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Mon, 12/01/2025 - 19:46
Edited Text
Marathon aids camp
by Mike Fleming
Staff Writer

Contestants gathered to dance
the night away to benefit children
inflicted with cancer. Many people turned out to open their hearts
through dancing.
20 contestants signed up to
dance 25 hours strai ght and
another 15 signed up for 10
hours.
The dance marathon , which
was sponsored by the Program
Board as their yearly service project , was held Friday and Saturday in the Kehr Union.
The theme for the marathon
was Open Your Heart
The marathon consisted of a 25
hour marathon that began at 8
p.m. Friday and ended at 9 p.m.
Saturday, and a 10 hour marathon
that lasted from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday .

Camp Dost, which is a summer
camp for children with cancer,
will receive the proceeds from the
marathon.
Lori Kinder and Mike Harvey
were co-chairpersons of the dance
marathon.
Kinder said , "I'm really glad
that the committee chose Camp
Dost. Working in the marathon
has really helped me understand
more and realize how much the
money donated will help. "
At registration , the dancers
turned in $602. This amount will
increase when the money from
the dancers' sponsors is collected.
Along with the money received from the dancers , local
businesses donated $2 ,039.
Local bands and radio stations
provided entertainment for the
marathon. Radio stations WBSC
and WBUQ sent DJs to volunteer
their time. The bands Trop-X and

Sybrx also donated their time.
Other forms of entertainment
included contests and specialty
hours throughout the marathon.
Included were a beach party
contest, funk hour , Bloomsburg
University hour , Madonna/Janet
Jackson hour, a cartoon character
contest, games and activities
hour , a pajama party contest , a
toga contest, and dancers request
hour.

The most money turned in at
registration for the 25 hour
marathon was by Ed Cherrington. Lisa Johnson and Shane
Telesky turned in the most money
for the 10 hour marathon.
The total amount of money
received was $2,641. This figure
will rise when the money from
the dancers' sponsors is collected.
All money must be turned in by
March 27.

Robert Anthony used many campaigning techniques, including this dog wearing a supportive shirt
Edward Gobora defeated Anthony in the recent CGA re-election. (Voice photo by Jim Loch)

Gohora wins CGA re-election
Edward Gobora defeated
Robert Anthony for the position
as CGA president next year
following one of the most contraversial election in the history

of CGA.
Gobora pulled 668 votes as opposed to Anthony 's 458. The
210-vote spread was large compared to the election on Febraury

12 (which was appealed and a reelection ordered), where there
was only a 33 vote difference.

In the first election , 13.6 percent of the student population
voted . The re-election , held
Thursday, brought approximately
17.3 percent of the students to
vote .

The camps offer students a
chance
to help teach campers
¦
several subjects, from survival in
More than 25 camps sent the wilderness to sports.
The Career Development
representatives to Bloomsburg
University for Summer Camp Center sponsored the event to
Day to offer students job oppor- give students a chance to find jobs
tunities working for summer for the summer.
Along with the 25 camp
camps .
by Ron Rabenold
Staff Writer

These girls were full of energy when this picture was taken, but as the dance marathon went on,
they probably wished they conserved some of that energy. Congratulations to all the dance contestants. (Voice photo by Tricia Ann Reilly)

Geoghegan searches for people exposed to AIDS
by liana Debare

L.A. Times- Washington Post Service

Christine Geoghegan says that
her most wrenching interview
was with a young mother of two,
who had recently been diagnosed with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
As the woman was starting to
plan for her childrens ' future
without her, Geoghegan gently
took her into the past. Geoghegan
asked the woman, who had been
separated from her husband for
several years, for the names, addresses and telephone numbers of
the men she had slept with in the

previous eight years . Whether
one had given her the virus or
whether they had been exposed to
it by her , they needed to be
warned- for their own health, and
for the health of others.
"She was in touch with some
of them already, but some she
wanted me to contact , "
Geoghegan said. "She was very
cooperative, very concerned that
this doesn 't happen to other people. "
Equal parts detective, therapist
and health educator , Geoghegan
works in a San Francisco Health
Department program aimed at
finding and notifying the past

heterosexual partners of newly
diagnosed AIDS patients.
Beginning with addresses that
may be months or years out of
date , Geoghegan searches for as
many of these people as she can.
She telephones them and asks for
a meeting, explaining that they
may have been exposed to a communicable disease. She prefers to
wait until she is with them, in her
office or at their home, to break
the news that the disease is AIDS.
She reassures them that although
they were exposed , they are not
necessarily infected. She offers
them counseling, assistance in arranging for the AIDS antibody

Tower Rep ort blames Reagan
by

Scott Davis
News Editor

The Tower . Commission
Report , released Thursday , attacked the Reagan Administration
for the way it handled the sale of
arms to Iran, and diversion of
funds to the Nicaraguan Contras.
One of the strongest findings
by the commission stated the sale
of arms ' 'rewarded a regime that
clearly supported terrorism and
hostage taking," and said that
President Reagan failed to control
his National Security Staff.
Reagan accepted the report and
promised to do "whatever is
necessary " to reform National
Security Council operations.
"I intend to read and digest it
(Tower Report) first , think
carefully about its findings and

promptly act on its recommendations. " Reagan told the press.
Reagan will address the nation on
the report next week.
Former White House aide
Oliver North was depicted by the
Tower Commission as "a
backstage manipulator who once
said 'Its going to be just fine.. .as
soon as everyon knows that.. .the
Ayatollah is helping us with the
Contras," accordng to a report in
Friday 's Times Leader.
The report brought to light the
fact that North also threatened
Costa Rican President Oscar
Arias. North told him if the secret
Costa Rican airfield used to
resupply Contra rebels was
publicized , the U.S. would cut off
$80 million in aid to Costa Rico.
Donald Regan , President
Reagan 's Chief of Staff , resign-

ed Friday after the Tower Commision blamed him for the
' 'chaos that descended upon the
White House. "
Regan will be replaced by
Senate Republican Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr. Baker ended his candidacy for president in
'88 so he could take the job .
The report said that the Reagan
Administration tried to cover-up
the affair after stories started to
leak out. The report said that
Former National Secruity Advisor Robert C. McFarlane gave
a false chronology of events to
protect the president.
The report states the commission believes Reagan did approve
the weapons sales. Reagan first
told the commission he did , then
said he did not , then said he could
not remember.

test , medical referrals if
necessary, and advice about 'safe
sex ' practices thoug ht to
minimize the infection.
"Some women who have had
a lot of sexual partners are not
surprised that they have been exposed ," Geoghegan said. "But
somebody from the suburbs who
had sex with a man who was
bisexual three or four years agothey 're just panicked. "
The San Francisco program is
one of a small but growing
number of efforts at AIDS ' 'contact tracing, " as the process is
called by health professionals.
State health departments in Minnesota, Colorado , and Wisconsin
have adopted contact tracing as
one weapon in their fight against
the disease. In California , health
officials in San Bernrdino , Riverside, and San Diego counties
have active tracing programs,but
nothing on the scale of the program here.
Supporters say that AIDS contact tracing can be useful in stopping the disease's spread from the
current high-risk groups- primarily homosexual men and intravenous drug users- into
relatively uninfected groups, including
the heterosexual
population.
THe goal is "to let people
know they're exposed and to stop
them from infecting other people," said Dr. Dean Echenberg ,
who started the San Francisco
program in the early 1985. "If
we didn 't do anything, we'd see
these rivulets of AIDS spreading
out into the heterosexual population over a period of years. "

The re-election was called for
by Gobora afte r several events
raised questions as to the fairness
of the election.
The first election results showed Anthony to be the winner with
454 v otes and Gobora with 421
votes.

representatives , over 100 other
camps sent information and applications for job openings. Most
of the positions are for couselors ,
water front supervisors, nurses
and kitchen staff.
Some camps require education
majors but most have job openings for any major. The various
Girl Scout camps lean toward
female applicants but are looking
for males to fill their maintenance
and sports program openings.
Some camps , like Rock Creek
Farm and Ken-Crest Camp, offer sessions for children and
adults with learning disabilities.
These camps are looking for
students who can build selfesteem and sociability in their
residents , as well as, students
with knowled ge in music , drama
and carpentry .
Une unique program , used by
Camp Fire Camps , teaches
children how to survive in the
wilderness and in the home. They
are looking for counselors who
can teach kids self-reliance , home
safety and personal values. Water
front supervisors and kitchen staff
are also needed.

But critics , including health officials in Los Angeles and New
York , call AIDS contact tracing
a waste of resources that would
be better spent on mass education . They point out that unlike
contact-tracing programs for
other sexually transmitted
diseases like syphilis , AIDS tracing programs offer no cure, onl y
education.
"We do contact tracing for
people diagnosed with other sexually transmitted diseases because
we can offer a treatment and a
cure," said Marvin Bogner, New
York City 's assistant health commisioner. "In the absence of
something like that , we don 't
think it's appropriate or proper to
do. "
Active notification efforts
should be limited to the AIDS pa- I
tient 's spouse, said Dr. Shirley
Fannin , deputy director of Los
Angeles County 's disease control I
1
program.
Beyond notifying the steady
sex partner , we don 't think there
would be much value in doing
contact tracing, " Fannin said.
"You can put a whole lot of effort in and get no return. "
Since 1981, federal health
authorities have reported more
than 30,000 cases of AIDS
throughout the country . The fatal
disease of the immune system is
transmitted primaril y through
sexual intercourse or use of contaminated hypodermic needles.
In addition , as many as 1.5
million Americans may be
unknowingly carry ing the virus
and infecting other people. Supsee AIDS page 7

see CAMP page 7

Index

§

Women lose to Lock
Haven In conference
semi-finals. For story see
page 8.

1
§
I
I

Midterms prove to be
controversial . For story
and more see page 4.

|
§
|

Foreign exchange pro- i
gram needs students to I
participate. For more in- g
formation see page 7.
§

Commentary
Features
Classifieds
Sports

page 2
page 4
page 6
page 8

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CGA should investigate
9

Comment on this year s CGA
election has waited until now
because this campus has but one
newspaper and to comment on
possible wrong doing one way or
the other would have been
misconstrued as endorsing a particular candidate .
Now that the issue of next
year 's president has been decided , the time has come to air some
of the questions that presented
themselves after all of the interviews were in and The Voice
reported on what one student later
termed the "Scandal of 1987. "
The only truly unarguable issue
is that of the extention of election
hours.
Tim Keller, the current CGA
president , exceeded his authority in extending the election time
lor voting in the Keh r Union.
It should first be mentioned that
the CGA president in all fairness
should avoid the polls and the
candidates during the course of
election day , not to mention the
campai gn.
On election day , Keffer was
directl y and intimatel y involved
with the removal of ballots and
the monitoring of polling places.
This is supposed to be the job of
the chairman of the election
committee.

