing regularly at
Dangerfield's and will be seen
in the new Rodney Dangerfield
film "Easy Money," to be
released in the fall .
Appearing as special guest
wil be Frankie Pace, a comic
who refers to himself as "the
man
with
a
missing
chromosome." Pace made his
comedic acting debut in the
movie, "Porky 's. " He has
appeared on "Saturday Night
Live" and on "Friday 's."
Frankie Pace performs the
most mad-cap type of comedy
act ever to perform on this
campus. He has been performing regularly at "Catch a
at
Star ," and
Rising
' Dangerfield's."
This show is one that should
not be missed by any comedy
fan. For a good time....be in the
President' s Lounge at 8 p.m
tonight.
HoldenLooking
To Change Attitudes
Are these statements about
handicapped people true or
false?
1. Greater precautions should
be taken in programming activities for disabled students
because they are more prone to
accidents.
2. The term "disability "
refers to impairment which can
be seen.
The answer to both of the
above questions is false, and the
man who set out to prove this,
Henry Holden, is the foremost
authority
on
handicap
awareness.
Today, Holden will be coming
to BSC for Handicapped
Awareness Day. He will give a
lecture which emphasizes
"attitudes are the real
disability. " Holden will also
conduct workshops for students
and will participate in a panel
discussion. Tonight Holden will
be one of three performers to
participate in comedy night.
You may be wondering how
Holden came to be involved in
handicapped awareness. The
answer is simple, Holden is
handicapped himself. He
contracted polio at an early age,
but he never left this stand in his
way. He has set many high
goals for himself and continues
to attain what many would
consider unreachable.
Holden has attempted and
achieved some truly amazing
feats. Athletically, disregarding
a minimal amount of muscle
tone in both legs, Holden was
nonetheless able to teach
himself to participate in many
sporting activities such as
swimming, horseback riding,
and bowling. Holden was instrumental in starting the
country's first program for
horseback riding instruction for
the disabled.
HoldgH'ls also an actor. He is
a member of the screen Actors
Guild, Actors Equity, and the
National Academy of the
Motion Picture of Arts and
Sciences. He has appeared in
major motion pictures such as
"Rocky, Part II", and
"Poltergeist." He is currently
making a stand to appear in a
role that does not center on his
disability.
InternationalR elations
Club Hosts Speakers
By TAKASHINAKANISHI
"International Reception ,"
sponsored by the International
Relations Club, was held at 7
p.m., Thursday, March 17, -in
the Multi Purpose Room A,
KUB. Six guest speakers, including one from Sierra Leone,
two from Guyana, one from
Scotland, and also a BSC faculty
member and his wife talked
about
"Internatinal Job
Opportunities" based on their
unique experiences.
The first speaker , Mr.
Fasuluku Amadu Bayoh, civil
engineer at the Susquehanna
Electric Plant in Berwick, stood
before the audience and talked
about his experiences. He came
to the United States in 1971 as a
foreign exchange student from
Sierra Leone, a nation in West
"He came to the U.S.
from Sierra Leone. "
Africa, 12 years ago. 31-year-old
Bayoh graduated from four
colleges and earned two
Master 's degrees in Construction Engineering, Finance,
and Economics. "If I was in my
country, I would not have a
chance to go to college," he
said. Although he experienced a
serious culture shock and
language problems which gave
him much trouble in the new
country, Mr. Bayoh's perseverant efforts brought him
successful results in his
educa tional endeavors. "I think
this country is the best place to
live in the world if people would
learn to understand each
other," he said.
The next speaker, 44-year-old
Robert Rikie, from Scotland,
talked about his experiences in
traveling the world, and also
about his country. He came to
the United States two years ago
because England had been
facing a serious economic
recession that eventually
pushed him out of England. "I
started working as an engineer
in Florida in the beginning, then
a few months later I was taken
on at the Susquehanna Electric
Plant as an engineer," he said.
Through his abundant travel
experiences, he had realized
that people living in different
parts of the world are not different. "Many people in this
country do not travel much, nor
know much abou t foreign
countries," Mr. Rikie said.
Marcel and Michelle, 17-yearold twin sisters from Guyana,
which used to be known as
British Guiana, are studying at
Berwick Area High School.
They talked about the life style-'
in Guyana and its educational
system. "We had never seen a
TV until we came to the United
States, The main entertainment
is motion pictures in theaters
tha t are seen elsewhere. Sports
such as soccer, cricket, and
boxing are very popular among
people," they explained.
According to them, since the
public transportation system is
still insufficient, it is not at all
surprising for school children to
commute five miles to their
school on foot. "Main industry
is mining bauxite for export ,
and agriculture is our major
works," they explained.
Mrs. Sandra Smith, wife of
Dr. Riley Smith , associate
professor of the English
Department, talked about her
experiences with her family in
Europe, where they lived three
years in Germany. She had
been in Greece and Austria
before she married Dr. Smith.
As other people would, she
faced some difficulty that would
happen to any one because of
cultural difference: strange
foods, space between people,
and language problems.
Raising children was another
problem, since sometimes they
brought home different manners picked up in school or
through social contacts with
other children.
Dr. Smith stood after his wife
and talked about his experiences in Europea n institutes and universities where
he taught English as a second
language. He also taught
linguistics to young people who
were studying to be English "Although I did not have reentry shock when I came back
to the United States after living
in Germany for three years, I
have realized that some people
would experience this depending on their situation," he said.
Dr. Smith went to the Soviet
Union in the fall of 1981 through
a project of Fullbright Institute,
and there he taught English at
Politechnic
Institute
in
Leningrad for one semester.
"American people in general
have a negative comment on
Russians, but I found that the
Russian people are very
"Dr. Smith talked of his
experiences in Europe."
freindly to Americans ," he said.
Dr. Walter Brasch, assistant
professor of English, talkedjat
the end of the presentation
about the nature of the U.S.
media, which tends to cover
events close to the American
people rather than to cover
things going on in the Third
World. "When Pabro Picaso
and Pabro Meruda died on April
8, 1973, the U.S. mass media
reserved a large space for the
death of Picaso, but very few
media reported about Meruda,
who had been awarded a Nobel
Prize," Dr. Brasch explained.
He also pointed out that though
it is true that the media does
concentrate on news having
monetary value, it is also the
reality that the U.S. media does
not have access to cover all that
occurs in Third Wo"rld countries.
The Interna tional Relations
Club is planning to have more
presentations this year for
better understanding of different cultures.
PBL Names New VP
By ROBERTFLANAGAN
The new vice-president of Phi
Beta Lambda's Pennsylvania
state chapter is BSC junior,
Keith Boroch. Boroch was
elected at the recent 12th annual
Phi Bella Lambda Leadership
Conference held in Monroeville,
Pennsylvania.
Boroch, who just transferred
from
Williamsport Area
Community
College,
is
majoring in accounting.
As vice-president, Boroch's
main duty will be to assist the
president in all activities. He
¦will act as a go-between for the
state and local chapters ,
making sure the lines of communication are always open.lt
will also be his repsonsiblity to
preside over meetings the
president can't attend.
PBL's state organization
performs many services for its
members. Its two biggest are
the Fall Workshop, held in"
November, and the State
Leadership Conference. It is
responsible for getting information to the local chapters
and keeping in touch with the
national organization.
Boroch feels the state PBL is
a "good organization " and that
good officers were elected. He
is looking forward to attending
the first meeting scheduled for
May 15 in Harrisburg. "Right
now I'm in the process ofbrainstorming, trying to think
of new ideas. I like the
"Boroch will act as a
go-between of state
and local chapters. "
organization, and I'm just going
to try to improve it."
"PBL is for people who want
to get a head start in the world
of business," Boroch says. "Our
goals are basic, to help in
the transition from school to
work and to increase knowledge
in business free-enterprise, and
the handling of money.
Although he doesn't hold a
PBL office here, Boroch was
chapter president at WACC.
Local chapters, such as BSC's
provide community services
and bring speakers to campus
to discuss various areas in
business.
"Vote • for a Change" was
Boroch's campaign slogan. He
explained that he didn't want to
change PBL's goals, but rather,
the ways of attaining those
goals. We need better communication, and we must stay
on top of the changes that take
place in business."
"Even though Boroch's a new
student here, he likes the
business department "It's a
really good department, and
Dean Rarig is very good." He
took general education courses
at WACC ana came to asu ror
what it has to of er the business
student. One change that he
would like to see at BSC is a
five-year program for accounting students. The final
year would be spent preparing
the student to take the CPA test.
Boroch became interested in
business as a freshmen at
Bishop Neumann High School,
Williamsport. "My dad is a
businessman, so I guess that
influenced me a lot. I've always
had a yearning toward it, and I
enjoy it."
R
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ONLY AT BURGER KING, RT. 11, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
*
Top Officials Take Part In Groundbreaking
» -*,v.,- - . ny,-******** .-¦****-.<-*«r*^i:;;:;;,";'.
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(continued from page 1)
breaking ceremonies.
Earlier in the program,
proving to indeed fit the
description of a man of
modesty, McCormick thanked
all those present for their individual efforts in lobbying for
the building. "This was a
cooperative effort with all of
you making the difference for
Bloomsburg State College every
step of the way," he said.
Special guests at the
ceremonies who were each
instrumental in early efforts to
obtain funds for the new
$6,406,000 structure approved as
a part of the state's capital
budget in 1980, took their turns
at the microphone.
Walter Bara n, secretary of
General Services for the
Commonwealth represented
Governor Richard Thornburgh.
He read a greeting prepared by
the Governor. "Today launches
an important effort of the
Bloomsburg State College
community to meet the special
needs of students and citizens.
The building represents a
decade of commitment by the
college," it read.
Baran also read comments
from Robert Wilburn, state
secretary of education, who was
unable to attend the event.
State Treasurer R. Budd
Dwyer
commented
that
groundbreakings for new
buildings are very rare now for
college campuses. "It will
provide more employment and
an influx of money in the area ,"
he said.
Representative Ted Stuban
(109th District) acknowledged
the help of voting districts and
alumni and students for their
hard work in the project. He
also commended the nursing
students for their extra effort.
Other remarks were made by
Robert J. Parrish, vicepresident for administration;
Julius Kroschewsky, BSC
president of APSCUF; and
Government
Community
Association President Paul
Stockier. Introductions were
made _ by John L. Walker,
executive director of institutional advancement.
The ceremonies concluded
with special guests turning
shovels of ground on the site.
Larry Jones, vice-president
for Academic Affairs , said the
new three-story building will
house 30 to 40 percent of the
faculty office s. "Currently,
three and four faculty members
are sharing-offices intended for
one, " he explained. He also
commented that the new
building will alleviate crowded
classrooms.
Patrick J. Murphy
TOP RIGHT: Ted Stuban (member of House of Representatives) addressed the audience. ABOVE LEFT: President emeritus Harvey A. Andruss
participates In the groundbreaking. ABOVE RIGHT: Student leaders, Aaron Porter (student member, board of trustees^ Karen
Chawaga (former CGA
President) , Paul Stockier (current CGA President), and Michele Kessler (CAS Coordinator) also took part in the groundbreaking.
Change In Parking
Now Effective
Changes
in
parking
regulations involving the area
affected by the construction of
the new Human Services Center
on campus are now effective.
The construction area located
between Bakeless Center and
Waller Administration will be
blocked off, reducing available
parking space considerably.
Student commuters are encouraged to use the tri-level
parking garage at the corner of
Penn and Second Streets, as
well as the expanded parking
faculties of the hospital lot
along Lightstreet Road, which
is leased by the college.
The first double row of
parking immediately south of
Waller Administration is being
converted to faculty - staff
parking. Open parking is also
available near the tennis courts.
Additionalparking adjustments
will be made when large
numbers come to campus for
special events held in Haas
Center and the other buildings
in that locale.
S '^^^^'^^^^^^^^^^'
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Third & Iron Sts., Bloomsburg, PA
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PUBLIC INVITED
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Graham Discusses
"Writing For Understanding"
By LYNNE SASSANI
"There is a lack, of understanding of the very simple
fact that people are people"
said novelist Lorenz Graham.
Graham 's presentation ,
"Wri ting for Understanding, " a
program in journalism sponsored by the English department, was held Wednesday,
March 30, in the president's
lounge.
Graham, 81, is the author of
the South Town tetralogy. He
wrote South Town, which won
the Foiled Gold Medal Award
(1958) , and the Child Study
writer. He said Americans
stereotype Africans as being
"savages," noting, "There
were no decent books which
described Africans honestly."
Therefore, he bagan writing
books from his experiences.
Publishers were skeptical
abou t his viewpoints on
Africans, therefore, he had
difficulties getting his books
published. He was told that his
Negro characters were "too
much like other people. "
Graha m said , "If you look
closely you will see that people
are. people."
"Publishers wanted me to
change my books -1 said I would
put more action, violence, make
it shorter or longer, but I would
not change my characters," he
said.
Throughout his presentation,
Graham discussed the principles of slavery. "People had
to defend institutional slavery
in the South," he noted, stating,
"slavery was supposedly God
inspired , Africans weren 't
considered people because they
weren't like us."
"Slaves were terrorized - they
The three rules for
writing are: "Write
what you know, write
something that's important and keep rewriting ."
Association of America Award
(1959) ; North Town ; Whose
Town ?, which won the World
Book Award; and Return to
South Town. Over 600,000 copies
of South Town were sold.
He has had over 15 other
book s published , and has
written plays and articles as
well. He was also honored with
the Association for Study of
Negro Life and History Award
(1959) , the Southern California
Council on Literature Award
(1968) , and will be awarded the
Honorary Doctor of Humane
Letters degree, May 1, by
Virginia Union University.
Graham was not alwavs a
Graham's main purpose for
writing is to get people to understand one another.
His three rules for writing
are: "Write what you know,
write something that' s important, and keep re-writing."
Graham is from California
and before writing he was a
probation officer in Los
Angeles. The Watts ghetto was
part of his assignment.
His concluding remarks were,
"To all of you who plan to be
writers, there are things to be
said, and understandings to be
developed - don't merely write
for money."
LORENZ GRAHAM stated his main thesis, "People are
people."
I
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consult with variou s constituencies in the college concerning the issue. McCormick
noted that the move was not a
"mandate for change," but
rather an opportunity to
examine the current efficiency
of the system.
.I \ h l \
"There were no books
about Africans as people, that's what started
my writing career. "
rMBUMacAs^nrspra^ l
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(Continued from Page 1}
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weren't killed because they
were property, but they were
badly beaten from the time they
were babies,"Graham said. He
added, "There is still a feeling
of inadequacy, inferiority, and
contempt."
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Educational Consortium Set
Speaker
Holocaust Viewed
By
ELIZABETH GROCHOWSKI
The Campus-Wide Committee
on Human Relations is bringing
Ms. Elizabeth Dopozo to
campus April 19. She will speak
on the Holocaust: Life In The
Third Reich, 8 p.m. in the Kehr
Union, President's Lounge. The
program is free and open to the
public.
Elizabeth Dopoz o was a
young child when Hitler became
Chancellor of the Weimer
Republic in 1933. Her earliest
memory is having the Gestapo
come to her home and arrest
her father in 1936. Mr Dopozo
was an active Jehovah's Witness and refused to give up his
religious beliefs. Therefore, he
was kept in prison until 1941
where he died of heart failure at
age 35.
