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Wed, 12/03/2025 - 20:38
Edited Text
Construction p rojects abound on campus
Wo rk to begin on dorm complex
The condensate pipeline reconstruction project , started in October, is expected to be completed by July. Resurfacing of the campus
p h >?chHs '- °w"
roads will follow the project's completion.
°'°
by Tom Sink
Managing Editor
The beginning of renovations to
Old Science Hall was one of two
construction projects which started
this week, according to Bloomsburg
University 's Director of Maintenance
Donald McCulIoch.
McCuIIoch said Ihc $2.8 million
project will be completed by July, and
renovations will then begin inside Old
Science. "The insides of ihe building (walls,
slairwclls, etc.) get torn out ," he said.
McCulIoch pointed out the fence recendy erected around Old Science is
intended to keep people out of the
demolition area. Renovations to the
building will include an elevator.
In olhcr campus projects , groundbreaking ceremonies took place
Monday for the new residence hall
complex on BU' s upper campus.
The $7. 1 million dormitory complex will include six buildings of 16
apartments each. The apartments,
which will house 380 students will
^
have kitchen and laundry facilities. A
285-car parking lot will be built adjacent to the complex.
Construction of the apartments will
begin next month and the dorms are
scheduled to be completed in time for
the Fall 1989.
The work on the steam condensate
lines on campus is continuing and is
expected to be completed by Jul y.
"I've pushed for this project,"
McCulIoch said. He pointed out that
although the legislation to allocate
funds for the pipeline work began in
1980, the money was not released
until last year.
McCulIoch said the $600,000 project, which began in October of last
year, will repair all leaks in the system
and will also attempt to rectify other
undergound problems.
Following the completion of the
underground work, renovations to the
campus 's roads will begin.
McCulIoch said this project, to
which $243,000 has been allocated, should befinished by the end
of summer.
Other projects scheduled to begin in the near future are:
- One phase of a two-part project
to upgrade handicap standards on
campus. This will include the addition of ramps to buildings, as well
as modifications to doorways and
toilet facilities. Woffc on this project is scheduled to begin soon.
- The second phase of improving
handicapped standards - installing
elevators in buildings which do not
have them - is tentatively set to
begin Feb. 27, 1989. This project ,
expected to cost over $800,000,
plans to install elevators in Carver
Hall, Scranton Commons, Ben
Franklin, Navy Hall, Haas Center
and Nelson Field House.
BU fraternity defeats town police Fraternity disciplinary actions vary
in f u ndraising volleyball game
by Bill Gwrgini
Staff Writer
A Bloomsburg University fraternity had a recent confrontation with
the Bloomsburg Town Police Saturday afternoon.
The confrontation , a volleyball
fundraiser for the Columbia County
Juvenile Earn-It Program (a program which rehabililalcs local juvenile delinquents), resulted in Tau
Kappa Epsilon beating Bloomsburg
police in three out of five games.
The purpose of the tournament
was to raise money to help pay ihe
fines that some of the children owe,
said Bill Sharp, service project coordinator of TKE.
"We thought it would be very
good for these kids because they were
the officials in the game," Sharp said.
"We thought that was beneficial to the
kids. We also thought it was good for
establishing a belter relationship with
the police."
TKE spokesman Bill Sheely said
the games were enjoyable. However,
he added nol many tickets were sold.
"It was a really good idea and the
police had fun too. But , I think it was
held at the wrong time of the year and
not as many tickets were sold as we
would have liked," Sheely said. "I
think it was successful as a whole and
we would like to make it an annual
evenL"
He added that next year the group
will try to publicize the event better
and in turn raise more money for the
cause.
Sheely said that the matches were
close but TKE won three games out
of five.
Chief Larry Smith agreed that the
event was a good time for all involved.
"I had a lot of fun and I believe all
our people did , too," Chief Smith
said. "I think this sort of tiling is
what all fraternities need to do to
convey a better public image. It
shows that the members are civic
minded and it will help them maintain a better relationship wilh the
community ."
Smith said his department looks
forward to the event next vear.
by Cindy Hurst
Staff Writer
The university 's decision to put
Lambda Chi Alpha on social probation was met with some surprise and
questions from students.
Many had expected the university
to deal as severely with them as it had
with Beta Sigma Delta, who lost its
university charter last semester.
Social Probation results in having
social activiiics limited , especially
those related to alcohol. Both fraternities were raided by the state police for
underaged drinking.
According to Dr. Jerry Griffis, vice
president for Student Life, each alcohol-related incident is, lo some extent,
handled individually with guidelines
in the alcohol policy always being
carefull y followed.
by Leon Bogdan
Press-Enterprise staff
The Magee Mansion, widely regarded as one of Bloom sburg's most
opulent and unique homes, is being
donated lo BloomsburgUniversity by
the family of the late industrialist
Harry L. Magee.
University officials, in informal
discussions wilh the family, have
proposed using the 8,320-square-foot
retreat as an adult learning center,
university meeting site, classrooms or
guest house for visiting dignitaries.
But no definite plans have been
made. Formal acceptance of the
building must await approval by university trustees and the state System
of Higher Education Board of Governors, said BU Director of Development Anthony Ianiero.
After that, final transfer to the university is expected by June. James
Magee, president of Magee Industrial
Enterprises and co-trustee of the
Magee Foundation, confirmed making the offer recendy to University
President Harry Ausprich.
"It is our desire to gift it to the
university if it can be worked out.
This is something we have talked
about informally for some time," he
said.
"I'd be just delighted if the university ended up with it It just seemed to
me to be the right thing to do," said
Magee, the 59-year-old son of Magee
Carpet Co. founder Harry L. Magee,
who died in October 1972.
Following the death of his mother,
Alice C. Hartman Magee, in October,
Magee and his sister, Joanne Magee
Katerman , agreed the university
could best maintain the stylishly designed house overlooking the
Bloomsburg Fairgrounds.
One family concern, Magee noted,
is maintaining the condition of the
property, which sits on an acre at 700
W. Main St.
Magee said that following the sale
by his father of the former Craig
mansion, another large property at
First and West streets where Harry
Magee was raised, the site fell into
"deplorable condition." It curently is
a fraternity house.
"I had visions of this happening to
the Magee Mansion and I just could
not have that," he said.
"It's a fantastic gesture by the
Magee family to consider us," BU's
Ianiero said. "We feel it's a vote of
confidence and couldn 't be more
pleased."
'This represents a very special and
very important gift from the community, a very positive statement in our
institution," Ausprich added.
"We believe, with servere problems we have faced in space shortage,
that this will well serve the educational mission of the university,"
Ausprich went on.
The field-faced house, considered
"revolutionary" when designed in
1946 by Philadelphia architect Paul
Dentremont, sports an expansive
central courtyard and patio, a spiral
staircase leading to an upstairs den,
black-marbled fireplaces and a 1,600square-foot indoor swimming pool.
In 1947, it was featured in a Life
magazine photo layout,
Today, its market value is nearly
$300,000, according to Columbia
County tax records.
The building supplanted the original Magee homestead built in 1923
when Harry and Alice Magee married, according to the family.
James Magee said several realtors
and others made offers on the property. But private sale of the family
homestead "was not our intent , not at
all," he added.
"The way I see it, it helps three
parties out," Magee explained. "It
helps the family and me primarily
because it will be kept in top-notch
condition , the way it's always been.
"It helps the university with whatever they want to do with the property, and thirdly, it keeps it in use in
the community.
"Everybody wins," he assessed of
the family 's offer through the Magee
Foundation .
"I think our parents would be very
happy and very proud about this," his
sisler, Mrs. Katerman, 64, added.
"They were both proud supporters of
the school and quite good friends with
(form er college president) Harvey
Andruss."
When he was asked what his parents might think of die idea, James
Magee paused and noted, "I thought
about that naturally. And I would
hope that they would be pleased by
what I'm doing.
"That's one thing I'll never know.
It just benefits everyone."
The Magee Foundation was set up
as a charitable outlet to support community activities through gifts. Most
Dean of Student Life Robert Norton said, "They look similar on the
surface, but underlying factors make
them different."
Norton further stated that certain
individual conditions and problems
existed in the Lambda Chi and Beta
Sigma incidences that had to be considered in the decisions of disciplinary action.
"The Beta Sigma raid was obviously of a greater magnitude, but \h&
flagrance of the act had more to do
wilh the course of action taken,"
Norton said.
Griffis said, "Along with much
disturbance, the Beta Sigma Delta
situation involved the selling of alcohol and underage drinking. It was a
larger event and the raid was a bigger
affair."
furnishings in the Magee Mansion,
the family said, would be privately
sold later and would not be included
in the gift to the university.
Tax income for the town and school
district would be cut if the building
becomes state property because the
university tax is exempt,
The property now pays $3,200 in
annual taxes to the Bloomsburg Area
School District and another $962 to
the town. Columbia County gets $650
a year.
"That's peanuts for what the town
and community would get out of it,"
Magee said. "You have to look at the
benefit to the overall community."
Magee family donates mansion to university
About the Lambda Chi Alpha situation Griffis said, "It was a mixer
which involved no selling of alcohol
and was a smaller event."
In efforts to follow-up on the disciplinary action taken, the school is
working with both groups to correct
the problem. "We are in close contact
with the leaders and are assisting them
in completing the conditions necessary to bring the two organizations
back up to the acceptable functioning
level," said Norten.
Norten added, 'The university is
looking for leadership, which we
hope to find in the Greek organizations."
Pat Barry, president of Beta Sigma
Delta, said, "Within our suspension
requirements, we are required to do a
number of alcohol awareness projects
for the whole student body." Beta
Sigma Delta is hoping to have its
charter reinstated by January of 1989.
According to Steve Murwin, a
Lambda Chi Alpha brother, a stricter
alcohol policy will be inforced next
October when their probationary period ends.
"We will meet the university 's request of having an alternative beverage at each function beginning again
next fall.," Murwin said.
Dr. Griffis said, "Our society is
looking for changes and improvements to be made in the alcohol-related laws and practices."
University officials are glad to see
efforts being made through such programs as "Cheers" and other nonalcholic functions.
"This is the most important issue
we have right now," Dr. Griffis said,
"and the university is working with all
groups to make the effort to overcome
this problem."
i
Index
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The Magee Mansion, located next to the Bloomsburg Fairgounds on W. Front Street, has been suggested as a gift for Bloomsburg
Photo by ChrisLower
University.
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Commentary
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Death penalty hypocritical
To the Editor
Having served with Governor
Robert P. Casey as an elected delegate
to the Pennsylvania Constitutional
Convention, I had no hesitation writing him when he recendy signed a
death warren t for one of the 83 persons sentenced to the electric chair in
the Commonwealth. I told Casey his
action was both reprehensible and
hypocritical.
It was reprehensible in lig ht of the
demonstrated facts lhat: the death
penalty is almost exclusivley reserved
for poor males who are members of
minority groups; the selection by
prosecuting attorneys of those for
whom they pursue ihe death penal ty is
capricious and standardless; and most
important , innocent people are executed and will continue to be executed.
In this century alone there have
been 350 errors of persons falsely
found guilty in potentially capital
cases. Of these, 23 have been executed.
Pennsylvania has had 11 people
erroneously convicted , two were of
them were sentenced lo death. This , in
a nation which proudl y claims its
dedication to ihe sanctity of life.
Governor Casey's acl was also
hypocritical to anyone familiar wilh
his position on abortion. It is neither
logically nor morall y possible (as the
Pope has pointed out) to oppose the
abortion of a fetus on one han d because of its right to life, and on the
other hand put to death human
beings , some of whom arc innocent of
the crime for which they were executed.
There is no way to guarantee that
any particular person is guiliy with an
absolute certainty. A claim of this son
by Joshua Lee
Guest Columnist
Apartheid , the South African system of domination which oppresses
the country 's Black people into carrying permits to walk the streets, live in
over crowded villages, and other incomprehensible behaviors , is the
centra l theme of this week's feature
movie, Cry Freedom.
It features Dcnzel Washington as
Steve Biko, a black citizen , who
looked into the system and saw that
blacks did not have to live under the
oppressive conditions dictated by the
government , and Kevin Kline as
Donald Woods, a white South African liberal journalist.
Mr. Woods, upon becoming aware
of the black deprivation sweeping the
South African natives, becomes engrossed in the struggle for change.
As the movie progresses, Biko is
arrested and killed by South African
officials , who later cited his death as
being voluntary starvation.
While this may sound absurd , it is
not an isolated incident , as over 70
other similar cases are known to have
occurred during the last 25 years. The
latest of these happenings being Jan.,
1987.
This may not seem at all signifi cant, or in any way related to you , but
believe that such a system as Apartheid effects all of our lives , black or
white , in many adverse and substantial ways.
was doubtlessly made in each of the
23 cases where the accused was executed and later found noi to be guilty.
Newspapers quoted Casey saying
that ordering someone's death , "is
probably the most difficult responsibility that a governor has."
Your readers should write and
urge him lo show political and moral
courage by not lending himself to this
barbaric activity.
Since this person is being executed
in the name of every cili/.cn of the
Commonwealth , those who support
the death penalty and those who passively permit it become accessories ,
along with Governor Casey, to the
sta te sanctioned m urder of a human
being.
A look at the candidates
James W . Percey
Associate Professor by Ruth Ann Page
Bloomsbur c Universit y Guest Columnist
The candida tes in the 1988 Presidential campaign arc quickl y weeding themselves out. There are two
Republicans and five Democrats left
The movie s explicit depiction of in the race for the White House.
blacks in South Africa left me with a
For most of us traditional college
feeling that may onl y best be de- students , this is our first opportunity
scribed as "empty. " Empty in the to vote on something as important as
sense that I was emotional l y drained the President of the United States. Do
and sli ghtl y powerless. Onl y slightly, you know who you are going to vote
because there is always something for? If you do, why ? Do you kriow
that can be done.
what the issues are? Do you know
You may be wondering what can where the candidates stand?
wc as college students do to alleviate
I am going to explain where each
such discrepancy?
party stands on four basic issues, and
To begin with , we can petition the then how each candidate differs from
government to put pressure on busi- die other candidates in his party.
nesses that invest in South Africa , and
The first issue that separates the
also make people more aware of the Republican and Democratic parlies is
tragedies facing blacks daily. These reducing the federal deficit. The
are bul a few of the many things which Republicans wan t to reduce it by
can be done to combat Apartheid. making spending cuts. They would
What are you prepared to do?
like to do this by enacting a "line item
veto " which would stive ihe President
the power to veto just certain items in
a bill that he considers wastes put in
by Congressmen'to'benefi t their particular reg ions.
The Democrats want to reduce the
deficit by making large budget cuts in
the area of defense.
The second issue is raising taxes.
The Republicans do not want any tax
raises. Some of them even want to
lower taxes in certain areas. Democrats, on the other hand , want taxes
raised. Most of the raises would be
made for the wealthy, corporations ,
and imported oils.
The third issue is the Stra tegic
Defense Initiative (SDI), more popularl y known as STAR WARS. SDI is
simply a plan to provide a defensive
shield against nuclear attack , rendering nuclear weapons obsolete.
The Republicans want research to
be done in this area as well as one day
possibly deploy ing it (putting it into
action). The Democrats are against
the research and deployment.
The fourth and final issue is the
Apar theid is our problem
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At Large
The child care crisis is still growing
by Ellen Goodman
EditorialColumnist
For those who were still in bellbottoms at the time, a small historic
note from the Nixon era: In 1971,
Richard Milhaus vetoed the last comprehensive child-care bill to come out
of Congress. It would , he insisted ,
"commit the vast moral authority of
the national government to the side of
communal approaches to child-rearing over the family-centered approach."
From then on, "the vast more authority" of the government was committed to neglect Child care all but
disappeared from the federal agenda.
Kids were private property . Working
parents had to find places for them the
way they might find a parking space in
a downtown crossing.
But now, in the words of another
golden oldie, the times they are achanging. This year even Orrin Hatch
has introduced a child-care bill . Only
Phyllis Schlafly still writes what
sound like parodies about attempts to
sovietize the American family by
warehousing babies in governmentlicensed institutions where they
would be subjected to secular, unisex
custodial care.... "
There are now 10.5 million children
under six being cared for by people
other than their parents . By 1995,
two-thirds of all preschool children
and four out of five school children
will have both parents in the work
force.
We have drifted our way into a
national child-care crisis. And finally
we're payin g attention.
"We have a clipping file that would
warm your heart," says Helen Blank ,
who has been a child-care stalwart
through the lean years at the
Children 's Defense fund.
In these files are dozens of freshly
minted pieces on "The Child Care
Crisis."
