rdunkelb
Mon, 11/24/2025 - 20:22
Edited Text
Enrollment
increases
to benefit
university
by Ellen Jones
for the Voice
According to Dr. Tom Cooper ,
Dean of Enrollment Management , the decision to increase
enrollment was made to get BU's
share of the state's contribution
to the system. According to
Cooper , the original figure of 50
additional students skyrocketed to
193 for four reasons.
Fifth day enrollment figures for
the fall '86 semester show 5,233
full-time, undergraduate degree
students enrolled at BU. This is
an increase of 193 from fall 1985
figures.
According to Cooper , Pennsylvania 's 14 state schools' funding is based primarily on 14th
day enrollment figures. This year
the State System had a six percent
increase in funding across the
board.
"When they ran that six percent formula through the budget
formula process , instead of
Bloomsburg getting six percent ,
we got four percent , " stated
Cooper.
The budget formula is based on
three years enrollment.
"Ri ght now, our enrollment
for the three years that are being
used in this formula , in relation
to the other 13 institutions, using
the same enrollment years, is not
as high as theirs. As a result,
some of the schools got seven to
eight percent increases, some got
less than we did , and some got
somewhere around the six percent," said Cooper.
According to Cooper , since
Bloomsburg does not have a big
increase in its freshmen class each
year , (some of its sister institutions have as much as 40 percent
of their total enrollment in their
freshman class) the institution has
been hurt financially by not
receiving its percentage of the
state's appropriation increase.
' 'That was part of the reason
we wanted to increase our enrollment slightly . Now , we did not
want to go up 200 students
though," said Cooper. "We
wanted to go up about 50
students," he added .
A second reason for the enrollment increase , according to
Cooper , was a 1.25 percent increase in the number of students
offered admission that elect to accept. This accounts for approximately 50 of the 193 student
increase.
There was also a slight increase
see page 7
CGA survey to study university pa rkingp roblem
by Rebecca Solsman
for the Voice
At tfce CGA Executive meeting
last Monday, the committee proposed to create , distribute and
calculate a survey which will help
to solve the parking problem at
the university .
The Parking Committee, made
up of faculty , staff , students and
law enforcement, would like to
put a zone into effect which says
that students living within a certain proximity of the university ,
may not park on campus. CGA
thinks more research should be
done before this parking restriction is put into effect.
CGA proposed that they ,
SOAR (Student Orginization of
Adult Resources) and a few commuter/off-campus students ,
design and distribute a survey to
those affected by the parking problem. The survey will find out
how many students have cars ,
how many students would be affected by the zone, how many
parking spaces are open during
classes , what times the parking
spaces are filled , among other
questions.
CGA also wants to research
how university neighbors will be
affected by the students who park
in front of their homes or walk
throug h their lawns. It was decided by CGA that the proposal for
the survey will be drawn up and
sent for permission to Dr. Parrish , Vice President for
administration.
Also discussed was a request
for funds by Tim Keffer , president of CGA , so he could attend
a national convention for leadership workshops on Nov 8-11.
The committee granted the request and approved funding for
the convention within the limit of
$500.
CGA also granted the request
of $ 152 to help defer the cost for
Jack Phelan , a QUEST student
leader , to attend a "learning by
doing " workshop to be held Sept.
25-28 in Moodus, Connecticut.
A decision to partially fund
buses to run to the West
Chester/Bloomsburg football
game at West Chester on Sept. 26
was passed. However , CGA
decided not to provide buses
Increased development
requires activation of fund
by Lynne Ernst
Staff Writer
Voice photo by Carl Huhn
The Bloomsburg Fair kicks off its 1986 run Monday , Sept. 21. Fair vendors spent the week
setting up wares and rides for the expected crowds. The fair runs through Saturday , Sept. 27.
Residence life hires new directors
by Sandi Kaden
for the Voice
The Residence Life Department at Bloomsburg University
has hired three new residence
directors over the summer to
replace the former directors who
have resigned.
Gretchen Erb, a native of Danville, has replaced Mary Lou
Dressman-Conroy as Residence
Director of Columbia Hall. Erb
attended Penn State University
for five years and acquired a B.A.
in Psychology and a Masters in
Counselor Education. She
graduated and
came to
Bloomsburg for her first job as a
residence director.
Although Erb is new to the
position , she has had some
previous experience as an assistant coordinator during her year
in graduate school at Penn State.
Erb and her staff at Columbia
Hall have been working closely
for the past few weeks and have
developed a very good working
relationship. She said , "I am
teaching and learning at the same
time."
Ed Volovage, from Mocanaqua , PA, has taken over as
residence director in Luzerne
Hall for Donald Young, who now
resides in Mountour Hall.
Volovage attended Allentown
College of St. Frances De Sales
for four years and then went on
to Clarion University for a year
majoring
in
Micro
Biology/Genetics.
Volovage currently attends
Marywood College and is studying to obtain a Masters Degree in
Counseling. While he attended
Clarion, Volovage maintained the
job of a graduate hall director ,
and until his job here at
Bloomsburg, he was employed as
an R.D. at Keystone Junior
College.
According to Volovage, he has
a close relationship with his staff
at Luzerne and they are "very experienced. " He believes the
students here are nice and
friendly.
Bill Koch , a graduate of
see page 7
The Foundation Fund of
Bloomsburg University , a nonprofit orgainization to receive
gifts , has been reactivated after
years of inactivity . The Foundation 's revival resulted from the
university 's awareness of the
need for private support and not
just state funds. The money the
foundation members work hard to
raise, spells the difference between BU being an adequate institution and a great institution.
The Foundation Fund , headed
by Anthony Ianiero, Director of
Development , is committed to
financing projects , scholarships ,
or anything that goes beyond the
funds allocated by the state.
"One of the biggest problems ,
said Ianiero," is that people
believe you 're funded totally by
the state and don 't need contributions. The state only provides for
50 percent of the university 's
budget while student tuitions ,
fees , and grants cover the rest.
Part of Ianiero's job is to
educate people to look at planned gifts and keep Bloomsburg in
mind as a beneficiary.
The Foundation 's Board of
Directors is comprised of 18 prominent business men and women
who volunteer their time and input. Some of the board members
work at Air Products , AT&T,
and other large corporations
which are willing to contribute to
BU.
AT&T donated $255,000 in
new computer equipment and
IBM and Tandy Corp. donated
computer equipment totaling
$4,000.
A local business man active
with the Foundation Fund is
Richard Benefield , President of
Hotel Magee Inc. and Chairman
Two losses fel t by university community
Seymour Schwimmer
Seymour
Schwimmer,
Bloomsburg University professor , died July 16 while
awaiting
heart
tests
at
Presbyterian University of Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia.
Schwimmer, 61, had taught
philosophy at BU for 21 years.
He was chairing his department's
program evaluation at the time of
his death. "He was one of our
most caring faculty, " said G.
Alfred Forsythe former Dean of
the College of Arts and:Sciences
as quoted in The PressEnterprise. He ' described
Schwimmer as "a probing ,
question-asking person who
always wanted to uncover the
underlying logic behind things. "
Schwimmer, originally from
New York City, graduated from
the City College of New York in
1946. He also served in the Ar-
Nov.
5
to
the
Norfolk/Bloomsburg game, Norfolk ,
Virg inia. The decision was made
because of the $1,324 cost per
bus and the Saturday 3 a.m.
departure time required to arrive
at the game on time.
CGA will continue to fund daily issues of the New York Times
and USA Today newspapers to
campus dormatories. The cost
will be under $150.
Deadline for ARS (Association
of Resident Students) petitions
will be extended until Friday ,
Sept. 20, because of the lack of
participants.
Robert McCarty
my in 1946.
Before.coming to Bloomsburg,
he worked as a statistician and
economist for the National Industrial Conference Board, he
was with the Cornell University
Auto Crash Injury Research Project for threeyears, and he taught
mathematics in the New York City public school system from
1962 to 1965.
Schwimmer received
a
masters' degree from Columbia
University in 1965 and did further graduate work at Columbia
University and New York
University. He was a member of
the American Philosophical
Association, the Eastern Pennsylvania Philosophical Association and B'nai B'rith.
He is survived by his wife,
Ruth , two sons, and a brother.
Robert M. McCarty , a
Bloomsburg University senior
marketing major , died July 15 as
result of injuries sustained in an
automobile accident. McCarty
was a passenger in a car driven
by someone under the influence
of alcohol.
McCarty, 22, was scheduled to
graduate in December, 1986. A
member of Tau Kappa Epsilon
Fraternity and the American
Marketing Association, he was an
active student at BU.
"He was very athletic, outgoing, " said Brad White, a former
roommate and fellow brother of
McCarty 's fraternity. White added that McCarty was involved
with intramural sports, he was an
Interfraternity Council representative, and was very active in the
fraternity.
' 'He was the kind of guy who
was always there for you , " said
White. "We miss him a lot. He
did not do a lot of big things, but
he was always there and always
willing to help everybody else, f
And that's how he got killed. He
was helping someone take
another person home." White
added that the two people in the
accident with McCarty survived
the accident.
Debbie Porter , a senior early
childhood education major and a
member of the Alpha Sigma
Alpha sorority, was McCarty 's
girlfriend of three years. They
were planning on getting married
after both of them were out of
school. "The girls in my sorority called him Mr. Bob," said
Porter. "The guys called him BMac." She added that McCarty
was a quiet person who. would
give advice if asked but basically kept to himself.
"It makes me very angry
because the person driving the car
obviousl y had no reason to be
driving," said Porter , referring
to the drunken driver of the car.
McCarty cont. pg. 7
of the Board of the BU Foundations Inc .
Benefield is active in the Foundation is because he "believes in
pay ing civic rent-which goes far
beyond jus t pay ing taxes. "
Benefield is also on the Board of
Governors of Higher Education
and works towards providing
students the opportunity for a
well-rounded education.
Tony laneiro
The Magee Foundation has
contributed $5,000 since the first
of the year.
Ianiero commented on the enthusiasm from the people in
Bloomsburg 's community about
the Foundation. Through market
research and public reations
Ianiero has shown the community that BU is an investment. The
college, a $35 million dollar corporation on the hill , puts millions
of dollars back into the
community .
Local banks have been very
willing to contribute. First National Bank of Berwick and Colsee page 7
Weather & Index
The Landing, a play written by T. Andrew Wright ,
directed and performed by
the Bloomsburg Players ,
runs through Saturday.
Story on page 5.
A new coach is named to
the women's basketball
team. Story on page 8.
Today 's forecast: Sunny
and mild with temperatures
in the mid to upper 60s.
Weekend forecast: Fair
conditions with afternoon
temperatures in the 70s
and overnight lows in the
50s.
Commentary
Classifieds
Comics
Crossword
Sports .
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page
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Well-balanced education is best
bet f or success af ter graduation
Editorial
Flexibility is the key to success
after graduation. According to the
September issue of Newsweek 's
On Campus, 'the most important
thing in college is to get a base
that makes it possible for you to
move. "
Unless you know that you are
going to find a cure for cancer or
build the first community on
Mars , you probabl y have experienced the anxiety and dread
that comes with trying to decide
on a career. So many things look
like fun or seem to be just for
you , but may turn out to be totally
wrong.
Going to college is not what it
used to be. Years ago , people
went to school to learn and
mature intellectually, emotionally
and socially. Today , college
seems to be more like a vocational school than an institute of
hi gher learning.
We go to school today to be
trained for a profession that
hopefull y will pay big bucks.
Professionals in the workforce
and career counseling say this
specialized education can be more
detrimental than hel pful.
"There is no such thing as getting trained for a career once in
a lifetime , " said Prof. Eli Ginzberg of the Columbia Business
School. Education today should
give you a broad base of
knowledge so you can move
around if you have to.
Nella Barkley , president of
Crystal-Barkely Corporation , a
career counseling firm , said that
employers are looking for people
with sound jud gment , communication skills and the ability
to manage others.
Just about everyone interviewed for this story said that a liberal
arts education , with practical
courses in , say , business or
Eng lish with a basic knowledge
of computers is the best way to
assure success after graduation.
New students should not feel
pressured to enter into a major as
soon as they are admitted to college. With the wide variety of
areas of study and extracurricular activites , you should
take the time to explore and learn
what is out there and not keep
yourself tied to a decision just
because you have heard th at peop le in that profession make a lot
of money or because mom always
wanted a doctor in the family.
Get involved with as much as
you can and experiment with different classes. You may find out
that oceanograp hy is not all it 's
cracked up to be or that calculus
is not the nig htmare you heard it
was.
One p iece of advice to those
who are not sure about a major
or a career choice , is to work
toward a career you will be happy with. There is no sense in
working toward something that
you hate just because you might
make lots of money.
So, when you look around and
it seems all your friends have
their careers in hand , do not get
too upset. Take your time and try
everything you can to find out
what is reall y ri ght for you.
You have a wonderful opportunity to be anything you want
and with a well-rounded education you have a better to chance
to do something you will reall y
enjoy .
Deregulation: conservatism that
discomforts the comfortable
by George Will
Editorial Columnist
WASHINGTON-Perhaps it is
a personality defect—insufficient
spontaneity ; failure to mellow out
and go with the flow—but some
airline passengers are finding
deregulation distressing. They
must pull up their socks and face
two facts. Deregulation has been
good for the masses. And the
masses are making flying a mess.
The masses are so very , well ,
numerous.
One craves a sense of the
predictable when one is boarding
an aluminum tube to be hurled by
strangers through great hei ghts at
hi gh speeds. It is unsettling to
reach the ticket counter of
Republic Airlines (which used to
be North Central before it was
Wisconsin Central) and see a sign
cheerily announcing: Hey , by the
way, we 're now Northwest.
Do not be misled by the insignia on your plane from Aspen
to Denver. Rocky Mountain Airways is really Continental Express , just as Aspen Ariways will
soon be United Express. Delta is
buy ing Western , but New York
Air is still New York Air.
However , its schedule is
sometimes a surprise to its own
employees , including the one
who was positive there was a
10:30 a.m., Washington-toLaGuardia fli ght...until she
checked and exclaimed "Well I'll
be!"
What is going on? Cap italism ,
for one thing. For another ,
democracy . It is not pretty , but
aesthetics aren 't everything.
This column is being composed on a plane. A fli ght attendant
has just said that when (I say
"if—the traffic flow we want to
go with has congealed , again) our
tri p ends , we will have, earned
various bonuses (what? no Tupperware?), including rights to
free fli ghts on various other
airlines , including Frontier.
Wrong. The flight attendant has
last week's list , now hopelessl y
out of date. Frontier is no more .
In 40 splendid years . Frontier
flew 87 million persons 47 billion
miles throug h the Mountain
West ' s stimulating weather , with
extraordinary numbers of takeoffs and landings—and only one
passenger fatality . Now Frontier
is a fatality , crushed by (among
other things) fi erce competition
with bi gger boys—United and
Continental—at a "hub" airport ,
Denver 's Stapleton.
Of 229 carriers licensed to
operate since 1978 , now 133 are
gone. Yet airline employment hit
a record hi gh in 1985. Why ?
Because in just two years
passenger bookings have soared
from 319 million to 410 million.
Why? Because during the past
decade the cost of the average
ticket has fallen 20 percent in
inflation-adjusted terms. Last
year , 85 percent of all travelers
used discount tickets and the
average discount was 55 percent.
Deregulation is conservatism
that discomforts the comfortable.
Affluent fliers can still pay for
first class , but they, too , suffer
from the congested terminals ,
delays and other effects of
deregulation. People fl ying coach
are at least getting economic
compensation.
Deregulation may seem like
app lied Reaganism , but the
legislation was passed in 1978 by
a Democratic Congress , at the
behest of a Democratic President .
Its effects have established it as
the most potent anti-labor legislation in decades.
Under regulation , airlines
became casual about labor costs
because the federal government
allocated routes and ratified fare
increases to protect profitab ility .
Entry of new carriers into the
deregulated marketplace was, at
least initially , easy. So the most
powerful effect of deregulation
was to confront the established
SHje Bmce
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Christine Lyons
jean Bihl
Elizabeth Dacey, Kristen Turner
Joannie Kavanaugh
Jeff Cox , Ted Kistler
Carl Huhn , Alex Schillemans
Darlene Wicker , Maria Libertella
Terri Quaresimo, Ben Shultz
John Maittlen-Harris
carriers , which had hi gh labor
costs , with new competitors that
enjoyed labor-cost advantages.
Some carriers (Braniff , Continental) forced wage concessions
by going into bankruptcy . In most
cases , competition sufficed to enforce wage concessions. Reconsolidatioh may soon result in.
say , just six or eight bi g carriers .
(Delta plus Western makes the
fourth largest.) However , there
will be fierce price competition
to entice the marg inal flier onto
all those expensive aircraft that
must be amortized.
Competition has encouraged
hub-and-spoke systems in which
carriers feed in and out of central airports. (Piedmont , for example, uses Dayton as a hub.)
Hub-and-spoke systems allow
ti g ht schedules that facilitate intense use of aircra ft . Do the aircraft get less attention from the
thinned maintenance crews? The
airlines say "no. "
They also say delay s are concentrated at the few busiest airports. (Twenty-five airports have
70 percent of all traffic.) That fact
means onl y that the persons least
likel y to be delayed are those going where the fewest persons go.
That is accurate—as was the
statistician who said that the football team that won six , lost 17 and
tied two had won 75 percent of
the games it did not lose.
Airports increasing ly resemble
bus terminals because air travel ,
which a generation ago was an
elite enjoyment , now is as accessible as bus travel. Airline
deregulation is powerful evidence
for this conservative convention:
Conservatism often is the true
populism , because less government often means a more open ,
egalitarian society .
Voice Editorial Policy
The editorials in The Voice
are the opinions and concerns
of the editorial staff , and not
necessarily the opinions of all
members of The Voice staff ,
or the student population of
Hloomsburg University.
The Voice invites all
readers to express their opinions on the editorial page
throug h letters to the editor
and guest columns. All submissions must be signed and include a phone .number and address for verification , although
names on letters will be
withheld upon request.
The Voice reserves the
right to edit and condense all
submissions.
All submissions should be
sent to The Voice office , Kehr
Union Building, Bloomsburg
University, or dropped off at
the office in the games room.
Rehnquist shoe-in f or Ch ief
Justicedesp ite liberal opp osition
by Tom Miller
Editorial Columnist
William Rehnquist seems certain to be confirmed within the
week as the next Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court , the circuslike atmosp here of the senate
committee hearings and an abortive filibuster by a handfu l of
Democrats
senate
notwithstanding.
Ronald Reagan ' s judicial
nominee will .probabl y be confirmed even as Jimmy Carter 's
jud ge. Harry E. Claiborne ,
undergoes impeachment (Yes ,
Ted Kennedy voted to confirm
him.)
The hearings achieved a level
of hypocrisy and outri g ht
ridiculousness which has not
been
seen
in
recently
Washington , a town which
specializes in such things.
The hei ght of incredulity was
reached when Sen. Kennedy
looked down his nose at Justice
Rehnquist and made references to
R e h n q u i s t ' s "questionable
background. " Kennedy continued to probe into the Justice ' s
distant past-back even to the days
before Kenned y was kicked out
of Harvard .
