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Mon, 10/14/2024 - 15:19
Edited Text
Thought For The Day
• Stress can be a "mess," so don't
let if get to you I

CAS Fee Policy Changed

JEFF BACHMAN
Feature Editor
HARRISBURG — BU and the
other 13schools of the State System
of Higher Education (SSHE) will
not collect the Commonwealth
Association for Student 's (CAS) fee
for the next school year due to a
recommendation passed Tuesday
by the SSHE's Board of Governors.
The Board voted unanimously to
abolilsh the current collection
procedure, established in 1978, and
create a new method, opposed by
CAS, which ends the SSHE universities responsibility to collect the
fee. Some 65 CAS leaders and supporters attended the meeting.
The recommehation was made

by Evelyn Crawford, chairperson
of the Board's Student Relations
Committee. The public was granted an hour to voice its opinions, after which, without discussion, the
Board decided.
J. Edwards Smith, acting chairperson of the Board , said the
decision, "was the right thing to do
in light of the circumstances
outlined by the committee (Student
Relations) . " According to
Crawford the 14 university
presidents are opposed to having
the universities collect the fee.
Mary Washington, vice-president
of CAS, said the "State System has
turned on the group that has
worked so hard for its existence

(the State Systems)."
CAS, the student funded and
operated lobby for the SSHE, and
the Board have been in conflict
over the fee since July. The conflict
centered on how the fee would be
collected and whether it would be
voluntary or refundable.
Until now, in a method favored
by CAS, the fee was collected along
with other fees by the university.
The fee was mandatory but refunds
were available. The Board ,
however, wanted to make the fee
voluntary and remove the universities as the collecting agencies.
Such a change in policy, said
Washington, would severely cut
CAS funding.
According to CAS, a compromise
between the two positions was
worked at a meeting of CAS and
SSHE representatives Oct. 11. The
compromise proposed that the
universities continue to collect the
fee, but the payment be voluntary.
If students did not wish to pay they
could withhold the fee while paying
their regular bills. Under the old

Scheduling

INSIDE
FRIDAY:
-Adoptive Mother,
Partll
-Hooters *Preview

policy a student would have to pay
the fee first and then ask for his
refund. The Board, however, rejected the compromise at their Oct. 18
meeting. Although the compromise
was raised by CAS at Tuesdays
meeting, no one on the Board commented.
A fee related issue that has yet to
be resolved is the disposition of
CAS fees currently in escrow. According to Crawford, the fees were
put in escrow so the money would
be available while the various
universities informed their students of the availability of refunds, and
for an additional three-week period
in which to apply for return.
Crawford has no idea as to the
future disposition of the remaining
funds. According to .her no one on
the Board has been assigned to look
at the issue.
CAS's Washington does not consider the Board's decision on fee
policy final. She pledged to "regain
control of our funding. We will continue to fight for the students rights
to organize and self taxation.''

A Complicated Process

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Vincent Price speaks to students at the various events during his campus residence.
During the weekend he stayed at the Hotel Magee and met and greeted many area
people. Tffe hjghlight of his stay was tiie . concert he narrated on Sunday with the
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KELLIE FITHIAN
Staff Writer
Although many students complained about the scheduling
process this semester, they were
careful and understanding, according to Ken Schnure of the
registrar 's office.
Schnure
apoligized for the long lines and explained the scheduling mix up at
the Student Senate meeting on
Monday night.
Schnure explained that the
registrar did not intend to complicate the procedure. They wanted
a program that would have a set
number of students scheduling
every 15 minutes, based on their
class schedules. According to
Schnure, this would be complex,
but effective. However, the time
schedule, which should have been
completed by Sept. l, was not
ready. - . .. ' .¦ • .•' •. ¦
•' . .. . ¦ .- ,-

Therefore, the registrar's office
had to make up a time schedule by
hand. They evaluated the number
of students in each credit class and
the number of hours the coffeehouse would be open for
scheduling. They then decided to
give seniors and juniors longer
scheduling hours, and sophomores
and freshmen shorter hours. Unfortunately the plan did not work,
said Schnure.
Schnure said the main reasons
the process backfired was because
students did not have enough time
to complete their schedule, students did not have alternate courses
listed, the regitrar misjudged the
need for courses in some areas, and
as courses got filled, students,
especially f r e s h m e n , and
sophomores, had to go through the
lines more than once.
. v • , (Continued on Page 3)

