rdunkelb
Thu, 12/11/2025 - 18:13
Edited Text
N. Korea opposes
Summer Olympics

Activist to speak
about life in '80s

by William Sexton

This talk should provide in-sight on
how other universities are dealing
with the impact of racism on their
campuses.
As a specialist of community psychiatry, Poussaint developed a strong
interest in race relations and the psychological impact of racism on the
Black psyche as a director of a low-

Dr. Earl Nollenberger, "Darwin
and the Galapagos Islands", will be
the featured speaker Monday, Sept.
12 at 8 p.m. in Carver Hall in a series
of five lectures on the general topic
"Darwin and the Impact of Evolutionary Thought," sponsored by the
University Scholars Symposium.
"Welcome to Your World: An
Audience Participation Presentation
on Population and Food Distribution" will be the topic of Dr. David
Flesch on Monday, Sept. 19 at8 p.m.
in Carver Auditorium.
Flesch, of Mansfield University,
holds a doctoral degree in molecular
and cellular biology from Iowa State
University.
He will demonstrate the problems
and effects of world food maldistribution by dividing actual food
among the audience.

The third featured speaker in the
Scholars Symposium lecture series is
Dr. Walter J. Diehl, of Mississippi
State University, Monday , Oct. 3 at 8
p.fn. in Carver Auditorium.
Diehl, author of more than fifteen
scientific papers, is a member of
numerous scientific societies including the New York Academy of Sciences.
He holds advanced degrees from
the University of South Florida at
Tampa and actively researches invertebrate physiology and ecology.
Diehl's topic will be "Variation in
Life: Origins and Implications."
National Lecture Program of
Sigma Xi, national science honorary
society, is sponsoring the fourth
speaker in the Scholars Symposium
series, Dr. Charles E. Oxnard.
He will lecture on "Human Origins

and The Problem of Sex."
Professor of Anatomy and Human
Biology and Director of the Centre
for Human Biology at the University
of Western Australia, Oxnard is a
leading authority on anatomical relationships of human and primate
groups, ancient and modern.
A native of Great Britain , he has
authored 240 scientific papers and
twelve books including Form and
Pattern in Human Evolution (1973)
and Uniqueness and Diversity in
Human Evolution (1975).
Oxnard's research in evolutionary
biology has included mathematical
and engineering studies of animal
form and laser investigations of the
internal structure of bones.
Dr. Richard Goldsby, of Amherst
College, will be the final speaker in
the lecture series. He will present

campaign issue, m contrast to tne
Reagan-Mondale race four years ago
or the 1968 race, when PresidentRichard M. Nixon campaigned extensively
against the liberal Warren Court.
The court's low profile in this campaign may be because neither side is
certain how the issue would play with
the voters.
American University law professor
Herman Schwartz said, "If Dukakis is
worried about the Reagan Democrats,
he certainly is not going to push the
social issues."
Schwartz also said, "Bush saw what
happened to (defeated Supreme Court
nominee Judge Robert H.) Bork and
sees it as a little two-edged."
But conservatives and liberals have
no doubt that the long-term future of
the court will be in the hands of the
next president.
Patrick McQuigan, head of the
conservative Center for Law and
Democracy, said a Bush victory
would spell the difference between the
"modest shift to the right" that President Reagan has achieved with his
appointments and a "dramatic shift."
"Continuation of that progress is
what this election is about. If you
could have another four to eight years
like the last, you'd be able to sit back
and puff on a cigar in 1996 and say
'We have really made a difference. ' "
In that situation , the high court
would likel y at least restrict abor tion
rights and possibly reverse Roe vs.
Wade, the 1973 court decision declaring a constitutional right to abortion.
Such a court, scholars and activists

on both sides agreed, would also be
likely to dramatically reduce if not
abolish affirmative action programs
and substantially lower the wall of
separation between church and state.
A GOP victory, Blackmun said in a
speech last July, could make the court
"very conservative well into the 21st
century."Schwartz said: If Bush wins,
liberals "can kiss the court goodbye."
American Civil Liberties Union
legal director John Powell said that if
the court's most liberal members were
replaced by strong conservatives, that
"could set us back judicially more
than 40 years."
A Dukakis victory, all court watchers agreed, would essentially leave
the court where it is now _ a moderateto-conservative institution closely
divided on most major issues.
McQui gan said that, "if Dukakis
wins, the range for him is stopping the
court where it is or shifting it back to a
slightly more liberal direction ," especially if conservative DemocratByron
R. White, 71,long the subject of retirement rumors, decides to leave.
White is a staunch member of the
conservative wing of the court, which
includes Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist, who will be 64 next month,
and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor,
58, Antonin Scalia, 52, and Anthony
M. Kennedy, also 52.
If Dukakis were to replace both the
liberal wing and White, moderate
Republican Justice John Paul Stevens
would find himself in the exact center
of the court, with four Dukakis appointees to his left on most issues and

Bloomsburg University 's Provost's
Lecture series beginning this Tuesday
evening with an 8* p.m. lecture in
Carver Hall from social activist Alvin
Poussaint, Harvard University psychiatry associate professor and script
consultant for the "Cosby Show".
Poussaint will- address living in a
modem world focusing on the topic
"Walking the Modem Tightrope:
Family, Career, Competition , Success."
The lecture will concern handling
stress in today 's fast paced world and
will address how to balance two-career families, increasing competition
in the workplace and the desire to
avoid job stress and burn-out.
HewiH also speakat4:00p.m.inth e
Forum in McCormick Human Services Center addressing racism in college campuses in a workshop entitled
"Racism on Campus: Myth or Real"
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"

AIDS: Science and Social Implications" Monday, Oct. 10 at 8 p.m. in
Multipurpose Room A, Kehr Union
Building.
Goldsby, a native of Kansas City,
worked as a research chemist with
Monsanto and Du Pont companies.
'He was a faculty member at Yale
University and the University of
Maryland before taking his current
position at Amherst.
Member of the board of directors
of Tuskegee Institute and a Senior
Fellow of the National Research
Council's Ames Research Center,
Goldsby earned a doctorate in chemistry from the University of California at Berkeley.
Goldsby's speech will mark the
end of the "Darwin and the Impact of
Evolutionary Thought" Fall Scholars Symposium lecture scries.

88 election will determine future
direction of the Supreme Court
LA..Times-Washington Post Service

WASHINGTON _ The next president will have an opportunity to shape
the direction of the U.S. Supreme
Court for decades _ particularly in
such critical areas as the right to abortion, affirmative action and civil
rights, and the separation of church
and state.
Three of the closely divided court's
most liberal members will be in their
80s by Inauguration Day. Justice
William J. Brennan Jr. will be 83 in
April.
Thurgood Marshall turned 80 in
July and Harry A. Blackmun will be
80 in November. At least two, and
probably all three of them , can be
expected to leave the bench in the next
four years.
Recent 5-to-4 rulings on abortion,
affirmative action , church-state c ases
and the death penalty for juveniles
could all be reversed if even one liberal justice is replaced by a staunch
conservative.
A Republican victory and replacement of those three justices could be
the fulfillment of a decades-long conservative quest to trim or overturn
many liberal decisions of the last 30
years.
For liberals, a Dukakis victory
would not likely lead to creation of a
liberal court, but it would slow what
now appears to be a strong conservative drift
Despite those clear stakes, neither
side has made the Supreme Court a

•"

Dr. Alvin Poussaint will address the stress of modern life Tuesday at 8p.m. in Carver.

Darwin topic of Scholars ' symposium

by AlKamen

,,

L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

income housing project in 1967.
He played a role in the desegregation of health facilities in the south as
the Southern Field Director for the
Medical Committee for Human
Rights in Jackson , Mississippi from
1965-67.
Poussaint has written two books,
"Why Blacks Kill Blacks", and coauthored "Black Child Care."
As an expert on family issues, Poussaint was retained as a script consultant for television 's "Cosby" Show.
He is an advocate for more responsible network programming and better
representation of minorities in the
media.
The Provost's Lecture series will
continue this fall with Washington
political correspondent and Washington Week in Revie w moderator Paul
Duke who will make two speaking
appearances on Oct. 27 at 3 p.m. in the
Forum in McCormick.
He will hold a workshop on Oct. 28,
at 10:30 p.m. entitled "Bloomsburg
Week in Review: Young Journalists
and Washington Politics".
Duke is a respected Washington
journalist who has served as the senior
correspondent for public television
since 1974, best known for his weekly
analysis of events in Washington.