This senate confirmation hearing y ielded damning testimony
from several people who said
they mi g ht have seen someone
who could have looked like Rehn-
quist who may have been
challeng ing voters at an Arizona
polling p lace 25 years ago. Small
beer to some but that was suffi cient. The very notion that Rehnquist mi g ht possibl y believe that
voters should be able to read , sent
a well-founded shudder of alarm
throug hout the Democrat caucus.
There is something very
disconcerting about a man-like
Kennedy, who could not possibly
survive a Senate confirmation
hearing himself , haranguing a
jurist of virtuall y incontrovertible
integrity.
There is something amusing
about a handful of senators on the
Judiciary Committee reading the
majority op inions of .'the court ,
most of them authored by Rehnquist himself , and coming to the
deli ghtfull y inconsistent conclusion that Rehnquist is "outside
the mainstream. "
To their credit , the Democrats
have abandoned the pretense ,
which came in so handy when
they were making appointments ,
that qualifications and not politics
should be the deciding factor in
judicial appointments . Sen.
Biden , during the Manion hearings made the frank statement: "I
believe you are a just and
honorable man but I can 't vote for
you because of your political
views.
The cards are finall y on the
table now. It is the duty of libera l
jud ges to effect liberal change. It
is the duty of conservative jud ges
to preserve liberal change.
The h i s t r i o n i c s by such
"mainstream " Americans as
Sens. Kennedy and Weicker were
embarrassing but the debate in
general was kind of fun. What
conservative did not enjoy the
sight of impotent senate liberals
writhing in discomfort at the
thought of two more conservative
appointees? Onl y a real sourpuss
could suppress a chuckle over
Sen. Joe Biden ' s laug hable
presidential campai gn speeches.
I personall y let out a restrained
chortle when the Democrats ' star
"voter harrassment " witness
changed his testimony once he
was put under oath.
This "extreme " Justice ,
nominated by an extreme President who was elected by an extreme majority in an extreme 49
states , and most likely to be confirmed by an extreme majority of
the Senate is headed for what will
hopefull y be an extremely long
and productive tenure as Chief
Justice of the United States.
Liberals lost this round. If they
want to avoid another , they had
better keep Justices Marshall and
Brennen out of drafts and away
from cracks in the sidewalk; there
are mere extremists out there
waiting to be nominated by the
century 's most popular President .
To the Editor
Vandalism: 'abnormal' and 'unacceptable ' at BU
Dear Editor ,
Have you noticed the gum
wrappers , empty ci garette
packages , and the like on the
floors of buildings , on sidewalks
and in the grass? Or , that trays ,
used containers and food are left
on the tables in the Kehr Union?
The other day I saw that the
women 's lavatory in the basement
of Bakeless had been vandalized-toilet paper had been thown over
the partitions and on the waste
E/VTEK 1
HERE...
\
basket; an enormous "ball" of
toilet paper had been left on the
floor; and sanitary bags had been
pasted to the mirror with soap.
I notice such things more so at
the beg inning of every fall
semester than at any other time
of the year. Is it possible that the
majority of the guilty parties
never make it to the spring
semester or summer sessions?
Is it possible that there is a
direct correlation between those
who think littering, leaving garbage on tables , and vandalizing
are normal acts and those who
become drop-outs? Or , is it possible that the majority of the guilty
parties learn , by the examples of
others , that littering, leaving garbage on tables and vandalizing
are abnormal acts AND unacceptable at Bloomsburg University ?
What do you think?
Disgusted
BU President on vacation
Takes time out to visit alumni
>
by Don Chomiak
Student at Large
While vacationing in Florida
this past summer , Dr. Harry
Ausprich , the president of
Bloomsburg University , took
time out to visit with alumni.
President Harry Auspric h
On Saturday , Aug. 7, Ausprich
attended an alumni luncheon in
Sarasota Florida. "The president
had been scheduled to go to
Florida in March , when we had
a series of alumni meetings down
there ," said Doug Hi ppenstiel ,
director of Alumni Affairs.
"He (Ausprich) was unable to
go at that time ," added Hi ppenstiel. "He spoke to me a couple of months ago. He said he
would be in Florida and it would
be an excellent opportunity to
meet with alumni in that area. I
agreed . " Hi ppenstiel then set up
the luncheon , which he said was
attended by nine people.
"The group was made up of
older and younger constituencies , " said Ausprich. He added
that after eating, he spoke to the
alumni about the university .
"They were interested in the
football program , " added
Ausprich. He then told the alumni
about the Celebrity Artists Series ,
the Scholars Program and other
new things happening at BU.
Ausprich added the luncheon
lasted two and one half to three
hours.
The president and his family
left Bloomsburg in the middle of
Jul y, driving down to Florida and
WBUQ
announces
fall 86
additions
"If the president had gone in
March , when I w?s down there ,
to attend the alumni chapter
meetings , all of his expenses
would have been covered , airfare , hotel rooms , meals ,
whatever ," said Hi ppenstiel ,
"because it would have been entirely directed to the business of
meeting alumni. "
"It was particularl y good that
the president was traveling in that
area ," said Hi ppenstiel . "It
allowed him to meet some of the
alumni he was unable to meet in
March. " Hi ppenstiel added the
luncheon took p lace in an area
that had never had an alumni
function before , althoug h they
had tried.
"One of the reasons we have
not had an alumni function in that
area is that it is not one of the
primary population areas , " added Hippenstiel. "The peop le who
are there have been very interested in having an alumni function and I have had requests fro m
a n u m b e r of them to do
something in that area. The one
year we did try (to hold a function), it did not work out. "
Hi ppenstiel added that he
received a lot of good feedback
from the president and alumni
about the luncheon.
returning to Bloomsburg Aug.
14, "the day before the summer
commencement," said Ausprich.
According to Hi ppenstiel , the
expense statement for the tri p,
"meals, mileage and other costs
incurred by the president during
the tri p, " was initiall y sent to the
Alumni Association and charged
against the Alumni Chapters ' account. This account , a line item
in the Alumni Association 's
bud get , is used for the costs of
holding alumni chapter meetings
of one kind or another and when
someone travels representing the
Alumni
Association.
For
1985-86. the account totaled
$7 ,500.
"This is a routine thing for us
to get an expense statement from
the president or someone else on
the staff , " said Hippenstiel.
"Frequentl y we have people attend alumni functions and we
reimburse them for their expenses. In this particular case ,
there was a misunderstanding
about who would pay what and
how much , basically. "
1986 Ho mecom ing
theme announ ced
The Student Activities Office
has announced the theme for this
year 's homecoming is, America—From Sea to Shining Sea.
Sweetheart
reg istration
deadline is Sept. 24.
Homecoming activities will end
Oct. 19 with a Pops Concert
featuring the Husky Singers ,
Women 's Chorale and Concert
Choir.
The homecoming parade will
be held at 10 a.m. on Oct. 18. and
is a combined effort of
Bloomsburg High School and the
university .
Bloomsburg
will
host
Mansfield at 1:30 p.m. Oct. 18 ,
for the annual homecoming football game.
Doug Hippenstiel
When asked why the expense
statement was initiall y sent to the
Alumni Association , Ausprich
concurred there had been a
misunderstanding . "I paid for the
tri p myself ," said Ausprich. He
added the Alumni Association
covered the costs of the luncheon.
"The total cost of the luncheon
to the Alumni Association was
$88, " said Hi ppenstiel. He added that the people who attended
the luncheon paid to be there and
this covered most of the costs.
f« 8HOS OUTLET
Your Genuine Manufacturers Outlet
7 East Pine Street
\L\^\ W£jr
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Voice photo
Art students take their class to the grass
by Carl Huhn
Scholars program under nem) direction
by Patty Moyer
Staff Writer
The Presidential Scholars Program has a new director following this summer 's resi gnation of
Dr. James Cole.
In mid-August , Dr. Nancy
Onuschak , of the N u r s i n g
Department , was appointed Interim Director of the scholars
program by Dr. Daniel Pantaleo .
interim provost and vice president
for academic affairs.
Cole , from the Department of
Biolog ical and Allied Health
Sciences , resigned due to an illness. He was the program ' s first
director , appointed in Jan. 1986.
"I think Dr. Onuschak is a
wonderful person and will be
great for the program ," Cole said
of his colleague.
"I' m very happy to be working with such very bri ght and
creative people ," Onuschak said
of the 25 freshmen involved in
this year 's program.
The Scholars Program was
established in March 1985 by an
Ad Hoc Committee formed by
former Provost and Vice President Larry Jones , Vice Provost
and Associate Vice President
Kal yan Gosh and former Acting
Dean , College of Arts and
Sciences G. Alfred Forsythe.
MMI'V.'W
mil
MIII
This year , approximatel y 180 be.
The student scholars will also
students were notified by the
director (Cole) based on their go to Washington , D.C. on Dec .
SAT scores of 1100 or more , 4 and 5 to visit the State Departranking in the top 20 per cent of ment and attend briefings on the
their class and their involvement Middle East.
Onuschak meets with the
in extracurricular activities.
Twenty-five students were students once a week in addition
selected on the basis of their ap- to "whenever else they want to
plication , and essay, an interview meet with me, " She noted.
"I am delighted the administraand at least one reference.
This semester, the student tion and the faculty strong ly supscholars are taking two courses port the program and feel
positivel y about it , " Onuschak
centered on the Middle East.
"Mr. George Turner will teach exp lained.
Onuschak , who became a
a history course on the ArabIsreali conflict. Dr. Pete Bohling faculty member at Bloomsburg in
1980, is uncertain if she will appwill teach about the economics of
the Middle East , " Onuschak ly for the Directo r position.
"Ri ght now I' m Interim Direcexp lained.
Onuschak and the advisory tor and I will be that for two
committee are planning a four years. I don ' t know about after
day symposium called The Mid- those two years. That ' s
dle East Symposium scheduled something I will have to discuss
with the department , " she said.
Nov. 17 to the 20.
Of the 25 students selected for
"This (the symposium) will be
open to the public so they can the Scholars program , 22 are
from Pennsy lvania , two are from
share the opportunity to learn
more about the Middle East , " New Jersey and one is from
Delaware .
Onuschak added .
To remain in the program ,
In addition to the symposium ,
students
must maintain a 3.0
the scholars committee is planning to have a "Visiting Scholar " grade point average or hi gher. To
receive recognition on their
who will be on campus for a few
transcri pts , the students must
days to meet with the students.
The committee has not yet decid- achieve a 3.5 GPA or better.
ed who the Visiting Scholar will
\i\ irtaiMTTi«winr*'~-^»™ i ""»M~**™"*nT~MMM™*MW
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by Jacqui O'Neill
for the Voice
Radio station WBUQ (91.1
FM) is located in the McCormick
Building, rooms 1250 and 125 1
(recording studios). The day-today operations of the station are
taken care of by the Executive
Staff consisting of BU students.
Staff members are : General
Manager Ted Hodgins , Music
Director Bruce Delong, Sports
Director John Deck , Continuity
Director Allison Krasner , Executive
Producer
Chris
Mingrone , FM Eng ineer John
Garcia , Program Director Lisa
Landis , and Remote Director
Marv MeNeeley. The News
Director position is currently not
occupied.
Deciding what and when programs are put on the air is done
by Hodgins and Landis.
Delong is responsible for talking to record companies , getting
new records , and making
play lists .
Mingrone is in charge of the on
air personnel , from the training
of new DJ's, done on the AM station , to deciding who is qualified
to go on the air , and also syndicated programs.
Garcia takes care of the
technical aspects of running the
station , AM as well as FM.
MeNeely will cover sports
events and community events
which would be of interest to the
college students. MeNeeley is
presently doing the publicity and
marketing, for the station.
Women s, name brand, all leather shoes.
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Saturday, Sep t. 20
8 p.m. - Comedy Cabaret — Carver
10 p.m. - Dance featuring 'TAPS ' -KU B
...we changed the name
but it 's still the same...
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Sunday , Sep t 21
|
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Money Ord., Pers. Check(2 wks toclr). Sorry noC.O.D.'s.Add $4.001st item $1 ea add'l shpg
& handl. Shpts to IL address add 7% tax. Prices subj to change. University/College P.O.'s
Welcome. WRITE (no calls) for free catalog. 30-day return policy for defective merchandise
only.ALL ELEK-TEK MERCHANDISE IS BRAND NEW, 1STQUALITY AND COMPLETE.
„_
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/ A Y^ ^ Y
Parent ' s
D ay
Activities
Student at Large
Seventeen
T.-wi.si;re c>: r»f ;r:it crccC'CC: " »j t ci*
Don Chomia k
We i-h i at the bar. The c._ ~ v.'u
one of the fl ashier rype ? I -r . e
been in. Locate ;. >: o.^;;; :¦:"
Da I fas . it prcr . ee :.:¦ re "-".e ;¦:".; ::
an episod e apprcpr: i".ei ;. :::!ec.
•¦Se '.entesn. "
Being Nonherr.er's ar.-d < '.:zr.:.' \
out of touch •A;- T. '_ he n:_ a!s ::' a
Texas mea t ma rket. '.'.,e sa: ba ;-:.
drinking ar.c en• ¦•"/. ;r.g the i-ce-er. .
It 'A B-S &arl\ anc _r.e tcics '^a-s ;:::.
short of a gallop.
Midv. a;. into our third ro_ -d of
drinks , our atient:or. v.a.s crav. r. to
the entrance of the place br. the arrr.aJ of tv.r,, -,ep, attractive wxer,.
They v.'aiked in. declining to let the
fl oor touch their feet, and gave
ever.one watching the impression
the;, ov.ne-d the p lace. And v.h ;.
not. the;, had the looks to get
whatever the;, wanted .
Sitting together at a tabl e av.a 1.
from the crov.d. the tv- o were a
.-.. . .-.„.- \_ . ^ ~ .
K
_ , ._ . . _ . - - - -'
beau::fcii. and looked as thoug h
she had just jumped out of the
page- of Vogue Magazine. It turn ed out. talking to my friend , the
;.oung 'A oman v.as a Florida resident. 'Miami i v. ho had done some
modeling and was interested in the
theatre. She was in Texa s visiting
by Bob Banchiere
for the Voice
A.
'_".e wc-mari she was with.
3.e'..e-. ;hg my friends to be worb~ .! wis angry with them for giv¦ _-~
: T:Z
. i wai also angry, indirect¦
ly. .-.-": the r.io 'Aom-en. And in the
r-Jru. »¦?. rr..en tend to protect each
¦ off
¦
roer. I ¦
to avenge them.
- '£-.:
After cuL-'Cing two or three times
« .± the "ForJdLan ." we sat down
±.7iz rep.-, talking. In the tru e.spirit
:•:' aibc '.esce-ce. I was try ing to set
.-;: _p a"d 'hen leave, to reverse
-_-.<; effecis of what she and her
fr:e.-d had done to my friends.
Sorr.cr.oA. "he topic of age came up
arc she asked me to guess hers. I
ralkec . but then said twenty-one
because that is the drinking age in
Seventeen.
It t u r n e d out
aib.es-cer.ee was more tru e than I
could ever have guessed . Her
frtend. "he one she was in Texas
•• tsittng. was eighteen. All of us
••-ere twenr. -one. Considering our
actions. I had trouble figuring out
w h o were the true adolescents .
The big joke for the rest of my
•• •sit was one word : Seventeen. We
j ouid no: believe we had given two
girls status above us because of
their looks. It is not so much w h o
vou are as it is w hat vou can make
other people think vou are .
BU singer to p erf orm at PCM
If you ' re listening without seeing who ' s sing ing . Amy Grantor may be W h i t n e y Houston
comes to mind. Backed up by her
own strong p iano play ing, she
performs with a relaxed sty le
which hel ps you lose yourself in
the music. It is a good mix of
"mellow " and up beat tunes well
suited to her bluesy vocals.
You ' re listening to Bloomsburg ' s
own Jane Kruse.
Jane Kruse plays the music of
James Tay lor , the Beatles. Carol
King, Joni Mitchel . Whitney
Houston , and her own favoriteAmy Grant. "I like to p lay Amy
Grant ' s music because it sounds
like it comes from a sensitive,
happy person who doesn ' t need
to force everyone else to believe
the way she does , " says Jane.
"Most Gospel Music sort of
crams God down your throat, but
she ' s not like that , she ' s subtle.
STUDIO 43
784-4300
S TYL ING SALON
Now available...
Mane Klip s
($2.50 each)
So. I play some of her songs. "
Now a j u n i o r at BU. Jane was
o n l y 16 w h e n she p l a y e d
•'live ' " on one of the eastern
United States largest public radio
stations. WVIA-FM. with her
brother Rob Kruse. Rob is a professional singer-song writer, and
has had a profound impact on
Jane ' s own music, hel ping her to
incorporate the freedom of jazz
and rock influences into her own
sty le. The e x a mp le of her
brother 's prolifi c song writing has
insp ired Jane to do some writing
of her own . "I write mostl y at
times when I feel emotionall y
moved. " Jane confesses, "like
with the song Unde r the Chang-
Hours : Mon.-Fri. 9-9;
Sat. 9A
J Got an opinion?}
tWrite it!
%
Voici: photo by Joiinic Kavanaugh
BL'\ Dot and Ann I'avkovic stcn "nutst toartciiilinj '" «»t Lemon 's Tavern last
m'uht.
Twelve BU seniors graduate with honors
Twelve Bloomsburg University
seniors graduated with honors at
summer commencement exercises on A u g . 14 in Mitrani Hall
of Haas Center for the Arts.
Graduating summa cum laude
(cumulative grade point average
of 3.95 to a perfect 4.0) was Durrel E. Reickley. of Perkasie , in
mass communications.
Graduating magna cum laude
(cumulative grade point average
of 3.75 to 3.94) were Joanne T.
Capone. Mahanoy City, elementary education and Lei gh J. Hill .
Stillwater, social studies.
Graduating
cum
laude
(cumulative grade point average
of 3.5 to 3.74) were Jill M. and
Neil M. Boy d. Bloomsburg ,
psychology: Michael J. Cuddy.
Towanda. accounting: Doug hlas
D. Depper , S. Plamlleld , N.J.,
Karen
e d u c a ti o n ;
special
Carlisle ,
Henseler ,
sociology /social welfare ; Mary
C. Macuta , Hazleton , dental
hygenist; William D. McGill ,
Sugarloaf , elementary education
and Ellen S u l l i v a n , Montoursvillc , mathematics.
The Voice is
always looking for
people interested
in all areas of a
newspaper .
mEARL\FmMcm/
£) JzJLJ *?
Excellent quality
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I ILlCKETY bPLIT C M V 0 /& Wf f U
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|
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Baked Po tatoes, Salads, Quiche
^§F';'0v
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418 East Street
ing Sky , which I wrote at the end
of a wonderful summer of working with friends as we were all
leaving. Writing songs is a good
way to express what I' m feeling. "
Jane Kruse will perform this
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Protestant Campus Ministry House
(near Carver Hall.) Admission is
free , (they will pass the hat for
the music) and refreshments will
be served.
This Saturd ay and Sunday,
Bloomsburg University will be
host to almost 2 ,000 parents of
BU s t u d e n t s for its ' a n n u a l
Paren ts ' Weekend activities.