Letters

Dear Editor :
Your call for the abolition of attendance requirements in University
courses last Friday needs a faculty response. At first I was ready to
dismiss it as predictable youth-inspired antinomianism, but the
widespread confusions of educational philosophy among students makes
a fuller statement of the rationale behind this policy of some use, particularly in view of the national outcry against declining academic standards.
Students earn usually 3 credits or semestral hours based on a course of
study consisting of 45 hours of instruction. When they register in a class,
they make a contract to be there for those hours with the school, the state
and Federal governments^yes, and their parents, too. When the instructor gives a passing grade, he is legally certifying that the student
took that course bona fide. How can that be a meaningful testimony if he
does not know whether the student is there or not? We are all too familiar
with phantom students who are never in class, but manage shomehow to
squeak through on generous grading practices. To receive credit for a
course not truly attended is a fraud. Many governmental and
organizational student programs require certification.
Many classes have activities and laboratories as part as their work;
others have no texts and depend on instructor knowledge; those that have
texts involve interpretation and discussion. When a student enters a
course, he enters a little temporary community, which he supports by his
presence and participation. We vote with our feet, we are where our
heart is, and so attendance is a barometer of student interest.
When you really consider it carefully, you will see that attendance
helps the student most of all. It certainly is a dull chore for the instructor,
beset by all the little claims and adjustments pertaining to keeping these
records. Since students suffer from human frailty it is probably helpful to
them to have a practical goal for going to class when they don't feel like
it. Often, attendance role is the only contact between the instructor and
the large number of "wall-flower" students who populate every class.
One would wonder how sports teams, plays, musical performances,
forensics, student governing bodies could carry out their tasks without
consistent attendance. If that is so, then how much more for academics,
the primary purpose of a college?
Look at it this way: Is it your intention when you leave school to make
the same demand on your employer? I will report and work when I feel
like it, and the other workers will fill me in ( presuming here that the other
workers don't feel the same way you do) The University is supposed to
prepare you for life. Leaving you totally without control is hardly reflective of the realities or needs of society.
Finally, the old arguments about "responsible" students who "get the
notes" (a contradiction in itself) just does not square with student
realities, even if there are some responsible students who do get notes
from good notetakers. Then complex, subtle presentation of a 50—75
minute lecture can never be adequately reconstructed in this manner.
Think of how the student body over the years, by cutting Fridays and
holidays en masse under the ubiquitous and ill-prioritized cry of "getting

Executive Editor
Managing Editor
Production Manager
News Editors
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Feature Editors
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c°Py Editor

Advertising Manager
Ad. Assistant
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Photo Department
Cartoonist
Circulation Manager ,
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Business Staff .


Advisor

The Voice Staff
.

Stephanie Richardson
Ernie Long
Betsy Wollam
Ninette Friscia, Lynne Sassani
Rob Flanagan, Lori Leonard
Jeff Bachman, Nancy Schaadt, Corty Pennypacker
j orm staman
Wade Douglas, Mary Hassenplug
Mike Albright

Art Carucci

Tony Crouthamel
Jacquelyn Page
Mary Mohl, Donna Stone, Chris Thren, Ann Strope, Todd Jones
. . ; . . .'
Kent Hagedorn, Bob Yoder
pau | rjerres
Sarah Hackforth
Neil Renaldi
Fran Meckel, Joanne Wizna
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. Richard Savage
_
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a ride" has unilaterally reduced the hours of instruction specified by the
school calendar.
I certainly agree that faculty and administration have never followed a
fully integrated policy on this matter, and probably it would be helpful if
they did. But, then, the instructor has to have some sort of sovereignty in
his class if he is going to run it at all, and diversity of class is perhaps part
of higher education.
I am af raid that it is an all-too-common fallacy in our culture to divorce Freedom from Responsibility, which you have done by rolling them
Anarchy. r A • „T1 , - , rti , x
together
into one, which spells
6
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Instructor Who Docks Students
-.
A Grade For Poor Attendance

BLOOM COUNTY

Faculty Lay-Offs
There just aren't as many college
teaching positions as there used to
be, according to Pennsylvania
State University's professor Kenneth Mortimer, who related his survey results at the recent American
Council on Education-Association
of Universities and Colleges of
Canada
.
? Most of
the 4,000 layoffs reported
in his survey happened in smaller
public universities and less-wellknown private institutions. Of the
4,000 affected, 1,200 had even
reached tenure, which has been
more difficult for professors to
achieve in the last five years.

