rdunkelb
Thu, 12/11/2025 - 18:19
Edited Text
Soviet Union extends diplomatic ties to South Korea
By William Sexton
SEOUL, South Korea Evidentl y
dazzled by the economic miracle on
show at the Seoul Olympics, Soviet
officials have begun distancing
themselves from their North Korean
ally and preparing to open dircctrclations with thc former South Korean
enemy.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
hinted at the turnabout in a major
foreign policy speech last week in
Siberia , and these concrete developments were already under way here:
Hungary and South Korea agreed to
exchange permanent diplomatic
missions. That would constitute the
first such recognition of the South
since the communist bloc supported
and supplied thc North' s invasion of
South Korea in 1950.
Western diplomats considered it a
foregone conclusion that Moscow
atleast approved and probably in-
spired Budapest 's decision. North
Korea angril y accused Hungary of
"intolerable treachery."
South Korean officials said that
Moscow, which established a temporary consular outpost here to look
after ils nationals during thc Olympics, is expected to leave semi-official missions in place to deal with
trade and oth er continuing exchanges. That would be another
postwar first.
A top Soviet expert on Asia disclosed that Moscow was preparing
to i nvite South Korean investment
in developing the Soviet Union 's
vast Siberian resources.
He said the Soviets also "are especially interested in computers, microprocessors , automobiles" among
other products from South Korea.
"Thc Soviet Union wants to have
a new relationshi p with South Korea, " Mikhail L. Titorcnko , director
of theSovietFarEasternResearchInstitute, told an academic seminar
here.
After a week 's curious silence on
the issue, the official North Korea n
news agency reacted angrily yesterday to the evident erosion of previousl y unwavering support from die
Soviet bloc.
"Hungary's decision is an intolerable treachery to the principle of
Marxism-Leninism and the revolutionary cause of the working class ,"
Pyongyang's Korean Central News
Agency said. "Hungary has now discarded even the elementary stand and
the moral obligation s ofthe Communists."
Western dip lomats said the newapproaches to Seoul should be
viewed as only part of a major recasting of Soviet geopolitical strategy.
"What comes out of the Gorbachev
speech is that Asia obviously is go ing
to bc thc economic powerhouse ofthe
21st Century, and Moscow is way
behind the United States in Asia," a
western European diplomat said.
"Washington has allies like Japan
and South Korea and perhaps Taiwan . Look at the Soviets' friends _
North Korea and Vietnam , both basket cases. They 've got to improve
their position."
He said for that reason the policy
spelled out by the Soviet leader Friday during a visit to Krasnoyarsk ,
Siberia , a major city in Soviet Asia,
should be taken seriously by western
strategists.
Another analyst suggested
Hungary 's recognition of Seoul
mi ght have been intended as a warning to Pyongyang to reform its economy and move to ease tensions with
Seoul .
"Whether Moscow follows
Budapest 's lead might hinge on the
Nelson Mandela would probably be
released after local elections in South
Africa in late October.
A member of thc ruling National
Party, Willcm Odcndaal , said that
Mandela would "most probably" be
given his freedom after the elections
Oct. 26.
Mandela, leader of the outlawed
African National Congress, has been
in prison for26 years. He was given a
life sentence for sabotage in 1963.
The eight-member South African
delegation is on a fac t-finding mission in West Germany. The delegates
arc members of South Africa 's threetier parliament.
Mandela may be free after elections
L.A. Times-Washington Post Service
BONN, West Germany (DPA) A
group of South African members of
parliament, on a visit to West Germany, said here Wednesday that the
imprisoned black nationalist leader
North Korean response", he said.
This diplomat predicted Moscow
would move very cautiously in enlarging ties to the south .
Gorbachev spoke positively but
vaguely about the Korean peninsula ,
evidendy leaving it to academician
Titorenko to spell out tbe details.
"The Soviets respect the history
and culture of bodi South and North
Korea," Titorenko said. "We also
respect the development of science
and technology and the remarkable
economic growth of South Korea."
But he saw "stumbling blocks" to
the proposed "new relationship wi th
South Korea: the presence of U.S.
nuclear weapons in South Korea,"
most of them targeting the Soviet
Union , and an annual U.S.-South
Korean military exercise evidently
too close to Soviet territory for comfort.
Still , significantly, there was no
mention of U.S. withdrawal from
South Korea , a condition always attached by North Korean leader Kim II
Sung to any negotiation on normalizing relations.
Titorenko was tacitly unsparing of
Pyongyang's economic and tcchnolog ical backwardness after four
decades of Stalinist leadership.
He spoke of thc South' s "extended
economic power"and proposed S iberia as "die most probable area for specific economic cooperation between
the two countries."
Soviet tardiness in acknowledging the North-South economic disparity is explainable in part, at least,
by Moscow's lack of any diplomatic ,
commercial or even journalistic representation in South Korea since tlie
Koreas were divided in 1945. Only
last year were Soviet correspondents
granted visas to cover Seoul's Olympic preparations firsthand.
Finance Minister target of assassination attemvt
Radical groep strikes out in Germany
By William Tuohy
L.A. Times-Washington post Service
BONN The West German terrorist group known as the Red Army
Faction claimed responsibility Wednesday for the attempted assassination ofa senior official ofthe Finance
Ministry.
The police said the terrorist group
might be planning to disrupt the annual meeting, scheduled to begin
Thursday in WestBcrlin , ofthe International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank.
The Red Army Faction, also
known as the Baader-Mcinhof gang,
said in a note delivered lo news agencies here that it had ambushed Hans
Tietmeyer, an assistant finance minister, en route to his office from Bad
Godesberg, a Bonn suburb, Tuesday.
It said it had joined with the Red
Brigades, a guerrilla group in Italy, to
altack "imperialist power"and "West
European economic and money policies." Other groups protesting the
IMF and World Bank meeting have
criticize d the international agencies'
policies toward Third World countries, arguing that loans to those countries have thrust them deeper into
poverty.
West German officials have taken
strict security precautions in Berlin ,
fearing that officials and bankers attending the meeting could be targeted
by guerrillas.
Authorities in Bonn said that a full
clip of submachine-gun ammunition
was found near the site of Tuesday 's
ambush. They took that as an indication that the gunmen had bungled the
assignment. Some security officials
speculated that a kidnapping was
planned but went awry when the
magazine was dropped.
The Federal Criminal Office said
in a statement: "On the evidence received, we cannot rule out that Dr.
Tietmeyer was supposed to have
been kidnapped ."
The Criminal Office said it was
seeking seven suspected members of
the Red Army Faction who are
wanted in connection with previous
attacks, and the office announced a
reward of $27,000 for information
concerning the incident, particularly
about to two cars and a motorbike
seen near the scene.
Contrary to Monday 's edition , Carver Ha '.l is not 200 years old. Last weekend a
bel l ringing ceremony was held to celebrate thc constitution 's 201 anniversary
Photo by Chris Lower
U.S. arms reduction talks make gains
Democratic candidate.
Both sides at the Moscow summit
L.A. Times-Washington Post Service
WASHINGTON In probably the in May wrote off chances of completfinal negotiations between the Krem- ing a Strategic Arms Reduction
lin and the Reagan administration, Treaty this year in which long-range
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. offensive nuclear weapons would be
Shevardnadze opens his 28th round cut about 50 percent. But as they
of talks with Secretary of State continue working toward a jo int text
George P. Shultz here Thursday in a on an agreement, U.S. officials said,
session that will stress "continuity"in differences could be narrowed now
U.S.-Soviet relations but is unlikely on such relatively technical issues as
air-launched cruise missiles.
to break major new ground.
In assessing each side 's arsenals,
U.S. officials expressed some hope
for arms control advances on strate- the Soviets want to count every bo
gic arms reductions, the controver- mber as carrying its maximum possial Soviet radar at Krasnoyarsk and sible load of such missiles 20 or22 on
cuts in conventional forces in Eu- a B-52, for example.
The United States wants to "attribrope.
The absence of Soviet chief of staff ute" to each bomber the average
Sergei Akhromeyev from the number of air-launched cruise misShevardnadze party makes major siles it carries 8 or 10.
The United States currently has
progress on the first two issues doubtmore
and better bombers and airful , but new impetus might be given
to starting talks on reducing arms and launched missies, and the Soviet
troops facing each other across the counting method would more severely constrict the number of such
Iron Curtain.
The two-day session will "empha- weapons the United States could resize continuity and process in the tain under the numerical limits of a
relationship," said Assistant Secre- treaty.
If the Soviets accept the U.S.
tary of State Rozanne Ridgway.
Moscow wants to complete as approach ,a concensus on this technimuch business as possible with this cal point might be possible, U.S.
administration, officials said, and the officials said.
administration wants to keep up arms
The huge Soviet radar at
control momentum to facilitate the Krasnoyarsk, which the United
work of its successor next year.
States insists is illegal under the 1972
Shevardnadze will meet President Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty, will be
Reagan on Friday, and Vice President discussed.
George Bush , at his request, is exBut the Reagan administration appected to meet the Soviet official pears to be in no mood to give the
sometime during the visit, Ridgway Soviets significant concessions in
said.
exchange for a Soviet promise to tear
Massachusetts Gov. Michael S. it down.
Dukakis has no plans for a meeting,
Backed overwhelmingly by the
according to a spokesman for the Congress and both presidential can-
by Robert C. Toth
Senator Ed Hclfrick addressed "Pro-Life at the Polls" in thc President's lounge
Photo by Chris Lowtr
Monday evening.
In its note to the news agencies,
the Red Army Faction said that Tict
meyer was responsible for "genocide
and mass misery in the Third World"
and that "as a delegate of the IMF and
World Bank , he develops and forces
through the imperialist policy of
annihilation through hunger and
counterinsurgency against the
peoples of dependent countries in the
south."
Over tlie years, the Red Army
Faction has claimed responsibility
for several assassinations of West
German government and business
officials. Police say it has tics not
only to Italy's Red Brigades but also
to the French urban terrorist group
Direct Action.
didate s, the administration wants the
two 10-story-tall buildings dismantled, and their foundations demolished, before any new arms
agreements are signed.
The Soviets., seeking a way out of
an obvious blunder, have proposed
several face-saving compromises.
But the administration wants to wipe
out the roughly five- to seven-year
lead time the Krasnoyarsk facility
represents for Soviet development of
a"batde management"radar, a senior
U.S. official said.
The ABM treaty forbids such radars in a nation 's interior. The facilities are permitted only on the border
and facing outward; the Krasnoyarsk
station is some 3,000 miles from the
Arctic coast.
Two compromise ideas on
Krasnoyarsk have surfaced recently.
One idea posed would be to negotiate
a set of rules for building such radar
in the future, including advance notice of where and when the construction would occur, in exchange for
demolishing the currentradar station.
This administration has already rejected that approach , but a Dukakis or
Bush administration might consider
it, U.S. officials suggested.
If this session produces significant
progress on the issue, Shultz an d
Shevardnadze could meet again before the end of the year, officials said.
The conventional force negotiations depend on a successful end of
the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, a periodic forum
to monitor observance of the 1975
Helsinki Accords.
Human rights issues are the main
obstacles to wrapping up the conference, which has been under way in
Vienna for the past two years, officials said.
Before the end of the conference,
the United States and its Western
European allies want to see improved
Soviet performance in releasing political and religious prisoners, including five Soviet citizens who were part
of the original Helsinki Monitoring
Group in Moscow in 1977, U.S. officials said.
They also are seeking hi gher immigration rates and codification of recent Soviet human rights reforms into
law.
In exchange, the West would ihen
agree to, among other things, a "conference on the human dimension" in
Moscow within the next few years
that the Soviets want in order to discuss international human rights issues.
Index
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I
Peace , Love , and Understanding
A coy died here las; - esja He ~ as neverrectify tha damage done, I never
ene cf us. No — auar if he was --.ear- cli write thai nasty letter to ihePressEr.zerprise telling them what a shitty
job they did of covering such a deliCT. Z .""775 -TT * ^"^5 r.15 ¦• "" ~ r71_> 2**Z T.C .* 15 cate issue. But that doesn 't take away
the fact that, although I didn 't know
Brian, it affected me , too. I guess
that ' s wh y I' m writing this.
