rdunkelb
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 19:04
Edited Text
Trivia of the Day

INSIDE
WEDNESDA Y:

What man refused the 1970 Best
Actor Award?
answer on p. 6
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-Crossword
Puzzle
-Les Estudiant
en France

Program Board
Fills Calendar
MARGARET WALDRON
Voice Contributor
Although many organizations are
beginning to plan upcoming activities the Program Board's activities began the first day. If you
saw the movie "Trading Places"
on Sunday, August 26, you witnessed the start of the Program
Board' s fall activities. The
Program Board , organizes social,
cultural, and educational entertainment for the university.
At their September 13 meeting
the members of the Program
Board discussed some of their upcoming events. Future events include a Trivia Hunt at the end of
September. On September 21 "We
Can Make You Laugh" will be held
in Carver Hall. This will be a show
where comedians will try to make
the audience laugh. The following
Sunday there will be a Coffeehouse
performance by Sadie Greensales,

a jug band.
October events include a Festival
Fall Run on the 13th. Participants
will be downtown merchants and
students running an obstacle course. Also, on the 14th there will be a
Punk Rock Party. Students can
dress punk, and prizes will be
awarded for the best costumes.
Other Program Board activities
include the widescreen TV in the
KUB. One of their weekly shows is
Monday Night Football.
The Program Board will also
supply bi-weekly bookmarks which
will be available at the KUB in
formation desk, \ library, and
university store.
Program Board President Judi
Palipkonich says, "It's never too
late to join." The Program Board is
always looking for new people with
new ideas. Their next meeting is
scheduled for Monday, October 1,
at 5:30 p.m.

NEWS

Rand Whipple in "Just Imagine" which was presented at the Alvina Krause Theater, Bloomsburg last week.

Across The World

DURRELL REICHLEY
News Editor
—President Reagan has
scheduled his first in-depth talk
with a senior Soviet official for September 28 in Washington. Reagan
will be meeting with Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei A. Gromyko.
—According to sources in
Washington, Ronald Reagan and
Walter Mondale will debate each
other on national television twice
next month. The debates are tentatively scheduled for October 7 in
Lousiville, Ky. and October 21 in
Kansas City Mo. A debate between
vice presidential candidates
George Bush and Geraldine
Ferraro will also be scheduled for
next month.
—Democratic Presidential Candidate Walter Mondale has

revealed a plan to cut the national
deficit by a combination of spending cuts and increased tax
revenue, lower interest rates, and
economic growth? According to
Mondale, under the plan, the 1989
deficit would be $86 billion, considerably less than the figure of
$263 billion now projected.
—According to Olympic officials,
the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics
were the most financially successful in history, making a surplus
of about $150 million.,$75 million of
the surplus will go to the U.S.
Olympic Committee; $50 million
will go to a foundation to develop
youth sports in Southern California ; and $25 million will be held in
reserve, possibly to help support
development of sports in Third
World nations.

—Secretary of State George P.
Schultz urged Vietnam to release
for resettlement in the" United
States all of its remaining political
prisoners and all children fathered
by American servicemen.
—The House ethics committee
voted unanimously to investigate
Rep. Geraldine A. Ferraro to determine whether or not she violated
House requirements by not
revealing her husband's business
interests on her annual financial
disclosurestatements.
—As Hurricane Diana travels out
to sea the damage toll in North
Carolina (as of Saturday ) is
estimated at $65.5 million and is expected to climb throughout the
week. Diana forced the evacuation
of about 13,000 people, however, no
deaths or injuries were blamed

directly oh the storm.
—Princess Diana of Great
Britain gave birth Saturday to a six
pound, 14 ounce boy, her second
child. The child was born at 4:20
p.m. at St. Mary 's Hospital in London. The child is the newest heir to
the 1,000-year-old British Crown after his father Prince Charles, and
brother, 2-year-old Prince William.
—Abbie Hoffman, one time campus radical and one of the Chicago
Seven charged with conspiracy after the 1968 Democratic National
Convention, says students today
have "designer brains" and are
sadly lacking in social consciousness. "I don't trust anyone
under 30," he told students at Marshall University in Huntington, W.
VA.