Double Standard

Women will be reheved-and men
will be irritated-to know that overweight women 'are healthier than
overweight men.
A new study by Swedish researcher Per Bjorntorp explains,
saying that there \re two kinds of

by Berke Breathed

fat: labile (changeable, usually
found in men ) and stabile (fixed ,
found in women) .
Fat deposits on women's legs and
hips tend to act as nutritional
stores during child-bearing,
whereas abdominal fat (most often
in men) can cause higher diabetes
rates, fat in the blood and high
blood pressure.

OtfFTirlEVml!ft, McNauqM Syndicate, inc .

Part II

Adoptive Mother Talks to CCM
Giving these children a chance
and basic '£elf worth is what Flynn
has been trying to do both
professionally and personally.
She recalled the difficulties she
experienced 14 years ago with her
first adoption. Many agencies felt
the Flynn 's were too young and
inexperienced to adopt. The adoption agencies couldn't understand
why the Flynns would want to
adopt when they could have their
own children. The agencies
believed the Flynns should wait until they become more secure.

Soon after Laurie's husband
finished law school and they bought
a house, they adopted their first
child, Lea. She was a six-week-old
black baby. She was "exactly the
right child," stated Flynn.
The Flynns second adopted child
was Daniel. He was six months old.
His parents were both retarded and
instituionalized. Daniel was
assumed to be retarded, but he is
not, and is now in the regular
school system.
The Flynns third adopted child

Scheduling
(Continued from Page 1)

Schnure said the registrar is inv e s t i g a t i n g various new
possibilities to facilitate the
scheduling process in the future.
They .are trying to predict what
courses students will need by
checking past class schedules and
class enrollment figures. Schnure
said starting Nov. 16 there will be a
schedule completion period for all
students who did not get at least 15
credits. There will be a drop-ad
period in the spring.
In other matters, the Student
Senate approved the purchase of
text books to keep on reserve at the
library each semester. The purchase will benefit students who do
not receive loan money on schedule
for payment of books. Now students will be able to use books at the
library until they receive their
loan.
The Student Senate also passed
an equipment sale policy which
states that all equipment, uniforms, and other items, purchased by

CGA are the property of CGA even
though other organizations use the
materials. To dispose of the equipment, permission must be obtained
from CGA .in advance, and any
money raised must be returned to
the organization 's CGA budget.
The Student Senate allocated
$175 to the Sociology-Social Welfare
Club to send five members to the
National . Association of Social
Workers Symposium. The members will learn about new
programs, current issues and
graduate school opportunities .
CAS coordinator Tammy Clewell
reported that CAS will sponsor a
program—The Day After The Day
After—on Nov. 21 as a follow up to
the film, "The Day After." The
film is a hypothetical situation
about what would happen after a
nuclear war . The program will include a replay of the film and a
discussion with Jeff Hunsicker, a
member of the nuclear disarmament organization.

was a 14-year-old American Indian,
Sarah. Sarah's mother was an
alcoholic, her father was abusive.
When adopting Sarah, the Flynn 's
were asked to consider Mike, her
brother. This time the Flynns adopted two children.
The fourth adoption was to be a
six-year-old Vietnamese boy,
Christopher . Because of inaccurate
records, Christopher turned out to
be a twelve-year-old boy with a
mustache. Christopher came to the
Flynns with a bloated belly, and he
believed he was in another orphanage. It took Christopher time
to realize that the Flynns were not
an orphanage but a family .¦
Andrew, the fifth adoption was
the "victim of labeling." He was
viewed as "semi-autistic." His
parents were mentally retarded
and institutionalized. All he needed
was a stimulating environment the Flynn family offered this. He is
not autistic.
Amy, a Vietnamese girl, came to
the Flynns for one weekend when