Though it is true that Mark
Emswiler , this year 's chairman ,
was ill on election day , he was
present during all of the voting
except fro m 2 p.m. to 3:10 p.m.,
when Keffer extended the voting
and manned the poll himself , and
from the time when Keffer relieved him of his duties as chairman ,
some time after 4 p.m.
The extention itself presents
another question. Between 1:30
and 2 p.m., Keffer went to Dean
Norton about extending the election. Both candidates were
around until about 1:45 p.m.
It seems odd that if Keffer had
thoug hts of extending the voting
in the Union , he would not at
least notify the chairman of the
elections committee, not to mention the candidates , of the
possibility of extending prior to
going to Norton.
Also , why did Keffer not attempt to reach Emswiler in class
for something as important as this
extention? He was in the same
class as Gobora , the current CGA
vice-president.
Keffer denies ever relieving
Emswiler. Emswiler , on the other
hand , said that Keffer did relieve
him at the poll in the commons
late on election day because he
was a brother of Gobora 's

fraternity .
It seems odd th at Keffer would
first relieve Emswiler of the
ballot box keys in the morning
because he was a TKE brother
and then wait until the end of the
day before relieving him as chairman of the elections because he ,
again , was a TKE brother.
Emswiler was appointed to the
position by Keffer and Gobora
earl y last semester.
If Keffer had a problem with
Emswiler , why did he wait until
election day to do something
about it?
Keffer states that the decision
to extend the voting was a
"mutual agreement between- Norton and myself. " Norton , on the
other hand , said that "Keffer told
me he was extending the voting
time. I didn 't see any problem as
long as the committee okayed it
and I' m assuming Mark
(Emswiler) was there all day . "
It is apparent that the quotes
g iven to the paper by Keffer conflict with those from other
sources. It seems as though trie
time may have come for CGA to
hold their own investi gation into
what Joseph Denelsbeck , the
chairman of the re-election termed "an ug ly little ep isode. "

Iran-Contra Affair brings hope

by Scott Davis
News Editor

Many political events have
forced Americans to believe that
our government does not care
about freedom or liberty , but
look.
there is'tuipc forinthose who of
This hopy^ame the form the
Iran-Contra A ffair.
The United States Government
sold arms to Iran for a reason: To
free Americans held hostage in
Lebanon. There is no reason for

Issue aired
Editor:

Because of the many questions
about the write-in policy of the
election for CGA president , I
believe it is necessary to clarif y
the policy .
There were no write-in votes
because this was a re-election between the two candidates. It was
not an open election. If others had
wished to be CGA president , they
would have filed a petition in the
first place.
I made litis decision with strong
support from the powers that be.
I would like to say that this
election , I feel , went extremely
well. I am very happy with the
student responsiveness and
hel pfulness. I hope and pray that
this ug ly little episode shall never
be played out again in the future
of CGA.
Joseph Denelsbeck
Chairman of the
Elections Committee

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not trading weapons tor the
freedom of our people. This was
a smart move. All the weapons
given to Iran have serial numbers
and
other
distinguishin g
characteristics that make it possible to identif y them as American.
If the United States took note
of these characteristics and the
weapons are involved in any terroristic activities , we would have
evidence linking Iran to the incident and take appropriate action
(what ever it may be).
The funds that came from the
Iran weapons deal went to the
Contras in Nicaragua. What is
wrong with that? The Contras are
fighting an oppressive . Communist government. The Contras
are Freedom Fi ghters , not
terrorists.

Re-re-e!ect
Editor:
At approximately 11:30 a.m.
on election day (2/26), I went to
p lace my vote for the president of
CGA. I requested a write-in
ballot , but I was informed that I
was not allowed to write in Jim
Fitzman.
Consequently, I feel I was
stri pped of my ri ghts as an
A m e r i c a n and I want a
re-re-election.
I feel that neither candidate , Ed
Gobora c-r Rob Anthony , are
trustworth y after this fiasco.
Honest American
Jeff Gensiejewski

If , in fact , the Contras are terrorists , it would mean our own
country is based on terroristic
ideolog ies. There is no difference
between the actions of the Contras and the American freedom
fighters during the American
Revolution.
Also , if a Communist government took over the United States ,
would the peop le sit back
peacefull y? No!
If the United States did not
receive aid fro m France during
the Revolution , we might still be
bowing to Eng land today .
The United States should aid
the Contras in any way possible
so they mi g ht have the chance to
enjoy all the liberty and freedom
that we enjoy.
Since the Cold War Era began ,
the peop le of the United States
have feared the thought of a Communist foothold in the Western
Hemisphere. Now there is one:
Nicaragua.
The Contras are fighting the
war that most United States
citizens would fight if we would
onl y take the time to think about
the situation. We do not want
Communism in the Western
Hemisphere and the Contras arc
doing something about it.
Yes, the Iran-Contra Affair is
a victory the United States should
be proud of; it is nothing the
United States should be ashamed
of.
The Iran-Contra Affair is one
of the best things that could have
happened to the United States.

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Reagan's time has come

indispensable , or that there is just
one more unfulfilled promise that
neecls to be redeemed . Presidents
Like a prizefi ghter who has also get it into their heads that
been on the receiving end of too their deeds will be writ large on
the pages of history and that the
many uppercuts but craves the
longer they are around the more
one last bout that will hel p him
leave the ring in a blaze of glory , of their accomplishments will be
President Reagan stands hel pless- inscribed .
Trag icall y, it is often that the
ly in his corner , surrounded by
his trainers and inhaling the best of them don 't know when to
aromatics of hope.
quit.
Graver Cleveland , for reasons
The hope is that in the two
years left in his administration the of health and politics , should not
Reagan revolution will achieve its have come back for a rematch
with Benjamin Harison in 1892.
unfulfilled objectives and instituA dy ing Franklin D. Roosevelt
tionalize itself firml y as the New
should certainl y not have run for
Deal. But there is about as much
chance of that as there is a a fourth term in 1944 .
Dwi ght D. Eisenhower 's selikelihood that Leon Spinks and
Sugar Ray Leonard will reclaim cond term was bli ghted by
presidential illness and tainted by
their titles.
Perhaps in the movies that the scandal , and it ended on a note
president so typ icall y draws on of personal and national humiliafor analog ies, such comebacks tion over the U-2 incident.
But some of the best also resare possible. After all , the
33-year-old club fighter Rocky pond either to some private
Balboa did it in the first version wisdom or to. for.ee majeure ,.and
of Rocky, and even went on to call it quits before they suffer
political humiliation or pitiable
greater triump hs.
But while life may imitate art incapacity .
Harry S. Truman might have
in some general sense , actual
political careers succeed or fail on sought a second term in his own
perceptions of power and whether right in 1952 , but wisely refrainit is seen as growing or ebbing. ed. Lyndon B. Johnson mi ght
Sentimental scenarios from have muscled his way to the
Holl ywood would have the dod- nomination in 1968, but saw a
dering president rally ing to recap- bloody and debilitating fight
ture the political initiative , hel p looming and decided not to seek
alond by his adoring and deter- another term . Even Richard M.
mined wife. The world of politics Nixon declined to put us through
a bruising impeachment.
is harsher.
To hang up your gloves takes
We are less likely to see Nancy Reagan as the supportive more political courage than perAdrian urg ing Rocky on than we sisting in a course that can lead
are to see her castr as the real-life onl y to frustration and sorrow.
The fact is that our president
Edith Wilson helping her stricken
husband , Woodrow Wilson , cannot take the grueling give-anddischarge the formalities of the take of a press conference without
presidency and becoming, in ef- the risk of disgracing himself by
fect , the chief executive herself. misstating facts , becoming
Politicians can convince pointlessl y garrulous or uttering
themselves that they are loved , or vacuous homilies.
He is now no better than a noble ruin. He should resign and
turn over the reins of power to
Vice President Bush. Or he may
eventuall y have to face the proEditor:
I wish to correct a slight error spect of being pressed by Conthat was made in the article con- gress to invoke the terms of the
25th amendment, which specifies
cerning Eddie Money . The writer
the conditions under which a
stated that the video for / Wanna
president who cannot fulfill his
Go Back was filmed in Eddie 's
duty may step down.
hometown of New York . This is
A president 's forgetfulness
not the case.
about when he ordered a major ,
by Ross K. Baker

L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

Money trivia

The video was actually made in
Dover , New Jersey . I was there
while it was being filmed. In the
video , Eddie is riding in a cab
along Blackwell St. If you look
closely, you can see that the cab
has a N.J. inspection sticker on
the windshield as well as N.J.
license p lates.
It passes by Dover Liquors , a
useful p lace I could get served at
long before I became legal .
The high school Eddie returns
to is really the old Dover Hi gh
School; it is now the Joe Quebert
School of Cartooning and
Graphic Arts !
I didn 't write this letter to be
sarcastic , only to enlighten
readers with a little bit of trivia
and to show you that things aren 't
always what they seem. I'll see
you at the concert.
Greg Dean

and arguably illegal , departure in
foreign policy is not like an ordinary person 's try ing to
reconstruct what happened a few
months ago by consulting notations in his week-at-a-glance
pocket calender.
Reagan 's working day is
documented meticulously and
logged precisely. There are more
clues to what he was doing at any
g iven moment and with whom
than there are for any other living mortal.
In a peculiar way I suspect that
the American people would feel
better if they thought the president really did know the circumstances of the Iran arms deal
but chose, as a matter of defiance
or even cynical political calculation , not to divul ge them.
When he claims that he is not
able to recall when he personally gave the authorization to deal
with the Iranians , the impression
is gained that he is being shielded by subordinates who feel that
the president cannot be trusted to
keep from blurting out the truth
at a news conference.
Ronald Reagan , at his peak , inspired us. By the standards that
he set for himself he accomplished much . He was, and continues
to be , a decent and likable man
with an uncommon gift for giving eloquent expression to our
noblest profession.
He could even voice our wrath
and frustration with marvelous
felicity . He understood us , and
we lavished our support on him.
Such a man should not be the object of pity .
Reagan 's second term has been
blighted by the frustrations of trying to sell major policies that lack
an underl ying consensus, such as
"Star Wars " and aid to the
Nicaraguan Contras , and b y
public embarrassments such as
the Reykjavik summit meeting
and the Iran arms deal.
What is most depressing is that
the best of Ronald Reagan is
behind us. Things will assuredly
not get any better , and there is the
real prospect of this administration decomposing in a slow and
unsightl y manner before the eyes
of the entire world. Only the
president can save us , and
himself , from that meloncholy
prospect by courageously throwing in the towel.