Ms. Dopozo's presentation
will coincide with the fourtieth
anniversary of the Warsaw
Ghetto uprising. On April 19,
1943, General Jurgen Stroop
entered the Warsaw Ghetto to
eliminate the remaining 55,000
to 65,000 inhabitants. By May 8,
the
Jewish
Fighting
Organization was virtually
eliminated.
The Campus-Wide Committee
on Human Relations presents
the Elizabeth Dopozo program
as a memorial to all Holocaust
victims, and as a special tribute
to the courageous people of the
Warsaw Ghetto.
Faculty Member
Publishes Work
In the most recent issue of
American Anthropologist
(March 1983, v. 85:1) , Gary
Feinman, along with Laura
Finsten of McMaster University, Richard Blanton of Purdue
University , and Stephen
Kowalewski of the University of
Georgia , has published an
analytical discussion of some
earlier archaeological work in
the basin of Mexico. "A Com-
ment on Steponaitis Determination
of
Catchment
Productivity " presents a
revised method for examining
the relationship between human
settlements and agricultural
resources in this region where
one of the earliest New .World
civilizations arose.
Feinman is a member of the
Anthropology Department at
BSC.
annual
first
BSC's
educational consortium will be
sponsored by the Career
Development and Placement
Center. The event will be held
on Wednesday, April 20, from
9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in the
Kehr Union Building. The
purpose of the consortium will
be for school districts and intermediate units to share information and to offer opportunities for future employment.
Representatives from approximately twenty schools will
be in attendance and will be
sharing information and interviewing students the entire
day. The event is also being
sponsored
by
Bucknell
University, Susquehanna
Letters
Continued from Page 2
that the doctor worked harder
( though he probably did) but
that he worked smarter. HE
MADE THE RIGHT CHOICES.
Conservatism is based on the
premise of individual responsibility. A man 's life mirrors his
University, Lock Haven State
College and Mansfield State
College, and students from
these institutions will also have
an opportunity to meet and
interview with those present.
Students from Bloomsburg
State College can sign up immediately in the Career
Development Center for these
interviews and can also put
their names on a waiting list.
Any graduating majors in
education are encouraged to
take advantage of this opportunity, and any spots which
are not taken by students from
the
other
participating
universities will be open to BSC
students for interviews.
This consortium will be the
first of its kind held at
decisions. After high school,
both individuals made a choice.
Bloomsburg State, and all
graduating education majors
should plan on attending. An
open registration and information session will also be
held during the day from 3:00 to
5:00 p.m.
Van
(Continued from Page 1)
street in front of the Ben
Franklin building. For this
reason, anyone who may have
observed this van while parked
in front of Ben Franklin, or
being driven away, or noting
any person appearing to be
associated with it, is requested
to contact D. Ruckle, SLE Investigations, 389-4171, as soon
as possible. All information will
be appreciated and will be
treated confidentially."
At your request, I have tried
to adhere strictly to the issues in
question. The rest of your reply
is merely a melodramatic personal attack, which neither
needs, nor deserves, any
rebuttal.
Sign me,
"The Lone Conservative?"
Shane Steck
Bird and Penney finished up
minutes later, both with 6-0, 6-0
victories. Coyne recovered
from a slightly shaky opening to
take his first set 6-1 behind a
very good serve. However, the
second set presented problems
for the number two player.
Coyne had several opportunities
to eliminate his LH opponent
but missed several routine shots
before struggling to a 6-4 second
set win.
Superdock suffered through
the same type of game, blowing
away his foe with a superb
serve in the first set, only to
miss easy volleys in the second.
Still Superdock had more than
enough to take a 6-1, 6-2 win.
Due to the rain, only one
doubles mstch was played, tha t
being Coyne-Superdock at
number one; The Husky duo
racked up a 6-2, 6-2 victory.
The Huskies take on archrival Millersville tommorrow
afternoon at 2:30 at home.
Now they must be content with
those choices..
Husky Tennis
(Continued from page 9)
and Bird,Grebe losing a 7-6, 7-6
nailbiter.
Lock Haven
Coach Burt Reese's
netmen quickly disposed of
Lock Haven 7-0 for their fifth
shutou t of the year in a rain
shortened match.
Grebe racked up the first of
three match shutouts at number three singles in less than 45
minutes by pounding Rob Lentz.
BSC Lacrosse
(Continued from page 11)
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be running as smoothly as it is."
The coaching chores are also
left up to the players. The older,
more experienced players are
the key contributors to this
aspect of the club. "Duran,
and
McMinn ,
Hackett ,
Toussaint are obviously the
leaders on the field and off ,"
commented Michaels.
"Because of not having one
authority figure, these guys all
share leadership and coaching
duties whenever they're called
upon ."
Another vital factor will be
fan support. McMinn said that
the club would like to become
more familiar to students on
campus because, like any sport,
the players need support from
their peers.
"Anyone who has seen us play
before can attest that our
games are always actionpacked and well worth seeing."
McMinn commented. "So, if the
fans show some interes t and
come out to watch us, I'm sure
they won't be dissappointed,
and they'll be helping us ' the
same time by giving us an extra
incentive."
The Huskies will face a
seven-game
competitive
schedule, which includes
Division I powerhouse Penn
State. Four of the games will be
Three
will
at
home.
be played at Old Athletic Park,
7th and Iron Streets, Bloomsburg. The PSU contest will be
at Nelson Fieldhouse.
"We have a real good shot at
beating everyone on our
schedule," McMinn said. "Penn
State will undoubtedly be our
toughest opponent because
they're usually always ranked
among the top twenty teams in
the country."
"The quality of play has
obviously risen here at BSC
since my freshman year," he
added. "I guess it's because
lacrosse is becoming more
popular throughout the country
on the high school level, which
results in more incoming freshmen already having valuable
experience."
For the 1983 Bloomsburg State lacrosse club the
talent is there, and now some
team spirit and inspiration has
been instilled. With this, playercoach McMinn concluded:
"We're looking forward to one
of the best years ever at BSC."
SCHEDULE
Thurs. Aprir?, Ursinus-Away
3:00
Sun. April 10, Penn St. - Away
2:00
Wed. April 13, E. Stroudsburg Home 3:00 - 7th. & Iron
Sat. April 16, Millersville Home 2:00 - 7th & Iron
Sun. April 24, E. Stroudsburg Away 2:00
Fri. April 29, Penn State - Home
4:00 - Nelson
Sat. April 30, Dickinson - Home
2:00 - 7th & Iron
Men's Tennis
BSC Having Up and Down Season
By WADE DOUGLAS
netmen
Husky
The
have suffered from a lack
of consistency thus far this
season, in posting a 5-6 record.
At times they play very well.
Witness their back-to-back-toback shutouts of Lycoming,
Scranton, and UMBC. At other
times they don't look like the
same team, as their losses to
Old Dominion (8-1) and
The Huskies host rival
Millersville in what
promises to be an exciting match at 2:30
tomorrow.
Patrick J. Murphy
TWO-HANDER. Number one player Dave Superdock returns
a two-handed backhand against Lock Haven Wednesday
afternoon. Superdock posted his eighth win of the seasbn
6-1.6-2.
Hampton (7-2) show.
And their inconsistency isn't
just limited from match to
match.
Wenesday 's match
against Lock Haven was a
perfect example. The Huskies
top three players Dave
Superdock, Marty Coyne, and
Rob Lario each suffered
momentary lapses in recording
wins. One game they would pull
off superb shots, making them
look routine, only to follow by
missing overhead smashes and
Husky 9 Uses Long-Ball
To Pull Record To 4-5
After dropping their opening
two games .' during their
southern tour, the BSC baseball
team has posted a 4-3 mark. The
Huskies, under head coach
Steve Bresset, split their three
double-headers against Penn
St., Shippensburg, and King's
and won their lone nine-inning
game over Susquehanna.
Power hitting has been the
key to BSC's success thus far.
Since returning from the south,
the Huskies have clubbed six
homeruns and added numerous
doubles and triples. In going 4-3,
BSC has averaged six runs a
game.
Penn St.
The Nittany Lions provided
the opposition for BSC's home
opener. However, since Litwhiler Field was under water,
the game was played at the
Town Park. In the first game,
PSU turned the tables on the
highly touted Husky offense,
romping 16-0. PSU' s Mike
Bellaman limited the home
team to just three singles.
BSC's offense opened up the
second game, and the pitching
held the Lions in check for a 7-3
victory. Shortstop Kevin
Sobocinsky pounded a secondinning two-run homer with Gary
Beiler aboard to give BSC a 2-0
lead.
Beiler and Dan Forbes added
sacrifice flies in the fourth to
erase a PSU run in the third.
The 4-1 margin was all BSC
hurlers Dean Adams and Craig
Smith needed, as they held the
Lions to single runs in the fifth
and seventh innings.
The next day BSC hit the road
to invade Shippensburg. They
again split the doubleheader.
The Huskies belted four
roundtrippers on the day, including three in their 8-3 victory. Sobocinsky, Scott Conway,
and Todd Remley each
displayed their homerun trots.
Susquehanna
BSC used both power and
finesse to pull out a ninth inning
8-7 win -over the visiting
Crusaders.
Susquehanna jumped out to a
quick 5-0 lead after two innings,
but the Huskies clawed back
with a run in the second and
three more in the fourth. They
finally tied it up with a two-run
sixth, but saw the Crusaders
come back an inning later to
claim a 7-6 lead.
With one out in the ninth, third
basemen Bill Salamy singled to
start the winning rally. Senior
captain Sobocinsky followed
with an RBI .triple, setting up
the finesse part of the victory.
Second string catcher Jim
Crookham laid down a suicide
allowing
squeeze
bunt ,
Sobocinsky to cross the plate
with the winning run.
Remley, the fourth BSC
pitcher, got the win.
King 's
BSC split their third
doubleheader of the young
season by taking the second
game 5-3 over the host King's
College. King's took the opener
in a 13-10 slugfest.
Base on balls to Crookham
and Salamy in the fifth inning
started the Huskies winning
rally. After the walks,
Sobocinsky unloaded a one out
three bagger , scoring both
runners. Sobocinsky 's key hit
broke up a 2-2 tie. The Huskies
added another run when first
baseman Conway grounded out
on a fielder's choice, scoring
Sobocinsky.
In the first game, King's
posted 11 third-inning runs after
the Huskies had scored six
times in the top of the inning.
Four hits, an error, and six
walks told the story as BSC was
unable to close the gap after
leading 8-1.
Catcher Mark Bonshak,
Salamy and Conway each had
multiple hit games with Bonshak and Salamy going 3 for 4
and Conway hitting 2 for 3.
volleys in the next game. With
the PSAC's and several other
important matches fast approaching, including Tuesday's
rival
showdown
against
Millersville, the netters will
hopefully get back on track.
Scranton
The Huskies allowed the
Royals to win only 19 total
games in the singles matches in
racking up their second straight
shutout and third on the year, 90. The win evened BSC's record
at 3-3 on the season.
Number one Superdock had
the most trouble of any
Husky as he was pushed to
take a 6-2, 7-5 victory over
Paul Wysocki. The victory ran
Superdock' s win streak to
five straight. Marty Coyne,
at number two , , recorded
three and four, Rob Lario and
Scott Grebe, racked up indentical 6-0, 6-2 victories, and
Jere Bird and Mike Penney
surrendered only two and three
games in chalking up wins.
the same BSC dominance as the
single, with the Huskies
recording easy victories in
each.
Old Dominion
The netters three match win
streak was ended rather
decisively by a, very good ODU
squad 8-1. The Huskies lone win
in the match came in the
number two doubles where
Bird-Grebe won 6-3, 7-6.
Although none of the singles
went to three sets, each was
close. Superdock's win string
was ended by Gary Cuppernal 64, 6-4, as was Coyne's 7-6, 6-4.
Lario dropped a 7-5, 6-4
decision, "while Grebe lost 7-6, 62. Bird and Penney rounded out
the singles by losing 6-4 7-6 and
6-3, 6-3 resepctively.
The duo of Coyne-Superdock
lost their first match of the year
in a three-setter 7-6, 6-7, 6-2.
Lario-Penney were downed 6-3,
6-4.
Hampton
,
A second straight loss was
handed to the netters by a
BSC started their postponed powerful Hampton Institute
southern tour by whitewashing squad 7-2. The fifth ranked host
UMBC for their third con- soundly whipped the Huskies by
secutive shutout. Bird was the taking five singles and two
lone Husky to be forced to a
doubles matches.
third set, but he managed to pull
Superdock got back on the
out a 4-6, 6-2, 6-1 victory. . . winning trail beating a tough
Superdock posted his sixth
Tadeau Luiz 2-6, 7-5, 6-4., but
straight win 7-6 6-0, while Coyne that would be the lone singles
blanked Rick Bleath 6-0, 6-0. win for the Huskies, as no other
Lario and Grebe dropped only Husky won more than four
one game in securing their
games.
wins. Penney completed the
In the doubles, BSC fared
singles sweep with 6-2, 6-3 -" slightly better with Coynetriumph.
Superdock taking 6-2, 7-6 win
The doubles segment featured
(Continued on page B)
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BSC Cindermen Set
Two School R ecords
By ERNIE LONG
The BSC's men's track team
set school records in two events
last week while competing in
the Towson State invitational
and Colonial Relays.
At Towson, the 2-mile relay
team of freshmen Steve Harris
and John Lewis, and seniors
Bob and John Feeley set a
^
7:49.92 mark
to break the
previous record of 7:55.9 set in
1976. Their score was good for a
4th place and helped the
Huskies to an 11th place finish
among 17 teams.
Other top performances included freshman Wilbur Reid's
strong 7th place finish in the 110
high hurdles and junior John
Homan's 8th place in the 10.000
meters.
In the field events, senior
Mike Gorczynski
placed
3rd in the shot put while
juniors Eric Feerrar and Ed
Lozo finished 5th and 6th
respectively, in he javelin.
At the Colonial Relays, the
team of Harris, Lewis, Feeley
and Feeley set another record,
this time in the 3200 meter
relay. Their 7th place performance of 7:53.0 broke the
1980 record by 4 seconds. The
successful foursome also ran to
a 9th place in the distance
medley while recording a
10:23.0 timing.
The sprint relay team of Keid.
Harris, J. Feeley and Marshal
Evers placed highes t of the day
for Bloomsburg with a 3rd place
in that event.
"These meets against some of
the top Divison I schools and top
track clubs in the country are
good for pulling better times for
us," commented coach Hinkle,
"We're up against a lot of '
quality groups which will
stimulate us for harder work
and hopefully a pay off at the
Penn Relays."
Power Iif ting
Wenner Takes Eighth
By MIKEJUPINA
BSC sophomore,
Rich
Wenner, copped eighth place at
the
Collegiate
National
Powerlifting
Championships
held at Texas A&M University
in College Station, Texas, on
March 25, 26, 27.
Wenner, competing in the 181pound class, opened with a
squat of 570 pounds. He then
attempted 590 pounds but was
!
In the next event, the
benchpress, Rich did
his personal best with
a lift of 370 pounds.
disqualified twice because of
lack of depth.
In the next event, the bench
press, Rich did his personal best
at 181 with a lift of 370 pounds.