SEOUL, South Korea _ Olympic
athletes and other celebrities are flood
ing into Seoul this weekend, but it is
the country that won 't be sending a
team _ North Korea _ that is dominating the attention here less than a week
before the start of the Summer Games.
Kim II Sung's Communist regime
has been issuing mixed signals in recent days, firs t denying any -intention
of engaging in violence against the
Games and then accusing the West of
using the competition as a cover to
launch a war or to plan "a new tricky
incident."
The only evident certainty from the
NoPth is that Pyongyang will not be
sending any athletes to Seoul, despite
a last-minute offer from the International Olympic Committee to waive
all deadlines.
I am disappointed but not surprised," Committee President Juan
Antonio Samaranch said Saturday.
Authorities here have gone to great
lengths to ensure security. Although
thc-U.S. Navy has moved ahead wilh
plans to deploy two nuclear-armed
battle groups as'a deterrent against
possible interference from the North ,
terrorists are the chief concern.
Police are on the watch for known
members of the ultra-radical Japanese
Red Army, for pro-Pyongyang Koreans living in Japan and for anyone on
Interpol's wanted list of anti-Western
groups from Europe and the Middle
East.
Each of the estimated 200,000 visitors arriving here for the Sept. 17 -Oct.
2 Games is being treated as a potential
conspirator on arrival at Kimpo International Airport on Seoul's outskirts.
All luggage has to pass examination
by dogs trained to sniff outexplosives,
and even VIPs are being marched
through metal detectors.
At Each immigration booth here
and at Tokyo's Narita Airport, the
busiest overseas gateway to Seoul,
photos of known terrorists are prominently displayed, and all carry-on
luggage is searched immediately before and after each flight.
In downtown Seoul, the flowerbedecked "Welcome to South Korea"
archways at the entrance to major
hotels actually are metal detectors.
In the North, meanwhile, the media
have taken sharp notice of the buildup
of U.S. naval and air forces.
The CommunistParty's organ, Nodong Sinmun, accused the United
States, Japan and South Korea of
"abusing the 24th Olympic Games in
preparing for an attack on our Republic and other Socialist countries."
The bellicose tone, while typical of
North Korean propaganda, contrasted
with the pledge against violence during the Games aired by Pyongyang
Radio earlier in the week.
The biggest security flap so far
erupted when guards encountered two
unauthorized men inside the American athletes' section of the Olympic

four Reagan appointees generally to
his right.
Assuming White stays, the court,
with Kennedy replacing Powell,
should be more conservative over the
next few years even if the Democrats
capture the White House.
Court scholars see O'Connor, a
moderate conservative on affirmative
action and church state issues, continuing to be the critical vote in most
cases involving divisive social issues.
Several court watchers said that,
even if Dukakis wins, the present
court may allow states to enact further
restrictions on abortions. The difference is that it would not likely overturn the 1973 ruling.
A Dukakis victory, said conservative court watcher Bruce Fein,
"throws O'Connor in the future as the
clone of (retired Justice Lewis F.)
Powell,"who for several years was the
pivotal vote on the court.
Fein said that , given the Reagan
appointments, the court is moving to
the right.
The election outcome, he said, will
only decide how fast the court will
move. "It's a matter of speed," Fein
said, whether you move allegro or
adaggio."
A Dukakis victory, leaving the
court closely divided, would diminish
the likelihood of many liberal precedents being overturned , Fein said.
"There is an institutional restraint to
doing too many 5-to-4 reversals" of
earlier rulings, he said. "They will do
some, but there is a kind of quota on
the number."

Internship
positi ons
available

Village, which is guarded by razorwire fences, commandos carrying
submachine guns and a state-of-theart computerized credentials system.
After a full alert was declared, the pahturned out to be Japanese newspaper
reporters.
According to one authpritative report, the South Koreans considered,
but rejected , a plan to try to lessen any
possibility of attack by the Irish Republican Army on British athletes by
housing them with the American
squad in one super-secure area.
The idea was that anti-British extremists would not risk harming
Americans because of Ireland' s
strong ties with the United States.
The Olympic Village's no-alcohol
rule already has inspired a minor incident.
After a shipment of beverages
addressed to U.S. team officials was
confiscated by security personnel, a
sharp protest from the Americans led
to cancellation of the rule.
The South Koreans have been especially sensitive about alcoholic beverages after North Korean agents
planted a plastic explosive in a bottle
and destroyed a Korean Air passenger
jet over the Arabian Sea last November.
In addition to the U.S. Navy's
beefed-up presence in Korean waters,
the U.S. Army and Air Force have
their 42,000-strong Korea contingent
on a state of "heightened awareness"
for the Olympics.
American and South Korean officials, however, said they believed the
chief deterrent to North Korean interference in the Games was the presence
of the teams from China and the S oviet
Union, North Korea's chief allies.
Political reform in the South, the
national preoccupation here for the
past two years, has been put on hold
for the duration of the Olympics.
Nevertheless, hard-core radicals
on university campuses continued to
stage anti-government rallies Saturday.
The demonstrations drew no public
support, and so far President Roh's
riot police have minimized the amount
of force used in response.
Although the ritualistic campus
confrontations make for magnificent
television news clips, they have had
virtually no impact on the city at large.
And if any demonstrators have tried to
disrupt Olympic sites or major tourist
areas, none have come close to succeeding.
One potential problem was removed Saturday when former President Chun DooHwan .achief target of
political opposition even though he relinquished office last February, announced that he would not attend the
opening ceremony for the Games next
Saturday.
"I decline your invitation because I
don't want any noise because of my
presence at the ceremony," he told
Roh, his successor.
i

Capital Semester Internships are
available this spring to interested students in a variety of areas including
accounting, communications, computer sciences, education, health, and
personnel. The program is open to
state residents with a 3.0 minimum
grade point average and junior, senior,
or graduate status from a four year
college.
Students in the program live in Harrisburg and have the opportunity to
discover how the state government
operates from the inside. The program
offers a chance to earn credits and
money while learning professional
duties of student's career field.
The deadline for application for the
spring semester is is Tuesday, Oct 11,
1988. Information and applications
are available at the Cooperative Education Office in the Ben Franklin
Building.

INDEX

^—^—«*•

Check out Husky Announcements to find out what's going
on.

Page 3
Pat Benatar concert in October.
Page 4
Huskies defeat Shippensburg.

Page S
Commentary

page 2

Features

page 4

Comics

page 6

Sports

page 8

A class for those who have none
t - fj 4 1 U J t / • i i C .-.:..>

.And yes. they do hive better things

Edtior-ir.-CkUf

bark doers and drinking in the TV

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(~ C~SUx d ^nt A t L arqe Y
__ )
I

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fou len n«JftUt«u

Fick a date

..ave to v - seme to get soine.
^
Searching for parties in groups of 20 is
no: going ID get us any. Throwing
empty beer tans, cigarette packs, and \
L'p until now , education huti
used p->7.': crusts from Sal' s isn ' t
been a relatively smooth process.
going to get us any. Throwing up en
Okay, may be someone stole your
their side-alks won 't do ii either.
tinker toys in kiridegarlen or
^r ,. .-_ :. J C..J.--J - - ;~ -J-.-. £.'-,:-;;.e
ma; be you v, ere called four eyes in
S r'.y-f .-ir.; R u p e e : f o r Fac u :
' :.. S:s/f .
the fourth grade , and so what if
you didn 't go to the prom 0»y
choice , of course!;. J' ul minus all
of those little trivialities and your
p a t h w a y to knowledge has been
pothole free... admit it.
So you figure , so far , so good...
ma; as well go to college... what' s
four more years of education going
to hurt , not to mention the four
more years of ruthless party ing.
And then one morning you wake
up. the four years have gone by
and y ou 're still try ing to get some
kind of a degree. Where did the
time 20?
Many w ould be quick to say that
the time went by while waiting in
line to schedule or even better , the
time passed as you ran all over
c a m p u s beggin g for p ink slips.
We ' •¦eall experienced the hell of
scheduling and the next to impossible task of dropping and or adding a course , but could four years
ha -.e passed while doing that? At
best , this could onl y account for

Oksiy.fto there is fttill wo years
left to account for h ere. Hey,Iike
what's your major dude? Is if
the same one that you started
your college career with at good
'ole /'. loom? Or have you gone
from lUthim.-sH Management to
Secondary Education to Philosophy?
I'd he the first , and not the
last , to say that my major
changed a coup le of times in the
course of one year. So hypothetical^ speaking, we have only oneyear left unaccountable.
Uut wait , did you pledge/associate a greek organization; write
for the paper; play a sport; join
the theatre group... this could go
on for a year!
Well , there it i.s, four years of
college... gone... and I still
haven 't mentioned attending
classes. Better add anotheryear
for them.
Uut hey, there 's nothing
wrong with being here on the
five year program , or the six, or
the... well , when do you want to
graduate?
The choice may not always
seem to be yours , but it is and it's
there to be made... by you.