Stuffed between them are the reports of myriad polls showing that
some two-Lhirds of Americans believe the government should do some
undesignated "more" about child
care.
We ve turned the corner in recognizing that society has responsibility
for child care," says Blank. But out of
long experience she adds: "I'm still
worried that all this attention won 't
ultimately mean much for children."
The desire to turn a problem into a
policy has energized the huge coali-
tion behind the ABC bill , the Act for
Better Child Care. This is a carefu l
piece of compromise legislation
being shepherded through ihe Senate
by Chris Dodd. Last week , at a packed
Senate hearing, people representing
vastly different worlds and worries—
from American Express employer to
the parents of a murdered child —
came forward to testif y in favor of it.
For a price tag of S2.5 billion , the
ABC bill would start up a national
infrastructure for day care based on
what the states are already doing. It 's
a package proposal that would begin
to deal with the quality as well as the
quantity of care.
Of the money, 75 percent would be
targeted to help moderate and lowincome families pay for child care.
Another 15 percent would go to
training providers, setting up standards and trying to keep people in the
profession. The final 10 percent
would go to administrative costs.
If S2.5 billion sounds like a hefty
new burden in a deficit-conscious era,
Ellen Galinsky of the Bank Street
College, a coalition leader, says:
"There are also costs when children
don 'tgetcared for ."Helen Banks puts
the money in another context: "The
congress spends money for emergencies all the time. When we need tankers in the Gulf. When Len Bias dies.
Well , child care is an emergency. "
The bill' s sponsors — 37 in the
Senate and 160 in the House — are
counting on lhat sense of emergency
coming from many directions. All the
talk about welfare reform , after all ,
leads inexorabl y back to chdd care.
The talk about excellence flows directly down to Ihe early years.
There are horror stories one day
about an abusive day-care center, the
next day about children who played
with matches or driers while their
parents were at work.
Parents are worried about children ,
and employers are worried about
workers, present and future. As one
person summed il up at the hearings:
"The future is in very small hands."
The ABC bill is just a piece — a
federal piece — of the day-care
puzzle. Says Galinsky: "We're having our 15 minutes in the sun. "
Pleased with the attention , she is
nevertheless worried about the attention span. "It took a long lime to make
this mess." It 's going to be with us at
least as long as the waiting lists at the
child-care center.
Inte rmediate-range Nuclear Forces
reduction treaty (INF). This treaty has
been discussed between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. It is a
treaty to reduce the arms build up and
hopefully stop ihe arms race by making 50 percent reductions in the intermediate-range nuclear forces. The
Republicans are skeptical about the
treaty because of possible problems
in wording and enforcing the treaty.
The Democrats, however, support the
treaty and its implications fully.
Now that /you know basically
where the iwo parties stand , how do
the candidate s differ from the others
in the same party? For the Republicans , there are only two candidates
left ; Vice President George Bush and
Pat Robertson. George Bush will
clearly be ihe Republican nominee
since Robert Dole dropped out Tuesday. A vote for George Bush is a vote
for Ronald Reagan , he is like a photocopy of the current president. He follows Reagan right down to the INF
treaty which most of the other Republicans are against. Pat Robertson
would raise revenue by imposing a
fee on alcohol consumption. He
would also try to ban tobacco and to
put an end to farm subsidies.
The Democratic party has five
candidates left; Michael Dukakis ,
Richard Gephardt , Albert Gore , Jesse
Jackson , and Paul Simon.
Michael Dukakis, the Govenor of
Massachusetts, would lik e to take the
programs he initiated in his home
state for economic growth on to a
national level.
One example is a comprehensive
enforcement program to collect a
portion of the SI 10 billion in federal
taxes that he projects go unpaid every
year. Another program he wants to
lake lo a national level would be a
National Economic Development
Fund to puL job creating projects in
depressed , needy regions.
Richard Gephard t 's mai n issue is to
establish a free trade balance by
mandating retalitory tariffs on countries guilty of unfair trade practices.
He is a fighter for the blue-collar
voters. Ablert Gore has been deeply
involved in the congressional complexities of defense and forei gn policy. He is the only Democrat that
supports STAR WARS research. He
stresses the need for economic
growth and is also the only one that
says he will increase taxes as a last
resort.
Jesse Jackson probabl y has the
strongest message of all the candidates. He wants government intervention in social areas such as child
and health care, a higher minimum
wage, and legal protections for farmers under forclosure. He wants to
support his progams by increased
personal-income taxes and a plan to
re-invest worker pension funds into
government bonds.
Paul Simon is probably saying the
least in all areas but economic. He
supports a Balance-budget Amendment without raising taxes by reducing the unemp loyment and interest
rates, thereby reducing the deficit
Now that the issues, party stands,
and candidates have been outlined,
hopefull y you can find a candidate
that best meets your personal views.
Registering to vote can be done either
at the courthouse downtown , or on
campus at various times in the fall. Be
sure to vote, its a rcsponsiblity as well
as a priveledge.
®lj£ Butte
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
Editor-in-Chief.
Karen Reiss
Managing Editor
Tom Sink
News Editors
Lisa Cellini , Tammy J. Kcmmcrer
Features Editors
Lynnc Ernst , Glenn Schwab
Sports Editor
Mike Mullen
Photograph y Editor
Christopher Lower
Assistant Photography Editor
Chrissa Hosking
Production/Circulation Manager
Alexander Schillcmans
Advertising Manager
Susan Sugra
Assistant Advertising Manager
Kim Clark
Business Manager
Adina Salcc k, Richard Shaplin
Assistant Business Managers
Jen Lambert
Copy Editors
David Ferris, Chris Miller
Illustrator
David K. Carton
Advisor
John Maittlcn-Harris
Voice Editorial Poliov
Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice arc the opinions and
concerns of the Editor-in-Chief , and do not necessarily reflect the opinions
of ail members of The Voice staff , or the student population of Bloomsburg
University.
The Voice Invites all readers to express their opinions on the editorial page
through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must be si gned 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.
WVIA -TV general
manager honored
The General Manager of WVIAChannel 44 and Bloomsburg alumni
will be presented the Young Alumni
of the Year at the annual Alumni
Awards Dinner-Dance on Sunday ,
April 30 at 6:30 p.m at the Caldwell
Consistory in Bloomsburg.
A. William "Bill" Kelly discovered
radio broadcasting in seventh grade.
At 13 he was working at WTTC in
Towanda describing everything from
canoe races to horse-pulling contests.
Today Kelly is vice president and
station manager^of WVIT-TV/FM ,
the public television and radio stations for northeastern Pennsylvania.
Kelly earned a bachelor's degree in
English from Bloomsburg Univcristy.
While pursuing his education ,
Kell y performed on the air and created special public service projects at
several radio stations in Pennsylvania
and New York . During his tenure as
station manager of WTBG, Masscna
N.Y., his efforts resulted in the long
delayed purchase of a new ambulance
for the community.
At WARM , Scranton/WilkesBarrc , his 20-mile walk for the March
of Dimes raised over $20,000 to fight
birth defects.
He received the Pennsylvania
Medical Society Walter F. Donaldson
Award for Outstanding Medical Journalisn and the Northeastern Pennsylvaniz Chapter March of Dimes Outstanding Volunteer Leadership
Award.
Currently, Kelly is president of the
Marian Sutherland Kirby Library
board of directors in Mountaintop
and an instructor of mass communications at BU.
At WVIA, Kelly is responsible for
overall television station operations
and executive producer of several
programs including the popular
weekly phone-in series "Call the
Doctor."
He has also coordinated live coverage of news events, produced music
specials and hosted several programs
on Channel 44.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has recognized his efforts in
fundraising and audience building
with two national awards.
He is a graduate of the University of
Wisconsin Executive Management
Institute and has participated in several management and fundraising
seminars conducted by the Public
Broadcast System.
Kelly lives in Mountaintop with his
wife Janice and their three children.
Lifeguards are needed for summer sessions for the recreational
swimming program at Nelson
and Centennial. Contact Dave
Rider at Nelson Field House.
Students who are Massachusetts residents may obtain an
application for Massachusetts
Grants and Scholarship by contacting Mrs. Kishbaugh in the
Financial Aid Office , 19 Ben
Franklin Hall. The application
deadline is May 1, 1988.
Library hours during the
Spring Weekend beginning Saturday, April 2 through Monday,
April 4 will be as follows: Saturday, April 2, Closed; Sunday,
April 3 (Easter), Closed; Monday, April 4, resume regular
hours.
•••••••••
The National College Poetry
Contest is open to all university
students desiring to have their poetry anthologized. Cash prizes
will be awarded to the top five
poems. The deadline is tomorrow. Interested students should
come to The Voice office for more
information .
Scheduling beg ins Tuesday,
April 5, according to the timetable on pages two and three of
the class schedule. Students will
schedule in a descending order
by credits earned (seniors first ,
etc.).
Students can exchange their
scheduling booklet notification
cards for the booklets in the University Store or the Reg istrar's
Office.
Advisement for summer sessions scheduling will begin Monday, March 28. Scheduling begins immediately at the
Registrar's Office.
Effective for the pay period
ending April 8, 1988 (pay date
April 15, 1988), Bloomsburg
University will be withholding
the $10 per-calendar-year occupational privilege lax from each
student employed by the University .
Any student from whom the
occupational privilege tax has
already been withheld (by another employer) for the calendar
year must presentproof of the$10
withholding to Mrs. Hess (Business Office - Waller Administration Building) in the form of Ihe
OPT receipt, prior to the submission of the April 8, 1988 pay
cards.
The Voice is looking for people
who are interested in writing political commentaries about presidential candidates. Call 4457 for
more information.
The Student Internship Service
offers you listings of summer internships in your major fields.
Placements are available with
sponsoring companies in New
York City and Long Island, N.Y.
Many of these intemsh*ips are either salaried or offer stipends.
Write for further information:
Student Internship Service, P.O.
Box 1053, Kings Park, NY,
11754.
The University Store will be
holding a continous Book Sale
during the entire month of April to
reduce excess inventory before
the end of the year. Over 1,000
childrens books, classics and a
wide variety of interest-books.
Books are priced for clearance.
Bloomsburg University Dining
Service presents a steak nightspecial tonight in the Scranton Commons. Students will have the
choice of one entree. Selections
include N.Y. Strip Steak, Boneless Breast of Chicken and Flounder Stuffed with Crabmeat. Dinner is served 4:30 - 7 p.m.
Remember: Cry Freedom will
be presented tonight in Haas at 7
& 9:30 p.m. in place of Full Metal
Jacket. Admission is free with BU
ID and current CA Sticker.
University President, Dc.
Harry Ausprich will hold open
visiting hours on April 25 from
1:30 - 4 p.m. in the Gold Room ,
Kehr Union Building. All students are welcome to stop by.
The Bloomsburg University
administration has determined
that for the upcoming summer
and fall semesters, fees must be
paid for all prior balances.
Holds will be placed on students' accounts which will prevent registration, transcripts and
diploma. In order to gain a release, students must pay in full all
outstanding debts or have documentation in writing .supporting
financial aid.
WBSC/WBUQ has announced openings for the 198889 Executive Staff. Positions
available include; Program Director, News Director, Chief
Engineer, Asst. Sports Director,
Asst. Music Director, Production
Director, Personnel Director,
Traffic Director, Public Affairs
Director, Advertising Director,
Promotion Director and Asst.
Remote Director.
These positions are open to all
BU students. For more information and job description contact
WBUQ office , Rm. 1250
McCormick Center or call 3894686.
Innovative instruction method taught
University President Dr. Harry Ausprich holds the first bit of ground broken
for the new residenac hall. This facility will be built on upper campus.
Photo by Robert Finch
Bloomsburg University students
are using a new and innovative way to
learn in courses such as sign language, where they learn how to sign
words and phrases for the deaf, audiometer training, where they learn to
test hearing, and chemistry labs,
where they learn to test hearing, and
chemistry labs, where they learn to
identify chemical elements and compounds.
The new instruction method is
called interactive video, and it combines the use of modem video and
computer technology, creativity, and
the technical expertise of subject
matter specialists.
Even the orientation program at
Andruss Library has turned to interactive video to inform users of the library how it operates and where
things are located.
Interactive video is a rapidly expanding instructional technique, and
Bloomsburg University is a frontrunner in the field's development.
With the master's program in in-
structional technology, BU is a pioneer in higher education institutions
that offer a degree program in preparing students to be interactive video
specialists.
Under the direction of Harold
Bailey, coordinator of this graduate
program , the interactive video program in its third year of operation at
BU. There have been 19 graduates to
date in this program, which is one of
only two offered in the nation.
Interactive video is the integration
of textual graphics and audio-visual
information totally under the control
of a computer The audio-visual infor-
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Professional health care . . . by people you know.
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Times best-seller list for more than 20 weeksand has made
the collegiate curriculum a burning public issue.
Bloom , a professor of philosophy and political science
at the University of Chicago, is a translator and interpreter
of Plato and Rousseau. He is known for his concern about
liberal education and his deep committment to the "Great
Books" approach to learning.
In "The Closing of the American Mind,"Bloom accuses
American universities of abandoning their principles and
their purpose, a stand that won him endorsement from
many of his colleagues and the angry rebuttal from others.
Bloom's appearance at Bloomsburg University is sponsored by the Community Government Association, the
Bloomsburg University Foundation and the SSHE Faculty Professional Development Council.
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director of the Center of Instructional
Systems Develpoment(CIDS).
The graduate assistants in the
Master's program at BU work with
the CISD to develop interactive video
disc course work to improve university teaching and to solicit external
industry-based projects.
It has become increasingly difficult
and expensive for businesses to hire
instructors or to send workers off-site
for training courses, Bailey said, so
interactive video offers an effective
cost and efficient means by which
industry can meet their training
needs.
¦
Education top ic of lecture :
Educator and best-selling author Allan Bloom will be
the final guest speaker -of the spring Provost's lecture
Series at Bloomsburg Univeristy.
Bloom will speak on "Liberal Education and the Political Community" at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 7, in Carver
Auditorium.
Bloom will participate in a panel discussion that is part
of the State System for Higher Education Northeast
Honors Symposium at 9:30 a.m. Friday, April 8, at the
Alvina Krause Theatre. The topic for the discussion will
be "Bloom 's Challenge to Education ."
An analysis of the American system of higher education
and contemporary students, Bloom 's "The Closing of the
American Mind," became a runaway best-seller when it
was published last spring. It has topped The New York
mation usually appears on a laserdisc.
The complete interactive video
system, therefore, consists of a computer, a laser disc player, at least one
television monitor and an interface allowing the laser player and the computer to communicate.
This advanced communication system is an ideal instructional and training tool, Bailey said.
Industry , business and corporations are using the interactive video
system as an individualized training
tool.
Bailey, in addition to being coordinator of the degree program , serves as
B
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Carlisle Hospital is hosting a nursing
externship, Summer Transition, an 8-week
program beginning on May 23, with an optional
2 to 4 week extension.
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You will "live the hospital experience " by
getting practical, hands-on training and by observing.
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The Summer Transition begins with a 3-day
classroom orientation, followed by a 7-day clinical
orientation. The remainder of the
program will be spent in a specific clinical area.
¦
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This externship is for nursing students who have
completed the junior year of a B.S.N, program or for
the A.D.N, and diploma
nursing students who have completed the
fundamentals of nursing and a related
clinical experience.
¦
¦
¦
¦
¦
:
Registration deadline is Friday, April 8
:
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For additional information , and to register , please call
Anne Bear, R.N.,
Carlisle Hospital ,
1-800-346-4789, extension 5590.
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Features
Holocaust
a fading
memory
Group promotes
new frien dships
of Columbia County, the board apby Brenda Bozochovic
points captains for the bowling teams
for The Voice
Big Brother/Big Sister Organiza- and the captains p ick four team
tion has been helping families for members. Each member is then reover 80 years. They match eligible sponsible for finding their own sponchildren between the ages of 7 and 17 sors. Father Snyder also says they are
to volunteers who arc carefully arranging another Bowl For Kids'
Sake to allow college students to
screened and trained .
For example, the volunteer must participate in the event since many
have at least three character refer- college students will not be here on
ences. The organization also runs a May 21. You may participate in both
of the Bowl For Kids' Sake games. If
police check on each volunteer.
you or any of your friends would like
developed
arc
Goals for the match
by the caseworker with input by the to participate in this acti Wty you can
parent , volunteer and child. The pick up sponsor sheets at the Big
match is then carefully supervised by Brother/Big Sister office at the
United Penn Bank Building on Main
the caseworker.
Street in Bloomsburg .
