rdunkelb
Thu, 12/11/2025 - 17:56
Edited Text
And these children that you spit on as they try
to change their worlds are immuned to your
consultations they 're quite aware of what their
going through.
DavidBowie

Classic books open American minds

by Lisa Cellini
Ne ws Editor
Universities are depriving students
of classical literature and are not properly educating American minds, liberal education advocate Professor
Allan Bloom said during his lecture
"Liberal Education and the Political
Community" on April 7 in Carver
Auditorium.
Wielding a New York Times bestseller entitled 'The Closing of the
American Mind" , which criticizes
weak collegiate curricula, Bloom said
that theabsence of liberal education at
universitieshas "assumed the proportions of a crisis academically."
Bloom argued that narrow career
specialization , which opposes liberal
education , causes students to ignore
life's meaning. A liberal education
teaches people how to "answer the
questions, 'Howoughtl to live? What
is the good life?' " Bloom said, citing
classical authors like Homer and
Shakespeare as appropriate informational resources.
According to Bloom, a professor of
philosophy and political science at the
University of Chicago, reflections
and disputes about life's meaning
should take place at universities. "We

are products of thoughts. Unless we
think ourselves, we will be victims of
others' thoughts," he said, criticizing
universities which fail to educate students through classic books.
Bloom also blamed the crisis on
dogmatic modern relativism, an ethics theory maintaining that the basis
of judgment is relative, and differs
according to events and people.
Bloom called the theory the "epicenter of our educational storm," and
blamed "radical egalitarians" of the
1960s for advocating detrimental
educational curricula changes.
Their contemporary counterparts
try to replace classical literature with
"affirmative action" literature, according to Bloom, who said, "Books
are important because they are the
enemy. White, western, male... books
areinstruments of dominance... so the
argument goes.
Relativism is deadly to higher
education," he said, claiming that
books should be read at universities
for their informational value rather
than to appease special interest
groups.
Cultural relativism, which tailors
moralities to individual cultures and
eras, deprives people of a sound,

common foundation , said Bloom,
adding, "Relativism implies that there
is no morality. Society's laws and
beliefs have no foundation."
Classical literature acts as that
moral foundation-andtransgresses all
cultures, Bloom said. Moral decisions
are "narrow and superficial if (people)
have no depth with which to work,"he
said, adding, "If books were a part of
our lives, we could communicate
more easily."
Emphasizing a need for higher
education values courses won 't solve
the intellectual crisis, according to
Bloom, who said, "The agreement
about the need for values is too easy ...
it can't be taken seriously."The word
"value" itself is linguistically problematic and ambiguous because it
implies neither good nor bad, and is
typical of relativism, he said.
Because of this pervading theory,
Americans are "comfortable with the
unexamined life Socrates said was not
worth living," Bloom said, calling
this attitude "easy-going nihilism , or
Nihilism American style."
Although not optimistic for
education's immediate future, Bloom
asserted, "Many Americans have respect for higher learning."

However, he added, "Intellectual
superiority is both neglected and assaulted. We crave excellence, but we
can 't endure exclusivity in excellence."According to Bloom, the word
"elitism "is considered a vice or crime
in a democracy.
A "theoretical life", which complements liberal education and encourages pondering life's important questions, "smacks of elitist in an egalitarian society and useless in a utilitarian
society," he added.
"You have to think to live. We are
somehow rational animals, and somehow, we have to give an account of
ourselves. A large composition of
being happy with ourselves is understanding ourselves,"he said, which he
clai med could best be done by reading
classical literature.
Focusing on Bloomsburg University , he said , "It is appropriate for me
to be here. This is one of those institutions trying to pursue liberal education ."
However, comparing BU with the
heated curricula debate involving
America 's top 20 to 30 universities,
he said , "Bloomsburg University is
nol connected to the cutting edge of
contemporary moral concerns."

f
Dukakis locked' in two-way race for
national Democratic nomination
Chinese culture
featured during
alumni weekend
Bloomsburg students enjoy the sunny weather at the beginning of the week.
Many studentsmoved their studing outside in an effort to soak up asmuth
SUnaspOSSiblC.

Michael Dukakis, governor of
Massachusetts, is locked into a twoway race for leadership of the national
DemocraticParty in the fall elections,
according to Bruce L. Rockwood, a
local Dukakis coordinator in Columbia County.
"Mike has experienced being attacked from all sides before and come
through," Rockwood said yesterday.
"After serving one term as governor, Mike was challenged in the 1978
primary by two candidates who
claimed he was not liberal enough,
and one who said he was too liberal.
"He narrowly lostrenomination to
the single conservative candidate Ed
King.
"Four years later, after the public
got tired of corruption and incompetence in the King administration, the
State Convention nominated Dukakis
and he went on to win the primary and
the next general election s with
enormous majorities.
"He had learned how to understand
and respond to the needs of the broad
center not only of the Democratic
party, but of the people as a whole,
with an emphasis on economic development, promoting entrepreneurship
and state cooperation with business
and labor.
"He was not alone in making the
economy turn around in Massachusetts," Rockwood said.
"Without his leadership the turnaround would have taken a lot longer,

and been a lot less pervasive.
"Mike made the difference between
a simple cyclical upswing, and a surge
in development that reached into the
least successful parts of the state, setting an example which would be
important in developing a national
economic strategy to benefit regions
which have suffered a long-term decline in business and jobs, including
northeastern Pennsylvania."
Rockwood, who served three times
as a local caucus delegate to the State
Democratic Convention in Massachusetts, and was first elected as a
Dukakis delegate when Dukakis
made his comeback in 1982.
He said Dukakis's record has been
misrepresented by national media to
fit a stereotype about northern liberals" that is simply false and reflected
shoddy reporting.
'"The Duke,' as he is sometimes
called by his supporters, has close
relationships with the business community, and has been responsive to
the concerns of moderates and blue
collars workers in the state," Rockwood said.
"From business development
loans, to his consensus approach to
health insurance for all workers, to
providing support for highway extensions and exits for regional industrial
parks, Dukakis has attempted to
bridge the gap between the ideal and
the practical in a way that meets the
concerns of all of his constituents."

Bruce and Susan Rockwood were
both invited as Dukakis supporters to
follow-up workshops at Worcester
Slate College in 1982 and 1983, at
which Dukakis and his cabinet presented Iheir legislative agenda, conducted panel discussions, and solicited input for state government from
the grass roots.
"Mike recognizes the importance
of building government from the
people up, and listening to his followers after the election as well as before
it, and that is something that impresses us as setting him apart from
the other candidates," Rockwood
said.
Susan Rockwood said "his campaign is perhaps the only one that fully
integrates women into policy making
and decision making levels.
"Dukakis ' campaign manager
Susan Estrich is a professor of law at
Harvard University, and author of the
book Real Rape ," she said.
Dukakis lieutenant governor is
his former Secretary of State Evelyn
Murphy. One minor bonus of his election as President will be the first
woman Governor of Massachusetts,"
she added.
Nationally Dukakis holds a slight
delegate lead over Jesse Jackson with
Albert Gore and Paul Simon ,who suspended his campaign last week, far
behind with little chance of catching
up.
"Mike has been endorsed by Sen.

Bill Bradley of NJ., who is widely
respected here in Pennsylvania by our
own political leadership," Rockwood
said.
"Mike's success in the Pennsylvania primary April 26 will stand or fall
noi on endorsements, but on individual Pennsylvanians coming to know
the man as he really is, and respecting
him as the most experienced, competent and committed candidate, capable of giving us eight years of honest government in Washington and
the nation , something for which
America is long overdue."
"Gore misrepresents himself as a
conservative in this race, when in fact
he has an extremely liberal voting
record compiled by the ADA, Rockwood said.
"In terms of honesty and record on
the issues, the race is between two
strongest candidates, Jackson and
Dukakis, and of the two, Dukakis has
the better claim to representing the
broad center of the party, as well as the
agenda management skills to deliver
for all of the people when he is chosen
our next President."
To help on election day April 26,
and in the fall campaign for president,
the public can contact ColumbiaMontour County Coordinators Bruce
and Susan Rockwood, and Shirley
Davis.
The public can also call the national
campaign toll-free number, 1-800USA-MIKE.

Food drive benef its Columbia county
byLauraSpecht
StaffWriter
Members of Psi Chi collected food for needypeople
in Columbia County Saturday.
The National Honor Society for Psychology collected food in the seven residence halls, at local food
stores and from members of the community.
Members decided to choose this project for its benefet to Columbia County.
"We were try ing to think of a project to do and we
decided on the food drive," said Joe Zajac, president of
Psi Chi.
Zajac, a certified Red Cross instructor, knew the
donated food would be evenly distributed throughout
Columbia County and would be kept within the county.
Other members who donated their time and energy
towards making the food drive successful are: Deb
Klinger, Vice-President, Dee Dee Waddell, Secretary,
Keshil Whiteleather, Treasure.
Psi Chi members,Jen Giliiard,Julie Herman. Doreen
Dietrich, Lynne Starkeyw and Dr. Michael Gaynor,
advisor for Psi Chi were there.
"We are definitely looking for new activities to get
involved with ," said Giliiard. "We want to get more
active with the community. "
Hundreds of cans have been collected as of now.
Because of the food drive's successPsi Chi may continue this as an annual event.

Members of Psi Chi display food collected during their food drive Saturday. Members pictured
(clockwlse)areKeshllWhltcleathcr,JennifcrGllllard , LynncStarky and Joe Zajac.
Photo by RobertFinch

A look at the culture, education ,
cuisine, medicine and business of
China will be featured at Alumni
Weekend at Bloomsburg University
which will be Thursday, April 28, to
Sunday, May 1.
The theme for the weekend's
events is "China Perspective," and

Forum
suspends
wrestlers

byKellyCuthbert
StaffWriter
Bloomsburg University wrestling
team was suspended from using
Comunity Government Association
vehicles following an accident, according to David Hill, comptroller of
Community Activities and Kehr Union Building.
The vehicle committee, a subcomittee ofCGA imposed the restrictions following a Jan. 7, 1988 incident
in Virginia. The wresding team was
involved in an accident when a vehicle cut in front of one of the vans.
The van operator was not 21 years
old.
Hill said operators of CGA vehicles
must be 21 years old because "its the
only way insurance companies will
insure us.There are so many drivers or
'youthful operators,' that they [insurance companies] are reluctant to take
any risks."
Risks are limited be raising the age
of those who may drive the vehicles to
21.
No one was taken to the hospital,"
said David Hill, comptroller of Community Activities and Kehr Union.
B ut the other party did file a bodily
injury claim which the insurance
companies are discussing.
The vehicle committee decided to
suspend the person who was supposed
to be driving permanentiy.
The BU driver involved in the accident was also suspended until one
semester after turning 21.
The wresding team will be allowed
to use the vans at all during the fall
semester.
Hill stated the restrictions will only
be enforced on the wrestling team.
"Other athletic teams will not be
affected by this," commented Hill.

Photo by Chris Lower

activities include a Chinese banquet
and a calligraphy demonstration as
well as lectures on the Chinese culture.
In addition to the China theme, the
weekend will feature a concert by the
NE Philharmonic as part of the BU
Celebrity Artist Series, the annual
Maroon and Gold spring football
game, a picnic at the Alumni House.
TheRenaissance Jamboree, a street
fair in downtown Bloomsburg featuring crafts, foods, games and entertainment also are scheduled that weekend.
A dinner at the Hotel Magee at 6
p.m. Friday will honor the Class of
1938 which is celebrating its 50thyear class reunion.
The annual Alumni Awards Din-

ner-Dance will be held at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Caldwell Consistory.
Director of Alumni Affairs Doug
Hippenstiel announced this year's
award recipients will include John W.
Thomas, '47, Harriet Kocher, '39, A.
William Kelly, '71, Howard McKinnon and Patrick Haggerty.
Thomas, of Hamburg, is a life
member and past president of the BU
Alumni Board. Harriet Kocher of
Phoneix , Ariz., was active with the
Washington, D.C., alumni chapter
and a former member of the BU Business Advisory Board . Thomas and
Kocher will each receive the Distinguished Service Award.