J

Class or show: Not
much of a choice
Please
return
my stuff

days , beginning at 8 a.m.
I realize the Concert Committe tries
hard to get good shows for us to enjoy.
But if we can 't go because of classes,
it doesn 't do us much good.
Maybe next time the Concert
Committee can try for a Friday or
Saturday night concert. That way no
one has to worry about night classes or
getting \:? early for classes the next
I: is hard to please everyone, I
ad-it. However , the first and forerr.:st reason we are here is to get an
education, and those of us who have
n:gh t classes shoul d be considered.
Out of Luck Again

Go with an original

to better the environment in Massachusetts. Now , all of the sudden ,
George Bush has become an environmentalist.
If Michael Dukakis is inadequate to
be the next president of the United
States , then what can be said of a man
who merely copies him.

'¦¦:.u.: ::>;.; rot mak e sen se is that
If George Bush has enough confidence in his opponent 's platform to
adopt it as his own , then we should be
confident enough to keep the original
and elect Michael Dukakis as our next
president.
Briton Omdorf
.-..'. IT. -.-¦:^:.z.-.. ~-t -mow that
Bloomsburg University
1_ci_c.: .-..at made rum;::us attempts

C3^POMN^TiON

Welcome back to the real world
to tai-tehome from the island. A bog cf
yellow periwinkles. A sense c: ease.
.An even keel. Was it possibleto rut
that en the zzn rcof? Would it last ail
the way ba:k to the office? Into Octc-

entire with windows thau coa 't open
is.i zh thai gives no hint of the seasons I: ico abru- L too final. I would
idee sc.T.ethlngof ±e summer to last
longer than a tan.
tion items as pantyhose anri eyeliner.
A few days ago we sat at the table in
Suitably co-stunted in our wcrk uni- Mainemaking our real new year's
forms, we rriouni cur cars and drive resolution, planning whai we wanted

i; from becoming businessbeige?
One of the joys of cur island
is that
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drugstore, movie Lt-ater.Our erran-ds
were limited to the dump and the
grocery store.
Our entertainment limited to the
porch and bay. We lived our Lives

Kehr Union RuiUHiig
3' comsburg University
Btcomsbure., PA 17SI.S

-• -t:?-in-C rce:
Karen Reiss
.'¦iar.ar.ng --titer
(ilenn Schwab
John Risdon . l\iwn D'Aries
- •" - - ": H-di trrs
7ia t._-;s Editors
Bridget Sulliv an , t 'hi issii Uosking
Sports EziizTS
Kelly Cuthhett , Sean \i\-.w\, I incoln Weiss
r'r tctrmapryncitcr
Cluistopher Lower
.-.-.•duuu;r. C:"uladon Manager
AUwituler Schillenians
AU' .erus;ng Director
Susan Sugra
Advertising Managers
Amy Oiinl an , Joili l\uiatelli
Assistant Advertising Managers
||m rilhi . I isa Mack
-— -••-» - • -—v '
Adtua Salek
Bob
Sal es ^Liiragers
Woolslneot , Viueo Vorttistro
Copy editors
I^vtd Ivtlis . ( 'liti s Miller
A -"~- JC:"
lohn Maiul on -Harris

I remembered a story from my
mother 's childhood . She spent cne
beach summer elaborately grir.zLz.z
stones into the sand. She layered die
szr.zl deliberately and carefully. One
shade was sifted subtly on top of
another in a iar until it made a Picture.
But her summersoape cldn ' i survive
the trip home. What she had left when
she go* ba:k to the city was a monois mere nothing irem surnmer s
design for Lice thai cir, be protected
to be a permanent resident in the from the josding insistence of this

€6* f ott*

Voice VMLLudali'oUcv

phone. An afternoon , evening crnour
I don ' t know if any cf us could keep
ths sort of new year 's resolution. But
now, before the colors of summer are
shaken into one dull hue , we should
allot some small piecesof peace to be
used in other seasons. Call them the
summer times.

Unless suted otherwise, the editorials In The. N' .ilio m ti llu' >>|\litliMi« mut
concerns of the Editor-in-Chief , m»i do iml ii milutouv
of all m embers of The Voice sialT. or (he student pnpiiUllim of Ulmimvlun fi
University.
The Voice invi t es all readers to e\piv*i their opinion* mt IU« vtll vmlnt \v» v>
through letters to the eililor ami giu-xi eolmmis, ,\|| KtitmiUiilttt iii uttut \w t\ft .
An
ed and include a phone number mul uil.li ¦»* foe vurlUt 'ttlloii , ullhoo^i dftmt^
c Submissions should be sent to 'The Voleo olYt t'w, KnUi Hiilmi tll .
Bloomsburg University, or droppetl olY ill ttui uft'tvtt In (tin umittu * > »nm\', 't'h»
Voice reserves the ri ght to edit , condensu or t t\|n«'l ill! kiiliin Uklmo.

HUSKY ANNOUN CEMENTS

Reagan defends education

by Don Irwin

L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

WASHINGTON _ President Reagan maintained Saturday that, as
U.S. schools reopen this month , prospects for educati on arc "brighter than
they have been for two decades," but
Senate Majority Leader Robert C.
Byrd , D-W.Va., retorted that "this
White House has never had a real
commitment to education."
Frequently colliding views on the
merits of the administration 's appr
oach to education were aired in
Reagan 's regular weekly radio broadcast and in the Democratic response,
delivered by Byrd . Despite electionyear differences on methods, the two
agreed that the nation 's future progress depends on the quality of today 's
education .
Since 1980 , Reagan said, test scores
and school attendance have impro
ved, while high school dropouts have
decreased. He called that it "a genuine
grassroots accomplishment" which
"proves the solution to problems is not

Pope
tours
Zimbabwe

to throw money at them , but lo come
up with common sense answers and
start applying them."
Dropping an oblique testimonial
for Vice President George Bush , the
Republican presidential nominee
who has said he wants to be an "education president," Reagan said he and
Bush "have been there with a sympathetic ear and a helping hand."
"But we've only just begun ," Reagan continued. "Far loo many
Americans are graduating from
schools without the skills they will
need to prosper and the knowledge
they 'll need to grow as adults. ...
"The education our childre n need is
the ability to read , write and reason as
well as any student in any country in
the world. ... The nation needs it as
well if we're going to prosper and
grow."
Reagan said he believed
children should be instructed in "the
best that has been known and said ,"
but added that curriculum decisions
are up to school districts, because "the
final arbiter of what a child should
learn is not the state, but the famil y
and the community ."
Byrd argued that Democrats have
tried vainly for seven years to "edu-

cate the administration about the value
of education ," but "the administration
hasn 't done its homework."
Even though "America 's future
economic prosperity depends on having the best educated work force in the
world ," Byrd said, 40 percent of engineering students graduating from U.S.
colleages and universities today arc
foreign born. He said this is "because
our schools are not teaching our children the math and science skills they
need for our new hig h-tech economy. "
While this point has been made
repeatedly, Byrd declared , "nothing
has been done by the White House to
link America's economic future to
rebuilding our nation 's educational
system." He said the White House
version of the traditional "three R' s"
amounts to "rhetoric, reductions and
retrenchment."
Byrd maintained that the
administration 's record for educating
the 23 million Americans who arc
believed to be functionall y illiterate is
"completely blank ," althoug h "these
ililcrate Americans are the very
Americans who can make the difference if America is lo stay number
one."

rf

^

Pat Benatar will
appear at Nelson
Fieldhouse on Oct. 5.
Tickets are $9 with
BU LD. and $12 for
all others. They will
be on sale at the Information Desk beginning Sept. 15 at
10:30 a.m.

J

• • • •e « « « a o e e a

BU Young Democrats will hold
first meeting Tuesday, Sept. 14 at 7
p.m. at the John Showers Office on
East Street. All newcomers welcome. Call 387-8161 for details.
• • •o « * » «* « « e «

Image tryouts will be held Wednesday, Sept. 14 at 9:30 p.m. in the
Centennial Gym Dance Studio.

Presidential Issues Forum will
be sponsored by the BU Young
Democrats on Wednesday, Sept.
14 at 7 p.m. in Multi-C. Film of
candidates and open debate will be
featured . Come for information
and argumentation.
The Campus Lawyer will be
available to students on Tuesday
nights from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the
office of Dr. John Mulka, KUB.
The Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsoring the film Hoosiers Wednesday, Sept. 14 at 8 p.m.
in the Presiden t's Lounge. The film
is free and all are welcome.

The first Husky Clufe luncheon will
be heldtoday in the Nelson Fieldhouse lobby from 11:45 a.m. to 1
p.m. The luncheons will be held
every Monday during the football
season. Coach Pete Adrian will be
present to show highlights of the
previous gamevand to answer questions.