EDITORIAL

BLOOM COUNTY
by Berke Breathed

Recently I heard of a student with a dilemna. (Not that we aren't all in a
dilemna because we are stuck in Bloomsburg.) But this was a real
problem. The student, for a teaching of science class had to make a science demonstration table. OK-No dilemna yet. The professor explained the
uses of this little device and it seemed to me a worthwhile thing that a
future teacher might use. But, the student is required to make this little
beauty out of hardwood (quite an expense) and follow blueprints. I don 't
know about any of you, but I don 't even know the difference between hard
wood and soft wood let alone how to follow a blueprint. The professor then
went on to tell them to have dad or the boyfriend make it for them. Well
some of the lucky females don 't have boyfriends or fathers who just happen to be amatuer carpenters. OK. Lets say the person decides to take a
crack at being brave and make it themselves. Where does a college
student possiblyfind the necessary tools to make such an aparatus. I personally don 't keep a toolbox and a saw under my bed. I wonder what the
deans of the dorms would think about that. So the helpful professor
recommends taking the plans to a lumberyard. I would recommend that
the student also take a well stuffed billfold along. Those endeavors are not
cheap. This whole episode is not intended as an attack on one professor,
but merely as an eye opener to all professors who have the attitude that a
student has no other classes besides their own. I think the university
should develop a policy as to the work load per credit, i.e. how many large
projects a professor may assign per credit, how many tests per credit and
how much out of class research. That may help to lessen the levels of
stress for the average college student. (And we all know how much this
university is concerned with stress!)

LETTERS to the Editor
Why?

Dear Editor,
I have two things that are on my
mind that I have to complain about.
The first thing is, of course, the
new registration system.
Everybody went through it so there
really isn't anything to say about
the waste of time that it was. My
only question is why?
A perfectly good, workable
system was completely changed
for some, as my mother says,
"God-unknown, and he's not
talking," reason. In the good old
days we went to Centennial Gym on
Monday and didn't have to go to

any classes. Then it was changed to
registration and classes on the
same day, not that bad, but now
this. I have to ask why we were
made to stand in line for up to two
and a half hours?

The first open forum for the fall
semester is scheduled for Friday,
October 5, 1984 at 3 p.m. in the
Forum, located on the third floor of
the McCormick Center for the
Human Services. One topic for
discussion will be admissions and
enrollment management. Dr.
Jones and the vice presidents will
also be pleased to discuss other
topics of current interest.

VOICE STAFF

The second thing I'd like to complain about is the ripping up of the
sidewalk between the Union and
the Commons. Again I have to ask
why, more specifically,: why not?
Couldn't something have been done

CGA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL OFFICE HOURS
MONDAY
8:00

LisaVitaliano
Corresponding Sec.

9:00

Sean Mullen
Vice President

Rob Flanagan
Lori Leonard
Gary Wessner, Durrell Reichley
Christine Lyons
John Staman, Dan Clemens
Kathleen Bartunek
Mike Albright, Sarah Hackforth
Chris Thren, Mary Mohl
Mary Griswald, Jerry Re,
Steve Rohrbach, Mary St. Leger, Ken VVajda
Sarah Hackforth
Circulation Manager
Jack Reilly, Mary Mohl
Business Managers .
Jeff Bachman
Voice Consultant
Richard Savage
• . . . . . .. ...... ,. . . ¦
Advisor .

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

Lisa Vitaliano
Sean Mullen
(9:15)

Sean Mullen

Lisa Vitaliano
Sean Mullen
(9:15)

Sean Mullen

10:00

Kelly Klingel
Executive Assistant

11:00

Bret Hoffmaster
President

Bret Hoffmaster

Bret Hoffmaster

Bret Hoffmaster

Bret Hoffmaster

12:00

Kelly Lewis
Treasurer

Kelly Lewis

Kelly Lewis

Kelly Lewis

Kelly Lewis

Ed Ebert
Ed Ebert
Parlimentarian
Kelly Klingel
Executive Assistant

Ed Ebert

Ed Ebert

Ed Ebert

Kris Curtis
Kris Curtis
Project Coordinator
Becky Walker
Becky Walker
Recording Secretary

Kris Curtis

Doug Miller
Historian

Doug Miller

1:00

Executive Editor
Managing Editor
News Editors
Assistant News Editor
Features Editors
Assistant Features Editor
Sports Editors
Advertising Managers
Photographers

during the break between the summer and fall semesters when
students wouldn't have been so inconvenienced?.
Wondering Why

2:00

3:00

4:00
5:306:30

Kelly Klingel

Becky Walker

Doug Miller

Kelly Klingel

Kelly Klingel

Kris Curtis

.