"We hope you will enjoy learning about the academic programs and the co-curricular activities in which your sons and
daug hters participate. " said B.U.
President Harry Ausprich in a letter welcoming parents. President
Ausprich also noted that parents
have a special relationshi p with
the University and urged parents
to share their thoug hts, questions,
and comments.
The activities start at 10 a . m .
Saturday in the Kehr Union ,
where faculty members and administrators will be available to
talk with parents on such things
as academic programs, caree r opportunities , student services , and
other concerns.
A pre-game ox roast lunch will
be served in Nelson Fieldhouse
at 11:30 a.m.
After the lunch , parents may
wish to check out the Husk y soccer team in action as they entertain Millersville University. The
game will be on the upper campus field at 1:30 p.m. in Redman
Stadium. The Huskies will also
host the Lock Haven Bald Eag les
in the annual Parent ' s Day football game. A "Mom and Pop of
the dav " will be p icked and
awarded a g ift during the special
half-time ceremonies.
Saturday ni ght at 8 p.m. the
Bloomsburg Players production
of "The Landing " will be perfo rmed in the Mitrani Hall of
Haas Center. There will be three
comedian^ from New York and
Philadel p hia performing at the
Comedy Cabaret in Kehr Union ,
also at 8 p.m.
On Sunday , parents may attend
brunch in the Scranton Commons. This will be followed by
bingo in Kehr Union or shopping
at the University Book Store .
\
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OPEN
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Can 't afford restaurants?
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We serve Bloomsburg University every Friday
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This "Landing " worth the trip
"Getting it up
on stage, a total
student p roduction, will
hopefully inspire other
students to write
p lays f o r pro duction. "
Left: Members of the "Landing" cast
in their opening performance last night
in Mitrani Hall. It is the first allstudent production at Bloomsburg
University. Right: T. Andrew Wright,
author of "The Landing.
Voice photo by Alex Schillemans
by Don Chomiak
Student at Large
Landing usuall y entails at least
touching the ground. "The Landing/ ' the first production written and directed by students at
Bloomsburg University, has its
feet firml y planted in the baser
emotions and motivations that
make us all tick.
The play, written by T. Andrew Wri ght and directed by Joel
Weible. revolves around ei ght
peop le and their lives in a rundown apartment building in New
York City. The set is the lobb y
of the apartment building in
which the eight live and is
representative of the basement of
hope, where frustration and anger
often combine into a combustible
mixture . Chance provides a
possible way out and is
represented by the phone that
stands at the center of the set.
This , however , is not the crux
of the play . The focal point is in
how these people pull together
throug h the d i f f i c u l t circumstances they face , despite the
conflicts that occur between
them.
From the moment he steps
onstage , Jeff Morgan , who plays
a gay novelist , is catal ytic. He
lends his energy to anyone else
in the scene and the result is a an
interaction that draws the audience in. The same is true of
Carol Westwood , who plays a
woman fixated on status. She
gives a beautiful portrayal of someone out of touch with her
circumstances.
Unfortunately, not even they
can save the second scene of the
first act. In the scene , Wendy
Tennis , play ing the pregnant wife
of a drunken cri pp le , is pushed
down a staircase. Meant to be a
serious scene , it is met with
laughter as her husband is taken
from the stage.
The
dialogue
between
Westwood and Diana Eves , who
plays a hopeful dancer , is sharp
and crisp. Though Eves had a
slow start at the outset of the play , sing le fall from them , is well
she quickl y recovered to shine defined by Jay .
Tennis , the cripple 's wife ,
throug hout the remainder of the
thoug h not seen for too long on
performance .
Laurie Wallace plays a tradi- stage , gives a good portrayal of
tional stand-by-her-man type wife inner conflict and the dangers of
and a co-den mother with Eves to dealing with a wife-beating
the rest of the cast. She is con- drunkard .
James Slusser p lays Old Jack ,
sistent in character and g ives a
house
apartment
the
solid performance.
Unfortunatel y for Jeff Cox. manager/desk clerk. With a total
who plays the drunken cri pp le, lack of lines and almost as little
concentration was lacking. His motion , he is a magnificent piece
performance in the first act was of furniture .
Wright , the author , said , "The
at best not a detraction from that
of the rest of the cast. He play is a treatment of life and how
recovered in the second act and peop le pull together at critical
points. " Asked how it felt to have
had a strong finish.
,
other peop le taking the characters
weaving
The plot is intricate
throug h the seperate yet interlac- in the p lay and interpreting them ,
ed subp lots, the day to day lives he said , "Many times during
rehearsals , I wanted to ju mp
of the individual characters .
Joe Grube is Alex Stro m , son onstage and say , 'No , no , no!
of the fixated woman. He lends
t.
, . _,
, ,... . . .
a sensitivity to the part overshadowed onl y by the performances of Morgan , Westwood
and Eves. On the other end of the
sensitivity spectrum is JamesMorgan, p layed by William Jay .
The character , a simple man of
princi p les who had suffered a
Bloomsburg University !
13-J
International Relations a
Club
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ALL WELCOME
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Walt Brasch
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Paul E. Kanjorski , (D-PA) an- to college , stated , "Too many
bri ght young minds go to waste
nounced the award of a SI67.000
federal grant to Bloomsburg
thinking college is an unattainable
University to fund the instituluxury when in fact it holds the
tion 's Upward Bound Program , key to a better future . "
which is now in its ninth year ,
The program starts with an inand has alread y received over a tensive summer sesion during
million in federal grants.
which students reside on campus
The . Upward Bound Project while undertaking studies in perrecruits high school students from sonal development , they meet
Columbia , Montour , and Nor- with instructors throug hout the
thumberland Counties who can year on a weekly basis after
now attend college , which they school hours.
could not have done before the
Bloomsburg has met with considerable success in administerproject came about.
Kanjorski , who realized the ing this program , next spring a
programs ability to provide total of 80 students will receive
academic preparation , motiva- extensive academic instruction ,
tion , and career guidance to career guidance , and advice on
students who might not have gone choosing a suitable college :
OX
j
i
Federal grant given to Upward Bound
We're Now Performing
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That character is not supposed to
do that ! Do it this way!" He adu ed , though , the performance is a
meld between the interpretations
of the author , the director and the
cast.
Asked what he thought the
most important goal of the play ,
Joel Weible , the directo r , said ,
"Getting it up and on stage , a
tota l student production , will
hopefully inspire other students to
write plays for production. " Weible , in his first role as director ,
added he intended no single
character to stand out beyond the
others. He said , "I hope this is
just the first total student production. "
The play , though it does slow
at certain points , has merit and
deserves a look. Performances
run through Saturday .
Commonwealth Bank is pleased to enter Bloomsburg
University as the newest performer on campus.
Commonwealth Bank's new banking center, located in
the lobby of the University Book Store,offers you the most
convenient banking services on campus. We're open
Monday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m.
For further convenience,a MAC automatic teller machine
is at your service 24 hours a day. MAC is accessible just .
^sf wlrW—
'! wmAAr
A
.
''Wpius
^snt.m
outside the book Store. Remind Mom and Dad that
deposits can be made to your Commonwealth account at
any MAC automatic teller machine,
Receive a FREE "Performing forBloomsburg
University" tee shirt and MAC card by opening
a Commonwealth Bank checking account.
Hurry -- offer good only while supply lasts.
Commonwealth Bank
Member FDIC
Mother 's support group
offered by Women 's Center
The Women 's Center of Bloomsburg is hosting a mothers ' support group. This group will meet on Fridays at 9:30 a.m. at the
Womens Center. The group is open to all mothers in the area.
Childcare will be provided.
This group will offe r an opportunity for mothers to discuss childrelated problems in a supportive atmosp here .
For more information contact the Bloomsburc Women ' s Center ,
784-6631.
THE FAR SIDE
U.S. Census Bureau
begins household survey
Area musiciansjoin band
Three area musicians have been
selected as members of the
Bloomsburg University Studio Band
for the 1986-1987 academic year.
The group is planning a return tri p
to play at Disney World in January
1987.
Performing .on trumpet and valve
trombone is Troy Snyder , a senior
music major. Charles Carlson Jr., a
senior anthropology major , plays
trombone , and Mike Bogush , a
secondary education sophomore ,
plays rhythm guitar.
The Studio Band , directed by
music department chairman Steven
C. Wallace , made its initial appearance at Disney World in January
1985.
The band' s most recent appearance was at Lock Haven University in April 1986.
¦ Membershi p in the band is by invitation and competitive audition.
The Studio Band plays in the annual Spring concert , in exchange
programs with other colleges and
university jazz bands , for high
school assemblies , and in concert
and in dances for area organizations.
Local representatives of the
U.S. Census Bureau began
revisiting selected households on
Sept. 2 to conduct its Survey of
Income
and
Program
Partici pation(SIPP) .
SIPP , one of the nation 's
largest household surveys , was
first introd uced in the Fall of
1983.
SIPP reports provide a wide
range of facts from household
Fourteen things that a boy always
says to a girl on a f irst date
collegiate crossword
By GARY LARSON
earnings to the effects of tax on
spending , all geared to inform the
government on how well its programs are working.
Past SIPP reports show the*
average household's value to be
$32,670 in 1984.
A nation-wide survey , SIPP
data is confidential by law and
surveyors have credentials identify ing them as Census Bureau
employees.
"They 're known for their hamburgers. "
*****
"If you 're having the salmon , then we 're supposed to have white
wine , ri ght? "
*****
"I know you 're going to think this is j ust a line , but you 've got
reall y amazing eyes ."
*****
"I' m talking too much. "
*****
"OK , let me try to exp lain it another way . When did the year one
begin? January first , year one or January first , year zero zero? January
first , year one, right? OK, so when does the twenty-first century
begin? January first , 2000? No , because that 's only 1,999 years after
January one , year one. Get it now? The twenty-first century begins
on January one , 200 1 ...What do you mean you don 't accept that? "
*****
"Picasso died? When did Picasso die?"
*****
Just give me a minute apd I'll explain why I voted for Reagan. "
*****
"Tell me something about yourself. "
*****
"Right , ri g ht , ri ght. "
*****
So how long were you married? "
*****
So maybe another time ."
*****
Taken from The Grown-Up Girl 's Guide to Boys
V
Chicken culls
© Edward Julius
ACROSS
41 " ...not with
19
but a whimper. "
20
1 Where one might
43 Return on investstudy Andy Warhol 's
ment (abbr.)
21
works (3 wds.)
44 Pondered
12 Enrollment into
45 Belonging to Mr.
24
college
Starr
25
14 "Calculus Made Sim- 47 Part of the classi"
ple , e.g. (2 wds.)
fieds (2 wds. )
28
16 Evaluate
48 Possible place to
17 Extremely small
study abroad (2 wds) 29
18 Follows a recipe
52 Small school in Candirection
ton , Ohio (2 wds.)
30
19 Belonging to Mr.
53 Orson Welles film
32
Pacino
classic (2 wds.)
22 Of land measure
33
23 Meets a poker bet
DOWN
24
Gay (WW II
34
plane)
1 Those who are duped 35
26 Capri , e.g.
2 "Do unto
..."
36
27 Belonging to Mayor
3 Fourth estate
37
Koch
4 Goals
28 Irritate or
5 Well-known record
38
embitter
label
40
30 Train for a boxing
6 Wei 1-known king
42
match
7 151 to Caesar
31
and the
8 Prefix meaning milk 44
Belmonts
9 Confused (2 wds.)
46
32 Processions
10
husky
47
35 Diet supplement
11 Most immediate
(abbr.)
12 Like a sailboat
49
38 Scottish historian 13 Cash register key
and philosopher
( 2 w ds.)
50
39 College in Green14 En
(as a whole)
Pa.
ville ,
15 Auto racing son of
51
40 The Venerable
Richard Petty
every Wednesday at j
Hess ' Tavern 1<
. D.J. entertainers and dancing
I on the best-lite dance floor
) provided by
<
^*^!!?$es^
^^^s
lsl
??
^"
"^r
}
<>
\ Oliveri Professional Sound Co.
j
Wednesday thru Saturday
10 p.m. - 2 a.m.
£
.
784-0579
•'
!
t. «~<=v. ••=&. **»<^. &~^=w «^-T=». «u^-^a—--^ «_ ^-^. -
.
Columbia-Montour
Family Planning Inc.
Call 387-0236 f o r appointment
NATIONAL COLLEGE MARKETING
COMPANY seeks individual or campus
group to work part-time assisting
students in applying for credit cards.
Flexible hours, excellent S, full training.
Meet students and have FUN. Call
Angela at (215) 567-2100.
varied
specials fe atured!
'
\
* Mainville Furniture *
(next to Computer Clinic)
%>•
l
at
1123 Old Berwick Road
CLASSIFIEDS
I . interested in joinin g n
a sorority?
^
|\
ISC Rush Sign- Ups
>
®
>
HELP WANTED: Someone who is a little bit crazy and likes to sing and dressup in costumes. If interested , call 'Someone Cares ' the Balloon People at
784-5138
ANYONE scheduled to student teach
anywhere around Bloomsburg Area
Spring 1987 who would like to trade
a s s i g n m e n t s to M t . C a r m e l and
Shamokin elementary schools, contact
Kim at 784-6642.
REWARD: Free trip to Daytona plus
commission money. WANTED: Organized group of individuals to promote the
Number One Spring Break Trip to
Daytona. If inte rested , call DESIGNERS
OF TRAVEL at 1-800-453-9074
FOR SALE: Spinet-Console l'iano
Bargain. Wanted: Responsible party to
take over low monthl y payments on
spinet-console piano. Can be seen locally. Call Mr. Wh ite at 1-800-544-1574 ext.
608.
DJ. WANTED: Local sound company
needs d.j. Freshman and sophomores
encouraged to app ly. If interested call
387-0944
All President's Talk
. ^£
Wednesday, Sept. 24
9:30 p.m. Carver Hall
TIRED OF STIFLING DORMS? Try living in the plush , luxurious . Maroon &
Gold Apartments. December male
graduate looking for someone to takeover lease for Spring 1987 semester. Live
onl y two blocks from campus with
three cool (well , two anyway) guys. Call
784-4063 anytime.
S60 PER HUNDRED PAID for rcmailing
letters from home! Send self-addressed ,
stamped envelope for informationAipplication. Associates, Box 95-B, Roselle,
NJ 07203.
WANTED STUDENTS , interested in selling vacation tour packages for 1987
'Spring Break Vacation' to Daytona
Beach and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida and
South Padre Isls, Texas. Guaranteed
good trips , good commission and
terms. For more information call 'The
Bus Stop Tours.' In Illinois call collect
(312) 860-2980 all o t h e r states
1-800-222-4139. Or write 436 No.
Walnut Ave. Wood Dale, III. 60191-1549.
Previous experience a plus. Student Act i v i t i e s , F r a t e r n i t y welcome to
participate
OLIVERI PROFESSIONAL SOUND CO.
booking date parties , dances, banquets.
Call 387-0944 now for a quote on college rates
*f* *** *P V * •$! «i*
PERSONALS
Attention Laura Parks. I' m getting
hungry for Chinese food. How about
you? If so, call me at 784-4063. Guy.
Happy Birthday Cin , have a GOOD
one!!! Love ya - your roomies
PS: Have a Happy! Ratettes Again.
P-Chem I and 21 - All in the same
semester: DON'T DROP IT! Ratettes.
It 's LANDING tonight at 8 p.m. in Haas
Auditorium!
1. - She shot herself - fancy that? - C.
VOICE CLASSIFIEDS
Sep t. 22 and 23
from
<0
10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
|
j
Union multi-purpose A
11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
^a
Os
Scranton Commons
p"4
j
SPRING BREAK. Campus representative
needed as SPRING BREAK trip promotor. Earn a free trip to Nassau. Past
experience in student promotions
necessary. Contact Nancy DeCarlo at
Atkinson & Mullen Travel, Inc., 606 E.
Baltimore Pike, Media , Pa., 19063. Or
call (215) 565-7070 or PA 800-662-5184 ,
Nj 800-523-7555
LOST AND FOUND: Reward offered for
return of black cat with white markings.
Lost in downtown Bloomsburg area.
Call 78-1-1198 anytime.
! »;;„.!*•' ^^
See one of the largest
selections of new and
used furniture and
appliances in the
6 county area
...takes pleasure in announcing
the relocation of our Bloomsburg
office to:
...
n — ^ — »—=" ^¦VJ*' v^
The door swung wide, and there, to the horror ot
the other pirates, stood Captain Monet —
unmistakable with his one eye and pegbody.
(just 4 miles across the
river from Bloomsburg)
Be sure to check out our
close-out department.
Political disorder
c i t . (footnote
abbreviation)
Traveled on a
Flexible Flyer
Glorify
Prospero ' s servant
in "The Tempest"
Well-known government agency
American league
team (abbr.)
Fictional hypnotist
Style exemplified
by Picasso
"She ' s
"
(from "Flashdance ")
Be unwell
Visible trace
Think
Woman ' s undergarment
Commit
kiri
i>
burner
" ...for if I
away... "
Actress Gibbs
African antelope
Well-known TV bandleader
Pi nee
(eyeglass type)
1968 f i l m , "
Station Zebra "
1965 film , "
Ryan ' s Express "
|
|
|
1
%
|
Send to: Box 97
KUB or drop in
the VOICE mail
slot, in Union
before 12 p.m.
on Thurs. for
Monday's paper
or Tuesday for
Thurs. paper.
All classifieds
must be prepaid.
I wish to place a classified
ad under the heading:
-Announcements
-Lost and Found
-For Sale
-Personals
-Wanted
-Other
I enclose $
for
Five cents per word.
words.
AMA: Credit on the wav
That 's right! Juniors , seniors ,
graduate students as well as faculty and staff can get the credit they
deserve thanks to the American
Marketing Association. According to Mike Karchner , vice
president of AMA , upperclassmen and faculty may obtain Sears, Amoco, Mastercard or
Visa credit card s on October 1,
2 , and 3 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in the Kehr Union Snack Bar
area. Karchner points out that
"charge accounts are a very inexpensive yet effective method of
establishing a credit history ."
Accordin g
to
Edward
Solomon , president of the College Credit Corporation , "A
solid credit rating can make the
difference when applying for a
car loan or another credit card .''
The Citibank cards have an annual fee of $20 while the Sears
and Amoco cards cost nothing to
apply. Special applications are used that take into account a student ' s uni que finacial circumstances. John R. Post of
Citibank says that the acceptance
requirements th roughout this program ate extremel y lenient
because Citibank and the other
companies offering accounts
"understands the students ' credit
dilemma " and considers factors
such as bank
accounts ,
allowances, summer jobs and part
time employment. A current job
is not necessarily required in
oreder to be approved .
1hat 's ri ght! Juniors , seniors ,
graduate students as well as faculty and staff can get the credit they
deserve thanks to the American
Marketing Association. According to Mike Karchner , vice
president of AMA , upperclassmen and faculty may obtain Sears, Amoco, Mastercard or
Visa credit cards on October 1,
2 , and 3 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in the Kehr Union Snack Bar
area. Karchner points out that
"charge accounts are a very inexpensive yet effective method of
establishing a credit history . "
According
to
Edward
Solomon , president of the College Credit Corporation , "A
solid credit rating can make the
difference when applying for a
car loan or another credit card ."