©be Bmce
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
717-389-4457

Editor-in-Chief
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John Maittlen-Harris
Voice Editorial Policy

Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice are the opinions and
concerns of the editor-in-chief , and do not necessaril y reflect the opinions
of all members of The Voice staff , or the student population of Bloomsburg
University.
The Voice invites all readers to express their opinions on the editorial pace
through 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.
Submissions should be sent to The Voice office , Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at the office in the games room The
Voice reserves the right to edit , condense or reject all submissions

Non-credit
PR course
off ered

Reagan aided North's effort
by Doyle McManus
L.A. Times- Washington Post Service

President Reagan actively aided Lt. Col. Oliver North' s efforts
to raise money for the Nicaraguan
rebels during the period when
U.S. military aid to the Contras
was banned , although Reagan
denies any knowled ge of the
secret funding effort , the Tower
Commission Report diclosed
Thursday .
The report quotes North , then
a White House aide, as telling
then National Security Advisor
John M. Poindexter in a 1986
message, "I have no idea what
(White House Chief of Staff) Don
Regan does or does not know re
my private U.S. operation , but
the president obviousl y knows
why he has been meeting with
several select people to thank
them for their 'support for
democracy '
in
(Central
America) .
Nevertheless, the report says,
Reagan told the Tower Commission last month that he did not
know that North or other
members of the National Security Council staff were working to

*NightTalk '
'Night Talk ,'a radio talk
show hosted by William
Acierno , airs every
Wednesday ni ght at 10:00
p.m. on WBUQ-FM 91.1.
Each week a different
guest who is of interest to
the community is interviewed and the listening audience has the opportunity
to call in and ask questions.
This Wednesday , Mr.
Acierno 's
guest
is
Bloomsburg University
President , Dr. Harry
Ausprich.
Listeners are invited to
call in questions at
389-4687.

CGA to give
scholarship
The Community Government
Association offers a scholarship
recognizing outstanding student
leaders on campus.
The scholarship will be awarded to a student or students who
have a minimum grade point
average of 2.5, a minimum of 32
credits and has demonstrated
leadership in extracurricular
activities.
Students interested in applying
for a Fall 1987 award should pick
up an application at the Community Activities Office .
Deadline for submitting applications is March 20.

help the Contras.
Contras, as Attorney General EdNorth arranged several White win Meese III charged last
House meetings inwhich Reagan November.
praised private donors to
Still , the report contains a
organizations that secretly funnelwealth
of new detail on the NSC's
ed money to the rebels. His ef, and puts
forts *on behalf of the Contras secret aid to the Contras
North
at
the
center
of
an effort
were reported in the press during
millions of
that
secretly
directed
1985 and 1986.
rebels
But the commission 's report , dollars in military aid to the
approval
with
the
knowledge
and
released Thursday , says: "The
his
president told the (Tower) Board of both Poindexter and
Securipredecessor
as
National
on January 26, 1987, that he did
McFarlane.
,
not know that the NSC staff was ty Advisor Robert
engaged in helping the Contras ."
It suggests that McFarlane ,
Although North asserted in his
, and North deliberatePoindexter
computerized message to
deceived
Congress by insisting
ly
Poindexter that the president
knew the reason for the meetings, that the NSC played no role in
the was no record of any organizing military aid for the
presidential decision to approve Contras. At one point , after
the private fund-raising effort , the North told the House Intelli gence
report said. "The Board is aware Committee last August that he
of no evidence to suggested that had no knowled ge of Contra
the president was aware of Lt. military operations. In 1985, it
says, he even attempted to
Col. North 's activities. "
organize
the seizure by the rebels
The 300-page report concenof
a
merchant
ship that he
trates on the record of the Reagan
Administration 's secret dealings suspected of carry ing weapons to
with Iran , and says that the three- Nicaragua 's leftest governmentmember panel was unable to an act that one of North' s
determine whether profits from memorandum referred to as
the sales were diverted to the "piracy ."

Consortium sign-ups
begin Wednesday

The Bloomsburg Hospital , in
association with Bloom Vision
Center , will offer free vision
screening on Friday , March 6, as
part of "Save Your Vision "
week.
Screening, available from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. in Classroom I,
will be conducted by Nicholas
Drobny , O.D. and Laurie
Costarelli, O.D. from the Bloom
conference will be Nancy West, Vision Center.
M.S., administrative director of
Visual acuity, color blindness ,
the Williamsport Hospital peripheral vision , and depth
Women 's Health Center. West perception will be checked durwill open the day with her adress
to the participants at 9:30 a.m.
"This forum is unique in that
it will offer a female perspective
on healthcare. The changing role
of women in today 's society and
the ever changing world of
healthcare make this a vital conference for all women , " Gloria
Young, RN at Bloomsburg
Hospital and co-coordinator of
the event said.
Registration for the conference
will be from 8:30 a.m. until 9:30
a.m. A $7 fee is required to attend and includes lunch.
For more information about the
conference, or to pre-register,
call 387-2175.

A conference concerning
women 's health issues , cosponsored by The Bloomsburg
Hospital and the Bloomsburg
Womens ' Center will take place
Saturday , March 14, in the Kehr
Union Building.
The all-day conference, open to
the public , will feature a variety
of speakers addressing many of
the healthcare concerns of today 's
women.
A series of three different
workshops will run throughout
the day , touching on more than
one dozen issues, including,
health insurance , substance
abuse, day care, menopause,
anorexia and bulimia , and stress.
Individuals will be able to attend
one meeting in each of the
workshops.
The keynote speaker of the

ing the screening .
"The screening should not take
the place of a thorough and complete eye exam ," Dr. Drobny
said. "The screening is effective
in detecting any minor problems
and is done as a way of calling
attention to the importance of eye
care . People take their vision for
granted. It is a priceless gift.
Hopefull y we will be able to help
some preserve, it."
For more information about the
free vision screening, call
387-2 175.

Dennis Hinde , who supervises
the public relations and advertising majors at the university , will
teach this Extended Prograrns
course. During his business
career , Hinde was a marketing
executive active in various merchant associations and chambers
of commerce. He has since served as a PR and advertising consultant to several businesses in the
Bloomsburg area .
Students will be introduced to
the general subject of public relations , then see for themselves
how it can work for them. Each
student will have the opportunity to prepare a PR plan for the
organization of his or her choice.
Students will also discover how
to spot a good news story and
how to plan special events people will attend . Guidelines will be
offered for working with the local
news media , as well as with
employees , in a coorination
public relations effort.
Public Relations on a Small
Budget will be offered on seven
Wednesday evenings from 6:30
to 8:30, March 4 through April
22. The fee for the course is $35.
Since there is a limit 15 students,
is
advance
reg istration
recommended.
Interested parties can call
389-4420 for more information.
Bloomsburg University's Extended Programs Office is on the se
cond floor of the Waller Building.

Selected Women 's Shoes j
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Tutors needed
for program g mSli^roducTo7y l>fi^
"" ™ ]
Applications are now being accepted for tutor-counselors for the
Upward Bound 1987 Summer
Program.
Call the Upward Bound Office
at 389-4280 or stop by Old
Science Hall, Room 12, for more
information.
Deadlines for applications is
March 13.

Area doctors to give
free vision tests

Conference to deal
with women 's health

Aerobics set to
raise funds
"Dance for Heart , four hours
of aerobic dancing and exercise,
will take place on Saturday ,
March 7, to raise funds for the
American Heart Association .
The event, sponsored by the
Student Nurses' Association, will
start at 12:00 p.m. in the Centennial Gym and continue until 4:30
p.m.
Refreshments will be provided
by Mister Donut and Weis
Market.
Sponsor sheets can be picked
up at the Information Desk in the
Union. Any questions can be
directed to Carol Ann Duchan ,
784-7983, or Susan Smith ,
389-3138.

Heidi Creasy, winner of the beach party contest , takes a break
in the action to pose in her award winning garb during the dance
marathon this past weekend. (Voice photo by Gerry Moore)

Bloomsburg on April 28 to interview BU students and alumni as
well as students and alumni from
other sponsoring institutions.
A complete listing of these
districts , the areas of certification
they are interested in , and a
geographic profile of each are
available at the Career Develpoment Center.

Sign-ups for the 1987 North
Central PA Education Consortium will begin at 5 p.m. on
Wednesday , March 4, in the
Career Development Center.
More than 50 school districts
located in Pennsylvania ,
Mary land , New York , New
Jersey , Virginia , Florida , and
Texas
will be visiting

A short course on public relations designed especially for
businesses and organizations on
small budgets will be offered
beginning March 4.
Besides lectures and discussions, the non-credit course will
devote time to writing news
releases that get published and PR
plans.

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Midterms prov e to be Controversial
by Dcnise Savid ge
for The Voice

MIDTERMS. The word
evokes fear even in the most
scholastic student. They are those
tests scheduled during the
halfway point of the semester and
a popular way for professors to
evaluate a student 's performance .
Midterm-paper-final . These are
the three basic grades for many
students taking large lecture
classes . What do students think of
' the formula? One hundred percent of those surveyed did not like
this method.
"I think it stinks. '* sophomore
Patti Haitsch remarked . "You
could be a good student and if you
have a bad day . you could fail the
course.
"It 's stup id. '" Rick Kinslinger
commented . "Let 's say you don 't
understand one concept- you
flunk the course. If vou were

If students don 't like having only a few tests, then why do professors continue to grade in this
way ?
"It ' s not necessaril y fair ."
c o m m e n t e d Professor L . B .
Fuller , "but it " there are a large
numbe r of students , it ' s about the
on ' _\ thing > ou can do. The
cruel.!*, question is. is the eourse
bes: tj uc 'r.: in large sections?"
"l:" :he> ' re computerizing the
test , wh -.c 'r. a lo: of professors are
doing. :he> don ' t have to do
anything. " senior Pam Plimpton
said . "If the> have to grade a
paper, they either skim over them
or have a erad assistant read

**

i

given a series of tests , it would
give you more variety and a better chance at passing ."
"It depends on the class , "
junior Joanne Machemer said ,
"but if I knew a professor graded that way, I wouldn 't take
him. "

them. "
"They don 't like to take the
time to make up more tests ,"
Kinslinger commented.
It is true that professors with
large classes are almost forced to
limit testing periods. But
midterms are crowded into a one
week period , leaving students to
study for two , three , four , even
five or six. tests at a time.
However , argue professors , a
student should be study ing and
reviewing continuall y throughout
the semester and be ready for a
test at any time.
This is a good theory on paper ,
but difficult in practice. Most
students would like to be tested
more often in order to show how
well they understand the material
covered.
"I'd rather have more tests. It
would force me to stud y more
often during the semester rather
than try ing to cram iri five classes

worth of material right before
midterms ," said junio r Tricia
Wagner.
"I always did much better in
the classes where I'had more than
just a midterm and a final to study
for ,"remarked senior Sue Reed.
"May be it is difficult for professors to think up more questions
for tests , but if we 're making the
effort to study for them and paying for the education to boot , we
should be tested the way we
want. "
Since cducaiton is for the student , may be students should be
able to choose the manner in
w h i c h they are e v a l u a t e d .
However , if everyone continues
to take the tests without a fuss,
the situation will remain the way
it is. Professors will dictate what
to learn and how to regurg itate
the information. Maybe it ' s time
to question whose education k is
anyway.