Kris Curtis

Becky Walker

Becky Walker

Becky Walker

Doug Miller

Doug Miller

Becky Walker
Recording Secretary •

Please use the above office hours to reach the CGA officers with questions or problems.

Few problems
reported . . . yet

It 's been almost six months since
the Solomon .Amendment (which tied
student eligibility for federal aid to
registering for the draft) has been
law , and so far the Selective Service
and college financial-aid officers are
more vocal than the students being
affected.
While it 's difficult for colleges to
measure the number of students not
applying for aid because of objection
to the law, Selective Service officials
report a recent surge in draft registration.
Last summer, registrants increased
by 8-12,000. Selective Service publicity attributes the increase to lastminute financial-aid applicants who
anticipated the amendment would
become law during the school year.
Before the law went into effect ,
93-94 percent of eligible males had
registered. Now, about 99.2 percent
have signed up.
Since October 1, students receiving
federal aid have been requ ired to first
sign a form acknowledging compliance with registration laws. Reaction has generally been limited to protesting comments written on the
forms—which were then usually signed.
But some financial-aid officers anticipate future trouble in administration. Colleges and universities, beginning in 1985-86, will have to verify
that eligible students have actually
registered—a requirement some hope
to have dropped. Until then, the
Department of Education will spotcheck the registration of students who
sign the forms.
Older or female students are not required to register for the draft , but
some confusion has resulted
nonetheless. Some women have had
aid delayed or canceled because they
did not sign exempt-from-registration
forms. Others did not understand the
rules or opposed both laws.
Critics had fea red that many
students might be unfairly denied
federal aid because of a law that they
saw as nearly impossible to enforce.
To help those who may not be receiving federal aid because of the law, a
number of religious groups and
several colleges have set up alternative loan programs. Unfortunately
for students , these loans usually carry
higher interest rates and immediate
repayment clauses.
Time will tell whether there is indeed little student objection to the
new law or whether student groups
are merely biding their time, hoping
that the Supreme Court will declare
the law unconstitutional.

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colleg iate crossword

DOWN
. 1 Mary

Lincoln

2 Fencing sword
3 Scottish caps
4 Romeo or Juliet ,
e.g.
5 Party support er6 "—— corny as..." .
7 Cert ain doc
8 Newspaper section ,
for short
9 Washi ngton seaport
10 Dairy product
(2 wds.)
11 Opposi te of
aweath er

¦ fixe ,
12
13 The Big Ap ple ' s
finest (abbr. )
»
18 Mr . Porter
19- "Out , damned
24 Part of some •
newscasts
25 Diamond bungle

26 Lyin g" flat

ACROSS

24
33
34
35
36
38

French head
Basketball move
Raise
October ' s birthstone
15 One-celled animal
16 '50s song, e.g.
(var.)

17 Republican election
nightmare (2 wds.)
20 Tyrants
21 Tennis tournament
favorite (2 wds.)
22 Mr. Whitney

40
41
42
43
44


¦¦

House of
Be human
Inter
(Lat.)
Mr. Waggoner
Eat
Undeliverabl e mail
or water sprite
Chicken
Fi rst-rate
Word of warning
Compass point .
Former Time Magazine
"Man of the Year " :
(2 wds.)

23 Common tattoo word

(r~ AFROTC -^
]
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Success is a long way up. But after
taking the first step, the second one
comes easier.
Air Force ROTC can help you climb
that ladder by providing a helping hand
during college. It can enrich your college years and also help you with some
of those school expenses at the same
time.
You can compete tor a two,three or
four-year scholarship that pays $100 a
month for college expenses, while it
picks up the tab for all tuition,lab fees
and books.
The AFROTC program hos many
extras. Like the Flight Instruction Program (FIP), where you qualify tor Air
. Force flight training through a screening
process and receive introductory (light
instruction. You'll also learn about
leadership, management; Air Force
history and traditions,and much more
through AFROTC. The program prepares
cadets to take command after they
graduate and are commissioned as Air
Force officers.
The list goes on. Check it out today.
See if you can climb the letters la success and meet the challenge and accept the commitment. Youll find that
. the Air Force is a great way to serve
. your country, and that AFROTC is . a
great way to get there from here.
FOR FURTHER IHF0 PLEASE CONTACT
CAPT. DRAK0P0UL0S
1-800-572-4444 ext. 371