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Nov. 17 '- 8 p.m.
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19 - 2:00 pm, 8pm

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she was fifteen. She stayed and
became the Flynn 's sixth adoption.
Flynn is extremely happy with
her family. She cheerfully recalls
many funny times. For instance,
she told how she once went to McDonalds and the manager came up
and asked her the name of her
organization.
When asked what the. biggest
problem in the Flynn family is, she
claimed that it is not age differences or the blending of
cultures, but socks no one can find
mates to.
Flynn strongly believes that you
get back what you give to adoptive
children. She has found this in her
personal life and strongly advises
everyone to think of the benefits of
adoption.
Flynn views adoption as the
"direct opportunity to change the
life of a few children." In a world
filled with war and poverty, she
believes adoption is one way to
make a difference, an "opportunity
to make one little thing that lasts."

Tuesday, Thursday: 1:00 - 9:00

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SHOW
Friday & Saturday

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|'TheDayAfter TheDay After' |
PETER SANCHEZ
Staff Reporter
The fear of nuclear war plagues everyone. For years people have
asked, what will happen to us if there is a nuclear war?
"The Day After," an ABC Theater production, will depict the effects of
nuclear holocaust and the devastation that would follow.
The story centers on the average people of Kansas City and surrounding area. The story puts viewers.in the middle of this community before,
during and after a nuclear attack.
The two-hour-and-fif teen-minute drama will air November 20 at 8:00
pm and will be shown on the wide screen in Kehr Union, followed by a
discussion of the implications of the film.
Several programs, including replaying of the film and discussion
groups of concerned faculty and students, will take place on Monday,
November 21, as a follow-up to the showing of "The Day After."
Monday's programs will be titled "The Day After The Day After" sponsored by the Day After Program Committee of CAS.
Discussions will focus on the implications of nuclear war, medical consequences, environmental impact, and ethics of nuclear war. All faculty
members, staff , and students are invited to participate.
The Day After the Day After include:
9:00 -11:00
Replay-The Day Af ter-KUB, Room A
"11:00 -12:00
Discussion of the film - Faculty and Student Panel
12:00 - 1:00
-Lunch with Jeff Hunsicker, from the PA Nuclear
Freeze Committee
1:00 - 3:00
Replay-The Day Af ter-KUB, Room A
3:00 - 4:00
Panel discussion led by Jeff Hunsicker, faculty and
students
6:00-8:00
Replay-The Day Af ter-KUB, Lounge area
8:00 -10:00
Panel discussion led by Greg Osterberg, from SANE
According to Ted Shanoski, a member of the History Department, no
one knows all the answers but the exchange of ideas, at the discussions,
will help everyone become better informed. Letting them make up their
oWn minds.

Don 't Let Off- Campus Living
Get You Dawn
PETER SANCHEZ
Staff Writer
Approximately 42 percent of all registered students at Bloomsburg
University live off-campus . Some of these students live in private homes,
others live in apartment buildings, old homes, or in trailers.
Some can walk to campus; others have to rely on a car. Some live with
many people; others live alone.
The only thing that unites these people is that they all decided to live
off-canipus. They all had questions ; others had serious problems.
That's why the Off-Campus Student Association (OCSA) started. OCSA, a new organization, wants to help solve the problems and answer the
questions that may arise while living off-campus.
OCSA would like to serve as the link between off-campus students and
the University. Through OCSA students can voice their ideas, opinions,
and concerns.
OCSA was started last year by CGA Vice-President Vickie Cilurso.
Cilurso set OCSA up as a one-year temporary committee of CGA, with
Cathy Bause and Peter Sanchez as co-chairpersons and Richard Haupt as
the advisor. Haupt, the assistant director of Residence Life , is familiar
with the problems of off-campus living.
Cilurso based her plans for OCSA on Perm State's OTIS, Organization
for Town Independent Students. OTIS is independently run by students
for students and is the largest organization for off-campus students in the
state.
Among then*services , OTIS provides apartment listings, helps students
understand leases , helps with housing complaints, and publishes a
booklet called 'Foundations,' which answers many of the questions of
living off-campus.
OCSA hopes to also provide services such as OTIS' and to expand on
those services already provided by other organizations: the CGA shut(Continued on Page 6)

BLOOMSBURG UNIVERSITY
COMMUTERS'ASSOCIATION
pr esents...