JLJlJIvfl-iCA.

H

Doyouhaveameetingthis
week? Check the Husky
Announcements,

Page 3

RenaissauceJamboree
scheduled for April30,
1988,
Page 4
See how the Huskies faired
fn the weekend of sp orts,

PageS

Commentary
Features
Comics
Sports
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¦— !mil—nm

page 2
page 4
page 6
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Commentary

f' MSW&fcfRlV
M tS \

S upport bill to save man $
best fri ends f rom torture
You bought a puppy two years ago
when you moved off campus. He's
been a faithfu l companion , a good
friend and blast at parties. You hale to
part with him but you are graduating
soon and won 't be able lo take care of
him any longer. So you decide to take
iiini lo an animal shelter .
There he 'll be given food , water and
a i;iace to sleep. Then someone-will
come, and adopt him. He 'll be safe.
Rl ghi? Well , maybe. And maybe noi.
Animals placed in shelters by owners can experience one of three fates.

If they are lucky, they will be adopted
and given a new home. Or, after a
while , if they arc not adopted , they
will be destroyed quickl y and painlessly.
If they aren 't luck y, they will be
sold to laboratories which use animals
to test household products such as
No law
cosmetics and detergent.
exists presentl y in Pennsy lvania to
protect owner-relinquished animals
from being sold to labs ^experimentation purposes.
However , last June the Pennsylva-

Foreign students
deserve a break

To l iif. !.idilor
,.
; ;.\ ! ii writing in regard to an article
!::.' :! appeared in the April 7 issue of
'."/¦,< ¦ 'i 'dec entitled "International stua - m ' s have problem rooming on

! leu have often wondered where
' iii.e.n.aiioiial students went during
¦.: ¦. -.. ' breaks such as Easter and
• ¦!¦ , . ' .sg iving.
i! , > vever I don 't like IRC President
¦Wc:. Schillemans ' suggestion that
.!' .- , .should be a separate residence
hail desi gned for these students. . In a
lii ' . iveisily already in an identity crisis
;! Iwi.iti cli quey, 1 feel having a sepa:.;!¦• cl'./i m for international students
/. •.nil ' onl y make the problem of
. , _ f,- ; MI ion on campus worse lhan il
¦
.•• ¦• • . ft is my feeling that internals - .¦:¦ '¦ .- indents should be in the main¦¦:¦ .. ') and not alienated as Mr.
; : s nians suggested.
question of where these people

should go during short break s is not
easy to answer, however 1 do have
two suggestions.
First, why not eliminate one of
these short breaks. Instead of having
Spring Break and Easter as separate
breaks, wh y not combine the two.
Spring Break could begin a week
before Easter and end Easter weekend.
Second , since the university is
try ing to decide what lo do with
Magcc Mansion , wh y not renovate it
into rooms so at least some international students can have a place to stay
during short breaks.
I hope and pray that this problem
can be solved without imposing on
others and bettering Bloomsburg
Univers i ty 's reputation as a trucly
international university.
Lincoln Weiss
Luzerne Hall

nia Senate passed the SB 890, Pet
Protection Bill. This bill would protect dogs and cats who were once
someone's companion from being
tortured during some \Sb experiment.
The bill calls for the same protection guaranteed to stray cats and dogs
brought in by animal control officers
for the last 70 years. Former pets,
placed in the protective custody of a
human e society should not be denied
what , historicall y, a mission has always promised — final refug.,.
The House Agriculture committee
has yet to pass The Pet Protection Bill.
Because of heavy lobbying by the
promotors of animal experimentation , six members of the committee
axe opposed the the bill and several
remain undecided .
Shelters should be safe, humane
places for animals no longer wanted
by their masters. Releasing shelter
animals to laboratories serves to undermine the vital functions these organizations serve in our society.
If you would like to show support
for this bill , call your Representative
and tell him or her to put pressure on
those who are undecided. If you are
unsure who your legislator is, call the
Leagurc of Women Voters for assistance.
People should feel confident with
theirdecisions togive up lheir pets for
what ever reason. This law gives pet
owners who can no longer keep their
animals the assurance that they will
be cared for humanely.
Think about that dog who has been
wilh you for a few years. Though you
can no longer care for him and must
give him up, should that give someone else the right to make a profit
from his suffering?

^EMXJ^^I

J Large

i

called jealousy.
One woman who chuckled at the
printed image admitted that she has
often felt like the central character in
a menage a trois, a love triang le. Her
double life of working mother remained as difficult to arrange as thai
of a married woman finding time in
her Filofax for an affair.
Leafing back to six years ago , when
her baby was born , she remembers
how a boss put her through a series of
small tests.
At the time she thought that he was
testing her commiunent to him. Once
she had her baby, did she like the baby
more?
I suppose that sibling rivalry is a
better model for this sort of jealousy.
A friend says she never understood
her manager 's behavior until she had
two children of her own. Her eldest
daughter acted up like clockwork ,
whenever she fed the newborn. Her
department head just as regularly arrived with problems as she headed out
to the babysitter.
The same man who had been genial
when she needed time off for study or
medical care was visibly disapproving when she needed time off for

motherhood. He kept track on the
claims of his small rivals wilh the
arithmetic precision and the suspicion
of an elder child. He didn 't want to
share her attention with the (other)
children.
We have ignored the psychological
model of the work force for so long
that it's easy to exaggerate it here.
Most bosses, male and female, have a
company goal, a production quota ,
work to be done.
That is their priority. Whatever
distracts workers makes the company
less (in the word of the hour) competitive. But even that word resonates in
our personal lives.
Have you seen the television ad that
shows a swimmer thinking of work as
she does her laps? She is an
employer 's fantasy of a singleminded employee whose brain is on
the job even when her body is submerged.
Do you remember that moment in
the movie Kramer vs. Kramer when
Dustin Hoffman was desribing the
joys of fatherhood to his boss and his
boss fired him? In Baby Boom, Diane
Keaton's superior replayed that scene
when Keaton fell in love with a baby.

J

A f istf ul of in voices
by David Ferns
Staff Troublemaker
Yesterday was a bad day for me. It
started bad and got worse.
As soon as I got to work I started the
accounts receivables program on the
mainfram e computer. The first three
punch cards in the deck went through
the card reader without problems, but
the fourth caught on a comer and the
"card jam" warning light blinked on.
I cleared the jam with the standard
procedure, pulling the top off the
reader and slamming the extraction
bar until the culprit card ejected itself.
The program started once again. I
braced myself for a second malfunction when another forest fire broke
out in Payroll Department. I've told
those people time and time again
abou t that , but does anyone ever listen
to me?
I tried to put out the flames by
flapping my "dress for success" flannel shirt at them with one hand while
clearing the now-jammed card punch
with the other. Just when it looked as
if I was making headway, a band of
ninja assassins,blirst in the door.
Apparendy they had been hired to
kill me by sortie'unknown person who
was upset about some article I wrote a
few weeks ago. I was able to keep the
ninja at bay by hitting them wilh bills
of lading.
Unfortunately this meant I could no
longer attend to the fire.
Once I had gotten the card punch
going and loaded invoice documents
into the printer, I could reassess my
priorities and concentrate on the blaze
and the ninja team. Things were getting tense and I was running out of
bills of lading.
Fortunately, a rival band of ninja
assassins burst in. This second group
had been hired by someone in Accounting Department to terminate me
for a small mistake I had made in the
gross profits run for the previous cost
month.
I never did understand the problem
there. After all, what's $40,000 between friends?
The two opposing ninja groups

4 working mother 's love triangle
h y Ellen Goodma n
Editoria l Columnist
BOS TON — I have had the cartoon
in my desk for months now. A lone
businesswoman is standing before a
tabic full of suited men. One of the
men asks her this question: "If you
i-ave a baby, will you like it better
Lhssn us?"
It is a wonderful moment , comically inappropriate , ripe with possibilities. In real life , after all, the word
"like" or surely the word "love" is
kept out of the boardroom.
fn real life , no boss or panel of partners would air their anxiety about the
ali enation of a co-worker's affection.
Indeed , we are not expected to feel
as strong ly about our collegues or
even our jobs as we do about our
families.
In all the talk about work and
family conflicts , we couch our concerns in much more objective terms.
We talk about parental guilt and
workplace inflexibility, about stress
and stretch , time and tensions.
But maybe in all this, we have
missed something the cartoonist saw.
A hidden emotional component to the
work/family dilemma. A component

NEWCMJRCH .

She lost her place bcause she s gone
soft "
Are these strictly business decisions? Are those in charge carefully
calculating the cost of chaos and confusion? Or is there a j ealous soul wondering: "What about me? Don 't I
come first anymore?"
We think of the two parts of our
lives separately. We subdivide them
neatly into the personal and the professional.
We think of the conflict between
family and work as one between
people and tasks, relationships and
obligations.
But it isn't really like that. Most of
us have two personal lives: one at
home and one at the office. We have
two sets of relationships. There are
many employers, of course, who feel
comfortable with these shared loyalties and try to build bridges over the
gaps.
But it isn 't only bosses in cartoons
who worry that a working mother will
neglect them.
Under many a proper business suit
there is a little green-eyed monster
who sometimes sees families as notquite-sibling rivals.

fough t amongst themselves for the
honour of doing me in and I could
concentrate on getting that accounts
receivables batch going properly.
Stepping over the bodies I deftly
handled a "file not found" error and
decollated some four-pl y forms.
Things were starting to look up.
The computer hadn 't had a malfunction in over eight minutes and the
Accounting Ninjas seemed to have an
edge over the Article Ninjas. My
hopes were dashed when my output
queue was destroyed by an incoming
90mm high explosive shell.
The National Guard had shown up
to combat the two ninja gangs and
were moving tanks into the hallway .
The fire department had also arrived
from the sounds of the sirens, but I
couldn 't sec them through all the
smoke and tear gas.
Surprisingly, it wasn 't the explosion of the tape drive that got me
angry. I almost expected that. I lost
control when the raging batdc moved
down the hall towards the sandwich
machine. My only hope for dinner
was in deep peril.
I didn 't want to do it, but I had no
choice. I used a fighting technique
called Big Blue Kung Fu (invented
hundreds of years ago by early Chinese computer operators). I killed 14
ninja , injured 30 National Guards-

men , and bit a tank, lt was at mis point
thai I realized lhat three cups of coffee
in one day is probably too much for
me.
I had a ninja by the throat in one
hand and my burning flannel shirt in
the olhcr when the phone rang.
"Data processing," I said, "can I
help you?"
The muffled voice on the other end
explained that their desktop computer
had a disk stuck in it and could I please
come and fix it.
"I'm a bit busy rig ht now, can it
wait?"
I never heard the reply because the
phone melted. The forest fire had
worked its way into my computer
room, and besides, the printer had run
out of paper.
Well , to make a long story less long,
the fire department beat both ninja
teams and the National Guard. Somebody managed to put out the fire on
their way out. I was exhausted, but the
sandwich machine was safe. The
computer beeped loudly at me. I
checked the message queue:
AccountsReceivable program has
completed normally. You are off by
$5345.18. It will be taken out of your
paycheck. "
Everybody ready for this? Let's all
say it together:
"I hate it when that happens!"