Alpha Kappa Alpha
and Kappa Alpha
Psi kick it out at BU

The University of Akron
recognizes the Ohio Ballet as its
professioanl
company
in
residence and provides studio,
administrative and theatrical
space and assistance.
I arrived at Mitrani Hall just
two minutes after the li ghts had
dimmed . Two friends and I
climbed the sta i rs to the balcony
to catch a glimpse of the dancers.
Never having seen a real ballet .

Kefir Union B«p«vn«
a«aBMaMnHA

LJZZ!*L
Bioomsburq University

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Squealer 's Corner

|RUTHLESS PEOPLE I

Tues., March 32:30 pm KUB
& 9:30 pm
Carver
Wed., March 42:30 pm KUB
Mr

t

7
^^0^

Thurs., March 57 & 9:30 pm Carver

Friday, March 6th

CAMPUS WHEEL OF FORTUNE
8 pm KUB

Saturday, March 7th...

Coming Soon..

University
Showcase

Dance/Concert
featuring
The

.

Tom Larsen Band

Sunday, March S

8:30 p m KUB
'i

other than my fifth grade dance
recital , I was entranced by the
dark black background and the
eig ht dancers in colored tu tus and
ti g hts.
To celebrate the 300th anniversary of George Handel and
Johann Sebastian Bach , these
dancers performed a dance called "Cascade ," to the music of
Handel and Bach.
After a brief intermission we
moved downstairs . Everyone
returned settled down to watch
Debra Vonce and David
Shimotakahara do their dance
"For Two " to the music ofJeanBaptiste Breval.
The progra m continued and the
mood changed as did the
background . The troupe added a
sunburst of new costumes, and an
"Untitled" dance began.
Another intermission , another
tri p to the bathroom , and another
drop change left us with the beat
of the bongos.
The entire cast concluded their
spectacular show with their impersonation of "Gravity ".

Apathy continues on Campus

This Week 's Film:
'Ruthless Peop le'

r
mwrn
ING
* °L
9 pm KUB

J

Show labeled spectacular
The ushers closed the doors ,
the lig hts dimmed and the curtain
rose as silence fell upon Mitrani
Hall last Tuesday at 8:00 p.m.
For one evening, what most
know as the classroom for
Psychology 101 became a theatre
full of appreciation for the art of
dance and the Ohio Ballet troupe.
The Ohio Ballet is a non-profit ,
tax exempt organization. It is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency, and the Ohio Arts Council.

program
"Let Us Entertain You " Boc>rc, \ !

-j *,-. ..

Ohio Ballet

by Rose Mary Schroeder
Cor The Voice

The Brothers of Kappa
Alpha Psi are seen here,
'stepping' in Friday night 's
step show.
A step show is a series of
rhythmic dance step routines
occasionally involving the use
of canes or staffs.
The show , sponsored by
the Sisters of Alpha Kappa
Alpha Sorority, opened in
Multi-B of KUB at 8 p.m.
with the Kappas, who were
then followed by the Sisters
of AKA.
Pictured here are Terrell
Roberts , Felix Rosado ,
Melvin Poulson, Michael
Williams and Todd Walker.
(Voice photo by Gerry
Moore)

!

Pandora Robertson and Jane Startzman of Ohio Ballet performing in
"Untitled" by Pilobolus. (Photo by Ott Gangl)

Dave rsurian

Recent editorials in this paper
have complained about a problem
that 'thrives ' amongst the student
population.
It occurs mainly because peop le consider themselves "too
busy " to contribute in ways that
would be beneficial both to the

University and to their own personal growth.
That problem is: Apathy.
As a writer on this paper that
deals with controversial topics , I
find it disheartening when my
opinions or beliefs are not (up until now) challenged by opposing
viewpoints.
The editors of this paper are
constantl y referring to the
lackadaisical attitude that most
students hold about various student activities , most recently the
student CGA elections.
This paper again printed front
page coverage of the elections , in
the hopes that the students who
only glance at it will pick up
something educational from it.
Then there are those who never
even pick up a paper.
But I also find it interesting that
this paper has appointed a

Mission isn't Complete

by Dave Garton
Staff Writer

A new gothic rock band fro m
Britain has hit the states with their
first album , Gods Own Medicine.
Following the breakup of The
Sisters of Mercy, a Europ ian
favorite , Guitarist and Vocalist
Wayne Hussey and Bass Guitarist
Craig Adams formed The Mission , with new members Simon
Hinkler on guitar and Mick
Brown on drums.
The Mission released two E.P.s
on the independent label Chapter
22 in late 1985 before landing
their contract with Mercury
Records in the summer of 1986.
The new album offers ten songs
of varied tones and textures.
The album opens with the song
Wasteland , the group 's current
sing le. Wasteland is a broad ,
sweeping song with a throbbing
bassline that is sure to get airplay

on college radio stations , as well
as on the dance floors of progressive clubs.
The video produced to accompany the song, now on MTV' s
li ght rotation , hi ghli ghts the
music with both conceptual and
live footage of Tlie Mission in
action .
Other hi gh points on the album
are Sacrilege , an upbeat song of
almost-metal intensity ; Severina ,
a stirring ballad complete with
haunting, female backing vocals;
and the subdued reworking of
their own Garden of Delight ,
previously released on an earlier
E.P.
While the album as a whole has
a captivating quality to it , there
doesn 't seem to be as much variety as evidenced in The Mission 's
earlier , pie-album material. For
instance , Stay with Me , although
see MISSION page 5

masthead (The Gadfly) which is
a direct affront to the continuing
apathy of the univers ity community 's lack of response to questions raised against it.
But silence still reigns.
I feel that part of the apathy involving students stems from the
fact that we are in college, a time
when other , more meaningful and
important duties befall us.
As a freshman , these tend to include staying up late , watching
television , occasionall y sleeping
late and missing class, or simply
giving yourself the luxury of a
day off.
There is no one to yell at you ,
no comp laints about cleaning
your room , laundry , etc .
Believe it or not , I was there
one time myself (and my roommates mi ght say that I' m still
there) .
The point is, getting adjusted
to the everyday occurrences and
routines of college must first be
mastered before attempting any
activities that infringe learning
them.
As we progress through our
college years , most people learn
to master these basics and get involved more in the other activities
that are everywhere on this
campus.
Some people even accept
responsibility earlier and are all
the better for it.
Since a newspaper is like a student in that it wants to respond
appropriately and effectively to
it 's audience (reader or teacher),
it needs sufficient ideas and
criticisms to do so.
So far, I've seen little evidence
that would indicate that our
readership is concerned with what
is going on in your paper.
So c 'mon, folks , prove me
wrong.
In the words of both Pink Floyd
and David Letterman , "Hello , is
there anybody out there?"

Color Purple more than captivates viewers
by Missi Menapace
Staff Writer

When The Color Purple appeared on the screen in Mitrani
Hall Wednesday night I was
v
prepared to be disappointed
by a
pale and lifeless version of Alice
Walker 's wonderful novel . Instead , I was pleasantl y proven
wrong by a beautiful movie.
The Color Purple is set in the
South earl y in this century . It
follows the life of Ceilie , played
by Whoop ie Goldberg .
As the movie opens , 14-year
old Ceilie is pregnant by her
father for the second time. Both
babies are taken from her , and
Ceilie has no one to share her sorrow with except God and her
younger sister , Nettie.

Ceilie is married off to Albert
Johnson whom she refers to as
Mister. He needs someone to
cook , clean , and tend to his pack
of bratty children. She meekly accepts her fate , and Mister 's
beatings despite Nettie 's advice
for her to gain more control of
her life.
Mister physically throws Nettie off of his land after he resists
his attempt to rape her. For many
years Ceilie won 't know if Nettie is dead or alive.
Ceilie ' s
self-confidence
graduall y grows throug h her relationshi p with two strong women
who ente r her life.
Oprah Winfrey plays Sophia ,
Ceilie 's domineering stepdaughter-in-law .
Sophia ' s
feistiness provides much of the

humor in the first part of the
movie and much of the tragedy
in the second half.
Sophia ends up in jail for cursing at a white women. After a
long jail sentence , she is
prematurely
aged
and
disoriented.
The most important influence
on Ceilie is her husband 's lover,
Shug, played by Margaret Avery.
Through Shug 's love and support , Ceilie 's image of herself
and her situation changes.
Ceilie finally leaves Mister
after she and Shug discover that
for over a decade Mister has been
witholding letters from Nettie.
Nettie is now a missionary in
Africa , where she works with the
couple who adopted Ceilie 's
children.
After Shug and Ceilie leave ,
Mister eventually has a change of

heart and helps Nettie and her
family arrive in the United States.
Whoopie Goldberg does an excellent job of portraying the
changes in Ceilie. Her almost imperceptible changes in voice and
courage build until the viewer
sees Ceilie as a totally different
•person at the end of the movie .
Like Goldberg, The Color Purple was also Oprah Winfrey 's
first movie. She is also outstanding and very convincing in the
demanding role of Sophia.
The Color Purp le does justice
to its powerful subject matter. It
is moving and dramatic. But it
also brings out the subtle humor
in the characters and their actions ,
without losing the seriousness and
tragedy of abuse , discrimination
and loneliness.
Although the movie is almost
three hours long , The Color Purple holds the viewers interest
from beginning to end.

Comedian Rondell Sheridan delighted the audience in the President's
lounge (KUB) last Thursday . (Voice photo by Gerry Moore)

Limited Warranty to open f or
EddieMoney at upcoming concert
by Lynne Ernst
Features Editor

A few years ago , Limited Warranty was just a bunch of guys
playing in a band . They , like
most new groups , were strugg ling to make it: living in a ramshakle house , practicing in their
garage, and mostly dreaming.
Those four men —Paul Hartwi g, Greg Sotebeer , Erik
Newman and Jerry Brunskill ,
began playing in Minneapolis ,
Minnesota , where they all grew
up and went to school together.

Limited Warrenty members Paul Hartwig, Jerry Brunskill, Erik Newman, Dale Goulett and Greg Sotebeer
are soon to open for Eddie Money at BU.

Since that time , Limited Warranty has worked to bring quality pop/rock music to the public.
And there efforts have paid off.
They have been the opening act
for such bi g names as Tina
Turner , Rick Spring ield , Tom
Petty and Kenny Loggins.
Limited Warranty is currentl y
on a month long tour with Eddie
Money. The group will open for
Money at the March 4 concert at
Bloomsburg University and plans
on play ing a lot of the songs off
of their new album titled Limited
Warranty.