Ironically. Brian ar.d I have a lot of
things in common. We ' re both collece students , sophomore s, 19 years
c '.d. ar.d we both attend Bloomsburg
r *;TO TV, " Z ~ 7> w Ci3. V". 5"wl *'777 Z . "D \- ".71 - Univ ersity. Ke even helped with a
p '.ay i v. as in last year, but I never got
to meet hum since we were on different sides of dne stage. But still , I feel
'_l-:e 1 zzYiic:*** him—or that I should
"
,
¦*. _.- z zzr.-z z r . ^ had to dea l wi*h ~ 77-'>
<
¦::-:. rest -ec -V.' y and tactfull y leav:*¦¦:' .y. Brian was wearing the night he
¦¦¦ent
thrcuch with his fatal action.
•
7;.7 P rczz-Erz.crprize , on the other
'. .j .r.z.. decided that such info rmation
¦¦¦
• c : absolute ' ;.* vital to the Importance
¦ .: " ihi , story . ' ar* d had the GALL to
:-:: ...;iiy --. uh '.ish it. let alone ask such
* -. .zzzYzzzY. Perscr.all y, I DON'T
shoc king ar.;:tragic event To Brian 's
family ar.d friends: I am insulte d FOR
you. I am sorry that such a tragedy has
to be so horridly publicized just because a certain newspaper just happens to dislike our University, and
Brian just happened to be a part of th is
institution.
Knowing that no matter how incredibl y pissed off I got about this
whole th ing ran d the unprofessional ism of certain parties; would really
wil l ever know what they really were,
or how intense they got
Maybe that 's because you 're a lot
like me, only I' m riding through this
tunnel ull the music stops, which
hopefully won 't be for a long while.
And when that last song is played,
maybe I'll find you at the end of this
tunnel , and then we can take a rainbow
ride across the sky, and spread the pot
of gold (which is reall y peace, love
and understanding , if we may borrow
frcm Elvis Costello) to the complex ,
potential-filled world below that
needs it all so much....
Someone who cares
life ts Ufe . Ar.d it is precious. If
Editor 's No te: After much debate,
s:- *c:t c hooses to end theirs, howI have decided to take Mike
}. lu!iens advise and change the
ever sad **-e may think such an act,
[ name of Jen McGinley's column.
*_-.:_- life still deserves respect. ltwas
.'./;. reasons are different than Mr.
B rian ' s decision. Tne reasons may
Mullen 's, howe*Jer. I believe that
-;*.;-.:be •r.c v. n to anyone , not even
Jen should have her own identity,
his fam ily. But. doesn ' t it always
end not have lo write in the
seem to happe n that way...
shado***,* ofthe 'O Great One. I ,for
It ' s a shame that all these insights
I K E . I JIOW what it is like tofollo*****
'n ad to be the result of som eone else's
:*-. those shoes. Il is no: p leasant.
final—ar.d fatal—decision.
So. Jen , forg ive r r & f o rchanging
rr.-. mind at the last second. Your
r.r_r.. it you re listening, thank
c/.umn is temporarily nameless,
ycu. Thanks for m ailing me think
r.y -.ever, I do believe that you will
about my own situation in this life ,
be better off. As for Chsmiak. Yes
ir.d realize that no matter how stress' did write some wonderful
ne
1_1 it may get , and how hel pless and
columns. But he was a legend in
rcpe 'ess I might feel , there is a light at
his own mind,not mine.
Ire end of this tunnel of life , of growing up. Maybe it isn ' t graduation , or
even adulthood; I'm not sure what it
Ls, but it 's something Lhat has a deep
enough meaning that I have to find out
wha t it is.
I only wish you could have finished
this tunnel ride with us. But you chose
A copy of last Thursday 's Voice
to get off a little bit earl y. In a world
mysteriously
surfaced at the office
full of peer pressure , drugs, and probwhere I work and circulated among
lems we should have figured out soluLhe employees. By the ume I arrived
tions to long ago. that 's understandfcr *.*.ork at 2 p.m., they all had a
able. You had your own problems and
chance to read my article on love and
you had your reasons for doin g what
lus*. and were demanding to know the
you did. Right or wrong, you made a
trcs identity of Karriiti Himmler.
decision. I can understand Lhat—not
I: shall . hava.io tone down- . this
why you did what you did , but I can
week's article, lest they discover that
identify with the pressures you must
I am not the mild-minded computer
have been feeline. even thoueh no one
operator I appear to be. I was going to
discuss my plan to solve the mystery
of Elvis ' s death by interviewing the
aliens who allegedly kidnapped him ,
State Government this summer. I but I think under the circumstances I
know that their emp loyees ' past v. ork should eo with something a littie more
experiences are weighed equal l y to mundane.
So what ' s really important in life?
educational experiences.
Being a state university I feel Lhat he asked , without the benefit of a
Bloosburg University shoul d be re- transitional phrase. What are my priquired to adhere to these state policies orities? Is my attention focusedon Lhe
important things in life? Is there any
as well.
So much more can be learned from ice cream left in the freezer? What
aperson who has had large amounts ef should my priorities be?
The old cliche for the important
hands-on experience as opposed to a
person who may have a PhD but things in life went , "God, country,
knows nothing about a particular area,. family, friends, and then self." In my
case this would have to be modified to
of study.
Changes must definitel y be made!! "God , family, country, friends , job ,
This is the education of students we cats, baked goods, college, and then
are talking about- not a political arena. self." Homework would probably
come in at about 45 on the list
Kimberlv Clark
Just say yes to overni ght guests
. .' e. - _ . . .¦- . (,. u.S U_ :. ^-i , L:c
beleaguered dean , a fuii-throa isd
protest. But ihe pickets carried a cryptic message: ' z a\. Yes to Guests. "
Guests .* What had mobilized the
studer. es on the sprawlin g urban cam pus o; boston university was a new
pclicy banning overnigh t and latenight visitor s to the dorms. Starting
next January, no one except a relative
of tine same sex, or a prospective student , can be in a dorm room after 11
p.m. on a weekriight or 1 a.m. on the
weekend.
For Lhe first time in many years an
administration at a major university
decided to limit dormitoryhours. "We
are simply saying tnat we must have
an environment in which students
have the rights to sleep and study,"
says Dean Ronald L. Carter.
The rights to sleep and study have
been sorel y battered indeed since student residences were transformed into
Liberty Halls. Many dorms today
resemble crowded subway trains
where the loudest music box dominates the environment The biorhythms of the entering freshmen
undergo a wrenching change to fit in
with the sleep cycle of dormitory action. There are more than a few horror
stories about a roommate's lover who
becomes a permanent lodger.
BU' s focus on regulating "guests"
has led students to believe that the
new rules are less about bedtime than
about bed partners. Dean Carter insists Lheseare not anti-sex rules, especially in coed dorms , but rather rules
for a livable community.
Even so, the university 's decision
provokes a new set of questions. Is
this university, are many universities,
gradually returning to their role as
parent? Is it about ume? Or is this an
inappropriate, role for educators who
deal in young adults?
At some point during the late Sixties, 18 became the age of total emancipation. Since you could be drafted at
18 , the reasoning went, you should be
able to vote at 18, drink at 18 , and live
as an independent adult making your
own decisions. Colleges that had been
basically stopped overseeing the social and moral lives of students.
Dr. Ernest Boyer, president of the
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, says that by
the tai\y 1980s, "Campuses were
Beer goggle sydrome:
Lt happens to the best of us
Sunday 's are no longer for
going to church whith the family, at least not while you 're in
college. Instead , most Sunday
afternoons are spent reconstructing the events ofthe night
before or saying goodbye to "uh ,
what's your name again?".
In the 50's, good girls didn 't
do "that»kind of thing". In the
60's and 70' s, "free love" was
the only way to relate to each
other. ButintheSO' s. wejust act
on impulse and ask names later.
Why? "What causes the one
night stand on college campuses
(which inevitably leads to the
morning afterj?
Some students blame a full
moon , while others claim to be
effected by their horoscopes.
The majority, however , admit
to falling helpless into the arms
of alcohol... yes, the dreaded
Beer Goggle Syndrome.
It
starts off innocently enough , a
glass of beer and some conversation with a mildl y interesting
person— but before you know it ,
it's been numerous glasses of
beer and a conversation with
the most incredibly beautiful/
handsome, sexy creature that
has ever walked the whole lace
of the earth.
To make matters even worse,
' their are some who are immune
to this syndrome arid prey on
the helpless. Maybe you 're one
of THEM... don 't you loye telling your friend the morning
after a party howhe/she danced
naked up College Hill... when
you know full well that they
didn 't, but hey, they don 't
remember, right?
Ah , the joys and sorrows of
the morning after are quite and
odd mixture. Who knows,
maybe the enforcement of
underage drinking laws is a
good thing. At least you'll
stand a better chance of having
memories to look back on of
your time here at Bloom, instead of worrying about anyone
finding out about the College
Hill episode
r nmSnt iff liJlM -kM
Pastry and other priorities
Not getting money s worth
Tine Mass Communication Department is queasy about hiring pan-time
professors , not to mention full-time , if
they do not have a PhD.
Come on now! I feel that the time to
mak e allowances has definitely
arisen. One entire sequence of study
has already been cancelled- How
much longer will it take until another
sequence is cancelled as well?
I have heard that other Departments
cf study at the University do not require PnD' s- if the applicant is qualified. Frankly, I do not understand
why the Mass Communications Dep artment is the exception. What kind
of "colitical charade is going on around
here?
Having work ed as an intern for the
By 3en McainCey
dramatically divided. They had rigid
academic requirements. But they said
noth ing about what it meant to be a
good citizen on campus. On some
campuses there was a low-grade decadence with no guidelines that could be
debated inte lligentl y."
When Dr. Boyer asked college
presidents about this, they squirmed.
They felt they were not in charge of
student life, but were held accountable when trouble happened.
Now , public attitudes about adults
have gradually changed and so have
collegiate ones. The drinking age was
raised in most states and the campuses
followed suit Indeed, it is worth noting that nobody at the BU rally protested the new restrictions on alcohol
in dorms.
Colleges are pulling back from the
sort of freedom that set undergraduates adrift, the freedom that seemed a
lot like neglect. Butthat doesn 'tmean
they should retreat to the old rules of
paternalism, regulating student life
from the dean 's office.
Dr. Boyer repeats the ambiguous
words of a student he once interviewed: "We don't want the univeristy involved in our lives, but we want
someone to be concerned about oui
lives."
It is a subtle distinction that any
parent of a college student has to recognize. And so does any administrator.
What BU has done under its combative president, John Silber, is to
reassert institutional authority. It
never engaged students in revising the
code for communal living. It just laid
down a new law . Guests out by 11
p.m. No overnight visitors. BU behaved like an authoritarian parent and
the students rebelled at being treated
like children. It was utterly predictable.
In the passage to full adulthood,
college students want guides, not
overseers. They need the sense that
there are community standards and
older adults who uphold them. But
they also need to feel like substantial
and welcome participants in the community, and not like subjects.
So, at Boston University these
days, even those undergraduates who
find Liberty Hall a noisy and disruptive place are raising the banner for
the dubious right to "say yes to
guests."
That whole idea dates from 30 years
ago or more, when th ings were different. Priorities have changed since
then.
Having firm beliefs in anything,
especially religious doctrine, is no
longer fashionable. If you make any
sort .of stand for religion or moral
integrity, you 're likely to be accused
of being messianic by people name
after cucumber-like vegetables.
Worse yet, people will compare you
with TV evangelists.
Strong feelings for the family are
out of vogue, too. The nuclear family
of three decades ago no longer exists,
at least according to the magazines.
No point in developing strong ties to
someone you 're going to divorce in
three years.
National pride? Unconstitutional.
With all the old values gone or
applying for workman 's compensation , what are the values of today 's
citizens? Grade point averages and
yearly income.
Tell you what let 's change that for
a day. I'm not suggesting that it 's
wrong to strive for good grades, or
that making a lot of money is necessarily a bad thing. I am saying that
these things should be of secondary
importance in the grand scheme of
things.