otffe llfoitt
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815
Editor-in-Chief.
Karen Reiss
Managing Editor
Tom Smk
News Editors
Lisa Cellini, Tammy J. Kemmerer
Features Editors
Lynne Ernst, Glenn Schwab
Sports Editor
..Mike Mullen
Photography Editor
Christopher Lower
Assistant Photograph y Editor
chrissa Hosking
Production/Circulation Manager
Alexander Schillemans
Advertising Manager
„Susan Sugra
Assistant Advertising Manager
"
y ^m dark
Business Manager
Adina Saieck,"'Richard Shaplin
Assistant Business Managers
"Jen Lambert
Copy Editors
David Ferris Chris Miller
mustrator
David K. Garton
Advisor
John Maittlen-Harris
Voice Editorial Pp|fry
Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in The Voice are 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 Bloomsbure
B
University.
The Voice Invites all readers to express their opinions on the editorial pace
through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must be signed and include a phone number and address for verification, although
«"nougn names
on letters will be withheld upon request.
Submissions should be sent to The Voice office, Kehr Union Bulldlne
Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at the office In the games room The
Voice reserves the right to edit, condense or reject all submissions

Managing studies
turn international

The College of Business at Bloomsburg University has announced operation of an Institute for Comparative and International Management Studies
(ICIMS). The institute, which grew out of initiatives taken in the college's
department of marketing and management, will be coordinated by Ruhul
Amin , an associate professor in the department.
BU President Harry Ausprich said the institute "fulfills institutionalgoals
related to enhancing academic climate and student understanding of cultural
issues,and it alsoprovides a vehicle for management research in a comparative
context , both national and international."
He said the flexibility for involvement of student-faculty exi anges, empirical research projects, and technology transfer within the aegis of the institute
is "particularly advantageous."
The institute has more than 100 potential research projects, according to
JohnE. Dittrich, dean of the College of Business. "We need to do comparative
studies of management both domestically among different types of businesses
and also studies comparing U.S. management practices with thoseoverseas."
Amin noted there also is a need to study the cultural differences , values and
assumptions inherent in the U.S. technology that cause problems when technology is transferred to another country.
Charles Chapman, chairman of the department of marketing and management, and Dittrich went to China last summer to teach executive development
courses in Anshan to 80 of the city's top managers, and Chapman noted that
there already are more opportunities of that type in China. It may be possible
to match local business expertise with needs overseas, he said.
We want to pursue opportunities overseas to teach and to conduct research," he said, pointing out that one faculty member has been cultivating a
relationship in business organizations in Nancy, France, and another has
professional ties with the European Common Market countries and has
established a network of research and publications interests within several
Latin American countries.
Amin has been invited to join the National Advisory Council for South
Asian Affairs , a group that advises the U.S. State Department on matters
pertainingto South Asian affairs. "All of these contacts and opportunities have
given us a sense of intellectual excitement and opportunity," Amin said, "and
we can contribute a great deal."
Chapman said, "We know virtually nothing about some of these countries
and how they manage. They sometimes have state-of-the-art technology right
next to 19th century technology." For example, in China last summer he and
Dittrich visited more than a dozen businesses, and their cash management
system was a throwback to the 1930s.
"They used an abacus in a large department store," he said. "We just know
so little about their incentive programs, how they're promoted, how they do
inventories, and yet they are competingsuccessfully in the world market with
giants."
Dittrich noted that some countries are labor rich and capital poor, and "we
need to think in terms of those dynamics. We don 't want to talk about laborsaving technologies in thosecountries because it's like taking food out of tiieir
mouths."
The first step Amin will take in coordinating the institute is formation of an
advisory board composed of three members from the department of marketing
and managementplus the department chair, three members from other departments in the College of Business plus the dean and the university's director of
international education.
"I will then begin writing proposals for grants and contacting other universities with similar programs, although we will be unique in our approach,"
Amin said. BU will eventually establish a data base of information from
research findings that can be used by other scholars both at this university and
later by faculty from other institutions, he said.
"We expect a lot of activity in this program," Dittrich said, "including a
couple of major grants and periodical publication of research results."

Forensics wins
tourney awards

The BU Forensics Team has returned to campus with a total of 19
awards in the last two weeks, including two third-place Sweepstakes trophies.
Bloomsburg University served as
the host site for the Collegiate Forensic Association's Spring Tournament
on Marchl8-19, 1988.
Winning awards for the Huskies
wereL.Evelyn Thompson, first in Poetry Interpretation; Mary Pelak, third
in Poetry Interpretation; Thompson/
Pelak, fifth in Dramatic Duo; and
Penny Gutshall, fifth in After Dinner
Speaking. BU placed third out of the
14-school field.
March 25^27 , 1988, saw the Huskies attending the Pi Kappa Delta
Province of the Colonies Tournament
in Stroudsburg. Twelve member
schools were in attendance, with BU
placing third over-all.
Winning awards were Missi Menapace, second in Informative Speaking, fifth in Persuasive Speaking,
third in Lincoln-Douglas Debate,
third in Extemporaneous Speaking,
and fifth in Impromptu Speaking;
James Barksdale, fourth in Salesman-

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ship, sixth in Impromptu Speaking
and Extemporaneous Speaking; Phil
Hoeflick , second in Extemporaneous
Speaking, sixth in Lincoln-Douglas
Debate, and with his partner Brian
Sullivan, first in two-man debate.
Mary Pelak captured fifth place in
Poetry Interpretation and the Dramatic Duo Team of Kris Rowe and
Ted Sarnoski also placed fifth.

Lifeguards are neededfor summer sessions for the recreational
swimming program at Nelson
and Centennial. Contact Dave
Rider at Nelson Field House.
Attention all Communication
Disorders majors and interested
students: The last National Student Speech, Language Hearing
Association (NSSLHA) meeting of the year will be Tuesday,
April 12 at 9:15 p.m. in Navy
Hall Auditorium. Elections will'
be held for 1988-89 school year.
A guest speaker on laryngectomees and esophageal speech
will be there.

The Anthropology Club will
be showing the film "Nomads of
the Rain Forest" on the Woarani
Indians of Ecuador on Tuesday,
April 12. An opening presentation will be given by Dr. Tom
Aleto. The showing will be at 7
p.m. in Room 70, HSC. All are
welcome.

The University Store will be
holding a continous book sale
during April to reduce excess
inventory before the end of the
year. Over 1,000 childrens '
books, classics and a wide variety of interest-books are priced
for clearance.
• • • • • • •• •
June 1, 1988 is the deadline for
the McDonald' s Literary
Achievement Awards for Writing on the Black Experience in
America. Categories include
Fiction, Poetry and Play writing.
Winners may receive an honorarium of $2,000, a trip to New
York and a literary reception.
For more information, contact
The Voice office.

The BU administration has
determined that for the upcoming
semesters, fees must be paid for
all prior balances.
Holds will be placed on students' accounts which will prevent registration, transcripts and
diploma.
To gain a release, students
must pay all outstanding debts or
have documentation in writing
supporting financial aid.

Harriet Kocher has spent much of
her life traveling across the United
States.
Her job, as director of marketing
and sales support for Quality Intemaional, takes her to places like Arizona, California , Hawaii, Alaska,
Nevada, Wyoming and the provinces
of British Columbia and Alberta.
Despite the success of her career
and the faraway places she has seen,
Kocher continuesto come back home
and support her alma mater.
She earned her bachelor's degree in
business education from Bloomsburg
State Teacher's College in 1939 and is
now being honored with the Distinguished Service Award at the annual
Alumni Awards Dinner-Dance to be
held 6:30 p.m. Saturday, April 30, at
the Caldwell Consistory in
Bloomsburg as part of BU's Alumni
Weekend.
After graduation, Kocher began
teaching high school. She taught business education, social sciences and
distributive education at Souderton,
Glen-Nor and Milford high schools.
After moving to the Washington,
D.C., area, Kocher began her long
career in the hospitality industry.
She started as a secretary, bookkeeper and assistant manager in hotels
in the nation's capital.

She then became general manager
of various inns including the Howard
Johnson 's Motor Lodge and Quality
Inn .
Kocher began operating her own
business, People Inc. out of Springfield, Va.
People Inc. was a placement service
for hotel/motel representation in the
Washington area. While there, she
was active with that chapter of the BU
Alumni Association.
Her final career move was to the
hotel/motel franchise headquarters of
Quality International, which owns
Quality Inns, in which she has been
director of sales, manager of special
programs and director of franchise
administration in the southern United
States.
Presently, she is director of marketing and sales support for the west. She
gives on-property assistance in marketing and sales, organizes sales
blitzes, conducts sales seminars and
marketing plan workshops and advises and participates in regional programs.

"Football Fever" - an actionpacked video capturing the*
NFL's zany, crazy, and personal
world as told by successful athletes - will be shown April 12, 8
p.m. in the President's Lounge.

Creation vs. Evolution, the
New Age Movement - Do you
have a valid stand and adequate
knowledge of these issues? Attend seminarsdealing with these
topics on Wednesday,April 13 at
8 p.m. in the Coffeehouse and on
Thursday, April 14 at 8 p.m. in
the President's Lounge. All are
welcome.

The Bloomsburg Players will
be presenting "A Raisin in the
Sun" on April 15-17 in the University Forum , third floor
MCHS. Admission is free with
BU ID and Community Activities Sticker.
A Spring Extravaganza is
being sponsored by the Black
Cultural Society. Tickets are on
sale at the Information Desk. The
deadline is Wednesday, April
13. "Dress to Impress!"

University President, Dr.
Harry Ausprich will hold open
visiting hours on April 25 from
1:30 p.m. - 4 p.m. in the Gold
Room, Kehr Union Building.

BU honors successfu l student

stop at H e n ag e r i e For
the Latest Looks In
Suj imuj ear by...
Raisins and Tmins.

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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.

TheStudentlnternshipService
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 internships are either salaried or offer stipends.
Write for further information:
Student Internship Service, P.O.
Box 1053, Kings Park, NY,
11754.

Tuberculine tine tests for prospective teachers and other interested members of the university
community will be given in the
University Book Store lobby on
Monday, April 11, from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. You must return for a
reading of the test on Wednesday,
April 13 at the same time and
location. The cost will be $1.50
per person.

*** BON KERS * POLO CL0B * REUERLV HILLS ***

£

Beta Sigma Delta will begin
their annual 24-hour"Duckwalk"
for leukemia at the basketball
courts on Friday at midnight.
Beta Sigma Delta brothers will
be circulating pledge sheets, and
encourage people to participate.
• •o o o *« « «
Positions are now open at the
Information Center, KUB, for receptionist this summer.
Pick up applications at the Information Desk and submit them
by April 15, or contact Mrs.
Pursel at 389-3900.

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Kocher has been awarded by the
American Hotel/Motel Association to
be a certified Hotel Administrator
(CHA).
This is presented to experienced
and knowledgable hotel personnel
with at least 10 years experience and a
passing score on a specially designed
examination to cover all phases of
hotel administration.

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. A Harriet Kocher Award was
namedafter her when she received the
first special award from the International Operators Council of die Quality International.
This award is presented to a person
who has made an outstanding contribution to the licensees of the organization.

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All young men have one responsibility in common. They
have to register with Selective Service within 30 days of their
18th birthday. It 's quick. It 's easy. And it 's the law.

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The Law Enforcement office announces that
there will be stricter enforcement of the
"No Parking" area between Lycoming and the
bookstore. Even though the street is one-way
north, any vehicles parking in that area, even
for a short period of time, interfere with tractor
trailers making deliveries to the Bookstore and
Union.

For one week only,order and save on the gold ring of your choice. For complete
details, see your Jostens representative.

JOSTENS
.