The group of friends then
formed the band Limited Warranty and added a fifth member , Dale
Goulett.

The show will include the
songs Victory Line , Hit You , and
Serious . Victory Line went into
the top ten in San Franscisco.

V-8 s and V-6 s produced today
can survive on 85 to 90 octane.
Paying for premium unleaded
y ields no appreciable horsepower
gains for these motors and other
four-cylinder powerplants.

hig her octane rating. Why?
Without going into too much
detail , the idea behind an efficient
motor is for fuel to igninte just
before the piston beg ins the
downstroke of its up and down
cycle.

While the band is well-known
in the area they come from , band
member Erik Newman said ,"The
group is virtuall y unknown to the
east coast , and that 's what this
tour is about. "
The band did a video for the
song Hit You which was on MTV
in li ght rotation. According to
Newman , the group had a lot of
fun and hopes to do more videos .
Also to hel p spread their
popularity , the group has played
on a lot of college campuses in
Pennsy lvania , including such
schools as IUP , New London ,
Albany, and Aubern. "We 're
reall y looking forward to the concert at Bloomsburg , and we ' re
reall y happy to be on tour with
Eddie, "added Newman.

Deciding on the right gas will save money and add miles

by Ted Kistler
Staff Writer

When you approach the gas
pumps , do you really know what
you are putting in your tank? Do
you know the difference between
regular and unleaded gas? Which
is best , regular unleaded or
premium?
If you are not sure of any
answers to the above , read on , it
could get you a few extra miles
out of your car and save you a little jingle in the pocket to boot.
First , regular gasoline is gas
with lead added . Lead was mixed with fuel to provide lubrication for the valves.
The best way to tell if your
motor requires leaded gas is to
look on the dashboard and near

the gas cap. If there is no label
reading "Unleaded fuel only " or
something similar , your car is
probably intended for leaded fuel.
Be sure not to place unleaded
gas in a car meant for leaded fuel .
The lead in regular gas is important in lubricating the valves.
Without lead , severe damage to
the valves can occur. The effect
is similar to running a motor with
no oil.
Unleaded gas is fuel with no
lead added. Though logic says
this fuel should be less expensive,
oil companies say it should be
more expensive.
Those of you who have cars
which use unleaded gas will have
no problem deciding which pump
to use. Regular fuel nozzles will
not fit into tanks meant to receive

unleaded , thoug h unleaded
nozzles will fit into regular tanks .
Unleaded gasoline produces
less pollution , which is why the
government mandated in the
seventies , that all cars and trucks
sold in the United States must be
designed to use it.
With the back ground done ,
let 's decide which octane fuel will
provide the best combination of
power and efficiency. Octane is
a measurement of a fuel' s
resistance to combustion. You
can find a fuel' s octane rating on
the pump.
Currently, those numbers run
between 85 and 93.5. The higher
the number , the more resistant to
combustion under pressure the
gas is.
All but the highest performance

Dream Warriors humors horror
by Kevin Thomas

L.A Times-Washington Post Service

Like Dracula , Freddy Krueger
ju st cannot be kept down. He is
is back again in A Nig htmare on
Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors.
Hideously burned but possessing
supernatural powers , and a
clawlike razor-tipped right hand ,
the erstwhile child murderer is
still running amok .
The big difference is that his
films are becoming burlesques of
the original , and that is frankly all
to the good. It would seem that
his creator , Wes Craven , who
this time has left the directing to
the capable Chuck Russell ,
figured that to raise Freddy
(Robert Eng lund) from the dead
would take so much contrivance
th at the whole procedure should
be treated as a joke .
Consequently, the morbid tone
of the original has given way to
horror comedy set off by quite
spectacular and imag inative fantasy sequences. Dream Warriors
is no less grisly , but at least you
can laug h at it.
Nancy Thompson (again
Heather Langenkamp) , who as a
child gathered the courage to defy

Freddy and thereby survive him ,
has grown up to become a
psychiatrist specializing in dream
disorders .
She is just joined the staff of a
psychiatric hospital where seven
suicidal teen-agers are confounding the best efforts of a young
doctor (Craig Wasson) to help
them.
Nancy quickly understands
what 's up: They are all terrified
of going to sleep because Fred :
dy intends to murder them (in a
variety of gruesome methods, to
be sure) in their dreams. They are
the last of the Elm Street kids, it
seems, and Freddy is seeking
revenge against their parents for
burning him to death (Shucks,
they failed to bury him in consecrated ground).
Never mind that none of this and more-adds up very well , for
the film itself proceeds with a
kind of nightmare logic while
suggesting almost subliminall y
that younsters must learn to stand
up for themselves, even in their
dreams.
Art directors Mick Strawn
("Sid & Nancy ," "Runaw ay
Train ").and his sister C.J. Strawn
(who has designed Wild West

shows and circuses) and their
associates have come up with terrific special effects and chilling
nightmare worlds , even turning
the boiler room where Fredd y
was supposed to have been done
in for good into a fiery inferno
worthy of Dante.
But what makes Dream Warriors really work is its throwaway
humor, credited to Bruce Wagner
and Frank Derabon t as well as
Craven and Russell. There is a
funny bit when one of Nancy 's
patients watches Dick Cavett interviewing Zsa Zsa Gabor on TVonly to see Cavett turn into Freddy and lunge at Zsa Zsa.
Wasson 's usual earnestness
serves him well here , and
Langenkamp is very pretty but
awfully callow , having to play a
character a good five years older
than she actually is.
Most prominent of the
tormented teens, all of whom are
believable , is Patricia Arquette .
John Saxon is back as Thompson 's now-dissolute father.
Not surprisingly, when A
Nig htmare on Elm STreet 3:
Dream Warriors (rated a most appropriate R) signs off , it makes
it clear that we probably haven 't
seen the last of Freddy .

The high-performance motors
of the Z-28's and Mustang G.T. 's
and other such animals , on the
other hand , may benefit from the

The piston is pushed down by
burning gas, providing power and
forward motion. Lower octane

Mission
shortened from its original length,
still sounds too much like a
lullabye , even with its implied
sexual suggestions.
Songs from previous E.P.s like
Naked and Savage , Serpents
Kiss, and the gutsy remake of
Neil Young 's Like a Hurricane ,
would have provided a wider
variety of material for this album.
One thing the album fails to do
is portray the wild rock' n 'roll
side of The Mission . Although
most of the songs on Gods Own
Medicine are fast-paced , they
sound much better live , in front
of an audience.
Taken in small doses , Gods
Own Medicine is good for a wide
variety of listeners. It 's not a

cure-all , but it should make the
listener feel better.
To get your prescription , liste n
to FM 91.1 WBUQ. Gods Own
Medicine is currentl y No. 10 on
the college radio chart , according
to Rolling Stone Magazine.

gas is more likely to ignite before
the piston reacheds the top of its
stroke. Simple , isn 't it?
What kind of gas should you
use? If your car is a hi-po job
fro m the late seventies to present ,
go for premium if you plan on a
little street racing , regular unleaded if you want to keep money in
your pockets.
If you have an unleaded family car or economy car , you
should also stick with regular
unleaded , premium will only cost
you money. Today 's regular
works well in older , low
horsepower motors.
Pregnant? Considering Adoption?
free Counseling. Mcdicol . Housing
Ifc

¦A

f
¦
w

• ! ¦ ,.. ¦¦ ¦•.•- , . ,)|. .in
t .|
' Cr-|.(. i|, ,. , ,,., . ' Ir .,-

Adoption Services
f 1 i TV
liv , ;;: . .• • :[¦¦:> I' -li
M I l h Si
lo '
•'
A i, >r i"oH .ji q ,>P' .\iv i

I'A
737-3960

Shirt Sale!
* $5.99 *

Record & Jeans Wear Co.
Main Street
Bloomsburg

|WANTED: Any Business or Mass Communication |
|

major interested in gaining valuable experience
in dealing with companies and people.

|
|

|
f

The Voice is looking for people to solicit
ads in downtowm Bloomsburg.

|
|

Those interested will be able to make their own
hours , expand their human relation skills and
possibly recieve commission!!

|
|
|

Looks GREAT on a resume!
If interested contact Maria or Mary,
1 2 - 2 pm on Tues. and Thurs., at 389-445 7.

\

j

The Soap Box

BLOOM COUNTY

CLASSIFIEDS

by Berke Breathed

collegiate camouflage

PERSONALS

CAMP COUNSELORS - Camp Kwecbcc,
Private, resident , coed . Pa. camp inte rviewing for general bunk counselorsspecialists: pool director, lakefront ,
ecology, fishing, archery. General sports
camp. Contact Mike Gorni
215-667-2123(4) or Richie Kane 609-883-3975.

MEN'S BRINE SHOTGUN Lacrosse stick
- $25 - 784-1730 Ask for John.
BIG BIRD - DON'T run , take the jeep.
Good Luck Pledging! Love Ya, Apt. 102.
TO OUR FAVORITE Pixie Pledge - We
miss our Super Bowl parties! Love Ya,
Your Neighbors at 102!

RESORT Hotels. Cruiselines, Airplanes ,
Amusements Parks, NOW accepting applications. For more information and an
app lication; write: National Collegiate
Recreation Service, P.O. Box 8074 ,
Hilton Head , S.C. 29938

SCOTT LINDER , I've never been treated
so rough before... I Loved it! Theta Tau
Sister.

SPRING BREAK - DAYTONA BEACH!!
Reduced to S209!! Only $109 without
transportation! Includes 7 nights hotel
accomodations on THE BEAC H and
much more ! Call Karen: 784-4961.

D.P. HOPE IS not a way out , its a way
through . Imtiaz Ali Taj.

FOR SALE: Spinet-Console Piano
Bargain! Wanted: Responsible party to
take over low monthly payments on
spinet-console piano. Can be seen locally. Call Mr. White at 1-800-247-3345
EXT. 101.
LIVE-IN Babysitter needed for summer
months in Ocean City, New Jersey area
to help care for three young boys. $200
per 50 hour week , plus room , board
and car if needed. Must adore children.
Juniors or Seniors preferred. Send recent photo, resume or references to: P.O.
Box 155 Ocean City, NJ 08226, For further information call 609-399-2155.

P.L. - HE'S NOT a Townie, He's a local!
(G.T.A.) CODER.

-edited by Denise Savidge

J.T. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY. Thanks for
a GREAT six months. I hope the next six
are even better. I LOVE YOU!