He finished off his try at
gaining the national title with a
600-pound deadlift, that made
his final total 1540 pounds.
The competition was tough,
and Rich would have to settle
for no more than eighth of 16.
The top five finishers in the 181pound class were members of
the "elite" class, which is the
highest ranking class in the
sport of powerlifting.
"The competition was good' I
tried my best," said Wenner.
The winner of the 181-pound
class was senior Neil Mairs of
Rochester, New York , who
lifted a total of 1710 pounds.
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GLOVE SAVE. The hockey action was fast and furious last week as the league hit midseason.
Street H ocky Starts With Bang
By ADRIAN MARCEWICZ
BSC's 1983 spring street
hockey league started with a
bang last Monday as last year's
runner-up, Bodaga Lodge, met
the ever-intimidating Muff
Divers in the opening game.
The result was a very
physically played 2-0 victory for
the Lodge, which hopes to get
another shot at the title. The
day's other game saw Norton's
Heroes defeat the Ghetto
Blasters 2-1, with the Blasters
scoring their lone goal with
about 20 seconds left.
On Tuesday, newcomers, the
69ers, were trounced by play-off
hopefuls, the Addams Family,
while in Division II, Taddeos
registered a 3-2 victory over
DOC.
Wednesday's action saw a
pair of close games. In the first
contest, the Wings jumped out
to a quick 2-0 lead before succumbing to the Journeymen 3-2
in overtime. In game two, Zeta
Psi had its hands full before
finally tripping the Alemen 2-L
second loss in as many games.
The other game that day was
also an exciting one, as the
On Thursday, a large crowd
bore the cold and came out to
watch the defending champs,
the Starry Knights, battle the
Muff Divers. The Knights, who
defeated Bodaga Lodge three
games to two in last year's best
of 5 championship series, had
their hands full early, as the
score was knotted 1-1 after
about seven minutes of play.
Sunday, unfortunately,
provided lousy weather conditions. Snowing and raining
simultaneously at some points,
three of the days' four contests
were cancelled. In the game
that was played, Bodaga Lodge
But the Knights defense
tightened, and they tallied the
next three goals for a 4-1 victory, handing the Divers their
Wri g ht St. Captures
Division II Title
Twice in its history the BSC
basketball team advanced to
the national quarterfinals, and
twice they have been defeated
by the eventual national
champion. Wright St (OH) ,
who was ranked fourth before
the tournament, stunned the
number one ranked defenidng
champions from District of
Columbia 92-73 to claim its first
national crown.
The Raiders utilized the same
one-two combination on the
UDC that enabled them to post a
73-53 victory over BSC. On the
offensive end Gary Monroe,
who scored 26 points against the
Huskies, again led the attack.
The 6' 7" Montoe poured in 23
points and pulled down eight
rebounds to top the Raiders.
While Monroe took care of the
offensive game, the Raiders'
suffocating defense held UDC's
All-American forward
MichaelBritt to only six secondhalf points and 17 overall.
Wright St took davantage of
an injury to UDC's three-time
All-American. center Earl
Jones midway in the first half to
turn a three point deficit into a
five point halftime lead. With
less than 12 minutes remaining
in the first half , the seven-foot
Jones went up for a two-handed
dunk, only to hit his face on the
rim. With Jones out, Wright
went on a 8-2 run to grab a lead
they would never lose. Even
when Jones returned with nine
minutes left in the half , the
Firebirds were unable to
recapture the lead.
UDC came out shakily in the
second stanza , committing
numerous turnovers that
allowed the Raiders to extend
their advantage to 59-42. With a
large cushion and the clock on
their side, Wright went into its
highly effective delay game.
And as they demonstrated in the
quarterfinals, the Raiders were
deadly from the line, hitting 29
of 32 in the second half.
Jones led all scorers with 26
points and 11 rebounds.
Ghetto Blasters squeezed by the
Gooneybirds 3-2 in overtime.
uppea their record to 2-0 with a
9-1 drubbing of the 69ers., who
fell to 0-2. The games that will
be made up later in the year
include the Wings vs the
Addams Family, Nortons'
Heroes vs Doc, and Taddeos vs
Zeta Psi.
Husky
Golf
After last week's matches,
coach Bill Sproule's golf team is
off to one of its best starts ever
at 3-1.
The veteran squad teed off its
season with a disappointing 417399 loss to King's College in bad
weather at home. Senior Rob
EmerT . came in with low
score of 78 — for the
Huskies, just one short of
medalist paul Waznik, Kings.
Other scorers for BSC were
Steve Schultz 83, Bill McGinnis,
83, Pete Sobrinsky, 86, and
Larry Ebeling, 87.
The Huskies fared better in
perfect weather at Shippensburg by sweeping the
quad against Kutztown, Shippensburg, and Lock Haven. BSC
shot 415 compared to the Golden
Bears, 418, Red Raiders 422,
and Bald Eagles, 436.
Greg Klose, Lock Haven, and
Scott Stanely, Kutztown, took
medalist honors with 79s while
Bill McGinnis finished top for
Bloomsburg with an 80.
Rounding out the team Were
Schultz, 81, Emert, 84, Steve
Reich, 84, and Mike Keech, 86.
BSC Lacrosse Club
Looks For Improvement
By DAN LOUGHLIN
SPORTS EDITOR
Returning three of its top five
scorers, the Bloomsburg State
men's lacrosse club is very
optimistic and is looking forward to a successful 1983
season.
After posting a rather
frustrating 3-5 record last year
in which three games were lost
by a goal in the last minute and
one game lost in overtime,
player-coach Craig McMinn
feels the team has something
this year that it lacked in
previous years-team spirit.
"One thing we have lacked in
the past years is team spirit and
inspiration, which I think could
have been one of the reasons for
our one-goal losses," McMinn
said. "We just didn 't have that
'killer instinct' to get those
clutch goals when we needed
them. This year's feeling is
totally different. Everyone
realizes that we need to
One top newcomer who has
shown promise during spring
practice is Craig Irvine. Irvine
will probably start with the top
attack line and will be looked on
to help fill the scoring void. He
should provide the Huskies with
speed and aggressive play.
BSC's defense will also play
akey role in the outcome of this
year 's squad. It will be headed
by the strong, steady play of
Bob Kramer, John Murphy, and
John Toussaint. Stan Line will
be the goalie.
"Our top three defendersKramer ,
Murphy, - ,
and
Toussaint proved they are
capable of playing on the
college-level," McMinn said.
"We expect the same strong,
consistent play from the trio
again this year. Stan (Line)
should anchor the defense with
steady play in goal."
One point that may be important to the success of this
year's leadership aptitude is the
recent changing of advisors.
Professor William Acierno has
assumed these duties this year.
And McMinn feels that
Acierno's optimistic attitude
will rub off on the team,
resulting in a more positive
effect.
Also, because of the advising
change, much of the adminstrative work was left up to
the club officers during the
transition. "Tony Duran and
Phil Michaels were invaluable
in getting all of the pre-season
chores taken care of," McMinn
said. "From ordering uniforms
and equipment
to the
scheduling of games, without
these guys the season wouldn't
(Continued on page •)
"Hopefull y, this year 's
scoring will be more
balanced."
scorers in Sharp and Wolford,
so we'll be looking for help from
some of our newer players."
"Hackett, Schneider, (Tony )
Duran and McMinn should
provide much of our scoring
punch," added , midfielder Phil
Michaels. "These guys showed
what they could do last year and
have 'looked _ pretty sharp
throughout ' most pf our spring
practice this year.
Announcements
"THE SCHOOL OF EXTENDED PROGRAMS it looking for several part-time
employees to serve as desk receptionists , van drivers, offico aids, and
official hosts for summer conferencegroups visiting BSC this summer. K
you plan to attend summer school or livo within commuting distance of
campus and are Interested in such employment , please call extension 4420
for an application form. Applicants must be approved for summer employment by the college Financial Aid Office."
FOR SALE: Wanted: Responsible party to take over low monthly payments
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ANYONE INTERESTED IN RUNNING FOR A.R.S., C.A.S. or class office for
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FOR SALE: KILTS, FOR HPE MAJORS. Like New I Size 10. $13 each. Call
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INTERNSHIP OrTORTUNITY - ACA (a group benefit plan administrator)
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10 weekspreparing financial and statistical reports and doing programming. A backround in Accounting and/or computer Science is required. For more information and application forms contact Dr. Ellen
Barker, Psychology Dept., 21 OSH, Ext. 4479. Application deadline Is April
"We have the talent,
but we fust need the
Inspirational factor to
pull us through this
season."
cooperate with each other." ¦
"We have the talent, but we
just need the inspirational
factor to pull us through this
season," he said. "Hopefully, if
we get more fan support this
year, it will provide some of this
inspiration and help pull us
together as a team."
Midfielder Joe Hackett, who
led the Huskies in both goals
and assists last season, will be
counted on to do much of the
same this year. The junior
scored 13 goals and assisted on
seven others for a total of 20
points in last year's eight-game
schedule.
Junior Lee Schneider, also a
midfielder , was second in
scoring last year with 10 goals
and five assists for 15 total
points. McMinn is also expected
to lead the offense as the senior
attackman registered 11 total
points last season.
A small void which must be
filled on offense is the result of
the graduation losses of Tom
Sharp and Jeff Wolford. The duo
combined to score 25 total
points last year.
"Hopefully, this year 's
scoring will be more balanced ,"
McMinn said. "We lost two key
CV Classifieds
1983-S4 STATEGRANT«.PEUAPPLICATIONDEALINE: Filing deadline for the
Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) grant Is May 1,
1983. For Pell grant consideration , PHEAA must receive your form before
March 15, 1913; BUT THE SOONER YOU SEND (T IN, THE BETTER.
Failure to comply with these deadlines could result In a delay of your PELL
grant and State awards, or even 'exclusion from Hie'ellglbte' cippllcant
pool for the 1983-84 award year:; "'
INTERESTED IN BECOMING AN OWL (Orientation Workshop Leader) this
summer? Applications are now available in the Councellng Center, Room
17, Ben Franklin. For more Information , call 4255 or stop In Room 17. Be
sure to complete your application NOW as the first training session
was held on Thursday, 4/7/83. Our next training session will be
Tuesday, 4/12/83. If you are Interested In being an. OWL, make
every effort to attend this training session.
APPLICATIONS are now being taken for the Campus Judicial Board for the
academic year 1983-84. -Interested students , should; contact Cathe
Kemmarer , ext. 2845 or Mr. Richard Haupt , ext. 4091 for Information. Application deadline will be April 16, 1983.
to THE OWNER of the car that was hit on 3rd St. Leave you name and number in Box 3196 KUB so I can contact you.
Kent Hagedorn
PLAYER-COACH Craig McMinn demonstrates a behind-theback pass during spring practice. The senior attackman Is
expected to be one of the club's leading scorers.
LOST: Very Important keys on a miniature trolley car key chain with
"BOB" on it. REWARD. Call Wendy at 784-3085.
LAST DAY to register to vote for the May primaries is April 18. Registration
forms can be picked up at the CAS office (3rd floor-KUB) or downtown at the courthouse.
TO: INSTRUCTORS, ADVISORS, AND EDITORS: Thirty-nine students have
prereglstered for 20.205, Feature Writing/for FALL SEMESTER, 1983, though
we have four sections with a total seating capacity of sixty. Therefore,
cancelled was 20.205-02 of Feature Writing and substituted was 20.305
JOURNALISM SEMINAR MWF -12 — BCH 105 — Mr. Savage.
Personals
TO: BRIAN O'DONNELL, ELLEN HARABIN, SUE GOTTSHALL, LISA SAMARA,
KEVIN CHERN AND MARK DAVIS...Welcomo to Montour Hall 11 Looking
Very Much Forward To Working With You. — John, Doug, Chris and
Donald.
KINKO: YOU ARE a great big brbTKarl Love ya , WEEPER P.S. Tell Superman that I think he's pretty OK, tool
CONGRATULATIONS
new sisters of PHI IOTA CHI SEVENTEENTH...We love
tUTPrta ffi^Aj !^^^^aCTS^T^!£^B^^^M^^^^a!«fc&E»^«^^iw^!»
j^a
you! I
CONGRATULATIONS! To the 10th Pledge class of AST. You great Tau
Women. TF and all that TauTau. .
. '." ' .
SANDY, SUE, LISA & BETH: You guys .are the bost l
PAIGE GREEB'T - Got psyched for a "wild & Crazy" Ohio weekend.
love yall!
CHI SIG PUKEr...thanks far ajqcketful. 'y, • L '
'
CATHY...Vanllla Isn't all that boring^ Z- i '.. ".- -. .- ""
^
PTWF"**""""*"5
¦ H i;
•¦ ".
•A '
¦
¦
¦
¦
!
¦
"
.
ii
-•—
¦
'
Mover Throws No-Hitter
Huskies Blank Mansfield , Susquehanna
By MARY HASSENPLUG
The Bloomsburg women 's
softball team " continued its
quest for a second National
championship crown
by
sweeping two doubleheaders to
raise its record to 10-1.
The Huskies took two from
Mansfield State College behind
outstanding pitching in both
games. Veteran All-American
Tina Souders hurled a one-hitter
in the opener on the way to a 9-0
victory. Mansfield's lone hit
came in the fifth inning, when
second baseman Sue Patrick
poked a change-up up the
middle, to ruin Souder's shot at
a no-hitter. Souders struck out
seven and walked one to earn
her fifth shutout.
Patrick J. Murphy
SOUOERS releases a strike on her way to an 11
strike-out , one hit victory over Susquehanna.
I
I
I
The Husky offense came
through with 11hits, sparked by
catcher Denise Henderson's 33 performance. Shortstop Anne
Schmidt drove in two runs while
going 1-3. A four run third
inning highlighted the scoring,
paced by singles off the bats of
Henderson, Deb Long, and Jean
Millen.
The second game of the
doubleheader gave freshman
pitcher Ch ris Moyer a chance
to prove that the Huskies do
have depth in their pitching
DON'T
LEAVEYOURCAREER
TOCHANCE.
staff. Moyer fired a no-hitter to
earn her second victory . The
offense backed her up with nine
hits in the 5-0 win.
Ka thy Berry hit a perfect 3-3
for the day while Moyer aided
her own cause by going 2-3 with
one RBI. The scoring started
early as the Huskies knocked in
two runs in the first. With Mary
Hassenplug and Schmidt on
base, Henderson laid down a
sacrifice bunt, and the two
runners scored when the throw
frdm first was wild, trying to
get Hassenplug as she rounded
third. The Huskies added two
more runs in the third when
Carolyn Harley drove in Sue
Hicks with a sacrifice fly .to left ,
and Chris Moyer singled hi
Laurie Snyder.
Bloomsburg's tight defense
did not commit an error in the
two games and was aided by
the fine play of third baseman
Kathy Berry and shortstop
Anne Schmidt. Snyder used her
stretch and sure glove to
complete a Husky double play.
Bloomsburg followed the
Mansfiled sweep with a second
over Susquehanna university.
Souders fired a one-hitter in the
opening game, followed by
Moyer's two-hitter.
Souders came on strong in the
late innings to finish with 11
strikeouts while walking three
on the way to a 2-0 shutout. With
the victory, Souders increased
her record to 7-0 while giving up
only 11 hits in 48 innings. She
has struck out 62, while issuing
three bases on balls. The
shutout dropped her ERA to
0.15.