The Citibank card s have an annual fee of $20 while the Sears
and Amoco cards cost nothing to
apply. Special applications are used that take into account a student 's .uni que finacial circumstances. John R. Post of
Citibank says that the acceptance
requirements throughout this program are extremely lenient
because Citibank and the other
companies offering accounts
"understands the students ' credit
dilemma " and considers factors
such
as bank
accounts ,
New directors
hired
from page 1
Bloomsburg University, replaced Sandy Shriner as residence
director in Schuy lkill Hall.
Koch is ori g inall y from
came
to
Hazelton , and
Bloomsburg to attain a Bachelors
Degree in Arts and Sciences. He
also received a second degree in
Education and E l e m e n t a r y
Education. As of last year , he
started his graduate studies in
Arts and Sciences.
Koch obtained his experience
working as a resident advisor for
two years while he was a student
at Bloomsburg and a graduate
counselor at North Hall last year.
Aside from these University positions , he was a former coach of
the Bloomsburg Hi gh School
football team.
Being an R.D. tends to intimidate students at times, Koch
believes. He wants students to
realize he can relate to them
because he was once a student at
Bloomsburg .
Enrollment
increases
from page 1
in the number of currentl y enrolled students who were eligible to
come back as opposed to last
year. That accounted for another
45 students .
"The other few that we're up,
we can 't refine it that closely
anyway ," admitted Cooper.
"We also were concerned
about the Gramm-Rudman implications on student financial aid .
There was some real serious concerns whether or not the financial
aid p icture would be bri g ht
enough to let as many students attend as has been the case in the
past , " said Cooper.
"We wanted to make sure we
were at least even with last year ,
in terms of enrollment , and not
behind at all ," said Cooper.
According to Cooper , had
Bloomsburg enrolled less
students than in previous years ,
capital requests for a new library
and a new residence hall , for example, may not be considered
favorabl y by the state .
"We 're concerned with pro viding the opportunity for as
many students who want to come
to Bloomsburg as we possibly
can. When that point is exceeded to the place that we are overtaxing all of our resources , then
we think it ' s going to be a
negative impact , but we don 't
think we 've reached that point
yet ," said Cooper.This reasoning is supported by
figures that show there were actually fewer triples this year than
last.
"Last year we opened with
over 200 triples, this year it 's
ri ght around 180. The reason it 's
less is because we didn 't house as
many transfer students ," said
Cooper.
According to Cooper , the state
dictates no guidelines for enrollment in its 14 institutions.
In setting their own enrollment
goals , the president , vicepresidents , and planning commissions take into consideration
library space., classroom space ,
number of faculty members and
their advisment loads , residence
hall space , and dining facilities ,
for example.
"We haven 't had a whole lot
of complaints. We hear some, but
it really hasn 't been any different
than any other year at this point.
Students are willing to put up
with a little bit of inconvenience
to have the opportunity provided
to them ," said Cooper.
f-
allowances, summer j obs and part
time employment. A current j ob
is not necessarily required in
oreder to be approved .
The AMA hopes that with the
holidays just around the corner ,
all eligible peop le will take advantage of this uni que offer to increase their buy ing power, requiring only a few minutes to
comp lete the app lications.
Prepare for the future by
establishing a good credit rating
today . After all , credit is no
longer just a convenience , it 's a
necessity.
Dr. Schreier winds uo in the student-faculty softball game last Friday.
Catholic Campus Ministry Offers Programs
by Melissa Menapace
for the Voice
Catholic Campus Min istry
touches many aspects of univer sity and community life. It offers
a chance to find time to think and
lake a look at life by meeting people , relaxing, and having fun.
The CCM house , 353 College
Hill , is open daily from 8 a.m.-l 1
p.m. All students are welcome
regardless of affiliation.
Father Chet Snyder and Sister
Anita McGowan work with student officers to plan events that
range from "beach" parties and
movies to weekend retreats.
CCM serves the community
throug h programs such as Operation Friendship, a big brother/bi g
sister program , and nursing home
visits.
U pcoming events include a
Parent ' s Weekend
Mass ,
September 21 , in Carver Hall. A
day of renewal with students from
other colleges at Lock Haven
University is planned for Oct. 4 .
Father Lou Gnppi will discuss
"death and dy ing " on October 9.
Weekend liturgy is celebrated
at 4:30 p.m. Saturday and 6 p.m.
Sunday at St. Columba Churc h ,
Third and Iron Streets . Dail y
Mass is held at the CCM house
Monday and Friday at noon and
Tuesday and Thursday at 9:30
p.m. Mass is also offered at 7:15
a.m. on Wednesdays.
Stop by the CCM house for
more i n f o r m a t i o n or call
784-3123.
$25 , PP&L will match it 2 to 1
and the university receives $50.
The areas that all contributions
go into are capital needs and
academic equipment , faculty
development , library support ,
academic scholarshi ps, fine arts,
program development , athletics ,
and an unrestricted area.
The Board of Directors listens
to proposals and requests made
fro m faculty and staff. Board
members can also initiate ideas.
Student organizations can not
apply for funds since they have
other opportunities (CGA, for
examp le).
Since the Foundation ' s rebirth
in January , it has received approximately $620,000 in contributions and gifts.
The Board has quarterl y
meetings to discuss ideas for the
university. Grants that have
already been appropriated include
$10 ,000 for presidential scholarshi ps , $14 ,000 for faculty
development (money for conferences and meetings attended),
$4 ,000 for university wide symposium , $2 ,500 for the purchase
of a visualtek machine for the
library to assist the visual impaired , and $5,000 for the purchase of an IBM/AT micro computer for the math and computer
science department.
Funds formerly going into the
Unrestictive Trust will now be
going into the Foundation Fund .
At the start of '85-'86, the
Unrestictive Trust has $25 ,000 .
The Unrestrictive Trust now has
approximate ly $4,000 remaining.
Of the $4 ,000. $2 ,500 is committed to the Bloomsburg Theatre
McCarty cont . from p. 1
' Who ever thinks that when they
get in a car that it could be the
last time they get in a car? " She
added , "Accidents aren 't picky.
They take any body . "
McCarty 's parents , Allison and
Ron McCarty , wrote to the
university and are hoping the
university will send the degree
McCarty would have received in
December. McCarty is also survived by his brother , Thomas
McCarty , a BU alumni.
Development requires activation of fund
from page 1
umbia County Farmer 's National
Bank have each donated $10,000
over a five year period.
Bloomsburg Bank Columbia
Trust and Commonwealth Bank
and Trust have each donated
$ 10,000 over a four year period.
United Penn Bank and First
Eastern Bank will each g ive
$2 ,500.
Although contributions from
large companies are needed ,
David Hill , treasurer of the Foundation Fund , said that the young
alumni is the target group since
many are associated w i t h
businesses. Many businesses support hi gher education and offer
incentives with matching gifts . If
an alumi working for PP&L gives
RESEARCH PAPERS
Ensemble and $ 1 ,000 is committed to sending the Madri gal
chora l group to Eng land. A fter
the remaining $500 is spent the
Unrestrictive Trust will be nonexistant. According to David
Hill , the Unrestictive Trust is a
thing of the past.
Hill stated that the two largest
costs for the Unrestrictive Trust
during '85- '86 were a $5 ,000
grant for the academic department and $4,000 spent to send the
Husky football team to Alabama.
Other expenses include the costs
of meetings and bring ing guests
to Bloomsburg University .
Hill remarked that most universities have foundations and expressed that it is harder to raise
money and approach peop le for
donations when you do not have
a foundation.
16,278 to choose from—all subjects
Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD
Hii 800-351-0222
ranl'lll im'
in Calif. 1213W7-8226
Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Assistance
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN, Los Angeles, CA 90025
Custom research also available—all levels
=^
QUESTION #2.
American Marketing Association
presents
"Ho t Shot Schnapps "
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Hibbs resigns post: Bressi Hutchinson feels BU field
women 's basketball coach hockey to have a big year
by Ted Kistlcr
Sports Editor
The Bloomsburg women 's
basketball team has a new head
coach in Joe Bressi. Bressi , a
34-year-old native of Kul pmont ,
has spent his past ten ygars as
women 's head coach at Bishop
McDevitte Hi gh School in
Harrisburg .
While at Bishop McDevitt ,
Bressi' s teams won seven league
titles and file district crowns.
Bressi also led his teams to four
champ ionshi ps in the former
South Central Penn League and
three Mid-Penn League titles in
Division I.
Bishop McDevitt , u n d e r
Bressi' s guidance also captured
three Class AA champ ionshi ps
and two Class AAA titles.
The 1983-84 season was his
best as his team built a record of
.Joe Bressi
36-1 , losing only in the state
AAA finals to North Catholic of
Pittsburg .
His career at Bishop McDevitt
built him a 237-43 record .
Referring to his switch fro m
hi g h school to college coaching,
Bressi commented , "I' ve always
wanted a college job. I feci I'd
taken g irls basketball as far as I
could go. "
When asked about his win-loss
record , which includes a 127-10
over the past four years , Bressi
said , "We had a very disci plined and very oriented program that
1 hope to bring to Bloomsburg. "
Last year Bloomsburg posted a
9-13 record overall , and were 8-5
in the Pennsy lvania Conference
Eastern Division. Bressi hopes to
improve that. "We have good
guards returning ... we only lost
one senior. "
by Kelly Ann Cuthbert
for the Voice
Men s net
team goes
to 3-0
by Robert Bail y
Stall ' Writer
The Bloomsburg University
men 's tennis team continued its
fall season last weekend with victories over Lehi gh and Lafayette
to win the Lehi gh Triangular
match. The team started the
season with a lair performance at
the Bloomsburg Invitational. The
team came back with a strong victory over SUNY at Bing hamton.
Their record is now 3-0.
This year 's team is led by Steve
Augustine , the PSAC number
three sing les champ ion. Also
returning are seniors Tim Mitchell and co-captain Scott Gibbs.
Jr.niors Dean Doria and Steve
Looker , as well as sophmorc
Scott Glassford . return after
strong seasons last year.
New p layers this year are Mark
Billone and Mark Lupinacci ,
transfers from Stamford , Connecticut. Matt Qui gley and Gene
Olyne , both from Philadel phia
hope to contribute in seasons to
come .
Saturday , the team takes on the
alumni in an exibition at 11:30
a.m. Sunday , they go up against
Haverford College here at 12:00 .
According to headcoach Jan
Hutchinson , the field hockey
team may be a contender for the
PSAC tournament and the National tournament again this year.
The coach's eight-year record
of 112-25-12 includes an NCAA
Division II championship in 1983
and a Division III champ ionship
in 1984, along with the double
honor of being the Pennsylvania
Conference Champ ions for both
of those years as well. Last year,
BU had a 19-2-0 record , placed
third in NCAA Division III and
in the Pennsylvania Conference,
and was Northeastern Regional
Champions.
"Field hockey is a running
game, " says Hutchinson , "it requires speed , quickness, good
stick work , and stamina. " The
Huskies will rely on these
strengths to get them, to the
playoffs this season , she adds.
Three members graduated this
past year including: Beth Eyer ,
goalie; Liz Yeager, an AllConference player and four year
starter in the position of sweeper;
and Karen Hertzler , a two-time
All-American and the high scorer
for three years .
Forty-five girls tried out for the
team this fall. The squad presently consists of seven seniors , six
juniors , five sophomores, and
nine freshmen. Returning lettermen are: Cind y Daeche
(back) , Kate Denneny (attack) ,
Donna Graupp (attack) , Lynn
Hurst (link), Carta Shearer (link),
and Diane Shields (attack).
Bloomsburg will play its first
seasonal home game against East
Stroudsburg on Tuesday , Sept.
23, at 3:00 p.m. Other games
scheduled for September include:
Sheptock.
-Sept. 25 - Gettysburg (home) at
Cook was the team leader with
3:30 p.m.
nine quaterback sacks and also in-Sept. 27 - Millersville (away) at
tercepted a pass. For his career ,
1 p.m.
he has 133 tackles and 16 sacks.
-Sept . 29 - Eastern Mennonite
Grande has been the Huskies'
(home) at 2 p.m.
leading receiver in each of his
three seasons with the club .
He caught 45 passes for 552
Lady netters
yards and six touchdowns in
1985. For his career , he has 91
receptions for 1,195 yards and 10
0-2 after
touchdowns.
Bloomsburg , which won the
Pennsylvania Conference title and
Bucknell Blitz
reached the national semi-finals
while posting a 12-1 record last
by Ted Kistler
season , did not appear among The
Sports Editor
Football News ' "top twenty ."
The women's tennis team's
record stands at 0-2 following
their loss to Bucknell Tuesday,
8-1.
The Huskies' only victory came
in a doubles match. Karen Gubicza and Jennifer Sterling won 6-3,
many holes in their roster.
6-4 over Cynthia Bentley and
49ers 24 New Orleans 23
Marge Triay .
San Francisco a question mark
In other doubles matches Sarah
ri ght now , and the Saints look to
Palmer and Dana Edwards of
be on their way up the divisional
Bucknell defeated Cortlee
ladder.
Gerhart and Megan Clarke 6-4,
New Orleans could pull off an
6-0.
upset if they can score early.
In a third doubles match Carol
Washington 28 San Diego 27
Rowland and Sue Lindstrom tooA lot of people are touting the
ped Huskies Cathy Vonluehrte
'Skins as the class of the NFC
East , but San Diego will be no and Jeanne Cancelliere 8-6 in a
pro set.
easy day for them.
The women 's singles matches
They have to stop certain Hall
of Famer Dan Fouts and a defen- all went to the Bisons. In the first
match Sarah Palmer defeated
sive front that is actually saying
Gerhart 7-6, 6-1. Mindy Moyer
hello to a few quaterbacks .
outscored Vonluehrte 6-2, 6-1.
Kansas City 21 Houston 17
After three sets, Wendy Howitt
Houston is another one of those
put down Husky Jean Cancelliere
teams who are finally starting to
4-6, 7-5, 6-3 . Rowland topped
show results of their rebuilding.
Gubicza in two sets 6-3, 6-3.
Next year , you may see this
Bucknell' s Edwards took the
team as one of the AFC leaders,
fifth match 6-2 , 7-5 over Wendy
but not yet.
Wendhold.
Chicago 30 Green Bay 17
In the final singles match it was
Chicago will definetel y lose
Lindstrom in three sets over Kim
more than one game this year.
Jefferis of Bloomsburg.
Teams are going to start scoring
The Huskies will try to impoints on them.
prove their record to 1-2 Friday
Green Bay just doesn 't happen
as they travel to Kutztown.
to be one of th ose teams.
Grande, Cook, receive
pr eseason honors
Predictions from the end zone
While the Bloomsburg University football team alread y has its
season in full swing, two of its
players , Wes Cook and Kevin
Grande , have been named to the
NCAA Division II preseason AllAmerican team.
The team , released by The
Football News , also includes 10
Conference
Pennsy l v a n i a
performers .
Wes Cook , the Huskies ' nose
guard, is expected to be one of the
leaders of a defense that led the
conference , allowing just 227.6
yards per game in 1985.
Cook reg istered 79 tackles a
year ago , ranking him second on
the team in that category behind
first team All-American Frank
Atlanta t© upset Cowboys in top NFL game
Well here goes sports fans. The
first installment of my football
p icks for the season.
One thing before I start. If
anybody would like to challenge
my picks , I issue an open invitation to anybidy out there to send
their picks to the Voice office.
And away we go...
Cleveland 31 Cincinnatti 21
Hi gh charged Brown offense
will manipulate hapless Bengal D
that has given up 57 points in two
contests.
The Browns are on the rig ht
track and will give a lot of AFC
teams headaches this year.
Denver 24 Philadelphia 10
The Broncos have got it going
this season. John El way is throwing beautifull y, and Buddy Ryan ,
the premier defensive mind in the
NFL , has a defense that has done
little else except get very tired .
Don 't give me that crap about
allowing only 13 points in OT
loss to the Bears . McMahon
didn 't play , and the Bears got
close enough for 6 field goal
attempts.
Elway-Steve Watson combo
will give Phill y their third loss in
a row.
Minnesota 28 Pittsburgh 13
Minnesota 's loss to Detroit was
a fluke . This is a Viking team
back on the track to greatness and
the weak Steeler secondary will
get blistered by Tommy Kramer.
No lie , this team can make a
run at the Bears if they can keep
that defense ti ght.
L.A. Rams 35 Indianapolis 7
Laugher of the week. The Colts
have scored 13 points while giving up 63. No contest.
Buffalo 27 St. Louis 21
Buffalo has lost two nail-biters ,
while showing one of the most
explosive offensive attacks in the
league, led by-millionaire Steve
Young.
The Cards looked tough against
the Rams , but their defense fell
apart against Atlanta . I expected
them to be competitive this year ,
but they 're still a couple of key
players short.
Tampa Bay 17 Detroit 14
Mild upset in a game between
teams trying to get their feet off
the ground. Look for the Bucs to
Jeff Cox
get their first win .
Atlanta 30 Dallas 24
Upset of the Week. Atlanta has
looked impressive and the NFC
West , once a laug hing stock , is
shaping up as a tough division.
This one could turn into an offensive party , but Atlanta has a
super ground game that will offset Walker and Dorsett.
Intangible here is Atlanta 's
league-leading offense that can
put points on the board in a hurry
up against a slow-starting Dallas
team.
Miami 28 N.Y. Jets 20
This one could get worse if the
Jets play like they did against
New England , but could be close
if the Dolphins defense stays at
home like they did against New
England .
Neither team has a good , solid
foundation , but both show signs
of brilliance. The Jets could turn
home field advantage in their
favor. A tough one to call.
New England 24 Seattle 17
Definetely the most interesting
game of the week from a viewing standpoint.
Both teams look strong this
season ,'and both have consistent
scoring machines and defenses
that have g iven up only 26 points
combined .
Look for the Patriots to win this
one on a late drive , but it should
be nip and tuck all the way .
N.Y. Giants 20 L.A. Raiders 13
This one could have been a
Super Bowl preview , but the
Raiders need a quaterback.
I expected the Raiders to really make a charge for the AFC
crown , but there are just too
increases
to benefit
university
by Ellen Jones
for the Voice
According to Dr. Tom Cooper ,
Dean of Enrollment Management , the decision to increase
enrollment was made to get BU's
share of the state's contribution
to the system. According to
Cooper , the original figure of 50
additional students skyrocketed to
193 for four reasons.
Fifth day enrollment figures for
the fall '86 semester show 5,233
full-time, undergraduate degree
students enrolled at BU. This is
an increase of 193 from fall 1985
figures.
According to Cooper , Pennsylvania 's 14 state schools' funding is based primarily on 14th
day enrollment figures. This year
the State System had a six percent
increase in funding across the
board.
"When they ran that six percent formula through the budget
formula process , instead of
Bloomsburg getting six percent ,
we got four percent , " stated
Cooper.
The budget formula is based on
three years enrollment.