IPC All-Presidents' Talk will be
held on Tuesday, Sept. 13 at 9:30
p.m. All men interested in pledging
this semester must attend.
The Bloomsburg Concert Committee is now accepting applications
for membership until Friday, Sept.
23. Applications can be picked up
at the Information Desk, KUB.

Don't miss Bingo tonight at 9 p.m.
in Multi-B, KUB. Only 250 a card.
$150 in prizes.

(•(•I don't want
a lot of hype.
I ju st want
something I
can count on.55

by William D. Montalbano
L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

HARARE, Zimbabwe _ Embarking on a pilgrimage to five black-ruled
cout hem African nations, Pope John
Paul II on Saturday called economic
sanctions acceptable as ajast resort to
end apartheid in white-ruled South
Africa.
On his fourth visit to Africa , and the
39th foreign trip of his 10-ye ar reign,
the pope will see first-hand some of
young Africa's triumphs and tragedies.
Before returning to Rome on Sept.
19, John Paul will pray in a dissim ilar
oair of Marxist states. Drosnerine
Zimbabwe and war-torn Mozambique; in two tiny kingdoms, Lesotho
and Swaziland; and in diamond-rich
Botswana, an African democratic
model.
Contentious South Africa, whose
commanding presence weighs heavily on its hostile black neighbors elsewhere, is conspicuous by its absence
from the papal itinerary.
Shuffle-dancing, flag-waving
women in long cotton skirts and
chanting, spear-waving folkloric
dancers in grass skirts greeted John
Paul here Saturday on a cool and
cloudless afternoon.
Gawking blacks and whites mixed
amicably to cheer the pope as he rode
to town along a route splashed by the
purple blossoms of Jacaranda trees.
Under President Robert Mugabe,
Zimbabwe_ the defiant British colony
of Southern Rhodesia until 1980 _ is
Marxist, but measured, and its economy is highly advanced by African
standards.
A white minority of about 100,000
in the nation of 8.4 million plays a
dominantrolein the business community, and Zimbabwe's manufacturing
industry is one of the strongest in
black-ruled Africa.
Greeting the pope at airport ceremonies Saturday, Mugabe told John Paul
he hoped "your visit will add a little
more weight to the pressures we are
trying to exert on the Pretoria regime."
Mugabe strongly advocates sanctions but has backed away from imposing them unilaterally, because of
the severe economic toll they would
take on Zimbabwe.
In a region where Roman Catholics
are a small minority, the pope will
stress "spiritual renewal at every level
of the church," but as John Paul flew
south Saturday he spoke mostly about
South Africa in response to lengthy
questioning in five languages by 70
reporters on the papal plane.
"Economic sanctions are a political
method. From the moral point of view,
they are acceptable in some situations,"the pope said, adding, "I think
there should be a search for solutions
that are less imposed, and more worthy of man."
In the United States, a sanctions bill
approved by the House is now before
the Senate but opposed by the White
House, which says sanctions would be
counterproductive.

^

Homecoming float registration
form s have been placed in all organization mailboxes. The deadline
for registration is Oct. 10 at 4 p.m.
Forms may be turned in to the Information Desk, KUB. Forms can be
obtained at the Information Desk or
from Jimmy Gilliland in the Student
Activities Office.

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Benatar 'AH Fired Up' for Bloomsburg
current issues, such as stars making commercial endorsements
which influence people, in the
song Cool Zero .
She re-addresses the issue of
child abuse- on her new album in
a song titled Suffer the Little Children. She first gave the issue exposure in her earlier hit Hell is For
Children.
Suffer the Little Children is
based on the true story of a child
who was abducte d and buried
alive.
In an interview in East Coa'st
Rocker magazine, she explained
that the concept behind her album
concerns being aware of what 's
going on in the world around us,
which is not "dreamland."

by John Risdon
News Editor

Rock star Pat Benatar will bring her
Wide Awake In Dreamland tour to
Bloomsburg University on Oct. 5 at
Nelson Fieldhouse.
The show will be one of the first in a
tour of America which will last unti l
December , before Bcnaiar and band
tour Europe , Japan and Australia.
Bcnaiar reached success back in
1979 with her first album , In The Ileal
of the Night , producing two hits ,
llcarlbreakcr and We Live For Love.
The album attained platinu m status ,
selling more than one million copies.
During ihe span of her 10-ycar career
she has gone throug h major changes,
from sex symbol and video star to wife
(of her guita r player , Neil Gerald), and
mother (of their two year-old daughter ,
Haley).
Bcnalar 's career lias been one of
extreme success with each of her
seven
albums attaining platinum
status.
Her most successful album Crimes
Of Passion , which includes the hits You
Better Run , 1lit Mc With Your Best Shot
and Treat Me Right went quadruple
platimun , selling four million copies.
The singer was awarded four consecutive Grammy Award s between
1980-84 , establishing herself as one of
the top female rock artists of the 1980s.
Currentl y she is listed on the Sept. 3
Billboard charts at the number 19 position with All Fire d Up, her first single
from Wide Awake In Dreamland ,
which is listed al 32 out of the current
top 100 albums.
Benatar spent two years working in
the studio on Wide Awake in Dreamland .
The album reflects her opinions on

"Sometimes I don 't even
know what I 'm doing here—
I'm not in the rig ht time. I
feel like I've been left behind
with the hippies from the '60s
who believe in peace and
love, but don 't see thatyou 've
got to work at it and fight for
it. "
She says in the interview , "I
don 't know how long people expect this to go on. You can't just
keep dump ing cesspools into the
water and garbage into the air and
expect it to last forever. And you
can't act like this towards each
other forever and expect to have
anything left.
"That's what the record (Wide
Awake in Dreamland) is all
about...having your eyes open in a
place that 's 'dreamland'—where

every tiling is golacn-cvcry thing is not!"
Concerned for the world her two yearold daughter will have to face, Benatar
says, "Sometimes I don't even know what
I'm doing here—I'm not in the right time.
I feel like I've been left behind with the
hi ppies of the '60s who believe in peace
and love, but don't see that you've got to
work al it and fight for it. "
According to the same interview , Benatar was also involved in the Sun City
recordings , which protested apartheid in
South America. She also partici pated in
the first Amnesty International tour three
years ago, as a "roving reporter ," according to East Coast Rocker.
She was approached to do this year's
Amnesty tour , but is unable to because of
her busy schedule.
The Bloomsburg Student Concert
Committee selected Pat Bcnaiar last
week as this fall' s campus concert after
reviewing a field ol" artists currenUy on
tour. The decision revolved around what
acts were available in the area during the
months of October and November. Benatar was selected due to her collection of
hit songs and availability.
As of this lime, the opening act has yet
to be announced by the Student Concert
Committee.
The committee is hoping for a positive
response from the BU student body while
the tickets are on sale.
Bcnalar's stop here at Bloomsburg on
Oct. 5 will be a good chance to sec the
artist in an intimate setting as her tour
progresses to larger venues , such as the
Spectrum in Philadelphia , and Europe,
which she plans to hit after Chrisunas.
Tickets for her show at Nelson arct
$9.00 wilh a curreni Bloomsburg I.D.
(with valid Community Activities
sticker), and SI2.00 for all others. The
tickets go on sale Thursday, Sept. 13 at
10:30 a.m.

Pat Benatar , who will he playing at Nelson Fieldhouse on Oct. 5, is one of the top female rock stars of the '80s.