\ AIH

54 Dermatological mark
55 "I cannct tell

... "

56 Suffix for poet
, '57 Legendary Roman
king
58 Catch sight of
60 Suffi x for block

SCANDAL

© Edward Julius

1
5
10
14

'

27 Omit in pronunciation
28 VP in '53
29 Tarnish , as a
reputation
.30 Competing
31 Actress Verdugo
¦ 32 The —— Sisters
37 "
Story " .
39 Of ancient W. Italy
45 Casino .words
i
46 Adventurous
47 Assam silkwo rm
48 Invalidates
51 The Odyssey, for
one
52 Ceremonial garment
53 Put
on
(cover up)

r

and

49 To be ' announced:
abbr.
50 Grecian
51 Classroom need
55 Stupid
59 Party meeting of
sorts (2 wds.)
61 Footnote abbreviation -~
62 Miss Comaneci

JOHN WASTE

are coming to BU!
Date: Thursday, October 18
Place: Nelson Field House

Watch the voice for further information
about the concert and tickets. Put the on your calendar now I
•The Concert Committee

63 Neon

64 Yield

65 Inexperienced

66 Do in , as a dragon

!

;

-

——:

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SAVE.„oiimusic
for all ears.

FORCE „

ROTC

Gateway to a qreat way of life.

dj ininq C,xp erience

MAJOR LABELS - TOP ARTISTS
A Sound Investment Save Big Bucks
Pop, Rock, Folk,Jazz and Classical

Limited Time. Come Early for Best Selection.
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wed., Thurs , Fri...8:oo-4-.3o
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Les Etudiant En France

L0RI LEONARD
Managing Editor
Comment-allez vous? Repeat after me. Very good. You have just
learned how to say 'How are you?'
in French. Why would a student
want to sit through a class of French at BU when there is a land full of
fragrant wines, towers as tall as
the skys are blue, and a history that
stretches back further than the
renaissance , waiting to be
discovered and enjoyed by BU
students? The French exchange
program at BU helps students with
the interest get a chance to study in
such a place.
The exchange program was formed by Dr. Ariane Foureman,
Professor of Languages and
Cultures, two years ago while she
was on sabbatical in Nancy, France. The program has four purposes
according to Dr. Foureman. It
gives the students a chance to improve their knowledge of French
through immersion in the culture.
Secondly, business students get the
opportunity to intern with a French
company and learn the French approach to the business world. France is currently the fifth leading
country in world trade. Interning
students learn to cope with communication difficulties.
Another reason for the program
said Dr. Foureman, "is to allow the
students to grow as individuals and
see the differences with the United
States and appreciate some US
ways." The program also gives
students an edge when competing
for a job. If a person knows a
foreign language, they have a better chance of getting the job than
someone who doesn't.
The program started as an exchange program for business
majors interested in French. It was
arranged through the Commercial
Institute of Nancy (ICN). The
student would go to France, intern
with a French company, and then
take classes at the Institute. The
program matches the third year
academic requirements at ICN.
Linda Fegley; BU senior, has
recently returned from ICN after a
semester of study. Fegley is a
management major with a minor
in French. Before going to France,
she had seven years of French in
school. "When I got there I could
hardly understand a word. It sounds scary but you just have to swim
instead of sink, '' said Fegley.
Fegley had a three month internship at Pont-A-Mousson, the
world's largest producer of ductile
iron piping. She worked in the
marketing department doing
cataloguing and translating. She

also did some computer programming within the pricing department. After her internship, Fegley
spent two months taking courses at
the ICN in international finance.
The experience gave Fegley
valuable business experience and
greatly increased her knowledge of
French. "The experience gives you
a better advantage for jobs in that
you are 'almost bilingual,'" said
Fegley.