BSC had five hits with Deb
Schneiderhan claiming two
singles, and Schmidt, Berry,
and Kathy Baha n each reaching
on-base hits.
The Huskies scored right
away as Loang walked, Kris
Zimmerman sacrificed her
to second, Schmidt singled,
Henderson was hit by a pitch,
and Millen walked to force in
the run.
The final marker came in the
fourth after Behan singled,
Schneiderhan dropped a bunt
single, and Berry knocked a
base nit behind the shortstop to
score Behan.
In the second game, the
Huskies
overpowered
Susquehanna in a 12-0 route.
Moyer game up only two hits
while striking out three and
walking four to win her third
game.
The bats were loaded as they
pounded out 11 hits while
scoring in every inning. Henderson once again held the hot
bat as she hit 3-5 and drove in
two runs. Moyer helped herself
with an impressive day at the
plate. She went 2-4 with a double
and a home run to knock in
three runs. Freshman second
baseman Karen Hertzler
contributed two hits and an RBI
while using her extensive reach
to make two outstanding
defensive plays.
The 10-1 Huskies will look to
extend their five-game winning
streak when they host
Miseracordia on Tuesday, April
12 at 2:00.
¦
The Navy's Delayed Entry Program can guarantee
¦
you the kind of sophisticated technical training
B
you want and need in today's world. It also lets
H
you wait up to one full year before reporting for duty.
H
Take your time to graduate, travel, or even
H
just relax. Then, if you qualify, begin your Navy
I
adventure with training in exciting fields like
I
computers, electronics, or communications. You'll
H
learn skills that will pay off for the rest of your
¦
life. And in the Navy, you can sharpen your skills
I
while traveling to exotic places like Athens,
I
Barcelona, Hawaii, or Hong Kong. Find out more
I
about the Navy's Delayed Entry Program. Talk
I
to your local Navy Representative.
I
I
I
NAVY.irS NOTJUSTA JOB,
IT'SAN ADVENTURE.
800-692-7878
Patrick J. Murphy
SUPER STRETCH: First baseman Jean Millen shows her
form as she stretches for the put out.
I
HumanServices Center
McCormick Inscribed
In BSC History
VICE PRESIDENT for academic affairs Larry Jones congratulates BSC President James
McCormick on his name being announced for the title for the new Human Services Center.
Teacher of the Deaf
Presents Lecture
By THERESA LOZETSKI
The Department of Communications Disorders was
honored with a distinguished
guest speaker, Zhu-li Wang, a
teacher at the Tianjin School
for the Deaf in China. Zhu-li
Wang spoke to some 30 students
of Introduction to Manual
Communications in Navy Hall
in
night,
Wednesday
cooperation with Assistant
Professor Sam Slike.
Wang, the first participant
from China welcomed by the
Philadelphia International
Program (PIP), compared
Chinese deaf education to the
United States' system. She cited
one major difference in the
teaching techniques of the two
countries. "We are concerned
(in China) not to use sign
language a lot so students can
learn to produce sounds and
learn to speak," she said. In the
United States, deaf students
learn to sign at age two.
A typical day at the Tianjin
School for the deaf , the largest
of 300 schools in China, begins
at 8:15 with morning exercise.
"We even exercise our eyes. If a
deaf student loses his sight, he
would have a very hard life,"
she said.
A class in China has about
twice as many students as
American classes have. "We
need to conduct a formal class
because of the size," she continued. "The informal class is
good because students are
allowed to ask questions freely,
but students should also respect
their teacher."
Wang said a positive attitude
is stressed in China. ' We do not
often point out to the students
what is bad. We think the way is
for the teachers to point to what
is good instead." This encourages students to learn more
efficiently.
Mainstreaming programs do
not exist in China. Deaf students
are not integrated into hearing
schools, and are placed in
government-assigned f actory
jobs after 10 years of education.
"After graduation, all students
are assigned to jobs according
to their own interests and the
needs of the country," said
Wang.
From the 300 Chinese schools
for the deaf, Wang was the only
one selected to study in the
United States on a 13-month
program. She is looking forward to the opportunity to
student teach at the Pennsylvania School for the Deaf in
September.
"I
always
remember that I am the first
participant from China. I want
to learn everything possible so
that I can share this when I
return home."
Van stolen
"Sometime between 11:00
a.m. and 11:25 a.m., Thursday,
March 31st, a Weller's Vending
Service truck, a 1976 Tan Chevy
Van, was stolen while parked in
front of the Ben Franklin
building. Although recovered
within an hour 2 blocks on
campus, considerable damage
there to and losses from within
it were experienced. This act
was accomplished during the
Ground Breaking Ceremonies
being conducted on campus at
that time, with a lot of vehicular
and pedestrian traffic on the
(Continued on Pag* 8) -
By DEB BERKLEY
Groundbreaking ceremonies
for the new Human Services
Center here on campus, held
Thursday, March 31, were
highlighted by the official
naming of the building for BSC
President James H. McCormick.
In a surprise presentation,
Board of Trustees President
Robert W. Buehner Jr.
described to the audience the
individual for whom a special
committee of faculty, alumni
and students had approved
naming the building for : a man
of the highest integrity and uncommon decency ; a man with
deep respect and concern for\
the educational processes; a
man with deep affection and
love for the tens of thousands of
students whose lives he has
Representative Assembly
touched; and a man of personal
modesty and quiet wisdom who
has always been committed to,
served, and championed the
cause of public higher
education.
"It is well known among his
staff that President McCormick
Undislikes
surprises.
fortunately, this is one surprise
that will have to be tolerated,"
Buehner said. McCormick and
others did not expect the
building to be named until
completion of the project in
1984.
President McCormick, who
had made legislators in
Harrisburg aware of the need
for the new building, received a
standing ovation from some 100
people present at the ground(Continu*d on pag* 6)
NewCurriculumPassed
By SHARON DEEGAN
A new curriculum in tne
School of Professional Studies,
¦which will train interpreters for
the deaf , was passed at the
April
6
Wednesday,
Representative Assembly
meeting. The program will offer
the option for a Bachelor of Arts
(BA) , Associate of Applied
Science (AAS) , or a Certificate
of Completion. Also, a policy
was passed to designate honor
graduates with the Latin titles
"Suma Cum Laude" (with
highest honors) , "Magna Cum
Laude" (with high honors), and
"Cum Laude" (with honors).
The "Interpreter Training
Program" will make Bloomsburg the fourth school in the
country to offer a B.A. in this
course of study and the third in
the state for the AAS (the other
programs in the state are at
two-year colleges).
"Teachers of the deaf are not
well-versed at being interpreters," said Samuel Slike,
Assistant Professor of Communication Disorders and
creator of the BSC program.
"We're dealing with a language
— you need to be very good at
it," he said. The curriculum will
also train oral interpreters for
the deaf who read lips, but don't
know sign language.
The program, targeted to
begin next fall, proposes an
additional nine or ten courses.
There are also plans to hire two
new professors, one next fall,
and the other by the fall of '85. A
projected 30 students, full and
part-time, will be eligible fort
The Solomon Amendment has
been effectively overturned
according to information gained
from the April 7, issue of The
Philadelphia Inquirer.
According to the Inquirer ,
several students , with the aid of
The American Civic Liberties
Union, contested the provisions
of the amendment in court.
On March 9,. a Minneapolis
U.S. district j udge 's ruling
prohibited the government from
enforcing the amendment. The
judge based his ruling on his
belief that the amendment was
unconstitutional.
According to the Inquirer,
officials of the U.S. Department
of Education were not
demanding colleges to request
information from students
regarding their adherence to
draft registration.
The Solomon Amendment to
the Select Service Act was
signed into law by President
Reagan last September.
Copies of the Minnesota
decision have been sent to Pa.
college Presidents by Parry
Steinhardt, executive director
of the Philadelphia branch of
the ACIU, reports the Inquirer.
John Morris, financial
director for Temple University,
was quoted by the Inquirer
stating that his office was not .
requiring aid applicants to
answer any questions on their
aid forms regarding draft
registration.
Solomon Amendment
EffectivelyOverturned
he program.
BSC
has
Currently ,
notetakers, counselors, and
non-certified interpreters for
the hearing-impaired on
campus. Slike sees his interpreter training as eventually
"providing experience for
students in the program, as well
as a service for hearingimpaired students."
Also, following discussion and
compromise, new quality point
( OPA) designations and Latin
titles will honor graduates who
have excelled academically .
Cum
Laude"
"Summa
graduates will need a 3.95 to 4.00
QPA, "Magna Cum Laude,"
3.75 to 3.94_ QPA, and "Cum
Laude", 3.50 to 3.74 QPA.
Athletic Conflict
In other matters, there was a
long and somewhat heated
discussion concerning
a
proposal for a Campus-wide
Committee
on Athletics
(CWCA). Opponents of the
committee argue there is a
conflict of charge between the
CWCA proposal and the existing
Ethletics Advisory Group (a
sub-committee under the
College Committee on Student
Life) . For now, the proposal
(which has been an issue since
September) will return to the
Executive Board for further
review.
Finally, President McCormick
and
APSCUF
President
Julius
R.
Kroschewsky informed the
assembly that a study group
will be forming a charge for a
proposed faculty committee to
review faculty role in governance. The eight-member
elected body will be obligated to
(Continueden Pag*7)
Pledging
rationale
Dear Editor :
We disagree with several
points mentioned in the recent
article about pledging. For
instance, how can the author
suggest that Greeks are
"buying their friends?" True,
some people pledge to gain
friendships, but others pledge
because they see unity and love,
not only for the members of the
organization, but for what the
organization stands for itself.
With this in mind, pledging is a
matter of personal taste.
However, the argument about
not having enough study hours
is invalid. The issue is not
whether there is ample time for
studying, but how the pledge
budgets his or her time. Pledges
are given three hours each night
during the week for studying.
Now how many people can
honestly say they study for
three hours a night? It is the
pledge's discretion whether or
not he or she chooses to take
advantage of this time:
The reason sororities and
fraternities ask pledges to carry
paddles, pillows, and manuals
is because they are representing a particular Greek
organization. Carrying these
items is like wearing a sorority
or fraternity jacket or sweatshirt. Greeks ask pledges to
carry these items' because it-is
the start of instilling a feeling of
pride in an individual fraternity
or soroity. Greeks wear their
letters with pride, so they ask
pledges to carry their letters
with pride.
In regard to interrogations,
their sole purpose is not to
embarrass
or
belittle
Letters to the Editor
the
pledge.
They
are necessary in order to
teach pledges about the sorority
a teacher didn't care whether a
student got good grades, he
wouldn't test you. Likewise, if a
fraternity or sorority didn't
care about the principles of
their
organization ,
they
wouldn't try to establish the
values and concepts their
organization was founded upon.
Therefore, we feel it is an
unfair assessment for someone
who is not a part of the Greek
system to pass judgment about
certain activities Greeks ask
pledges to do. Everything has a
purpose, although people who
aren't involved in the Greek
system may misinterpret it. GO
GREEK!
Seven Proud XEP
Sisters
Two's too few
Dear Editor:
We, the students of BSC, have
a complaint. Maybe it seems
like we are asking a lot, but I
personally think that two
typewriters for hundreds of
students are not quite enough.
Call me selfish if you like, but I
feel we need more than two
typewriters.
It is not only that there are
only two typewriters , but
usually one of them is out of
order. So a nice line forms
behind the one typewriter ,
-making the-typist at the time
very uncomfortable and
making the other students,
impatient "
The annoying thing is that we
all know about all those
typewriters sitting in Sutliff , but
we are not allowed to use them.
Unless, of course, you have a
pass, and to get a pass you have
to be a business student.
The students of this school
paid for those typewriters, so
we should be allowed to use
them. I am not asking you to
disrupt typing classes for my
sake, just set aside time for
students—any students — to be
able to use those typewriters,
with or without pass.
Ann Saloum
Parkina
squeeze
Dear Editor :
What is all this "BULL"
about reserving the parking
places for faculty and staff , and
the students — paying students
— having to do their best to find
a parking place in an already
over-crowded hospital parking
lot or elsewhere?
I'm afraid that this school has
its priorities backwards. Since
when is faculty royalty? Since
when is staff royalty? This is a
democracy, or at least I thought
it was. We have no royalty!
I don't expect all the parking
space to be reserved for the
students either. In actuality, the
only spaces that should understandably be reserved are
the spaces for the handicapped.
It would be better for all
concerned if the faculty and
students had to share whatever
spaces are left after the handicapped spaces have been
designated. If faculty is caught
parking in any handicapped
parking spaces, they should get
whatever penalty is normally
assigned.
Whoever thought up the
brilliant idea of giving the
Bakeless and Waller parking
spaces over to the faculty is
qualified to park in handicapped spaces too, because
tha t person is truly mentally
handicapped.
It would serve the faculty
right if commuter students
staged sit-ins , wrote their
congressman and the governor,
or did something drastic such as
a protest, until the proper adjustments have been made. No
violence , please. That only
causes problems.
Remember that the school
and faculty are working for us.
Security is also wroking for the
students. Campus police should
not be used to enforce a
bourgeois caste system.
Don't let this place drown us.
in red tape again. Do
something. Flood the administration with letters. Flood
the governor with letters, if
need be. There will be no
royalty on this campus.
Rob Sweeney
Rick Zakin
Charles Warner
Draft debate
Dear Editor:
A response to Ernie and
Harry's rebuttal of the "Draft
Debate" that appeared in the
Monday, March 28 issue of the
Campus Voice...
Dear Ernie and Harry:
I must confess, I was impressed with your reply to my
outlandish attack on the liberal
values you hold so dear to your
heart. The opening three
paragraphs were great! They
say, "IMITATION is the
HIGHEST form of FLATTERY!" Yes, I'm flattered.
I must admit, I'm also confused about the issues at hand.
How can you separate the issue
of draft ' registration from the
issue of draft resistance? The
two
are
interwined!
Registration resistance IS the
issue! The government is using
the financial aid departments of
all colleges to police resistors.
The ONLY people affected by
this
law
are
DRAFT
RESISTORS !
(And
the
financial aid departments.)
Those registered have nothing
to worry about. I see the
Solomon Amendment as a way
to enforce the law at a minimal
cost to the taxpayers. The cost
of initiating a special draft
registration enforcement
agency would be astronomical.
What better way to ensure
maximum compliance with the
law without spending millions of
tax dollars.
This brings up the fact that
draft registration IS a LAW. If it
is a law, those who don't pay
attention to it should be
penalized for disobeying it.
Justice for all. Is it your impression that college students
should be considered ABOVE
the law? If so, why?
Interesting that you should
drag social security, welfare,
and unemployment benefits into
this discussion. No, I doubt the
government will ever require
registration for these benefits.
The government realizes that
the majority of recipients of
those programs are well beyond
the age limits specified for draft
registration.
I question your premise that
people need financial aid, and a
chance for a college education
to enlighten themselves to the
facts of the American work
ethic. How do you explain to
people receiving "free"
education, that they're not
getting anything free? I may
have missed something there please explain.