Music Revie w

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Guns n Roses best new band

by Scott Anderson
for The Voice
Certain groups have always prevailed when the discussion turns to
rock n ' roll. The classics... Led Zeppelin, The Who, and , of course, the
immortal Rolling Stones.
The high voltage excitement created by bands like these has not been
equalled since the departure of The
Who back in 1982.
Many new groups have tried , and
many have failed , but none have created such an impact upon arrival as
Guns n ' Roses.
Guns n' Roses is not only the best
new group to come around in years,
but it is perhaps one of the best groups
to emerge in the last decade.
At first glance, this band may seem
to be yet another typical "no talent
heavy metal band" which has been
bombarding the record aisles in recent
years. However, there is a lot more to
Guns n Roses than meets the eye.
Singer W. Axl Rose's uni quely
wide-ranged vocal quality and stirring
stage performance make him one of
the most exciting lead singers around.
Lead guitarist Slash' s seemingly violent hard thrashing does nothing to
detractfrom his smooth style of guitar
playing, reminiscent of a young Keith
Richard .
The Rose/Slash duo is similar to
that of Jaggcr/Richard or Plant/Page.
Their songs deal wilh the cold harshness of reality and the band' s perhaps
hopeless, yet vibrant desire for a better
society.
"You ' re a very sexy girl, very hard
to please. You can taste the bright
lights but you won' t get there f or
free. "
Lyrics such as these found in their
hit Welcome to the Jungle describe the

bitter reality of the difficulty of surviv
ing on the streets in a big city.
The haunting mood created in Mr.
Brownstone further exemplifies the
horrors found in the every day world.
A song which at first seems to be
playfully innocent actually tells of the
hellish life of a drug addict.
"/ used to do a little but a little
wouldn ' t do it so the little got more and
more.
I just keep trying to get a little better,
a little belter than before... "
These lines portray the endless
cycle in which a typical drug addict is
trapped.
Proving to be a multi-dimentional
band, Guns n ' Roses puts on one of the
most memorable shows around. Having seen them twice this summer , it is
quite apparent that this is the type of
band that will play according to the
prevailing mood which eminates from
the crowd.
At a recent show at Giants Stadium
which had a boisterous yet non-violent
and controlled crowd, Guns n' Roses
was allowed to be their natural selves
— wild, raunchy, and entertaining
with non-stop action. They played all
the songs people came to hear
including Sweet Child o' Mine and
Welcome to the Jungle .
Though Guns n ' Roses may now be
just an opening act, it is obvious that
they will soon reach the caliber of any
headlining band.
With their powerful lyrics and
show-stopping music, Guns n' Roses
will not be taking the back seat for
long.
Keep an eye open for their next
arrival. It 's a show worth seeing.
Until then , pick up acopy of Gunsn '
Roses' debut album , Appetite for Destruction. It speaks for itself. ¦

Wellness Day devoted
to complete well-being

Student Health Center sponsors Wellness Day at tha Library Mall Wed., Sept. 14.
Photo by Jim Bettendorf

by Shay Butasek, R.N.
for The Voice
It's the beginning of a new semester
and time once more to set aside some
special time to focus on the many
facets of wellness.
Wc, at the Student Health Center,
want to remind the campus community that being "well" docs not merely
mean being free of disease. Wellness
is a total commitment to physical ,
cmoiional , and spiritual well-being.
We also want to emphasize that
Wellness Day is for everyone on
campus. This includes all staff, faculty, and students.
On Wednesday, Sept. . 14, the second annual Wellness Day will be held
at the Library Mall.
Wc have asked representatives of
campus law enforcement, suite, and
local police to be at booths to meet
students and staff, and to provide
pamphlets , answer questions regarding alcohol , drugs , and legal problems.
Representatives from many community agencies will be present with
answers to many of your questions
pertaining to wellness.
Kath y Thomas of the Penn State
Extension Service will give you the
lowdown on the "fattening" effects of

alcohol. Gloria Young of Bloomsburg
Hospital can provide information regarding their now alcohol "detox "
unit , appropriately called "New
Hope." Florence Thompson, of the
Women 's Center, will provide information on such issues as "Date Rape,"
which is often related to over-indulgence in alcohol or drugs. Cindy
Rupp, of Family Planning, will have
information on Sexually Transmitted
Diseases (often contracted when on is
"under the influence") and reproductive issues. In addition , representatives of the Red Cross, Mental Health
Association will be present.
Be sure tojoin us at 1p.m., when Dr.
Robert Kosloski of the University Art
Department will present a talk on Art
and it 's use in drug and alcohol treatment. Art is a valuable relaxation tool
and a terrific means of expressing
emotion.
We are fortunate to have Bcrnie
McMonigle of Clear Brook Lodge is a
treatment center for adolescent alcoholism and chemical dependency located in nearby Shickshinny.
Having a positive self concept is an
importantaspectofmental health.Th e
Academy of Hair Design will again be
on hand to transform "LizaDoolittles"
into "Fairladies", with new makeup

and hairstyles. They can also answer
questions related to hair, skin, and
makeup.
"Dr. Chicken" from the "Someone
Cares" balloon store will be roaming
the arealogive his quicky "checkups."
"Someone Cares" is also donating
balloons to add to the festivities.
Dorothy Ashman of New Age
Supply will be present with information on nutrition and body building for
both men and women. Also on hand at
Dorothy's booth will be Bill Downs of
Muscle Masters. Bill is well trained in
both male and female requirements
for athletes. He has some of the latest
information on natural plant replacements for steroids. Don 't miss this
opportunity to speak with Bill.
Dorothy will also have resource information on alcoholism and issues
involving children of alcoholics.
We know that good nutrition is a
vital aspect of wellness. Bob Wislock
and the personnel department will
again provide us with delicious delec tables.
The Health Center will be showing
a timely film on the subject of AIDS.
The film is not a documentary. It is a
true story .
So, everyone, come up to the Library Mall for fun , food , and facts.

had been given to her by her Ouija
board in 1919.
One man refused to join the army
after Pearl Harbor if he could not take
his Ouija board with him. When the
recruiting officer let him demonstrate
the board and it predicted the Nazis
would be defeated , Ihe Ouija board
joined the army, too.
In 1966, Parker Brothers bought the
ri ghts to theOuijaboard. Andinl967 ,
it outsold Monopoly.
The Donning International Ency-

clopedic Psychic Dictionary warns,
however, that the Ouija board is "a
dangerous tool when used by one not
well-grounded in psychic sciences
and knowledge of beforehand preparation."
During the course of all our Ouija
"marathons," the spirits we encountered "told" us many things. Frighteningly, one spirit even spelled out the
exact date, year and place Madison is
supposed to die.
Needless to say, Tenia's board was

promptly left to collect dust underneath a lounge chair in my room..
Even Madison and I were uneasy
about that situation , but no one else
would keep it.
Everyone was still curious about
that magic board that had us mesmerized for two weeks, though. They
were the longest two weeks of the
semester for some of us.
After reading my article, Tonia,
who owned the board .said, "Hey
Bridg, wanna buy a Ouija board?"

Ouija boards have long and strange history

by Bridget Sullivan
Features Editor
Editor's note: Some names in this
article have been changed to protect
the reputations of those involved.
When Tonia brought a Ouija board
into our dorm last year, it was just for
fun - another toy to distract us from our
studies. She never thought it would
become an obsession. Neither did I.
It started out harmlessly enough.
Two people, usually my roommate
Madison, and Maxine from down the
hall, would sit Indian-style on the
floor, facing each other, with the
board on their laps.
There were never more than three
people on the board at one lime because the Parker Brothers box lid
warned that too many people would
confuse and/or scare the spirits. So,
Madison and Maxine would place
their fingers ever-so-lightly on the
funny-looking triangular-shaped device with the window that helped the
spirits answer our questions.
The board itself had the letters of
the alphabet, numbers zero through
nine and the words yes, no and goodbye printed on it.
So, when the triangular window
would swiftly move to yes after we
would ask, "Are there any spirits
here?" we knew someone ~ or something ~ heard us.
The spirit would then spell out its
name, and supposedly answer the
questions we asked about our futures,
as well as tell us about their own lives
on Earth and how they passed on to the
nether world.
Common questions such as, "Who
am I going to marry?" and "How
many kids will I have, if any ?" kept the
spirits busy in the beginning.
But when the Ouija gave Tonia a
message from her late grandfather to
tell her mother, Tonia refused to have
"that thing" in her room.
Madison and Maxine became obsessed. They were using the board for
hours every day. This "mystifying
oracle" had cast a spell on all of us , I
must admit.
Naturally, I wondered what the big
deal about Ouija was. I had tried a few
times to use the board myself... unsuccessfully. It is said in the world of
Ouija that the spirits know if you don 't
believe or when you 're scared of
them, so they won't talk to you. I
guess I was more scared than I
thought.
Curious about its origin, though, I
headed to the Andruss Library to find
out where the mysterious Ouija came
from.
According to an article called Ouija
by James P. Johnson in the FebruaryMarch 1983 issue of American Heritage magazine, the board originated in
America in 1847 when two teen-age
sisters (better known as the "Fox sisters") "claimed that mysterious (table)
rapp ings emanated from their

bodies...(and were from) the ghost of a
peddler murdered and buried in their
cellar."
Even though the girls later adi n itied
that "they were cracking iheir knee
joints ," the desire 'to communicate
with the dead persisted.
Then in tire 1850s, a chemistry professor at the University of Pennsylvania , Robert Hare, "developed a complex table that converted movements
into letters automatically by means of
pulleys and a circular alphabet dial."
The triangular-shaped window
device Madison and Maxine (and a
few others as well) would put their
fingers on was originally created by
French spiritualists.
The planchette , as it is still known
today, started out as a "tiny, heartshaped board supported by two short
wooden legs and a pencil." When
someone put his or her fingers on the
planchette, it would move about the
paper underneath it.
The patent for the Ouija board belongs to William Fuld , even though
two men from Maryland ,E.C. Rcichie
and C.W. Kennard , claimed to have
invented it. Fuld had been a foreman
in the Kennard Marketing Company,
where Kennard produced his board .
Fuld bought the right to the Ouija
board and recorded the patent in 1892.
The name "Ouija" has different
origins; Kennard said the word was
Egyptian for "good luck ," while Fuld
explained that he combined the
French and German words for "yes":
"oui" and "ja". Both men claimed the
name was given to them by the board
itself.
Fuld and his brother Isaac (who
marketed his own version of the Ouija
board, the Oriole Talking Board) redesigned the board by putting the letters of the alphabet, the numbers zero
through nine and the words yes, no,
hello and good-bye printed on it.
They built the planchette with three
legs and a pointer to move on the 3ply, 18 x 12 inch pine board .