THE FAR SIDE

PAM , I Give up... John.
TRACEY - HERE is your personal. Are
you happy now? Love ya. The other half
of TNT!
ELECTIONS: AMERICAN MARKETING
ASSOCIATION. 1987/88 Executive
Board Officers. Monday, March 9th 7:00 pm Coffeehouse. Information session about available positions TONIGHT !7:30 pm - Blue Room. GET
INVOLVED NOW!
TYPING DONE at Lowrate. For more info. Call 784-3234. Ask for Lisa.

Can you find the hidden ISMs?

RAHOOOOO !!!!!!!!

STOP IN and register for a chance to
win a Nike blow dryer. Split Ends Beauty Salon , drawing date is March 31. No
Purchase necessary.

DIANN , SORRY about classes. Nex t
time call the station for the real weather
report.

ACTIVISM
ATHEISM
BUDDHISM
CANNIBALISM
CAPITALISM
CHAUVINISM
COMMUNISM
CUBISM
DARWINISM
DEISM
EGOISM
EUPHUISM
MYSTICISM

EXPERIENCED typist wILL type at
home. Reasonable rates. 784-4437, Pat
Magda.
ADDITION - Happily married couple
wishes to adopt a newborn . Please give
us a chance to be a mom and dad! We
can offer lots of love, a beautiful home
surrounded by a loving family, and a
secure future. Expenses paid. Please call
Marie collect at 718-236-4294.
STUDENTS NEEDED to work for
security for Eddie Money Concert. Apply at Student Activities Office.
IS IT TRUE you can buy Jeeps for $44
through the US government? Get the
facts today ! Call 1-312-742-1142 , ext.
3678.

VOICE
CLASSIFIEDS
I wish to place a classified
ad under the heading:
-Announcements
•LosUnd Found

other

I enclose $

for

Five cents per word.

GRETCHEN , DO YOU THINK I' m Phi
Sigma Pi material? - Todd
CINDY - You're doing great - Keep up
the good work. Love Giggles and
Sunshine.
WILL THE REAL Sean C. Mullen Please
stand up.
TO THE 18th PLEDGE CLASS of AST Congratulations and good luck with
Pledging!! LOVE SUE.

words.

PLAGIARISM
PRISM
PURISM
RACISM
REALISM
SADISM
SCHISM
SEXISM
SOLECISM
TAOISM
TRUISM
WITTICISM

When a body meets a body
comin' through the rye

KEN - IF THE OIL SITS any longer it will
lose its taste. Let 's put it to use real soon!
Stacy.

Staff Writers meeting

DAVE -1 NEVER THAN KED you for that
Saturday night. Also, Thanks for the
great party you promised. Let 's do it
again soon. Sharon.
TO MARIA AND TRICIA ANNE - The
two of you brighten up the office so
much and that is the real reason that I'm
down here all the time!!! - Sports Editor
Mike

There will be a meeting for all Voice News and Investigative
reporters on Thursday, March 5 . The meeting will be held
at 7 p.m. in The Voice office.
Anyone who can not attend must contact News Editor Karen
Reiss or Scott Davis.
The News Editors' office hours are:
Monday, 1:30-2:30 p.m. and 3-5 p.m.
Tuesday, 2:15-3:15 p.m.
Wednesday, 3-5 p.m.
Anyone interested in becoming a News Staff Writer is urged
to attend the meeting.

Send to: Box 97
KUB or drop in

the VOICE mail
„i nt in iin;nn
* luf1' m «mon
before 12 p.m.
on y\/ed f or
mniif %

-Personals
-Wanted

by Gary Larson

LAURA , ILUA M !!! Scott.

SPLIT ENDS Beauty Salon. In the alley
behind Berrigans. 10u/° discount to BU
students with college I.D.'s. Walk-ins
welcome.

NO JACKET REQUIRED , Only tanning
oil and a swim suit. Spend Spring Break
at Club Tropic $114 , or Day tona Beach
$109- Price includes 7 night stay, dail y
pool side parties , local discounts, and
all taxes and tips! Call Intercampus Program - 1-800-433-7747. Travel free with
20 or more reservations!

AMC- Erica and Travis have agreed to form a business partnership
not in fashion, but by starting a new magazine to rival TEMPO. Jesse
is pretending to be a tax cheat so he can investigate Otis undercover.
Palmer asked Natalie to join him on a tropical vacation to
"recuperate," Cecily [Phoebe's niece] threw a wild party to introduce
herself to Pine Valley 's junior society and Phoebe walked in when
Dagney was doing imitations of her, Matt rescued Robin from being raped by the man she owed $30,000, Ross and Natalie decided
to end their affair after one last fling in the stable , Julie saw them
kissing in the hall.
ATWT- John claimed he's innocent to switching the babies , Meg
is conspiring to get Dusty while still play ing around with Sierra 's
husband , Sierra is divorcing her husband because of his affair with
Barbara .
DOOL- Shane saw a picture of Teddy and realized it was Andrew ,
he got all the evidence on Barbara and was ready to convict her but
she ran and crashed her car , Orpheus showed Mariana p ictures of
her children and of Roman and and Olivia together , Jason gave Victor the envelope containing the evidence Beau had against him , Lars
is upset because Jason is portraying Melissa as the star of the dance
show , Mrs . Johnson agreed to go to a battered women 's shelter.
GH- Camelia quit the convent and is in Port Charles after Duke,
Frisco has linked Kay and Hillary to the robberies that have been
occurring, Shawn and Tiffany are on vacation in Martinique and
Shawn won a lot of money gambling, Kay was beat up and Frisco
questioned her but she denied it , Bobby thinks Lucy is pregnant and
told Jake, Terry and Patrick finally "hooked up, " Frisco is going
to set a trap for Kay and Hillary .
GL- Alan fired Paul Valer so the art dealing is off , India panicked
because her father is in the hospital and she n^eds money , Warren
and India decided to continue the scam by dealing directly with Valer ,
Josh and Fletcher lured Mr , Cutler to the house with information
Reeva got, Cutler called the Man from Amsterdam and had him come
to Springfield , both were jailed , Reeva collapsed in the middle of
all the excitement and Ed told her to take it easy for the rest of the
pregnancy or she could die, Henry has been having heart pains caused
by money problems , Vanessa found out and confronted him which
made him so angry he had a heart attack , Mindy is visiting her father
her father in Venezuela , Valer found out Johnny and Christine are
in Spring field.
OLTL- Max was shot at by the cocaine dealer but Maria was hit
and is in surgery, Cord chased after the dealer to save Tina but Jamie
came, knocked Cord out , and took Tina, Vicki and Tom went to NYC
and Clint is looking for Tom , Diane poisoned Murray and was leaving the house with the j ewels but Dorian interrupted her escape, Diane
is holding Dorian at gunpoint.
Y&R- Ashley has returned home to a hospital and began therapy ,
Nicki told Victor she is dying and is planning a way for him to marry
her sister after she dies , Philip is moving from the Chancellor home
to college housing.

paper

or Monday for
Thurs . paper.
All classifieds
W,UST be prepaid.

' "You have a small capacity for reason, some
basic tool-making skills, and the use of a few
simple words." ... Yep. That's you."

J

DO YOU LIKE EARLY MORNINGS?

J

%

How about free breakfast at Burger King?

j

The Voice needs a circulation manager

0

5

2

s

g

sssssssss ssssss sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss

j If you are interested in being a part in the production
5 and distribution of The Voice , then contact Jeff Cox at
2 our office for more information. Phone number
389-4457
4
^

p

if

4
J
J

Students needed to participate

by Anne Richardson
Staff Writer

At this msment Dr. William
Carlough , Director of the Department of International Education ,
is looking for qualified students
to participate in a foreign exchange program between
Bloomsburg University and the
University of Aberdeen.
Now the question of cost pops
into your mind. The program
works like this—a student of the
University of Aberdeen pays
basic fees for tuition , room and
board at Aberdeen and a
Bloomsburg student does the
same at Bloomsburg, then they
switch places. The only extra cost
is travel fees,.
Dr. Carlough is interested in
students with a GPA hi gher than
3.0 to attend school at Aberdeen
for either the fall semester, 1987
or the full 1987- 1988 year.
Presently BU's Patty Haitsch is
attending the University of Aberdeen for the spring semester.
Joanna Mercer of the University
of Aberdeen is attending
Bloomsburg University for both
semesters this year. Both students
are the first to experience this
new program.
"I'm a sort of guinea pig for
the whole thing, " exp lained
Mercer. When she got here , she
had problems with registration
and scheduling her classes.
Although she had a bad start , she
does like the program.
Mercer enjoys the fact that
because of the program she has
the opportunity to see new places.
Overall she said ,"It has been
quite an adventu re ."
Mercer has found many differences between the two school
systems. One is that in Great Britain all of the universities are
located in cities , and so she expected Bloomsburg to be a large
school in a busy city . She was
wrong and Bloomsburg was a bit
of a shock to her.
Another difference between the
two systems is that in Britain only the top two percent attend
universities , and it is free.
Technical schools charge a fee
and are considered below the
university in prestige.
Here , the more money you pay
for an education , supposedly, the
better it is. What a reversal!
A third difference in curriculum is one that Mercer enjoys. At Aberdeen all classes are

Sixth man

from page 8
ing in for a player who is tired or
not really playing well. Then you
come in and play well , and
everyone remembers ," Simpkins
said. "It 's a big role. "
A major factor in Simpkins '
success is the Huskies ' use of a
three-guard lineup against the
quicker opponents. Early in the
season , Chronister 's game plan
was to get the ball down into the
low post to the Huskies ' talented
group of big men. Recently, the
strategy has changed slightly to
include the long-ball threat of
Simpkins as well as fellow guard
Joe Stepanski , Shickshinny , and
forwards John Williams , Detroit ,
MI, and Bill Connelly, Absecon ,
NJ.
"I like the three-point play , "

Rookie

from page 8
Ice, the Cy bex machine , the
endless hours in the weight room ,
that was the easy part. "The hard
part was the weekends," said
Juriga. ' 'I had so much to do during the week - daily treatment ,
team meetings - that I didn 't have
time to think about things. The
big letdowns came on the
weekends when yu know you 're
not going to be able to contribute
and you 're on a team that 's going to the Super Bowl. "
But it is true that misery loves
company , so it helped that Juriga
made a couple of new friends in
those late weeks of summer Duke the dog and Bruce Klostermann the linebacker.
The tackle, the chocolate

under a major , there is no general
education. At Bloomsburg,
Mercer gets the chance to try new
things that would never be offered at Aberdeen.
Most of the courses offered at
the University of Aberdeen are
based on the intellectual
disci plines. There i no teaching
or nursing. Aberdeen offers law ,
medicine, psychology , and even
Arabic.
Americans are usuall y given
first year courses and some have

second year courses. The majority of American students, according to Mercer , are in their j unior
year at college so it is easier to
adapt.
Mercer says that the Aberdeen
campus is beautiful. It was built
in the 1600's and has a distinct
charm. All of the dorms are
single rooms and are usuall y coed
by wing.
There are many opportunities
for exploring because Europe and
England are right at Aberdeen 's

doorstep.
To pick up an application , go
to room 218 at the Bakeless„
Center for the Humanities, or call
389-4332.