2nd Annual Craft Fair
Friday & Saturday - November 18th - 19th
10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Multi Rooms A, B, & C
Kehr Union
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Hooray For The Hooters'

With an album to be released
around Thanksgiving, the reformed HOOTERS are the hottest
thing around Philadelphia and
their coming to Bloomsburg. They
will perform in Haas Auditorium
on Wednesday, November 30, 1983,
with special guest BERU REVUE.
The Hooters released their first
big hit "ALL YOU ZOMBIES" two
and a half years ago. Since then the
five man pop-reggar band from
Philadelphia has lived through club
and college" dates from Virginia to
Boston, the release of 2 45's and a
five month split from February to
June.
The split gave Eric Bazilian, and

|

Rob Hyman, two of the founding
members a chance to regroup and
come out stronger than ever. With
three new players, John Lelley,
Rob Meller, and David Uosinkien.
The past six months have seen the
group through many more club appearances and a trip to the recording studio to Cape "Amore " their
upcoming album.
The band has made story lines in
many top music magazines along
the East coast including Bill Board
and Melody Maker.
To get tickets to the show bring
$3.00 and your student ID to the
union, if you don't have an ID bring
$4.50.

Money For Your Can
A new vending machine service gives you money back if you put in an
empty can.
With many states now passing laws requiring the return of soda cans
and bottles, retailers are looking for a more convenient way to refund the
money. The machines rent for nearly $5,000 a year. The "reverse vending machines"are made by Environmental Products Co.

The Hooters will perform in Haas Auditorium on Wednesday, November 30.

Spring Break '84 ^V^T
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'Step On a Crack

See It Now Or Forever
Hold Your Peace

Tonight and tomorrow night are your last two chances to see the Bloomsburg Players production Step On A Crack/unless you plan to travel to
Japan this summer to see it.
Step On A Crack, a hilarious comedy, is the first production of the new
Child Drama program here at Bloomsburg. Although it is child drama, it
is written for audiences of all ages.
The play revolves around Ellie Murphy (Patty Neilon) the impish
heroine. Ellie comes complete with imaginary playmates, Lana ( Cyndee
Fellers) and Frisbee (Jeff Davis ) who live in her toy box. Her mother
died when Ellie was only four and the relationship between Ellie and her
father, Max (Pat Murphy ) is a special one. When Max remarries, Elbe's
reaction to Lucille, Max 's bride (Julie Pyle) wreaks havoc in the Murphy
household. The play offers hilarious comedy combined with much
emotion as Ellie struggles to find both herself and her family.
v Step On A Crack*was performed last night and will be performed at 9:30
a.m. and 8 p.m. today. It will also be performed at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
tomorrow. All performances are at Carver Hall.

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"YOU RING, WE BRING "

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Campus Shorts
'Image '

IMAGE, BUP's signing group
will present two concerts in Haas
on Sunday, Nov. 20 at 2 p.m. and
Monday, Nov. 21. Please plan to attend;

Housing

Students who desire to live oncampus for the 1984-85 academic
year and are not eligible for the
Spring lottery (over 65 credits at
the end of the semester ) must sign
up in the Residence Life Office no
later than Dec. 5. Sixty spaces in
the seven residence halls have been
saved and should there be more
than sixty interested students, a
mini lottery will be held.