While in France , the students live
in dormitories. Fegley met girls
from England, Scotland, Mexico,
Tunisia, and other Americans. "It
was a wonderful experience," said
Fegley. "It opens a window to yourself that you never knew existed.'*
This year , the exchange
program, instead of sending only
business majors, will also include
three students studying an Arts and
Sciences curriculum. One of the
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three is Dan Teitelbaum, junior
French and Political Science
major. Teitelbaum will be taking
mainly French literature ,
playwriting and composition courses. He also wants to take some
government courses.
In addition to his language and
political studies, Teitelbaum hopes
to learn French sign language
. (Continued on Page 5)
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En France

professors will be hard at first,
said Teitelbaum. If the academic
problem continues or grows, the
directors of studies for both the
ICN and the school of Arts and
Sciences are there to help, said Dr.
Foureman.
In addition to Teitelbaum, three
other students will be going to
France in the spring. Barb Tressler
will be going in the business
program and Frank Sellers and
Janet Carey in the Arts and Sciences curriculum. In exchange, up to
three students from the University
of Nancy will be attending BU this
spring.
These students were recommended by their langauge
professors after showing an interest in the program. They must
be at least in the 200 level of their
French courses. Applications are
sent to the University of Nancy.
Then, with the help of Dr.
Foureman, they must apply for a
student visa from the United States
consulate.
According to Dr. Mary Lou John,
Chairman of the Department of
Languages and Cultures, going
abroad is "absolutely the best thing
that any language student can do.
And going as a student is even better. I would recommend it to all
students. "

. (Continued from Page 4)
while in France. Teitelbaum, a
member of the BU sign language
group, Image, said, "French sign
language is closely related to
American sign language in word
order. "
A semester abroad is not expensive, according to Teitelbaum .
The students pay tuition per credit
to BU and will pay about $60 a month for a dormitory room. The
student is also responsible for
plane fare and meals. An optional
expense is travel money. Courses
at ICN are similar to graduate
studies here. They may have a
seminar and discussions one week
and have the next week free. Many
students take advantage of the free
time to see Europe.
"I want to see Paris , England,
Italy, and Switzerland ," said
Teitelbaum. "I also want to see the
Coasts of Normandy. They always
fascinated me. I have seen slides in
my culture and civilization course
and they are breath taking.''
The students are on their own
and communication breakdowns
are anticipated. The French speak
faster than students are used to and
have dialects. "Understanding the
^•















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GO GREEK

.

Frate rnity
Winning Recognition

DAN CLEMMONS
Features Editor
There may be a new fraternity in the making here at BU. You may have
seen the members around campus wearing their Greek letters. The faces
may be old but the organization is new.
Last semester Zeta Beta Tau was initially denied formal recognition by
The Inter Fraternity Council (I.F.C.). However through the persistence
of Widener transfer student John Birks, the group was approved, 6-0, by a
subcommittee of student organization.
Last term the 18 member frat donated blood as a unit, participated in
the Rennaissance run and cleaned the town park as part of their service
projects. They also gave a generous donation to the 3rd Street fire victims
last semester.
"We would like to become more involved in Greek activities this
semester but due to I.F.C regulations we are prohibited,"said Birks.
According to campus policy, the frat is on probation for a minimum of
one semester and therefore forbidden to participate in any IFC activities
until final approval is made. ZBT cannot take a new pledge class until
then.
;
The group has, however, participated in several mixers with greek
sororities and will be asked to perform services to prove their worth,
"The projects which will be proposed to do this semster won't be determined until the guidelines are established at the IFC meeting, tentatively
set for Sept. 23," said Birks. "That is when the work will really begin."
The next step for ZBT is the proposal of a local constitution to IFC
which will establish the groups goals and purposes. A recent conversation
between Birks and Dean Robert Norton revealed the possibility of the frat
becoming recognized as early as next semester, depending on the group's
progress.
U.S.News & World Report presents

News^Vaves

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BU Wins Despite
Lackadaisica l Play

Team Effort Overwhelms LH

(Continued from Page 8)
tackles and eight assists. Junior
field goal. In the first half the defensive back Cas Kosciolek also
Eagles were held to just 45 yards of had a productive day with eight
total offense.
tackles (four unassisted ) and a
fumble
recovery.
As the second half opened, the
Landis
"I think the key
Huskies went to tailback Jeff defensivelysaid,
was
play up front.
Flickner. The sophomore was The tackle and our
the
nose guard
called upon nine times in the penetrated all day and really
set up
second half and he responded with our linebackers and secondary.
We
54 yards. For the game Flickner controlled the line of scrimmage
led all rushers with 72 yards on 16 well."
carries.
The win moves the Huskies mark
Bloomsburg's final touchdown to 1-1, while Lock Haven fell to 0-2
drive was set up by Butch Kahlau's with the loss.
"I think this was a very im- interception on the BU 46. Flickner
carried the ball on six of the eight portant win for us,'' Landis said.
plays in the drive and second from "It evened our record, it was our
4 yards out with 9:30 to play in the first home game, and it gives us
quarter to cap the drive. Jones ' confidence for our big game next
week."
PAT was good and the Huskies had,
Next Saturday the Huskies will
their winning margin.
host East Stroudsburg in both
Defensively, BU was led once team's Pennsylvania Conference
again by Little All-America Eastern Division opener. The game
linebacker Frank Sheptock. Shep- will start at 12:30 p.m. due to the
tock recorded . six unassisted telecast on WNEP-TV Channel 16.