Applications must be completed and submitted by March
25, 1987.
The final decision to determing
the successful candidates will be
made by the Bloomsburg University Advisory Committee on International Education.

AIDS tough to trace
from page 1

porters of contact tracing say that
it is a useful complement to broad
education campaigns for reaching
the large groups of people who
fee) that "it can 't happen to me, "
health officials say .
"When does behavioral change
occur- when one becomes informed , or when one develops a
sense of personal vulnerability?"
said Michael Osterholm , Minnesota 's state epidemiologist and
a founder of the contact tracing
program there . "If I come to you
and say that somebody had intercourse with you who is (AIDS
virus) positive , it brings it home
a lot more than just knowledge.
Tracing efforts may ultimately be useful as models for larger
programs in the event a cure or
therapy for the disease is found ,
said Dr. George Rutherford ,
director of AIDS programs for
the San Francisco Health
Department.
Pilot AIDS tracing programs
share a focus on stopp ing the
diseases spread into relativel y
uninfected segments of the
population , but they vary widel y
due to differences in state law ,
target groups and resources.
In Colorado and Minnesota ,
health workers try to notify partners both of AIDS patients and of
the people who test positive for
AIDS antibodies- but San Francisco officials, limited by a state
law keeping antibody test results
confidential, are able to notify only AIDS patients ' partners .
And Minnesota , with a
relatively small poll of infected
individuals traces both homosexual and heterosexual contacts . But

Simpkins said. "We have a really good outside shooting team
(Bloomsburg ranks second
among the 14 teams in the conference in three-point field goal
percentage). Since it is such a
short shot , once you get the
rhythm down , the shot is there ."
Simpkins said the team practices the long shot a lot , running
different p lays around the
outside.
"Early in the season our big
men were our strength. Our outside guys had to learn to work
with each other," he said. "Early
we used the three-point shot when
were not supposed to , and is probably wh y we lost some games
we shouldn 't have . Now we have
learned to mix it up a little. "
The 1986-87 season has been

Labrador retreiver and the eighthround draft choice from South
Dakota State liked each other so
much that they agreed to share a
house.
"I bought Duke right after I got
out of the hospital , " explained
Juri ga , "and Bruce was in a cast
(following knee surgery), too , so
we got a place. We're both Midwesterners, so we've got a lot of
the same interests - hunting, camping, outdoors stuff.
"We kind of kept each other
going. "
It was six weeks before Juri ga's
cast came off , 12 before he could
put the crutches down. And it was
only recently, he said , "that I
finall y feel like I've got my walk

in San Francisco- where an
estimated 50 percent to 70 .percent of the male homosexual
population already is thought to
be infected with the AIDS virusofficials trace only heterosexual
contacts , said George Lemp the
program epidemologist.

With "tens of thousands " of
contacts in the gay community ,
tracing is not practical , Lemp
said. But , he added , "since the
number of heterosexual cases in
San Francisco was still fairly
small , it was a manageable pro gram . "
Since the start of the San Francisco program in mid-1985, staff
members have identified 114
AIDS patients who seemed very
likely to have had heterosexual
partners. They compiled names
of 93 of these contacts but were
able to find and test only 27.
Seven of those notified and
tested- 26 percent- appeared to be
carrying the virus.
Many patients are relieved to
have the department 's help in
notification because of the stigma
attached to the disease, San Francisco health officials said.
"It's difficult for people to tell
their partners or former partners ," Lemp said. "Only a certain proportion would be willing
to do the education we 've been
doing. "
In five San Francisco cases ,
AIDS patients refused to
cooperate with the program at all.
Some said that they did not want
the government interfering with
their personal life. In such cases ,
there is little health workers can
do.
"What gets me is when they try

a rollercoaster
ride for
Bloomsburg , losing games they
should have won , and winning
ones no one thought they could.
The team 's biggest upset came at
a crucial time in the playoff picture . Following a loss to Kutztown , bring ing the Golden Bears
into a second place tie with
Bloomsburg, BU needed a win
over
nationall y
ranked
Millersville to stay in the running.
They got that big game,winning 60-55, putting them in the
driver 's seat for the second place
spot in the division.
"I thought we could be
them,"Simpkins said . "When we
went out there, it was just their
ability against our abilty.
"It was a good win emotionally
for us. We knew we could beat

down so I m not favoring it. "
Yet th rough it all , said Antonopulos , he never supervised
"more determination or a better
attitude.
"He never looked back and felt
sorry for himself , " said Antonopulos , "even right after
surgery when there was concern
about his life. "
A model patient , Juriga "does
everything you ask him to do and
then wants to do more," said
Antonopulos.
These days, that means three
hours of treatment and rehabilitation under the trainer 's supervision on Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays. Tuesdays and
Thursdays are for classes at

to justify why they don 't want to
contact them ," said Dennesse
Neal , who together with
Geoghegan does the notification.
"They say , 'She didn 't give (the
virus) to me,' or 'She's married
now; I don 't want to disturb
her. '"
One AIDS patient blew up at
Geoghegan when she and the
man 's doctor pressed him about
notifying his current lover.

"He said he had AIDS and was
going to die and that he wanted
her to go with him , '' Geoghegan
said. "I tried to get her on the
phone, but she refuses to talk and
he refuses to bring her to a doctor 's appointment. "
In telling people that they have
been exposed to AIDS ,
Geoghegan and Neal are careful
not to give the name of the AIDS
patient.
"You really have to stress the
confidentiality, and that we're
here to protect the patient and to
protect them ," Neal said.
To further insure confidentiality, Geoghegan and Neal destroy
the lists of contact names once
they have been notified.

Gamp

Senior co-captain Linda King played in her last game for Bloomsburg,
finishing second on the BU all-time assist list.
(Voice file photo)

Cagers

Bloomsburg
Bressi 0-0 0-0 0, DeLullo 0-0 0-0
0, Kocher 0-3 2-3 2, Lorenzi 10-27
6-7 26, King 3-6 3-5 9; Shearer
6-14 0-2 12, Wolf 2-7 0-1 4
21-57 11-18 53

from page 8
firs t half (three of them one-andone's). The key to their downfall
was their anemic shooting (2 1-57,
36.8 percent)....First year head
coach Joe Bressi now begins to
build for next year. He only loses
two seniors in Susan Kocher and
Linda King, but they are both
starters . Returning starters will be
the national leader in scoring ,
Lorenzi ,
along
with
Bloomsburg ' s career assist
leader , Shearer and the shot
blocker Wolf...
BOXSCORE :
.

Lock Haven
Derus 0-5 4-6 4, Frohnheiser 0-0
0-0 0, Jaskuta 2-9 4-4 8, Klepp
3-12 6-8 12, Myers 1-1 2-2 4,
Rearick 1-1 0-0 2, Redmon 2-4 0-2
4, Richards 1-3 0-0 2 , Sergi 3-6 6-6
12, Young 5-14 0-4 10
18-55 22-3.2 58

from page 1

The average summer session
for camp workers lasts from midJune to mid-August. Average
salaries , plus room and board ,
starts at $800 and goes as high as
$2, 100 depending on education
and experience.
For more information and applications , contact the Career
Development Center , Ben
Franklin Building, room 12.

good teams, but we were losing
to some bad teams all year. "
Simpkins enjoyed talking about
playoff possibilities , because early in the season, playoffs were the
furthest thing from the squads '
mind. Simpkins said the team was
getting frustrated , and was ready
to hang it up for the year.
"We would talk among
ourselves in the locker room, saying 'something 's not right ,' "he
said. "We just didn 't work well
together for a while.
"Now we are a smarter as a
team , and we are working as a
team. "
So, with Mike Simpkins comfortable with his role , and the
Huskies winning basketball
games again , everything in
Bloomsburg seems settled.

Metropolitan State College here,
where Juriga is completing some
work toward a B.S. in animal
science (pre-veterinary medicine)
and the weekends are for ' 'doing
nothing. "
The idea , he said , is to "get
back to where I was before training camp."
To Reeves, that means the happy arival of what he considers a
true "bonus baby. "
It 's like knowing you 're going
to get an extra first-round draft
choice, only with Jim, we already
know what he can do. We're
looking at him as a hi gh draft
choice because before he got
hurt , he was everything we hoped
he 'd be and more. "

FAMOUS LAST WORDS

FROM FRIENDS TO FRIENDS.

"Are you OK to drive?"
'What's af e w beers?"
"Did you have too much to drink?"
"I' m perfectly fine "
"Are you in any siiape to drive?"
"Yve neverfelt better "
"I think you've Jiad a-few too many."
"You kiddin, I can drive
with my eyes closed!'
"You've had too much to drink ,
let me drive "
"Nobod y drives my car but me "
m
^
Wmk

^w£t'
^fm "

"A / v you OK to drive ?"
' Who?\ n f ew beers ?"

v

^»**te
.* *S£

DRINKING AND DRIVING
CAN KILL A FRIENDSHIP
UiS. Department of Transportation WC*!