This brings me to the issue of
"laziness." You call it lazy, I
call it lacking initiative. It's one
and the same,. Our society is
structured in a way that encourages achievers and competition. This fact means
doctors get paid more than
janitors. Why? Because we
recognize that doctors invest
more time and money in their
education and otherwise above
and beyond the level of the
average American. I won't say
(Continued on page 8)
From the Archives
College PR...way back when
By R.W.FROMM
As the numbers of college-age men and women
decline in this country, colleges and universities
have begun to take steps to attract a sufficient
number of students to maintain courses and
programs, and in some cases, just to keep the
doors open. Alas, in the past several years, some
colleges, largely small private ones have failed
and gone out of business.
This concern to attract students, though
perhaps more urgent today, is not a new
phenomenon. When it was still Bloomsburg State
Normal School, our institution advertised its
advantages in 1893. Surrounded by ads for
carpets, fountain pens, "gents" clothes, jewelry,
boots and shoes, hardward, groceries , lumber ,
notions, fancy goods, and laces, the following
"points worth thinking about when choosing a
school" were presented in a June publication of
that year:
1. Our school is larger than ever before - this
means that the public appreciates the good and
faithful work done here.
2. -Our Corps of Instruction is stronger than,
ever before. We keep only live teachers. Really
Jive teachers are scarce and high-rpiced.
. -3. .We. give special attention to music and art.
students - students in these departments are on
the increase. More will come when they find out
what we can give them...
4. Our graduates are being called for faster
than we can supply them - there can be only one
secret behind that fact. We do professional work
that counts. We'd like to show how we do it, but
we can't on paper. Come and see.
5. Our location is unsurpassed - everybody
who has been on "Normal Hill" and looked down
on the beautiful town of Bloomsburg, and out
over the Susquehanna valley, to the winding
river at the base of the mountains, exclaims
"unsurpassed! "
6. Good air, pure water, beautiful scenery,
comfortable rooms - a passenger elevator , good
board , wholesome discipline, and earnest, hardworking, well-behaved students. We have them
all. What more could be desired?
7. Our prospects are brighter than ever before
- we are becoming more widely known, and this
brings us increased and better patronage.
Thirty-three different counties are represented
now in our roll of students, and six different
states also contribute to the list.
Our next term will open Sept. 4th! 1893. Many
are already engaging rooms. Let us hear from
vou....
Cancer: A Personal Experience j
The Toqns a pop vocal group will perform at 9 p.m. April 13.
The Show Goes On
By CHRISTOPHER CARY
"So let the party and the
sound rock on. We're gonna
shake until the life has gone.
Rose-tint my world, keep me
safe from my trouble and pain."
Dr. Frank N. Furter, The
Rocker Horror Picture Show.
The scene could be likened to
Halloween in Greenwich
Village. Forty-five tennagers in
costumes ranging from maids'
uniforms to pajamas and
lingerie ( worn by males as far
as I could tell) , wait to see a
movie.
The movie is The Rocky
Horror Picture Show. I've never
seen it, but I've heard about it. I
want to know why these people
are out in the rain, at midnight,
in drag.
'"Why are you. dressed like
that?", I ask a girl in a maid's
apron.
"I'm Magenta", she says.
"Let's see, that's M-a-g..."
"No, no, Magenta is my
character. My name's Laurie,"
I find out from Laurie that
everyone in costume is portraying a character from the
film. "You've never seen the
show before?" she asks.
"No, I haven't," I reply.
"45 teenagers In cosfumes rang ing from
maids' uniforms to paja mas and lingerie"
"That means you 're a
virgin."
—
"I beg your pardon."
"Everybody who hasn't seen
the show is a virgin," she says.
"I see."
Once inside the theatre things
really get bizarre. I notice a lot
of people carrying bags and
packages. I ask a man in dark
glasses about what's in the
bags.
cards,
toast,
"Rice,
newspaper," he says, "you
know, all the stuff."
I didn't know, but I'm about to
find out
As it turns out the movie
contains the two elements most
American
to
important
teenagers: Rock n' roll and sex.
Not just normal sex, but every
deviant form , imaginable. For
example, the star of the show is
a bisexual transvestite named
Frank N. Furter.
It becomes immediately
apparent that these kids are not
here to SEE the show, so much
as to BE the show. It seems they
all know the dialogue and song
lyrics and have their own
responses to parts of the
dialogue. The aforementioned
props are thrown on verbal and
visual cues from the movie.
During a wedding scene., the
air in the theatre becomes think
with rice, followed by toast and
"Well,Idon't drink or
smoke, so what else Is
there to do on Saturday night?"
cards on other cues.
The high point in audience
participation comes early in the
film, during a song title "The
Time Warp. " Most of the
audience runs to the front of the
theatre to perform a dance that
is best described as a
suggestive bunny-hop.
From what1could gather, the
plot of the film is this: A pair of
newlyweds stumble upon a
castle inhabited by creatures
from the planet Transylvania.
They are sexually corrupted by
the Transylavanian leader, Dr.
Frank N. Furter. However,
when the Transylvanians revolt
against Furter, the newlyweds
are released and the castle
( which is also a spaceship)
returns to Transylvania.
^
After the show I get some
background information from
theatre manager Steve Giradli.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show
was released in 1975. It starred
Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon,
Meat Loaf , and Richard
O'Brien, the show's creator. It
was hardly a box office smash,
but it developed a cult following
in New York; first among gays,
later some college students, and
has since spread throughout the
tri-state area.
"Now the high school kids
have picked it up," Giraldi
says. "This is an average
crowd, abou t 50 kids." Not a bad
average. The show has been
playing at the Somerville
The show has been
playing at the Somerville cinema for two
years.
Cinema for two years.
As I watch the crowd leave, I
notice an older couple walking
out The woman is trying to pull
rice from her hair. When I
comment that they seem
slightly out of place they explain that they're escoring their
16-year-old daughter. "It's the
last time she'll go," the father
sayd. "It's like somebody told
these kids they could swear for
their birthday."
I catch up to one of the Frank
N. Furter imposters. He is
Brian Miller, a senior at
Manville High School. I ask
"How many times have you
seen this show?"
"About seventeen."
"Why do you keep coming
back?"
"Well, I don't drink or smoke,
so what else is there to do on
Saturday night?"
Good question.
numbness in the fingers and
. By S. BAUGHER
It was a cold February day
toes.
during my senior year in high
The side effects > of the
school when I found out that my
treatments to "combat my
father had cancer.
father 's cancer were very
I recall coming home to hear
harsh. His weight dropped from
the sound of my mother's
215_ lbs. to 135 lbs; He lost much
crying. I was sure someone -in
of his hair and skin on the back
our family was hurt or had died.
of his neck due to the.radiation.
It was a feeling that I could just
He still can not walk normally
sense.
due to the numbness caused by
She told me to sit down. I did.
treatments . that ended more
She explained that Dad had
than nine months ago.
Hodgkin's disease, a cancer of
More dramatic than the
the lymph node system. She
physical changes and problems
also, said that he would need to
go through surgery, radiation,
"the trauma of a close
and eventually chemotherapy,
famil y member having
if necessary, to fight the
disease.
cancer is not to be
My father's illness inspired
taken lightly"
me to do some research into
specifically
cancer
and .
he suffered were the mental
Hodgkin's disease. Reading the
struggles my father fought
pamphlets and brochures was
during, his 14-month treatment
not easy. It was hard to realize
period.
. ~ . . . ' . " . '. . .
that what I was reading was .
barely
write all the
I can.
happening in the body of
father and
emotions
my
someone I cared for.
everyone close to him felt
Though there are over 100
during his treatments. He could
types of cancer, they are all
not work and was burdened by
similar in that the cancerous
heavy medical expenses.
nolle grow
orrau at
rate
very fast rate.
cells
at aa vprv
He could riot eat. most of the
and destroy vital organs around
time. When he . would try, it
them.
almost always, came back up.
Hodgin's disease affects the
He was always tired and weak
lumph system. With early
and was frustrated because he
diagnosis and an aggressive
could not move and lift objects
treatment, 90 percent of
that just yesterday seemed very
patients with Hodgkin's disease
light.
can be
cured. Clearly, I
My father's entire life style realized, diagnosis of the
changed within a few weeks.
disease is no longer a death
His only recourse was to show
sentence.
Though the percentage .. of : self;pity and disgust,. I think
complete remissions is high .. .that is.what Hurt me the most I
never had seen that side of my
with Hodgkin's disease, the
father.
trauma of a close family
My mother took a heavy part
member having cancer is not to
of the mental burden. She had to
be taken lightly. The treatments
feed my father and clean up his
and mental strain can cause
messes. She had to cope with
many problems, as I found out.
the thought of his death and
My father's treatment inhaving to run the show. To me it
cluded radiation, surgery (to
seemed she forced the will to
live on my father at times when
"I recall coming home
he had greatself-doubt and was
to hear the sound of
convinced of his own death.
When my mother broke down
my mothers cry ing'
from the strain ( she is only
human), she would throw her
remove the spleen and other
problems on my brother and
vulnerable organs), and finally
me.
She talked about leaving
chemotherapy (this included
Dad. I knew that she never
the injection of two drugs would; she loves him too much.
Mechlorethamine and VinI was lucky. I left for college
cristine).
and heard only parts of what
The Mechlorethamine causes
was happening at home. I don't
nausea, vomiting, and lowered
know if I could have dealt with
blood counts. Vincristine causes
the mental anguish on a daily
hair loss, constipation, and
basis much longer. I was very
[ '"fati^^^^^R
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WARHURST
APARTMENTS
SUMMER RENTALS $200 A MONTH
Furnished withallutilities paid
784-0816
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relieved to be at school.
However, I felt bad that I
could not do anything for my
father and my family. My
younger brother was at home
and helped out a lot. The stress
on him was great, too. He began
to drink too much and when I
was home for break one time he
even confessed that he thought
about killing himself.
After all these experiences,
there is no doubt in my mind
that cancer is hell. It is hell for
the one who has got it, and it is
hell for those who care for him.
As I end this account of my
personal experience with
cancer, I must say that he is
alive today, and that is all that
really matters.
r
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FRANK1E PACE appeared on Saturday Night Live and conies
to campus at 8:00.
HENRY HOLDEN brings his special brand of humor to the
Union tonight.
8:00 p.m. Tonight
Comics To Perfo rm For Disability-Awareness
By MIKE FORD
What do Henry Holden and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
have in common? According to
Holden, they both married ugly
women. But Franklin Delano
Roosevelt became president.
Henry Holden became funny.
Tonight you have the opportunity to enjoy the
provocative comedy of Holden
in what promises to be the most
hilarious comedy show ever at
BSC.
Tonight at 8 p.m. in the
President's Lounge, Kehr Union
the Association ' of Resident
Sudents (ARS) will present
Holden and three other New
York City comedians. The show
is in conjunction with the
Disability-Awareness Day,
entitled "Attitudes are the Real
Disability."
The master of ceremonies for
the evening is Larry Covington,
a former sportscaster from
Washington, D.C., who has been
working as a stand-up comic in
New York for the past three
years. He has appeared in the
movies "Ragtime" and "Fort
Apache, the Bronx."
Also on the bill is Randy
Credico, who came to New York
just one year ago from Las
Vegas where he played for three
consecutive years, opening for
such stars as Buddy Hackett,
Ann Margaret, Shecky Greene,
and the Pointer Sisters. He is an
talented
imextremely
p .^mj^^^^^^^a^^
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W. B.5. C.
640 AM
T-SHIRT CONTEST
HAS STARTED!
Listen from 4 p.m. till midn ig ht
Everyday !
Win a T-shirt by answering a
SportsorMusicTriviaQuestion...
Rules of Contest are posted
outside WBSC studio.
WBSC...WHERE GREAT
MUSIC LIVES ON!
pressionist doing over $00
vocies. He holds the dinstinction
of being the "official Ronald
Reagan voice" for Warner
Bros. Pictures. He has been
performing regularly at
Dangerfield's and will be seen
in the new Rodney Dangerfield
film "Easy Money," to be
released in the fall .
Appearing as special guest
wil be Frankie Pace, a comic
who refers to himself as "the
man
with
a
missing
chromosome." Pace made his
comedic acting debut in the
movie, "Porky 's. " He has
appeared on "Saturday Night
Live" and on "Friday 's."
Frankie Pace performs the
most mad-cap type of comedy
act ever to perform on this
campus. He has been performing regularly at "Catch a
at
Star ," and
Rising
' Dangerfield's."
This show is one that should
not be missed by any comedy
fan. For a good time....be in the
President' s Lounge at 8 p.m
tonight.
HoldenLooking
To Change Attitudes
Are these statements about
handicapped people true or
false?
1. Greater precautions should
be taken in programming activities for disabled students
because they are more prone to
accidents.
2. The term "disability "
refers to impairment which can
be seen.
The answer to both of the
above questions is false, and the
man who set out to prove this,
Henry Holden, is the foremost
authority
on
handicap
awareness.
Today, Holden will be coming
to BSC for Handicapped
Awareness Day. He will give a
lecture which emphasizes
"attitudes are the real
disability. " Holden will also
conduct workshops for students
and will participate in a panel
discussion. Tonight Holden will
be one of three performers to
participate in comedy night.
You may be wondering how
Holden came to be involved in
handicapped awareness. The
answer is simple, Holden is
handicapped himself. He
contracted polio at an early age,
but he never left this stand in his
way. He has set many high
goals for himself and continues
to attain what many would
consider unreachable.
Holden has attempted and
achieved some truly amazing
feats. Athletically, disregarding
a minimal amount of muscle
tone in both legs, Holden was
nonetheless able to teach
himself to participate in many
sporting activities such as
swimming, horseback riding,
and bowling. Holden was instrumental in starting the
country's first program for
horseback riding instruction for
the disabled.
HoldgH'ls also an actor. He is
a member of the screen Actors
Guild, Actors Equity, and the
National Academy of the
Motion Picture of Arts and
Sciences. He has appeared in
major motion pictures such as
"Rocky, Part II", and
"Poltergeist." He is currently
making a stand to appear in a
role that does not center on his
disability.
InternationalR elations
Club Hosts Speakers
By TAKASHINAKANISHI
"International Reception ,"
sponsored by the International
Relations Club, was held at 7
p.m., Thursday, March 17, -in
the Multi Purpose Room A,
KUB. Six guest speakers, including one from Sierra Leone,
two from Guyana, one from
Scotland, and also a BSC faculty
member and his wife talked
about
"Internatinal Job
Opportunities" based on their
unique experiences.
The first speaker , Mr.
Fasuluku Amadu Bayoh, civil
engineer at the Susquehanna
Electric Plant in Berwick, stood
before the audience and talked
about his experiences. He came
to the United States in 1971 as a
foreign exchange student from
Sierra Leone, a nation in West
"He came to the U.S.
from Sierra Leone. "
Africa, 12 years ago. 31-year-old
Bayoh graduated from four
colleges and earned two
Master 's degrees in Construction Engineering, Finance,
and Economics. "If I was in my
country, I would not have a
chance to go to college," he
said. Although he experienced a
serious culture shock and
language problems which gave
him much trouble in the new
country, Mr. Bayoh's perseverant efforts brought him
successful results in his
educa tional endeavors. "I think
this country is the best place to
live in the world if people would
learn to understand each
other," he said.