Brother/
The average cost of a Big
The goal of the Big Brother/Big
Little Brother or Bi g Sister/Little
Sister match is under S600 a year. By Sister Organization is to provide an
comparison it costs an average of opportunity for positive growth and
$3,000 for each child who enters the enrichment to children from singlejuvenile justice system and from parent homes. Over time, improve$18,000 to $65,000 a year for institu- ments begin to show in the child' s
relationship with family and friends ,
tionalization.
To help prevent these costly alter- in school work, and most impornatives , Bi g Brother/Big Sister of tantly, in the child' s self esteem.
According to Father Snyder there
Columbia County is holding Bowl
was
a case where a college studen t
for Kids ' Sake. A pledge of 5 cents
was
able to help a child who was
per pin means a $5 contribution if you
bowl a 100. The Bowl For Kids ' Sake doing poorly in school. The student
will be held at the Peanut Bowl , Sat- not only aided the child academiurday, May 21 , 1988. Throughout the cally, but also established a good
day, prizes will be g iven by many friendship and guidance.
But, they can't do it alone!
participating agencies to sponsored
It doesn 't matter if you 're a pro or
will
be
refreshments
bowlers and
a casual bowler with a 53 average.
served.
According to Father Chester Your support will help Big Brother/
Snyder, President of the Board of the Big Sister Organization match a
Big Brother/Big Sister Organization youngster who is in need of a friend.
Program places
foreign students
American Scandinavian Student
Exchange Programs (ASSE) is seeking local families to host Scandinavian , French, Spanish , German ,
Dutch , British, Swiss, Japanese and
Australian boys and girls.
SCREEN PRINTING
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AT THE FOOT OF
COLLEGE HILL
The students, 15 to 18 years of age,
are coming to this area for the upcoming high school year.
These personable and academically select foreign exchange students are bright , curious and anxious
to learn about this country by living as
part of a family and attending a local
high school.
They arc also eager to share their
own culture and language with their
newly adopted American family.
The exchange students arrive from
their home country in August and
return at the end of the school year in
June.
Each ASSE student is fully insured
and brings their own spending
money. They expect to bear their
share of household responsibilities as
well as being included in normal
family activities and lifestyles.
The students are fluent in English,
well screened and qualified by ASSE.
Families may select the youngster of
their choice from extensive student
applications, family photos and biographical essays.
Families who would like to share
their lives with a foreign teenager and
experience the rewards of this enriching oppurtunity should contact
ASSE's local representative: Jane
Hergert at (717) 636-0885.
dJUEFrlT
Wmu
WILL BROADCAST
HUE
Rpril
Rpril
Rpril
BU/E.
7 3:00 W. Softball
12 3:00 111. Softball
13 1:00 Baseball
Stroudsburg
The new student residence hull facilities were unveiled Monday, March 28. The new facilities, sketched here will be built on
upper
campus.
1 '
'
Photo by Robert Finch
Police snare Easter Bunny
by D.J. Metcalf
for The Voice
When will the madness end? Another chapter in the
continuing saga of LCB raids at Bloomsburg has unfolded , and this time the Easter bunny was involved.
A social gathering was raided last ni ght at approximately 11:30 p.m. surprising everyone at the Easter celebration. The spirit of the crowd was spoiled like rotten
eggs as the tormenting process of getting "busted" was
just the beginning.
Party-goers reached for their jackets and identification ,
as those under 21 prepared for a long evening at the police
barracks.
Soon after police began carding, a faint knock was
heard at the back door. People looked on inquisitively as
an officer squeezed his way through the crowded room to
open the door. He reached the crowded doorway and
finall y managed to pul l the door open. The officer gazed
downward with a look of astonishment.
Standing before him was a short, plump, furry, white
bunny with floppy ears and a damp pink nose twitching up
and down. The cuddl y, innocent looking animal held a
basket with colorfu l eggs and various other treats. The
officer scratched his head, then snared the bunny by his
cars and pulled him inside. The terrified bunny found
some comfort standing snug in a corner of the room .
After the crowded house finally began to clear out, a
stringent looking officer approached the bunny. The
bunny was hopping-mad as the officer came toward him
wilh a pair of handcuffs.
The bunny 's eyes gleamed with retaliation as he
reached for his basket and began hurling eggs at the
officers. Eggs of every imaginable color soared»through
the room. Officers were forced to take cover.
The enraged fluffy creature gazed at the remaining
group of people with a grin stretching from floppy ear to
the other. He whistled to them and pointed to the back
door. They escaped while he continued pelting officers
with his colorful ammunition.
Once outside the officers waited to see if the heroic hare
would escape the LCB. He never emerged from the house
and was last seen in back of a police car heading for the
station.
According to a reliable source, the bunny failed its
brealhalizcr test and was later determined to be an intoxicated midget impersonating the Easter Bunny.
Published works aid profs
by Kelly Monitz
for The Voice
Yes, the old adage still haunts university professors. According to one
faculty member, some large schools
emphasize being a good researcher,
not a good teacher. I' ve heard some
schools put (the professors ') CV
(curriculum vitac) on a scale or just
count the pages, he said, "Teachers
are under a great deal of pressure lo
publish these days." Even when enrollment is high , he added , universities want to advertise their school
with their professor 's publications.
Roughly, there are a hundred applicants for every teaching job available
and "if you have publications , you
get the job."
According to Dr. Calvin Walker,
psychology department chairperson
at Bloomsburg University, the faculty is evaluated on three criteria:
teaching effectiveness and fullfillment of professional responsibilities;
continuing scholarl y growth; and
service to the university and/or community.
These criteria arc the basis for
promotion and tenure. If professors
want good evaluations for promotion , they must continue their scholarly growth, which entails attending
meetings or workshops and publishing articles or papers. Even after a
professor is tenured , he is still evaluated every five years.
Also, money is an important factor
surrounding research studies intended for publication. "Faculty
aren 't spending their own money (on
research), but (they) aren 't getting
any money for it either," commented
Walker.
Some of the money comes out of
the departmental budget and some
comes from the State System of
Higher Education (SSHE). Through
SSHE, all 14 state schools compete
for the grants, which are allocated for
professional development and some
strictly for research. On campus, the
faculty can apply for release time,
which allows the professor to lighten
his class load from 12 hours a week to
9 hours a week.Overall, there is "very
little money (in the department to
support research), maybe a litde to
pay for the rats, " Dr. Walker said,
half jokingly.
According to a member of the
psychology department, "Psychologists aren 't getting a lot of money
from ihe government. Our grants
have been cut back." There is also a
great deal of competition for these
grants and a "detailed proposal has to
be written."
Another member of the faculty
commcnted,"It's hard to apply for
grants and do systematic research
without release time."
He also added that, "Faculty
should not have to compete for release time or funding. It should be a
part of the professional development
of every member, granted the individual is showing some productivity."
Aside from financial difficulties,
there are also positive aspects to research studies that pertain to the
community as a whole.
A faculty member commented that
society can benefit through the prediction and prevention of certain disorders, like anxiety or depression.
"The next generation will have less
problems with these disorders."
Dr. Eileen Astor-Stetson, a psychology professor at BU, commented
that it is not only important to do
research, but also to be invoved with
undergraduate researchers. AstorStetson also added that researching
trains the student to think critically
and to be able to present ideas clearly.
According to Walker,"The student
will get first hand experience with
conducting research. It gives them
the opportunity to work one-on-one
with a faculty member, and maybe a
publication that will be on their vitae
for graduate school or job hunting."
Also, students who volunteer to be
a subject in a study not only aid the
fac ulty, but they can also get a lot of
out of it, if the topic is of educational
value and they are fully debriefed
about the subject.
Overall, Bloomsburg University
does not force faculty members to
publish , but it is important for scholarly growth and advancement.
Walker commented that hopefully
the faculty will become involved in
research and involve students.
One faculty member, after doing
two research studies this year, concluded that he has become a "work
oriented person."
The Bullets guitarist and lead singer Michael Davis entertains a captive crowd at
p holo Ceny Moorc
Monday 's Sound Stage performance in the union.
^
,
by John Thomas
for The Voice
In the middle of the nig ht there is a
knock on your door. Three men
dressed in black, carrying machine
guns tell you and your family to
gather your things and prepare to
leave.
From here , you are put on a train
and taken to a concentration camp. In
the next few days you will either be
used for experimental science , lined
up against a wall and shot, or put into
a huge room and killed with poisonous gas.
Forty years ago , this could have
happened to any Jewish family in
Nazi Germany. Forty years later .-the
fact that more than 6,000,000 people
were brutally slain by these methods
is quickly forgotten.
For the young generation, remembering the Holocaust is little more
than a long list of dates, facts and
figures learned in history class. In
fact, many high school and college
history programs do not include the
Holocaust in their studies. Many
teachers consider the moral issues
surrounding the Holocaust loo delicate to be discussed in the classroom.
Basically, The Holocaust was a
situation where man turned against
himself. Millions were murdered on
the command of a worshipped political figure in Germany, Adolph
Hitler. Kis ideology was anti-semiusm. The reason behind this action
was not understood 40 years ago, let
alone today. Societies were ashamed
of the acts of Hitler and the German
people, so they covered up that part
of history.
With the number of living Holocaust survivors dwindling to less than
45,000, the chances for first-hand
accounts of this part of history are
quickly disappearing.The students of
America can utilize such accounts to
gain more vivid insight to the reality
of the issue. The fact that Hitler used
thousands of Jews for deforming scientific tests becomes more than a
mere fact when one reads an actual
account
History can be used to prevent catastrophic happenings in the future by
examining the past. Educating the
new generations about the Holocaust
might prevent them from relivirfg
past mistakes.
History can also be used to pay
tribute to those deserving of it. The
Holocaust represents hundreds of
thousands of lives that were taken for
no logical reaspn. To forget the lives
taken at concentration camps would
be disrespectful to those who suffered.
On April 11, 1983, President Reagan addressed the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors,
telling them,"... let us pledgethat we
will never shut our eyes, never refuse
to acknowledge the truth, no matter
how unpleasant."
This attitude regarding the Holocaust needs to be integrated into the
educational systems of America.
Through the schools the students can
be taught the historical facts about the
issue without forgetting the human
factor.
The American Gathering of Jewish
Holocaust Survivors is one group
which is promoting the idea that the
Holocaust be integrated into American schools. With the support of the
government, the organization may be
able to get the attention of state and
local school systems.
Protecting the youth from the
memory of the Holocaust could actually be depriving them of a better
understanding of mankind. Several
top researchers and psychologist
have discovered that shielding young
generations from the past is not giving them a realistic view of life.
In his book Never Forget , researcher Milton Meltzer writes, "I
once asked a little German girl:
'What would you like to be?' 'A
dog,' she answered, 'because the
(German) sentries like dogs.' "
Meltzer believes that this quote is
evidence of the dehumanization that
the Jewish people underwent in the
Holocaust Generations later, Americans need to remember this.
It is very possible that no one will
be knocking on your door in the
middle of the night to remove you
from society. But in the future, it may
happen. Education could prevent it,
or lack of education could be the
causeof another Holocaust.
BLOOM COUNTY
¦
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THE FAR SIDE
by Berke Breathed i
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
NEED TYPING DONE? Experienced typ ist will type term papers,
resumes , thesis, etc. Reasonable
rate. Call Pat at 784-4437
Babysitter wanted for 1 yr. old in
my Catawissa home. Early mornings and/or late afternoons , weekdays. April and May. Nonsmokers only. Call 356-7787.
By GARY LARSON
ESSAYS & REPORTS?
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Order Catalog Today wilh Visa/MC or COP
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applicants send recent resume and
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Amidst congratulatory applause
Cindy leaves the group.
THE FAR SIDE
Loving couple with adopted 2 yr.
old son wishes to adopt infant.
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Call anytime collect -1 (412) 5712273;
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"HIRING! Government jobs your area. $15,000 - $68,000. Call
(602) 838-8885. Ext. 7842."
© Edward J u l i u s
C o l l e g i a t e CW87Z5
46 Lupino and Cantor
48 Woodturning machine
1 Jet
49 Sound amp lifier
7 Shoos away
50 Covered with
13 Bel onging to Dobie
hoarfrost
G i l l i s ' s girlfriend 52
neck shirt
15 Small crown
53 Pioneer in mental
16 Senior citizen ,
health
usuall y
54 Varnish ingredient
17 Dance performance
56 Do car work
18 Formation
58 Oscar
19 Roman 151
59
box , in
21
system
psychology
22 Polynesian warriors 60 U.S. industrialist ,
23 Statement of
Samuel
faith
61 Avaricious
25 College in Houston
26 Telephone-dial
DOWN
trio
27 Actress Norma
1 Layers
29
Synephrine
2 Richard Burton film
30 Gulf-state food
(2 wds.)
fishes
3 Frantic scramble
32 Jazz instrument
(2 wds.)
34 First-rate
4 Inventor Howe
35 Manny of baseball
5 Breezy
36 Actor Navarro
6 Busch , Clarke ,
38 Gridiron play
or West
41 Comedy producer
7 "Barney Miller "
Roach
actor , Jack
42 Reads
8 Technical name for
44 Editor 's insertion
the shank
in a quote
9 Helicopter part
ACROSS
Planaria sports
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Summer Rentals - Warhurst
Apartments. $250 per month - per
unit. All utilities paid. Call 7840816.
10 Dye ingredient
11 Dangerous ones
12 Car accessory
14 Discharge
15 Town
20 Pastures
23 waterway
24 Aficionado
27 Ex-Senator Jackson
28 Last
31 On the
33
Harbor , Maine
35 Flirtatious fellows
36 Math symbol
37 California city or
shaded walk
38 Stringed instrument
of old
39 Stupid
40 Compared
41 Former Senator
Fong , et al.
43 Poe ' s bird
45 Dieter 's food
47 What to do with a
new watch (2 wds.)
49 Creator of
Winnie-the-Pooh
51 Measure of me dicine
53 Possible poker hand
55 And not
57 Record of heart
activity
S N E I D M A N'
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200 COUNSELORS and Instructors needed! Private, coed summer
camp in Pocono Mountains,
Northeastern PA. Lohikan, P.O.
Box 234BM, Kenilworth , NJ
07033 (201)276-0565.
Diversified Computer Services Resumes, term papers, all kinds of
typing jobs done on a PC with
Laser Printer. Free pick-up and
delivery, call 387-1174.
WILL DO TYPING - - termpapers,
resumes, etc. Fast service, reasonable rates. Word processor available. Call Lorie at 784-8507 or 784
8334.
Financially secure couple wilh 2 yr
old adopted daughter wishes to
adopt white infant. All medical
expenses paid. We're very easy to
talk lo. Call collect anytime (201) 455-0497.
S
V > '" 'V- '- ^Hftt
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MAKE YOUR T
MARK
AEBd>IXQTQA2XEP
Sneidman 's can engrave your sorority or
fraternity symbols onto gold or silver jewe lry
and pewter. Stop in and discover the variety of
affordable gifts you can make your mark on.
1(7
^j »-
The jewelerwho offers
more than just the ordinary.
SNEIDMAN'S
X
f{ J E W E L R Y S T O R E
130 East Main St. • Bloomsburg. PA • 784-2747
To Phi Delta's 9th PledgeClass:
Keep smiling! How "bout it?
-Chris G.
Phi Sigma Sigma P.C. - We've
come a long way; everything is
coming up roses. Have a Happy
Easter!
NEEDED: Two roomates for
Ocean City, Maryland, Summer
'88. Excellent Apartment! Call
Chuck 784-4266
BABYSITTER (Live-In) - Ocean
City, NJ - BABYSITTER needed
for summer months in Ocean City,
NJ area for three (3) children.
Must adore children. $200.00
weekly (50) hours; plus room and
board , car if needed. Juniors or
seniors preferred. Non-smoker.
Send recent resume and photo to:
P.O. Box 155, Ocean City, NJ
08226;
Physician and wife desperately
seek to adopt white infant. We will
provide a very loving, happy and
secure home. Please help us.
Absolutely confidential. Call
collect. (215) 469-9770.
Camp Staff Positions - We are
seeking mature and enthusiastic
individuals to work at a local
(Benton) Boy Scout Camp. A
Scouting background is helpful
though not necessary. We are
especially interested in employing
a Shooting Sports Director and
Camp Commissioner (both must
be over 21); Dining Hall Steward;
Trading Post Manager; and Nature
Director. Applicants call 784-270C
to arrange for inerviews.
LOST: Brown clutch style wallet
with all I.D. in it. Reward if found.
No questions asked. Call 387-0656
114th Pledge Class - It was movin '
and groovin, shakin' and bakin',
rockin' and rollin'. I'm glad i went
through it with all of you. It was a
super experience. Ish
Mark -Beta Sig- Happy 21st
Birthday ! Wait till you see the
surprise I have for you. I'll give
you a clue, "it's from behind!"