Let's get some new priorities in
here. Cinnamon rolls obviously go
near the top cf the list but that goes
without sayir.g.
Our society tells us to look after our
own interests first because "no one
else will". I propose that for the rest of
the day we look after the best interests
of the first person on our immediate
left whose shoes match our shirt
We spend way too much timetrying
to ''get ahead". I think we should put
our efforts into falling behind instead.
We 'd cover twice as much ground
that way and the end effect would
probablv be the same.
For this one day of alternate importance, let 's put a high premium on
scratching cats on the ears and special
emphasis on humming unrecognizable tunes.
Remember to stop and smell those
little red flowers that make women get
so mad if you forget to buy some for
them.
Get to know your universe. Stop
and have a long chat with the stars
some night They have a lot to tell you.
Tomorrow you can go back to your
old priorities. If you happen to sec two
small green people from Pluto, one
named Zaknar and thc other called
Brad, tell them that they need to phone
me before next week's deadline.
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg,PA 17S15
Editor-in-Chief
Karen Reiss
Managing Editor
Glenn Schwab
News Editors
John Risdon , Dawn D'Aries
Features Editors
Bridget Sullivan , Chrissa Hosking
Sports Editors
Kell y Cuthbert, Scan Ryan, Lincoln Weiss
Photography Editor
Christopher Lower
Production/Circulation Manager
Alexander Schilleninns
Advertising Director
Susan Sugra
Advertising Manager
Amy Oilman
Assistant Advertising Managers
Jim Pill* *., Lisa Mack ,
Jodi Donatelli
Business Manager
Ailinn Salek
Assistant Business Managers
Kris DaCosta, Carol Yancoski
Sales Managers
Bob Woolslager, Vince Veiuisiro
Copy Editors
David Ferris, Chris Miller
Contributing Editor
LyiinoKmst
Advisor
Jolin Maii ilen-ll ni ris
Voice Editorial Policy
Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in Thc Voice arc H IP opInUniN nml
concerns of the Editor-in-Chief, and do not necessarily rolled Iho opliilmm
of all members of The Voice staff, or the student population of llhuiinstinri ;
University.
The Voice invites all readers to express their opinions on Iho oriltorlul pii||o
through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must lio N I|*II .
ed and include a phone number and address for verification , «llhmi li mimos
u
on letters will be withheld upon request.
Submissions should be sent to The Voice office, Kehr Union Uulltllng,
Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at thc office In tho Ramos romii'. Tho
Voice reserves the right to edit, condense or reject all siitmilssloim,
Biologist gives lecture
By Bridget Sullivan
Features Editor
Cell biologist Dr. David Flcsch,
of Mansfield University, presented a
lecture on population growth and
nutrition titled "Welcome to Your
World ," Mon., Sept. 19 at 8p.m. in
Carver Hall.
Flcsch introduced the studentdominated audience to how rapidly
the world' s population is increasing,
while food supply is diminishing, by
handing out sheets of paper to cach
person as they entered the auditorium. These sheets had the names of
countries printed in bold letters. The
countries included the United States.
Latin America, Africa , Indi a, Japan ,
Russia, Pakistan, and Europe.
An audience-partici pation lecturer, Flcsch had the students geographically locate themselves in thc
aisles of the auditorium according to
which country was on their paper.
Then Flcsch explained that 8000
years ago there were 5 million people
on Earth . In 1987 lhat number expanded to 5 billion. Flcsch demonstrated this by having one person the
equivalent of 50 million people and
continued to randomly choose members of the audience to trace Ihe history of the human population of the
earth from 8000 years ago to the present.
Through this exercise, Flcsch
demonstrated in 20 years, the entire
world population will double.
Sixty percent of the world's popu-
lation is in Asia, according to Flesch,
and by the year 2000, that percentage
will reach 75.
The United States, while being one
of the wealthiest nations in the world,
only possesses one to two percent of
the population on this planet.
South America and Africa are the
most rapidly expanding countries in
regards to population.
Flesch said that experts predict that
this earth can hold 10-14 billion
people, which is three to four times
the present number.
Flesch demonstrated the increasing
overcrow/ling problem in our world
by having every person in each country huddle as close together as possible at ihe front of the auditorium.
After realizing how uncomfortable
such a situation is in terms of the
entire world , the studen ts were allowed to return to their seats.
"How do we feed you?" Flesch
then asked his audience. He then
became "Chef Pierre Donutski" who
prepared "meals" for everyone in the
world.
These meals consisted of doughnut in small brown paper bags, with
each doughnut representing one balanced meal.
As the members of each country
went on the slage to receive their food
it became apparent that the distribution of food in the world is very unequal .
But the most interesting aspect of
the food distribution , Flesch pointed
Friend of Biko to
speak at Lehigh
BETHLEHEM-Donald Woods, a
former South African newspaper
editor whose books on his friendship
with slain black leader Steve Biko
inspired the movie "Cry Freedom ,"
will speak at Lehigh University's
Packard Laboratory Auditorium ,
Monday, October 3 at 7:30 p.m. The
talk ia open to the public free of
charge and is sponsored by the Lehigh University Visiting Lectures
Committee.
A fifth-generation white South
African/ Woods, as editor of the
South African newspaper "The Daily
Dispatch", attacked the racial policy
of apartheid in his editorials. During
his twelve years of editorship (19651977), he was prosecuted seven times
by the government for violating the
laws restricting criticism of governmental policy.
In 1977, he was arrested and punished without legal process for publishing details of the killing of Steve
Biko, a young leader of South African blacks and Woods' friend.
Woods was subjected to a banning
order which forbade him to write,
speak publicly, to be quoted in the
press, or to speak or be in a room with
more than one person at a time .for
five years.
Three months after his arrest, following attacks on his family by officers of the State Security Police, he
escaped from South Africa with his
wife and five children to the neighboring country of Lesotho.
When he reached London in 19787
Woods was appointed director of the
Lincoln Trust, a foundation which
supplies information about aparthied
to the international media. In 1985,
he was appointed special advisor to
the 49-nation Commonwealth Secretariat in London.
MANDATORY PHOTOGRAP H E R S
MEETING
AT 9 P.M.
THURS., IN
THE VOICE
NEWSROOM
"Biko," his biography of the slain
leader, and "Asking for Trouble,"
Woods' autobiography were used by
director Richard Attenborough as the
basis for the film "Cry Freedom,"
released in November, 1987.
Woods also has authored "Black
and White," a book on the South
African situation , "Filming with Attenborough ," a recently-released
chronicle of the making of "Cry Freedom ," and "South African Dispatches," a collection of the "Daily
Dispatch"editorials that provoked his
banning.
"Cry Freedom," starring Denzel
Washington as Steve Biko and Kevin
Kline as Woods, will be Shown September 28-29 at 6:30 and 9:15 p.m. in
Lehigh University's Whitaker Laboratory Auditorium. The film is open
to the public for $2.
Bloomsburg Fair
informatio n
out, was that "No one offered to share
their food." Wealthy countries , like
Europe, received their food while a
poor country, such as Africa , would
also go to get their own. With half the
people in the Africa, India and Latin
America having no doughnuts and
starving, no one from Europe (or the
United States or Japan) offered to
share any of their food.
An the 17th century, .3 percent of
the poulation staved, said Flesch.
During the 18th century, 1.2 percent
died of starvation. That number
reached 3.3 percent in the 19th century and/Today, in the 20th century,
seven and a half percent of all the
people in the world are expected to
starve to death on this planet,"Flesch
said.
Pollution is also a contribution factor to the problem of food distribution ,
according to Flesch.
Pollution is destroying our resources (such as water)," Flesch said.
"Illness can also result from pollution ,
"Flesch pointed out."You can 't help
people if you're not healthy."
Flesch tried to show that "as population varies over time, it increases
over time."
The purpose of the exercise was to
"illustrate the difference between
countries with low and high population density and then compare them to
the per capita intake of food , which
varies depending upon where we
live."
Flesch said,"Food is bird to distribute. The behavior of people tonight is
tyupical of everywhere... it's hard to
share with people that far away."
f
&M©ra©[ii]iMTa
IKITOKY
Students interested in working
security for the Pat Benatar
concert may sign up for
interviews at the Student
Activities office in the Kehr
Union Building. Work Study is
not necessary.
The Men's Varsity Basketball
team is looking for dedicated
college students to fill the positions of secretary, team managers and student assistantcoaches. Please contact
assistant Bill Whitney at 3894371 or stop by Rm . 240 in
Nelson Fieldhouse to make
application as soon as possible.
Al pha Phi Omega ,
Bloomsburg's only national
co-ed service fraternity will
hold rush meetings on the following dates: Thursday Sept.
22 at 7:30 p.m.; and Monday
Sept. 26 at 8:30 p.m. All
meetings will bc held in the
Blue Room in the Kehr Union.
All are welcome.
Men 's
and
Women 's
Horsheshocs competition will
begin on Mon., Sept. 26. Signups have becn extended today
until 3 p.m. at the intramural
office.
Aerobics are in Centennial
Gymnasium Monday through
Thursday from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
wilh Sue , 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. with
Cheryl, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. with
Linda , and on Friday from 5
p.m. to 6 p.m. with Chris.
••••••••••••••• a
An error was made on
page 33 of the Pilot concerning thc Kehr Union Mail
Room. Note: "Unstamped
mail of a political nature may
not be filed in student boxes."
^
HOMECOMIN G
SCHEDULE
Sept. 22 Sweetheart
pictures will be taken
Oct. 10. 4 p.m. Deadline for Float, Banner,
and Residence Hall
Decorating registration *
Ott. 10-11 Primary
Sweetheart Elections
Oct. 12 Freshman
Sweetheart Elections
Oct. 14 Deadline for
Office Decorating registration
>
^
The Protestant Campus Ministry holds worship every
Wednesday night at 9:30 p.m.
in the PMC house chapel (368
College Hill). All are
invitedlCome fellowshi p with
us! Thanks! Any questions call 784-0703.
The Campus Lawyer is
available to students on
Tuesday nights from 7 p.m. to 9
p.m. in the office of Dr. John S.
Mulka, Kehr Union.
Pat Benetar with special
guest The Del Lords appearing October 5 at 8 p.m. at
Nelson Fieldhouse. Tickets
will be on sale in Multi A.
An
open
hearing
on
Communication
and
Coordination will take place at the
University Forum in McCormick
Human Services Center today at
3:30 p.m..
The Men's Lacrosse Club is
looking for experienced lacrosse
players and those looking to get
involved
with
lacrosse.
Interested people should contact
coach Bill Acierno in MHSC.
Students enrolled in 60.201Field Studies in Education I
with Professors Collins and
Doby will meet in the Hartline
Science Center at 6:00 p.m..
Previous meetings had been
scheduled for Carver Hall. The
next seminar will be on
Monday, September 26, at 6:00
p.m..
The Gray House, located at 312
East St.(next to Arcus Brothers)
is holding a non-alcoholic party
Sat., Sept 24 at 9 p.m..
Rush
TKE International
Fraternity Mon., Sept 26, at 9
p.m. and Tues., Oct. 4, at 9 p.m. in
Kuster Auditorium. Open House
to follow.
• • • • • •a
• «* o o « « o «
ATTENTION:
Education
Major with junior / senior
standing. If you have a GPA of
3.5 or better, Kappa Delta Pi
Honor Society invites you to an
Orientation
Meeting
on
September 29, 1988 at 7:30 p.m.
in the Coffeehouse, Kehr Union.
The Community Government
Association is sponsoring a bus
to the West Chester football
game on Fri., Sept. 30. The cost
is $2, non-refundable. The bus
will leave Elwell Hall at 3 p.m.
and return after the game.
Tickets can be purchased today
at the Information Desk in the
Kehr Union.
%rjp §|f
The 1988 Bloomsburg Fair
%SJ^ %?
g
fv |v Paradeof Stars fv f .