Dat e

A M E R I C A '

Apr11 18th-22nd

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Place University Store

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C O L L E G E

Time 10-4

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b eature s

Jamboree offe rs
outdoor festi val

One of the first signs of Springbefore geese are spotted or the first
robin appears- is the Bloomsburg 's
Renaissance Jamboree Committee
meeting in local restaurants to plan
the yearly street festival
"Bloomsburg University and the
town of Bloomsburg will sponsor the
11th annual Renaissance Jamboree
on Saturday, April 30 from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m.," said Bcttic McDowell ,
Bloomsburg Area Chamber of Commerce Program Director. McDow*cll
and Jimmy Gill ilan d of The
Bloomsburg University Program
Board co-chair the p lanni.ig committee.
Main Street, from Jefferson to Iron
Street, will be closed to traffic on the
30th. More lhan 220 arts and crafts
booths will be set up. Sandy Prosscr

and Lillie DeFrain, Arts and Crafts
coordinators, have been receiving
dozens of booth reg istrations daily.
Non-profit organizations sponsor
food booths, information stands and
games. Margie Hunsinger, chair of
the food section, noted that any nonprofit group can obtain registration
information by calling the Chamber
of Commerce office at (717) 7842522.
Local and regional entertainers
will perform on three stages and in
Market Square.
"We're looking for more local talent, and anyone who wants to perform should call me at 389^344 ,"
said Gilliland.
Funds raised throug h Renaissance
Jamboree support local organizations
and activities.

by Mike Moyer
StaffWriter
Spring has finall y arrived! It 's lime
for warm weather, budding plants ,
and unfortunate ly allerg ies. For most
allergy sufferers, spring is the worst
time of the year for itch y eyes, runny
noses, and scratch y throats. Many
allergy and non-allergy sufferers may
wonder what causes these symptoms
and why they are worse at certain
times of the year.
More than 13 million Americans
suffer from allergies. Allergy symptoms occur when your body mistakenly identifies certain things as dangerous to you and releases defensive
chemical substances from certain
cells. The release of these substances
causes the dilation of blood vessels,
increased secretion of fluids , swelling of tissues, and sneezing. Medical
research has not confirmed wh y some
people arc or are not allergic, but the
likelihood of developing allergies is
probably inherited.
Spring is a bad time for allergies
because most allergy sufferers are
allergic to tree and plant pollens that
flourish in the spring. Late spring and
early summer is the time for grass to
grow. Half of all allergy suffers are
sensitive to grass.
The time of year when a person
suffers from allergies is called "hay
fever" season. The medical term for
hay fever is allergic rhintitis. Most
people develop allerg ic rhintitis before age 30. But some persons suffer
from chronic symptoms all year
around caused by dust, animal fur,
molds, and types of food. This is
called perennial allerg ic rhintitis.
The best wav to control allergic

reaction is to avoid the substance you
are allergic to. Other ways of relieving allergy symptoms is by seasonal
traveling, using air conditioners and
air puri fying devices, and taking
medication. But the most effective
way to combat allergies is th rough
desensilization (allergy shots).
Allergy shots contain small
amounts of the substance that you are
allergic to. The dosage is gradually
increased in each injection until the
body can tolerate larger doses without a reaction. How often allergy
shots are needed varies from person
to person.
For many allergic individuals, a
reaction is just a pesky annoyance for
a few weeks of the year, but for others
it can be much more serious. If you
suffer from allergies, or think you do,
here are a few tips to remember:
-Consult your doctor on what to do
about your allergies
-If you can , steer clear from substances thai cause your reactions
-Use allergy relieving drugs sparingly, always with your doctor 's
advice.
-If your doctor thinks injections
will help, start well before the hay
fever season. Don 't skip shots.
Bloomsburg students may suffer
from more adverse reaction to their
allergies because the town is located
in the Susquehanna River valley. The
close location of the river increases
the humidity causing pollen to become trapped in the tiny water droplets in the atmosphere.
If you suffer from allergies, see a
doctor. Remember two things: Allergies are controllable , and spring lasts
onlv three months.

Spring means a
return of allergies

Movathon
benefits
athletes

by Lynne Ernst
Features Editor
Althoug h millions of dollars were
spent getting the Winter Olympics at
Calgary off the ground, money is still
needed for another Olympics being
held in 1988 - Special Olympics.
Movathon , a fundraiser for the
Bloomsburg University Special
Olymp ics program, will be held on
April 17 at 10 a.m. The Movathon
requires participants to obtain sponsors and complete as much of the
designated route as possible. The
route, which begins at Bloomsburg's
town park is approximately 20 miles.
Special Olymp ics meets 14 times a
Bassist and drummer of The Klamin ' Caucasians entertain a union crowd last ni ght at a sound stage performance
year. Approximately 75 individuals
sponsored by the Kehr Uiiion Program Board.
,,,,„,„ G{rry Moon
come to partici pate in a wide variety
of games and activities on Saturday
mornings in Centennial Gym.
"Aside from being a great way for
participants to socialize, Special
by Mike Moyer
equally
All of the women are either di- throw-up cherry pits) and an
Olymp ics also allows Bloomsburg
StaffWrite r
's
the
film
,
and
their
unanivorced or widowed
confusing final scene,
University students to work with
Th£ Witches of Eastw ick is Jack mous wish is to find the perfect man major problem is that it can not decide developmental^ disabled people.
Nicholson 's film all the way. With his who can fulfill their every dream and whether to be a comedy or a horror
The program , which is financially
devilish grin and arching eyebrows, desire. That "perfect" man mysteri- tale.
independent , needs funding to transhe was born to play the role of the ousl y arrives in town one day. His
The first half is a quirky comedy port parti cipants to the university
demon in this film. He gels excellent name is Darryl VanHorne, and he with the relationship of all four taking from outside the community, pay for
supporting work from Cher, Michelle eventually succeeds in seducing the center stage. The second half be- materials used during the sessions,
Pfeiffer , and Susan Sarandon. All three women. Little do they realize comes an offbeat horror tale. The and hold activities throughout the
three are talented actresses, but , like that he is really a demon they con- intended funny moments are never year.
the witches of the title, Nicholson jured up when they wished for a man. truly hilarious, and the horror scenes
Some of the activities during the
casts a spell and it is impossible to
Eventual ly the women discover are awkwardly intrusive to the light 1987-88 year included a Halloween
look away.when he is on screen. He's that the whole town knows of their comedy in the film.
party, a skating party held at
definitely the best acior in movies affair with VanHorne, and they deBut the film docs succeed in deliv- Skatetown and a Christmas party. At
today.
cide to stop seeing him. Well , they ering its theme of man 's inhumanity the Christmas party, each Special
The film 's setting is Eastwick, learn the hard way that one should towards women, and of course, it Olympic participant received a gift
New York , a small, quaint town re- never cross a demon. In an exciting does have Nicholson to hold every- and enjoyed a visit from Santa.
sembling Salem, Massachussettes. and funny conclusion, a battle is thing together.
Lawrence Mack, advisor to the
And like Salem of the 1600s, there are foug ht and Van Home is sent back to
He supplies most of the humor as Special Olymp ics program at BU,
witches in Eastwick of the 1980s in wherever he came from.
the foul-mouthed self-proclaimed rode his bike 20 miles during last
the form of Cher , Pfeiffer , and SaranBesides an unnecessary and com- "horny little devil." All four princi- years Movathon , which was held in
don. They're the witches of East- plicated subplot involving a woman pal actors work well together and 33 degree weather. With the help of
wick, and they have the ability to who suspects that Van Home is the manage to serve up a witches' brew of the BU faculty sponsoring him , Mack
make their wishes come true.
devil (she doesn 't do much except fun .
See OLYMPICS nageS

Nicholson saves 'Eastwick'

Booin ahas history in concert halls
By Steve Metcalf

L.A.Times-Washington Post Service

As he sat in the balcony at the
Bushncl l Memorial here listening to
the Cleveland Orchestra a few weeks
ago, David Simpson had this question. He was aware that he was not
enjoying Philip Glass 's piece, "The
Light," which the orchestra was playing. In fact, the composition , written
in Glass ' s patented repetitive ,
needle-stuck-in-the-groove sty le,
gradually became deeply irritating to
Simpson , and ... well, let 's let him
take it from there:
"After 10 or 15 minutes, it was
getting painful ," says Simpson , an
amiable, precise-speaking, 55-yearold French teacher. "Then I thought ,
look, this is excruciating. I can 't kike
this. This deserves a reaction."
When the 23-minute piece ended ,
and tepid applause broke out around
him , Simpson made his move. He sat

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forward and booed. His boos, there
were three altogether, were vigorous,
sustained and heartfelt. Perhaps owing to Simpson's voice training as a
younger man , the boos carried nicely
through the hall , easily reaching the
ears of conductor Christoph von
Dohnanyi, music director of ihe
Cleveland, down on the stage. The
maestro smiled gamely, took his
bows and strode off.
Meanwhile, the scene up in the balcony remained tense. As the house
lights came up, it was intermission, a
Bushnell usher, fingering his walkietalkie, approached Simpson and
warned him that the security might
have to be summoned if there were
further outbursts. Nearby patrons, on
their way to the lobby, fixed Simpson
with withering stares, and one of
them had unpleasant words for the
miscreant.
Despite his sadden negative celebrity, Simpson elected to remain for
the rest of the concert and made it
home unmarked.
But the incident , brief as it was,
lived on. Judith Allen , the Bushnell's
executive director, was flooded with
letters from people who had witnessed the troubling episode and who
wanted to make their consternation
known. "I must have gotten 30 or 40
of them. Most of the writers, incidentally, thought the piece was trash, but
they were mostly upset by the booing."
Is booing at classical concerts the
end of civilization as we have known
it?
"Boo" as a term of disapproval is
thoug ht to have entered the language
in the early 1800s as an imitation of
the lowing of cattle. Prior to this, the
hiss was the heavy favorite of disgruntled audiences, as it still is in
many parts of the world.
Booing has long been a cherished
device at sporting events. Significantly, many modern sports fans
consider the boo to be superannuated,
too mild for the desired, maximally
stinging effect. Today, an unpopular
decision by an umpire is as likely to
touch off unabashed rhythmic chanting of a time-honored, two-syllable
obscenity (also pertaining to cattle,as
it happens) as it is to elicit a mere boo.
Indeed, modern sports-fan declamations are almost totally uninhibited and no longer necessarily even
connected to events on the field. At
several stadiums, a new tradition has
taken hold among beery bleacher
patrons in which two opposing sec-

tions shriek "Tastes Great!" "Less
Filling!" back and forth at each other
in joyful , meaningless imitation of
the TV beer commercial. No doubt
about it, commentators tell us, sports
crowds are getting louder, more belligerent.
But what has this kind of behavior
got to do with the genteel, civilized
concert hall?
Everything.
It is in the early 1800s, with the fall
of music-for-aristocracy-only and
the rise of public concerts open to
anybody with the price of a ticket,that
you find the first truly juicy references to your tough music crowds.
The French composer Berlioz (18031869) was one of the earliest victims.
He took a real beating at the premieres of many of his works, especially his opera "Les Troyens,"which
was laughed at in places. Not the kind
of reaction that Hector, who had
worked on the piece for many years,
had been hoping for.
Meanwhile, in Rome, audience
members who suspected plagiarism
in a new piece screamed out the name
of the. supposedly purloined composer during the performance, a
crude but imaginative precursor to
"Name That Tune." In more sedate
London , it became the custom to
chuck oranges at performers.
The rough stuff was not confined
to young, unproven composers. Such
established figures as Tchaikovsky
and Puccini were driven to deep depression by hostile opening-night
rowdies. And , of course, in the early
20th century, things really turned
ugly. Every music student is solemnly told about the riot at the 1913
Paris premiere of Stravinsky's "Rite
of Spring."
If anything, then, music audiences
have become progressively more
docile and polite in the past few generations. The question is: Is that good
for music?
It might be comforting (then again it
might not) for some of the aggrieved
Bushnell correspondents to know
that Hartford was not the only place at
which Glass's work was accorded the
raspberry.
"I can speak personally about the
premiere performance last October
here at Severance Hall (in Clevelend)," says Charles Owens of the
Cleveland Orchestra's marketing
staff. "There was booing. Very, very
loud booing. My sense is that it came
from one person, but a person with an
incredibly far-reaching voice."