Love va.
ASA - Thanks for mixing with us!
We've NEVER had a better time!
Love, Phi Sigma Sigma Pledge
Colony
To all Phi Sig Pi Brothers - You're
the best.
Sylvia - There's no doubt - "You're
the One." Happy Easter. I Love
You. Mickey
Rob - Thanks for everything.
You're a super big. Ish
Babs - You're terrific. I'm glad you
were there for me. Love, Ish
The word for the day is... POL-
LENJJ
Karen - Here's to the senior member of the best family. You're
super. Ish
VOICE
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the Voice mail
slot, in Union
before 12p.m.
on Wed. for
Monday 's paper
°«* Monday for
Thursday's paper.
All classifieds
MUST be prepaid.
1
FROM THE LOCKER ROOM
The new
kid on the
block
Mike Mullen
Sports Editor
Varsity sports at Bloomsburg
University arc of an interesting
breed .
How many oilier universities in
tiic state system can you name that
has the overall success record that
all of our programs have?
You would have to think long
and hard about that before you
could give an answer.
The only name that could even be
considered would be Millersville.
But even they don 't achieve the
high level of performance that
Bloomsburg docs in all their sports.
Field hockey was last season 's
national champion. Football was
14th in the nation last year, cross
country , 19th.
Our men 's basketball team
barel y missed taking a young club
to the playoffs , while our women's
team won the East and barel y
missed a bid to nationals.
The wrestling team sent seven
wrestlers lo nationals , while the
women 's swim team had a second
place finisher at nationals.
Everyone knows about the success of the softball team and the
baseball and track teams are looking up.
There is another sport that wc can
now add to the growing list of successful teams at Bloomsburg .
The women 's lacrosse team.
No , I'm not joking.
Yes, it reall y is a team.
It is not a club as most may have
thought , but very much a varsity
sport a little over a decade old. A
varsity sport on the rise.
In 1984 the team did not win a
single game in eight tries. Two
years later in 1986, head coach
Sharon O'Kccfc led her team to a
division championshi p and subsequent PSAC playoffs.
For the second year in a row, in
1987, the team again qualified for
Ihc PSAC playoffs.
This is definitely a team to be
reckoned with this year. Yet the
support , both fan and financial has
been lacking the past two seasons.
For example in 1986 when the
team made the playoffs, they were
held in BU' s backyard , Nelson
Fieldhousc. Still , no spectators
were to be found for this young
team.
Wh y not?
Popularity may be one of the
problems that the sport of women's
lacrosse has going against it.
Thcr is no way that a sport like
this can compete with other sports
up here like football , basketball and
softball for popularity.
Even if you were to explore the
game once by traveling up to Nelson, some types of fan s would be
dissapointcd.
Women's lacrosse is very dissimilar to it's male counterpart and
even more distant from the increasingly popular sport - Box Lacrosse.
No, this is not a physical game
that the women play , not a knock
'em down , tear 'em limb from limb
till they spit blood game.
It is a finesse game.
It doesn't take an expert to notice
the difference in styles between the
two genders when they play the
same game.
Ball handling is taken very seriously in the women's game and not
Iackadasiacally like the men's.
Passing is essential in both sports
and the short quick passes needed
to facilitate a score are done much
more effectivel y by the women and
their two-handed grip.
Don 't get me wrong, the men's
game is very exciting to watch , and
I highly suggest that you make as
many matches as you can along
with the women's team.
My only point is that there is
another team on this campus that is
readying themselves for the playoffs before the season even begins.
Isn't that the way it is for everybody?
Baseball team pounds Kings,
now readies for PSAC opener
Mike Mullen
Sports Editor
Bloomsburg used a four-run and
two five-run innings Tuesday to defeat King 's College handil y by a score
of 15-6.
The Huskies ' firs t runs came in the
second inning with the big blow
coming on a bases loaded triple by
Rob Kirkpatrick to account for three
of the inning 's five runs and a 5-0
Husky lead.
Two innings later in the fourth ,
King 's scored a lone run before
Bloomsburg tallied five more runs to
take a commanding 10-1 lead with
four runs coming on a Tim Pritchard
grand slam.
Four more runs in the fifth scaled
the game for the Huskies despite
being outscored by Kings 5-1 over the
last three innings.
Kings out-hit the Huskies 13-11,
while committing onl y two errors to
Bloomsburg 's three.
Bloomsburg will host Millersville
to open play in the Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Divisionat 1 p.m.
today at Danny Litwhilcr Field on the
university 's upper campus.
Coach John Babb's team enters the
the game with a 9-5 record.
The Huskies have used a combination of strong hitting and solid pitching in their fi rst 14 games.
The club boasts a team batting
average of .305, while it's pitching
staff has a combined earned run average of 3.86.
Third baseman Matt Karchncr
leads the Huskies ' potent attack at the
plate leading the team in average .422,
hits 19, and runs batted in 23.
He also has the most homcruns on
the club wilh four.
Pritchard , the fi rst baseman , and
Kirkpatrick , who has spent most of
the time as the squad's designated
hitter, arc also contributing strongly
to the team 's offense.
Pritchard has 16 hits for an average
or .421 and has 14 RBI' s. three of his
hits are doubles , along with one triple
and two homcruns.
Kirkpatrick has had 16 hits giving
him an average of .381. He has hit a
homcrun , a triple and two doubles
while driving in 16 runs.
OuLficldcr Steve Clemens has contributed 5 rbi' s, 14 hits and one double
while building a .318 average.
Freshman J.P. Thomas has the top
record on the mound at 3-0 with an
earned run average of 1.59.
He has struck out21 batters, walked
six and has given up onl y five earned
runs in 22 innings of work .
Eric Pcdcrson , Warren Shi pc and
Sieve Sees, along with Thomas, give
the Huskies one of the most solid
starling groups the Huskies have had
in several seasons.
Pcdcrson has pitched 24 innings
and allowed seven earned runs , while
recording 20 strikeouts and 14 walks.
He has a 2-1 rcocrd with an ERA of
2.04.
Shipc has a 2-0 record , has struck
out seven , walked four other batters
and allowed 10 earned runs in in 14
and one-third innings for a 4.90 ERA.
Sees, despite an 0-2 mark , has
slruck out 11 opponents and walked
only four , while allowing three earned
runs in 14 innings for a 1.50 ERA.
Millersville won three of four meetings wilh the Huskies a year ago.
Next action after Thursday 's
double header will be Tuesday, April
5, when the Huskies play a double
header on defending Pennsylvania
Conference champ ion Shippensburg 's home field.
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Unfortunately, what too many of them are getting Instead Is
drugs. With youc help, it doesn't have to be this way.
There Is a program called "Schools Without Drugs:
The Challenge" that can help you deal with the
drug problem in your community or school.
Find out about it The smarter you are about what
works, against drugs,the better chance our kids will
understand how dumb It is to take them.
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HELPSUMTHE OQ0R ON DRUGSJf
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Tra nsplanted Amer ican coach at home in Holland
by Randy Harvey
Los Angeles Times Washington Post Service
Looking ahead to the 1992 Summer
Olympics, which they were bidding to
have in their country, sports officials
in the Netherlands in 1986 hired Arie
Sclingcr, the former U.S. women 's
volleyball coach , to coach their men 's
team.
They figured that even Sclingcr,
considered a miracle worker wilh dow
n and out teams, such as the U.S.
women , would need six years to lead
the Dutch to international respectability in time for the Opening Ceremony
in Amsterdam.
Since then , the Dutch have learned
that the 1992 Summer Olympics will
be held not in Amsterdam but in Barcelona, Spain. They also have learned
not to underestimate Sclingcr.
Their men 's volleyball team is four
years ahead of schedule, having qualified for the 1988 Summer Olympics
in Seoul , South Korea.
The Dutch
played volleyball in the Olympics
once before. They were in eluded in an
invitational field for the first Olymp ic
volleyball tournament in 1964. Of
eight teams, they finished eighth .This
time, they earned a berth , winning a
qualification tournament last month
in Amsterdam.
Sclingcr, 51, is a Polish-born U.S.
citizen who was raised in Israel. But,
the Dutch claim him as their own.
While the volleyball team has had
unprecedentedsuccess, the country' s
most popular soccer team, Ajax , has
been a disappointment. Fans at soccer
matches have begun a new chant:
"Arie to Ajax!"
"In a small country, it 's very easy
for people to identify themsclve s with
a successful program or athletes,"
Selinger said. "It's gotten to the point
that if I walk in Amsterdam , I would
say 80 percent of the people know my
name and approach me. Every place I
go, they know me because it's a small
country ."
Yet, Sclingcr said, he wants to
come home to the United Stales.
He returned to Orange County, California , last week for the first tim c in
almost a year. He was there to conduct
a clinic , but also to sec his wife, Aia,
who lives in Laguna Niguel and
manages their sports marketing business, and his daughter , Ayclct, who
attends UCLA.
"This is my home," Selinger said.
"In every other aspect, the situ ation in
Holland is better. There is less politics
involved . There is more coordination
and communication between sponsors and the federation. Our success is
creating so many things there .
"That 's attractive to me, to stay there
until I complete this whole process.
There arc man y pluses to staying in
Holland. But , if something docs happen, and I have to make a decision, I'11
come back home."
AI Monaco, executive director of
the United States Volleyball Associa
tion (US VB A), said that discussion of
Selingcr 's return is premature. Neither U.S. Olympic Coach , Marv
Dunp hy of the men nor Terry
Liskevych of the women , has announced whether he will return after
this year, although there has been
speculation lhat Dunphy, whose team
is the gold-medal favorite, will resign.
Selinger said he would prefer to
coach the men.
Monaco did not dismiss the possibility and that may be significant ,
considering Selinger's strained relationship in the past with the US VB A.
Monaco pointed out that he would
Intramural Information
-CO-ED VOLLEYBALL rosters are due today, Thursday,
March 31, at 3pm, in the Intramural Office. Competition will begin
following the Easter Break.
is being sponsored nationwide by
the Intramural , Recreation and
Sports Association and T-shirts
will be awarded to the top finishers.
-Swimmers !! It's not too late.
Sign up for the Swim and Stay fit
program. Summer is r i g h t
aroound the corner. Applications
and further information is available in the Intramural Office in the
Kehr Union.
-Karate and Self-defense, a general information meeting will be
held Wednesday, April 6 at 8 p.m.
in the Green Room of Kehr Union
Building. All those interested
should plan to attend.
-SPRING SOFTBALL FESTIVAL!! This tournament for both
men and women will be held the
week of April 10. entries will be
limited to the first twelve teams in
each division and deadline for all
rosters is Thursday, April 7.
-Do you enjoy jazz or ballet?
Dance classes taught by Linda
Everest will begin on Tuesday,
April 5. Classes are FREE and will
be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Centennial Dance Studio and classes begin promptly at 8
p.m.
-Runners, keep April 16 free!
-SOCCER and BADMINTON
The Intramural Progra m is spon- rosters for both men and women
soring a 5K fitness run. This event are due on Thursday, April 7.
nol be involved in the decision , since
his own resignation will become effective after the Summer Olympics,
but he said that he believes Sclingcr
would be considered if there is an
opening.
Sclingcr was extremely successful
as ihc U.S. women 's coach for 10 ye
ars, turning a program that was virtuall y non-existent in 1974 into one of
the best in the world less than six years
later. Had il not been for the boycott,
Ihc U.S. women mighi have won the
gold medal in 1980 in Moscow. They
finished second to China four years
later in Los Angeles. But , theUS VB A
did nolrcncw Selingcr 's contractafter
the 1984 Olympics.
"He was a difficult guy to work
with , but he was always fighting for
his players and his program ," Monaco
said. "That's where our fights occurred , when wc tried to balance
Arie's needs with the association's.
"But , I have only the fondest
memories of the years Arie and I
struggled together. I can't think of any
overwhelming negatives to offset all
the positives. Throug h the passage of
lime, any wounds I had have been
healed."
As for the USVBA' s decision not to
renew Selingcr 's contract, Monaco
said: "I'm not sure it was anti-Aric.
It 's not a lifetime job. It was a decision
to let some fresh air in."
It also was a decision to return perspective to the women 's program.
Some USVBA officials believed
that Selinger was so obsessed with
winn ing that he did not allow his
players to have lives off the volleyball
court. They sometimes worked out
eight hours a day, six days a week,
leaving little time for jobs, school or
social lives.
Monaco said he prefers
Liskevych's system. His players
work out seven hours a day, five days
a week, but many of them also are
involved in the Olympic Job Opportunitics Program.
"We want our volleyball program
to reflect the American style of life,"
Monaco said. "We want our players to
have well-rounded lives, college educations, j ob opportunities, international travel and social lives."
At the same time, Monaco said, he
and other USVBA officials might
have misunderstood Selinger's motivation.
Going into 1980, he was fighting
to catch up with the rest of the world,"
Monaco said. "After 1980, the team
was physically beaten down. He
might have had no choice but to train
them so well because they weren't at
their ph ysical peaks. He may be less
driven in a different situation."
Selinger said he was not as driven as
his players.
"It got to the point where the team
demanded heavy interest in the program ," he said. "When I was slacking
off a little, they would say, 'Hey,
Coach , get in shape.' People think that
I ruled this team with an iron hand , but
I didn 't. They were very serious about
what they were doing, totally committed. But it didn 't come from me. It
came from themselves.
"They were mature women, 24 to
30. They knew what they were doing.
They were pioneers for the sport in the
USA. Volleyball at that time was their
life, their mission. That was the
unique thing about lhat group, and I
just let it happen.
"I don 't feel any remorse. I don 't
need to apologize for anything I've
done, and I don 't feel anybody on the
team feels they need to apologize to
anybody. All of them are doing extremely well today. History will judge
us whichever way."
Liskevych was Selinger's assistant
with the national team in 1975, but
they had a falling out and now seldom
speak to one another. Selinger said he
did not want to fan the flames by
discussing their differences.
For the two or three years I've
lived in Holland , I don 't bother with
this thing," he said.
"I don 't care about it anymore.
There's a certain amount of frustration about what's happening here with
the (U.S.) women 's team because
they're not generating the interest and
enthusiasm of the public the way it
was, but that has nothing to do with
the way they play. I understand the
team is playing well and has had some
Softball team wins four games
over weekend to move to 14-2
The Bloomsburg University softball team opened their Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Division schedule with a pair of shut-out wins over
West Chester on Monday.
Joanne Sulmonctti threw a six-hitter in the first game won by the Huskies, 4-0.
In the 5-0 victory, it was Julie
Robbins throwing a four-hitter as the
Huskies raised their season mark to
14-2.
In this past weekend's games, the
Huskies took a close 3-1 11 inning
decision over St. Joseph's University
in the first game of their doubleheader. In the 11th, Cindy Slocum
singled in Kim Vogel and then came
around to score an insurance run later
in the inning to earn the win.
Track team performs
well at Susquehanna
Bloomsburg's men 's and women 's
track and field teams made thier outdoor season debut over the weekend
at the Susquehanna Invitational with
an outstanding performance.
Nelson Barr represented the Huskies' only first place winner taking the
100 meter dash evet in a time of 10.82
seconds. He also claimed a third place
finish in the 200.
Bruce Linton had a good day as he
garnered a third in the long jump and
a sixth place finish in both the triple
jump and the javelin as he prepares
himself for the decathalon.
The women also turned in a fine
performance as Jill Cicierski, Brenda
Bisset and Lynne Ritz all placed for
the team.
Ritz was second in the 100 meter
dash and third in the 200. Bisset took
third in the 5000 meter run and fourth
in the 3000 meter run. Cicierski
placed second in both the shot put and
the discus.
The teams next meet will be April 9
when they go on the road to participate in the Shippensburg Invitational.
The second game proved to be
much easier for the Huskies as Patti
knocked in three runs and Slocum
added two RBI' s as the women
cruised to an 11-0 victory.
The next action for the Huskies will
be April 6 when they travel to Lock
Haven to play a double header with
the Bald Eagles.
BLOOMSBURG
SCOREBOARD
Women 's Softball:
Bloomsburg 3 1st game
West Chester 1 11in.
Bloomsburg 11 2nd game
West Chester 0
Men 's Baseball:
Bloomsburg 15
Kings
6
Men 's Lacrosse:
Bloomsburg 7
Lycoming 2
Wo rk to begin on dorm complex
The condensate pipeline reconstruction project , started in October, is expected to be completed by July. Resurfacing of the campus
p h >?chHs '- °w"
roads will follow the project's completion.