The next speaker, 44-year-old
Robert Rikie, from Scotland,
talked about his experiences in
traveling the world, and also
about his country. He came to
the United States two years ago
because England had been
facing a serious economic
recession that eventually
pushed him out of England. "I
started working as an engineer
in Florida in the beginning, then
a few months later I was taken
on at the Susquehanna Electric
Plant as an engineer," he said.
Through his abundant travel
experiences, he had realized
that people living in different
parts of the world are not different. "Many people in this
country do not travel much, nor
know much abou t foreign
countries," Mr. Rikie said.
Marcel and Michelle, 17-yearold twin sisters from Guyana,
which used to be known as
British Guiana, are studying at
Berwick Area High School.
They talked about the life style-'
in Guyana and its educational
system. "We had never seen a
TV until we came to the United
States, The main entertainment
is motion pictures in theaters
tha t are seen elsewhere. Sports
such as soccer, cricket, and
boxing are very popular among
people," they explained.
According to them, since the
public transportation system is
still insufficient, it is not at all
surprising for school children to
commute five miles to their
school on foot. "Main industry
is mining bauxite for export ,
and agriculture is our major
works," they explained.
Mrs. Sandra Smith, wife of
Dr. Riley Smith , associate
professor of the English
Department, talked about her
experiences with her family in
Europe, where they lived three
years in Germany. She had
been in Greece and Austria
before she married Dr. Smith.
As other people would, she
faced some difficulty that would
happen to any one because of
cultural difference: strange
foods, space between people,
and language problems.
Raising children was another
problem, since sometimes they
brought home different manners picked up in school or
through social contacts with
other children.
Dr. Smith stood after his wife
and talked about his experiences in Europea n institutes and universities where
he taught English as a second
language. He also taught
linguistics to young people who
were studying to be English "Although I did not have reentry shock when I came back
to the United States after living
in Germany for three years, I
have realized that some people
would experience this depending on their situation," he said.
Dr. Smith went to the Soviet
Union in the fall of 1981 through
a project of Fullbright Institute,
and there he taught English at
Politechnic
Institute
in
Leningrad for one semester.
"American people in general
have a negative comment on
Russians, but I found that the
Russian people are very
"Dr. Smith talked of his
experiences in Europe."
freindly to Americans ," he said.
Dr. Walter Brasch, assistant
professor of English, talkedjat
the end of the presentation
about the nature of the U.S.
media, which tends to cover
events close to the American
people rather than to cover
things going on in the Third
World. "When Pabro Picaso
and Pabro Meruda died on April
8, 1973, the U.S. mass media
reserved a large space for the
death of Picaso, but very few
media reported about Meruda,
who had been awarded a Nobel
Prize," Dr. Brasch explained.
He also pointed out that though
it is true that the media does
concentrate on news having
monetary value, it is also the
reality that the U.S. media does
not have access to cover all that
occurs in Third Wo"rld countries.
The Interna tional Relations
Club is planning to have more
presentations this year for
better understanding of different cultures.
PBL Names New VP
By ROBERTFLANAGAN
The new vice-president of Phi
Beta Lambda's Pennsylvania
state chapter is BSC junior,
Keith Boroch. Boroch was
elected at the recent 12th annual
Phi Bella Lambda Leadership
Conference held in Monroeville,
Pennsylvania.
Boroch, who just transferred
from
Williamsport Area
Community
College,
is
majoring in accounting.
As vice-president, Boroch's
main duty will be to assist the
president in all activities. He
¦will act as a go-between for the
state and local chapters ,
making sure the lines of communication are always open.lt
will also be his repsonsiblity to
preside over meetings the
president can't attend.
PBL's state organization
performs many services for its
members. Its two biggest are
the Fall Workshop, held in"
November, and the State
Leadership Conference. It is
responsible for getting information to the local chapters
and keeping in touch with the
national organization.
Boroch feels the state PBL is
a "good organization " and that
good officers were elected. He
is looking forward to attending
the first meeting scheduled for
May 15 in Harrisburg. "Right
now I'm in the process ofbrainstorming, trying to think
of new ideas. I like the
"Boroch will act as a
go-between of state
and local chapters. "
organization, and I'm just going
to try to improve it."
"PBL is for people who want
to get a head start in the world
of business," Boroch says. "Our
goals are basic, to help in
the transition from school to
work and to increase knowledge
in business free-enterprise, and
the handling of money.
Although he doesn't hold a
PBL office here, Boroch was
chapter president at WACC.
Local chapters, such as BSC's
provide community services
and bring speakers to campus
to discuss various areas in
business.
"Vote • for a Change" was
Boroch's campaign slogan. He
explained that he didn't want to
change PBL's goals, but rather,
the ways of attaining those
goals. We need better communication, and we must stay
on top of the changes that take
place in business."
"Even though Boroch's a new
student here, he likes the
business department "It's a
really good department, and
Dean Rarig is very good." He
took general education courses
at WACC ana came to asu ror
what it has to of er the business
student. One change that he
would like to see at BSC is a
five-year program for accounting students. The final
year would be spent preparing
the student to take the CPA test.
Boroch became interested in
business as a freshmen at
Bishop Neumann High School,
Williamsport. "My dad is a
businessman, so I guess that
influenced me a lot. I've always
had a yearning toward it, and I
enjoy it."
R
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Road Race * Popeye *
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•Pac Man Plus * Centipede *
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FUN FOR ALL
AGES!
ONLY AT BURGER KING, RT. 11, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
*
Top Officials Take Part In Groundbreaking
» -*,v.,- - . ny,-******** .-¦****-.<-*«r*^i:;;:;;,";'.
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(continued from page 1)
breaking ceremonies.
Earlier in the program,
proving to indeed fit the
description of a man of
modesty, McCormick thanked
all those present for their individual efforts in lobbying for
the building. "This was a
cooperative effort with all of
you making the difference for
Bloomsburg State College every
step of the way," he said.
Special guests at the
ceremonies who were each
instrumental in early efforts to
obtain funds for the new
$6,406,000 structure approved as
a part of the state's capital
budget in 1980, took their turns
at the microphone.
Walter Bara n, secretary of
General Services for the
Commonwealth represented
Governor Richard Thornburgh.
He read a greeting prepared by
the Governor. "Today launches
an important effort of the
Bloomsburg State College
community to meet the special
needs of students and citizens.
The building represents a
decade of commitment by the
college," it read.
Baran also read comments
from Robert Wilburn, state
secretary of education, who was
unable to attend the event.
State Treasurer R. Budd
Dwyer
commented
that
groundbreakings for new
buildings are very rare now for
college campuses. "It will
provide more employment and
an influx of money in the area ,"
he said.
Representative Ted Stuban
(109th District) acknowledged
the help of voting districts and
alumni and students for their
hard work in the project. He
also commended the nursing
students for their extra effort.
Other remarks were made by
Robert J. Parrish, vicepresident for administration;
Julius Kroschewsky, BSC
president of APSCUF; and
Government
Community
Association President Paul
Stockier. Introductions were
made _ by John L. Walker,
executive director of institutional advancement.
The ceremonies concluded
with special guests turning
shovels of ground on the site.
Larry Jones, vice-president
for Academic Affairs , said the
new three-story building will
house 30 to 40 percent of the
faculty office s. "Currently,
three and four faculty members
are sharing-offices intended for
one, " he explained. He also
commented that the new
building will alleviate crowded
classrooms.
Patrick J. Murphy
TOP RIGHT: Ted Stuban (member of House of Representatives) addressed the audience. ABOVE LEFT: President emeritus Harvey A. Andruss
participates In the groundbreaking. ABOVE RIGHT: Student leaders, Aaron Porter (student member, board of trustees^ Karen
Chawaga (former CGA
President) , Paul Stockier (current CGA President), and Michele Kessler (CAS Coordinator) also took part in the groundbreaking.
Change In Parking
Now Effective
Changes
in
parking
regulations involving the area
affected by the construction of
the new Human Services Center
on campus are now effective.
The construction area located
between Bakeless Center and
Waller Administration will be
blocked off, reducing available
parking space considerably.
Student commuters are encouraged to use the tri-level
parking garage at the corner of
Penn and Second Streets, as
well as the expanded parking
faculties of the hospital lot
along Lightstreet Road, which
is leased by the college.
The first double row of
parking immediately south of
Waller Administration is being
converted to faculty - staff
parking. Open parking is also
available near the tennis courts.
Additionalparking adjustments
will be made when large
numbers come to campus for
special events held in Haas
Center and the other buildings
in that locale.
S '^^^^'^^^^^^^^^^'
|
X^^^^ JWWWMlfcJ 'i^JWI'jWW
TRINITY REFORMED
CHURCH
Third & Iron Sts., Bloomsburg, PA
NEVV...WEEKLY
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OFFICE HOURS I PRAYER SERVICE"
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9 a.m.-8 p.m. J TESTIMONIES-BIBLICALPREACHING
WELCOME B.S.C. STUDENTS
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Tues., Thurs.
PUBLIC INVITED
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9 a.m.-10 p.m. ¦
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Graham Discusses
"Writing For Understanding"
By LYNNE SASSANI
"There is a lack, of understanding of the very simple
fact that people are people"
said novelist Lorenz Graham.
Graham 's presentation ,
"Wri ting for Understanding, " a
program in journalism sponsored by the English department, was held Wednesday,
March 30, in the president's
lounge.
Graham, 81, is the author of
the South Town tetralogy. He
wrote South Town, which won
the Foiled Gold Medal Award
(1958) , and the Child Study
writer. He said Americans
stereotype Africans as being
"savages," noting, "There
were no decent books which
described Africans honestly."
Therefore, he bagan writing
books from his experiences.
Publishers were skeptical
abou t his viewpoints on
Africans, therefore, he had
difficulties getting his books
published. He was told that his
Negro characters were "too
much like other people. "
Graha m said , "If you look
closely you will see that people
are. people."
"Publishers wanted me to
change my books -1 said I would
put more action, violence, make
it shorter or longer, but I would
not change my characters," he
said.
Throughout his presentation,
Graham discussed the principles of slavery. "People had
to defend institutional slavery
in the South," he noted, stating,
"slavery was supposedly God
inspired , Africans weren 't
considered people because they
weren't like us."
"Slaves were terrorized - they
The three rules for
writing are: "Write
what you know, write
something that's important and keep rewriting ."
Association of America Award
(1959) ; North Town ; Whose
Town ?, which won the World
Book Award; and Return to
South Town. Over 600,000 copies
of South Town were sold.
He has had over 15 other
book s published , and has
written plays and articles as
well. He was also honored with
the Association for Study of
Negro Life and History Award
(1959) , the Southern California
Council on Literature Award
(1968) , and will be awarded the
Honorary Doctor of Humane
Letters degree, May 1, by
Virginia Union University.
Graham was not alwavs a
Graham's main purpose for
writing is to get people to understand one another.
His three rules for writing
are: "Write what you know,
write something that' s important, and keep re-writing."
Graham is from California
and before writing he was a
probation officer in Los
Angeles. The Watts ghetto was
part of his assignment.
His concluding remarks were,
"To all of you who plan to be
writers, there are things to be
said, and understandings to be
developed - don't merely write
for money."
LORENZ GRAHAM stated his main thesis, "People are
people."
I
Deaf
I «CT I Now Thru I "susss?* I I
consult with variou s constituencies in the college concerning the issue. McCormick
noted that the move was not a
"mandate for change," but
rather an opportunity to
examine the current efficiency
of the system.
.I \ h l \
"There were no books
about Africans as people, that's what started
my writing career. "
rMBUMacAs^nrspra^ l
I
FRO/W
(Continued from Page 1}
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weren't killed because they
were property, but they were
badly beaten from the time they
were babies,"Graham said. He
added, "There is still a feeling
of inadequacy, inferiority, and
contempt."
Your Possible Pasts/The Gunners Dream
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Educational Consortium Set
Speaker
Holocaust Viewed
By
ELIZABETH GROCHOWSKI
The Campus-Wide Committee
on Human Relations is bringing
Ms. Elizabeth Dopozo to
campus April 19. She will speak
on the Holocaust: Life In The
Third Reich, 8 p.m. in the Kehr
Union, President's Lounge. The
program is free and open to the
public.
Elizabeth Dopoz o was a
young child when Hitler became
Chancellor of the Weimer
Republic in 1933. Her earliest
memory is having the Gestapo
come to her home and arrest
her father in 1936. Mr Dopozo
was an active Jehovah's Witness and refused to give up his
religious beliefs. Therefore, he
was kept in prison until 1941
where he died of heart failure at
age 35.
Ms. Dopozo's presentation
will coincide with the fourtieth
anniversary of the Warsaw
Ghetto uprising. On April 19,
1943, General Jurgen Stroop
entered the Warsaw Ghetto to
eliminate the remaining 55,000
to 65,000 inhabitants. By May 8,
the
Jewish
Fighting
Organization was virtually
eliminated.
The Campus-Wide Committee
on Human Relations presents
the Elizabeth Dopozo program
as a memorial to all Holocaust
victims, and as a special tribute
to the courageous people of the
Warsaw Ghetto.
Faculty Member
Publishes Work
In the most recent issue of
American Anthropologist
(March 1983, v. 85:1) , Gary
Feinman, along with Laura
Finsten of McMaster University, Richard Blanton of Purdue
University , and Stephen
Kowalewski of the University of
Georgia , has published an
analytical discussion of some
earlier archaeological work in
the basin of Mexico. "A Com-
ment on Steponaitis Determination
of
Catchment
Productivity " presents a
revised method for examining
the relationship between human
settlements and agricultural
resources in this region where
one of the earliest New .World
civilizations arose.
Feinman is a member of the
Anthropology Department at
BSC.
annual
first
BSC's
educational consortium will be
sponsored by the Career
Development and Placement
Center. The event will be held
on Wednesday, April 20, from
9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in the
Kehr Union Building. The
purpose of the consortium will
be for school districts and intermediate units to share information and to offer opportunities for future employment.
Representatives from approximately twenty schools will
be in attendance and will be
sharing information and interviewing students the entire
day. The event is also being
sponsored
by
Bucknell
University, Susquehanna
Letters
Continued from Page 2
that the doctor worked harder
( though he probably did) but
that he worked smarter. HE
MADE THE RIGHT CHOICES.
Conservatism is based on the
premise of individual responsibility. A man 's life mirrors his
University, Lock Haven State
College and Mansfield State
College, and students from
these institutions will also have
an opportunity to meet and
interview with those present.
Students from Bloomsburg
State College can sign up immediately in the Career
Development Center for these
interviews and can also put
their names on a waiting list.
Any graduating majors in
education are encouraged to
take advantage of this opportunity, and any spots which
are not taken by students from
the
other
participating
universities will be open to BSC
students for interviews.
This consortium will be the
first of its kind held at
decisions. After high school,
both individuals made a choice.
Bloomsburg State, and all
graduating education majors
should plan on attending. An
open registration and information session will also be
held during the day from 3:00 to
5:00 p.m.
Van
(Continued from Page 1)
street in front of the Ben
Franklin building. For this
reason, anyone who may have
observed this van while parked
in front of Ben Franklin, or
being driven away, or noting
any person appearing to be
associated with it, is requested
to contact D. Ruckle, SLE Investigations, 389-4171, as soon
as possible. All information will
be appreciated and will be
treated confidentially."