And at the Carnegie Hall performance in New York in February,
shortly after the Hartford concert,
Owens reports, there were "many
boos, really quite a din." According
to Owens, and to several of the reviews of that concert, the booers and
the applauders fought each other
vigorously for dominance, in something of a spontaneous recapitulation
of the "Tastes Great-Less Filling"
debate.
Owens says he is certain
that none of the Cleveland Orchestra
members was personally insulted by
the boos. "They knew that the booing
was not for them but for the piece."
Indeed, many of the players may
have been secretly pleased by the
boos; reportedly the majority of them
had less than warm feelings about
"The Light."
But here is the important thing:
Owens, speaking for the orchestra,
says the boos were considered to have
been a "healthy expression."
And
Judith Allen says she was relieved to
learn , as she made her way uncertainly to the Green Room after the
Bushnell performance , that
Dohnanyi himself took a similarly
expansive view.
Since that night, Allen has developed a firm , unequivocal posture on
the booing issue generall y. "I'm saying to the letter-writers that, yes, it
can be upsetting for some, but people "
have the right to express themselves."
To underscore her position, Allen
recently gathered the hall's ushering
staff, more than 40 people, and gave
them the new policy statement (In the
absence of any precipitating incident,
there had been no prior policy). "I
told them if someone wants to express themselves, after the piece is
over, of course, then there's nothing
to do but to let it happen. And if a
fistfi ghtbreaksout, then v/e'll call the
police."
Simpson foresees little possibility
that his spontaneous reactionof a few
weeks ago will do anything to alter
the fundamental , automatic-applause
code of the concert hall. He also
doubts that the booing will impinge
much on the consciousness of a wellpaid, media-supportedfiguresuch as
Glass.
"Yes, I have wondered that. I don't
know whether he has the intelligence
to realize how dull he is. Theproblem
with Mr. Glass's music .lhowrealize,
is not that it's too modenvbut that it's
not modern enough." 1
Plus, Simpson might have added,
it is less filling.

Job outlooks vary

By Richard Bullaro
Staff Writer
Have you ever sat down and really
thought about wh y you are in college? If you have , your answer was
probabl y that you want a good job.
Many students go through four years
of college without ever finding out
what opportunities lie ahead for them
in their career choice.
The Occupational Outlook
Handbook , prepared by the U.S.
Department of Labor, is a listing of
almost every occupation and its projected outiook . This resource, found
in most libraries, can give students
the proper information to prepare
themselves for the future.
Bloom sburg University 's Planning, Institutional Research and Information Management Office, directed by Dr . Hugh McFaddcn , supplies a listing of the majors at
Bloomsburg University and the
number of students enrolled in each
major.
This listing can be used to determine the most popular majors at
Bloomsburg and gives an idea about
which fields Bloomsburg students
are planning to enter.
The curriculum and foundations
of elementary education major has
the largest number of enrolled students, approxiamately 1,103 at
Bloomsburg.
The job outlook for elementary
and secondary teachers is expected to
improve in the next decade. It is said
that the employment rate in this field
is expected to grow faster than the
average for all occupations.
According to the handbook, the
positions available in the education
field will outnumber qualified applicants. There were 2,400,000 elementary and secondary education teachers employed in the mid-1980s.

About 85 percent of these teachers
taught in public schools, the others in
private or parochial schools.
The average income of a teacher in
the mid-1980s was $16,000 to
$18,000. This figure may vary from
one state to another , but it seems that
Mid-Atlanlic and far western states
pay the highest salaries. There are
some opportunities for advancement
in ihis field. After obtaining classroom experience, teachers may move
lo supervisory, administrative or
specialized positions, but usually
these positions require a master's
degree.
Marketing and management majors at Bloomsburg University numbered more than 650 in the fall of
1987. Enrolled in the second most
popular major at Bloomsburg , graduates in marketing and management
can go into variety of positions in
business.
Managers and administrators are
an essential part of any organization
Administrators neld about 8.8 million jobs in the mid-1980s, many of
which were in large industrial corporauons.
The job outlook for administrators
is expected to improve in the next few
years. The increase in employment is
hoped to surpass the average for all
occupations in the next decade.
Managers and administrators tend
to have a higher income level than
those in other occupations. The average earnings were $27,400, more
than $10,000 above average income
levels of other professionals.
Depending upon one's performance, the opportunities for advancementin this field aremany . However,
the more technical professions , such
as engineering or complex manufacturing, usually require a master's
degree.

Marketing graduates can go into
any number of fields; including real
estate, insurance and sales. The average salary for a manufacturing sales
worker was about $18,000 a year,
depending upon die size of the corporation. Advancement to supervisory
positions is possible after first hand
experience in the field.
The third most popular major at
Bloomsburg University is the accounting major , with more than 500.
students enrolled. Accountants are
an essential asset to any organization .
The four major fi elds of accounting
arc public , management , govern ment , and internal auditing.
Because of the necessity for
accurate financial records in any
organization, the job prospects for
accountants is expected to surpass the
average for all occupation in the
1990s. Certified Public Accountants
(CPA s) are said to have a wider
range of opportunities than other
accountants.
The average salary of an accountant in the mid-1980s ranged from
$18,000 to $27,000, depending upon
the nature and size of the organization. In public accounting, accountants can move from auditing for several small clients to joining a partnership or starting their own public accounting office.
Beginning management accountants usually start as ledger accountants, and depending upon their skills ,
can move on to positions in management. Many corporate leaders today
have backgrounds in accounting.
This is just a sample of the information available about the outlook of
jobs in the coming decade. So the
next time you wonder what you are
going to do after graduation , do some
research and prepare yourself for the
future.

""as'wMmiMYiMmOTaiMaaEB^^
The Flamin ' Caucasians performed for a large audience last night in Kehr Union. They played songs from the sixties,
seventies and eighties.
Photo by Gerry Moore

¦]

Act to guarantee clean air
The effects of air pollution on the human respiratory
system have not been completely revealed , but it is clear
that both short-term exposure to high levels of air pollution and long-term exposure to lower levels may produce
adverse health effects. Breathing may become more difficult because of constriction of respiratory airways; susceptibility to respiratory infections may increase, through
interference with the body 's defense mechanisms; and
chronic lung diseases may develop or worsen as a result.
The goal of the Clean Air Act is to guarantee the
American peopletheir right to clean and healthful air. The
American Lung Association is working to protect the
respiratory health of the American people by the prevention and control of lung disease.
Since air pollution can be injurious to the lungs, the
aims of the Clean Air Act and the American Lung Association coincide.
The Clean Air Act is now under review and is to be
rcauihorized by Congress. The American Lung Association has undertaken its own review and has made its recommendations to protect and strengthen the Act's effectiveness.
The Clean Air Act requires that the U.S. Environmental
Proicction Agency (EPA) determine which substances in
the air endanger public health and welfare. For each of
these pollutants EPA must set individual National Ambient Air Quality Standards which limit their presence in the
outdoor air. Currendy, standards have been setfor particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, carbon
monoxide, ozone and lead.
Basic to the Act is the achievement and maintenance of
these standards. The primary standards are designed specifically to protect health-the health of all , including
children , the chronically ill, and the elderly-and are set so
as to provide an adequate margin of safety in the face of
scientific uncertainties.
Millions of Americans still live in areas with air quality
in the "unhealthful" range.
Significant progress has been made in meetinghealthbased standard s, but substantial reductions in air pollution

are still necessary to meet these standards in some regions
of the nation.
Motor vehicles are a principal reason for the failure of
many urban areas to meet health-based air quality standards.
With the passage of the 1970 Clean Air Act, all new
gasoline-powered automobiles were required to meet
emission standards set by the Act. Though the United
States has been a world leader in setting ambitious goals
for controlling auto pollution , any slippage in these goals
could effect the pulic heallh.
To accomplish this, specific deadlines for meeting air
quality standards need to be maintained; provisions in the
Act which allow for economic growth but reduce rather
than increase pollution should be kept; and meaningful
economic penalties are needed to encourage states and localities to move ahead in achieving healthful air quality.
In addition to requiring air quality standards for certain
pollutants , the'Clean Air Act authorizes EPA to set emission limits on hazardous air pollutants-those for which
there are not ambient air quality standards but which can
cause death or serious illness.
Of the hundreds of hazardous substances emitted into
the air, EPA has so far issued standards for only a small
number. The American Lung Association believes the
Clean Air Act should set deadlines to speed EPA' s development of emission limits and standards for these potentially dangerous air pollutants.
The use of the state-of-the-art emission controls for
hazardous pollutants can be accomplished at reasonable
cost. In some cases, fully protecting public health will be
possible immediately by substituting a safe chemical for
the hazardous one, or by totally enclosing polluting processes. Where these options are not feasible, the best
control technology now available should be required.
Congress should pursue the goal of protecting public
health with an ample margin of safety from these pollutants while recognizing that protecting the public's heallh
does not necessarily require eliminating all risks regardless of cost.

Tape making a quality choice

An early spring day arrived as these students enjoyed themselves last week playing hackcysack outside Kehr Union.
Photo by ChrisLower

Spring returns at last

by Tom Spock
for The Voice
The days are getting longer and
warmer. Buds on the trees are starting
to get fat. Green pigment is coloring
the dull, brown grass. Signs of spring
are everywhere in the country, as well
as in the cities.
After spending the past few months
inside my house trying to keep warm
by means of kerosene and wood heat,
I can finally come out to enjoy the
warm weather.
Probably one of the first signs I
noticed was the northward migration
of the Canadian geese. The geese
flew through the area more than a
month ago, and by now are well on
the way to their summer homes in
Canada.
Other birds arrived after the geese
began migrating and are abundant in
many areas. Huge flocks of blackbirds congregate in the old corn fields
scrounging around for food. Robins
scan the lawns for worms and insects.
Even the birds that spent the winter in
the area seem to be more active now.
I think this is because the sun is rising
earlier and setting later. This warm
sign of spring makes waking up a lot
easier for me.
With the sun shining hotter and
longer, flowers start to grow. Crocuses are usually first, followed by
tulips and daffodils. In a few weeks
they 'll be in full bloom.
Along with all these signs of spring
come the sounds. The geese are always easy to pick out because of their
tell-tale honking. The hordes of
blackbirds cackle annoyingly, while

the robins chirp quiedy and balde for
territory. Sparrows, cardinals, and
blue jays, birds that wintered here,
seem to chatter more with warmer
temperatures.
Birds aren't the only ones making
more noise. Warmer weather enables
people to start lawn and garden work.
Gardners and farmers use tractors to
till the soil. Weed-eaters, chainsaws,
and hedge trimmers also signal the
start of spring in the country. It's time
to rake any remaining leaves from the
fall , and bum them along with fallen
branches and hedge clippings.
At the end of the day when the sun
starts setting and a chill fills the air,
silence returns. The various machinery is shut down, birds fly back to

their nests, and the smell of burning
brush is in the air.
There is also the smell of spring - that fragrance in the air that makes
everything seem fresh and new. This
"spring smell", sometimes even noticeable in the city, is a sure sign of
upcoming warm weather.
Yesterday I was reminded of another smell associated with spring,
though I think it is only found in the
country. Manure. A farmer down the
road was preparing some of his fields
for plowing and the manure was used
for fertilizer.
This pungent odor is one of the
setbacks of life in a rural area, but it
beats the smell of the kerosene heater
I had to use during the winter monihs.