°'°
by Tom Sink
Managing Editor
The beginning of renovations to
Old Science Hall was one of two
construction projects which started
this week, according to Bloomsburg
University 's Director of Maintenance
Donald McCulIoch.
McCuIIoch said Ihc $2.8 million
project will be completed by July, and
renovations will then begin inside Old
Science. "The insides of ihe building (walls,
slairwclls, etc.) get torn out ," he said.
McCulIoch pointed out the fence recendy erected around Old Science is
intended to keep people out of the
demolition area. Renovations to the
building will include an elevator.
In olhcr campus projects , groundbreaking ceremonies took place
Monday for the new residence hall
complex on BU' s upper campus.
The $7. 1 million dormitory complex will include six buildings of 16
apartments each. The apartments,
which will house 380 students will
^
have kitchen and laundry facilities. A
285-car parking lot will be built adjacent to the complex.
Construction of the apartments will
begin next month and the dorms are
scheduled to be completed in time for
the Fall 1989.
The work on the steam condensate
lines on campus is continuing and is
expected to be completed by Jul y.
"I've pushed for this project,"
McCulIoch said. He pointed out that
although the legislation to allocate
funds for the pipeline work began in
1980, the money was not released
until last year.
McCulIoch said the $600,000 project, which began in October of last
year, will repair all leaks in the system
and will also attempt to rectify other
undergound problems.
Following the completion of the
underground work, renovations to the
campus 's roads will begin.
McCulIoch said this project, to
which $243,000 has been allocated, should befinished by the end
of summer.
Other projects scheduled to begin in the near future are:
- One phase of a two-part project
to upgrade handicap standards on
campus. This will include the addition of ramps to buildings, as well
as modifications to doorways and
toilet facilities. Woffc on this project is scheduled to begin soon.
- The second phase of improving
handicapped standards - installing
elevators in buildings which do not
have them - is tentatively set to
begin Feb. 27, 1989. This project ,
expected to cost over $800,000,
plans to install elevators in Carver
Hall, Scranton Commons, Ben
Franklin, Navy Hall, Haas Center
and Nelson Field House.
BU fraternity defeats town police Fraternity disciplinary actions vary
in f u ndraising volleyball game
by Bill Gwrgini
Staff Writer
A Bloomsburg University fraternity had a recent confrontation with
the Bloomsburg Town Police Saturday afternoon.
The confrontation , a volleyball
fundraiser for the Columbia County
Juvenile Earn-It Program (a program which rehabililalcs local juvenile delinquents), resulted in Tau
Kappa Epsilon beating Bloomsburg
police in three out of five games.
The purpose of the tournament
was to raise money to help pay ihe
fines that some of the children owe,
said Bill Sharp, service project coordinator of TKE.
"We thought it would be very
good for these kids because they were
the officials in the game," Sharp said.
"We thought that was beneficial to the
kids. We also thought it was good for
establishing a belter relationship with
the police."
TKE spokesman Bill Sheely said
the games were enjoyable. However,
he added nol many tickets were sold.
"It was a really good idea and the
police had fun too. But , I think it was
held at the wrong time of the year and
not as many tickets were sold as we
would have liked," Sheely said. "I
think it was successful as a whole and
we would like to make it an annual
evenL"
He added that next year the group
will try to publicize the event better
and in turn raise more money for the
cause.
Sheely said that the matches were
close but TKE won three games out
of five.
Chief Larry Smith agreed that the
event was a good time for all involved.
"I had a lot of fun and I believe all
our people did , too," Chief Smith
said. "I think this sort of tiling is
what all fraternities need to do to
convey a better public image. It
shows that the members are civic
minded and it will help them maintain a better relationship wilh the
community ."
Smith said his department looks
forward to the event next vear.
by Cindy Hurst
Staff Writer
The university 's decision to put
Lambda Chi Alpha on social probation was met with some surprise and
questions from students.
Many had expected the university
to deal as severely with them as it had
with Beta Sigma Delta, who lost its
university charter last semester.
Social Probation results in having
social activiiics limited , especially
those related to alcohol. Both fraternities were raided by the state police for
underaged drinking.
According to Dr. Jerry Griffis, vice
president for Student Life, each alcohol-related incident is, lo some extent,
handled individually with guidelines
in the alcohol policy always being
carefull y followed.
by Leon Bogdan
Press-Enterprise staff
The Magee Mansion, widely regarded as one of Bloom sburg's most
opulent and unique homes, is being
donated lo BloomsburgUniversity by
the family of the late industrialist
Harry L. Magee.
University officials, in informal
discussions wilh the family, have
proposed using the 8,320-square-foot
retreat as an adult learning center,
university meeting site, classrooms or
guest house for visiting dignitaries.
But no definite plans have been
made. Formal acceptance of the
building must await approval by university trustees and the state System
of Higher Education Board of Governors, said BU Director of Development Anthony Ianiero.
After that, final transfer to the university is expected by June. James
Magee, president of Magee Industrial
Enterprises and co-trustee of the
Magee Foundation, confirmed making the offer recendy to University
President Harry Ausprich.
"It is our desire to gift it to the
university if it can be worked out.
This is something we have talked
about informally for some time," he
said.
"I'd be just delighted if the university ended up with it It just seemed to
me to be the right thing to do," said
Magee, the 59-year-old son of Magee
Carpet Co. founder Harry L. Magee,
who died in October 1972.
Following the death of his mother,
Alice C. Hartman Magee, in October,
Magee and his sister, Joanne Magee
Katerman , agreed the university
could best maintain the stylishly designed house overlooking the
Bloomsburg Fairgrounds.
One family concern, Magee noted,
is maintaining the condition of the
property, which sits on an acre at 700
W. Main St.
Magee said that following the sale
by his father of the former Craig
mansion, another large property at
First and West streets where Harry
Magee was raised, the site fell into
"deplorable condition." It curently is
a fraternity house.
"I had visions of this happening to
the Magee Mansion and I just could
not have that," he said.
"It's a fantastic gesture by the
Magee family to consider us," BU's
Ianiero said. "We feel it's a vote of
confidence and couldn 't be more
pleased."
'This represents a very special and
very important gift from the community, a very positive statement in our
institution," Ausprich added.
"We believe, with servere problems we have faced in space shortage,
that this will well serve the educational mission of the university,"
Ausprich went on.
The field-faced house, considered
"revolutionary" when designed in
1946 by Philadelphia architect Paul
Dentremont, sports an expansive
central courtyard and patio, a spiral
staircase leading to an upstairs den,
black-marbled fireplaces and a 1,600square-foot indoor swimming pool.
In 1947, it was featured in a Life
magazine photo layout,
Today, its market value is nearly
$300,000, according to Columbia
County tax records.
The building supplanted the original Magee homestead built in 1923
when Harry and Alice Magee married, according to the family.
James Magee said several realtors
and others made offers on the property. But private sale of the family
homestead "was not our intent , not at
all," he added.
"The way I see it, it helps three
parties out," Magee explained. "It
helps the family and me primarily
because it will be kept in top-notch
condition , the way it's always been.
"It helps the university with whatever they want to do with the property, and thirdly, it keeps it in use in
the community.
"Everybody wins," he assessed of
the family 's offer through the Magee
Foundation .
"I think our parents would be very
happy and very proud about this," his
sisler, Mrs. Katerman, 64, added.
"They were both proud supporters of
the school and quite good friends with
(form er college president) Harvey
Andruss."
When he was asked what his parents might think of die idea, James
Magee paused and noted, "I thought
about that naturally. And I would
hope that they would be pleased by
what I'm doing.
"That's one thing I'll never know.
It just benefits everyone."
The Magee Foundation was set up
as a charitable outlet to support community activities through gifts. Most
Dean of Student Life Robert Norton said, "They look similar on the
surface, but underlying factors make
them different."
Norton further stated that certain
individual conditions and problems
existed in the Lambda Chi and Beta
Sigma incidences that had to be considered in the decisions of disciplinary action.
"The Beta Sigma raid was obviously of a greater magnitude, but \h&
flagrance of the act had more to do
wilh the course of action taken,"
Norton said.
Griffis said, "Along with much
disturbance, the Beta Sigma Delta
situation involved the selling of alcohol and underage drinking. It was a
larger event and the raid was a bigger
affair."
furnishings in the Magee Mansion,
the family said, would be privately
sold later and would not be included
in the gift to the university.
Tax income for the town and school
district would be cut if the building
becomes state property because the
university tax is exempt,
The property now pays $3,200 in
annual taxes to the Bloomsburg Area
School District and another $962 to
the town. Columbia County gets $650
a year.
"That's peanuts for what the town
and community would get out of it,"
Magee said. "You have to look at the
benefit to the overall community."
Magee family donates mansion to university
About the Lambda Chi Alpha situation Griffis said, "It was a mixer
which involved no selling of alcohol
and was a smaller event."
In efforts to follow-up on the disciplinary action taken, the school is
working with both groups to correct
the problem. "We are in close contact
with the leaders and are assisting them
in completing the conditions necessary to bring the two organizations
back up to the acceptable functioning
level," said Norten.
Norten added, 'The university is
looking for leadership, which we
hope to find in the Greek organizations."
Pat Barry, president of Beta Sigma
Delta, said, "Within our suspension
requirements, we are required to do a
number of alcohol awareness projects
for the whole student body." Beta
Sigma Delta is hoping to have its
charter reinstated by January of 1989.
According to Steve Murwin, a
Lambda Chi Alpha brother, a stricter
alcohol policy will be inforced next
October when their probationary period ends.
"We will meet the university 's request of having an alternative beverage at each function beginning again
next fall.," Murwin said.
Dr. Griffis said, "Our society is
looking for changes and improvements to be made in the alcohol-related laws and practices."
University officials are glad to see
efforts being made through such programs as "Cheers" and other nonalcholic functions.
"This is the most important issue
we have right now," Dr. Griffis said,
"and the university is working with all
groups to make the effort to overcome
this problem."
i
Index
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BU honors WVIA/TV-44
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PSAC opener.
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Commentary
Features
Comics
Sports
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Page 6
The Magee Mansion, located next to the Bloomsburg Fairgounds on W. Front Street, has been suggested as a gift for Bloomsburg
Photo by ChrisLower
University.
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page 2
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Commentary
suwNPp^efj
Death penalty hypocritical
To the Editor
Having served with Governor
Robert P. Casey as an elected delegate
to the Pennsylvania Constitutional
Convention, I had no hesitation writing him when he recendy signed a
death warren t for one of the 83 persons sentenced to the electric chair in
the Commonwealth. I told Casey his
action was both reprehensible and
hypocritical.
It was reprehensible in lig ht of the
demonstrated facts lhat: the death
penalty is almost exclusivley reserved
for poor males who are members of
minority groups; the selection by
prosecuting attorneys of those for
whom they pursue ihe death penal ty is
capricious and standardless; and most
important , innocent people are executed and will continue to be executed.
In this century alone there have
been 350 errors of persons falsely
found guilty in potentially capital
cases. Of these, 23 have been executed.
Pennsylvania has had 11 people
erroneously convicted , two were of
them were sentenced lo death. This , in
a nation which proudl y claims its
dedication to ihe sanctity of life.
Governor Casey's acl was also
hypocritical to anyone familiar wilh
his position on abortion. It is neither
logically nor morall y possible (as the
Pope has pointed out) to oppose the
abortion of a fetus on one han d because of its right to life, and on the
other hand put to death human
beings , some of whom arc innocent of
the crime for which they were executed.
There is no way to guarantee that
any particular person is guiliy with an
absolute certainty. A claim of this son
by Joshua Lee
Guest Columnist
Apartheid , the South African system of domination which oppresses
the country 's Black people into carrying permits to walk the streets, live in
over crowded villages, and other incomprehensible behaviors , is the
centra l theme of this week's feature
movie, Cry Freedom.
It features Dcnzel Washington as
Steve Biko, a black citizen , who
looked into the system and saw that
blacks did not have to live under the
oppressive conditions dictated by the
government , and Kevin Kline as
Donald Woods, a white South African liberal journalist.
Mr. Woods, upon becoming aware
of the black deprivation sweeping the
South African natives, becomes engrossed in the struggle for change.
As the movie progresses, Biko is
arrested and killed by South African
officials , who later cited his death as
being voluntary starvation.
While this may sound absurd , it is
not an isolated incident , as over 70
other similar cases are known to have
occurred during the last 25 years. The
latest of these happenings being Jan.,
1987.
This may not seem at all signifi cant, or in any way related to you , but
believe that such a system as Apartheid effects all of our lives , black or
white , in many adverse and substantial ways.
was doubtlessly made in each of the
23 cases where the accused was executed and later found noi to be guilty.
Newspapers quoted Casey saying
that ordering someone's death , "is
probably the most difficult responsibility that a governor has."
Your readers should write and
urge him lo show political and moral
courage by not lending himself to this
barbaric activity.
Since this person is being executed
in the name of every cili/.cn of the
Commonwealth , those who support
the death penalty and those who passively permit it become accessories ,
along with Governor Casey, to the
sta te sanctioned m urder of a human
being.
A look at the candidates
James W . Percey
Associate Professor by Ruth Ann Page
Bloomsbur c Universit y Guest Columnist
The candida tes in the 1988 Presidential campaign arc quickl y weeding themselves out. There are two
Republicans and five Democrats left
The movie s explicit depiction of in the race for the White House.
blacks in South Africa left me with a
For most of us traditional college
feeling that may onl y best be de- students , this is our first opportunity
scribed as "empty. " Empty in the to vote on something as important as
sense that I was emotional l y drained the President of the United States. Do
and sli ghtl y powerless. Onl y slightly, you know who you are going to vote
because there is always something for? If you do, why ? Do you kriow
that can be done.
what the issues are? Do you know
You may be wondering what can where the candidates stand?
wc as college students do to alleviate
I am going to explain where each
such discrepancy?
party stands on four basic issues, and
To begin with , we can petition the then how each candidate differs from
government to put pressure on busi- die other candidates in his party.
nesses that invest in South Africa , and
The first issue that separates the
also make people more aware of the Republican and Democratic parlies is
tragedies facing blacks daily. These reducing the federal deficit. The
are bul a few of the many things which Republicans wan t to reduce it by
can be done to combat Apartheid. making spending cuts. They would
What are you prepared to do?
like to do this by enacting a "line item
veto " which would stive ihe President
the power to veto just certain items in
a bill that he considers wastes put in
by Congressmen'to'benefi t their particular reg ions.
The Democrats want to reduce the
deficit by making large budget cuts in
the area of defense.
The second issue is raising taxes.
The Republicans do not want any tax
raises. Some of them even want to
lower taxes in certain areas. Democrats, on the other hand , want taxes
raised. Most of the raises would be
made for the wealthy, corporations ,
and imported oils.
The third issue is the Stra tegic
Defense Initiative (SDI), more popularl y known as STAR WARS. SDI is
simply a plan to provide a defensive
shield against nuclear attack , rendering nuclear weapons obsolete.
The Republicans want research to
be done in this area as well as one day
possibly deploy ing it (putting it into
action). The Democrats are against
the research and deployment.
The fourth and final issue is the
Apar theid is our problem
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At Large
The child care crisis is still growing
by Ellen Goodman
EditorialColumnist
For those who were still in bellbottoms at the time, a small historic
note from the Nixon era: In 1971,
Richard Milhaus vetoed the last comprehensive child-care bill to come out
of Congress. It would , he insisted ,
"commit the vast moral authority of
the national government to the side of
communal approaches to child-rearing over the family-centered approach."
From then on, "the vast more authority" of the government was committed to neglect Child care all but
disappeared from the federal agenda.
Kids were private property . Working
parents had to find places for them the
way they might find a parking space in
a downtown crossing.
But now, in the words of another
golden oldie, the times they are achanging. This year even Orrin Hatch
has introduced a child-care bill . Only
Phyllis Schlafly still writes what
sound like parodies about attempts to
sovietize the American family by
warehousing babies in governmentlicensed institutions where they
would be subjected to secular, unisex
custodial care.... "
There are now 10.5 million children
under six being cared for by people
other than their parents . By 1995,
two-thirds of all preschool children
and four out of five school children
will have both parents in the work
force.
We have drifted our way into a
national child-care crisis. And finally
we're payin g attention.
"We have a clipping file that would
warm your heart," says Helen Blank ,
who has been a child-care stalwart
through the lean years at the
Children 's Defense fund.
In these files are dozens of freshly
minted pieces on "The Child Care
Crisis."
Stuffed between them are the reports of myriad polls showing that
some two-Lhirds of Americans believe the government should do some
undesignated "more" about child
care.