SEPTEMBER 24 thru OCTOBER 1, 1988
~
~
SAT., SEPT. 24 - 8:00 PM
DEMOLITION DERBY
RICKY VA N SHELTON & THE FORESTER SISTERS
THE
^gg§-%
Visitors to the Bloomsburg Fair next yj z r h, RECORD
KHIN ,
week are encouraged to stop at The ~e
p WAREHOUSE J^=y
American Lung Association of
Central Pennsylvania's Snowman 122 MILL ST'^^^ DANVILLE, PA
275-5551
Tree. The tree will be located inside
the front door of the farm museum
Stocking a wide
building and fairgoers will have the
variety on
opportunity to hang a snowman on
NEW & USED
the tree when they make a donation
*compact discs
to the Lung Association. Donations
records
*
of any amount will be accepted and
money raised will help the local
*tapes
association , which serveices
Northumberland, Snyder, Union, Hours: Tue-Wed 12-6
Thur-Fri 12-9
Montour, and Columbia counties.
Sat 12-5
Free pamphletrs focusing on flu ,
Closed Sun-Mon
emph ysema , asthma, cigarette
smoking, radon and other lung
Bring in this ad for a
related topics will be available to the
10% discount
public throughout the week.
TUES., SEPT. 27 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
MON., SEPT. 26 - 5:00 & 8:30 PM
NEIL SEDAKA
08
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^
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;'
LP^Ilfe
'
,¦ i . . .. . .. ..
_ .
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I
THE OAK RIDGE BOYS
on your favorite selections
I
I
- -
. . .
THUR-, SEPT. 29 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
WED., SEPT. 28 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
|
TIFFANY
THE LETTERMEN
*
with Special Guest Attraction
ALABAMA
EXPIRES OCT 31. 1988
Proa n-nlrck
d rree
uoKe .I
11 q
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Order any large pizza and
,
get four free cans of Coke
j
Onecoupon per pizza. Customer pays I
applicable sales tax on Coke.
1
Expires: 9/26/88
|
Domino's Pizza Delivers
I
Bloomsburg
599 Old Berwick Rd.
„.,
im i m m t m, mm mm mataMmms, mmmMm P ^SS '^^il 'Lm
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HOLLYWOOD STUNT
WORLD THRILL SHOW
|
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SAT., OCT. 1 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
, ltf
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s JETS
THE
"
CHARLEY PRIDEvUJ ,
-^D ^^i^-
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I $ 2 00
$2.00 Off any 3-item pizza.
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One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 9/26/88
.
Domino 's Pizza Delivers
Bloomsburg
599 Old Berwick Rd.
Phone: 784-6211
FRI., SEPT. 30 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
J
I
I
I
I
..
\7?....... .
.
. ..I . i...-
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...„„„„ ..::*,,
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I All Week long: • Free Band sheii Attractions
I j$j ^
I Other Editing Fair Features: * pitting zoo *
is Kiddie Rides * Free Horse Racing Monday thru Thursday *
I Biggest Midway in the East * Robinson' s Racing Pigs
...¦,,-.- T-
.
i
Ticket Information
GROUNDBOx oFFiCEON i
r™^^™s^T,^s
sah ^S^^W^g& DC,
Sat & Sun Sept 24 & 25-9 AM397
to 8 PM
^
Mae into-mat R^ne?!?
^
Fair Week-9 AM to 9 PM
JWDu-irg rc-zt ateo ^-z oo*
Amnesty Tour rocks Philadelphia
Over 40,000 people signed petitions to support the rights of humans
all over the world , as well as the freedom of political prisoners.
The creator ofthe Amnesty International tour , John Healey, came out to
speak on tour promotions between
sets.
There was also a special video presentation of thc thirty articles in the
Declaration of Human rights during a
45-minutc intermission , enli ghtening
the audience about tlie Amnesty
cause.
The Philadelphia show is one of
only three in tlie U.S., and was thc
only east coast performance. The tour
continues to spread its message as it
will perform in many locations around
by Lisa Ryden
for The Voice
Bruce Springsteen 's powerful twohour set kept thc sold-out audience on
their feet during the Amnesty International concert at JFK Stadium in
Philadelphia Mon. night.
Thc show opened at 5:15 p.m. wiih
Joan Baez , Tracy Chapman , Peter
Gabriel , Sting and Springsteen singing Bob Marley 's Gt?; Up, Star.d Up.
Baez then went on to sing Arr:zt:ii:g
Grace.
.
New artist "Tracy Chapman followed with songs from her debut
album , Tracy Ciy ipnutr... Songs she
performed included Revolution. If Sot
Nov.-, and her recent hit . Fast Car .
among many others for almost an
hour.
Chapman then returned to the stage
to introduce Stins. who was most
impressive performing duets with
Peter Gabriel . Set Them Free , and
Every Breath You Take with Springsteen.
After a short intermission Peter
Gabriel fired up the crowd with such
popular tunes as Shock the Mon.*tey.
Sledge Hanur.cr, Biko. In Your Eyes ,
and a dynamic duet oi Don ' t Give Up
with Chapman .
The long-awaited Springsteen
brought the crowd to tlieir feet with his
bristly rendition oi Born in thc USA.
He continued for nearl y 2 hours playing old favorites like Jung leland ,
Born to Run , Thunder Road ,
Hometown , and yet another duet—
this time with Sting—of The River.
The show 's finale was a regrouping
of all the artists to sing an Amnesty
theme song and an encore of Get Up,
Stand Up.
Everyone knows what the united
Suites Constitution is, and that it 's
been around for a long time. Actua lly,
that document was 201 years old last
year.
Wc celebrate the Constitution for
its role in American history, its significance in modern government and
its role in the continuation of our personal freedoms. At a time when personal freccdoms are under attack , it is
good to have the protection of the
Constitution.
Few governments have endured for
over 200 years. No other constitution
has lasted so long.
Almost two-thirds of the world' s
national constitutions have been developed since 1970; onl y 14 nations
have constitutions predating World
War II. Most nations have developed
two constitutions since 1945.
By these standard s, thc Constitution
of the United States has proved remark ably durable.
As a nation , we celebrated thc bicentennial of the Constitution last
year. It is importan t that we conunue
to remember to celebrate the histori c
signing of thc document in Philadelphia on September 17, 1787.
The Bicentennial Commission ,
headed bv former Chief Justice War-
ren Burger , encourages us to mark this
occasion
with
appropriate
Constitution Week activities.
At Bloomsburg University, we
marked the event by ringing the bell
in Carver Hall toweron Sat., Sept. 17,
1988 at 4 o'clock p.m.
Students from Drs. Ted and Lorraine Shanoski's classes participated
in the bell-ringing ceremony.
** Lorraine Shanoski , of the curriculum and foundations department , is
working with her students in developing materials on the Constitution for
use in early childhood and primary
education settings.
Ted Shanoski , of the history department , uses thc Constitution as a theme
in his American History classes.
Both professors were recip ients ofa
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship at Oklahoma State
University this past summer , titled ,
"Thc Constitution: Its Roots and Sig- i Thc bowling alleys in Kehr Union are being removed (after much controversy) to provide a new location for 'Cheers', BU's popular
nificance."The institute dealt with tlie I
philosophical , historical and political
aspects of the United States
Constitution.
house , and numerous small tables, called The Heard. Future attractions
The Shanoskis are currentl y in- by Lorie Audenricd
and the dance floor complete with include a games night, a funk/rap
volved in plannin g and carry ing out a f o r The Voice
This Thurs. night , Sept. 22, the flashing lights and loud music. And of night with a rap contest, and a videteaching project on the Constitution
with the Millvllle Area School Dis- Progra m Board will once again open course, Cheers has a bar, offering a odance night.
Also, one night in Nov., Cheers will
the doors to Bloomsburg Univer sity 's variety of affordable , non-alcoholic
lively non-alcoholic ni ghtspot , beverages, including the popular have electronic boards set up at each
table, from which a person can send
Cheers.
strawberry dai quiri.
Thc idea for a non-alcoholic ni ghtGreek organizations are also in- messages to someone else at another
club at BU has originated back in volved in the functioning of Cheers. table.
In addition to being a place to meet
1985. The Program Board had put
According to Jim Gilliland , advisor
together a dance club atmosphere in a to the Program Board , "The fraterni- new people and dance the night away,
Night Class. It was a good idea , but ties and sororities offer great support Cheers offers an alternative to the
didn 't go over very well at first. So, the [to Cheers] . We couldn 'tdo it without Thurs. night party scene by giving
Executive
Board of the Program them." Fraternity and sorority mem- students a chance to go out with
g
'
Board made some changes. The re- bers perform many tasks at Cheers, friends , in a nightclub atmosphere.
Gilliland says, "The turnout has
sulting product opened in April of such as waitressing, bartending and
i 1987 with the name Cheers, after the even bouncing.
been terrific. We've gotten really
familiar television show. It was a hit at
Cheers also offers various forms of positive feedback; people really enjoy
each ofits monthly openings.
entertainment on different occasions, it!"
Cheers is held every other Thurs.
The nig htclub atmosphere of so it does not become, as Gilliland puts
night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Cheers comes from decorations and it, "the same old thing."
balloons put up by Program Board
This Thurs., for example, Cheers
members in the Kehr Union Coffee- will be featuring a j azz fusion group
I
I
I Enthusiastic contestant in the popular Campus Win , Lose or Draw game in Kehr Union Tuts, night.
~--;r :*|
,
''*""> h fa'"«» *'° |.j :g;:;;: ;|
thc world.
U.S. Constitution
celebrates 201 y ears
I •-
—
non-alcoholic dance club.
Photo by Chris flower
i- n
Cheers' offers social alternative
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Bloomsbur g
EtoursiMon-Wed i0:O0 A M - 6 . 0 0 PM
T h u r - F r i 10:00-6:00 PM
Sat
10:00 A M - 6 . 0 0 PM
I
s
367-19 19
Trying to relax tn thc sunshine while studying is a rare activity these
days, with thc cloudy skies that have been shadowing the campus
lately. There will bc even less of the sun from now on , as today is
officially the first day of autumn.
Pholo h J!m Brttelytorf
Ji
New Quest director named)
Roy Smith a nationally
*
Hnown innovator and developer <>r outdoor adventure
and icadmiiip progra m* *has
I>c«n appointed executive director of the QUEST program at Bloomsburg* University, awoi-dhitg to .j otm
Trathen , director of' student
activities.
Smith replaces ClHir.es
Conn-elly *>vi«) resigned in
July to accept a position with
the PrJiK 'fton University
Education Center,
¦"We're fortunule in having
a person .of Hoy's outdoor e xperiwu.e and management
Skills directing our program,"Trmhen said, "A Jong
with his creativity and vision,
tehns ti good track record in
fundraij- ing -and is an outstanding speaker in (he outdoor movement. He is a dy-
namic, higli-energv Individ'
utal.*"
For the past year. Smith hasbeen the d .rector or Wilderness
Forum , Inc. of Crested Butte *
Colo, ife also J.as heen a consultant to the Kellog Foundation on iendership training and
teanibuiidingprogram.
Working in ^university environment is not new to Smith as
he was associated -vith wilderness anrt outward bound programs at the University of/
California at Santa llarhara.
Anttcoch College in Ohio,
Oreat Lakes Colleges Association and Prescott College in
Arizona.
In 1-UH5, with support of the
National Geographic Society
and World Wildlife Fund , he
organized and led s Yale University biological reconnaissance of Omo Hiver Valley in
Southern Ethiopia.During two
different periods, t967«*?6 and;
1-986-K7,--he worked with the
Colorado Outward Bound
School School.
fn tiie 1970s, his accwupilisfc*-*;
ments included ski expeditions
in Alaska and tM Arctic Circle,
ascents of Mt. McKinley in
Alaska and MU Kenya io Bast
Africa, a first crossing of tbe
Sea of Ctn ti-r. in Mexico in a
kayak and a descent «f the
Colorado Uiver through the
GrandCanyon.In W66, he -was
a member of the British expedition that marie the first ascent
of the 20,000 ft. Alpamayo
Mountains in the Peruvian
Andes.
Smith has a bachelor «f arts
degree in education f r o m
Prescott College and a master
of arts degree in human ecology
from Yale University.