Workshop

"Songs of Struggle and Social
Change," a workshop by folk
singer Priscilla Herdman, will be
held today in the coffeehouse from
12tol:30 p.m.
During this workshop, Ms. Herdman will perform and discuss
songs that express themes of interior struggle and growth and of
revolutionary social change. The



Off-campus living
(Continued fro m Page 4)

songs will cover many issues including women's lib, black, lib and
recent political upheavals in Latin
America.
Ms. Herdman writes some of her
own music and sings contemporary
songs by others. She also reserches
and sings traditional folk music
and has set to music the poetry of
Henry Lawson, who is considered
the "Carl Sandberg" of Australia.
Priscilla Herman's credits include three albums, "The Water
Lily," "Forgotten Dreams," and
"Season of Change." She has also
done numerous club, concert, and
festival performances.

tlebus, and the publications put out by the Residence Life Office .
OCSA's main concern at present, is getting people involved. "We have
to get people out to help us. This organization will only be as good as the
people who will put time into it," Bause said after a recent meeting.
The success of this organization depends on personal involvement. Any
students, on or off campus, interested in OCSA should read the Bloomsburg University Today for the announcement of the next meeting.

Ski Austria For Credit

Students interested in receiving physical education credit for snow
skiing will be able to earn one semester hour through the Austrian Ski
Program sponsored by the Pennsylvania Consortium for International
Education (PCIE). The PCIE which represents all universities ovtfhed by
the Commonwealth has offered the program eleven times in the past.
Students from several universities participate each year.
With the expanded January semester break on all campuses virtually
all 14 universities are now able to participate. The program will run from
Jan. 2-14, 1984. The program is priced at $1,350 plus $62 for academic
credit - and includes : round trip jet transportation with Pan American
Airlines, all transportation in Austrilia, accommodations in double rooms
with bath, breakfast; and dinner each day, lift pass every day, two hours
of ski instruction by Austrian ski instructor, private transportation to
four different ski resorts , and a tour escort from New York in addition a
city tour of Salzburg, Austria and an overnight stay in Munich is included.
Radstadt, a medieval walled city where the group will stay, is in the
center of Austria's best ski area . It is located in the Tauern Alpine Range
which has more winter resorts than any other alpine area . Students interested in the program should contact Dr. William Carlough, chairperson of the philosophy and Anthropology department, and director of
International Education at Bloomsburg University.

Correction
In the Nov. Il issue, an article
called "New Housing?" Appeared
written by Durrell Reichley. The
VOICE would like to make a
correction. In the second
paragraph it should read: Currently 2,350 students are living in
residence halls designed for 2 ,100.
Many off-campus students live in
substandard housing, and are
being overcharged," Parrish said.
In the article published a line was
omitted.

University
Bloomsburg
NEW B US SER
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Penn State, Lehighton, Allentown and Bethlehem

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784-8689
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Men's Intramurals

Three Seasons Open This Weekend
Nelson Field House will be the
place to be this weekend for the
avid sports fan, as three Bloomsburg teams open their winter
schedules on the home turf. Action
gels underway Friday morning
with the wrestling team hosting the
Bloomsburg Invitational. The first
round action starts at 10 a.m. and
will continue through the day and
evening with the finals and consolation finals Saturday night.
In last years tournament, the
Huskies placed a solid second
behind the champion Clarion
squad. . 190 pounder, John McFadden will be the only returning
champion for BU. The Husky
junior defeated Clarion's Brian
Kesneck 13-6 to cop the first of BU's
two individual crowns.
Senior Woody Fry also reached
the finals last year before having
his winning streak ended by
Virginia's Jim Pagano in the 126
pound championship.
Among teams expected to compete are the defending champion
Clarion, Penn St., Virginia, Kutztown, and Bucknell.
After the wrestling mats are
cleared off the floor it will be time
for the basketball team to hit the
court as they open against the
Colonels from King's College Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m. The
Huskies will be coming off an incredible year in which they went
23-10, while advancing all the way
to the NCAA Division II quar-

terfinals before losing to eventual
national champion Wright State. It
was the farthest a Charlie
Chronister coached squad had ever
reached ; and almost totally unexpected since the team depended so
heavily on the efforts of its first
players.
BU will be led by Ail-American
candidate Barry Francisco. The
6'3" senior guard was the Huskies
leading scorer a year ago with
nearly 15points a game. Also being
counted on will be a trio of
sophomore forwards, Glen Noack,
Shane Planutis and Pat Flanagan;
and the center duo of Wes Wright
and Randy Calone.
The third BU starting its season
at home will be^ the men's swimming team. The tankmen host their
own invitational relays Saturday
afternoon at 1 p.m. Eli
McLaughlin's charges are the two
time defending champions, but
should be challenged by newcomer
West Chester and Lycoming, which
placed second a year ago.
Heading the tankmen's lineup
will be tri-captains Matt Thran,
Phil Christian, and Tom DiMarco.
A fourth BU squad will start their
campaign but will be on the road.
The Lady Huskies swimmers will
invade the Naval Academy on Sunday. Coach Mary Gardiner thinks
that this could be her best team
ever, but the Lady Middies will
give her swimmers a severe test
right off the bat.