"Ri ght now, our enrollment
for the three years that are being
used in this formula , in relation
to the other 13 institutions, using
the same enrollment years, is not
as high as theirs. As a result,
some of the schools got seven to
eight percent increases, some got
less than we did , and some got
somewhere around the six percent," said Cooper.
According to Cooper , since
Bloomsburg does not have a big
increase in its freshmen class each
year , (some of its sister institutions have as much as 40 percent
of their total enrollment in their
freshman class) the institution has
been hurt financially by not
receiving its percentage of the
state's appropriation increase.
' 'That was part of the reason
we wanted to increase our enrollment slightly . Now , we did not
want to go up 200 students
though," said Cooper. "We
wanted to go up about 50
students," he added .
A second reason for the enrollment increase , according to
Cooper , was a 1.25 percent increase in the number of students
offered admission that elect to accept. This accounts for approximately 50 of the 193 student
increase.
There was also a slight increase
see page 7
CGA survey to study university pa rkingp roblem
by Rebecca Solsman
for the Voice
At tfce CGA Executive meeting
last Monday, the committee proposed to create , distribute and
calculate a survey which will help
to solve the parking problem at
the university .
The Parking Committee, made
up of faculty , staff , students and
law enforcement, would like to
put a zone into effect which says
that students living within a certain proximity of the university ,
may not park on campus. CGA
thinks more research should be
done before this parking restriction is put into effect.
CGA proposed that they ,
SOAR (Student Orginization of
Adult Resources) and a few commuter/off-campus students ,
design and distribute a survey to
those affected by the parking problem. The survey will find out
how many students have cars ,
how many students would be affected by the zone, how many
parking spaces are open during
classes , what times the parking
spaces are filled , among other
questions.
CGA also wants to research
how university neighbors will be
affected by the students who park
in front of their homes or walk
throug h their lawns. It was decided by CGA that the proposal for
the survey will be drawn up and
sent for permission to Dr. Parrish , Vice President for
administration.
Also discussed was a request
for funds by Tim Keffer , president of CGA , so he could attend
a national convention for leadership workshops on Nov 8-11.
The committee granted the request and approved funding for
the convention within the limit of
$500.
CGA also granted the request
of $ 152 to help defer the cost for
Jack Phelan , a QUEST student
leader , to attend a "learning by
doing " workshop to be held Sept.
25-28 in Moodus, Connecticut.
A decision to partially fund
buses to run to the West
Chester/Bloomsburg football
game at West Chester on Sept. 26
was passed. However , CGA
decided not to provide buses
Increased development
requires activation of fund
by Lynne Ernst
Staff Writer
Voice photo by Carl Huhn
The Bloomsburg Fair kicks off its 1986 run Monday , Sept. 21. Fair vendors spent the week
setting up wares and rides for the expected crowds. The fair runs through Saturday , Sept. 27.
Residence life hires new directors
by Sandi Kaden
for the Voice
The Residence Life Department at Bloomsburg University
has hired three new residence
directors over the summer to
replace the former directors who
have resigned.
Gretchen Erb, a native of Danville, has replaced Mary Lou
Dressman-Conroy as Residence
Director of Columbia Hall. Erb
attended Penn State University
for five years and acquired a B.A.
in Psychology and a Masters in
Counselor Education. She
graduated and
came to
Bloomsburg for her first job as a
residence director.
Although Erb is new to the
position , she has had some
previous experience as an assistant coordinator during her year
in graduate school at Penn State.
Erb and her staff at Columbia
Hall have been working closely
for the past few weeks and have
developed a very good working
relationship. She said , "I am
teaching and learning at the same
time."
Ed Volovage, from Mocanaqua , PA, has taken over as
residence director in Luzerne
Hall for Donald Young, who now
resides in Mountour Hall.
Volovage attended Allentown
College of St. Frances De Sales
for four years and then went on
to Clarion University for a year
majoring
in
Micro
Biology/Genetics.
Volovage currently attends
Marywood College and is studying to obtain a Masters Degree in
Counseling. While he attended
Clarion, Volovage maintained the
job of a graduate hall director ,
and until his job here at
Bloomsburg, he was employed as
an R.D. at Keystone Junior
College.
According to Volovage, he has
a close relationship with his staff
at Luzerne and they are "very experienced. " He believes the
students here are nice and
friendly.
Bill Koch , a graduate of
see page 7
The Foundation Fund of
Bloomsburg University , a nonprofit orgainization to receive
gifts , has been reactivated after
years of inactivity . The Foundation 's revival resulted from the
university 's awareness of the
need for private support and not
just state funds. The money the
foundation members work hard to
raise, spells the difference between BU being an adequate institution and a great institution.
The Foundation Fund , headed
by Anthony Ianiero, Director of
Development , is committed to
financing projects , scholarships ,
or anything that goes beyond the
funds allocated by the state.
"One of the biggest problems ,
said Ianiero," is that people
believe you 're funded totally by
the state and don 't need contributions. The state only provides for
50 percent of the university 's
budget while student tuitions ,
fees , and grants cover the rest.
Part of Ianiero's job is to
educate people to look at planned gifts and keep Bloomsburg in
mind as a beneficiary.
The Foundation 's Board of
Directors is comprised of 18 prominent business men and women
who volunteer their time and input. Some of the board members
work at Air Products , AT&T,
and other large corporations
which are willing to contribute to
BU.
AT&T donated $255,000 in
new computer equipment and
IBM and Tandy Corp. donated
computer equipment totaling
$4,000.
A local business man active
with the Foundation Fund is
Richard Benefield , President of
Hotel Magee Inc. and Chairman
Two losses fel t by university community
Seymour Schwimmer
Seymour
Schwimmer,
Bloomsburg University professor , died July 16 while
awaiting
heart
tests
at
Presbyterian University of Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia.
Schwimmer, 61, had taught
philosophy at BU for 21 years.
He was chairing his department's
program evaluation at the time of
his death. "He was one of our
most caring faculty, " said G.
Alfred Forsythe former Dean of
the College of Arts and:Sciences
as quoted in The PressEnterprise. He ' described
Schwimmer as "a probing ,
question-asking person who
always wanted to uncover the
underlying logic behind things. "
Schwimmer, originally from
New York City, graduated from
the City College of New York in
1946. He also served in the Ar-
Nov.
5
to
the
Norfolk/Bloomsburg game, Norfolk ,
Virg inia. The decision was made
because of the $1,324 cost per
bus and the Saturday 3 a.m.
departure time required to arrive
at the game on time.
CGA will continue to fund daily issues of the New York Times
and USA Today newspapers to
campus dormatories. The cost
will be under $150.
Deadline for ARS (Association
of Resident Students) petitions
will be extended until Friday ,
Sept. 20, because of the lack of
participants.
Robert McCarty
my in 1946.
Before.coming to Bloomsburg,
he worked as a statistician and
economist for the National Industrial Conference Board, he
was with the Cornell University
Auto Crash Injury Research Project for threeyears, and he taught
mathematics in the New York City public school system from
1962 to 1965.
Schwimmer received
a
masters' degree from Columbia
University in 1965 and did further graduate work at Columbia
University and New York
University. He was a member of
the American Philosophical
Association, the Eastern Pennsylvania Philosophical Association and B'nai B'rith.
He is survived by his wife,
Ruth , two sons, and a brother.
Robert M. McCarty , a
Bloomsburg University senior
marketing major , died July 15 as
result of injuries sustained in an
automobile accident. McCarty
was a passenger in a car driven
by someone under the influence
of alcohol.
McCarty, 22, was scheduled to
graduate in December, 1986. A
member of Tau Kappa Epsilon
Fraternity and the American
Marketing Association, he was an
active student at BU.
"He was very athletic, outgoing, " said Brad White, a former
roommate and fellow brother of
McCarty 's fraternity. White added that McCarty was involved
with intramural sports, he was an
Interfraternity Council representative, and was very active in the
fraternity.
' 'He was the kind of guy who
was always there for you , " said
White. "We miss him a lot. He
did not do a lot of big things, but
he was always there and always
willing to help everybody else, f
And that's how he got killed. He
was helping someone take
another person home." White
added that the two people in the
accident with McCarty survived
the accident.
Debbie Porter , a senior early
childhood education major and a
member of the Alpha Sigma
Alpha sorority, was McCarty 's
girlfriend of three years. They
were planning on getting married
after both of them were out of
school. "The girls in my sorority called him Mr. Bob," said
Porter. "The guys called him BMac." She added that McCarty
was a quiet person who. would
give advice if asked but basically kept to himself.
"It makes me very angry
because the person driving the car
obviousl y had no reason to be
driving," said Porter , referring
to the drunken driver of the car.
McCarty cont. pg. 7
of the Board of the BU Foundations Inc .
Benefield is active in the Foundation is because he "believes in
pay ing civic rent-which goes far
beyond jus t pay ing taxes. "
Benefield is also on the Board of
Governors of Higher Education
and works towards providing
students the opportunity for a
well-rounded education.
Tony laneiro
The Magee Foundation has
contributed $5,000 since the first
of the year.
Ianiero commented on the enthusiasm from the people in
Bloomsburg 's community about
the Foundation. Through market
research and public reations
Ianiero has shown the community that BU is an investment. The
college, a $35 million dollar corporation on the hill , puts millions
of dollars back into the
community .
Local banks have been very
willing to contribute. First National Bank of Berwick and Colsee page 7
Weather & Index
The Landing, a play written by T. Andrew Wright ,
directed and performed by
the Bloomsburg Players ,
runs through Saturday.
Story on page 5.
A new coach is named to
the women's basketball
team. Story on page 8.
Today 's forecast: Sunny
and mild with temperatures
in the mid to upper 60s.
Weekend forecast: Fair
conditions with afternoon
temperatures in the 70s
and overnight lows in the
50s.
Commentary
Classifieds
Comics
Crossword
Sports .
page
page
page
page
page
2
6
6
6
8
Well-balanced education is best
bet f or success af ter graduation
Editorial
Flexibility is the key to success
after graduation. According to the
September issue of Newsweek 's
On Campus, 'the most important
thing in college is to get a base
that makes it possible for you to
move. "
Unless you know that you are
going to find a cure for cancer or
build the first community on
Mars , you probabl y have experienced the anxiety and dread
that comes with trying to decide
on a career. So many things look
like fun or seem to be just for
you , but may turn out to be totally
wrong.
Going to college is not what it
used to be. Years ago , people
went to school to learn and
mature intellectually, emotionally
and socially. Today , college
seems to be more like a vocational school than an institute of
hi gher learning.
We go to school today to be
trained for a profession that
hopefull y will pay big bucks.
Professionals in the workforce
and career counseling say this
specialized education can be more
detrimental than hel pful.
"There is no such thing as getting trained for a career once in
a lifetime , " said Prof. Eli Ginzberg of the Columbia Business
School. Education today should
give you a broad base of
knowledge so you can move
around if you have to.
Nella Barkley , president of
Crystal-Barkely Corporation , a
career counseling firm , said that
employers are looking for people
with sound jud gment , communication skills and the ability
to manage others.
Just about everyone interviewed for this story said that a liberal
arts education , with practical
courses in , say , business or
Eng lish with a basic knowledge
of computers is the best way to
assure success after graduation.
New students should not feel
pressured to enter into a major as
soon as they are admitted to college. With the wide variety of
areas of study and extracurricular activites , you should
take the time to explore and learn
what is out there and not keep
yourself tied to a decision just
because you have heard th at peop le in that profession make a lot
of money or because mom always
wanted a doctor in the family.
Get involved with as much as
you can and experiment with different classes. You may find out
that oceanograp hy is not all it 's
cracked up to be or that calculus
is not the nig htmare you heard it
was.
One p iece of advice to those
who are not sure about a major
or a career choice , is to work
toward a career you will be happy with. There is no sense in
working toward something that
you hate just because you might
make lots of money.
So, when you look around and
it seems all your friends have
their careers in hand , do not get
too upset. Take your time and try
everything you can to find out
what is reall y ri ght for you.
You have a wonderful opportunity to be anything you want
and with a well-rounded education you have a better to chance
to do something you will reall y
enjoy .
Deregulation: conservatism that
discomforts the comfortable
by George Will
Editorial Columnist
WASHINGTON-Perhaps it is
a personality defect—insufficient
spontaneity ; failure to mellow out
and go with the flow—but some
airline passengers are finding
deregulation distressing. They
must pull up their socks and face
two facts. Deregulation has been
good for the masses. And the
masses are making flying a mess.
The masses are so very , well ,
numerous.
One craves a sense of the
predictable when one is boarding
an aluminum tube to be hurled by
strangers through great hei ghts at
hi gh speeds. It is unsettling to
reach the ticket counter of
Republic Airlines (which used to
be North Central before it was
Wisconsin Central) and see a sign
cheerily announcing: Hey , by the
way, we 're now Northwest.
Do not be misled by the insignia on your plane from Aspen
to Denver. Rocky Mountain Airways is really Continental Express , just as Aspen Ariways will
soon be United Express. Delta is
buy ing Western , but New York
Air is still New York Air.
However , its schedule is
sometimes a surprise to its own
employees , including the one
who was positive there was a
10:30 a.m., Washington-toLaGuardia fli ght...until she
checked and exclaimed "Well I'll
be!"
What is going on? Cap italism ,
for one thing. For another ,
democracy . It is not pretty , but
aesthetics aren 't everything.
This column is being composed on a plane. A fli ght attendant
has just said that when (I say
"if—the traffic flow we want to
go with has congealed , again) our
tri p ends , we will have, earned
various bonuses (what? no Tupperware?), including rights to
free fli ghts on various other
airlines , including Frontier.
Wrong. The flight attendant has
last week's list , now hopelessl y
out of date. Frontier is no more .
In 40 splendid years . Frontier
flew 87 million persons 47 billion
miles throug h the Mountain
West ' s stimulating weather , with
extraordinary numbers of takeoffs and landings—and only one
passenger fatality . Now Frontier
is a fatality , crushed by (among
other things) fi erce competition
with bi gger boys—United and
Continental—at a "hub" airport ,
Denver 's Stapleton.
Of 229 carriers licensed to
operate since 1978 , now 133 are
gone. Yet airline employment hit
a record hi gh in 1985. Why ?
Because in just two years
passenger bookings have soared
from 319 million to 410 million.
Why? Because during the past
decade the cost of the average
ticket has fallen 20 percent in
inflation-adjusted terms. Last
year , 85 percent of all travelers
used discount tickets and the
average discount was 55 percent.
Deregulation is conservatism
that discomforts the comfortable.
Affluent fliers can still pay for
first class , but they, too , suffer
from the congested terminals ,
delays and other effects of
deregulation. People fl ying coach
are at least getting economic
compensation.
Deregulation may seem like
app lied Reaganism , but the
legislation was passed in 1978 by
a Democratic Congress , at the
behest of a Democratic President .
Its effects have established it as
the most potent anti-labor legislation in decades.
Under regulation , airlines
became casual about labor costs
because the federal government
allocated routes and ratified fare
increases to protect profitab ility .
Entry of new carriers into the
deregulated marketplace was, at
least initially , easy. So the most
powerful effect of deregulation
was to confront the established
SHje Bmce
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
717-389-4457
Executive Editor
Managing Editor
News Editors
Features Editor
Sports Editors
Photography Editors
Advertising Managers
Business Managers
Advisor
Christine Lyons
jean Bihl
Elizabeth Dacey, Kristen Turner
Joannie Kavanaugh
Jeff Cox , Ted Kistler
Carl Huhn , Alex Schillemans
Darlene Wicker , Maria Libertella
Terri Quaresimo, Ben Shultz
John Maittlen-Harris
carriers , which had hi gh labor
costs , with new competitors that
enjoyed labor-cost advantages.
Some carriers (Braniff , Continental) forced wage concessions
by going into bankruptcy . In most
cases , competition sufficed to enforce wage concessions. Reconsolidatioh may soon result in.
say , just six or eight bi g carriers .
(Delta plus Western makes the
fourth largest.) However , there
will be fierce price competition
to entice the marg inal flier onto
all those expensive aircraft that
must be amortized.
Competition has encouraged
hub-and-spoke systems in which
carriers feed in and out of central airports. (Piedmont , for example, uses Dayton as a hub.)
Hub-and-spoke systems allow
ti g ht schedules that facilitate intense use of aircra ft . Do the aircraft get less attention from the
thinned maintenance crews? The
airlines say "no. "
They also say delay s are concentrated at the few busiest airports. (Twenty-five airports have
70 percent of all traffic.) That fact
means onl y that the persons least
likel y to be delayed are those going where the fewest persons go.
That is accurate—as was the
statistician who said that the football team that won six , lost 17 and
tied two had won 75 percent of
the games it did not lose.
Airports increasing ly resemble
bus terminals because air travel ,
which a generation ago was an
elite enjoyment , now is as accessible as bus travel. Airline
deregulation is powerful evidence
for this conservative convention:
Conservatism often is the true
populism , because less government often means a more open ,
egalitarian society .
Voice Editorial Policy
The editorials in The Voice
are the opinions and concerns
of the editorial staff , and not
necessarily the opinions of all
members of The Voice staff ,
or the student population of
Hloomsburg University.
The Voice invites all
readers to express their opinions on the editorial page
throug h letters to the editor
and guest columns. All submissions must be signed and include a phone .number and address for verification , although
names on letters will be
withheld upon request.
The Voice reserves the
right to edit and condense all
submissions.
All submissions should be
sent to The Voice office , Kehr
Union Building, Bloomsburg
University, or dropped off at
the office in the games room.
Rehnquist shoe-in f or Ch ief
Justicedesp ite liberal opp osition
by Tom Miller
Editorial Columnist
William Rehnquist seems certain to be confirmed within the
week as the next Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court , the circuslike atmosp here of the senate
committee hearings and an abortive filibuster by a handfu l of
Democrats
senate
notwithstanding.
Ronald Reagan ' s judicial
nominee will .probabl y be confirmed even as Jimmy Carter 's
jud ge. Harry E. Claiborne ,
undergoes impeachment (Yes ,
Ted Kennedy voted to confirm
him.)
The hearings achieved a level
of hypocrisy and outri g ht
ridiculousness which has not
been
seen
in
recently
Washington , a town which
specializes in such things.
The hei ght of incredulity was
reached when Sen. Kennedy
looked down his nose at Justice
Rehnquist and made references to
R e h n q u i s t ' s "questionable
background. " Kennedy continued to probe into the Justice ' s
distant past-back even to the days
before Kenned y was kicked out
of Harvard .
This senate confirmation hearing y ielded damning testimony
from several people who said
they mi g ht have seen someone
who could have looked like Rehn-
quist who may have been
challeng ing voters at an Arizona
polling p lace 25 years ago. Small
beer to some but that was suffi cient. The very notion that Rehnquist mi g ht possibl y believe that
voters should be able to read , sent
a well-founded shudder of alarm
throug hout the Democrat caucus.
There is something very
disconcerting about a man-like
Kennedy, who could not possibly
survive a Senate confirmation
hearing himself , haranguing a
jurist of virtuall y incontrovertible
integrity.