Oldies remain goodies 9Sweet Charity 9 sings and
Musical comedy, Sweet Charity , will be performed at Mitrani Hall October 13th.
by Melissa Harris
Staff Writer
Do you ever get the feeling that you
are in the wrong time period.? As I sat
in \h&Voice office last night , minding
my own business, I listened to the
classic rock block on WBUQ and
realized I was bom about ten years loo
late to have experienced most of (lie
great rock classics of thc twentieth
century.
Not to say that anything is wrong
with today 's music; in fact , I like progressive and pop music. But there is
something about tlie music of llic
70s...
Artists like The Ste ve Miller Band ,
Steve Winwood , and Billy Joel were
in their prime as they turned out Take
a Chance , Mag ic, and New York.
Who can forget the lonely melody
oi Piano Man and the fitting lyrics of
Meatloafs Paradise by the Dashboard Light 1. Ten years ago, many of
these songs were climbing UiCvCharts,
ahd guess whal? They are still selling.
Ten years down the line , will we bc
able to say the same thing about Poison, or Motley Crue?
I am nol putting down anyone 's
tasle in music , but we must realize thc
time fram e here. When I was ten , a lot
of these groups were popular. But at
that age, I don 't tliink I cared about
music , and in thc process, I missed a
lot.
History was j ust passing me by and
I was more concerned with which
boys had cooties. In the 70s, groups
like Chicago , The Beatles , America
and other artists like Billy Joel were
laying the groundwork for some of the
Trya Macintosh today-yOU
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Nowthatanew s-chool year is
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songs we listen to now. If you look at
an old Chicago album you will see the
song 25 or 6 to 4. If you look at
Chicago 18 , you will notice the same
song, just updated throug h new mixing.
Billy Joel's Uptown Girl and Ma tter of 'Trust would not hav e sounded as
they did it Piano Man had not come
first. More than ten years ago .TVze
Beatles did Hey, Jude.
Steve Winwood was producing
songs thattoday havemadehim oneof
the most enduring performers of the
decade. These are the songs lhat history is made of.
I just hope that someday, when I
have kids , they will learn to appreciate
things faster than I did. Maybe some
of the greats will be great just a bit
longer.
feel a bit more confident come
finals time:
. Get a Macintosh'computer to
help with your homework.
toyou 11never have to spend
another all-nighter retyping a paper
just to purge a few typos and
dangling modifiers. You'll be able to
dances into Bloomsburg
One of the showiest song and dance extravaganzas in Broadway history, Sweet Charity, is coming to Mitrani Hall
theatre on Oct. 13, at 8 p.m.
Winner of four 1986 Tony Awards, including "BestRevival ,"lhis internationally acclaimed 1960s musical comedy
sensation had Broadway audiences cheering and is now delighting audiences across the country in this 1988 national
touring production .
Sweet Charily was conceived by award-winning Director/Choreography Bob Fosse ("Cabaret", "Pippin", "All that
Jaz z"), and the hilarious book was written by comic genius Neil Simon("Bri ghton Beach Memoirs", "The Odd
Couple"). With music and lyrics by Cy Coleman and Dorothy Fields , thc celebrated score includes such memorable
standards as "If My Friends Could Sec MeNow ", "Hey Big Spender!" "I' m A Brass Band" and "Where AmIGoing?"
Based on Nights of Cabiria, thc world-rcnowcdFcllini film , Sweet Charily, is tlie tale of a lovable New York dance
hall hostess who metaphorically wears hcrhcart on hcrslccvc—or actually, for lack of a sleeve, hasit indelibly tattooed
on her arm.
Legendary dancer Gwcn Verdon created llic title role in the ori ginal production , Academy Award winner Shirley
MacLaine starred in the classic 1969 film version , and television star Debbie Allen won rousing approval from the
critics as Charity in the 1986 Broadway revival.
All tickets are general admission: SIO for adults and S5 for students. Tickets may bc purchased at the Information
Cen ter, Kehr Union.
Sweet Charity is sponsored by the Community Arts Council as a special fund-raising event.
If not for yourself, do it for
And if that isn't enough reason
to look at a Macintosh today, here's
your folks.
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another:
tte power to be your best,
Right now, you havethree
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For "Buying Advice and Ordering and Advice "
Contact Dave Heffner at 717/389-4781
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Apple, thc Apple I IIJI .) , I ¦••perCard, anil Macintosh are registered trademarks, and "The power to he your hest " is a trademark , of App le Computer, Inc. Sony Discman is a trademark of Sony Corporation. No purchase necessary. Odds depend on number of entrants. Sec your campus Apple reseller for complete contest details Prizes may vary from product shown.
I
Bloom County
bv Berke Breathed
THE
my
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Anatidaephobia: The fear thai somewhere,
somehow, a duck is watching you.
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Ancient exterminators
117 Wsct Mniti St.i-r.ef.
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College Students: Account executive
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Good money. Preferred status min.
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Custom research also available—all levels
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Abby? I still don 't know?!! Here's
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Walkins Welcome-Split Ends
Beauty Salon-784-2250. Open 98p.m. Discounts to students!!
•
Medals Count
Louganis 1 accident revives danger of sports
"~
THROUGH 22 EVENTS
Country
<7
R
S
USSR
6
1
4
China
1 2
4
Bulgaria
3
2
1
USA
2
2
2
East Germany 2
1 1
Sweden
0
2
1
South Korea 0
2
1
West Germany 0
1 2
Australia
1
1 0
Czech.
1 1
0
Romania
1
1 0
Yugoslavia
1 0
1
Poland
0
2
0
France
"1
0
1
Hungary
0
1 1
Japan
0
1
1
G. Britain
1
0.
* 1
Ital y
1
0
0
* 1
Surinam
0
0
Turkey
1 0
0
Finland
0
1
0
Belgium
0
0
1
T
11 By GerriKobren
7 L.A. Times-Washington
Post Service
6
They fl y through the air with the
6 greatest of grace, and then one of
4
them , the one that many sports au3
thorities consider the greatest diver in
3
the world, hits his head on the diving
3 board and you
suddenl y realize these
2 charming young
Olympic athletes
2 could be in dangcrof
losing more than
2 gold medals.
2
Greg Louganis ofthe United States,
2 gold medalist in the summer
Olym2 pics four years ago and again in
Seoul,
2
stunned the sports world during the
2
diving preliminaries Monday when
2 he rose off the springboard for a re1 verse 2 and a half somersault
in pike
1 position and hit his head on the final
1 rotation , before entering the water.
1
It was not his first accident. During
1
a competition in the Soviet Union in
1979, Louganis hit his head on the
board during a somersaulting dive and
had to be pulled, unconscious, from
As of Tuesday night midni ght EST
the water.
Basketball
| He recovered that time, and he recovered this time, going on to take the
Men 's
gold medal' in springboard diving
Group A
once again.
Team
W
L Pts
Still, questions remain. Just how
Yugoslavia
2
0
4
dangerous are high-level competitive
Australia
1 1 3
sports?
Cen. African Rep. 1 1 3
America's insurance companies
Puerto Rico
1 1 3
seem to think they 're very dangerous
Soviet Union
1 1
3
indeed; two years ago major AmeriSouth Korea
0 2
2
Group B
Volleyball
1
USA
Brazil
China
Spain
Canada
Egypt
3
2
1
1
0
0
Woman 's
Group A
Team
0
6
1 5
1
3
1
3
2
2
2
2
W
L
Pts.
South Korea
USSR
Bulgaria
Australia
Group B
1 0
2
1
0
2
0
1 1
0
1 1
USA
Yugoslavia
China
Czech
1 0
1 0
0
1
0
1
2
2
1
1
Soccer
Group A
Team
W
L
T Pts.
West Germany 2
0 0
4
Sweden
1 0
1 3
Tunisia
0
1 1
1
China
0
2 0
0
'
j
;
l
\
I
\
I
Iraq
Zambia
Italy
Guatemala
1 0
1
1 0
1
1 1 0
0
2 0
Soviet Union
South Korea
USA
Argentina
1 0
1
0
0 2
0
0 2
0
1 1
3
2
2
1
1 0
0
1 0
0
1 1 0
0
2 0
2
2
2
0
| Australia
1 Brazil
s Yugoslavia
:| Nigeria
3
3
2
0
Men 's Group A
Team
W
Soviet Union • 2
Brazil
1
Bulgaria
1
South Korea
1
Sweden
1
Italy
0
Group B
Argentina
USA
France
Netherlands
Japan
Tunisia
Pts.
0
1
1
1
1
2
4
3
3
3
3
trophe, she believes. Volleyball players are separated from their opponents by a net; basketball players can
be called out on foul for body contact;
fencers wear a lot of protective gear
and blunt their foils with buttons.
Boxing, which can be exceedingly
dangerous at the professional level, is
less so in high-level amateur competitions, according to Bruce Mathis,
assistant executive director of the
U.S.A. Amateur Boxing Federation.
After a national championship bout in
the late 1970s, he recalls, a fighter
passed out from a brain injury , but he
later recovered, and in Olympic competitions, Mathis says, "There have
been no serious injuries that I know
of."
Part of the reason is in the protective headgear and gloves, he believes. Part of it is in the rules: There's
no bonus for hitting hard, as there is in
pro boxing. In amateur fights, a body
blow earns the same point whether or
not it knocks the opponent down.
And part of it is in the expertise of
the partici pants. According to
Mathis, if you 're good enough for the
Olympics, you are good enough to
protect yourself.
"Every sport has injuries," he adds.
"But in a survey done several years
ago of the dangers of all kinds of
sports, including mountain climbing,
we were rated relatively low."
-Sign up now for Swim and Stay Fit. A non-competitive program designed to recognize
dedicated swimmers. T-shirts will be awarded. For more info - come to the intramural office in
the Kehr Union.
Women 's
2
Great Britain 1, Argentina 0
-Stay in shape with Aerobics. Classes are every evening starting at 4:00. Check the intramural
office for times and places.
Team Handball
Monday 's Results
Men 's
Pts.
Japan
South Korea
East Germany
USSR
Group B
1 0
1 0
0
1
0
1
2
2
1
1
China
Peru
Brazil
USA
1
1
0
O
2
2
1
l
"I'd be fooling you if I said it wasn t
dangerous," says Hauschild , a competitive gymnast herself from 1982 to
1986. "As an athlete, that 's something
you take into consideration every time
you step onto the equipment. One slip
of concentration , and you could be in
trouble. But in the long run , with the
right equipment, in thc right environment, it can be done safely."
Ellen Eason , professor of physical
education at Towson State University,
says, "It 's very difficult to do anything
physical and not have risks of injuries," But she points to the particular
perils of gymnastics: "It is probably
one of the most dangerous sports because we're asking people to throw
their bodies around bars and into
space," she says.
Water polo can be dangerous too,
she adds: It's a contact activity, with
a lot of possibly illegal contact below
the waterline, where officials don 't
always see it. Greg Louganis, "one of
the best in the world ," proved that
diving has its hazards, and equestrian
sports are high on her risk list too,
since riders can fall and horses can
trample them.
Weightlifters, working alone, can
suffer back injuries from the strain , or
have bone crushing accidents if they
drop the weights.
But most other Olympic sports do
not have that same potential for catas-
Field Hockey
Pakistan 8, Kenya 0 (4-0)
USSR 3, South Korea 1 (1-1)
0
4
0
4
1
3
1
3
2
2
2
2
0
0
1
i
Greg Louganis knows about that
one too: He was standing on a lower
board at.lhe 1983 World University
Games in Edmonton, Alberta, when a
Soviet diver, Sergei Chalibashvili, hit
his head against a platform. He died a
week later .
"Diving gets a bad rap because of
the people who are injured diving into
shallow pools and rock quarries,"
Suriano points out. In competitions,
where'the water is of known depth and
the participants arc experts, thedanger
is far less, he contends: "This sport is
fairly safe. We don 't have the kind of
injuries yougct in sports like gymnastics, wrestling, high school and college football."
Gymnastics , in fact , has claimed
some victims too. In the World Championships in the Netherlands in 1987,
gymnast Tim Daggett fell during a
dismount , broke his leg, severed an
artery, and nearly lost the leg. Harrowing as it was, Daggett recovered lo the
point that he tried, unsuccessfully for
a spot on thc team this year.