We ve turned the corner in recognizing that society has responsibility
for child care," says Blank. But out of
long experience she adds: "I'm still
worried that all this attention won 't
ultimately mean much for children."
The desire to turn a problem into a
policy has energized the huge coali-
tion behind the ABC bill , the Act for
Better Child Care. This is a carefu l
piece of compromise legislation
being shepherded through ihe Senate
by Chris Dodd. Last week , at a packed
Senate hearing, people representing
vastly different worlds and worries—
from American Express employer to
the parents of a murdered child —
came forward to testif y in favor of it.
For a price tag of S2.5 billion , the
ABC bill would start up a national
infrastructure for day care based on
what the states are already doing. It 's
a package proposal that would begin
to deal with the quality as well as the
quantity of care.
Of the money, 75 percent would be
targeted to help moderate and lowincome families pay for child care.
Another 15 percent would go to
training providers, setting up standards and trying to keep people in the
profession. The final 10 percent
would go to administrative costs.
If S2.5 billion sounds like a hefty
new burden in a deficit-conscious era,
Ellen Galinsky of the Bank Street
College, a coalition leader, says:
"There are also costs when children
don 'tgetcared for ."Helen Banks puts
the money in another context: "The
congress spends money for emergencies all the time. When we need tankers in the Gulf. When Len Bias dies.
Well , child care is an emergency. "
The bill' s sponsors — 37 in the
Senate and 160 in the House — are
counting on lhat sense of emergency
coming from many directions. All the
talk about welfare reform , after all ,
leads inexorabl y back to chdd care.
The talk about excellence flows directly down to Ihe early years.
There are horror stories one day
about an abusive day-care center, the
next day about children who played
with matches or driers while their
parents were at work.
Parents are worried about children ,
and employers are worried about
workers, present and future. As one
person summed il up at the hearings:
"The future is in very small hands."
The ABC bill is just a piece — a
federal piece — of the day-care
puzzle. Says Galinsky: "We're having our 15 minutes in the sun. "
Pleased with the attention , she is
nevertheless worried about the attention span. "It took a long lime to make
this mess." It 's going to be with us at
least as long as the waiting lists at the
child-care center.
Inte rmediate-range Nuclear Forces
reduction treaty (INF). This treaty has
been discussed between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. It is a
treaty to reduce the arms build up and
hopefully stop ihe arms race by making 50 percent reductions in the intermediate-range nuclear forces. The
Republicans are skeptical about the
treaty because of possible problems
in wording and enforcing the treaty.
The Democrats, however, support the
treaty and its implications fully.
Now that /you know basically
where the iwo parties stand , how do
the candidate s differ from the others
in the same party? For the Republicans , there are only two candidates
left ; Vice President George Bush and
Pat Robertson. George Bush will
clearly be ihe Republican nominee
since Robert Dole dropped out Tuesday. A vote for George Bush is a vote
for Ronald Reagan , he is like a photocopy of the current president. He follows Reagan right down to the INF
treaty which most of the other Republicans are against. Pat Robertson
would raise revenue by imposing a
fee on alcohol consumption. He
would also try to ban tobacco and to
put an end to farm subsidies.
The Democratic party has five
candidates left; Michael Dukakis ,
Richard Gephardt , Albert Gore , Jesse
Jackson , and Paul Simon.
Michael Dukakis, the Govenor of
Massachusetts, would lik e to take the
programs he initiated in his home
state for economic growth on to a
national level.
One example is a comprehensive
enforcement program to collect a
portion of the SI 10 billion in federal
taxes that he projects go unpaid every
year. Another program he wants to
lake lo a national level would be a
National Economic Development
Fund to puL job creating projects in
depressed , needy regions.
Richard Gephard t 's mai n issue is to
establish a free trade balance by
mandating retalitory tariffs on countries guilty of unfair trade practices.
He is a fighter for the blue-collar
voters. Ablert Gore has been deeply
involved in the congressional complexities of defense and forei gn policy. He is the only Democrat that
supports STAR WARS research. He
stresses the need for economic
growth and is also the only one that
says he will increase taxes as a last
resort.
Jesse Jackson probabl y has the
strongest message of all the candidates. He wants government intervention in social areas such as child
and health care, a higher minimum
wage, and legal protections for farmers under forclosure. He wants to
support his progams by increased
personal-income taxes and a plan to
re-invest worker pension funds into
government bonds.
Paul Simon is probably saying the
least in all areas but economic. He
supports a Balance-budget Amendment without raising taxes by reducing the unemp loyment and interest
rates, thereby reducing the deficit
Now that the issues, party stands,
and candidates have been outlined,
hopefull y you can find a candidate
that best meets your personal views.
Registering to vote can be done either
at the courthouse downtown , or on
campus at various times in the fall. Be
sure to vote, its a rcsponsiblity as well
as a priveledge.
®lj£ Butte
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
Editor-in-Chief.
Karen Reiss
Managing Editor
Tom Sink
News Editors
Lisa Cellini , Tammy J. Kcmmcrer
Features Editors
Lynnc Ernst , Glenn Schwab
Sports Editor
Mike Mullen
Photograph y Editor
Christopher Lower
Assistant Photography Editor
Chrissa Hosking
Production/Circulation Manager
Alexander Schillcmans
Advertising Manager
Susan Sugra
Assistant Advertising Manager
Kim Clark
Business Manager
Adina Salcc k, Richard Shaplin
Assistant Business Managers
Jen Lambert
Copy Editors
David Ferris, Chris Miller
Illustrator
David K. Carton
Advisor
John Maittlcn-Harris
Voice Editorial Poliov
Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice arc the opinions and
concerns of the Editor-in-Chief , and do not necessarily reflect the opinions
of ail members of The Voice staff , or the student population of Bloomsburg
University.
The Voice Invites all readers to express their opinions on the editorial page
through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must be si gned 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.
WVIA -TV general
manager honored
The General Manager of WVIAChannel 44 and Bloomsburg alumni
will be presented the Young Alumni
of the Year at the annual Alumni
Awards Dinner-Dance on Sunday ,
April 30 at 6:30 p.m at the Caldwell
Consistory in Bloomsburg.
A. William "Bill" Kelly discovered
radio broadcasting in seventh grade.
At 13 he was working at WTTC in
Towanda describing everything from
canoe races to horse-pulling contests.
Today Kelly is vice president and
station manager^of WVIT-TV/FM ,
the public television and radio stations for northeastern Pennsylvania.
Kelly earned a bachelor's degree in
English from Bloomsburg Univcristy.
While pursuing his education ,
Kell y performed on the air and created special public service projects at
several radio stations in Pennsylvania
and New York . During his tenure as
station manager of WTBG, Masscna
N.Y., his efforts resulted in the long
delayed purchase of a new ambulance
for the community.
At WARM , Scranton/WilkesBarrc , his 20-mile walk for the March
of Dimes raised over $20,000 to fight
birth defects.
He received the Pennsylvania
Medical Society Walter F. Donaldson
Award for Outstanding Medical Journalisn and the Northeastern Pennsylvaniz Chapter March of Dimes Outstanding Volunteer Leadership
Award.
Currently, Kelly is president of the
Marian Sutherland Kirby Library
board of directors in Mountaintop
and an instructor of mass communications at BU.
At WVIA, Kelly is responsible for
overall television station operations
and executive producer of several
programs including the popular
weekly phone-in series "Call the
Doctor."
He has also coordinated live coverage of news events, produced music
specials and hosted several programs
on Channel 44.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has recognized his efforts in
fundraising and audience building
with two national awards.
He is a graduate of the University of
Wisconsin Executive Management
Institute and has participated in several management and fundraising
seminars conducted by the Public
Broadcast System.
Kelly lives in Mountaintop with his
wife Janice and their three children.
Lifeguards are needed for summer sessions for the recreational
swimming program at Nelson
and Centennial. Contact Dave
Rider at Nelson Field House.
Students who are Massachusetts residents may obtain an
application for Massachusetts
Grants and Scholarship by contacting Mrs. Kishbaugh in the
Financial Aid Office , 19 Ben
Franklin Hall. The application
deadline is May 1, 1988.
Library hours during the
Spring Weekend beginning Saturday, April 2 through Monday,
April 4 will be as follows: Saturday, April 2, Closed; Sunday,
April 3 (Easter), Closed; Monday, April 4, resume regular
hours.
•••••••••
The National College Poetry
Contest is open to all university
students desiring to have their poetry anthologized. Cash prizes
will be awarded to the top five
poems. The deadline is tomorrow. Interested students should
come to The Voice office for more
information .
Scheduling beg ins Tuesday,
April 5, according to the timetable on pages two and three of
the class schedule. Students will
schedule in a descending order
by credits earned (seniors first ,
etc.).
Students can exchange their
scheduling booklet notification
cards for the booklets in the University Store or the Reg istrar's
Office.
Advisement for summer sessions scheduling will begin Monday, March 28. Scheduling begins immediately at the
Registrar's Office.
Effective for the pay period
ending April 8, 1988 (pay date
April 15, 1988), Bloomsburg
University will be withholding
the $10 per-calendar-year occupational privilege lax from each
student employed by the University .
Any student from whom the
occupational privilege tax has
already been withheld (by another employer) for the calendar
year must presentproof of the$10
withholding to Mrs. Hess (Business Office - Waller Administration Building) in the form of Ihe
OPT receipt, prior to the submission of the April 8, 1988 pay
cards.
The Voice is looking for people
who are interested in writing political commentaries about presidential candidates. Call 4457 for
more information.
The Student Internship Service
offers you listings of summer internships in your major fields.
Placements are available with
sponsoring companies in New
York City and Long Island, N.Y.
Many of these intemsh*ips are either salaried or offer stipends.
Write for further information:
Student Internship Service, P.O.
Box 1053, Kings Park, NY,
11754.
The University Store will be
holding a continous Book Sale
during the entire month of April to
reduce excess inventory before
the end of the year. Over 1,000
childrens books, classics and a
wide variety of interest-books.
Books are priced for clearance.
Bloomsburg University Dining
Service presents a steak nightspecial tonight in the Scranton Commons. Students will have the
choice of one entree. Selections
include N.Y. Strip Steak, Boneless Breast of Chicken and Flounder Stuffed with Crabmeat. Dinner is served 4:30 - 7 p.m.
Remember: Cry Freedom will
be presented tonight in Haas at 7
& 9:30 p.m. in place of Full Metal
Jacket. Admission is free with BU
ID and current CA Sticker.
University President, Dc.
Harry Ausprich will hold open
visiting hours on April 25 from
1:30 - 4 p.m. in the Gold Room ,
Kehr Union Building. All students are welcome to stop by.
The Bloomsburg University
administration has determined
that for the upcoming summer
and fall semesters, fees must be
paid for all prior balances.
Holds will be placed on students' accounts which will prevent registration, transcripts and
diploma. In order to gain a release, students must pay in full all
outstanding debts or have documentation in writing .supporting
financial aid.
WBSC/WBUQ has announced openings for the 198889 Executive Staff. Positions
available include; Program Director, News Director, Chief
Engineer, Asst. Sports Director,
Asst. Music Director, Production
Director, Personnel Director,
Traffic Director, Public Affairs
Director, Advertising Director,
Promotion Director and Asst.
Remote Director.
These positions are open to all
BU students. For more information and job description contact
WBUQ office , Rm. 1250
McCormick Center or call 3894686.
Innovative instruction method taught
University President Dr. Harry Ausprich holds the first bit of ground broken
for the new residenac hall. This facility will be built on upper campus.
Photo by Robert Finch
Bloomsburg University students
are using a new and innovative way to
learn in courses such as sign language, where they learn how to sign
words and phrases for the deaf, audiometer training, where they learn to
test hearing, and chemistry labs,
where they learn to test hearing, and
chemistry labs, where they learn to
identify chemical elements and compounds.
The new instruction method is
called interactive video, and it combines the use of modem video and
computer technology, creativity, and
the technical expertise of subject
matter specialists.
Even the orientation program at
Andruss Library has turned to interactive video to inform users of the library how it operates and where
things are located.
Interactive video is a rapidly expanding instructional technique, and
Bloomsburg University is a frontrunner in the field's development.
With the master's program in in-
structional technology, BU is a pioneer in higher education institutions
that offer a degree program in preparing students to be interactive video
specialists.
Under the direction of Harold
Bailey, coordinator of this graduate
program , the interactive video program in its third year of operation at
BU. There have been 19 graduates to
date in this program, which is one of
only two offered in the nation.
Interactive video is the integration
of textual graphics and audio-visual
information totally under the control
of a computer The audio-visual infor-
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Professional health care . . . by people you know.
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Times best-seller list for more than 20 weeksand has made
the collegiate curriculum a burning public issue.
Bloom , a professor of philosophy and political science
at the University of Chicago, is a translator and interpreter
of Plato and Rousseau. He is known for his concern about
liberal education and his deep committment to the "Great
Books" approach to learning.
In "The Closing of the American Mind,"Bloom accuses
American universities of abandoning their principles and
their purpose, a stand that won him endorsement from
many of his colleagues and the angry rebuttal from others.
Bloom's appearance at Bloomsburg University is sponsored by the Community Government Association, the
Bloomsburg University Foundation and the SSHE Faculty Professional Development Council.
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director of the Center of Instructional
Systems Develpoment(CIDS).
The graduate assistants in the
Master's program at BU work with
the CISD to develop interactive video
disc course work to improve university teaching and to solicit external
industry-based projects.
It has become increasingly difficult
and expensive for businesses to hire
instructors or to send workers off-site
for training courses, Bailey said, so
interactive video offers an effective
cost and efficient means by which
industry can meet their training
needs.
¦
Education top ic of lecture :
Educator and best-selling author Allan Bloom will be
the final guest speaker -of the spring Provost's lecture
Series at Bloomsburg Univeristy.
Bloom will speak on "Liberal Education and the Political Community" at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 7, in Carver
Auditorium.
Bloom will participate in a panel discussion that is part
of the State System for Higher Education Northeast
Honors Symposium at 9:30 a.m. Friday, April 8, at the
Alvina Krause Theatre. The topic for the discussion will
be "Bloom 's Challenge to Education ."
An analysis of the American system of higher education
and contemporary students, Bloom 's "The Closing of the
American Mind," became a runaway best-seller when it
was published last spring. It has topped The New York
mation usually appears on a laserdisc.
The complete interactive video
system, therefore, consists of a computer, a laser disc player, at least one
television monitor and an interface allowing the laser player and the computer to communicate.
This advanced communication system is an ideal instructional and training tool, Bailey said.
Industry , business and corporations are using the interactive video
system as an individualized training
tool.
Bailey, in addition to being coordinator of the degree program , serves as
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Carlisle Hospital is hosting a nursing
externship, Summer Transition, an 8-week
program beginning on May 23, with an optional
2 to 4 week extension.
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getting practical, hands-on training and by observing.
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The Summer Transition begins with a 3-day
classroom orientation, followed by a 7-day clinical
orientation. The remainder of the
program will be spent in a specific clinical area.
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This externship is for nursing students who have
completed the junior year of a B.S.N, program or for
the A.D.N, and diploma
nursing students who have completed the
fundamentals of nursing and a related
clinical experience.
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Registration deadline is Friday, April 8
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For additional information , and to register , please call
Anne Bear, R.N.,
Carlisle Hospital ,
1-800-346-4789, extension 5590.
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Features
Holocaust
a fading
memory
Group promotes
new frien dships
of Columbia County, the board apby Brenda Bozochovic
points captains for the bowling teams
for The Voice
Big Brother/Big Sister Organiza- and the captains p ick four team
tion has been helping families for members. Each member is then reover 80 years. They match eligible sponsible for finding their own sponchildren between the ages of 7 and 17 sors. Father Snyder also says they are
to volunteers who arc carefully arranging another Bowl For Kids'
Sake to allow college students to
screened and trained .
For example, the volunteer must participate in the event since many
have at least three character refer- college students will not be here on
ences. The organization also runs a May 21. You may participate in both
of the Bowl For Kids' Sake games. If
police check on each volunteer.
you or any of your friends would like
developed
arc
Goals for the match
by the caseworker with input by the to participate in this acti Wty you can
parent , volunteer and child. The pick up sponsor sheets at the Big
match is then carefully supervised by Brother/Big Sister office at the
United Penn Bank Building on Main
the caseworker.
Street in Bloomsburg .
Brother/
The average cost of a Big
The goal of the Big Brother/Big
Little Brother or Bi g Sister/Little
Sister match is under S600 a year. By Sister Organization is to provide an
comparison it costs an average of opportunity for positive growth and
$3,000 for each child who enters the enrichment to children from singlejuvenile justice system and from parent homes. Over time, improve$18,000 to $65,000 a year for institu- ments begin to show in the child' s
relationship with family and friends ,
tionalization.