Famous Ouija stories are quite
numerous-more than I had imagined.
There was''Patiencc Worth , a spirit
who revealed herself to Pearl Curran
in 1913, and spoke through her for
more lhan 20 years.
During those 20 years, Pearl , who
claimed no writing talent, wrote seven
novels, as well as thousands of poems
and epigrams. And in 1916 Patience
asked Pearl to adopt a child. Pearl
found a child put up for adoption that
matched the description Patience gave
her, which included hair color and
ancestry.
The board gained popularity during
World War I, and at the University of
Michigan was said to have been used
more than die Bible and prayerbooks
in fraternity houses and students'
rooms.
On Dec. 23, 1933, a Ouija board
told Dorothea Irene Turley 's 15 yearold daughter Mattie to kill her father
so that Dorothea could live with her
lover.
Mattie served six years in Arizona
State Industrial School, and her
mother, though sentenced to 10-25
years, served only three years.
Two years later, the Ouija was
claimed as being responsible for another murder.
Nellie Hurd was told by her Ouija
that her husband Herbert was having
an affair with a woman he had given
515,000 to from a secret fortune of his.
Herbert denied it, and claimed Nellie
"beat...burned...and tortured me into
confessing all those lies." Because he
could not stop her belief in Ouija,
Herbert "had to kill her."
Macy's was selling thousands of
Ouija boards by 1944, but R.S.
Woolworth , a psychology professor
at Columbia University predicted the
craze would end by 1945 - and it did.
But in 1956, the Ouija 's popularity
reappeared when Helen Dow Peck 's
will was read.
Mrs. Peck had left most of her
S180,000 estate to a man whose name



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643 E. Front St.
Mon.-Thurs. 10a.m.- 6p.m.
Danville
Closed Sundays & Major Holidays
275-5771



L

d

$ 12 citC others
Subsided Btj Ca*3.

THE FAR SIDE

Bloom County
by Berke Breathed

by GARY LARSON

Daddy long-leg jerks

Scientific meat markets

Camouflage
1
IVk Collegiate
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I W ^emzzs ^ HI

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Eskimo restaurants

Can you find the hidden
philosophers?

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CLIP & SAVE
WEEKEND BUS SERVICE to
LEHIGH VALLEY, CLINTON,
NEWARK AIRPORT &
NEW YORK CITY

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AQUINAS
ARISTOTLE
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VOLTAIRE

College Students: Account executive wanted. Part-time servicing
and
selling
advertising.
Bloomsburg area. ( Good money.
Preferred status min. junior. Daytime call 1-524-9850, ask for Brian.
Evenings after 6 p.m. call 387-1205

Now Hiring : Part-time/Full-time
cooks, waitresses/waiters, dishwashers. Apply in person at
Ridgeway's Restaurant , 801 Central
Road , Bloomsburg.

Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD

Wanted: Student desiring to go to
Pittsburgh on weekends with my
car, and willing to share driving and
expenses. Long weekends preferred , although willing to compromise to meet studen t's schedule.
Any or all trombone players interested Write: Resident, P.O. Box 94, Shin making some extra cash while play- enandoah , PA 17976
ing for the live, on the razors edge,
laugh in the face of death University
Studio Band should contact Dr. Wal- The Bloomsburg Student Concert
Committee is now accepting applilace A.S.A.P.
cations for membership until Friday, Sept. 23. Applications can be
Attention all Greeks! Theta Chi open picked up the information desk in
house! 231 East St. Wed., Sept. 14 at Kehr. 2.0 GPA required.
8:30-10:30 p.m. Free refreshments!

«.m»aT.]jnr
in Calif. (213)477 -8226
Or, rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN, Los Angeles, CA 90025
Custom research also available—all levels

Split Ends Beauty Salon 784-2250
Discounts to students—Call today!

Earn S6-S8 an hour. Now hiring
drivers. Flexible hours, tips, raises,
and pizza discounts. Must be 18
years or older and have own car wilh
insurance. Apply in person after
4:30 p.m. to Domino 's Pizza , 599
Old Berwick Road , Bloomsburg.

PAT BENATAR - Oct. 5th at Nelson Field House. Tickets on sale
starling Sept. 15th at 10:30 a.m. $9
w/BUID with CA sticker and $12
all others.

Needed: Pleasant, dynamic , responsible students to work at Information Desk, KUB. Should be qualified for Federal Work Study. Contact Mrs. Purscl , 389-3900 or submit an application A.S.A.P.

ESSAYS & REPORTS
16^78

to choose from —all
subjects

W$mm 800-351-0222

SuzieK. -Youlittlepoop ! 7:30a.m.
is a little late to listen to your "stereo
system." The Night Talker
God bless the Grateful Dead, they
aren't mass comm. majors. They're
making a living!
Congrats Jim!! Front page photo!

I VOICE

BmHam^H^^^BBBDHHBBaiHB ^B^^aBni ^HnBiin

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Order any pizza and get $1.00 ¦
on Fridays and Sundays
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$1 00
ff!
1988
Fall
Semester
Schedule
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Expires: 9/15/88
.
¦ ¦ ^_^___
Fri. Schedule will operate on...Nov. 23 (Wed.)
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a
No Friday Service on
Nov. 25
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Regular Service on
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59 9 Old Berwick Road
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ad under the heading:
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Phone: 784-6211
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Five cents per word.
Expi res: 9/15/88
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12:20 pm
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599 Old Berwick Road
Qy^HH
Call or stop in at Carter Cut Rate - 422 East St. - 784-8689
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I

Soccer kicks back

Huskies defeat Ship, 2-0
by Jamie Calkin
Staff Writer
Bloomsburg Men's soccer defeated Shippensburg 2-0 Saturd ay in
their first victory of the season. Both
goals were scored in the second half
as the momentum switched in favor
of the Huskies.
"Wc started off terrible. The first
ten minutes was all Shippensburg ,
but wc turned it around and dominated the second half. The team
showed a lot of maturity and devotion." Coach Sieve Goodwin commented .
Junior Jerry Crick, an all-regional
player, tapped in the first score, unassisted , almost midway through the
second half. BU then scaled their vic-

Football
wins

BU's Jack Milli gan netted a goal against Shippensburg Saturday, ensuring his team 's first victory.

Pholo by Rob Samimann

Men 's, women 's cross country teams
race to third and fifth place finishes
In Competition dominated by
Division I teams, Brenda Bisset
and Craig Koch led the men's and
women's cross country teams to
respective third and fifth place
firlishes this weekend at the Lafayette College Invitational in Easton.
More than 150 men and women
challenged the Metzger Fields
five-mile and five-kilometer
courses.
In the women's race, Renee
Laubens broke the tape in 18:40 to
lead Lafayette to the team title over
runner-up Fordham.
Brenda Bisset led all
Bloomsburg finishers with a fifth
place finish in a time of 19:36.
Other Bloomsburg scorers included Pam Mitchell , 12th , 19:51,
Laurie Alexander, 19th, 20:32,
Julie Saville, 27th, 21:01, Loreen
Miller, 31st, 21:21, Bridget Hed-

New
assistant
director
named

Joe DeMelfi has been named assistant director of development/athletics at Bloomsburg University on
an acting basis, according to the
university's director of development, Anthony Ianiero. DeMelfi
has been given the one-year appointment to replace Tom Calder,
who resigned to accept the assistant
athletic director's position at Johns
Hopkins University.
In his new duties, DeMelfi will be
responsible for the athletic fundraising activities of the university
dealing in large part with the over
1000 members of the Husky Club.
The club, which was initiated in
1974, is part of the Bloomsburg
University Foundation, Inc. and
received gifts totalling almost
$100,000 last year.
He will work in close conjunction
with Ianiero and Mary Gardner, the
director of athletics, in helping to
provide scholarship aid to many of
the university 's more than 550 athletes. He will continue to administer
the many programs established for
the membership of the club, including the weekly football luncheons,
socials following designated winter
events, summer golf outings and
others. In addition, the Husky Club
will help honor this year 's inductees in the university's athletic hall
of fame on Sept. 23 and 24.
DeMelfi has been a member of
the Bloomsburg staff for 13 years
serving as assistant director of admissions and assistant dean of extended programs. He was in the latter capacity during the past year.
The Berwick native also spent eight
seasons as a member of the
university's football coaching staff.
He received his bachelor 's and
master's degrees at Delta State University in Cleveland, Mississippi.