More recently, an American
woman gvmnast competing in Japan
suffered a paralyzing injury when she
missed her footing while running forward, toward a mount, and hit her
head on the horse, recalls Penney
Hauschild , assistant gymnastics
coach at the University of Maryland,
College Park.
Tuesday 's Results
Men's
L
-Interested in Karate or Self Defense? The Intramural Department is sponsoring a karate class.
Learn how to defend yourself. Every Monday and Thursday from 8:30-10:00 in the Dance
-Studio. All are welcome.
South Korea 22, Hungary 20'* '
USSR 24, Yugoslavia 18
Sweden 21, Algeria 19
-Do you like to be involved in sports? Do you need some extra cash? Officials/Referees are
needed for all kinds of intramural games. Contact Intramural Office 389-4721.
Tuesday 's Results
Men 's
-Don't forget , Betterball Golf Rosters for Men and Women are due on September 28.
Iceland 22, USA 15
East Germany 25, Japan 18
Czechoslovakia 20, Spain 17
Water Polo
Tuesday's Results
Baseball (demonstration)
Hungary 12, Greece 10
USA 7, Yugoslavia 6
Gymnastics
Monday 's Results
Netherlands 6, Taiwan 1
Japan 7, Puerto Rico 1
Men 's Team Medals
Tuesday 's Results
Canada vs. South Korea
USA vs. Australia
Gold: USSR
Silver: East Germany
Bronze: Japan
To Thine Own Self Be True
Join PSECU
)
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it wa- s fiecC !
sponsored by the
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Phi Sigma Pi
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Women 's Group A
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W
t Is your car
dirty?
H a l f of tfi©
tno ney roisecC
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2
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|
can insurers refused to issue liability
coverage for the U.S. Olympic Committee, and the committee had to form
a company of its own, called Panol.
Faced with a similar crunch, the governing bodies of some of the affiliated
sports federations insured with Panol
also.
But this had little to do with athletic
hazard , contends Kenneth Clarke,
Ph.D., assistant executive director of
the Olympic Committee. Rather, he
says, "The insurance industry retrenched in 1985-86; besides the
world of sport is not well understood
from thepoint of view of risk management. They figured , 'Why take a risk
on something they didn 't understand?' "
In any case, he adds, individual
athletes have medical costs paid by
their own health insurers first, and by
their federations or the United States
Olympic Committee if they do not
have coverage for treatment of injuries. "Historically,"he says, "the typical bill has been under $10,000."
Even in competitive diving, a Superman sport of aerodynamic maneuvers and high-speed entries into the
water, injuries are more often wearand-tear punishments than life-threatening accidents. "I know of only one
serious accident in the sport,"says Joe
Suriano, diving coach at the United
States Naval Academy in Annapolis.
^-,
iriS!
*» - *****nJEEBJSSs.JBHI
^ ill i*6. JM "^ *¦"
'
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R I N G' "
Time: w-Th-F io~4
Deposit: $1 °
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I . _^____
E
M-Tu 10-7
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See your Jostens representative for winning details.
^
88J33(CP 501 m\
Country
Cross
B.U. men and women travel to Penn
Student
Athlete of
theWeek
State for Sp iked Shoe In vitational
Husky Football will square off with Kutztown on Sat. at 1;00, come out and support the team
photo by Chris Lower
BU Football to host Kutztown
Leonard Hlu ill
I'htito by liavi Saulrr
by Dave Sauter
Staff Writer
Congratulations are in order for
Husk y running back Leonard Bluitt ,
as lie has been selected this week's
Student Athlete ofthe Week.
Bluitt earned this honor based
upon his outstanding performance
against Lock Haven last Saturday
and his overall effort throughout tlie
season.
On Saturday, he shredded thc
Bald Eagle rushing defense for 135
yards on 30 carries. For thc season ,
hc had handled tlie ball 91 limes for
386 total yards , averag ing 4.3 yards
per carry. He's also scored four
touchdowns.
On carrying lhe ball an average of
30 times per game. Bluitt commented , "I just want to do whatever
I have to do to make tliis team a
winner M
»
"If ihey wanl mc to carry tlie ball
fifteen times, I'd like to carry iv 16
times. If they need mc to carry il 30
times , I'd want to carry il 31 times,
just enough lo make sure we gel thc
win. "
Bluitt , however , docs nol wanl lo
hear talk of quarterback Paul Vcncsky and himself replacing graduated stars Jay Dcdca and Tommy
Martin.
"I feel offended saying wc must
replace Dedea and Martin , because
they arc two totally different players. With myself and Tommy, our
roles arc similar , but we're two totally different backs."
"Paul and Jay arc two totally different quarterbacks. We're doing
lhe same things they were doing, but
actually we're creating our own
paths."
The talented senior running back
has confidence in this year's team ,
presently 3-0.
"I think this team is capable of
going far. We've got a strong defensive unit with "Tex "Lee and Delmas
(Woods) and all types of players that
are impact players. If they can get us
the bal l and hold us up strong, 1think
the offense can get us some points on
the board , and we can go a long
way."
With Kulztown coming up on
Saturday and West Chester the week
after , Bluitt had these thoughts.
"I feel good about my performance so far, but as an athlete , you
always want to get better , and you
always think there is more, beyond
what you 've already done."
"Right now we're concentrating
on Kutztown; we can 't overlook a
game. But in the back of your head ,
you can always hear West Chester.
You have to have them in your
thoughts a little bit."
Bluitt and the rest of the Huskies
go for their fourth win Saturday afternoon at 1:00 in a home game
against Kutztown.
A win here would put
Bloomsburg at 4-0 going into the
battle against West Chester, a key
PSAC matchup.
The Bloomsburg University football team will put its perfect 3-0 mark
on thc line in thc Huskies' secondconsecutive home game this Saturday, Sept. 24, when Kutztown visits
Redman Stadium in the Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Division opener
for both teams. The Hall of Fame Day
contest is set for 1 p.m., and the eight
newest members of the university 's
Athletic Hall of Fame will be honored
during ceremonies at halftime.
Thc Huskies won their lliird gatne
ofthe season with a 17-6 triumph over
visiting Lock Haven last week upping
their current win streak to six games
dating back to thc eighth contest oflast
season. Kutztown evened its record at
1-1 last Saturday with a 21-15 defeat
of Shippensburg.
A steady rain hampered play
throughoutmosl of thc Huskies' game
with Lock Haven , and there were a
total of seven turnovers between thc
teams. The Huskies held a large statistical edge over the Bald Eagles but
four interceptions , including two in
the endzonc and one at the Lock
Haven one-yard line, stopped potential scoring drives.
Thc defense continued its fine play
as Lock Haven managed just nine first
downs and 32 yards rushing in the
game. Thc Bald Eagles did pick up
208 passing yards , however, and 86
yards of that total came on their lone
scorcof the day. Bloomsburg has now
allowed three consecutive opponents
onl y one touchdown per game.
Leonard Bluitt went over the 100yard rushing mark for the third time as
hc gained 135 yards on 30 carries and
scored both of the B loom slj urg touchdowns. He scored a one-yard run in
the opening quarter and added a threeyard scoring run in the final period.
Bluitt has carried the ball 91 times in
the first three games for 382 yards and
four touchdowns. In addition , hc has
eight receptions for 49 yards.
Despite throwing four interceptions in bad weather , Paul Vcncsky
completed 12 of 19 passes for 134
yards. Hc has completed 30 of his 54
pass attempts tliis season for 333
yards. The Huskies have scored all
seven of their touchdowns on the
ground. Vcncsky has also run thc ball
35 limes for 79 yards.Tiglit end Paul
Lonergan has been on the receiving
end ofthe most pass completions with
12 catches for 149 yards. Wide receiver Jeff Sparks has four catches for
another 83 yards.
Defensivel y, thc Huskies have been
gelling good performances from several players each game and that set up
an early touchdown. The Huskies
scored all of their points in the first
half of thc sloppil y played game, and
lhe Golden Bears managed just a field
goal in tlie third quarter.
The contest is the first of six-consecutive Pennsylvania Conference
Eastern Division games for thc Huskies. Kutz town plays Western Division member Edinboro next week and
then faces five straight division
games.
Thc game can bc heard live on
WHLM radio AM 55.0 beginning at
12:30 p.m. with "Husk y Countdown "
followed by thc play-by-play with Jim
Doyle and Andy Ulicny.
Pouring rain and tough Division I
competition didn 't stop thc Men 's
and Women 's Cross Country teams
from making a strong showing at
Penn Suite's Spiked Shoe Invitational . Each member of thc men 's
team posted season 's best five mile
times on PSU' s national championship course, while two members of
thc women 's team took home awards
for their performances.
In the women 's race, Penn State's
Wendy Nelson claimed the victory,
covering the five kilometer course in
18:31, three seconds ahead of teammate Anne Marie Quinn.
Thc Huskies top finisher was
Brcnda Bisset, 12th in a time of
19:40. Close behind was Laurie Alexander, Mlh in a time of 19:51.
Awards were given to the top 15
finishers.
Otlicr runners scoring for the Huskies were Pam Mitchell , 16th in
19:58, Julie Saville, 21sl in 20:32,
Lorecn Miller, 28th in 21:23, and
Bridget Hedman , 32nd in 22:09.
Penn State captured the team
crown with 24 points oudistancing
runner-up
West
Virginia.
Bloomsburg finished third with 68
points. It should be noted that both
PSU's and West Virginia 's women 's
teams perenniall y compete in the
Divion I national cross country
champoinships, making them the
women 's toughest competition to
date. Men 's teams from Ohio
State .Southcrn Florida , and James
Madison traveled to Slate College to
challenge PSU's lightning quick five
mile Blue Course.
Despite a steady downpour which
turned certain sections of the course
into mudholcs , many runners posted
outstanding performances.
Battling the mud and rain as well as
top notch competition , Pete Wcilenman of James Madison bested the field
with a time of 24:26. Penn Slate's Brian
Laird was second in 24:33.
Bloomsburg 's Craig Koch was the
Huskies first runner , finishing 33rd in a
Ume of 26:51.
The Huskies varsity squad was
rounded out be Mark Elsasser, SOth in
27:41, Che Bartholomew , 55th in
28:04, Tom Kangcr, 57lh in 28:17,
Scott Hotham , 59lh in 28:35, Mark
Jobes, 60th in 28:43, and Stan Share,
61st in 28:51.
In team competition , Penn State
edged out Southern Florida by eight
points.
Although Bloomsburg finished fifth
out of five teams, every member ofthe
Huskies squad improved on their times
from the first two meets. With continued improvement, the team hopes to
finish among the top six at the Pennsylvania Slate Athletic Conference championships.
Saturday, the BU cross country
teams will face a pair of PSAC foes in
their first home meet ofthe season. East
Stroudsburg and Lock Haven will
travel to Bloomsburg for a 10 am start
at the Nelson Fieldhouse.
NCAA Div. II Top 10
1. North Dakota St.
2. Central Florida
3. Indiana (Pa.)
4. St. Cloud St. (Minn.)
5. West Chester (Pa.)
6. Cal State-Northridge
7.W. Salem State (N.C.)
8. Troy State (Ala.)
9. Texas A&I
10. East Texas State
Difficult weekend for tennis
women 's tennis had a disappointing weekend at army
by Kelly Werkheiser
Staff Writer
This past weekend spelled very few
triump hs for the Bloomsburg
Women 's Tennis team as they traveled to compete at the West Point
Invitational.
On Saturday the Huskies were challenged by Canisius. While not overpowering the opponent , thc match was
close as Bloomsburg took a loss of 32.
Bloomsburg 's Chris Labosky defeated Wendy Tubbert (6-3,6-2) to accept the only singles victory.
In doubles play, Jayme Arlow and
Leslie Troglione gave Bloomsburg 's
tlieir only otlicr victory as they defeated Kellie Kandcrfcr and Mcagen
Bucket , (6-2,6-3).
In tlie remaining singles matches,
the Huskies were not as fortunalc . Jen
Johnson of Canisius defeated
Bloomsburg 's number one player,
Nancy Buie (6-3,4-6,7-5). Cath y Von
Luchrte lost in three sets(7-5,0-6,2-6)
to Michele Teffyman . Also Jeanne
Cancelliere suffered a loss (0-6,2-6)
from Molly Evcrz.