Early SurgeBoosts Raiders

Hurts Huskies
First Half
(Continued from Page 8)

was Mark Burnham out racing a group of slow reacting BU players to a
loose ball, and firing a drive from 18 yards away that caught Gaspar out
of position.
"We are just not getting to the ball quick enough," said Goodwin, "and
that has hurt us so far. All we need is a few more aggressive plays 'here
and there' and we'll be in good shape.''
The Huskies finally got in shape in the second half , but by then it was
too little, too late.
NOTES: Aside from the ejections which were given to BU's Howie
Angstad, and SU's Bill Tompkins, Husky defender Kurt Scholz was shown
the yellow card after he tackled a Red Raider player to the ground late in
the game. Scholz was one of the few BU players with a consistently good
90 minutes of action, as he broke up several SU rushes throughout the
game. The Huskies will be on the road for games against Scranton and
Millersville, before returning Sept. 29 to face UMBC.

.:

NOTE: Due 1© WNEP-TV covering this Saturday's
football game with East Stroudsburg at Redman
Stadium, the starting time for the game has
been moved from 1:30 to 12:30
'

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¦

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J

SARAH HACKFORTH
Sports Editor
The women's field hockey team
beat host Millersville, 2-0, in their
season opener last Thursday afternoon. Another feat was also accomplished. The nagging question,
"Who will be the new goalie," was
put to rest.

Senior, Linda Hershey, scored
the first goal of the season for the
Lady Huskies. The unassisted goal
came in the first half of action and
clinched the win for the Huskies.
The Huskies kept the action
aimed at the Maurauders defense
throughout both periods of play.
BU tallied 22 shots on goal while the
Marauders could only get 5.
Mindy Crouse put the game
beyond Millersville's reach by
scoring unassisted in the second
half. The junior powered her way
through the Marauder 's defence to

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The ICE WOLF is coming! Mary-Thanks!!
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A NEW
ODNTRACEITIVE
IS HERE. .
TODAT

give the Huskies a 2^0 lead.
Millersville goalie, Pain Graun,
had 12 saves on the day compared
with Guitson's one. Bloomsburg
also dominated on corners,
shooting 8 while the Marauders had
3.
The Huskies hope to improve
upon their performance tomorrow
when they travel to Slippery Rock.
Head coach, Jan Hutchinson,
was not too pleased with her teams
p e r f o r m a n c e . "We were
lackadasical and did not execute as
well as we are capable," said Hutchinson.
The goalie question was finally
put to rest as Lori Guitson took her
place in the cage. The sophomore
rookie took over the spot vacated
by Ail-American Laurie Snyder.
How was Guitson's debut? "It was
kind of boring," commented Guitson. That's understandable considering she made only one save.

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p. Field
Hockey Team wins season opener
7
over Millersvil le

Defense Keys B U

Huskies Shutout Bald Eagles 23-0 to go 1-1

TROY SELLERS
Football Guru
It has been said that a lot of points by an offense is nice, but defense
wins championships. If that's the
case, look out for the Bloomsburg
University Huskies. BU's defense
allowed just 104 total yards and
only seven first downs (two by
penalty), as Bloomsburg shut out
Lock Haven 23-0 at Robert Redman
Stadium Saturday, September 15.
It was the Huskies first shut out since September 24, 1977 when Mansfield fell by a 24-0 score.
The Huskies threw a total team
effort at head coach Jack Fisher 's
Bald Eagles, as Lock Haven turned
the ball over five times, and
crossed mid-field only two times
each half.
. Bloomsburg head coach George
Landis said, "Overall it was a good
effort, particularly on defense. We
were tough all day and showed
much more spirit than last week. I
think the defense set the tone for
the whole ball game. ''
The Huskies got all the points
they really needed in the first quarter after the second of Lock
Haven's turnovers. Sophomore
defensive tackle Jim Tyson
recovered a Pat Cahill fumble at
the Lock Haven 45, and the Huskies
offense needed just five plays to
convert.