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led off the eighth with by poking a
home run into the gap in center
field. Two singles, two outs, two
throwing errors later, and three
unearned runs gave the Misfits
their second consecutive softball
title.
"It wasn't pretty, " said Misfit
captain Jim Innerst, "but all year
long we've found a way to win
games." And the Misfits have won.
The one run victory was their 14th
consecutive win dating back to the
middle of last year.

The Misfits weren't handed the
title, they played top-flight softball
in the first three rounds of the
playoffs, allowing only seven runs
in three games. "Over the course of
the season, our tough defense has
been the difference," said outfielder John Maloski. Maloski was
a member of the infamous "peach
pit crew" that was recruited to
patrol the Misfit outfield this year.
With softball being finished for
the year, the next major sport on
the agenda is volleyball. The tournament will start this week in
Nelson Fieldhouse.
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JIM KNAUB
Sports Writer
In what was not a classic
exhibition of Softball prowess, the
opportunistic Misfits retained their
intramural softball title by
defeating POD 12-11 in eight innings.
'
The championship contest was a
mistake filled affair as each team
kept trying to give the game away.
"Usually our defense plays tough,"
said Misfit third baseman Bob
Sti;eit, "but that was not the case
today."
The Misfits were ahead 6-3 going
into the top of the seventh when
POD, the letters POD stand for absolutely nothing, scored 5 runs to
take a two run lead. In the bottom
of the seventh, the Misfits countered with a single by Streit and a
triple by Wayne Staudt. Tom Embleton drove a sacrifice fly to left
field to score Staudt and force the
game into extra innings.
POD scored three runs in the
eighth inning and it looked like they
would force the final playoff game,
but then the wheels came off the
proverbial wagon. Mike Kozelsky

TERM PAPERS, resume. Theses by Word Processor. Better quality and more accurate than
typing. Very reasonable rates. Call 784-4579.

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Misfits Claim Softball Crown

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INSIDE:

¦'¦

P. 7 Three BU sports teams will open their season this weekend at Nelson Fieldhouse.

Men s Basketball Preview

Huskies May Be The Team To Beat In PSAC
MARTY HASENFUSS
Sports Writer

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All-American candidate Barry Francisco, the lone senior, will be leading the Huskies' in
Sunday afternoon's opener against Kings College. He led the team with 14.7 points
per game during last year's 23-10 campaign, it was the Huskies' fourth straight NCAA Tournament
appearance.

Flickner and Sheptock

Gndders Claim ECAC Honors

The Bloomsburg University football team ended the 1983 campaign
in style on Satruday with a 28-10
triumph over visiting Lycoming
and both the Huskies' offensive and
defensive leaders were rewarded
accordingly.
Freshman tailback Jeff Flickner
was named as the Eastern College

For Flickner, who carried

22 times f o r 111 ya rdsand
two TD's, it marks the third
time that he has won the
(<
Rookie of the We ek "
honor this season.
Athletic Conference's (ECAC )
"Rookie of the Week" while
sophomore linebacker Frank Sheptock was selected to the ECAC
"Weekly Honor Roll" as well as
being chosen as the Pennsylvania
Conference's Eastern Division
"Player of the Week."
For Flickner, who carried 22
times for 111' yards and two touchdowns, it marks the third time that
he has won the "Rookie" honors