The match with Pace did not fare
well for the Huskies either as they suffered a severe loss of 5-1.
Again Leslie Troglione, a lirst year
player, came ihroug h for the Huskies
by overpowering Joanne Mamp (62,6-1).
Chris Labosky suffered her first loss
of the season (6-7,5-7) to Theresa
Rogas of Pace. Nancy Buie and Cathy
VonLuchrte were upset in singles (0BU Soccer sutlers two losses. Huskies host Susquehanna on Sept. 27
6,0-6) and (6-7,6-7) by Bea Ellemerer
photo by Rob Samtmann
and Chclsie Rose.
In the final singles play, Jeanne
Cancelliere and Jayme Arlow were
not successful against Pace as they
lost (1-6,2-6) and (3-6,0-6).
Senior Cindy Hurst scored the
The Huskies also lost to Army 5-0.
only
goal in BU's fourth shutout of
This weekend altered their once
the
season
against Pennsylvania
winning record to a mere 2-4. BU
Conference
rival
East Stroudsburg.
hosts the University of Scranton at 3
Alicia Terrizzi assisted the score
p.m. on Sept. 24.
which came wilh only four minutes Wilkes
1
remaining in the first half.
0
"The game sounds a lot closer than Bloomsburg
it actually was,"said Head Coach Jan
Hutchinson. "We were really dominating in the first half."
Defensively, BU goalie April Scranton
5
Kolar had two saves. Hutchinson
Bloomsburg 0
stated, "Their (East Stroudsburg)
defense was just trying to keep the
ball out of the circle. They really
didn 't get an offense going."
Hutchinson added , however, that
1
BU missed a penalty stroke and "let Bloomsburg
up some in the second half. East E. Stroudsburg
0
Stroudsburg got down to our circle
but didn 't score."
The Huskies racked up 49 shots on
goal and 29 penalty corners to East
Stroudsburg's five shots and six corners.
The shutout victory raises the
team's season record to 6-0, and BU
has defeated 30 opponents in their Men's: Fifth
overall '
last 31 games.
BU hosts William Smith, St. Law- Woman's: Third overall
rence and Drew University this
photo by Jim Bettendorf
weekend.
Hockey
Still undefeated
Scoreboard
Men 's Soccer
Field Hockey
Cross Country
PSU Invitational
Field hockey continues Its winning ways and ups its record to 6-0
I
I
By William Sexton
SEOUL, South Korea Evidentl y
dazzled by the economic miracle on
show at the Seoul Olympics, Soviet
officials have begun distancing
themselves from their North Korean
ally and preparing to open dircctrclations with thc former South Korean
enemy.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
hinted at the turnabout in a major
foreign policy speech last week in
Siberia , and these concrete developments were already under way here:
Hungary and South Korea agreed to
exchange permanent diplomatic
missions. That would constitute the
first such recognition of the South
since the communist bloc supported
and supplied thc North' s invasion of
South Korea in 1950.
Western diplomats considered it a
foregone conclusion that Moscow
atleast approved and probably in-
spired Budapest 's decision. North
Korea angril y accused Hungary of
"intolerable treachery."
South Korean officials said that
Moscow, which established a temporary consular outpost here to look
after ils nationals during thc Olympics, is expected to leave semi-official missions in place to deal with
trade and oth er continuing exchanges. That would be another
postwar first.
A top Soviet expert on Asia disclosed that Moscow was preparing
to i nvite South Korean investment
in developing the Soviet Union 's
vast Siberian resources.
He said the Soviets also "are especially interested in computers, microprocessors , automobiles" among
other products from South Korea.
"Thc Soviet Union wants to have
a new relationshi p with South Korea, " Mikhail L. Titorcnko , director
of theSovietFarEasternResearchInstitute, told an academic seminar
here.
After a week 's curious silence on
the issue, the official North Korea n
news agency reacted angrily yesterday to the evident erosion of previousl y unwavering support from die
Soviet bloc.
"Hungary's decision is an intolerable treachery to the principle of
Marxism-Leninism and the revolutionary cause of the working class ,"
Pyongyang's Korean Central News
Agency said. "Hungary has now discarded even the elementary stand and
the moral obligation s ofthe Communists."
Western dip lomats said the newapproaches to Seoul should be
viewed as only part of a major recasting of Soviet geopolitical strategy.
"What comes out of the Gorbachev
speech is that Asia obviously is go ing
to bc thc economic powerhouse ofthe
21st Century, and Moscow is way
behind the United States in Asia," a
western European diplomat said.
"Washington has allies like Japan
and South Korea and perhaps Taiwan . Look at the Soviets' friends _
North Korea and Vietnam , both basket cases. They 've got to improve
their position."
He said for that reason the policy
spelled out by the Soviet leader Friday during a visit to Krasnoyarsk ,
Siberia , a major city in Soviet Asia,
should be taken seriously by western
strategists.
Another analyst suggested
Hungary 's recognition of Seoul
mi ght have been intended as a warning to Pyongyang to reform its economy and move to ease tensions with
Seoul .
"Whether Moscow follows
Budapest 's lead might hinge on the
Nelson Mandela would probably be
released after local elections in South
Africa in late October.
A member of thc ruling National
Party, Willcm Odcndaal , said that
Mandela would "most probably" be
given his freedom after the elections
Oct. 26.
Mandela, leader of the outlawed
African National Congress, has been
in prison for26 years. He was given a
life sentence for sabotage in 1963.
The eight-member South African
delegation is on a fac t-finding mission in West Germany. The delegates
arc members of South Africa 's threetier parliament.
Mandela may be free after elections
L.A. Times-Washington Post Service
BONN, West Germany (DPA) A
group of South African members of
parliament, on a visit to West Germany, said here Wednesday that the
imprisoned black nationalist leader
North Korean response", he said.
This diplomat predicted Moscow
would move very cautiously in enlarging ties to the south .
Gorbachev spoke positively but
vaguely about the Korean peninsula ,
evidendy leaving it to academician
Titorenko to spell out tbe details.
"The Soviets respect the history
and culture of bodi South and North
Korea," Titorenko said. "We also
respect the development of science
and technology and the remarkable
economic growth of South Korea."
But he saw "stumbling blocks" to
the proposed "new relationship wi th
South Korea: the presence of U.S.
nuclear weapons in South Korea,"
most of them targeting the Soviet
Union , and an annual U.S.-South
Korean military exercise evidently
too close to Soviet territory for comfort.
Still , significantly, there was no
mention of U.S. withdrawal from
South Korea , a condition always attached by North Korean leader Kim II
Sung to any negotiation on normalizing relations.
Titorenko was tacitly unsparing of
Pyongyang's economic and tcchnolog ical backwardness after four
decades of Stalinist leadership.
He spoke of thc South' s "extended
economic power"and proposed S iberia as "die most probable area for specific economic cooperation between
the two countries."
Soviet tardiness in acknowledging the North-South economic disparity is explainable in part, at least,
by Moscow's lack of any diplomatic ,
commercial or even journalistic representation in South Korea since tlie
Koreas were divided in 1945. Only
last year were Soviet correspondents
granted visas to cover Seoul's Olympic preparations firsthand.
Finance Minister target of assassination attemvt
Radical groep strikes out in Germany
By William Tuohy
L.A. Times-Washington post Service
BONN The West German terrorist group known as the Red Army
Faction claimed responsibility Wednesday for the attempted assassination ofa senior official ofthe Finance
Ministry.
The police said the terrorist group
might be planning to disrupt the annual meeting, scheduled to begin
Thursday in WestBcrlin , ofthe International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank.
The Red Army Faction, also
known as the Baader-Mcinhof gang,
said in a note delivered lo news agencies here that it had ambushed Hans
Tietmeyer, an assistant finance minister, en route to his office from Bad
Godesberg, a Bonn suburb, Tuesday.
It said it had joined with the Red
Brigades, a guerrilla group in Italy, to
altack "imperialist power"and "West
European economic and money policies." Other groups protesting the
IMF and World Bank meeting have
criticize d the international agencies'
policies toward Third World countries, arguing that loans to those countries have thrust them deeper into
poverty.
West German officials have taken
strict security precautions in Berlin ,
fearing that officials and bankers attending the meeting could be targeted
by guerrillas.
Authorities in Bonn said that a full
clip of submachine-gun ammunition
was found near the site of Tuesday 's
ambush. They took that as an indication that the gunmen had bungled the
assignment. Some security officials
speculated that a kidnapping was
planned but went awry when the
magazine was dropped.
The Federal Criminal Office said
in a statement: "On the evidence received, we cannot rule out that Dr.
Tietmeyer was supposed to have
been kidnapped ."
The Criminal Office said it was
seeking seven suspected members of
the Red Army Faction who are
wanted in connection with previous
attacks, and the office announced a
reward of $27,000 for information
concerning the incident, particularly
about to two cars and a motorbike
seen near the scene.
Contrary to Monday 's edition , Carver Ha '.l is not 200 years old. Last weekend a
bel l ringing ceremony was held to celebrate thc constitution 's 201 anniversary
Photo by Chris Lower
U.S. arms reduction talks make gains
Democratic candidate.
Both sides at the Moscow summit
L.A. Times-Washington Post Service
WASHINGTON In probably the in May wrote off chances of completfinal negotiations between the Krem- ing a Strategic Arms Reduction
lin and the Reagan administration, Treaty this year in which long-range
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. offensive nuclear weapons would be
Shevardnadze opens his 28th round cut about 50 percent. But as they
of talks with Secretary of State continue working toward a jo int text
George P. Shultz here Thursday in a on an agreement, U.S. officials said,
session that will stress "continuity"in differences could be narrowed now
U.S.-Soviet relations but is unlikely on such relatively technical issues as
air-launched cruise missiles.
to break major new ground.
In assessing each side 's arsenals,
U.S. officials expressed some hope
for arms control advances on strate- the Soviets want to count every bo
gic arms reductions, the controver- mber as carrying its maximum possial Soviet radar at Krasnoyarsk and sible load of such missiles 20 or22 on
cuts in conventional forces in Eu- a B-52, for example.
The United States wants to "attribrope.
The absence of Soviet chief of staff ute" to each bomber the average
Sergei Akhromeyev from the number of air-launched cruise misShevardnadze party makes major siles it carries 8 or 10.
The United States currently has
progress on the first two issues doubtmore
and better bombers and airful , but new impetus might be given
to starting talks on reducing arms and launched missies, and the Soviet
troops facing each other across the counting method would more severely constrict the number of such
Iron Curtain.
The two-day session will "empha- weapons the United States could resize continuity and process in the tain under the numerical limits of a
relationship," said Assistant Secre- treaty.
If the Soviets accept the U.S.
tary of State Rozanne Ridgway.
Moscow wants to complete as approach ,a concensus on this technimuch business as possible with this cal point might be possible, U.S.
administration, officials said, and the officials said.
administration wants to keep up arms
The huge Soviet radar at
control momentum to facilitate the Krasnoyarsk, which the United
work of its successor next year.
States insists is illegal under the 1972
Shevardnadze will meet President Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty, will be
Reagan on Friday, and Vice President discussed.
George Bush , at his request, is exBut the Reagan administration appected to meet the Soviet official pears to be in no mood to give the
sometime during the visit, Ridgway Soviets significant concessions in
said.
exchange for a Soviet promise to tear
Massachusetts Gov. Michael S. it down.
Dukakis has no plans for a meeting,
Backed overwhelmingly by the
according to a spokesman for the Congress and both presidential can-
by Robert C. Toth
Senator Ed Hclfrick addressed "Pro-Life at the Polls" in thc President's lounge
Photo by Chris Lowtr
Monday evening.
In its note to the news agencies,
the Red Army Faction said that Tict
meyer was responsible for "genocide
and mass misery in the Third World"
and that "as a delegate of the IMF and
World Bank , he develops and forces
through the imperialist policy of
annihilation through hunger and
counterinsurgency against the
peoples of dependent countries in the
south."