There is something amusing
about a handful of senators on the
Judiciary Committee reading the
majority op inions of .'the court ,
most of them authored by Rehnquist himself , and coming to the
deli ghtfull y inconsistent conclusion that Rehnquist is "outside
the mainstream. "
To their credit , the Democrats
have abandoned the pretense ,
which came in so handy when
they were making appointments ,
that qualifications and not politics
should be the deciding factor in
judicial appointments . Sen.
Biden , during the Manion hearings made the frank statement: "I
believe you are a just and
honorable man but I can 't vote for
you because of your political
views.
The cards are finall y on the
table now. It is the duty of libera l
jud ges to effect liberal change. It
is the duty of conservative jud ges
to preserve liberal change.
The h i s t r i o n i c s by such
"mainstream " Americans as
Sens. Kennedy and Weicker were
embarrassing but the debate in
general was kind of fun. What
conservative did not enjoy the
sight of impotent senate liberals
writhing in discomfort at the
thought of two more conservative
appointees? Onl y a real sourpuss
could suppress a chuckle over
Sen. Joe Biden ' s laug hable
presidential campai gn speeches.
I personall y let out a restrained
chortle when the Democrats ' star
"voter harrassment " witness
changed his testimony once he
was put under oath.
This "extreme " Justice ,
nominated by an extreme President who was elected by an extreme majority in an extreme 49
states , and most likely to be confirmed by an extreme majority of
the Senate is headed for what will
hopefull y be an extremely long
and productive tenure as Chief
Justice of the United States.
Liberals lost this round. If they
want to avoid another , they had
better keep Justices Marshall and
Brennen out of drafts and away
from cracks in the sidewalk; there
are mere extremists out there
waiting to be nominated by the
century 's most popular President .
To the Editor
Vandalism: 'abnormal' and 'unacceptable ' at BU
Dear Editor ,
Have you noticed the gum
wrappers , empty ci garette
packages , and the like on the
floors of buildings , on sidewalks
and in the grass? Or , that trays ,
used containers and food are left
on the tables in the Kehr Union?
The other day I saw that the
women 's lavatory in the basement
of Bakeless had been vandalized-toilet paper had been thown over
the partitions and on the waste
E/VTEK 1
HERE...
\
basket; an enormous "ball" of
toilet paper had been left on the
floor; and sanitary bags had been
pasted to the mirror with soap.
I notice such things more so at
the beg inning of every fall
semester than at any other time
of the year. Is it possible that the
majority of the guilty parties
never make it to the spring
semester or summer sessions?
Is it possible that there is a
direct correlation between those
who think littering, leaving garbage on tables , and vandalizing
are normal acts and those who
become drop-outs? Or , is it possible that the majority of the guilty
parties learn , by the examples of
others , that littering, leaving garbage on tables and vandalizing
are abnormal acts AND unacceptable at Bloomsburg University ?
What do you think?
Disgusted
BU President on vacation
Takes time out to visit alumni
>
by Don Chomiak
Student at Large
While vacationing in Florida
this past summer , Dr. Harry
Ausprich , the president of
Bloomsburg University , took
time out to visit with alumni.
President Harry Auspric h
On Saturday , Aug. 7, Ausprich
attended an alumni luncheon in
Sarasota Florida. "The president
had been scheduled to go to
Florida in March , when we had
a series of alumni meetings down
there ," said Doug Hi ppenstiel ,
director of Alumni Affairs.
"He (Ausprich) was unable to
go at that time ," added Hi ppenstiel. "He spoke to me a couple of months ago. He said he
would be in Florida and it would
be an excellent opportunity to
meet with alumni in that area. I
agreed . " Hi ppenstiel then set up
the luncheon , which he said was
attended by nine people.
"The group was made up of
older and younger constituencies , " said Ausprich. He added
that after eating, he spoke to the
alumni about the university .
"They were interested in the
football program , " added
Ausprich. He then told the alumni
about the Celebrity Artists Series ,
the Scholars Program and other
new things happening at BU.
Ausprich added the luncheon
lasted two and one half to three
hours.
The president and his family
left Bloomsburg in the middle of
Jul y, driving down to Florida and
WBUQ
announces
fall 86
additions
"If the president had gone in
March , when I w?s down there ,
to attend the alumni chapter
meetings , all of his expenses
would have been covered , airfare , hotel rooms , meals ,
whatever ," said Hi ppenstiel ,
"because it would have been entirely directed to the business of
meeting alumni. "
"It was particularl y good that
the president was traveling in that
area ," said Hi ppenstiel . "It
allowed him to meet some of the
alumni he was unable to meet in
March. " Hi ppenstiel added the
luncheon took p lace in an area
that had never had an alumni
function before , althoug h they
had tried.
"One of the reasons we have
not had an alumni function in that
area is that it is not one of the
primary population areas , " added Hippenstiel. "The peop le who
are there have been very interested in having an alumni function and I have had requests fro m
a n u m b e r of them to do
something in that area. The one
year we did try (to hold a function), it did not work out. "
Hi ppenstiel added that he
received a lot of good feedback
from the president and alumni
about the luncheon.
returning to Bloomsburg Aug.
14, "the day before the summer
commencement," said Ausprich.
According to Hi ppenstiel , the
expense statement for the tri p,
"meals, mileage and other costs
incurred by the president during
the tri p, " was initiall y sent to the
Alumni Association and charged
against the Alumni Chapters ' account. This account , a line item
in the Alumni Association 's
bud get , is used for the costs of
holding alumni chapter meetings
of one kind or another and when
someone travels representing the
Alumni
Association.
For
1985-86. the account totaled
$7 ,500.
"This is a routine thing for us
to get an expense statement from
the president or someone else on
the staff , " said Hippenstiel.
"Frequentl y we have people attend alumni functions and we
reimburse them for their expenses. In this particular case ,
there was a misunderstanding
about who would pay what and
how much , basically. "
1986 Ho mecom ing
theme announ ced
The Student Activities Office
has announced the theme for this
year 's homecoming is, America—From Sea to Shining Sea.
Sweetheart
reg istration
deadline is Sept. 24.
Homecoming activities will end
Oct. 19 with a Pops Concert
featuring the Husky Singers ,
Women 's Chorale and Concert
Choir.
The homecoming parade will
be held at 10 a.m. on Oct. 18. and
is a combined effort of
Bloomsburg High School and the
university .
Bloomsburg
will
host
Mansfield at 1:30 p.m. Oct. 18 ,
for the annual homecoming football game.
Doug Hippenstiel
When asked why the expense
statement was initiall y sent to the
Alumni Association , Ausprich
concurred there had been a
misunderstanding . "I paid for the
tri p myself ," said Ausprich. He
added the Alumni Association
covered the costs of the luncheon.
"The total cost of the luncheon
to the Alumni Association was
$88, " said Hi ppenstiel. He added that the people who attended
the luncheon paid to be there and
this covered most of the costs.
f« 8HOS OUTLET
Your Genuine Manufacturers Outlet
7 East Pine Street
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Voice photo
Art students take their class to the grass
by Carl Huhn
Scholars program under nem) direction
by Patty Moyer
Staff Writer
The Presidential Scholars Program has a new director following this summer 's resi gnation of
Dr. James Cole.
In mid-August , Dr. Nancy
Onuschak , of the N u r s i n g
Department , was appointed Interim Director of the scholars
program by Dr. Daniel Pantaleo .
interim provost and vice president
for academic affairs.
Cole , from the Department of
Biolog ical and Allied Health
Sciences , resigned due to an illness. He was the program ' s first
director , appointed in Jan. 1986.
"I think Dr. Onuschak is a
wonderful person and will be
great for the program ," Cole said
of his colleague.
"I' m very happy to be working with such very bri ght and
creative people ," Onuschak said
of the 25 freshmen involved in
this year 's program.
The Scholars Program was
established in March 1985 by an
Ad Hoc Committee formed by
former Provost and Vice President Larry Jones , Vice Provost
and Associate Vice President
Kal yan Gosh and former Acting
Dean , College of Arts and
Sciences G. Alfred Forsythe.
MMI'V.'W
mil
MIII
This year , approximatel y 180 be.
The student scholars will also
students were notified by the
director (Cole) based on their go to Washington , D.C. on Dec .
SAT scores of 1100 or more , 4 and 5 to visit the State Departranking in the top 20 per cent of ment and attend briefings on the
their class and their involvement Middle East.
Onuschak meets with the
in extracurricular activities.
Twenty-five students were students once a week in addition
selected on the basis of their ap- to "whenever else they want to
plication , and essay, an interview meet with me, " She noted.
"I am delighted the administraand at least one reference.
This semester, the student tion and the faculty strong ly supscholars are taking two courses port the program and feel
positivel y about it , " Onuschak
centered on the Middle East.
"Mr. George Turner will teach exp lained.
Onuschak , who became a
a history course on the ArabIsreali conflict. Dr. Pete Bohling faculty member at Bloomsburg in
1980, is uncertain if she will appwill teach about the economics of
the Middle East , " Onuschak ly for the Directo r position.
"Ri ght now I' m Interim Direcexp lained.
Onuschak and the advisory tor and I will be that for two
committee are planning a four years. I don ' t know about after
day symposium called The Mid- those two years. That ' s
dle East Symposium scheduled something I will have to discuss
with the department , " she said.
Nov. 17 to the 20.
Of the 25 students selected for
"This (the symposium) will be
open to the public so they can the Scholars program , 22 are
from Pennsy lvania , two are from
share the opportunity to learn
more about the Middle East , " New Jersey and one is from
Delaware .
Onuschak added .
To remain in the program ,
In addition to the symposium ,
students
must maintain a 3.0
the scholars committee is planning to have a "Visiting Scholar " grade point average or hi gher. To
receive recognition on their
who will be on campus for a few
transcri pts , the students must
days to meet with the students.
The committee has not yet decid- achieve a 3.5 GPA or better.
ed who the Visiting Scholar will
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for the Voice
Radio station WBUQ (91.1
FM) is located in the McCormick
Building, rooms 1250 and 125 1
(recording studios). The day-today operations of the station are
taken care of by the Executive
Staff consisting of BU students.
Staff members are : General
Manager Ted Hodgins , Music
Director Bruce Delong, Sports
Director John Deck , Continuity
Director Allison Krasner , Executive
Producer
Chris
Mingrone , FM Eng ineer John
Garcia , Program Director Lisa
Landis , and Remote Director
Marv MeNeeley. The News
Director position is currently not
occupied.
Deciding what and when programs are put on the air is done
by Hodgins and Landis.
Delong is responsible for talking to record companies , getting
new records , and making
play lists .
Mingrone is in charge of the on
air personnel , from the training
of new DJ's, done on the AM station , to deciding who is qualified
to go on the air , and also syndicated programs.
Garcia takes care of the
technical aspects of running the
station , AM as well as FM.
MeNeely will cover sports
events and community events
which would be of interest to the
college students. MeNeeley is
presently doing the publicity and
marketing, for the station.
Women s, name brand, all leather shoes.
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Money Ord., Pers. Check(2 wks toclr). Sorry noC.O.D.'s.Add $4.001st item $1 ea add'l shpg
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Parent ' s
D ay
Activities
Student at Large
Seventeen
T.-wi.si;re c>: r»f ;r:it crccC'CC: " »j t ci*
Don Chomia k
We i-h i at the bar. The c._ ~ v.'u
one of the fl ashier rype ? I -r . e
been in. Locate ;. >: o.^;;; :¦:"
Da I fas . it prcr . ee :.:¦ re "-".e ;¦:".; ::
an episod e apprcpr: i".ei ;. :::!ec.
•¦Se '.entesn. "
Being Nonherr.er's ar.-d < '.:zr.:.' \
out of touch •A;- T. '_ he n:_ a!s ::' a
Texas mea t ma rket. '.'.,e sa: ba ;-:.
drinking ar.c en• ¦•"/. ;r.g the i-ce-er. .
It 'A B-S &arl\ anc _r.e tcics '^a-s ;:::.
short of a gallop.
Midv. a;. into our third ro_ -d of
drinks , our atient:or. v.a.s crav. r. to
the entrance of the place br. the arrr.aJ of tv.r,, -,ep, attractive wxer,.
They v.'aiked in. declining to let the
fl oor touch their feet, and gave
ever.one watching the impression
the;, ov.ne-d the p lace. And v.h ;.
not. the;, had the looks to get
whatever the;, wanted .
Sitting together at a tabl e av.a 1.
from the crov.d. the tv- o were a
.-.. . .-.„.- \_ . ^ ~ .
K
_ , ._ . . _ . - - - -'
beau::fcii. and looked as thoug h
she had just jumped out of the
page- of Vogue Magazine. It turn ed out. talking to my friend , the
;.oung 'A oman v.as a Florida resident. 'Miami i v. ho had done some
modeling and was interested in the
theatre. She was in Texa s visiting
by Bob Banchiere
for the Voice
A.
'_".e wc-mari she was with.
3.e'..e-. ;hg my friends to be worb~ .! wis angry with them for giv¦ _-~
: T:Z
. i wai also angry, indirect¦
ly. .-.-": the r.io 'Aom-en. And in the
r-Jru. »¦?. rr..en tend to protect each
¦ off
¦
roer. I ¦
to avenge them.
- '£-.:
After cuL-'Cing two or three times
« .± the "ForJdLan ." we sat down
±.7iz rep.-, talking. In the tru e.spirit
:•:' aibc '.esce-ce. I was try ing to set
.-;: _p a"d 'hen leave, to reverse
-_-.<; effecis of what she and her
fr:e.-d had done to my friends.
Sorr.cr.oA. "he topic of age came up
arc she asked me to guess hers. I
ralkec . but then said twenty-one
because that is the drinking age in
Seventeen.
It t u r n e d out
aib.es-cer.ee was more tru e than I
could ever have guessed . Her
frtend. "he one she was in Texas
•• tsittng. was eighteen. All of us
••-ere twenr. -one. Considering our
actions. I had trouble figuring out
w h o were the true adolescents .
The big joke for the rest of my
•• •sit was one word : Seventeen. We
j ouid no: believe we had given two
girls status above us because of
their looks. It is not so much w h o
vou are as it is w hat vou can make
other people think vou are .
BU singer to p erf orm at PCM
If you ' re listening without seeing who ' s sing ing . Amy Grantor may be W h i t n e y Houston
comes to mind. Backed up by her
own strong p iano play ing, she
performs with a relaxed sty le
which hel ps you lose yourself in
the music. It is a good mix of
"mellow " and up beat tunes well
suited to her bluesy vocals.
You ' re listening to Bloomsburg ' s
own Jane Kruse.
Jane Kruse plays the music of
James Tay lor , the Beatles. Carol
King, Joni Mitchel . Whitney
Houston , and her own favoriteAmy Grant. "I like to p lay Amy
Grant ' s music because it sounds
like it comes from a sensitive,
happy person who doesn ' t need
to force everyone else to believe
the way she does , " says Jane.
"Most Gospel Music sort of
crams God down your throat, but
she ' s not like that , she ' s subtle.
STUDIO 43
784-4300
S TYL ING SALON
Now available...
Mane Klip s
($2.50 each)
So. I play some of her songs. "
Now a j u n i o r at BU. Jane was
o n l y 16 w h e n she p l a y e d
•'live ' " on one of the eastern
United States largest public radio
stations. WVIA-FM. with her
brother Rob Kruse. Rob is a professional singer-song writer, and
has had a profound impact on
Jane ' s own music, hel ping her to
incorporate the freedom of jazz
and rock influences into her own
sty le. The e x a mp le of her
brother 's prolifi c song writing has
insp ired Jane to do some writing
of her own . "I write mostl y at
times when I feel emotionall y
moved. " Jane confesses, "like
with the song Unde r the Chang-
Hours : Mon.-Fri. 9-9;
Sat. 9A
J Got an opinion?}
tWrite it!
%
Voici: photo by Joiinic Kavanaugh
BL'\ Dot and Ann I'avkovic stcn "nutst toartciiilinj '" «»t Lemon 's Tavern last
m'uht.
Twelve BU seniors graduate with honors
Twelve Bloomsburg University
seniors graduated with honors at
summer commencement exercises on A u g . 14 in Mitrani Hall
of Haas Center for the Arts.
Graduating summa cum laude
(cumulative grade point average
of 3.95 to a perfect 4.0) was Durrel E. Reickley. of Perkasie , in
mass communications.
Graduating magna cum laude
(cumulative grade point average
of 3.75 to 3.94) were Joanne T.
Capone. Mahanoy City, elementary education and Lei gh J. Hill .
Stillwater, social studies.
Graduating
cum
laude
(cumulative grade point average
of 3.5 to 3.74) were Jill M. and
Neil M. Boy d. Bloomsburg ,
psychology: Michael J. Cuddy.
Towanda. accounting: Doug hlas
D. Depper , S. Plamlleld , N.J.,
Karen
e d u c a ti o n ;
special
Carlisle ,
Henseler ,
sociology /social welfare ; Mary
C. Macuta , Hazleton , dental
hygenist; William D. McGill ,
Sugarloaf , elementary education
and Ellen S u l l i v a n , Montoursvillc , mathematics.
The Voice is
always looking for
people interested
in all areas of a
newspaper .
mEARL\FmMcm/
£) JzJLJ *?
Excellent quality
I
Z&m
^ CHEAPr
I ILlCKETY bPLIT C M V 0 /& Wf f U
33 E. Main St.
|
I
§
Ph ila. Steaks, Perrogies, Soups
Baked Po tatoes, Salads, Quiche
^§F';'0v
\
|/i ^^^ S^iS^v
v
418 East Street
ing Sky , which I wrote at the end
of a wonderful summer of working with friends as we were all
leaving. Writing songs is a good
way to express what I' m feeling. "
Jane Kruse will perform this
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Protestant Campus Ministry House
(near Carver Hall.) Admission is
free , (they will pass the hat for
the music) and refreshments will
be served.
This Saturd ay and Sunday,
Bloomsburg University will be
host to almost 2 ,000 parents of
BU s t u d e n t s for its ' a n n u a l
Paren ts ' Weekend activities.
"We hope you will enjoy learning about the academic programs and the co-curricular activities in which your sons and
daug hters participate. " said B.U.
President Harry Ausprich in a letter welcoming parents. President
Ausprich also noted that parents
have a special relationshi p with
the University and urged parents
to share their thoug hts, questions,
and comments.
The activities start at 10 a . m .
Saturday in the Kehr Union ,
where faculty members and administrators will be available to
talk with parents on such things
as academic programs, caree r opportunities , student services , and
other concerns.
A pre-game ox roast lunch will
be served in Nelson Fieldhouse
at 11:30 a.m.
After the lunch , parents may
wish to check out the Husk y soccer team in action as they entertain Millersville University. The
game will be on the upper campus field at 1:30 p.m. in Redman
Stadium. The Huskies will also
host the Lock Haven Bald Eag les
in the annual Parent ' s Day football game. A "Mom and Pop of
the dav " will be p icked and
awarded a g ift during the special
half-time ceremonies.
Saturday ni ght at 8 p.m. the
Bloomsburg Players production
of "The Landing " will be perfo rmed in the Mitrani Hall of
Haas Center. There will be three
comedian^ from New York and
Philadel p hia performing at the
Comedy Cabaret in Kehr Union ,
also at 8 p.m.