man, 38th , 22:18, and Dana Rapson ,
42nd, 23:32.
In the team competition , the Huskies
bested two Division I teams, LaSalle and
the University of Delaware, as well as
PSAC foes East Stroudsburg and West
Chester.
On the men 's side, Millersville runner
Kevin Stover broke away from the pack
at the 2.5 mile mark and ran uncontested
to claim the men 's overall victory.
Stover completed the five-mile course
in 25:57.
Division I national powerhouse Bucknell took the team title, placing iheir top
five runners in third, fourth , fifth , sixth ,
and seventh places overall. LaSalle finished a distant second.
Craig Koch was Bloomsburg's top
finisher , placing 10th in 27:15.
Bloomsburg's varsity was rounded out
-by- Mark Elsasscr, 24th , 27:58, Stan
Share, 41st, 29:05, Mark Jobes , 47th ,

.

several of those incomplete passes
were just dropped , so his numbers do
not reall y reflect the type of day he
had.
Ti ght end Loncrgan was
Vcncsky 's main receiver as he
grabbed six passes for 78 yards with
a long of 18.
Switching to the defense , Lee enjoyed another fine Saturday as he had
two quarterback sacks and blocked a
field goal.
Heavy and Sahm at defensive back
both had fumble recoveries for the
Huskies. Sahm and Dennis also each
grabbed an interception.
Bloomsburg will play its homeopener this coming Saturday against
the Bald Eagles of Lock Haven University . The game at Redman Stadium is scheduled to start at 1:00 pm.
The Huskies hope to keep building
momcnlum against Lock Haven and
Kutztown the next weekend as a big
conference game against West
Chester looms closer and closer.

for Shippensburg. Both players controlled the midfield and teamed up for
the only two scores of the game.
Shippensburg came into the game
undefeated in scrimmage play, but
chalked up their first loss of the season
as BU took the important conference
victory with a decisive shutout.
"Those two goals were a big emotional and psychological boost. The
boys were wondering if they could ever
score because of that game against
West Chester," Goodwin stated.
The Huskies are hoping for a repeat
performance in their next game against
Lock Haven.

The following is a schedule for recreation facilities at The Nelson Field
House and the Centennial
Gym

From Page 8

29:25, Scott Hotham , 48th , 29:26,
Tom Kangcr, 51st, 29:46, and Chaz
Bartholomew , 54th , 30:06.
Veterans Mark Elsasscr , Craig
Koch andStanSharc h avegaincdalot
of competitive experience in road
races during the off-season and should
continue to provide the necessary
leadership for the squad.
Elsasscr and Share, along with
another senior, Dave DeGerolamo,
also compete as members of the
university 's long distance corps on the
track and field team.
Koch return s to the team after missing last season , and senior Tom
Kanger is racing again following a
two-year absence from the sport.
Themcn finished fifth outof seven,
defeating West Chester and Lafayette.
Saturday, BU harriers travel to State
College for Penn State's-Sprked Shoe
Invitalional .

ATHLETES...

tory with a goal from junior co-captain Jack Milligan , who was assisted
by sophomore Mike Gomez.
The team needed the victory to
stay in the running for a playoff spot
next to Stroudsburg, the league
powerhouse. "Our backs were
against the wall as far as the playoffs
were concerned ," Goodwin said.
"Wc definitely had to win."
Junior Alfred McKenzie, an allregional pick , played a near perfect
game on defense aiding sophomore
goalie Keith Cincotta in picking up
his first shutout of the season. Crick
and Milligan combined their skills
to produce a tough offensive threat

Centennial

Nelson Field House

Adult Fitness Center:

Nautilus Room:

Mon - Fri 9 am - 9 pm
Sat & Sun 12 pm - 6 pm

Mon - Thr 9 am - 9 pm
Friday
9 am - 6 pm
Sat & Sun 12 pm - 6 pm

Nautilus Room:

Free Weight Room:

Mon - Fri 9 am - 9 pm
Sat & Sun 12 pm - 6 pm

Mon - Thr 9 am - 9 pm
Friday
9 am - 6 pm
Sat & Sun 12 pm - 6 pm

Main Gymnasium:
Mon - Fri When Available
Sat & Sun 12 p m - 6 pm

Indoor Track:
Mon - Fri 8 am - 9 pm
Sat & Sun 1pm - 4 pm

Pool:
Mon

8 am - 9 am
7 pm - 9 pm
Wed
8 am - 9 pm
Tue, Thr
8 a m - 9 am
& Fri
12 pm - 2 pm
7 pm " - 9 pm
Sat & Sun 1pm - 3 pm

Pool:
Mon 12:15 pm - 2 :15 pm
Wed 12:15 pm - 2:15 pm
7 p m - 9 pm

m
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Keh r Union —^———^ —^

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Bloomsburg Univer sity

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KUB

Women 's Tennis team wins
their first conference match
against Kutztown 7-2
by Kelly Werkheiser
Staff Writer
The Women 's Tennis team split
their two matches this past week as
Bloomsburg defeated Kutztown 7-2
and lost to Bucknell 6-2.
Last Thursday afternoon the team
suffered a disappointing loss in their
season opener against Bucknell Uni«
versity 6-2.
Despite the Huskic 's loss, sophomore Labosky went on to win her first
singles match of the year (6-3,3-6,62). '
Labosky, combining with her
doubles partner , Arlow , were victorious (6-4,6-3).
Despite the unsuccessful singles
matches of top seeded Nancy Buie (36,3-6), senior Jean Canccllierc (2-6,16), fi fth seeded Jaymc Arlow (1-6,06), and first year player, Michelle
Strutt (4-6,6-4,4-6), the Huskies
gained experience from their respective matches.
While playing a very an agrcssive
match , the number one doubles team
of Buic and Von Luehrtc, lost a close
one to Kutztown (5-7,4-6).
Coach Doc Herbert slated , "It was a
tough opening match and wc will have
to raise the level of our play."
The Women 's tennis hosted
Kutztown for their fi rst conference
match on Saturday the 10th, and had a

relatively easy match as they cruised
to victory with a 7-2 win.
After a tough defeat by the Huskies
Nancy Buie to Kutztown 's Chrissy
Porter (2-6,6-4,3-6), Bloomsburg
won the next seven out of eight
matches including a sweep in the three
doubles matches.
Cathy Von Luehrte won her match
against Melanie Jones (7-6,6-4),
while Chris Labosky defeated the
Golden Bears Kathy Hector (6-3,6-4).
The only other loss in this match
came at the hands of Kutztown 's Maureen Walsh as she defeated Jean Canccllicre (2-6,1-6).
Bloomsburg then took the last five
matches as Jayme Arlow beat Jodi
Amos (6-0,6-4), Michelle Strutt defeated Velerie Yurinko in three sets
(6-4,3-6,6-3) in singles competition.
All three of Bloomsburg's doubles
teams won as Buie/Von Luehrte defeated Porter/Jones of Kutztown (63,6-2) to clinch the team victory.
Labosky/Arlow and Laurie MacGregor/Cancelliere added victories
over Walsh/Yurinko and Hector/
Amos respectively.
The victory over Kutztown gave
Bloomsburg their first victory of the
season and the Huskies are now 1-1
overall and 1-0 in the Pennsyl vania
State Athletic Conference.