Movathon promotes
Special Olympics

from page 4
raised $600 dollars for the Special Olympics program , and approximately
$900 dollars was raised overall. Mack said, "The Movathon used to be a very
big thing. Our original van was bought with the money we raised. However,
in the past few years, participation in the Movathon has been lacking."
Dawn Wodarczyk, a junior special education major remarked,"People
exercise for enjoyment. This is just a way to help an important cause and have
a good time too.
Currently, the Special Olympics volunteers and participants are preparing
for a meet held at Bucknell on April 23. Here, the athletes will match their
capabilities against athletes from other areas. "In the past," said Mack, "we've
had some very good athletes. In general, this gives them a more positive self
image."
Volunteers helping at the Bucknell meet, act as "buggers", giving young
athletes a hug after they have completed their events.
Anyone is invited to participate in the Movathon. Sign-up sheets are
available in the Special Education Office in Navy Hall.

by Dave Carton
Staff Writer
Spring has officiall y arrived in
Bloomsburg, and so has the time to
break out the boom box and cassettes.
There's nothing quite like hanging
out and blasting tunes.
It's a great way to relax, plus you
can inflict your musical tastes on
everyone within earshot. You won 't,
however, be impressing too many
people with a mix tape that sounds
like it went through the wash with
your sweats. Here's a quick primer on
how to make a great tape.
First, buy a cassette that's worth
your money. Recording on storebrand tapes is like doing an oil painting on toilet paper; it may work, but it
won 't turn many heads. Stick with
name brands like TDK, Maxell, Sony
or Denon. It may cost you a bit more,
but it's worth the expense.
Once you 've decided on a brand ,
you'll have to choose a bias. Bias
determines how well your tape will
hold the sound you record on it.
If you want to record only spoken
word or high-energy rock music, then
normal bias (Type I) will suffice.
If you're like me and a little picky
with the sound of your tapes, you may
want high bias (Type II) cassettes.
High bias, or Cr02, tape has less
back ground hiss and gives a wider
range of frequency response. However, a high bias tape will also cost a
bit more.
Another option is to purchase a
metal bias (Type IV) cassette. Of the
three types, metal tapes have unparalleled sound reproduction capability,
but they're quite expensive, especially on a college-student budget.
Metal tapes are for audiophiles with
elaborate stereos and stringent recording requirements.
For me, metal tapes are a class
above that of my stereo, so I stick to
high bias.

Now that you 've selected a cassette, you 're ready to make your tape.
To get the most out of your time, it's
essential to start with a well-maintained stereo system. If you 're recording from records, make sure that
the stylus is clean and the records are
dust-free.
The tape recorder that you're using
should also be clean, especially if
you 're dubbing tapc-to-tape: pinch
rollers clean, and heads cleaned and
demagnetized. Preventative maintenance goes a long way!
Pop your cassette into the tapedeck
(record side if dubbing) and close the
door. Set the equalization (EQ) for
the type of tape you 're using.
Most tape decks have settings for
Type I and Type II, and some have
settings for Type IV. Choose whether
or not you want noise reduction (NR).
Use what suits your own needs.
Personally, I find that Dolby NR
deadens the sound of recordings, so I
avoid it.

With the EQ and NR set, the next
step is to set the recording levels. The
best way to get an accurate setting is
to play the loudest part of a song that
you're putting on your tape. Put the
tape deck into record mode but with
pause on also. Increase the recording
levels until the loudest parts, or
peaks, are at about +3 decibels (dB)
on the meter.
If you want a tape with a highenergy sound, set the record ing levels
higher (+4 dB to +6 dB). Be careful ,
though.
If you set them too high the tape
will come out muddy and distorted. In
addition , if your source material has
different sound levels, you may have
to reset the recording levels for each
song.
With some minor preparation and a
minimum of effort, you should soon
have a well-recorded tape.
Be it for parties, exercise, or just
bumming in the sun , you 'll be boasting the best tape around.

I f V o u 111 a n-1 to be
in t h e "I N C R O U J D "
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BLOOm COUnTL J

NEED TYPING DONE? Experienced typist will type term papers,
resumes, thesis, etc. Reasonable
rate. Call Pat at 784-4437
Physician and wife desperately,
seek to adopt while infant. We will
provide a very loving, happy and
secure home. Please help us.
Absolutely confidential. Call
collect. (215) 469-9770.

JUNIORS , SENIORS , GRADS 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 unforgelable
experience awaits you. Interested
applicants send recent resume and
tft278 to Choose from —all subjects )
photo to: PO Box 155, Ocean City,
Older Catalog Today wilh Visa/MC or cot?,
NJ 08226. Reasonably priced room
800-351-0222
WSmm
1 ¦
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information call (609)399-2155
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN . Los Angeles. 0A 90025
i - ' •¦ Custom research also available—all levels
M-F
9 A.M.-3 P.M,__
—*- -i i i- i
' *
L_
'
HOMES FOR SALE: Government BABYSITTER (Live-In) - Ocean
City, NJ - BABYSITTER needed
Homes from $1.00. "U Repair".
for summer months in Ocean City,
Also tax delinquent property. Call
805-644-9533 Ext. 1180 for info.
NJ area for three (3) children.
Must adore children. $200.00
Local professional desires to have
weekly (50) hours; plus room and
opportunity to help you by typing
board, car if needed.Juniors or
those term papers. Call Sara at
seniors preferred. Non-smoker.
389-1377.
Send recent resume and photo to:
1 or 2 females needed for a College
P.O. Box 155, Ocean City, NJ
Hill apartment for Fall '88/Spring
08226.
'89. Call Doric, Kerry, or April at
784-9236.
It's not too late! Whether you need
Tandy 1000 computer FOR SALE!! building up or would like to learn
Includes everything! Only 6 months to build up others more effectively,
old - barely used. $500.00 or best
we have a study for you . "Building
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up One Another" at First Church of
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Christ, 381 West Street, 9:00 a.m.
Loving couple with adopted 2 yr.
during the Sunday School hour.
old son wishes to adopt infant.
Call 389-1377 if interested.
Legal, confidential and expenses
Hawaii - 9 days - Local visits and
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7456. JVC and Teac. VCR's too!
July
13. Call 784-0412 for more
200 COUNSELORS and Instrucinformation.
tors needed! Private, coed summer
To the AST pledges: esp. Michele camp in Pocono Mountains,
I love you guys. Hang in there, it's
Northeastern PA. Lohikan, P.O.
worth it! - Love, Betsy
Box 234BM, Kenilworlh , NJ
07033 (201)276-0565.
Sisters of Theta Tau - You guys
Our Hearts are lull , but our Arms
have a lot to be proud of - keep up
are empty, Won't you help us fill
the great work! Thank you for the
them. Loving successful couple
last two years of my life - I'll miss
with nice home unable to have a
you terribly when I'm gone. Love,
child of their own wishes to adopt
Mazzenga
a Newborn. Let us help you
Steve - Don't forget to mark the
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legal and confidential, please call
Hilary or Joel collect anytime at
To the cute little blonde Gamma
1-215-742-7002.
brother - I've got my eye on you Anonymous in Elwell Hall

THE FAR SIDE

By GARY LARSON

—————~*~

THE FAR SIDE

By GARY LARSON
—^—""""^^^^^^
*

ESSAYS & REPORTS

(CRUISE SHIPS
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Diversified Computer Services Resumes, term papers, all kinds of
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Laser Printer. Free pick-up and
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Financially secure couple with 2 yr.
old adopted daughter wishes to
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expenses paid. We're very easy to
talk to. Call collect anytime (201) 455-0497.

"Well,she's at it again ..
that no-good neslwrecker."

"For God's sake, hurry, driver! . She's
dropping babies all over the place!"

THE FAR SIDE

By GARY LARSON

THE FAR SIDE

By GARY LARSON

Mankind arrives on Earth.

"Well, there goes my appetite."

collegiate crossword
THE FAR SIDE

By GARY LARSON

Hey-Hey Paula! Let's leave Hess'
and go 4-wheeling. We can stop
and get a joint. Let's leave Spooge
drive!
Billy C - Wanna' share some white
chocolate? It's better than... well,
maybe not. But I still think it's
WONDERFUL! Love, AKL
Get involved NOW!Become more
in tune with Bloomsburg University
by joining Circle K, the college
equivalent to Key Club. For more
information call Lisa at 2110 or
come to our next meeting Wed.
April 13, 9:00p.m. in the KUB
Green Room. Be there!!

I VOICE
CLASSIFIEDS
I wish to place a classified
ad under the heading:
-Announcements
- For Sale
-Personal
-Wanted
-Other
for _ words.
I enclose $
Five cents per word.

_ ..
Box^ 0
97
Send to: ~
KUB or drop in
the Voice mail
slot, in Union
before 12p.m.
on Wed. for
Monday's paper
or Monday for
Thursday's paper.
All classifieds
MUST be prepaid.

[

© Edward Julius
45
47
1
trial (1925) 48
7 Gem resembling a
50
beetle
51
13 Writer of "Break- 52
fast at Tiffa ny 's " 53
14 Mr. Mann
15 Certain teeth
54
16 Paints
18 Actor Warner
55
19 "My Gal
"
58
21 The Beehive State 60
22
majesty
61
23 Ziegfeld workers
62
25 Surfeit
63
26 Explosive
27 Baby 's footwear
29 A Kennedy
30 Ocean animal
(2 wds.)
1
32 Dual-purpose
2
couches
3
34 Recede
4
35 African antelope
5
36 Worked at the
6
circus
7
40 Insect larvae
8
44 George 's lyricist
9
ACROSS

Collegiate CW8723

Hermit
Common prefix
Actress Theda
Laminated rock
Statisti cs measure
Cabell or Slaug hter
Lawn ,
Illinois
"West Side Story "
character
Smaller
Repeatin g
Odd
Hake inval id
Awards
Ground up by
rubbing

DOWN

Type of triang le
Card game
Express an opini on
"
"On Golden
Summer in Soissons
Class meeti ng
Bombarded
Prisoner
Coach Parseghia n

10 Plant branch
11 Recording-tape
material
12 Tardy
15 NFL team
17 Loses hair
20 School subject
23 Georgia product
24 Entrance to the
ocean (2 wds.)
27 Best-selling book
28 Irish dramatist
31 Pants part
33 Software error
36 Agreed
37 Element #92
38 French river
39 Works with cattle
Farm job
1
° Do hospital work
41
42 Prepared for boxing
43 French legislature
46 Pasture sound
49 Hade inquiry
51 French revolutionist
54 Prefix for byte
56 Shrub genus
57 Electric
59 Prefix: three

_
|
^


-4-&I

Huskies begin spring drills

The first two seasons under head
coach Pete Adrian saw a lot of
changes both offensively and defensively for the Bloomsburg University
football team.
But Adrian and his staff are happy
witht the way the club has adapted and
plan few changes during the squad's
annual spring drills which opened
Thursday, April 7.
"We have a good amount of experience on bodi sides of the football , so
the kids know the system," said
Adrian, who has led the Huskies lo
records of 7-2-1 and 8-3.
"We want to do some more, especially defensively, but basicall y what
we have in place will rcmain.There is
not much question about the talent
that's out there, it's a matter of who
will emerge as the people we can depend on."
Among the 88 performers expected
to report for the workouts are 37
lettermen including 15 starters.
Seven of the returning starters are
on the offense, while the remaining
eight veterans will be on the defense.
The bi ggest voids for the staff to fill
will be at quarterback, where the
school's all-time leading passer Jay
DeDea has graduated, and tailback ,
which was manned by Tom Martin ,
who finished as Bloomsburg's second
all-time leading rusher.
DeDea threw for 7,026 yards and 56
touchdowns, while Martin gained
2,709 yards during their careers.
Senior Paul Venesky, DeDea's
understudy for the past three seasons,
appears ready to step into the starling
role.
He, along with sophomore Dave
Robson, give the Huskies two talented players at the position.
Some adaptations could be incorporated into the offense to utilize the
speed and athletic abilities of both
quarterbacks.
Leonard Bluitt, another senior,
leads a group of experienced backs
after gaining the second most yards of
the Huskies' backs a year ago.
Fourth year performer Mike Medina and junior Eric Speece could be in
the other slot in the backfield.
A trio of ballcarriers, including
sophomores Mike Sohn , who was the
team's leading kickoff returner in
1987, and Scott Walton, as well as
junior John Cannon, should all see a
lot of action in the spring drills and
could earn themselves valuable playing time in the upcoming season's
plans.