On Sunday , parents may attend
brunch in the Scranton Commons. This will be followed by
bingo in Kehr Union or shopping
at the University Book Store .
\
™
* Sundaes , Floats *
* Banana Splits *
^ Thurs. -- 10:30-10
Fri. -^^
Sat. - 10:30-11; Sun. - 1-11
OPEN
Buckhorn -- 784-6883.
HOURS
at Exit 34 off 1-80.
~
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<^T *<&%^ B s lf W l i Z*
/^
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/ f f£ $
1 each - breast , thi» li , dr u m & w i n "-
4 0/" colc
Back To College
/ d & £m {with
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coupon
4Lm49f *2P
Good thru 10/19/86
f
Can 't afford restaurants?
Cafeteria food too terrible?
¦
Meatball Sandwich
Italian Sausage Sandwich
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\$i £AS^di
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2 each - breasts, thi
,o1g hs , drums & hi!
wings:
Going to:
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New York City
,. .-„M IiH
ip^
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Ne wark Airport ,
VXj f?*/
Lehigh Valley or
^C£°fc^^
Penn Sta te University ?
Go with Trans-Bridge Lines
We serve Bloomsburg University every Friday
and Sunday to:
Lehighton, Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton,
Penn State , Newark Airport and New York City
422 East Street
784-8689
8 oz ' ra,e sla
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79 cents each
Qo
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3 each :b ,s,s ,hi Shs - l, ™»« *
f 4', potato 1logs & 3 ^"^
oz. colc slaw.
biscuits.
f
HOAGIES....$1.49
vi. small// soda
with
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l9/86
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2 loaves - 99 cents
COKE - 6 PACK
uils
*
coupon
#
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Make Your Own Sandwich!
$1.98 lb.
Roast Beef
Lebanon Bologna...$1.99 lb.
16 oz., non-returnable bottles
Call or Stop in for information:
Carter 's Cut Rate
Across from Quality Inn
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(& 0 %
£S
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cou Pon
5L°_°f Ji?™ i?^??... ™.
CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN!
l " dozen " WINGS...$1.99
x
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DRUM S... $3.49
This "Landing " worth the trip
"Getting it up
on stage, a total
student p roduction, will
hopefully inspire other
students to write
p lays f o r pro duction. "
Left: Members of the "Landing" cast
in their opening performance last night
in Mitrani Hall. It is the first allstudent production at Bloomsburg
University. Right: T. Andrew Wright,
author of "The Landing.
Voice photo by Alex Schillemans
by Don Chomiak
Student at Large
Landing usuall y entails at least
touching the ground. "The Landing/ ' the first production written and directed by students at
Bloomsburg University, has its
feet firml y planted in the baser
emotions and motivations that
make us all tick.
The play, written by T. Andrew Wri ght and directed by Joel
Weible. revolves around ei ght
peop le and their lives in a rundown apartment building in New
York City. The set is the lobb y
of the apartment building in
which the eight live and is
representative of the basement of
hope, where frustration and anger
often combine into a combustible
mixture . Chance provides a
possible way out and is
represented by the phone that
stands at the center of the set.
This , however , is not the crux
of the play . The focal point is in
how these people pull together
throug h the d i f f i c u l t circumstances they face , despite the
conflicts that occur between
them.
From the moment he steps
onstage , Jeff Morgan , who plays
a gay novelist , is catal ytic. He
lends his energy to anyone else
in the scene and the result is a an
interaction that draws the audience in. The same is true of
Carol Westwood , who plays a
woman fixated on status. She
gives a beautiful portrayal of someone out of touch with her
circumstances.
Unfortunately, not even they
can save the second scene of the
first act. In the scene , Wendy
Tennis , play ing the pregnant wife
of a drunken cri pp le , is pushed
down a staircase. Meant to be a
serious scene , it is met with
laughter as her husband is taken
from the stage.
The
dialogue
between
Westwood and Diana Eves , who
plays a hopeful dancer , is sharp
and crisp. Though Eves had a
slow start at the outset of the play , sing le fall from them , is well
she quickl y recovered to shine defined by Jay .
Tennis , the cripple 's wife ,
throug hout the remainder of the
thoug h not seen for too long on
performance .
Laurie Wallace plays a tradi- stage , gives a good portrayal of
tional stand-by-her-man type wife inner conflict and the dangers of
and a co-den mother with Eves to dealing with a wife-beating
the rest of the cast. She is con- drunkard .
James Slusser p lays Old Jack ,
sistent in character and g ives a
house
apartment
the
solid performance.
Unfortunatel y for Jeff Cox. manager/desk clerk. With a total
who plays the drunken cri pp le, lack of lines and almost as little
concentration was lacking. His motion , he is a magnificent piece
performance in the first act was of furniture .
Wright , the author , said , "The
at best not a detraction from that
of the rest of the cast. He play is a treatment of life and how
recovered in the second act and peop le pull together at critical
points. " Asked how it felt to have
had a strong finish.
,
other peop le taking the characters
weaving
The plot is intricate
throug h the seperate yet interlac- in the p lay and interpreting them ,
ed subp lots, the day to day lives he said , "Many times during
rehearsals , I wanted to ju mp
of the individual characters .
Joe Grube is Alex Stro m , son onstage and say , 'No , no , no!
of the fixated woman. He lends
t.
, . _,
, ,... . . .
a sensitivity to the part overshadowed onl y by the performances of Morgan , Westwood
and Eves. On the other end of the
sensitivity spectrum is JamesMorgan, p layed by William Jay .
The character , a simple man of
princi p les who had suffered a
Bloomsburg University !
13-J
International Relations a
Club
|
^
S
f i r s t club meeting
(i
j) Sept. 21 - Coffee House 8 p.m.
jj
jj
jj
ALL WELCOME
|
I) Refreshments will be served
jj
y
X
Walt Brasch
1 ¦ " ' '—»-?-*"r rp- * -
Y"^Q^
an<^
Floyd Walters
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(music
of
people, },
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songs ofr protest) "1
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^^^^^^^P^? -
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W\\ CAMPUS FOLK FESTIVAL \
\
Paul E. Kanjorski , (D-PA) an- to college , stated , "Too many
bri ght young minds go to waste
nounced the award of a SI67.000
federal grant to Bloomsburg
thinking college is an unattainable
University to fund the instituluxury when in fact it holds the
tion 's Upward Bound Program , key to a better future . "
which is now in its ninth year ,
The program starts with an inand has alread y received over a tensive summer sesion during
million in federal grants.
which students reside on campus
The . Upward Bound Project while undertaking studies in perrecruits high school students from sonal development , they meet
Columbia , Montour , and Nor- with instructors throug hout the
thumberland Counties who can year on a weekly basis after
now attend college , which they school hours.
could not have done before the
Bloomsburg has met with considerable success in administerproject came about.
Kanjorski , who realized the ing this program , next spring a
programs ability to provide total of 80 students will receive
academic preparation , motiva- extensive academic instruction ,
tion , and career guidance to career guidance , and advice on
students who might not have gone choosing a suitable college :
OX
j
i
Federal grant given to Upward Bound
We're Now Performing
n wr^zr w~±=r»^i- r^s *-»\y •-'V^'•«v«y «P*NJ»- W^^ •"vz*r wvs»' w<^~w^
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That character is not supposed to
do that ! Do it this way!" He adu ed , though , the performance is a
meld between the interpretations
of the author , the director and the
cast.
Asked what he thought the
most important goal of the play ,
Joel Weible , the directo r , said ,
"Getting it up and on stage , a
tota l student production , will
hopefully inspire other students to
write plays for production. " Weible , in his first role as director ,
added he intended no single
character to stand out beyond the
others. He said , "I hope this is
just the first total student production. "
The play , though it does slow
at certain points , has merit and
deserves a look. Performances
run through Saturday .
Commonwealth Bank is pleased to enter Bloomsburg
University as the newest performer on campus.
Commonwealth Bank's new banking center, located in
the lobby of the University Book Store,offers you the most
convenient banking services on campus. We're open
Monday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m.
For further convenience,a MAC automatic teller machine
is at your service 24 hours a day. MAC is accessible just .
^sf wlrW—
'! wmAAr
A
.
''Wpius
^snt.m
outside the book Store. Remind Mom and Dad that
deposits can be made to your Commonwealth account at
any MAC automatic teller machine,
Receive a FREE "Performing forBloomsburg
University" tee shirt and MAC card by opening
a Commonwealth Bank checking account.
Hurry -- offer good only while supply lasts.
Commonwealth Bank
Member FDIC
Mother 's support group
offered by Women 's Center
The Women 's Center of Bloomsburg is hosting a mothers ' support group. This group will meet on Fridays at 9:30 a.m. at the
Womens Center. The group is open to all mothers in the area.
Childcare will be provided.
This group will offe r an opportunity for mothers to discuss childrelated problems in a supportive atmosp here .
For more information contact the Bloomsburc Women ' s Center ,
784-6631.
THE FAR SIDE
U.S. Census Bureau
begins household survey
Area musiciansjoin band
Three area musicians have been
selected as members of the
Bloomsburg University Studio Band
for the 1986-1987 academic year.
The group is planning a return tri p
to play at Disney World in January
1987.
Performing .on trumpet and valve
trombone is Troy Snyder , a senior
music major. Charles Carlson Jr., a
senior anthropology major , plays
trombone , and Mike Bogush , a
secondary education sophomore ,
plays rhythm guitar.
The Studio Band , directed by
music department chairman Steven
C. Wallace , made its initial appearance at Disney World in January
1985.
The band' s most recent appearance was at Lock Haven University in April 1986.
¦ Membershi p in the band is by invitation and competitive audition.
The Studio Band plays in the annual Spring concert , in exchange
programs with other colleges and
university jazz bands , for high
school assemblies , and in concert
and in dances for area organizations.
Local representatives of the
U.S. Census Bureau began
revisiting selected households on
Sept. 2 to conduct its Survey of
Income
and
Program
Partici pation(SIPP) .
SIPP , one of the nation 's
largest household surveys , was
first introd uced in the Fall of
1983.
SIPP reports provide a wide
range of facts from household
Fourteen things that a boy always
says to a girl on a f irst date
collegiate crossword
By GARY LARSON
earnings to the effects of tax on
spending , all geared to inform the
government on how well its programs are working.
Past SIPP reports show the*
average household's value to be
$32,670 in 1984.
A nation-wide survey , SIPP
data is confidential by law and
surveyors have credentials identify ing them as Census Bureau
employees.
"They 're known for their hamburgers. "
*****
"If you 're having the salmon , then we 're supposed to have white
wine , ri ght? "
*****
"I know you 're going to think this is j ust a line , but you 've got
reall y amazing eyes ."
*****
"I' m talking too much. "
*****
"OK , let me try to exp lain it another way . When did the year one
begin? January first , year one or January first , year zero zero? January
first , year one, right? OK, so when does the twenty-first century
begin? January first , 2000? No , because that 's only 1,999 years after
January one , year one. Get it now? The twenty-first century begins
on January one , 200 1 ...What do you mean you don 't accept that? "
*****
"Picasso died? When did Picasso die?"
*****
Just give me a minute apd I'll explain why I voted for Reagan. "
*****
"Tell me something about yourself. "
*****
"Right , ri g ht , ri ght. "
*****
So how long were you married? "
*****
So maybe another time ."
*****
Taken from The Grown-Up Girl 's Guide to Boys
V
Chicken culls
© Edward Julius
ACROSS
41 " ...not with
19
but a whimper. "
20
1 Where one might
43 Return on investstudy Andy Warhol 's
ment (abbr.)
21
works (3 wds.)
44 Pondered
12 Enrollment into
45 Belonging to Mr.
24
college
Starr
25
14 "Calculus Made Sim- 47 Part of the classi"
ple , e.g. (2 wds.)
fieds (2 wds. )
28
16 Evaluate
48 Possible place to
17 Extremely small
study abroad (2 wds) 29
18 Follows a recipe
52 Small school in Candirection
ton , Ohio (2 wds.)
30
19 Belonging to Mr.
53 Orson Welles film
32
Pacino
classic (2 wds.)
22 Of land measure
33
23 Meets a poker bet
DOWN
24
Gay (WW II
34
plane)
1 Those who are duped 35
26 Capri , e.g.
2 "Do unto
..."
36
27 Belonging to Mayor
3 Fourth estate
37
Koch
4 Goals
28 Irritate or
5 Well-known record
38
embitter
label
40
30 Train for a boxing
6 Wei 1-known king
42
match
7 151 to Caesar
31
and the
8 Prefix meaning milk 44
Belmonts
9 Confused (2 wds.)
46
32 Processions
10
husky
47
35 Diet supplement
11 Most immediate
(abbr.)
12 Like a sailboat
49
38 Scottish historian 13 Cash register key
and philosopher
( 2 w ds.)
50
39 College in Green14 En
(as a whole)
Pa.
ville ,
15 Auto racing son of
51
40 The Venerable
Richard Petty
every Wednesday at j
Hess ' Tavern 1<
. D.J. entertainers and dancing
I on the best-lite dance floor
) provided by
<
^*^!!?$es^
^^^s
lsl
??
^"
"^r
}
<>
\ Oliveri Professional Sound Co.
j
Wednesday thru Saturday
10 p.m. - 2 a.m.
£
.
784-0579
•'
!
t. «~<=v. ••=&. **»<^. &~^=w «^-T=». «u^-^a—--^ «_ ^-^. -
.
Columbia-Montour
Family Planning Inc.
Call 387-0236 f o r appointment
NATIONAL COLLEGE MARKETING
COMPANY seeks individual or campus
group to work part-time assisting
students in applying for credit cards.
Flexible hours, excellent S, full training.
Meet students and have FUN. Call
Angela at (215) 567-2100.
varied
specials fe atured!
'
\
* Mainville Furniture *
(next to Computer Clinic)
%>•
l
at
1123 Old Berwick Road
CLASSIFIEDS
I . interested in joinin g n
a sorority?
^
|\
ISC Rush Sign- Ups
>
®
>
HELP WANTED: Someone who is a little bit crazy and likes to sing and dressup in costumes. If interested , call 'Someone Cares ' the Balloon People at
784-5138
ANYONE scheduled to student teach
anywhere around Bloomsburg Area
Spring 1987 who would like to trade
a s s i g n m e n t s to M t . C a r m e l and
Shamokin elementary schools, contact
Kim at 784-6642.
REWARD: Free trip to Daytona plus
commission money. WANTED: Organized group of individuals to promote the
Number One Spring Break Trip to
Daytona. If inte rested , call DESIGNERS
OF TRAVEL at 1-800-453-9074
FOR SALE: Spinet-Console l'iano
Bargain. Wanted: Responsible party to
take over low monthl y payments on
spinet-console piano. Can be seen locally. Call Mr. Wh ite at 1-800-544-1574 ext.
608.
DJ. WANTED: Local sound company
needs d.j. Freshman and sophomores
encouraged to app ly. If interested call
387-0944
All President's Talk
. ^£
Wednesday, Sept. 24
9:30 p.m. Carver Hall
TIRED OF STIFLING DORMS? Try living in the plush , luxurious . Maroon &
Gold Apartments. December male
graduate looking for someone to takeover lease for Spring 1987 semester. Live
onl y two blocks from campus with
three cool (well , two anyway) guys. Call
784-4063 anytime.
S60 PER HUNDRED PAID for rcmailing
letters from home! Send self-addressed ,
stamped envelope for informationAipplication. Associates, Box 95-B, Roselle,
NJ 07203.
WANTED STUDENTS , interested in selling vacation tour packages for 1987
'Spring Break Vacation' to Daytona
Beach and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida and
South Padre Isls, Texas. Guaranteed
good trips , good commission and
terms. For more information call 'The
Bus Stop Tours.' In Illinois call collect
(312) 860-2980 all o t h e r states
1-800-222-4139. Or write 436 No.
Walnut Ave. Wood Dale, III. 60191-1549.
Previous experience a plus. Student Act i v i t i e s , F r a t e r n i t y welcome to
participate
OLIVERI PROFESSIONAL SOUND CO.
booking date parties , dances, banquets.
Call 387-0944 now for a quote on college rates
*f* *** *P V * •$! «i*
PERSONALS
Attention Laura Parks. I' m getting
hungry for Chinese food. How about
you? If so, call me at 784-4063. Guy.
Happy Birthday Cin , have a GOOD
one!!! Love ya - your roomies
PS: Have a Happy! Ratettes Again.
P-Chem I and 21 - All in the same
semester: DON'T DROP IT! Ratettes.
It 's LANDING tonight at 8 p.m. in Haas
Auditorium!
1. - She shot herself - fancy that? - C.
VOICE CLASSIFIEDS
Sep t. 22 and 23
from
<0
10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
|
j
Union multi-purpose A
11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
^a
Os
Scranton Commons
p"4
j
SPRING BREAK. Campus representative
needed as SPRING BREAK trip promotor. Earn a free trip to Nassau. Past
experience in student promotions
necessary. Contact Nancy DeCarlo at
Atkinson & Mullen Travel, Inc., 606 E.
Baltimore Pike, Media , Pa., 19063. Or
call (215) 565-7070 or PA 800-662-5184 ,
Nj 800-523-7555
LOST AND FOUND: Reward offered for
return of black cat with white markings.
Lost in downtown Bloomsburg area.
Call 78-1-1198 anytime.
! »;;„.!*•' ^^
See one of the largest
selections of new and
used furniture and
appliances in the
6 county area
...takes pleasure in announcing
the relocation of our Bloomsburg
office to:
...
n — ^ — »—=" ^¦VJ*' v^
The door swung wide, and there, to the horror ot
the other pirates, stood Captain Monet —
unmistakable with his one eye and pegbody.
(just 4 miles across the
river from Bloomsburg)
Be sure to check out our
close-out department.
Political disorder
c i t . (footnote
abbreviation)
Traveled on a
Flexible Flyer
Glorify
Prospero ' s servant
in "The Tempest"
Well-known government agency
American league
team (abbr.)
Fictional hypnotist
Style exemplified
by Picasso
"She ' s
"
(from "Flashdance ")
Be unwell
Visible trace
Think
Woman ' s undergarment
Commit
kiri
i>
burner
" ...for if I
away... "
Actress Gibbs
African antelope
Well-known TV bandleader
Pi nee
(eyeglass type)
1968 f i l m , "
Station Zebra "
1965 film , "
Ryan ' s Express "
|
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1
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Send to: Box 97
KUB or drop in
the VOICE mail
slot, in Union
before 12 p.m.
on Thurs. for
Monday's paper
or Tuesday for
Thurs. paper.
All classifieds
must be prepaid.
I wish to place a classified
ad under the heading:
-Announcements
-Lost and Found
-For Sale
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-Wanted
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I enclose $
for
Five cents per word.
words.
AMA: Credit on the wav
That 's right! Juniors , seniors ,
graduate students as well as faculty and staff can get the credit they
deserve thanks to the American
Marketing Association. According to Mike Karchner , vice
president of AMA , upperclassmen and faculty may obtain Sears, Amoco, Mastercard or
Visa credit card s on October 1,
2 , and 3 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in the Kehr Union Snack Bar
area. Karchner points out that
"charge accounts are a very inexpensive yet effective method of
establishing a credit history ."