At your request, I have tried
to adhere strictly to the issues in
question. The rest of your reply
is merely a melodramatic personal attack, which neither
needs, nor deserves, any
rebuttal.
Sign me,
"The Lone Conservative?"
Shane Steck
Bird and Penney finished up
minutes later, both with 6-0, 6-0
victories. Coyne recovered
from a slightly shaky opening to
take his first set 6-1 behind a
very good serve. However, the
second set presented problems
for the number two player.
Coyne had several opportunities
to eliminate his LH opponent
but missed several routine shots
before struggling to a 6-4 second
set win.
Superdock suffered through
the same type of game, blowing
away his foe with a superb
serve in the first set, only to
miss easy volleys in the second.
Still Superdock had more than
enough to take a 6-1, 6-2 win.
Due to the rain, only one
doubles mstch was played, tha t
being Coyne-Superdock at
number one; The Husky duo
racked up a 6-2, 6-2 victory.
The Huskies take on archrival Millersville tommorrow
afternoon at 2:30 at home.
Now they must be content with
those choices..
Husky Tennis
(Continued from page 9)
and Bird,Grebe losing a 7-6, 7-6
nailbiter.
Lock Haven
Coach Burt Reese's
netmen quickly disposed of
Lock Haven 7-0 for their fifth
shutou t of the year in a rain
shortened match.
Grebe racked up the first of
three match shutouts at number three singles in less than 45
minutes by pounding Rob Lentz.
BSC Lacrosse
(Continued from page 11)
© J & C Ferrara Co.,
Inc
Tne Legendofthe
Dogwood ModeVisible
At the time of the Crucifixion, the dogwood, then the size
of the oak and other forest trees , was chosen as the timber
of the Cross, because it was so firm and strong. And from
the Cross it was said, "Never again shall the dogv/ood tree
grow big enough to be used for such a cruel purpose.
Henceforth, it shall be slender, bent and twisted; its blossoms shall have two long and two short petals and be in
the form of a cross. In the center of each petal's outer
edge, there shall be nail prints, brown with rust and stained
red. And a crown of thorns will be in the flower 's center.
All who see it will remember."
A reprint of the legend comes with our sterling dogwood
cross , 3A" x "I '/id" on an 18" chain. From J & C Ferrara.
$17.50
SNEIDMAN 'S JE WELERS
130 E. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
784-2747
be running as smoothly as it is."
The coaching chores are also
left up to the players. The older,
more experienced players are
the key contributors to this
aspect of the club. "Duran,
and
McMinn ,
Hackett ,
Toussaint are obviously the
leaders on the field and off ,"
commented Michaels.
"Because of not having one
authority figure, these guys all
share leadership and coaching
duties whenever they're called
upon ."
Another vital factor will be
fan support. McMinn said that
the club would like to become
more familiar to students on
campus because, like any sport,
the players need support from
their peers.
"Anyone who has seen us play
before can attest that our
games are always actionpacked and well worth seeing."
McMinn commented. "So, if the
fans show some interes t and
come out to watch us, I'm sure
they won't be dissappointed,
and they'll be helping us ' the
same time by giving us an extra
incentive."
The Huskies will face a
seven-game
competitive
schedule, which includes
Division I powerhouse Penn
State. Four of the games will be
Three
will
at
home.
be played at Old Athletic Park,
7th and Iron Streets, Bloomsburg. The PSU contest will be
at Nelson Fieldhouse.
"We have a real good shot at
beating everyone on our
schedule," McMinn said. "Penn
State will undoubtedly be our
toughest opponent because
they're usually always ranked
among the top twenty teams in
the country."
"The quality of play has
obviously risen here at BSC
since my freshman year," he
added. "I guess it's because
lacrosse is becoming more
popular throughout the country
on the high school level, which
results in more incoming freshmen already having valuable
experience."
For the 1983 Bloomsburg State lacrosse club the
talent is there, and now some
team spirit and inspiration has
been instilled. With this, playercoach McMinn concluded:
"We're looking forward to one
of the best years ever at BSC."
SCHEDULE
Thurs. Aprir?, Ursinus-Away
3:00
Sun. April 10, Penn St. - Away
2:00
Wed. April 13, E. Stroudsburg Home 3:00 - 7th. & Iron
Sat. April 16, Millersville Home 2:00 - 7th & Iron
Sun. April 24, E. Stroudsburg Away 2:00
Fri. April 29, Penn State - Home
4:00 - Nelson
Sat. April 30, Dickinson - Home
2:00 - 7th & Iron
Men's Tennis
BSC Having Up and Down Season
By WADE DOUGLAS
netmen
Husky
The
have suffered from a lack
of consistency thus far this
season, in posting a 5-6 record.
At times they play very well.
Witness their back-to-back-toback shutouts of Lycoming,
Scranton, and UMBC. At other
times they don't look like the
same team, as their losses to
Old Dominion (8-1) and
The Huskies host rival
Millersville in what
promises to be an exciting match at 2:30
tomorrow.
Patrick J. Murphy
TWO-HANDER. Number one player Dave Superdock returns
a two-handed backhand against Lock Haven Wednesday
afternoon. Superdock posted his eighth win of the seasbn
6-1.6-2.
Hampton (7-2) show.
And their inconsistency isn't
just limited from match to
match.
Wenesday 's match
against Lock Haven was a
perfect example. The Huskies
top three players Dave
Superdock, Marty Coyne, and
Rob Lario each suffered
momentary lapses in recording
wins. One game they would pull
off superb shots, making them
look routine, only to follow by
missing overhead smashes and
Husky 9 Uses Long-Ball
To Pull Record To 4-5
After dropping their opening
two games .' during their
southern tour, the BSC baseball
team has posted a 4-3 mark. The
Huskies, under head coach
Steve Bresset, split their three
double-headers against Penn
St., Shippensburg, and King's
and won their lone nine-inning
game over Susquehanna.
Power hitting has been the
key to BSC's success thus far.
Since returning from the south,
the Huskies have clubbed six
homeruns and added numerous
doubles and triples. In going 4-3,
BSC has averaged six runs a
game.
Penn St.
The Nittany Lions provided
the opposition for BSC's home
opener. However, since Litwhiler Field was under water,
the game was played at the
Town Park. In the first game,
PSU turned the tables on the
highly touted Husky offense,
romping 16-0. PSU' s Mike
Bellaman limited the home
team to just three singles.
BSC's offense opened up the
second game, and the pitching
held the Lions in check for a 7-3
victory. Shortstop Kevin
Sobocinsky pounded a secondinning two-run homer with Gary
Beiler aboard to give BSC a 2-0
lead.
Beiler and Dan Forbes added
sacrifice flies in the fourth to
erase a PSU run in the third.
The 4-1 margin was all BSC
hurlers Dean Adams and Craig
Smith needed, as they held the
Lions to single runs in the fifth
and seventh innings.
The next day BSC hit the road
to invade Shippensburg. They
again split the doubleheader.
The Huskies belted four
roundtrippers on the day, including three in their 8-3 victory. Sobocinsky, Scott Conway,
and Todd Remley each
displayed their homerun trots.
Susquehanna
BSC used both power and
finesse to pull out a ninth inning
8-7 win -over the visiting
Crusaders.
Susquehanna jumped out to a
quick 5-0 lead after two innings,
but the Huskies clawed back
with a run in the second and
three more in the fourth. They
finally tied it up with a two-run
sixth, but saw the Crusaders
come back an inning later to
claim a 7-6 lead.
With one out in the ninth, third
basemen Bill Salamy singled to
start the winning rally. Senior
captain Sobocinsky followed
with an RBI .triple, setting up
the finesse part of the victory.
Second string catcher Jim
Crookham laid down a suicide
allowing
squeeze
bunt ,
Sobocinsky to cross the plate
with the winning run.
Remley, the fourth BSC
pitcher, got the win.
King 's
BSC split their third
doubleheader of the young
season by taking the second
game 5-3 over the host King's
College. King's took the opener
in a 13-10 slugfest.
Base on balls to Crookham
and Salamy in the fifth inning
started the Huskies winning
rally. After the walks,
Sobocinsky unloaded a one out
three bagger , scoring both
runners. Sobocinsky 's key hit
broke up a 2-2 tie. The Huskies
added another run when first
baseman Conway grounded out
on a fielder's choice, scoring
Sobocinsky.
In the first game, King's
posted 11 third-inning runs after
the Huskies had scored six
times in the top of the inning.
Four hits, an error, and six
walks told the story as BSC was
unable to close the gap after
leading 8-1.
Catcher Mark Bonshak,
Salamy and Conway each had
multiple hit games with Bonshak and Salamy going 3 for 4
and Conway hitting 2 for 3.
volleys in the next game. With
the PSAC's and several other
important matches fast approaching, including Tuesday's
rival
showdown
against
Millersville, the netters will
hopefully get back on track.
Scranton
The Huskies allowed the
Royals to win only 19 total
games in the singles matches in
racking up their second straight
shutout and third on the year, 90. The win evened BSC's record
at 3-3 on the season.
Number one Superdock had
the most trouble of any
Husky as he was pushed to
take a 6-2, 7-5 victory over
Paul Wysocki. The victory ran
Superdock' s win streak to
five straight. Marty Coyne,
at number two , , recorded
three and four, Rob Lario and
Scott Grebe, racked up indentical 6-0, 6-2 victories, and
Jere Bird and Mike Penney
surrendered only two and three
games in chalking up wins.
the same BSC dominance as the
single, with the Huskies
recording easy victories in
each.
Old Dominion
The netters three match win
streak was ended rather
decisively by a, very good ODU
squad 8-1. The Huskies lone win
in the match came in the
number two doubles where
Bird-Grebe won 6-3, 7-6.
Although none of the singles
went to three sets, each was
close. Superdock's win string
was ended by Gary Cuppernal 64, 6-4, as was Coyne's 7-6, 6-4.
Lario dropped a 7-5, 6-4
decision, "while Grebe lost 7-6, 62. Bird and Penney rounded out
the singles by losing 6-4 7-6 and
6-3, 6-3 resepctively.
The duo of Coyne-Superdock
lost their first match of the year
in a three-setter 7-6, 6-7, 6-2.
Lario-Penney were downed 6-3,
6-4.
Hampton
,
A second straight loss was
handed to the netters by a
BSC started their postponed powerful Hampton Institute
southern tour by whitewashing squad 7-2. The fifth ranked host
UMBC for their third con- soundly whipped the Huskies by
secutive shutout. Bird was the taking five singles and two
lone Husky to be forced to a
doubles matches.
third set, but he managed to pull
Superdock got back on the
out a 4-6, 6-2, 6-1 victory. . . winning trail beating a tough
Superdock posted his sixth
Tadeau Luiz 2-6, 7-5, 6-4., but
straight win 7-6 6-0, while Coyne that would be the lone singles
blanked Rick Bleath 6-0, 6-0. win for the Huskies, as no other
Lario and Grebe dropped only Husky won more than four
one game in securing their
games.
wins. Penney completed the
In the doubles, BSC fared
singles sweep with 6-2, 6-3 -" slightly better with Coynetriumph.
Superdock taking 6-2, 7-6 win
The doubles segment featured
(Continued on page B)
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2
BSC Cindermen Set
Two School R ecords
By ERNIE LONG
The BSC's men's track team
set school records in two events
last week while competing in
the Towson State invitational
and Colonial Relays.
At Towson, the 2-mile relay
team of freshmen Steve Harris
and John Lewis, and seniors
Bob and John Feeley set a
^
7:49.92 mark
to break the
previous record of 7:55.9 set in
1976. Their score was good for a
4th place and helped the
Huskies to an 11th place finish
among 17 teams.
Other top performances included freshman Wilbur Reid's
strong 7th place finish in the 110
high hurdles and junior John
Homan's 8th place in the 10.000
meters.
In the field events, senior
Mike Gorczynski
placed
3rd in the shot put while
juniors Eric Feerrar and Ed
Lozo finished 5th and 6th
respectively, in he javelin.
At the Colonial Relays, the
team of Harris, Lewis, Feeley
and Feeley set another record,
this time in the 3200 meter
relay. Their 7th place performance of 7:53.0 broke the
1980 record by 4 seconds. The
successful foursome also ran to
a 9th place in the distance
medley while recording a
10:23.0 timing.
The sprint relay team of Keid.
Harris, J. Feeley and Marshal
Evers placed highes t of the day
for Bloomsburg with a 3rd place
in that event.
"These meets against some of
the top Divison I schools and top
track clubs in the country are
good for pulling better times for
us," commented coach Hinkle,
"We're up against a lot of '
quality groups which will
stimulate us for harder work
and hopefully a pay off at the
Penn Relays."
Power Iif ting
Wenner Takes Eighth
By MIKEJUPINA
BSC sophomore,
Rich
Wenner, copped eighth place at
the
Collegiate
National
Powerlifting
Championships
held at Texas A&M University
in College Station, Texas, on
March 25, 26, 27.
Wenner, competing in the 181pound class, opened with a
squat of 570 pounds. He then
attempted 590 pounds but was
!
In the next event, the
benchpress, Rich did
his personal best with
a lift of 370 pounds.
disqualified twice because of
lack of depth.
In the next event, the bench
press, Rich did his personal best
at 181 with a lift of 370 pounds.
He finished off his try at
gaining the national title with a
600-pound deadlift, that made
his final total 1540 pounds.
The competition was tough,
and Rich would have to settle
for no more than eighth of 16.
The top five finishers in the 181pound class were members of
the "elite" class, which is the
highest ranking class in the
sport of powerlifting.
"The competition was good' I
tried my best," said Wenner.
The winner of the 181-pound
class was senior Neil Mairs of
Rochester, New York , who
lifted a total of 1710 pounds.
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GLOVE SAVE. The hockey action was fast and furious last week as the league hit midseason.
Street H ocky Starts With Bang
By ADRIAN MARCEWICZ
BSC's 1983 spring street
hockey league started with a
bang last Monday as last year's
runner-up, Bodaga Lodge, met
the ever-intimidating Muff
Divers in the opening game.
The result was a very
physically played 2-0 victory for
the Lodge, which hopes to get
another shot at the title. The
day's other game saw Norton's
Heroes defeat the Ghetto
Blasters 2-1, with the Blasters
scoring their lone goal with
about 20 seconds left.
On Tuesday, newcomers, the
69ers, were trounced by play-off
hopefuls, the Addams Family,
while in Division II, Taddeos
registered a 3-2 victory over
DOC.
Wednesday's action saw a
pair of close games. In the first
contest, the Wings jumped out
to a quick 2-0 lead before succumbing to the Journeymen 3-2
in overtime. In game two, Zeta
Psi had its hands full before
finally tripping the Alemen 2-L
second loss in as many games.
The other game that day was
also an exciting one, as the
On Thursday, a large crowd
bore the cold and came out to
watch the defending champs,
the Starry Knights, battle the
Muff Divers. The Knights, who
defeated Bodaga Lodge three
games to two in last year's best
of 5 championship series, had
their hands full early, as the
score was knotted 1-1 after
about seven minutes of play.