strong safety Ron Sahm , both seniors,
as well as junior cornerback Tom
Heavy won't be around for the drills,
but veterans Dan Shutt and Delmas
Woods will add the needed experience to an otherwise young group.
"There should be a lot of good
battles for position going into the fall ,
and even with the people we're missing, it is going to be a worthwhile
period for us ," said Adrian.
"We are going to spend more time
on our kicking game, which is somewhat unusual, but we expect to make
some strides in the right direction in
many aspects."
The Huskies have 18 sessions
planned including two scrimmages
prior to the "Maroon and Gold" game
at noon on April 30 in Redman Stadium.
The unit will scrimmage at 10 a.m.
on April 16 and will travel to WilkesBarre again this spring for a 40-minute technique clinic wilh area coaches
followed by a scrimmage in teh stadium at Meyers High School. That
injury.
His absence will give senior Ed event begins at 6 p.m.
Frayne and sophomore Vinny Mcnnclla more time to work al the position.
The top two tacklcrs last season,
The women were well-represented
linebackers Wade Pickett and Gene
in
a variety of events while the men
Straface, lead the eight returning
their excellance in the
concentrated
starters on defense.
field
events
as
the men 's and women 's
The senior duo combined for 168
tackles and will be teamed wilh sen- track teams performed well at
iors Brian Angncy, who missed last Saturday's Shippensburg Invitational.
In a field of 24 men 's teams, as well
year due to an inury, and John Hellas
a field of 22 women's teams, their
gren to give the Huskies a lot of
some stellar performances.
were
strength up the middle.
For
the men in the 10000 m run ,
In front of ihem, all dirce down
Stan Share finished ninth and Mark
linemen are back.
Seniors Joshua Lee and Chris Gross Elsasser finished tenth.
Mike Ecker took an eighth spot in
and junior Larry DeLuca give the club
the
shotput and came back with a
talent and experience in the defensive
ninth
in the discus.
line.
Bloomsburg
was well represented
Starting defensive ends Steph Petit
and Todd Lcitzel round out the fron t in the javelin as Bill Piotrowski took
wall and should be aided by the addi- ninth place and Mark Lukens cam e
tion of Darryl Richards who returns out with tenth place.
Those six places devided among
after a year's absence.
five people was all that the
those
The biggest problem will be in the
team
could grab however.
men's
of
the
defensive backfield where three
The women's team turned in an
four starters will miss the workouts.
Cornerback Bruce Linton and oustanding performance at Ship-

pensburg. The women captured 11
places on Saturday.
The women began their day in a
rather upbeat way.
In the first event of the meet, the
10000 m run , Brenda Bisset captured
a first place finish in a meet record of
38:49.9.
From there it was Jill Cicierski taking a fourth place finish in the shotput
and also a second place finish in the
discus.
Bloomsburg's women' were placing in the sprint events as well as the
field and distance events.
Lynne Ritz was strong enough in
the 100 m dash to take a fifth palce
finish.
Freshman Lisa Virus showed some
potential as she ran the 400 for the
Huskies and look an eighth place finish .
The pair then teamed up in the
200m dash and equally impressed the

at fifth singles known by easily ousting Ken Hosteller in straight sets, 6-2.
6-1.
Kerry Puhl was not able to take his
match at sixth singles as he fell to
Dennis Shank, 7-6, 6-3.
In doubles action , il was Lupinacci
and Billone teaming up to defeat
Hoffman and Koons in three sets, 2-6,
6-3, 6-2.
Then it was Gilbert and Pheasant
getting by Serafin and Brink to the
tune of 6-2, 7-6.
Looker and Puhl lost a tough match
at third doubles as Hosteller and
Shank took the match in three sets, 64, 5-7, 7-5.
With the victory, Bloomsburg
upped their match record to 10-5.
The loss dropped Shippensburg to

3-2 in the Pennsylvania Conference.
Hampton's win continued their
winning streak and put them al 20-0.
Temple's loss was enough to set
them back at 9-8 on the season.
The men's team will now have two
matches this week before they get a
well deserved break.
The first will be Tuesday at Penn
State starling al 3:00 p.m.
The team will then return home to
face Army on Thursday wilh the
match slated to begin at 3:00 p.m.
After their match with Army, the
Huskies will have a rare weekend off.
In total Bloomsburg will have a brief
five-day rest before taking on East
Stroudsburg next Wednesday.
The rest should be a welcome one to
Coach Reese's men.

From page 8
singles, and both committed an error.
Unfortunately for Bloomsburg, that
error cost them a run , and the game,
Sue Khnger of Army led off the
fourth inning wilh a walk. She was
sacrificed to second, and remained
there after a ground out to shortstop.
With two outs, Karen Slattery
singled up the middle and the ball got
by the centerfielder and allowed Klinger to score on the error.
Upcraft took the loss, while Army's
Pat McCabe earned the win with

seven scoreless innings,
The eleventh-ranked Cadets raised
their record to 15-5 while the Huskies'
overall record fel l to 17-4 on the season.
Hutchinson's club will now ready
themselves to take on Shippensburg at
home this Tuesday at 3:30 p.m.

All five starters return on the offensive line and should use a year's experience to their benefit as the workouts
progress.
Tackles John Avia and Brian
Croudiamel , guards Dave Pysher and
Rob Grow and center Bob Preston
showed vast improvement as last
season progressed and will use the
drills to make improvements on their
technique.
Croulhamcl and Grow earned starting berths in their first seasons with
the Huskies, while die olher three arc
all entering their senior years.
Two-time all-conference center
Joh n Fulmcr is expected to return to
the team in die fall after completing
rehabilitation work on a knee injury
which forced the senior to miss last
year's campai gn.
One of the squad's starting tight
ends, sophomore Paul Lonergran ,
who was one of six receivers to catch
more than 20 passes, will also miss the
spring practice sessions due to a hand

liloomsburg University hosted a soccer tournament this past weekend for both high school and college teams. The high schools
competed Saturday while the colleges competed Sunday. Bloomsburg did well, qualifying f or the eight-team playoff before being
eliminated in the first round.
Photo by Rob Samtmann

Track teams fare well at invitational

Huskies handle Shippensburg

From page 8
In fourth singles, Pheasant disposed of Tom Brink by a 6-3, 6-1
margin.
Steve Looker made his appearance

Army beats Huskies

FreshmanRoly Lamy had a rough weekend as he went withou t a singles win. His
doubles team, with partner Lance Mllner, however, was 2-0. photo by TJ .Kemmerer

Slocum and Kirkpatrick named as PSAG Eastern 'Players of the Week'

Outfielder Cindy Slocum and designated hitter Rob Kirkpatrick have
been named the Pennsylvania Conference Eastern Division softball and
baseball "Players of the Week" for
their performances in their teams'
respective games last week.
This is the first week for the awards
which will recognize outstanding
individual efforts by PC East and PC
West players wach week throughout
the 1988 season.
Slocum had 11 hits in 20 at-bats last
week for an average of .550 as teh
Huskies won six games to up their
winning streak to 16 games.
The sophomore had two triples and
a home run among her 11 hits to help
her drive in nine runs and score an-

other five times during her awardwinning week..
She has 21 hits in 51 trips to the
plate this season for an average of
.412. In addition, Slocum has 18 runs
batted in and has scored eight runs.
The Huskies registered doubleheader victories over St. Joseph's
(Pa.), West Chester and Indiana (Pa.)
to raise their season mark to 17-4.
Kirkpatrick made 14 appearances
at ih»'i plate during the week and contributed six hits as well as walking
three times and being credited with a
sacrifice.
His .600 batting average included a
pair of doubles, a triple and a home run
which led to seven RBIs and five runs
scored.

The senior has picked up 20 hits in
49 at-bats for a season batting average
of .408. He has knocked in 20 runs and
scored 18 other times.
Bloomsburg record stands at 10-10
following the week which saw the
Huskies down King's (Pa.) and split a
doubleheader with Millersville in teh
Eastern Division opener for both
teams.

Correction
The Voice mistakenly identified
the photo of the baseball player on
page eight of Thursday, April 7th's
issue as being a file photo.
It should have read, "Photo by Rob
Samtmann."
The Voice regrets this error.

Bloomsburg coaches as they finished
ninth and tenth , respectively.
The relay teams were also clicking
for the Huskies.
In the 4x100m relay, the team of
Deb Wands, Robin Hoban , Virus and
Ritz ran a good enough race to capture
sixth in ihe event.
In the 4x400m relay event, Ritz,
Virus, Stefanie Michael and Wands
teamed up to give the Huskies a sev-

enth place finish in the middle distance relay.
Let's not forget that it was the distance running of Bisset that started the
meet off.
Pam Mitchell was strong in the
other long distance events as she
brought home a sixth place finish in
the 5000 m run and an eighth place
finish in the 3000 m run to round out
the Huskies' placewinners.
v—

INTRAMURAL INFORMATION
- Co-ed softball rosters are due Thursday, April
14.
- Captains for: Men's and Women's soccer; men's
softball tournament; Co-ed volleyball; and Badminton partici pants are urged to check with the
Intramural office to find out their respective schedules.
- Runners,the intramural 5Krun is this Saturday,
April 16 at 10 a.m. Entry forms are available in the
Intramural office. T-shirts will be awarded.
- Jazz and ballet classes every Tuesday and
Thrusday. Linda Everest begins her classes at 8
p.m. in the Centennial Dance Studio and classes are
FREE.
1988 Men 's Lacrosse Club Schedule
Thursday, April 14, 3:30 p.m., Home, Penn
State
Saturday, April 16, 2:00 p.m., Away, Lycoming
Sunday, April 17, 2:00 p.m., Home, Bucknell
Wednesday, April 20, 4:00 p.m., Away, Juniata
Saturday, April 23, 2:00 p.m., Home, Millersville
Wednesday, April 27, 3:30 p.m., Away, Bucknell
Saturday, April 30, 2:00 p.m.,Away, Wyoming
Sp 'm i n n r v "

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'

Bloomsburg

Profesional Bowling

Bowling? A

Tennis team takes two of three over weekend

very popular Men drop Shippensburg and
sport
Temple, but fall to Hampton
Troy Hunsinger
Staff Writer

It's Friday night and you decide
to go bowling. You walk into the
alleys to sec a dimly lit place that is
occupied by older, overweight men
smoking cigars and drinking beer.
Many of them have plain white tshirts on with cigarettes rolled up in
their sleeves.
If it was the 1950s or 1960s, this
scene is what you would probably
see, but , thanks to television and
the Professional Bowlers Association , Ihis has all changed. Nowadays, bowling lanes arc clean,
well-lit and respectable.
Bowling on television has been
gaining popularity ever since. Next
to college football and the Wide
World of Sports, the bowling tour
is the longest-running sports scries
on television.
The tour made its debut in 1962
when the image of bowling was not
too good.
The PBA in 1962 decided to
form an Image committee to
change the image of bowling.
There were a number of rules
with which the bowlers had to
comply.
Each week's finalists would have
to wear color-coordinated clothes
approved by the PBA officials in
advance of the telecast and shirts
had to be tucked in.
Untrimmed beards or mustaches
and sideburns extending below the
earlobes were out.
Bowling alleys were lo be referred to on the air as "lanes" or
"centers," and the word gutter was
never to be uttered. Instead, they
were called "channels."
The result of this was a clean and
respectable sport.
Bowling has maintained its respectability so much on television
that on many Saturdays the PBA on
ABC outratcs all other sports.
Golf , tennis, college basketball ,
hockey baseball and pro basketball
have all fallen victim to bowling at
one time or another.
When the world renowned Long
Island Open at Garden City Bowl
went head-to-head against the third
round of the Masters, the bowlers
rolled up a 5.2 in the Neilsens for
ABC , while the golfers shot a 4.2
for CBS.
This is a difference of more than
two million viewers.
In 1987's first bowling telecast,
the U.S. Open, on January 10, it
outrated the North Carolina-Duke
game on CBS and the Tournament
ofChampions onNBC,5.1 to 4.9 to
3.3.
Statistics are nice, but the question remains, why is bowling becoming so popular?
Michael Deppen, who has been
working for different bowling establishments for the past 12 years
believes, "People like to watch pro
bowlers to see how they do it
(bowl) and learn from it."
Deppen also says its popularity
is based on its simplicity, "Everybody can do it, it takes no particular
skill."
A total of 8.9 million adults bowl
at least once a week in organized
leagues in the U.S. and some 70
million more tried the sport at least
once.
Gary Essex, who has been an
anchorman with both ABC and
CBS, says that bowling is one of
the biggest pasttimes of people in
the U.S. because unlike football ,
you can participate in it after retirement.
"Bowling is a spectator sport,
even when you're participating,"
says William Acierno, who has
been in the TV business for six
years, "because even when you
participate, you watch the other
bowlers around you."
We are in debt to ABC for sticking with the Pro Bowlers Tour even
when times were toug h. Because of
them , many more Americans are
enjoy ing the simple, yet enjoyable
soort of bowling.