To help prevent these costly alter- in school work, and most impornatives , Bi g Brother/Big Sister of tantly, in the child' s self esteem.
According to Father Snyder there
Columbia County is holding Bowl
was
a case where a college studen t
for Kids ' Sake. A pledge of 5 cents
was
able to help a child who was
per pin means a $5 contribution if you
bowl a 100. The Bowl For Kids ' Sake doing poorly in school. The student
will be held at the Peanut Bowl , Sat- not only aided the child academiurday, May 21 , 1988. Throughout the cally, but also established a good
day, prizes will be g iven by many friendship and guidance.
But, they can't do it alone!
participating agencies to sponsored
It doesn 't matter if you 're a pro or
will
be
refreshments
bowlers and
a casual bowler with a 53 average.
served.
According to Father Chester Your support will help Big Brother/
Snyder, President of the Board of the Big Sister Organization match a
Big Brother/Big Sister Organization youngster who is in need of a friend.
Program places
foreign students
American Scandinavian Student
Exchange Programs (ASSE) is seeking local families to host Scandinavian , French, Spanish , German ,
Dutch , British, Swiss, Japanese and
Australian boys and girls.
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AT THE FOOT OF
COLLEGE HILL
The students, 15 to 18 years of age,
are coming to this area for the upcoming high school year.
These personable and academically select foreign exchange students are bright , curious and anxious
to learn about this country by living as
part of a family and attending a local
high school.
They arc also eager to share their
own culture and language with their
newly adopted American family.
The exchange students arrive from
their home country in August and
return at the end of the school year in
June.
Each ASSE student is fully insured
and brings their own spending
money. They expect to bear their
share of household responsibilities as
well as being included in normal
family activities and lifestyles.
The students are fluent in English,
well screened and qualified by ASSE.
Families may select the youngster of
their choice from extensive student
applications, family photos and biographical essays.
Families who would like to share
their lives with a foreign teenager and
experience the rewards of this enriching oppurtunity should contact
ASSE's local representative: Jane
Hergert at (717) 636-0885.
dJUEFrlT
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WILL BROADCAST
HUE
Rpril
Rpril
Rpril
BU/E.
7 3:00 W. Softball
12 3:00 111. Softball
13 1:00 Baseball
Stroudsburg
The new student residence hull facilities were unveiled Monday, March 28. The new facilities, sketched here will be built on
upper
campus.
1 '
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Photo by Robert Finch
Police snare Easter Bunny
by D.J. Metcalf
for The Voice
When will the madness end? Another chapter in the
continuing saga of LCB raids at Bloomsburg has unfolded , and this time the Easter bunny was involved.
A social gathering was raided last ni ght at approximately 11:30 p.m. surprising everyone at the Easter celebration. The spirit of the crowd was spoiled like rotten
eggs as the tormenting process of getting "busted" was
just the beginning.
Party-goers reached for their jackets and identification ,
as those under 21 prepared for a long evening at the police
barracks.
Soon after police began carding, a faint knock was
heard at the back door. People looked on inquisitively as
an officer squeezed his way through the crowded room to
open the door. He reached the crowded doorway and
finall y managed to pul l the door open. The officer gazed
downward with a look of astonishment.
Standing before him was a short, plump, furry, white
bunny with floppy ears and a damp pink nose twitching up
and down. The cuddl y, innocent looking animal held a
basket with colorfu l eggs and various other treats. The
officer scratched his head, then snared the bunny by his
cars and pulled him inside. The terrified bunny found
some comfort standing snug in a corner of the room .
After the crowded house finally began to clear out, a
stringent looking officer approached the bunny. The
bunny was hopping-mad as the officer came toward him
wilh a pair of handcuffs.
The bunny 's eyes gleamed with retaliation as he
reached for his basket and began hurling eggs at the
officers. Eggs of every imaginable color soared»through
the room. Officers were forced to take cover.
The enraged fluffy creature gazed at the remaining
group of people with a grin stretching from floppy ear to
the other. He whistled to them and pointed to the back
door. They escaped while he continued pelting officers
with his colorful ammunition.
Once outside the officers waited to see if the heroic hare
would escape the LCB. He never emerged from the house
and was last seen in back of a police car heading for the
station.
According to a reliable source, the bunny failed its
brealhalizcr test and was later determined to be an intoxicated midget impersonating the Easter Bunny.
Published works aid profs
by Kelly Monitz
for The Voice
Yes, the old adage still haunts university professors. According to one
faculty member, some large schools
emphasize being a good researcher,
not a good teacher. I' ve heard some
schools put (the professors ') CV
(curriculum vitac) on a scale or just
count the pages, he said, "Teachers
are under a great deal of pressure lo
publish these days." Even when enrollment is high , he added , universities want to advertise their school
with their professor 's publications.
Roughly, there are a hundred applicants for every teaching job available
and "if you have publications , you
get the job."
According to Dr. Calvin Walker,
psychology department chairperson
at Bloomsburg University, the faculty is evaluated on three criteria:
teaching effectiveness and fullfillment of professional responsibilities;
continuing scholarl y growth; and
service to the university and/or community.
These criteria arc the basis for
promotion and tenure. If professors
want good evaluations for promotion , they must continue their scholarly growth, which entails attending
meetings or workshops and publishing articles or papers. Even after a
professor is tenured , he is still evaluated every five years.
Also, money is an important factor
surrounding research studies intended for publication. "Faculty
aren 't spending their own money (on
research), but (they) aren 't getting
any money for it either," commented
Walker.
Some of the money comes out of
the departmental budget and some
comes from the State System of
Higher Education (SSHE). Through
SSHE, all 14 state schools compete
for the grants, which are allocated for
professional development and some
strictly for research. On campus, the
faculty can apply for release time,
which allows the professor to lighten
his class load from 12 hours a week to
9 hours a week.Overall, there is "very
little money (in the department to
support research), maybe a litde to
pay for the rats, " Dr. Walker said,
half jokingly.
According to a member of the
psychology department, "Psychologists aren 't getting a lot of money
from ihe government. Our grants
have been cut back." There is also a
great deal of competition for these
grants and a "detailed proposal has to
be written."
Another member of the faculty
commcnted,"It's hard to apply for
grants and do systematic research
without release time."
He also added that, "Faculty
should not have to compete for release time or funding. It should be a
part of the professional development
of every member, granted the individual is showing some productivity."
Aside from financial difficulties,
there are also positive aspects to research studies that pertain to the
community as a whole.
A faculty member commented that
society can benefit through the prediction and prevention of certain disorders, like anxiety or depression.
"The next generation will have less
problems with these disorders."
Dr. Eileen Astor-Stetson, a psychology professor at BU, commented
that it is not only important to do
research, but also to be invoved with
undergraduate researchers. AstorStetson also added that researching
trains the student to think critically
and to be able to present ideas clearly.
According to Walker,"The student
will get first hand experience with
conducting research. It gives them
the opportunity to work one-on-one
with a faculty member, and maybe a
publication that will be on their vitae
for graduate school or job hunting."
Also, students who volunteer to be
a subject in a study not only aid the
fac ulty, but they can also get a lot of
out of it, if the topic is of educational
value and they are fully debriefed
about the subject.
Overall, Bloomsburg University
does not force faculty members to
publish , but it is important for scholarly growth and advancement.
Walker commented that hopefully
the faculty will become involved in
research and involve students.
One faculty member, after doing
two research studies this year, concluded that he has become a "work
oriented person."
The Bullets guitarist and lead singer Michael Davis entertains a captive crowd at
p holo Ceny Moorc
Monday 's Sound Stage performance in the union.
^
,
by John Thomas
for The Voice
In the middle of the nig ht there is a
knock on your door. Three men
dressed in black, carrying machine
guns tell you and your family to
gather your things and prepare to
leave.
From here , you are put on a train
and taken to a concentration camp. In
the next few days you will either be
used for experimental science , lined
up against a wall and shot, or put into
a huge room and killed with poisonous gas.
Forty years ago , this could have
happened to any Jewish family in
Nazi Germany. Forty years later .-the
fact that more than 6,000,000 people
were brutally slain by these methods
is quickly forgotten.
For the young generation, remembering the Holocaust is little more
than a long list of dates, facts and
figures learned in history class. In
fact, many high school and college
history programs do not include the
Holocaust in their studies. Many
teachers consider the moral issues
surrounding the Holocaust loo delicate to be discussed in the classroom.
Basically, The Holocaust was a
situation where man turned against
himself. Millions were murdered on
the command of a worshipped political figure in Germany, Adolph
Hitler. Kis ideology was anti-semiusm. The reason behind this action
was not understood 40 years ago, let
alone today. Societies were ashamed
of the acts of Hitler and the German
people, so they covered up that part
of history.
With the number of living Holocaust survivors dwindling to less than
45,000, the chances for first-hand
accounts of this part of history are
quickly disappearing.The students of
America can utilize such accounts to
gain more vivid insight to the reality
of the issue. The fact that Hitler used
thousands of Jews for deforming scientific tests becomes more than a
mere fact when one reads an actual
account
History can be used to prevent catastrophic happenings in the future by
examining the past. Educating the
new generations about the Holocaust
might prevent them from relivirfg
past mistakes.
History can also be used to pay
tribute to those deserving of it. The
Holocaust represents hundreds of
thousands of lives that were taken for
no logical reaspn. To forget the lives
taken at concentration camps would
be disrespectful to those who suffered.
On April 11, 1983, President Reagan addressed the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors,
telling them,"... let us pledgethat we
will never shut our eyes, never refuse
to acknowledge the truth, no matter
how unpleasant."
This attitude regarding the Holocaust needs to be integrated into the
educational systems of America.
Through the schools the students can
be taught the historical facts about the
issue without forgetting the human
factor.
The American Gathering of Jewish
Holocaust Survivors is one group
which is promoting the idea that the
Holocaust be integrated into American schools. With the support of the
government, the organization may be
able to get the attention of state and
local school systems.
Protecting the youth from the
memory of the Holocaust could actually be depriving them of a better
understanding of mankind. Several
top researchers and psychologist
have discovered that shielding young
generations from the past is not giving them a realistic view of life.
In his book Never Forget , researcher Milton Meltzer writes, "I
once asked a little German girl:
'What would you like to be?' 'A
dog,' she answered, 'because the
(German) sentries like dogs.' "
Meltzer believes that this quote is
evidence of the dehumanization that
the Jewish people underwent in the
Holocaust Generations later, Americans need to remember this.
It is very possible that no one will
be knocking on your door in the
middle of the night to remove you
from society. But in the future, it may
happen. Education could prevent it,
or lack of education could be the
causeof another Holocaust.
BLOOM COUNTY
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THE FAR SIDE
by Berke Breathed i
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—____ .
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
NEED TYPING DONE? Experienced typ ist will type term papers,
resumes , thesis, etc. Reasonable
rate. Call Pat at 784-4437
Babysitter wanted for 1 yr. old in
my Catawissa home. Early mornings and/or late afternoons , weekdays. April and May. Nonsmokers only. Call 356-7787.
By GARY LARSON
ESSAYS & REPORTS?
16,278 to choose from—all subjects
Order Catalog Today wilh Visa/MC or COP
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Custom research also available—all levels
JUNIORS, SENIORS, GRADS w
SUMMER JOBS OCEAN CITY,
NJ (RETAIL) $5.00 per hour. The
SURF MALL in Ocean City, NJ is
looking for twenty (20) highly
motivated individuals to fill various retail oriented positions. If you
are intelligent, attractive, possess a
nice smile and know how to play
and work hard. . .an unforgetable
experience awaits you. Interested
applicants send recent resume and
photo to: PO Box 155, Ocean City,
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information call (609)399-2155
M-F 9 A.M.-3 P.M.
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Amidst congratulatory applause
Cindy leaves the group.
THE FAR SIDE
Loving couple with adopted 2 yr.
old son wishes to adopt infant.
Legal, confidential and expenses
will be paid. We're easy to talk to.
Call anytime collect -1 (412) 5712273;
Our Hearts are full , but our Arms
are empty, won't you help us fill
them. Loving successful couple
wilh nice home unable to have a
child of their own wishes to adopt a
Newborn. Let us help you through
this difficult time, strictly legal and
confidential. Please call Hilary or
Joel collect anytime at #1-215-742
7002;
BRAND NEW STEREO COMPONENTS at the LOWEST PRICES!
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collegiate crossword
By GARY LARSON
"HIRING! Government jobs your area. $15,000 - $68,000. Call
(602) 838-8885. Ext. 7842."
© Edward J u l i u s
C o l l e g i a t e CW87Z5
46 Lupino and Cantor
48 Woodturning machine
1 Jet
49 Sound amp lifier
7 Shoos away
50 Covered with
13 Bel onging to Dobie
hoarfrost
G i l l i s ' s girlfriend 52
neck shirt
15 Small crown
53 Pioneer in mental
16 Senior citizen ,
health
usuall y
54 Varnish ingredient
17 Dance performance
56 Do car work
18 Formation
58 Oscar
19 Roman 151
59
box , in
21
system
psychology
22 Polynesian warriors 60 U.S. industrialist ,
23 Statement of
Samuel
faith
61 Avaricious
25 College in Houston
26 Telephone-dial
DOWN
trio
27 Actress Norma
1 Layers
29
Synephrine
2 Richard Burton film
30 Gulf-state food
(2 wds.)
fishes
3 Frantic scramble
32 Jazz instrument
(2 wds.)
34 First-rate
4 Inventor Howe
35 Manny of baseball
5 Breezy
36 Actor Navarro
6 Busch , Clarke ,
38 Gridiron play
or West
41 Comedy producer
7 "Barney Miller "
Roach
actor , Jack
42 Reads
8 Technical name for
44 Editor 's insertion
the shank
in a quote
9 Helicopter part
ACROSS
Planaria sports
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Summer Rentals - Warhurst
Apartments. $250 per month - per
unit. All utilities paid. Call 7840816.
10 Dye ingredient
11 Dangerous ones
12 Car accessory
14 Discharge
15 Town
20 Pastures
23 waterway
24 Aficionado
27 Ex-Senator Jackson
28 Last
31 On the
33
Harbor , Maine
35 Flirtatious fellows
36 Math symbol
37 California city or
shaded walk
38 Stringed instrument
of old
39 Stupid
40 Compared
41 Former Senator
Fong , et al.
43 Poe ' s bird
45 Dieter 's food
47 What to do with a
new watch (2 wds.)
49 Creator of
Winnie-the-Pooh
51 Measure of me dicine
53 Possible poker hand
55 And not
57 Record of heart
activity
S N E I D M A N'
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200 COUNSELORS and Instructors needed! Private, coed summer
camp in Pocono Mountains,
Northeastern PA. Lohikan, P.O.
Box 234BM, Kenilworth , NJ
07033 (201)276-0565.
Diversified Computer Services Resumes, term papers, all kinds of
typing jobs done on a PC with
Laser Printer. Free pick-up and
delivery, call 387-1174.
WILL DO TYPING - - termpapers,
resumes, etc. Fast service, reasonable rates. Word processor available. Call Lorie at 784-8507 or 784
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Financially secure couple wilh 2 yr
old adopted daughter wishes to
adopt white infant. All medical
expenses paid. We're very easy to
talk lo. Call collect anytime (201) 455-0497.
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MAKE YOUR T
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AEBd>IXQTQA2XEP
Sneidman 's can engrave your sorority or
fraternity symbols onto gold or silver jewe lry
and pewter. Stop in and discover the variety of
affordable gifts you can make your mark on.
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The jewelerwho offers
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SNEIDMAN'S
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130 East Main St. • Bloomsburg. PA • 784-2747
To Phi Delta's 9th PledgeClass:
Keep smiling! How "bout it?
-Chris G.
Phi Sigma Sigma P.C. - We've
come a long way; everything is
coming up roses. Have a Happy
Easter!
NEEDED: Two roomates for
Ocean City, Maryland, Summer
'88. Excellent Apartment! Call
Chuck 784-4266
BABYSITTER (Live-In) - Ocean
City, NJ - BABYSITTER needed
for summer months in Ocean City,
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Must adore children. $200.00
weekly (50) hours; plus room and
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Send recent resume and photo to:
P.O. Box 155, Ocean City, NJ
08226;
Physician and wife desperately
seek to adopt white infant. We will
provide a very loving, happy and
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Absolutely confidential. Call
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Camp Staff Positions - We are
seeking mature and enthusiastic
individuals to work at a local
(Benton) Boy Scout Camp. A
Scouting background is helpful
though not necessary. We are
especially interested in employing
a Shooting Sports Director and
Camp Commissioner (both must
be over 21); Dining Hall Steward;
Trading Post Manager; and Nature
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to arrange for inerviews.