Golf starts season

Freshman Jim Geigcr was the team medalist with a score of 83 over the
Soaring Eagles Golf Club at the Elmira College Invitational last week. Other
Bloomsburg scoring was Todd Arwood with 92 and Wes Hollis andEd Rogers
with a 93. The team travels to Pocono Manor Golf Club Wednesday Sept 14 for
the East Stroudsburg Invitational .
Elmira Invitational Results:
Rochester (Blue)
Gannon
Rochester (Gold)
Binghamton
Hamilton
Ithaca
St. Bonnaventure
Oswego
Elmira
RDI
Bloomsburg

302
311
324
326
329
338
339
339
353
354
361

Pitt-Bradford

400

Student
Athelete
of the Week

Leonard Itlu:tt(7) gaining some of his 129 rushin yards in Bloomasburg 's 21-7 win against Shi ppensburg.
Photo by Chris Lower

Offensive line dominates as Bloomsburg
defeats Shippensburg 21-7
by Dave Sauter
Staff Writer
Inspired by an outstanding job done
by the offensive line and a defense tha '.
would just not break, the Huskies of
Bloomsburg L'nivcrsity claimed a 217 "ictory over Shippensburg University on Saturday.
The game, played at Seth Grove
Stadium in Shippensburg in front of
6,500 fans , marked the 53rd meeting
between the two clubs. It was also the
Red Raiders' season opener.
Much like last weekend's contest
against Norfolk State, the Huskies
won the toss and elected to defer until
the second half , allowing Shippensburg to receive the opening kickoff.
The drive by the Red Raiders typified the kind of day the Husky defense
would have. Shippensburg easily
moved downfield to the Bloomsburg
nine-yard line where Husky defense
finally dug in and stopped them.
In this case, it was defensive back
Tom Heavy, who recovered a fumble
by Shippensburg's Robert Plummer.
Bloomsburg opened the scoring in
the game on their second drive, one
that consisted fo 81 yards in 18 plays
and lasted several minutes.
Running back leonard Bluilt led the
Huskies on the drive as he carried the
ball nine times for 35 yards, Eric
Speece had a good run , and tight end
Paul Lonergan caught a nine-yard

pass in a crucial third-down situation.
Quarterback Paul Venesky ran a
keeper from three yards out to score
the touchdown. With a perfec t extrapoint kick from Mark Weiss ,
Bloomsburg led, 7-0.
In the second quarter on their very
next possession , Speece capped another long drive of 73 yards in 14
plays with a three-yard run for a
touchdown. Weiss again was on the
money and the Huskies now led, 14-0.
Bluitt and Speece again paced the
drive with their running as Venesky
mixed up the plays very well keeping
the Red Raider defense off balance.
Bloomsburg really dodged a bullet
when Venesky was racked up on a
second down play deep in Shippensburg territory. Back-up quarterback Dave Robson made his initial
varsity appearance for a play before
Vanesky was able to return.
The Red Raiders finally got on the
scoreboard late in the firs t half on a
bomb by Steven Muchowski to wide
receiver Jeff Lucas. The pass was
good for 59 yards and six points. Wilh
John Duke's extra point, Bloomsburg
lead had been cut to 14-7 going into
the third quarter.
The Huskies received the kickoff to
start the second half and promptly
marched 73 yards downfield for their
third touchdown of the day. The drive
was highlighted by the Vanesky/Lonergan show as the talented tight end

caught three passes in a row for 45
yards. Bluitt caped the drive with his
run from five yard s out. Weiss extra
point attempt was good again and
bloomsburg was up 21-7.
The Bloomsburg defense hi ghlighted the rest of the game with crucial plays coming in just the right
situations.
Early in the third quarter , Joshua
Lee blocked a field goal attempt by
Shippensburg 's Duke to thwart a
drive. Defensive tackle Chris Gross
scooped up the ball and rumbled for 19
yards before being brought down.
Later, in the fourth quarter, Shippensburg drove to the BU 20-yard
line, only to be stopped by a Ron Sahm
interception.
Very late in the game, Trent Dennis
stopped a final surge by the Red Raiders with a leaping interception near the
BU 5-yard line.
From there, it was just a matter of
the Huskies running out the clock, and
claiming their second victory of the
season.
By way of final statistics, for the
Huskies, Bluitt enjoyed another fine
day as he gained 129 yards on 30
carries. Speece also had a good day
with 12 carries for 61 yards.
Quarterback Venesky completed
seven of 13 passes for 79 yards and
was intercepted once. Additionall y,

by Kelly Cuthbert
Sports Editor
Jan Hutchinson 's field hockey players certainly know their game; they
opened their season in a fashion quite
reminiscent to last season—total
domination.
The defending 1987 national champions had an "easy" day as they
soundly crushed their first opponent,
Lycoming, 8-1. "Today was a little too
easy," commented Head Coach Jan
Hutchinson. "They (Lycoming)
weren't that strong. We 'll really be
tested on Tuesday when we play Gettysburg."
The 1988 Husky line-up tested the
skills they 've been working on and
perfecting during pre-season, and the
pay-off was victory—one of the highest scoring games in BU's successful
field hockey history. "We're starting
to work on a more intelligent passing
game," Hutchinson stated.
The Huskies took a total of 29 shots
and BU goalie April Kolar did not
have to turn away any Lycoming shots
before or after their lone goal.
BU also caused numerous Lycom
ing penalties to capitalize on 25 cor

ners during the game.
Junior Daneen Fero, an NCAA alltournament pick last season, led the
scorers with three goals. Senior
S.iaron Reilly, a 1987 All-American
and all-tournament pick, followed
with two. Reilly was tied last season
for the top scoring position with 14
goals.
BU's defense didn 't see much action thanks to a domineering attack,
but when they were tested they kept
their opponents out of scoring range.
Contributing nicely to the defense
were freshman Trudy Horst, junior
Kathy Frick and senior Betsy Warmerdam.
Senior Cindy Hurst knocked the
first goal into the cage from her left
forward position in the first five minr.cs of the game. Teammate Alicia
Terrizzi, also a senior, followed suit
three and a half minutes later wilh her
goal from the opposite forward position. Terrizzi was assisted by Reilly.
The next and only Lycoming goal
came off the stick of opponent Kim
Kauffmen , making it 2-1 with ten
minutes remaining in the half. Reilly,
however, returned the favor one min-

ute later, dodging a defender and
slamming the ball into the cage.
The scoring frenzy continued as
Fero knocked two in , making it 5-1 at
the conclusion of the first half. Her
second goal was assisted by senior
link Michelle Carcarey.
Fero decided to open the second
half the same way—wilh a hard outside drive that was tipped into the goal
by a Lycoming defender .
Susie Slocum later converted a corner penalty into a goal as she received
the pass from Hurst and drove the ball
into the cage from the top of the circle.
The final goal of the game came
from Reilly, who picked up the ball
from a scramble in front of the cage
and knocked it in.
Although Hutchinson was pleased
with the win , she said, "We still have
a lot to work on to be where we want
to be at the end of the season. We need
to work more on supporting each other
and on achieving more depth on defense."
The Huskies next game is at Marywood on Tuesday and they then return
home on Wednsday for a tough contest against a Getteysburg at 3:00 pm.

See FOOTBALL page 7

As a new school year began so began new ideas for the Sports pages.
"Lets have a column were we recognize an outstanding athelete at
Bloomsburg," wc thought.
And so it was born.
In the next issue of The Voice due
out this Thursday , September 15, we
arc going to introduce a new column
called Student Athelete of the Week.
The column will focus on an
Bloomsburg athlete that we feel has
achieved a level of excellence during
the last week based on information
that we have.
All Bloomsburg University varsity
athletes are eligablc for this honor and
pure statistics may not determine who
is Student Athelete of the Week.
For example, a football player may
have a fantastic game statistically, but
a women 's tennis player may have defeated a nationally ranked player in
her singles match . This may qualify
the tennis player over the footbal l
player for that week.
The award is also not limited to one
person .
Let us say that we are trying to
decide between two field hockey players for the honor, but we just can 't
destiquish which one should receive
the award. Wc may just award both
athletes.
Student Athelete of the Week will be
a celebration. A celebration of all
Bloomsburg athletes be they football
players, field hockey players, golf
players, or any oilier varsity sport.
It will ' honor an athlete who has
given his/her all to the dedication of
his/her sport and has also well represented Bloomsburg University.
Candidates for the first Studen t Athlete of the Week are:
Michelle Strutt, Women's Tennis
team. Strutt, a freshman , won her first
match at the collegiate level last Saturday in a tough three sets against her
Kutztown opponent.
Leonard Bluitt , Football team.
Bluitt , who has had to fill big shoes
with the graduation of Tom Martin has
done a excellent job and had a good
game against Shippensburg rushing
for 129 yards on 30 carries.
Daneen Fero, Field Hockey team.
Fero was the high scorer in the field
hockey's home opener against Lycoming scoring three goals. The three
goals already matches her total goals
scored for last year.
One of these three will be chosen as
Student Athelete of the Week and will
have a feature story done on them
which will appear in the next issue of
The Voice .

Field hockey crushes
Lycoming in first game, 8-1 Scoreboard

Sophomore Christy Gibson takes part in the Huskies domination over visiting
Lycoming
Photo bu Jim B e t t e n d o rf

7ootball

31oomsburg
21
Shippensburg 7
Soccer
bloomsburg
Shippensburg

2
0

>oss Country
. a f a y e t t e In v i t a .ional
Vlen's: Fifth Overall
Women's: Third Overall
?ield Hockey

31oomsburg
sy coming

8
1

Women ' s Tennis
Sloomsburg
7
Cutztown
2
kickneli
bloomsburg

6
2
i