Sunday, unfortunately,
provided lousy weather conditions. Snowing and raining
simultaneously at some points,
three of the days' four contests
were cancelled. In the game
that was played, Bodaga Lodge
But the Knights defense
tightened, and they tallied the
next three goals for a 4-1 victory, handing the Divers their
Wri g ht St. Captures
Division II Title
Twice in its history the BSC
basketball team advanced to
the national quarterfinals, and
twice they have been defeated
by the eventual national
champion. Wright St (OH) ,
who was ranked fourth before
the tournament, stunned the
number one ranked defenidng
champions from District of
Columbia 92-73 to claim its first
national crown.
The Raiders utilized the same
one-two combination on the
UDC that enabled them to post a
73-53 victory over BSC. On the
offensive end Gary Monroe,
who scored 26 points against the
Huskies, again led the attack.
The 6' 7" Montoe poured in 23
points and pulled down eight
rebounds to top the Raiders.
While Monroe took care of the
offensive game, the Raiders'
suffocating defense held UDC's
All-American forward
MichaelBritt to only six secondhalf points and 17 overall.
Wright St took davantage of
an injury to UDC's three-time
All-American. center Earl
Jones midway in the first half to
turn a three point deficit into a
five point halftime lead. With
less than 12 minutes remaining
in the first half , the seven-foot
Jones went up for a two-handed
dunk, only to hit his face on the
rim. With Jones out, Wright
went on a 8-2 run to grab a lead
they would never lose. Even
when Jones returned with nine
minutes left in the half , the
Firebirds were unable to
recapture the lead.
UDC came out shakily in the
second stanza , committing
numerous turnovers that
allowed the Raiders to extend
their advantage to 59-42. With a
large cushion and the clock on
their side, Wright went into its
highly effective delay game.
And as they demonstrated in the
quarterfinals, the Raiders were
deadly from the line, hitting 29
of 32 in the second half.
Jones led all scorers with 26
points and 11 rebounds.
Ghetto Blasters squeezed by the
Gooneybirds 3-2 in overtime.
uppea their record to 2-0 with a
9-1 drubbing of the 69ers., who
fell to 0-2. The games that will
be made up later in the year
include the Wings vs the
Addams Family, Nortons'
Heroes vs Doc, and Taddeos vs
Zeta Psi.
Husky
Golf
After last week's matches,
coach Bill Sproule's golf team is
off to one of its best starts ever
at 3-1.
The veteran squad teed off its
season with a disappointing 417399 loss to King's College in bad
weather at home. Senior Rob
EmerT . came in with low
score of 78 — for the
Huskies, just one short of
medalist paul Waznik, Kings.
Other scorers for BSC were
Steve Schultz 83, Bill McGinnis,
83, Pete Sobrinsky, 86, and
Larry Ebeling, 87.
The Huskies fared better in
perfect weather at Shippensburg by sweeping the
quad against Kutztown, Shippensburg, and Lock Haven. BSC
shot 415 compared to the Golden
Bears, 418, Red Raiders 422,
and Bald Eagles, 436.
Greg Klose, Lock Haven, and
Scott Stanely, Kutztown, took
medalist honors with 79s while
Bill McGinnis finished top for
Bloomsburg with an 80.
Rounding out the team Were
Schultz, 81, Emert, 84, Steve
Reich, 84, and Mike Keech, 86.
BSC Lacrosse Club
Looks For Improvement
By DAN LOUGHLIN
SPORTS EDITOR
Returning three of its top five
scorers, the Bloomsburg State
men's lacrosse club is very
optimistic and is looking forward to a successful 1983
season.
After posting a rather
frustrating 3-5 record last year
in which three games were lost
by a goal in the last minute and
one game lost in overtime,
player-coach Craig McMinn
feels the team has something
this year that it lacked in
previous years-team spirit.
"One thing we have lacked in
the past years is team spirit and
inspiration, which I think could
have been one of the reasons for
our one-goal losses," McMinn
said. "We just didn 't have that
'killer instinct' to get those
clutch goals when we needed
them. This year's feeling is
totally different. Everyone
realizes that we need to
One top newcomer who has
shown promise during spring
practice is Craig Irvine. Irvine
will probably start with the top
attack line and will be looked on
to help fill the scoring void. He
should provide the Huskies with
speed and aggressive play.
BSC's defense will also play
akey role in the outcome of this
year 's squad. It will be headed
by the strong, steady play of
Bob Kramer, John Murphy, and
John Toussaint. Stan Line will
be the goalie.
"Our top three defendersKramer ,
Murphy, - ,
and
Toussaint proved they are
capable of playing on the
college-level," McMinn said.
"We expect the same strong,
consistent play from the trio
again this year. Stan (Line)
should anchor the defense with
steady play in goal."
One point that may be important to the success of this
year's leadership aptitude is the
recent changing of advisors.
Professor William Acierno has
assumed these duties this year.
And McMinn feels that
Acierno's optimistic attitude
will rub off on the team,
resulting in a more positive
effect.
Also, because of the advising
change, much of the adminstrative work was left up to
the club officers during the
transition. "Tony Duran and
Phil Michaels were invaluable
in getting all of the pre-season
chores taken care of," McMinn
said. "From ordering uniforms
and equipment
to the
scheduling of games, without
these guys the season wouldn't
(Continued on page •)
"Hopefull y, this year 's
scoring will be more
balanced."
scorers in Sharp and Wolford,
so we'll be looking for help from
some of our newer players."
"Hackett, Schneider, (Tony )
Duran and McMinn should
provide much of our scoring
punch," added , midfielder Phil
Michaels. "These guys showed
what they could do last year and
have 'looked _ pretty sharp
throughout ' most pf our spring
practice this year.
Announcements
"THE SCHOOL OF EXTENDED PROGRAMS it looking for several part-time
employees to serve as desk receptionists , van drivers, offico aids, and
official hosts for summer conferencegroups visiting BSC this summer. K
you plan to attend summer school or livo within commuting distance of
campus and are Interested in such employment , please call extension 4420
for an application form. Applicants must be approved for summer employment by the college Financial Aid Office."
FOR SALE: Wanted: Responsible party to take over low monthly payments
on spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager: P.O. Box 33
Friendens , PA 15541
PROCESS MAIL AT HOME I $30.00 per hundred I No experience. Part
or full time. Start Immediatel y. Details, send self-addressed stamped
envelope. Haiku Distributors , 115 Walpalanl Rd., Haiku, HI 967M
AGENTS WANTS, INTERNATIONAL MKTG./MAIL ORDER - no ma|or Investment. Send name, address, and phone to: Kerlin Enterprises, It Willow St.
MarysvlMe, Pa. 17053
ANYONE INTERESTED IN RUNNING FOR A.R.S., C.A.S. or class office for
the 1983-84 school year should pick up a petition at the KUB Information
Desk.
FOR SALE: KILTS, FOR HPE MAJORS. Like New I Size 10. $13 each. Call
784-2876.
INTERNSHIP OrTORTUNITY - ACA (a group benefit plan administrator)
will be selecting a state college student to work In Harrlsburg for
10 weekspreparing financial and statistical reports and doing programming. A backround in Accounting and/or computer Science is required. For more information and application forms contact Dr. Ellen
Barker, Psychology Dept., 21 OSH, Ext. 4479. Application deadline Is April
"We have the talent,
but we fust need the
Inspirational factor to
pull us through this
season."
cooperate with each other." ¦
"We have the talent, but we
just need the inspirational
factor to pull us through this
season," he said. "Hopefully, if
we get more fan support this
year, it will provide some of this
inspiration and help pull us
together as a team."
Midfielder Joe Hackett, who
led the Huskies in both goals
and assists last season, will be
counted on to do much of the
same this year. The junior
scored 13 goals and assisted on
seven others for a total of 20
points in last year's eight-game
schedule.
Junior Lee Schneider, also a
midfielder , was second in
scoring last year with 10 goals
and five assists for 15 total
points. McMinn is also expected
to lead the offense as the senior
attackman registered 11 total
points last season.
A small void which must be
filled on offense is the result of
the graduation losses of Tom
Sharp and Jeff Wolford. The duo
combined to score 25 total
points last year.
"Hopefully, this year 's
scoring will be more balanced ,"
McMinn said. "We lost two key
CV Classifieds
1983-S4 STATEGRANT«.PEUAPPLICATIONDEALINE: Filing deadline for the
Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) grant Is May 1,
1983. For Pell grant consideration , PHEAA must receive your form before
March 15, 1913; BUT THE SOONER YOU SEND (T IN, THE BETTER.
Failure to comply with these deadlines could result In a delay of your PELL
grant and State awards, or even 'exclusion from Hie'ellglbte' cippllcant
pool for the 1983-84 award year:; "'
INTERESTED IN BECOMING AN OWL (Orientation Workshop Leader) this
summer? Applications are now available in the Councellng Center, Room
17, Ben Franklin. For more Information , call 4255 or stop In Room 17. Be
sure to complete your application NOW as the first training session
was held on Thursday, 4/7/83. Our next training session will be
Tuesday, 4/12/83. If you are Interested In being an. OWL, make
every effort to attend this training session.
APPLICATIONS are now being taken for the Campus Judicial Board for the
academic year 1983-84. -Interested students , should; contact Cathe
Kemmarer , ext. 2845 or Mr. Richard Haupt , ext. 4091 for Information. Application deadline will be April 16, 1983.
to THE OWNER of the car that was hit on 3rd St. Leave you name and number in Box 3196 KUB so I can contact you.
Kent Hagedorn
PLAYER-COACH Craig McMinn demonstrates a behind-theback pass during spring practice. The senior attackman Is
expected to be one of the club's leading scorers.
LOST: Very Important keys on a miniature trolley car key chain with
"BOB" on it. REWARD. Call Wendy at 784-3085.
LAST DAY to register to vote for the May primaries is April 18. Registration
forms can be picked up at the CAS office (3rd floor-KUB) or downtown at the courthouse.
TO: INSTRUCTORS, ADVISORS, AND EDITORS: Thirty-nine students have
prereglstered for 20.205, Feature Writing/for FALL SEMESTER, 1983, though
we have four sections with a total seating capacity of sixty. Therefore,
cancelled was 20.205-02 of Feature Writing and substituted was 20.305
JOURNALISM SEMINAR MWF -12 — BCH 105 — Mr. Savage.
Personals
TO: BRIAN O'DONNELL, ELLEN HARABIN, SUE GOTTSHALL, LISA SAMARA,
KEVIN CHERN AND MARK DAVIS...Welcomo to Montour Hall 11 Looking
Very Much Forward To Working With You. — John, Doug, Chris and
Donald.
KINKO: YOU ARE a great big brbTKarl Love ya , WEEPER P.S. Tell Superman that I think he's pretty OK, tool
CONGRATULATIONS
new sisters of PHI IOTA CHI SEVENTEENTH...We love
tUTPrta ffi^Aj !^^^^aCTS^T^!£^B^^^M^^^^a!«fc&E»^«^^iw^!»
j^a
you! I
CONGRATULATIONS! To the 10th Pledge class of AST. You great Tau
Women. TF and all that TauTau. .
. '." ' .
SANDY, SUE, LISA & BETH: You guys .are the bost l
PAIGE GREEB'T - Got psyched for a "wild & Crazy" Ohio weekend.
love yall!
CHI SIG PUKEr...thanks far ajqcketful. 'y, • L '
'
CATHY...Vanllla Isn't all that boring^ Z- i '.. ".- -. .- ""
^
PTWF"**""""*"5
¦ H i;
•¦ ".
•A '
¦
¦
¦
¦
!
¦
"
.
ii
-•—
¦
'
Mover Throws No-Hitter
Huskies Blank Mansfield , Susquehanna
By MARY HASSENPLUG
The Bloomsburg women 's
softball team " continued its
quest for a second National
championship crown
by
sweeping two doubleheaders to
raise its record to 10-1.
The Huskies took two from
Mansfield State College behind
outstanding pitching in both
games. Veteran All-American
Tina Souders hurled a one-hitter
in the opener on the way to a 9-0
victory. Mansfield's lone hit
came in the fifth inning, when
second baseman Sue Patrick
poked a change-up up the
middle, to ruin Souder's shot at
a no-hitter. Souders struck out
seven and walked one to earn
her fifth shutout.
Patrick J. Murphy
SOUOERS releases a strike on her way to an 11
strike-out , one hit victory over Susquehanna.
I
I
I
The Husky offense came
through with 11hits, sparked by
catcher Denise Henderson's 33 performance. Shortstop Anne
Schmidt drove in two runs while
going 1-3. A four run third
inning highlighted the scoring,
paced by singles off the bats of
Henderson, Deb Long, and Jean
Millen.
The second game of the
doubleheader gave freshman
pitcher Ch ris Moyer a chance
to prove that the Huskies do
have depth in their pitching
DON'T
LEAVEYOURCAREER
TOCHANCE.
staff. Moyer fired a no-hitter to
earn her second victory . The
offense backed her up with nine
hits in the 5-0 win.
Ka thy Berry hit a perfect 3-3
for the day while Moyer aided
her own cause by going 2-3 with
one RBI. The scoring started
early as the Huskies knocked in
two runs in the first. With Mary
Hassenplug and Schmidt on
base, Henderson laid down a
sacrifice bunt, and the two
runners scored when the throw
frdm first was wild, trying to
get Hassenplug as she rounded
third. The Huskies added two
more runs in the third when
Carolyn Harley drove in Sue
Hicks with a sacrifice fly .to left ,
and Chris Moyer singled hi
Laurie Snyder.
Bloomsburg's tight defense
did not commit an error in the
two games and was aided by
the fine play of third baseman
Kathy Berry and shortstop
Anne Schmidt. Snyder used her
stretch and sure glove to
complete a Husky double play.
Bloomsburg followed the
Mansfiled sweep with a second
over Susquehanna university.
Souders fired a one-hitter in the
opening game, followed by
Moyer's two-hitter.
Souders came on strong in the
late innings to finish with 11
strikeouts while walking three
on the way to a 2-0 shutout. With
the victory, Souders increased
her record to 7-0 while giving up
only 11 hits in 48 innings. She
has struck out 62, while issuing
three bases on balls. The
shutout dropped her ERA to
0.15.
BSC had five hits with Deb
Schneiderhan claiming two
singles, and Schmidt, Berry,
and Kathy Baha n each reaching
on-base hits.
The Huskies scored right
away as Loang walked, Kris
Zimmerman sacrificed her
to second, Schmidt singled,
Henderson was hit by a pitch,
and Millen walked to force in
the run.
The final marker came in the
fourth after Behan singled,
Schneiderhan dropped a bunt
single, and Berry knocked a
base nit behind the shortstop to
score Behan.
In the second game, the
Huskies
overpowered
Susquehanna in a 12-0 route.
Moyer game up only two hits
while striking out three and
walking four to win her third
game.
The bats were loaded as they
pounded out 11 hits while
scoring in every inning. Henderson once again held the hot
bat as she hit 3-5 and drove in
two runs. Moyer helped herself
with an impressive day at the
plate. She went 2-4 with a double
and a home run to knock in
three runs. Freshman second
baseman Karen Hertzler
contributed two hits and an RBI
while using her extensive reach
to make two outstanding
defensive plays.
The 10-1 Huskies will look to
extend their five-game winning
streak when they host
Miseracordia on Tuesday, April
12 at 2:00.
¦
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Patrick J. Murphy
SUPER STRETCH: First baseman Jean Millen shows her
form as she stretches for the put out.
Media of