LOST: Brown clutch style wallet
with all I.D. in it. Reward if found.
No questions asked. Call 387-0656
114th Pledge Class - It was movin '
and groovin, shakin' and bakin',
rockin' and rollin'. I'm glad i went
through it with all of you. It was a
super experience. Ish
Mark -Beta Sig- Happy 21st
Birthday ! Wait till you see the
surprise I have for you. I'll give
you a clue, "it's from behind!"
Love va.
ASA - Thanks for mixing with us!
We've NEVER had a better time!
Love, Phi Sigma Sigma Pledge
Colony
To all Phi Sig Pi Brothers - You're
the best.
Sylvia - There's no doubt - "You're
the One." Happy Easter. I Love
You. Mickey
Rob - Thanks for everything.
You're a super big. Ish
Babs - You're terrific. I'm glad you
were there for me. Love, Ish
The word for the day is... POL-
LENJJ
Karen - Here's to the senior member of the best family. You're
super. Ish
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1
FROM THE LOCKER ROOM
The new
kid on the
block
Mike Mullen
Sports Editor
Varsity sports at Bloomsburg
University arc of an interesting
breed .
How many oilier universities in
tiic state system can you name that
has the overall success record that
all of our programs have?
You would have to think long
and hard about that before you
could give an answer.
The only name that could even be
considered would be Millersville.
But even they don 't achieve the
high level of performance that
Bloomsburg docs in all their sports.
Field hockey was last season 's
national champion. Football was
14th in the nation last year, cross
country , 19th.
Our men 's basketball team
barel y missed taking a young club
to the playoffs , while our women's
team won the East and barel y
missed a bid to nationals.
The wrestling team sent seven
wrestlers lo nationals , while the
women 's swim team had a second
place finisher at nationals.
Everyone knows about the success of the softball team and the
baseball and track teams are looking up.
There is another sport that wc can
now add to the growing list of successful teams at Bloomsburg .
The women 's lacrosse team.
No , I'm not joking.
Yes, it reall y is a team.
It is not a club as most may have
thought , but very much a varsity
sport a little over a decade old. A
varsity sport on the rise.
In 1984 the team did not win a
single game in eight tries. Two
years later in 1986, head coach
Sharon O'Kccfc led her team to a
division championshi p and subsequent PSAC playoffs.
For the second year in a row, in
1987, the team again qualified for
Ihc PSAC playoffs.
This is definitely a team to be
reckoned with this year. Yet the
support , both fan and financial has
been lacking the past two seasons.
For example in 1986 when the
team made the playoffs, they were
held in BU' s backyard , Nelson
Fieldhousc. Still , no spectators
were to be found for this young
team.
Wh y not?
Popularity may be one of the
problems that the sport of women's
lacrosse has going against it.
Thcr is no way that a sport like
this can compete with other sports
up here like football , basketball and
softball for popularity.
Even if you were to explore the
game once by traveling up to Nelson, some types of fan s would be
dissapointcd.
Women's lacrosse is very dissimilar to it's male counterpart and
even more distant from the increasingly popular sport - Box Lacrosse.
No, this is not a physical game
that the women play , not a knock
'em down , tear 'em limb from limb
till they spit blood game.
It is a finesse game.
It doesn't take an expert to notice
the difference in styles between the
two genders when they play the
same game.
Ball handling is taken very seriously in the women's game and not
Iackadasiacally like the men's.
Passing is essential in both sports
and the short quick passes needed
to facilitate a score are done much
more effectivel y by the women and
their two-handed grip.
Don 't get me wrong, the men's
game is very exciting to watch , and
I highly suggest that you make as
many matches as you can along
with the women's team.
My only point is that there is
another team on this campus that is
readying themselves for the playoffs before the season even begins.
Isn't that the way it is for everybody?
Baseball team pounds Kings,
now readies for PSAC opener
Mike Mullen
Sports Editor
Bloomsburg used a four-run and
two five-run innings Tuesday to defeat King 's College handil y by a score
of 15-6.
The Huskies ' firs t runs came in the
second inning with the big blow
coming on a bases loaded triple by
Rob Kirkpatrick to account for three
of the inning 's five runs and a 5-0
Husky lead.
Two innings later in the fourth ,
King 's scored a lone run before
Bloomsburg tallied five more runs to
take a commanding 10-1 lead with
four runs coming on a Tim Pritchard
grand slam.
Four more runs in the fifth scaled
the game for the Huskies despite
being outscored by Kings 5-1 over the
last three innings.
Kings out-hit the Huskies 13-11,
while committing onl y two errors to
Bloomsburg 's three.
Bloomsburg will host Millersville
to open play in the Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Divisionat 1 p.m.
today at Danny Litwhilcr Field on the
university 's upper campus.
Coach John Babb's team enters the
the game with a 9-5 record.
The Huskies have used a combination of strong hitting and solid pitching in their fi rst 14 games.
The club boasts a team batting
average of .305, while it's pitching
staff has a combined earned run average of 3.86.
Third baseman Matt Karchncr
leads the Huskies ' potent attack at the
plate leading the team in average .422,
hits 19, and runs batted in 23.
He also has the most homcruns on
the club wilh four.
Pritchard , the fi rst baseman , and
Kirkpatrick , who has spent most of
the time as the squad's designated
hitter, arc also contributing strongly
to the team 's offense.
Pritchard has 16 hits for an average
or .421 and has 14 RBI' s. three of his
hits are doubles , along with one triple
and two homcruns.
Kirkpatrick has had 16 hits giving
him an average of .381. He has hit a
homcrun , a triple and two doubles
while driving in 16 runs.
OuLficldcr Steve Clemens has contributed 5 rbi' s, 14 hits and one double
while building a .318 average.
Freshman J.P. Thomas has the top
record on the mound at 3-0 with an
earned run average of 1.59.
He has struck out21 batters, walked
six and has given up onl y five earned
runs in 22 innings of work .
Eric Pcdcrson , Warren Shi pc and
Sieve Sees, along with Thomas, give
the Huskies one of the most solid
starling groups the Huskies have had
in several seasons.
Pcdcrson has pitched 24 innings
and allowed seven earned runs , while
recording 20 strikeouts and 14 walks.
He has a 2-1 rcocrd with an ERA of
2.04.
Shipc has a 2-0 record , has struck
out seven , walked four other batters
and allowed 10 earned runs in in 14
and one-third innings for a 4.90 ERA.
Sees, despite an 0-2 mark , has
slruck out 11 opponents and walked
only four , while allowing three earned
runs in 14 innings for a 1.50 ERA.
Millersville won three of four meetings wilh the Huskies a year ago.
Next action after Thursday 's
double header will be Tuesday, April
5, when the Huskies play a double
header on defending Pennsylvania
Conference champ ion Shippensburg 's home field.
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Unfortunately, what too many of them are getting Instead Is
drugs. With youc help, it doesn't have to be this way.
There Is a program called "Schools Without Drugs:
The Challenge" that can help you deal with the
drug problem in your community or school.
Find out about it The smarter you are about what
works, against drugs,the better chance our kids will
understand how dumb It is to take them.
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HELPSUMTHE OQ0R ON DRUGSJf
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Tra nsplanted Amer ican coach at home in Holland
by Randy Harvey
Los Angeles Times Washington Post Service
Looking ahead to the 1992 Summer
Olympics, which they were bidding to
have in their country, sports officials
in the Netherlands in 1986 hired Arie
Sclingcr, the former U.S. women 's
volleyball coach , to coach their men 's
team.
They figured that even Sclingcr,
considered a miracle worker wilh dow
n and out teams, such as the U.S.
women , would need six years to lead
the Dutch to international respectability in time for the Opening Ceremony
in Amsterdam.
Since then , the Dutch have learned
that the 1992 Summer Olympics will
be held not in Amsterdam but in Barcelona, Spain. They also have learned
not to underestimate Sclingcr.
Their men 's volleyball team is four
years ahead of schedule, having qualified for the 1988 Summer Olympics
in Seoul , South Korea.
The Dutch
played volleyball in the Olympics
once before. They were in eluded in an
invitational field for the first Olymp ic
volleyball tournament in 1964. Of
eight teams, they finished eighth .This
time, they earned a berth , winning a
qualification tournament last month
in Amsterdam.
Sclingcr, 51, is a Polish-born U.S.
citizen who was raised in Israel. But,
the Dutch claim him as their own.
While the volleyball team has had
unprecedentedsuccess, the country' s
most popular soccer team, Ajax , has
been a disappointment. Fans at soccer
matches have begun a new chant:
"Arie to Ajax!"
"In a small country, it 's very easy
for people to identify themsclve s with
a successful program or athletes,"
Selinger said. "It's gotten to the point
that if I walk in Amsterdam , I would
say 80 percent of the people know my
name and approach me. Every place I
go, they know me because it's a small
country ."
Yet, Sclingcr said, he wants to
come home to the United Stales.
He returned to Orange County, California , last week for the first tim c in
almost a year. He was there to conduct
a clinic , but also to sec his wife, Aia,
who lives in Laguna Niguel and
manages their sports marketing business, and his daughter , Ayclct, who
attends UCLA.
"This is my home," Selinger said.
"In every other aspect, the situ ation in
Holland is better. There is less politics
involved . There is more coordination
and communication between sponsors and the federation. Our success is
creating so many things there .
"That 's attractive to me, to stay there
until I complete this whole process.
There arc man y pluses to staying in
Holland. But , if something docs happen, and I have to make a decision, I'11
come back home."
AI Monaco, executive director of
the United States Volleyball Associa
tion (US VB A), said that discussion of
Selingcr 's return is premature. Neither U.S. Olympic Coach , Marv
Dunp hy of the men nor Terry
Liskevych of the women , has announced whether he will return after
this year, although there has been
speculation lhat Dunphy, whose team
is the gold-medal favorite, will resign.
Selinger said he would prefer to
coach the men.
Monaco did not dismiss the possibility and that may be significant ,
considering Selinger's strained relationship in the past with the US VB A.
Monaco pointed out that he would
Intramural Information
-CO-ED VOLLEYBALL rosters are due today, Thursday,
March 31, at 3pm, in the Intramural Office. Competition will begin
following the Easter Break.
is being sponsored nationwide by
the Intramural , Recreation and
Sports Association and T-shirts
will be awarded to the top finishers.
-Swimmers !! It's not too late.
Sign up for the Swim and Stay fit
program. Summer is r i g h t
aroound the corner. Applications
and further information is available in the Intramural Office in the
Kehr Union.
-Karate and Self-defense, a general information meeting will be
held Wednesday, April 6 at 8 p.m.
in the Green Room of Kehr Union
Building. All those interested
should plan to attend.
-SPRING SOFTBALL FESTIVAL!! This tournament for both
men and women will be held the
week of April 10. entries will be
limited to the first twelve teams in
each division and deadline for all
rosters is Thursday, April 7.
-Do you enjoy jazz or ballet?
Dance classes taught by Linda
Everest will begin on Tuesday,
April 5. Classes are FREE and will
be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Centennial Dance Studio and classes begin promptly at 8
p.m.
-Runners, keep April 16 free!
-SOCCER and BADMINTON
The Intramural Progra m is spon- rosters for both men and women
soring a 5K fitness run. This event are due on Thursday, April 7.
nol be involved in the decision , since
his own resignation will become effective after the Summer Olympics,
but he said that he believes Sclingcr
would be considered if there is an
opening.
Sclingcr was extremely successful
as ihc U.S. women 's coach for 10 ye
ars, turning a program that was virtuall y non-existent in 1974 into one of
the best in the world less than six years
later. Had il not been for the boycott,
Ihc U.S. women mighi have won the
gold medal in 1980 in Moscow. They
finished second to China four years
later in Los Angeles. But , theUS VB A
did nolrcncw Selingcr 's contractafter
the 1984 Olympics.
"He was a difficult guy to work
with , but he was always fighting for
his players and his program ," Monaco
said. "That's where our fights occurred , when wc tried to balance
Arie's needs with the association's.
"But , I have only the fondest
memories of the years Arie and I
struggled together. I can't think of any
overwhelming negatives to offset all
the positives. Throug h the passage of
lime, any wounds I had have been
healed."
As for the USVBA' s decision not to
renew Selingcr 's contract, Monaco
said: "I'm not sure it was anti-Aric.
It 's not a lifetime job. It was a decision
to let some fresh air in."
It also was a decision to return perspective to the women 's program.
Some USVBA officials believed
that Selinger was so obsessed with
winn ing that he did not allow his
players to have lives off the volleyball
court. They sometimes worked out
eight hours a day, six days a week,
leaving little time for jobs, school or
social lives.
Monaco said he prefers
Liskevych's system. His players
work out seven hours a day, five days
a week, but many of them also are
involved in the Olympic Job Opportunitics Program.
"We want our volleyball program
to reflect the American style of life,"
Monaco said. "We want our players to
have well-rounded lives, college educations, j ob opportunities, international travel and social lives."
At the same time, Monaco said, he
and other USVBA officials might
have misunderstood Selinger's motivation.
Going into 1980, he was fighting
to catch up with the rest of the world,"
Monaco said. "After 1980, the team
was physically beaten down. He
might have had no choice but to train
them so well because they weren't at
their ph ysical peaks. He may be less
driven in a different situation."
Selinger said he was not as driven as
his players.
"It got to the point where the team
demanded heavy interest in the program ," he said. "When I was slacking
off a little, they would say, 'Hey,
Coach , get in shape.' People think that
I ruled this team with an iron hand , but
I didn 't. They were very serious about
what they were doing, totally committed. But it didn 't come from me. It
came from themselves.
"They were mature women, 24 to
30. They knew what they were doing.
They were pioneers for the sport in the
USA. Volleyball at that time was their
life, their mission. That was the
unique thing about lhat group, and I
just let it happen.
"I don 't feel any remorse. I don 't
need to apologize for anything I've
done, and I don 't feel anybody on the
team feels they need to apologize to
anybody. All of them are doing extremely well today. History will judge
us whichever way."
Liskevych was Selinger's assistant
with the national team in 1975, but
they had a falling out and now seldom
speak to one another. Selinger said he
did not want to fan the flames by
discussing their differences.
For the two or three years I've
lived in Holland , I don 't bother with
this thing," he said.
"I don 't care about it anymore.
There's a certain amount of frustration about what's happening here with
the (U.S.) women 's team because
they're not generating the interest and
enthusiasm of the public the way it
was, but that has nothing to do with
the way they play. I understand the
team is playing well and has had some
Softball team wins four games
over weekend to move to 14-2
The Bloomsburg University softball team opened their Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Division schedule with a pair of shut-out wins over
West Chester on Monday.
Joanne Sulmonctti threw a six-hitter in the first game won by the Huskies, 4-0.
In the 5-0 victory, it was Julie
Robbins throwing a four-hitter as the
Huskies raised their season mark to
14-2.
In this past weekend's games, the
Huskies took a close 3-1 11 inning
decision over St. Joseph's University
in the first game of their doubleheader. In the 11th, Cindy Slocum
singled in Kim Vogel and then came
around to score an insurance run later
in the inning to earn the win.
Track team performs
well at Susquehanna
Bloomsburg's men 's and women 's
track and field teams made thier outdoor season debut over the weekend
at the Susquehanna Invitational with
an outstanding performance.
Nelson Barr represented the Huskies' only first place winner taking the
100 meter dash evet in a time of 10.82
seconds. He also claimed a third place
finish in the 200.
Bruce Linton had a good day as he
garnered a third in the long jump and
a sixth place finish in both the triple
jump and the javelin as he prepares
himself for the decathalon.
The women also turned in a fine
performance as Jill Cicierski, Brenda
Bisset and Lynne Ritz all placed for
the team.
Ritz was second in the 100 meter
dash and third in the 200. Bisset took
third in the 5000 meter run and fourth
in the 3000 meter run. Cicierski
placed second in both the shot put and
the discus.
The teams next meet will be April 9
when they go on the road to participate in the Shippensburg Invitational.
The second game proved to be
much easier for the Huskies as Patti
knocked in three runs and Slocum
added two RBI' s as the women
cruised to an 11-0 victory.
The next action for the Huskies will
be April 6 when they travel to Lock
Haven to play a double header with
the Bald Eagles.
BLOOMSBURG
SCOREBOARD
Women 's Softball:
Bloomsburg 3 1st game
West Chester 1 11in.
Bloomsburg 11 2nd game
West Chester 0
Men 's Baseball:
Bloomsburg 15
Kings
6
Men 's Lacrosse:
Bloomsburg 7
Lycoming 2
Media of