Bloomsburg's men's tennis team
easily handled both Temple and Shi ppensburg over the weekend, but only
managed to win one match against
undefeated Hampton.
In the Temple match, it was Mark
Billone starting things off with a win
at first singles as he defeated Gary
McGcchan, 6-3, 6-3.
Roly Lamy fell victim to the Owl's
Joe Lizardo in second singles, 6-1, 63.
From there the Huskies swept the
rest of the singles action , and Lance
Milner took a 6-4, 6-1 decision over
Mark Oryskcvich .
Marc Lupinacci downed his opponent Dave Astorino by a 6-4, 6-2
count.
In fifth singles, it was Dave Gilbert
beating Terry Godman in three sets,
7-6, 4-6, 6-3.
Jay Pheasant wrapped up singles
action with a three-set victory over
Richard Lees in sixth singles, 3-6, 64, 6-2.
In doubles, it was the team of Lamy
and Milner easily defeating Lees and
PJ. Haar, 6-1, 6-4.
Billone and Lupinacci were victorious over the Owl team of Lizardo
and Astorino by a 6-1, 6-3 count.
In third doubles, it was the team of
Gilbert and Pheasant dropping a
tough three-set match to McGcchan
and Oryskcvich, 1-6, 7-5, 6-3.

Bloomsburg won the match by a 72 final.
After that match , Hampton came
into town riding their 19-0 record and
rode roughshod over the Huskies
taking their 20th win with an 8-1
thrashing of Bloomsburg .
Hampton swept every singles
match and IWo of the three doubles
matches.
The only victory for the Huskies in
the match was in first doubles as
Lamy and Milner defeated Scavio
Lima and Pedro Ali pio in straight
sets, 6-3, 6-2.
Luis Nascimcnto, Lima, Islam UlHaq, Muri Ajivade , Yakubu
Suleiman and Alpio each had singles
wins along with doubles wins for Ulhaq/Ajivadc and Sulciman/Eduardo
Afini .
Later in the day, the Huskies took
on Shi ppensburg in a PSAC match
and handed the Red Raiders a 7-2

Using a different look, Coach Burt
Reese gave some other members a
chance to prove themselves and they
came throug h.
Milner , playing fi rst singles, won
over Mike Hoffman , 6-3, 6-1.
Lupinacci at second singles handed
Mark Koons a 6-2, 7-6 defeat.
Gilbert downed Dan Serafi n , 6-0,
6-1, at third singles.
See HUSKIES p aste 7

In a wild game that saw some 58
shots on goal , Bloomsburg
University 's women's lacrosse team
defeated East Stroudsburg by a 13-10
final score.
It was a well balanced scoring attack that the Huskies threw at the
Warriors. In all , Bloomsburg had six
different women score a goal.
Goals by Kelly Cuihbcrl and Chris
Scavo helped Bloomsburg to a 7-5
lead at halftime.
In the second half , East
Stroudsburg again scored five goals,
but the offensive minded Huskies
were able to net six more for the win.

Bloomsburg easil y outshot the visiting Warriors by a 35-23 margin.
Fortunately for East Stroud sburg ,
Cheryl Blake, their goalie, turned in
an outstanding performance turning
away 13 shots to record as many
saves.
Bloomsburg's goalie, Ruth Doyle ,
also had a good game for the Huskies
and recorded five saves en route to the
13-10 victory.
In the scoring column for
Bloomsburg their were six diffcrcnl
names.
Cuthbert , who led the team in scoring last year, led the team again this

Bloomsburg used a one-hitter by
The weekend was not a complete
Julie Robbins and some crucial relief success however, as eleventh-ranked
pitching by Kirstcn Upcraft to take a Army was able lo defeat the Huskies,
pair of games from Mansfield over 1-0.
the weekend.
In the first game against Mansfield ,
Bloomsburg could do nothing wrong.
It was an eight-run firs t inning that
catapulted the Huskies to a 19-0
thrashing of Mansfield.
If the offensive explosion wasn't
bad enough, the Mounties' bats were
silenced by the arm of Robbins.
game recording four goals.
Robbins threw a one-hit shutout
Scavo, Kathy Samples, Sherri
with
the only hit of the game coming
Hoover and Chris Pierie each scored
in
the
fourth . It was a triple.
two goals for the Huskies.
Cindy
Slocum was 4-5 and Sandy
Cindy Daeche added her lone goal
Herr
chi
pped
in with three RBIs in the
to round out the scoring for
19-run,
17-hit,
offensive onslaught.
Bloomsburg.
Mansfield's Peg Masters took the
The win lifted Bloomsburg's season mark to 1-1 overall and 1-1 in the loss for the Mounties.
In the second game, it was Masters
Pennsylvania Conference.
on
the mound again for the Mounties,
The loss dropped the Warriors to 0but
after some early inning trouble,
4 overall with an 0-1 mark in the
she
managed
to stifle the Bloomsburg
PSAC.
offense.
The Huskies will now prepare for
The Huskies did their damage
another PSAC battle at Shipearly.
A pair of two-run innings, one
pensburg, tomorrow at 3:30 p.m.

Despite the longball attack of Rob
Kirkpatrick and Matt Karchncr ,
Bloomsburg University's men's baseball team dropped two close games to
Mansfield by scores of 5-4 and 7-6.
In the opener, Bloomsburg jumped
all over starter Rod Nellcnbach for
four early runs.
The Huskies scored in each of the
first three innings to open a 4-1 lead.
Kirkpatrick had the hot bat as he
went 2-3 with a homerun and two
RBIs.
Teammates Cory Terwilliger, 2-3
and one RBI, and Joe Catanzaro, 2-3
with a double, also had good games
for the Huskies.

It was a three-run rally in the fourth
by the Mounlies that tied the game up
and set up the sixth inning heroics.
In the bottom of the sixth , the
Mounites scored an unearned run
aided by the third error of the game by
the Huskies.
Bloomsburg failed to score in their
half of the seventh and fell 5-4.
Bloomsburg's J.P. Thomas took the
loss for the Huskies.
Both teams had nine hits but it was
the Huskies' three errors, especially
the third , that cost them the game.
In the second game against the
Mountics, Bloomsburg again used
longball to account for th ier runs , but

again commited three errors and lost a
close 7-6 decision.
For the second straight game, the
Huskies jumped out to an early lead
courtesy of Matt Karchner.
With one swing of the bat, Karchner put the Huskies up 3-0 in the first
inning by belting a three run blast
after Kirkpatrick and Steve Sees had
already reached base.
The lead held up through three
innings despite a pair of runs in the
second by Mansfield of off loser Erik
Pederson.
In the Mansfield half of the fourth,
the Mountiesscored another pair of
runs to take the lead, 4-3.

loss.

Sophomore Marc Lupinacci had a successful weekend as he won two of three singles matches and two of three doubles matches. His
ph
doubles partner is Mark Billone.
°'° *> Rob SaMmann

S oftball wins twice, now 17-4

Lacrosse team wins shootout,
defeats East Stroudsburg 13-10

Baseball team f alls twice to Ma nsf ield

The Bloomsburg University men's baseball team fell to Mansfield twice over the weekend in two close games. They dropped the opener
Fhoto Rob a""""*"
by a 5-4 score and lost the second game 7-6.
*

Bloomsburg struck right back in
the top half of the fifth with a bit of
deja vu.
Sees, who was 2-4, and Kirkpatrick
both reached base again and up lo the
plate stepped Karchner.
For the second time in the game,
Karchner, 2-4 with six RBIs, blasted a
three-run shot to retake the lead, 6-4.
Pederson was unable to hold this
newfound lead in the bottom of the
fifth as the Mounties plated two more
runs to knot the game at six at the end
of five innings.
Again as in the first game,
Bloomsburg failed to score in their
half of the sixth and the Mounlies
came to bat with the score all tied, 66.
And again it was the Mounties
coming up with that extra run to take
the game by a 7-6 score.
Bloomsburg was outhit by the
Mounties, 11-7, and again committed
three errors.
Pederson took the loss, while
Mounty pitcher Mike Foulke earned
the win.
The two losses dropped the Huskies' overall record to 10-10 while
making their Pennsylvania Conference record a bleak 1-5.
It is the second doubleheader in a
row against a PSAC club in which the
Huskies have been swept.
Bloomsburg now readies to take on
East Stoudsburg this Wednesday in
another PSAC double header beginning at 1:00 p.m.
For those who can't make it to the
game, they can catch it on WBUQ,
91.1 FM.
Bob Bailey and Mike Mullen will
be broadcasting the game live from
Danny Litwiler Field, and will go on
the air at 12:55.

in the second and one in the third ,
gave the Huskies a 4-0 lead at the end
of three.
From there the Mounties tried to
mount their comeback. It started with
a lone run in the fourth off of winner
Joanna Sulmonetti , that cut the lead to
4-1.
Masters pitched some beautiful
innings as she kept the Husky bats
quiet for the rest of the game.
Two more runs in the sixth inning
cut the Bloomsburg lead to one 4-3
and set up some seventh inning heroics.
In the bottom of the seventh, with
the Huskies leading4-3, the Mounties
loaded the bases with one out and
Upcraft was called in to quell the
uprising.
She calmly got the next two batters
out to preserve the win and earn the
save.
Mansfield outhit the Huskies 6-5
but couldn't get that final run home in
the seventh to take the victory.
The two losses dropped Mansfield
to 0-2 on the year and 0-2 in the
Pennsylvania Conference.
In a battle of top twenty teams yesterday, Army was able to squeak by
the Huskies on an unearned run in the
fourth inning to take a 1-0 victory
over the fourth-ranked Huskies.
Both teams had only three hits, all
See ARMY page 7

IBLOOMSBURG]
SCOREBOARD
Women 's Softball:
Bloomsburg 19 1st game
Mansfiel d
0

Bloomsburg 4 2nd game
Mansfield
3
Bloomsburg 0
Army
1
Men 's Baseball:
Bloomsburg 4 1st game
Mansfield 5
Bloomsburg 6 2nd game
Mansfield 7
Women 's Lacrosse:
Bloomsburg
13
East Stroudsburg 10
Men 's Tennis:
Bloomsburg 7
Temple
2
Bloomsburg 1
Hampton
8
Bloomsburg 7
Shippensburg 2

Media of