__

this season. On Saturday, he raced
81 yards on the game's third play
for one score and hauled in a 28
yard Mike Glovas pass for the
other. This season the 5-11, 190 lb.
performer was the club's leading
rusher and scorer with 800 yards
and seven touchdowns (six
rushing, one receiving) respectively. He also had 11receptions for
87 yards and returned five kickoffs
for 105 yards.
Sheptock's honor is the fifth time
the ECAC has seen fit to select the
Huskies' inside linebacker after
outstanding efforts. He had a fine
afternoon being credited with 18
tackles and rcovering a Lycoming
fumble. His statistics simply added
to the huge lead he has on the team
in total defesive points (236),
heading the next defender by 111
points. He has contributed 140
tackles, recovered four fumbles,
intercepted three passes and
knocked down two others,
Bloomsburg completed its first
non-losing season since 1978 with a
5-5 mark under second year head
coach GeorgeLandis.

Bloomsburg University's men's
basektball team will have some
high expectations to live up to this
year as they are already being
labeled as "the team to beat" in the
PSAC for the 1983-84 season. As the
surprise team of 82-83 Bloomsburg
finsihed with a 11-3 mark in the
PSAC and 23-10 overall. That team
sported a number of untested
players who have a year of experience under their belts which
makes them seem to be a powerful
team in the NCAA Division II this
season. The Huskies have already
been nationally ranked by the
United States Basketball Writers
Association at 18th in the country in
their pre-season poll and many are
looking for Bloomsburg to go
higher.
The Huskies will be led by their
extremely talented senior captain
from Wilkes-Barre, Barry Francisco. The versatile Francisco ( 6-3)
brings back with him his 14.7 point
average which led the Huskies a
year ago. Francisco was named to
the 1983 ECAC Ail-Star team last
season along with being named the
Most Valuable Player in last years
Eastern Regional NCAA Division
II tournament.
Backing up Francisco will be the
1983 ECAC Co-Rookie of the Year
Glenn Noack. The Whitehall native
returns with his 12.2 point average
along with his team leading
rebounding abilities, 6 a game. The
sharp shooting 6-5 Noack also led
the Huskies in free throw percentage shooting a sparkling 80.2
percent from the charity stripe.
Bloomsburg will be looking to
senior Randy Colone, a 6-7 Woodbury, New Jersey native, to help on
the boards this year. Underneath
with Colone will be 6-8 junior Wes
Wright from Whitehall , who came
strong in the second half last
season and particularly in BU's upset of Cheyney in the East Regional
last year. Also helping out at the
forward slot will be a pair of 6-5
sophomores. Pat Flanagan from
White Haven and Shane Planutis
from West Hazelton. With
Flanagan's great hustle and the all
around good play of Planutis the
Huskies should make improvements on the boards this

season.
A major concern for the Huskies
will be the replacement of the outstanding point guard Terry
Conrad. Hoping to fill this sport in
the new season are freshman Todd
McLaughlin, a 6-1 point guard from
Tamaqua, Jerome Brisbon , a 5-9
point guard from Philadelphia 's
William Penn High arid Greg Johnston, a 5-10 guard from Sayre. Bill
Plasko, a 5-10 junior from
Tamaqua, will also be battling it
out with the newcomers for the
vacancy left by Conrad.
Cas Kosciolek, a 6-2 sophomore
from Lansford, will return at a
guard spot after starting on the
football team this fall. Two
newcomers round out the 83-84
squad. Bloomsburg native Dave
Koslosky, a 6-4 swingman, and Bob
McCullough, a 6-8 forward from
Paoli, will round out the Huskies
lineup.

GLEN NOACK

BU will be led again by the PSAC
and Eastern Basketball magazine
"Coach of the Year" Charles
Chronister. In his 13th season at
Bloomsburg, Chronister has compiled a fine 216-104 (.675) record
which includes 12 straight winning
seasons. Over Bloomsburg has
compiled 17 straight winning
years. Coach Chronister will be
assisted by Burt Reese, in his 16th
season, and Michael Herbert , now
in his 18th season. Bloomsburg will
have two fine graduate assistants
helping out the program this
season in Jon Bardsley, '82, and
Terry Conrad, '83.
Bloomsburg opens the 1983-84
season Sunday against King's
College at 2:00 p.m. at Nelson Field
House. The Huskieswill follow this
contest with a 7:30 p.m. meeting
Monday night against Allentown at

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