Accordin g
to
Edward
Solomon , president of the College Credit Corporation , "A
solid credit rating can make the
difference when applying for a
car loan or another credit card .''
The Citibank cards have an annual fee of $20 while the Sears
and Amoco cards cost nothing to
apply. Special applications are used that take into account a student ' s uni que finacial circumstances. John R. Post of
Citibank says that the acceptance
requirements th roughout this program ate extremel y lenient
because Citibank and the other
companies offering accounts
"understands the students ' credit
dilemma " and considers factors
such as bank
accounts ,
allowances, summer jobs and part
time employment. A current job
is not necessarily required in
oreder to be approved .
1hat 's ri ght! Juniors , seniors ,
graduate students as well as faculty and staff can get the credit they
deserve thanks to the American
Marketing Association. According to Mike Karchner , vice
president of AMA , upperclassmen and faculty may obtain Sears, Amoco, Mastercard or
Visa credit cards on October 1,
2 , and 3 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in the Kehr Union Snack Bar
area. Karchner points out that
"charge accounts are a very inexpensive yet effective method of
establishing a credit history . "
According
to
Edward
Solomon , president of the College Credit Corporation , "A
solid credit rating can make the
difference when applying for a
car loan or another credit card ."
The Citibank card s have an annual fee of $20 while the Sears
and Amoco cards cost nothing to
apply. Special applications are used that take into account a student 's .uni que finacial circumstances. John R. Post of
Citibank says that the acceptance
requirements throughout this program are extremely lenient
because Citibank and the other
companies offering accounts
"understands the students ' credit
dilemma " and considers factors
such
as bank
accounts ,
New directors
hired
from page 1
Bloomsburg University, replaced Sandy Shriner as residence
director in Schuy lkill Hall.
Koch is ori g inall y from
came
to
Hazelton , and
Bloomsburg to attain a Bachelors
Degree in Arts and Sciences. He
also received a second degree in
Education and E l e m e n t a r y
Education. As of last year , he
started his graduate studies in
Arts and Sciences.
Koch obtained his experience
working as a resident advisor for
two years while he was a student
at Bloomsburg and a graduate
counselor at North Hall last year.
Aside from these University positions , he was a former coach of
the Bloomsburg Hi gh School
football team.
Being an R.D. tends to intimidate students at times, Koch
believes. He wants students to
realize he can relate to them
because he was once a student at
Bloomsburg .
Enrollment
increases
from page 1
in the number of currentl y enrolled students who were eligible to
come back as opposed to last
year. That accounted for another
45 students .
"The other few that we're up,
we can 't refine it that closely
anyway ," admitted Cooper.
"We also were concerned
about the Gramm-Rudman implications on student financial aid .
There was some real serious concerns whether or not the financial
aid p icture would be bri g ht
enough to let as many students attend as has been the case in the
past , " said Cooper.
"We wanted to make sure we
were at least even with last year ,
in terms of enrollment , and not
behind at all ," said Cooper.
According to Cooper , had
Bloomsburg enrolled less
students than in previous years ,
capital requests for a new library
and a new residence hall , for example, may not be considered
favorabl y by the state .
"We 're concerned with pro viding the opportunity for as
many students who want to come
to Bloomsburg as we possibly
can. When that point is exceeded to the place that we are overtaxing all of our resources , then
we think it ' s going to be a
negative impact , but we don 't
think we 've reached that point
yet ," said Cooper.This reasoning is supported by
figures that show there were actually fewer triples this year than
last.
"Last year we opened with
over 200 triples, this year it 's
ri ght around 180. The reason it 's
less is because we didn 't house as
many transfer students ," said
Cooper.
According to Cooper , the state
dictates no guidelines for enrollment in its 14 institutions.
In setting their own enrollment
goals , the president , vicepresidents , and planning commissions take into consideration
library space., classroom space ,
number of faculty members and
their advisment loads , residence
hall space , and dining facilities ,
for example.
"We haven 't had a whole lot
of complaints. We hear some, but
it really hasn 't been any different
than any other year at this point.
Students are willing to put up
with a little bit of inconvenience
to have the opportunity provided
to them ," said Cooper.
f-
allowances, summer j obs and part
time employment. A current j ob
is not necessarily required in
oreder to be approved .
The AMA hopes that with the
holidays just around the corner ,
all eligible peop le will take advantage of this uni que offer to increase their buy ing power, requiring only a few minutes to
comp lete the app lications.
Prepare for the future by
establishing a good credit rating
today . After all , credit is no
longer just a convenience , it 's a
necessity.
Dr. Schreier winds uo in the student-faculty softball game last Friday.
Catholic Campus Ministry Offers Programs
by Melissa Menapace
for the Voice
Catholic Campus Min istry
touches many aspects of univer sity and community life. It offers
a chance to find time to think and
lake a look at life by meeting people , relaxing, and having fun.
The CCM house , 353 College
Hill , is open daily from 8 a.m.-l 1
p.m. All students are welcome
regardless of affiliation.
Father Chet Snyder and Sister
Anita McGowan work with student officers to plan events that
range from "beach" parties and
movies to weekend retreats.
CCM serves the community
throug h programs such as Operation Friendship, a big brother/bi g
sister program , and nursing home
visits.
U pcoming events include a
Parent ' s Weekend
Mass ,
September 21 , in Carver Hall. A
day of renewal with students from
other colleges at Lock Haven
University is planned for Oct. 4 .
Father Lou Gnppi will discuss
"death and dy ing " on October 9.
Weekend liturgy is celebrated
at 4:30 p.m. Saturday and 6 p.m.
Sunday at St. Columba Churc h ,
Third and Iron Streets . Dail y
Mass is held at the CCM house
Monday and Friday at noon and
Tuesday and Thursday at 9:30
p.m. Mass is also offered at 7:15
a.m. on Wednesdays.
Stop by the CCM house for
more i n f o r m a t i o n or call
784-3123.
$25 , PP&L will match it 2 to 1
and the university receives $50.
The areas that all contributions
go into are capital needs and
academic equipment , faculty
development , library support ,
academic scholarshi ps, fine arts,
program development , athletics ,
and an unrestricted area.
The Board of Directors listens
to proposals and requests made
fro m faculty and staff. Board
members can also initiate ideas.
Student organizations can not
apply for funds since they have
other opportunities (CGA, for
examp le).
Since the Foundation ' s rebirth
in January , it has received approximately $620,000 in contributions and gifts.
The Board has quarterl y
meetings to discuss ideas for the
university. Grants that have
already been appropriated include
$10 ,000 for presidential scholarshi ps , $14 ,000 for faculty
development (money for conferences and meetings attended),
$4 ,000 for university wide symposium , $2 ,500 for the purchase
of a visualtek machine for the
library to assist the visual impaired , and $5,000 for the purchase of an IBM/AT micro computer for the math and computer
science department.
Funds formerly going into the
Unrestictive Trust will now be
going into the Foundation Fund .
At the start of '85-'86, the
Unrestictive Trust has $25 ,000 .
The Unrestrictive Trust now has
approximate ly $4,000 remaining.
Of the $4 ,000. $2 ,500 is committed to the Bloomsburg Theatre
McCarty cont . from p. 1
' Who ever thinks that when they
get in a car that it could be the
last time they get in a car? " She
added , "Accidents aren 't picky.
They take any body . "
McCarty 's parents , Allison and
Ron McCarty , wrote to the
university and are hoping the
university will send the degree
McCarty would have received in
December. McCarty is also survived by his brother , Thomas
McCarty , a BU alumni.
Development requires activation of fund
from page 1
umbia County Farmer 's National
Bank have each donated $10,000
over a five year period.
Bloomsburg Bank Columbia
Trust and Commonwealth Bank
and Trust have each donated
$ 10,000 over a four year period.
United Penn Bank and First
Eastern Bank will each g ive
$2 ,500.
Although contributions from
large companies are needed ,
David Hill , treasurer of the Foundation Fund , said that the young
alumni is the target group since
many are associated w i t h
businesses. Many businesses support hi gher education and offer
incentives with matching gifts . If
an alumi working for PP&L gives
RESEARCH PAPERS
Ensemble and $ 1 ,000 is committed to sending the Madri gal
chora l group to Eng land. A fter
the remaining $500 is spent the
Unrestrictive Trust will be nonexistant. According to David
Hill , the Unrestictive Trust is a
thing of the past.
Hill stated that the two largest
costs for the Unrestrictive Trust
during '85- '86 were a $5 ,000
grant for the academic department and $4,000 spent to send the
Husky football team to Alabama.
Other expenses include the costs
of meetings and bring ing guests
to Bloomsburg University .
Hill remarked that most universities have foundations and expressed that it is harder to raise
money and approach peop le for
donations when you do not have
a foundation.
16,278 to choose from—all subjects
Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD
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Hibbs resigns post: Bressi Hutchinson feels BU field
women 's basketball coach hockey to have a big year
by Ted Kistlcr
Sports Editor
The Bloomsburg women 's
basketball team has a new head
coach in Joe Bressi. Bressi , a
34-year-old native of Kul pmont ,
has spent his past ten ygars as
women 's head coach at Bishop
McDevitte Hi gh School in
Harrisburg .
While at Bishop McDevitt ,
Bressi' s teams won seven league
titles and file district crowns.
Bressi also led his teams to four
champ ionshi ps in the former
South Central Penn League and
three Mid-Penn League titles in
Division I.
Bishop McDevitt , u n d e r
Bressi' s guidance also captured
three Class AA champ ionshi ps
and two Class AAA titles.
The 1983-84 season was his
best as his team built a record of
.Joe Bressi
36-1 , losing only in the state
AAA finals to North Catholic of
Pittsburg .
His career at Bishop McDevitt
built him a 237-43 record .
Referring to his switch fro m
hi g h school to college coaching,
Bressi commented , "I' ve always
wanted a college job. I feci I'd
taken g irls basketball as far as I
could go. "
When asked about his win-loss
record , which includes a 127-10
over the past four years , Bressi
said , "We had a very disci plined and very oriented program that
1 hope to bring to Bloomsburg. "
Last year Bloomsburg posted a
9-13 record overall , and were 8-5
in the Pennsy lvania Conference
Eastern Division. Bressi hopes to
improve that. "We have good
guards returning ... we only lost
one senior. "
by Kelly Ann Cuthbert
for the Voice
Men s net
team goes
to 3-0
by Robert Bail y
Stall ' Writer
The Bloomsburg University
men 's tennis team continued its
fall season last weekend with victories over Lehi gh and Lafayette
to win the Lehi gh Triangular
match. The team started the
season with a lair performance at
the Bloomsburg Invitational. The
team came back with a strong victory over SUNY at Bing hamton.
Their record is now 3-0.
This year 's team is led by Steve
Augustine , the PSAC number
three sing les champ ion. Also
returning are seniors Tim Mitchell and co-captain Scott Gibbs.
Jr.niors Dean Doria and Steve
Looker , as well as sophmorc
Scott Glassford . return after
strong seasons last year.
New p layers this year are Mark
Billone and Mark Lupinacci ,
transfers from Stamford , Connecticut. Matt Qui gley and Gene
Olyne , both from Philadel phia
hope to contribute in seasons to
come .
Saturday , the team takes on the
alumni in an exibition at 11:30
a.m. Sunday , they go up against
Haverford College here at 12:00 .
According to headcoach Jan
Hutchinson , the field hockey
team may be a contender for the
PSAC tournament and the National tournament again this year.
The coach's eight-year record
of 112-25-12 includes an NCAA
Division II championship in 1983
and a Division III champ ionship
in 1984, along with the double
honor of being the Pennsylvania
Conference Champ ions for both
of those years as well. Last year,
BU had a 19-2-0 record , placed
third in NCAA Division III and
in the Pennsylvania Conference,
and was Northeastern Regional
Champions.
"Field hockey is a running
game, " says Hutchinson , "it requires speed , quickness, good
stick work , and stamina. " The
Huskies will rely on these
strengths to get them, to the
playoffs this season , she adds.
Three members graduated this
past year including: Beth Eyer ,
goalie; Liz Yeager, an AllConference player and four year
starter in the position of sweeper;
and Karen Hertzler , a two-time
All-American and the high scorer
for three years .
Forty-five girls tried out for the
team this fall. The squad presently consists of seven seniors , six
juniors , five sophomores, and
nine freshmen. Returning lettermen are: Cind y Daeche
(back) , Kate Denneny (attack) ,
Donna Graupp (attack) , Lynn
Hurst (link), Carta Shearer (link),
and Diane Shields (attack).
Bloomsburg will play its first
seasonal home game against East
Stroudsburg on Tuesday , Sept.
23, at 3:00 p.m. Other games
scheduled for September include:
Sheptock.
-Sept. 25 - Gettysburg (home) at
Cook was the team leader with
3:30 p.m.
nine quaterback sacks and also in-Sept. 27 - Millersville (away) at
tercepted a pass. For his career ,
1 p.m.
he has 133 tackles and 16 sacks.
-Sept . 29 - Eastern Mennonite
Grande has been the Huskies'
(home) at 2 p.m.
leading receiver in each of his
three seasons with the club .
He caught 45 passes for 552
Lady netters
yards and six touchdowns in
1985. For his career , he has 91
receptions for 1,195 yards and 10
0-2 after
touchdowns.
Bloomsburg , which won the
Pennsylvania Conference title and
Bucknell Blitz
reached the national semi-finals
while posting a 12-1 record last
by Ted Kistler
season , did not appear among The
Sports Editor
Football News ' "top twenty ."
The women's tennis team's
record stands at 0-2 following
their loss to Bucknell Tuesday,
8-1.
The Huskies' only victory came
in a doubles match. Karen Gubicza and Jennifer Sterling won 6-3,
many holes in their roster.
6-4 over Cynthia Bentley and
49ers 24 New Orleans 23
Marge Triay .
San Francisco a question mark
In other doubles matches Sarah
ri ght now , and the Saints look to
Palmer and Dana Edwards of
be on their way up the divisional
Bucknell defeated Cortlee
ladder.
Gerhart and Megan Clarke 6-4,
New Orleans could pull off an
6-0.
upset if they can score early.
In a third doubles match Carol
Washington 28 San Diego 27
Rowland and Sue Lindstrom tooA lot of people are touting the
ped Huskies Cathy Vonluehrte
'Skins as the class of the NFC
East , but San Diego will be no and Jeanne Cancelliere 8-6 in a
pro set.
easy day for them.
The women 's singles matches
They have to stop certain Hall
of Famer Dan Fouts and a defen- all went to the Bisons. In the first
match Sarah Palmer defeated
sive front that is actually saying
Gerhart 7-6, 6-1. Mindy Moyer
hello to a few quaterbacks .
outscored Vonluehrte 6-2, 6-1.
Kansas City 21 Houston 17
After three sets, Wendy Howitt
Houston is another one of those
put down Husky Jean Cancelliere
teams who are finally starting to
4-6, 7-5, 6-3 . Rowland topped
show results of their rebuilding.
Gubicza in two sets 6-3, 6-3.
Next year , you may see this
Bucknell' s Edwards took the
team as one of the AFC leaders,
fifth match 6-2 , 7-5 over Wendy
but not yet.
Wendhold.
Chicago 30 Green Bay 17
In the final singles match it was
Chicago will definetel y lose
Lindstrom in three sets over Kim
more than one game this year.
Jefferis of Bloomsburg.
Teams are going to start scoring
The Huskies will try to impoints on them.
prove their record to 1-2 Friday
Green Bay just doesn 't happen
as they travel to Kutztown.
to be one of th ose teams.
Grande, Cook, receive
pr eseason honors
Predictions from the end zone
While the Bloomsburg University football team alread y has its
season in full swing, two of its
players , Wes Cook and Kevin
Grande , have been named to the
NCAA Division II preseason AllAmerican team.
The team , released by The
Football News , also includes 10
Conference
Pennsy l v a n i a
performers .
Wes Cook , the Huskies ' nose
guard, is expected to be one of the
leaders of a defense that led the
conference , allowing just 227.6
yards per game in 1985.
Cook reg istered 79 tackles a
year ago , ranking him second on
the team in that category behind
first team All-American Frank
Atlanta t© upset Cowboys in top NFL game
Well here goes sports fans. The
first installment of my football
p icks for the season.
One thing before I start. If
anybody would like to challenge
my picks , I issue an open invitation to anybidy out there to send
their picks to the Voice office.
And away we go...
Cleveland 31 Cincinnatti 21
Hi gh charged Brown offense
will manipulate hapless Bengal D
that has given up 57 points in two
contests.
The Browns are on the rig ht
track and will give a lot of AFC
teams headaches this year.
Denver 24 Philadelphia 10
The Broncos have got it going
this season. John El way is throwing beautifull y, and Buddy Ryan ,
the premier defensive mind in the
NFL , has a defense that has done
little else except get very tired .
Don 't give me that crap about
allowing only 13 points in OT
loss to the Bears . McMahon
didn 't play , and the Bears got
close enough for 6 field goal
attempts.
Elway-Steve Watson combo
will give Phill y their third loss in
a row.
Minnesota 28 Pittsburgh 13
Minnesota 's loss to Detroit was
a fluke . This is a Viking team
back on the track to greatness and
the weak Steeler secondary will
get blistered by Tommy Kramer.
No lie , this team can make a
run at the Bears if they can keep
that defense ti ght.
L.A. Rams 35 Indianapolis 7
Laugher of the week. The Colts
have scored 13 points while giving up 63. No contest.
Buffalo 27 St. Louis 21
Buffalo has lost two nail-biters ,
while showing one of the most
explosive offensive attacks in the
league, led by-millionaire Steve
Young.
The Cards looked tough against
the Rams , but their defense fell
apart against Atlanta . I expected
them to be competitive this year ,
but they 're still a couple of key
players short.
Tampa Bay 17 Detroit 14
Mild upset in a game between
teams trying to get their feet off
the ground. Look for the Bucs to
Jeff Cox
get their first win .
Atlanta 30 Dallas 24
Upset of the Week. Atlanta has
looked impressive and the NFC
West , once a laug hing stock , is
shaping up as a tough division.
This one could turn into an offensive party , but Atlanta has a
super ground game that will offset Walker and Dorsett.
Intangible here is Atlanta 's
league-leading offense that can
put points on the board in a hurry
up against a slow-starting Dallas
team.
Miami 28 N.Y. Jets 20
This one could get worse if the
Jets play like they did against
New England , but could be close
if the Dolphins defense stays at
home like they did against New
England .
Neither team has a good , solid
foundation , but both show signs
of brilliance. The Jets could turn
home field advantage in their
favor. A tough one to call.
New England 24 Seattle 17
Definetely the most interesting
game of the week from a viewing standpoint.
Both teams look strong this
season ,'and both have consistent
scoring machines and defenses
that have g iven up only 26 points
combined .
Look for the Patriots to win this
one on a late drive , but it should
be nip and tuck all the way .
N.Y. Giants 20 L.A. Raiders 13
This one could have been a
Super Bowl preview , but the
Raiders need a quaterback.
I expected the Raiders to really make a charge for the AFC
crown , but there are just too
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