Gouxil

A weekend to forget For the Bloomsburg Huskies
FTL
How we
measure
success
by Mike Mullen
Sports Editor

What a week.
First, on Monday , Nelson
Fieldhouse fills to near
capacity to witness the
men 's basketball team down
a pesky Kutztown ball team
to advance to the semi-finals
of the Pennsy lvania State
Athletic
Conference
(PSAC) tournament.
Little did anyone know
that that would be the last
time a Bloomsburg team
would win that week.
Wednesday,
Coach
Chronister took his young ,
inexperienced team to
Millersville to take on the
Marauders and their crowd .
They lost.
Friday , Joe Bressi led his
confident , yet inexperienced , women into a game at
home in Nelson against the
Lock Haven Bald Eagles in
the semi-final round of the
women 's
PSAC
tournament.
They lost.
Saturd ay , Roger Sanders
moved his wrestling team to
Penn State to grapple with
the top-ranked Nittany

Lorenzinets 1000thp oint
j
Women cagers fall , 58-53
by Joe Jackson
Staff Writer

Thresa Lorenzi scored her
1000th career point on a free
thro w Saturday ni ght as she led
the Bloomsburg University
women Huskies against the Lady
Eagles of Lock Haven.
Needing 22 , she scored 26, but
it was not enough as the Lady
Eagles held on to win a close one
58-53.
The loss ends Bloomsburg 's
season and also snaps a 14 game
winning streak for the women in
Nelson Fieldhouse.
The women Huskies played
somewhat slugg ishly in the first
half and just could not find the offensive groove.
Both teams played tenacious
defense , but Lock Haven
outhustled the Huskies to take a
25-19 lead to the locker room at
intermission.
In the second half , Lock Haven
built a quick cushion on the
Huskies , increasing their six point
marg in to as much as 17 points
at one time.
Then with 8:23 left in the
game, Bloomsburg started to
mount an insp ired comeback ,
scoring 10 strai ght points to cut

the lead to seven.
The women Huskies were able
to close the gap to one at 54-53
with less than 30 seconds to play ,
but clutch foul shooting by Lock
Haven allowed them to seal the
victory .
Bloomsburg saw two g irls in
double figures as Lorenzi had 26
and Carla Shearer netted 12.
Amy Wolf had 12 boards for the
Huskies.
Lock Haven was led by Donna Serg i and Lisa Klepp each with
12 points , while Lori Young also
hit double figures as she nailed
down 10.
Despite the dissapointing end to
the season , the women had a fine
year. They finished the season an
1 8-6 record .
HOOP SCOOPS:
The Huskies started out the
game 's first few minutes on total
fire. They made their first seven
shots to open up a 14-4 lead but
faded from there scoring only five
points the rest ,of the half....
Theresa Lorenzi hit her first four
shots than faltered hitti ng six of
23 the remainder of the game.
She did hit six of seven free
throws on her way to her 26
points which leads the nation. She
broug ht down eight rebounds

while blocking a shot , making a
steal and handing out one assist..
..Carla Shearer also hit her first
three shots en route to her 12
points . Shearer had a good ni ght
as she grabbed six boards , had
three steals , a blocked shot and
handed out five assists , adding to
her career leading total at
B loomsburg.... Sen ior Co-captain
Linda King played in her last
game as a Husky. She hit on three
of her six shots and canned three
of five foul shots to net nine
points. She landed five rebounds
and had one assist....The other
senior Co-captain Susan Kocher
also played her last basketball
game for Bloomsburg University. The 5-8 two sport performer
grabbed five rebounds , hit two of
three free throws for her two
points , handed out two assists and
had a steal in her final appearance
in Nelson Fieldhouse....Amy
Wolf was her usaul power under
the boards as she led the Huskies
with 12 rebounds. She lent four
points to the Husky cause while
garnering two steals , dishing out
two assists and rejecting four
shots....The Huskies shot 61 percent from the charity stripe , but
missed seven foul shots in the
see CAGERS page 7

BU Huskies humbled
by Penii State, 35-5

Bloomsburg 's Rocky Bonomo was the only grappler to come back from Penn State with a victory. The
only other wrestler to avoid a defeat was Jack Yocum who drew at heavyweight.
(Voice file photo)

Rocky Bonomo was the only
Bloomsburg University wrestler
to survive the purge at Penn State
University this past Saturday as
all but two Huskies were downed by the Nittany Lions in a
crushing 35-5 Eastern Wrestling
League loss.
The match did not begin well
for the Huskies as John Supsic
was beaten handily 14- 1 at 118.
Then usuall y powerful Rick
Bonomo was humbled by Ken
Chertow , 4-2.
Following Rocky Bonomo 's
win at 134, BU lost the next six
weights including a forfiet at 158,
a major decision at 167 (14-4),
and a technical fall at 177 (18-1).
Bruce Wallace fought hard but

came up short , 5-4, while Jack
Yocum drew at heavyweight.
PSU 35
BU 5
Individual Results :
118 Jim Martin (PSU) sup. dec.
John Supsic (BU), 14-1
126 Ken Chertow (PSU) dec.
Rick Bonomo (BU), 4-2
134 Rocky Bonomo (BU) dec.
Tim Flynn (PSU), 7-4
142 Joe Hadge (PSU) dec . Marty King (BU), 8-3
150 Sean Finkbeiner (PSU) dec.
Dave Morgan (BU), 11-6
158 Duane Peoples won by forfeit
167 Greg Elinski (PSU) maj . dec .
Roger Leitzel (BU), 14-4
177 Dan Mayo (PSU) tech. fall
Frank Spencer (BU) at 5:51
190 Andy Voit (PSU) dec. Bruce
Wallace (BU), 5-4
Hwt Jack Yocum (BU) draw
Greg Haladay (PSU), 0-0

"Schoolwise , I have made a
comeback , " said Simpkins. "I
have learned to set some standard s for myself , I now know
how to get the job done. "
Simpkins , a business management major , said he now knows
his way around the academic
realm of the institution and feels
more comfortable with his
classes.
The guard also feels more comfortable on the court , averag ing
7.3 points per game, and shooting

at the beginning of this year , I
thought he was a different person," Chronister said. "He knew
he had a job to do, and he wanted
to get it done. He is a good team
player now , and an asset to this
program. "
Simp kins ' role with the
Huskies is a definite indefinite.
He will find himself starting one
night while play ing sixth man the
next. Although he is constantly
jump ing around the Husky
lineup, Simpkins is happy with

his role on the squad. While
many performers would be upset
with the fact of constantl y losing
a starting role , Simpkins admitted he prefers to be a reserve.
"I'd rather come off the
bench ," he said. "I see all the
shot spots , and see how the other
players make their moves. This
gives me a good feel for the
game . "
"Coming off the bench is a
challenge. You are usually cornsee SIXTH MAN page 7

by Mike Mullen
Sports Editor

'Success isn 't measured
by what you wear
around you r neck. It 's
measured by what you
house inside your
heart. '
Lions in an Eastern Wrestling League (EWL) match.
They lost.
What exactl y one week
ago looked like the beg inning of a long and prosperous
post-season , turned into a
nightmare for our basketball
teams, each losing to a team
that they had beaten once
before .
Still , one cannot help but
ponder the possibilities of
the coming year. Let s
itemize the facts.
First , out of the two
squads, there are only two
seniors and none on the
men's team . In other words,
24 out of 26 team members
will be returning here next
year.
The women 's team will
still be with the services of
the nation 's leading scorer
in 1986-87 , Theresa Lorenzi , and Bloomsburg 's career
assist leader, Carla Shearer.
The men 's team has all
five starters returning plus
reserves Mike Simpkins ,
Dave Carpenter , Steve
Melchior and Dallas
Wilson .
The success these two
teams have shown over the
past season has been
remarkable.
As I once said before ,
'success isn 't measured by
what you wear around your
neck. It 's measured by what
you house inside your
heart .'
These two teams have
p lenty of heart as the
women showed in defeating
West Chester to capture the
Eastern Division title and
the men battled from the
basement to earn second
place in the division and a
spot in the playoffs.
Now , those are people
with heart.

Theresa Lorenzi goes up strong for two of her game high 26 points
against Lock Haven. The women lost 58-53. (Voice photo Jim Loch)

Simpkins content on playing his sixth man role
by Mike Feeley
for The Voice

Earl y in his college career
Michael Simpkins found that it
sometimes takes a little while to
get settled.
The Norristown Hi gh School
graduate had a shaky start at
Bloomsburg University , both
academically and athleticall y. He
ended his first semester with a
sub-par grade point average
(GPA), and found himself
suspended from the BU basketball team for three games, due to
disciplinary reasons , at one point
during the 1985-86 season.
He has turned that all around ,
however , capturing an important
role in the Bloomsburg line-up,
as well as finding his place in the
classroom. Simpkins has rebounded by averaging 2.75 GPA
over the last th ree semesters and
by play ing a major part in the
Huskies ' recent successes on the
court.
Bloomsburg finished in second
place in the Pennsylvania Conference 's Eastern Division ,
defeated Kutztown University ,
70-62 , in the first round and lost
to Millersville, 87-73, in the Conference semi-finals. The team
ended the regular season with a
16-10 overall record , while 11-3
in the division.
The sophomore guard attributes his turnaround in the
classroom to learning how to set
priorities.

over 40 percent from three-point
range. He has also totalled 75 rebounds and is second on the team
in assists with 41.
According to Bloomsburg head
coach Charlie Chronister , Simpkins has made a complete turnaround fro m last season. He
said , like all freshman , Simpkins
came to BU with the idea he had
to prove himself , which conflicted with the thoughts of some
of the other players and coaches.
"When he walked into practice

Second y ear rookie ready to play
by Joseph Sanchez

The Denver Post

It was a week ago that the exhilaration final y returned. It
washed over Jim Juri ga in the
middle of the Denver Broncos '
practice field , like some sort of
renewable athletic baptism.
There he stood , 6-4, 270
pounds , born again by the raw
fell of it , the small rivers of sweat
trickling down his forehead .
"I can 't even tell you how good
it felt to just jog again , " said
Juriga. It was just reall y exhilirating. "
After six long months, he said ,
he had experienced no greater joy
than the realization that health
was within his reach. A few laps ,
and it was not unrealistic to start
thinking about being physical y
complete again.
The low point of Juriga 's

athletic life is little more than an
unp leasant memory now. It was
Tuesday , August 26, during a
simple two-on-two drill on that
same Broncos practice field.
A fourth-round draft choice out
of Illinois who had been the sensation of summer training camp,
Juriga was assigned to block
defensive end Simon Fletcher. "I
just p lanted my foot , twisted my
upper body and the knee popped
out. "
Juri ga had torn the anterior
cruciate ligament away from the
bone on the left knee. That kind
of injury happens all the time on
football fields all over America.
John Elway plays on a similar injury that was never repaired. So
did Randy Gradishar.
But this one was not routine .
Comp lications . In postsurgery, Juriga suffered an acute
case of pulmonary edema , his

lungs filling with fluid in reaction
to a heavy dose of morphine. Except for the alarm signaled by his
girlfriend , Denise Fracaro , there
might have been a disaster.
The trauma of those few hours ,
however do not compare to the
six months of agony Juri ga endured before that first taste of exhiliration last Wednesday .
"It had to be really tough for
him , " observed Broncos Coach
Dan Reeves.
"Here's a guy who is just about
to realize his dream of coming out
of college and starting for a National Football League team , and
suddenly he has it taken away
from him. "
So instead of a place on
everybody 's all-rookie team ,
Juriga got a pair of crutches and
daily reservations at Steve Antonopulos ' training table.
see ROOKIE page 7

INTRAMURAL CORNER
MARCH 2:
- Women 's Intramural
Floor Hockey Clinic in
Centennial Gym at 3:30
- Women 's Intramural
Pickleball begins at 4:00
- Men 's Intramural Foul
Shooting begins in Nelson
Fieldhouse at 9:00
MARCH 3:
- Men 's Intramural table
tennis singles and doubles
rosters due in Nelson
Fieldhouse at 3:30
- Women 's Intramural
pickleball (doubles) begins
at 4:00
MARCH 4:
- Co-ed Intramural
pickleball begins at 7:30

Media of