An offensive pass interference
penalty moved the ball back to the
BU 42, but quarterback Mike
Glovas (7 for 17, 130 yards) hit
Brian Bidlespach for 28 yards and a
first down at the LH-31. After two
rushes moved the ball to the 29
yard line, Glovas went up top again
and found tight end Kevin Grande.
Grande broke a tackle and raced
into the end zone for the score.
"It was a third down and eight,
and we wanted the tight end to hook
up behind the linebackers and in
front of the safety, " Landis explained. "Mike ( Glovas) hit Kevin
(Grande ) and he made a nice catch
and a nice run for the touchdown."
Tim Jones extra point try went
wide right, and the Huskies led 6-0.
Bloomsburg scored twice more
in the second quarter. Fullback
Calvin Robinson scored on a 1yard
run and Jones booted a 39 yard field
goal with :05 left in the half for
BU's 16-0 lead.
Meanwhile, the Bloomsburg
defense was bottling up the Eagles
attack as the visitors tried to play
catch-up.
Pete Woodhouse intercepted a
Cahill pass mid-way through the
second quarter and Jake Williams
returned his interception 22 yards
late in the quarter to set up Jones'
(Continued on Page 7)

Record Drop s to 0-2-1

Booters Fall to Raiders

ART CARUCCI
As early first half scoring spree, coupled with a "hold on and pray "
defense at the end, carried the Shippensburg University soccer team to a
3-1 victory over Bloomsburg on Saturday.
After building a 3-0 lead, the Red Raiders had to weather a storm of BU
confidence when Chris Albany tipped in a Brian Cole crossing pass 15:00
into the second half. With their lead cut, the Red Raiders sagged into a
defensive shell, thwarting off potential BU rushes with a combination of
finesse and roughhouse tactics which resulted in player ejections for both
sides.
Shippensburg began its offensive surge at 3:13 on a Tor Hathan goal
from the right side of the penalty area . Hathan's shot was perfectly
placed, as it missed a diving Andy Caspar, and struck the inner half of the
post before settling behind the white line.
''That goal, '' commented first year coach Steve Goodwin, ''really took
away some of our early momentum. Up until then we were handling them
(Shippensburg ) very well. "
Nine minutes later the Huskies seemed to be on their way to a repeat of
the Lock Haven debacle, as Shippensburg brunched two goals within 55
seconds of one another . The first came on a Jim Lanyon 20 yard grounder
that snuck by Gaspar, who was screened on the play. Then, at 13:01, it
(Continued on Page 7)

KentHagedorn

Lock Haven's Bald Eagles fell 23-0 to the Huskies on Saturday giving them a 1-1 record. The Huskies play
¦
East Stroudsburg on Sunday. The game will begin at 12:30 due to WNEP coverage.
*

Huskies take 2 of 3

Ludy Paces BU

MIKE FREELEY
Staff Reporter
The BU men's cross country
team proved that they are going to
be in strong contention for the
PSAC championships, as they
defeated both Kings (20-43) and
Wilkes colleges ( 17-44), and lost to
Delaware Valley College by only
one point (29-28) .
King 's John Gernert broke the
tape on his home course with the
time of 26:39, beating BU's top
finisher, Chris Ludy, by only six
seconds.
Huskies Mark Elsasser, who according to coach Ron Puhl is
coming on strong, finished second
for the Huskies and 6th overall with
a time of 27:30.
Kent Gross (28:04) , Mike Greene
(28:04) and Dan Netting (28:11)
rounded out the scoring for Bloomand 11th
sburg, finishing 9th, 10th
respectively. . '" . . . ¦
They 're a nicejjroup of runners,"

said Puhl, "they run in a groups
which is the best way for a cross
country team to run. "
Burt Hindman and John Starr,
along with Gross, Greene and Netting finished in a group, taking
places'9 through 13. "If they could
move up farther in the scoring,"
said Puhl, "they could be a very
strong team. "
Coach Puhl, is very pleased with
the performance of his runners,
and expects them to improve
steadily throughout the year. One
disadvantage for BU, is they have
only one home meet scheduled this
season. "There is a great advantage at home, you know your
coursz better, plus it is hard to
come off a long trip and have to
run,"said Puhl.
BU's record is now 2-2 and their
next meet will be Saturday against
Shippensburg, Cheyney and Kutztown at Millersville.