Over tlie years, the Red Army
Faction has claimed responsibility
for several assassinations of West
German government and business
officials. Police say it has tics not
only to Italy's Red Brigades but also
to the French urban terrorist group
Direct Action.
didate s, the administration wants the
two 10-story-tall buildings dismantled, and their foundations demolished, before any new arms
agreements are signed.
The Soviets., seeking a way out of
an obvious blunder, have proposed
several face-saving compromises.
But the administration wants to wipe
out the roughly five- to seven-year
lead time the Krasnoyarsk facility
represents for Soviet development of
a"batde management"radar, a senior
U.S. official said.
The ABM treaty forbids such radars in a nation 's interior. The facilities are permitted only on the border
and facing outward; the Krasnoyarsk
station is some 3,000 miles from the
Arctic coast.
Two compromise ideas on
Krasnoyarsk have surfaced recently.
One idea posed would be to negotiate
a set of rules for building such radar
in the future, including advance notice of where and when the construction would occur, in exchange for
demolishing the currentradar station.
This administration has already rejected that approach , but a Dukakis or
Bush administration might consider
it, U.S. officials suggested.
If this session produces significant
progress on the issue, Shultz an d
Shevardnadze could meet again before the end of the year, officials said.
The conventional force negotiations depend on a successful end of
the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, a periodic forum
to monitor observance of the 1975
Helsinki Accords.
Human rights issues are the main
obstacles to wrapping up the conference, which has been under way in
Vienna for the past two years, officials said.
Before the end of the conference,
the United States and its Western
European allies want to see improved
Soviet performance in releasing political and religious prisoners, including five Soviet citizens who were part
of the original Helsinki Monitoring
Group in Moscow in 1977, U.S. officials said.
They also are seeking hi gher immigration rates and codification of recent Soviet human rights reforms into
law.
In exchange, the West would ihen
agree to, among other things, a "conference on the human dimension" in
Moscow within the next few years
that the Soviets want in order to discuss international human rights issues.
Index
I
Chech out the Huskie
Announcemens to find
out what is happening
this week.
g
m
i
i
Quest recieves new
director
1
1
Commentary
Features
Comics
Sports
I
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I
I
Peace , Love , and Understanding
A coy died here las; - esja He ~ as neverrectify tha damage done, I never
ene cf us. No — auar if he was --.ear- cli write thai nasty letter to ihePressEr.zerprise telling them what a shitty
job they did of covering such a deliCT. Z .""775 -TT * ^"^5 r.15 ¦• "" ~ r71_> 2**Z T.C .* 15 cate issue. But that doesn 't take away
the fact that, although I didn 't know
Brian, it affected me , too. I guess
that ' s wh y I' m writing this.
Ironically. Brian ar.d I have a lot of
things in common. We ' re both collece students , sophomore s, 19 years
c '.d. ar.d we both attend Bloomsburg
r *;TO TV, " Z ~ 7> w Ci3. V". 5"wl *'777 Z . "D \- ".71 - Univ ersity. Ke even helped with a
p '.ay i v. as in last year, but I never got
to meet hum since we were on different sides of dne stage. But still , I feel
'_l-:e 1 zzYiic:*** him—or that I should
"
,
¦*. _.- z zzr.-z z r . ^ had to dea l wi*h ~ 77-'>
<
¦::-:. rest -ec -V.' y and tactfull y leav:*¦¦:' .y. Brian was wearing the night he
¦¦¦ent
thrcuch with his fatal action.
•
7;.7 P rczz-Erz.crprize , on the other
'. .j .r.z.. decided that such info rmation
¦¦¦
• c : absolute ' ;.* vital to the Importance
¦ .: " ihi , story . ' ar* d had the GALL to
:-:: ...;iiy --. uh '.ish it. let alone ask such
* -. .zzzYzzzY. Perscr.all y, I DON'T
shoc king ar.;:tragic event To Brian 's
family ar.d friends: I am insulte d FOR
you. I am sorry that such a tragedy has
to be so horridly publicized just because a certain newspaper just happens to dislike our University, and
Brian just happened to be a part of th is
institution.
Knowing that no matter how incredibl y pissed off I got about this
whole th ing ran d the unprofessional ism of certain parties; would really
wil l ever know what they really were,
or how intense they got
Maybe that 's because you 're a lot
like me, only I' m riding through this
tunnel ull the music stops, which
hopefully won 't be for a long while.
And when that last song is played,
maybe I'll find you at the end of this
tunnel , and then we can take a rainbow
ride across the sky, and spread the pot
of gold (which is reall y peace, love
and understanding , if we may borrow
frcm Elvis Costello) to the complex ,
potential-filled world below that
needs it all so much....
Someone who cares
life ts Ufe . Ar.d it is precious. If
Editor 's No te: After much debate,
s:- *c:t c hooses to end theirs, howI have decided to take Mike
}. lu!iens advise and change the
ever sad **-e may think such an act,
[ name of Jen McGinley's column.
*_-.:_- life still deserves respect. ltwas
.'./;. reasons are different than Mr.
B rian ' s decision. Tne reasons may
Mullen 's, howe*Jer. I believe that
-;*.;-.:be •r.c v. n to anyone , not even
Jen should have her own identity,
his fam ily. But. doesn ' t it always
end not have lo write in the
seem to happe n that way...
shado***,* ofthe 'O Great One. I ,for
It ' s a shame that all these insights
I K E . I JIOW what it is like tofollo*****
'n ad to be the result of som eone else's
:*-. those shoes. Il is no: p leasant.
final—ar.d fatal—decision.
So. Jen , forg ive r r & f o rchanging
rr.-. mind at the last second. Your
r.r_r.. it you re listening, thank
c/.umn is temporarily nameless,
ycu. Thanks for m ailing me think
r.y -.ever, I do believe that you will
about my own situation in this life ,
be better off. As for Chsmiak. Yes
ir.d realize that no matter how stress' did write some wonderful
ne
1_1 it may get , and how hel pless and
columns. But he was a legend in
rcpe 'ess I might feel , there is a light at
his own mind,not mine.
Ire end of this tunnel of life , of growing up. Maybe it isn ' t graduation , or
even adulthood; I'm not sure what it
Ls, but it 's something Lhat has a deep
enough meaning that I have to find out
wha t it is.
I only wish you could have finished
this tunnel ride with us. But you chose
A copy of last Thursday 's Voice
to get off a little bit earl y. In a world
mysteriously
surfaced at the office
full of peer pressure , drugs, and probwhere I work and circulated among
lems we should have figured out soluLhe employees. By the ume I arrived
tions to long ago. that 's understandfcr *.*.ork at 2 p.m., they all had a
able. You had your own problems and
chance to read my article on love and
you had your reasons for doin g what
lus*. and were demanding to know the
you did. Right or wrong, you made a
trcs identity of Karriiti Himmler.
decision. I can understand Lhat—not
I: shall . hava.io tone down- . this
why you did what you did , but I can
week's article, lest they discover that
identify with the pressures you must
I am not the mild-minded computer
have been feeline. even thoueh no one
operator I appear to be. I was going to
discuss my plan to solve the mystery
of Elvis ' s death by interviewing the
aliens who allegedly kidnapped him ,
State Government this summer. I but I think under the circumstances I
know that their emp loyees ' past v. ork should eo with something a littie more
experiences are weighed equal l y to mundane.
So what ' s really important in life?
educational experiences.
Being a state university I feel Lhat he asked , without the benefit of a
Bloosburg University shoul d be re- transitional phrase. What are my priquired to adhere to these state policies orities? Is my attention focusedon Lhe
important things in life? Is there any
as well.
So much more can be learned from ice cream left in the freezer? What
aperson who has had large amounts ef should my priorities be?
The old cliche for the important
hands-on experience as opposed to a
person who may have a PhD but things in life went , "God, country,
knows nothing about a particular area,. family, friends, and then self." In my
case this would have to be modified to
of study.
Changes must definitel y be made!! "God , family, country, friends , job ,
This is the education of students we cats, baked goods, college, and then
are talking about- not a political arena. self." Homework would probably
come in at about 45 on the list
Kimberlv Clark
Just say yes to overni ght guests
. .' e. - _ . . .¦- . (,. u.S U_ :. ^-i , L:c
beleaguered dean , a fuii-throa isd
protest. But ihe pickets carried a cryptic message: ' z a\. Yes to Guests. "
Guests .* What had mobilized the
studer. es on the sprawlin g urban cam pus o; boston university was a new
pclicy banning overnigh t and latenight visitor s to the dorms. Starting
next January, no one except a relative
of tine same sex, or a prospective student , can be in a dorm room after 11
p.m. on a weekriight or 1 a.m. on the
weekend.
For Lhe first time in many years an
administration at a major university
decided to limit dormitoryhours. "We
are simply saying tnat we must have
an environment in which students
have the rights to sleep and study,"
says Dean Ronald L. Carter.
The rights to sleep and study have
been sorel y battered indeed since student residences were transformed into
Liberty Halls. Many dorms today
resemble crowded subway trains
where the loudest music box dominates the environment The biorhythms of the entering freshmen
undergo a wrenching change to fit in
with the sleep cycle of dormitory action. There are more than a few horror
stories about a roommate's lover who
becomes a permanent lodger.
BU' s focus on regulating "guests"
has led students to believe that the
new rules are less about bedtime than
about bed partners. Dean Carter insists Lheseare not anti-sex rules, especially in coed dorms , but rather rules
for a livable community.
Even so, the university 's decision
provokes a new set of questions. Is
this university, are many universities,
gradually returning to their role as
parent? Is it about ume? Or is this an
inappropriate, role for educators who
deal in young adults?
At some point during the late Sixties, 18 became the age of total emancipation. Since you could be drafted at
18 , the reasoning went, you should be
able to vote at 18, drink at 18 , and live
as an independent adult making your
own decisions. Colleges that had been
basically stopped overseeing the social and moral lives of students.
Dr. Ernest Boyer, president of the
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, says that by
the tai\y 1980s, "Campuses were
Beer goggle sydrome:
Lt happens to the best of us
Sunday 's are no longer for
going to church whith the family, at least not while you 're in
college. Instead , most Sunday
afternoons are spent reconstructing the events ofthe night
before or saying goodbye to "uh ,
what's your name again?".
In the 50's, good girls didn 't
do "that»kind of thing". In the
60's and 70' s, "free love" was
the only way to relate to each
other. ButintheSO' s. wejust act
on impulse and ask names later.
Why? "What causes the one
night stand on college campuses
(which inevitably leads to the
morning afterj?
Some students blame a full
moon , while others claim to be
effected by their horoscopes.
The majority, however , admit
to falling helpless into the arms
of alcohol... yes, the dreaded
Beer Goggle Syndrome.
It
starts off innocently enough , a
glass of beer and some conversation with a mildl y interesting
person— but before you know it ,
it's been numerous glasses of
beer and a conversation with
the most incredibly beautiful/
handsome, sexy creature that
has ever walked the whole lace
of the earth.
To make matters even worse,
' their are some who are immune
to this syndrome arid prey on
the helpless. Maybe you 're one
of THEM... don 't you loye telling your friend the morning
after a party howhe/she danced
naked up College Hill... when
you know full well that they
didn 't, but hey, they don 't
remember, right?
Ah , the joys and sorrows of
the morning after are quite and
odd mixture. Who knows,
maybe the enforcement of
underage drinking laws is a
good thing. At least you'll
stand a better chance of having
memories to look back on of
your time here at Bloom, instead of worrying about anyone
finding out about the College
Hill episode
r nmSnt iff liJlM -kM
Pastry and other priorities
Not getting money s worth
Tine Mass Communication Department is queasy about hiring pan-time
professors , not to mention full-time , if
they do not have a PhD.
Come on now! I feel that the time to
mak e allowances has definitely
arisen. One entire sequence of study
has already been cancelled- How
much longer will it take until another
sequence is cancelled as well?
I have heard that other Departments
cf study at the University do not require PnD' s- if the applicant is qualified. Frankly, I do not understand
why the Mass Communications Dep artment is the exception. What kind
of "colitical charade is going on around
here?
Having work ed as an intern for the
By 3en McainCey
dramatically divided. They had rigid
academic requirements. But they said
noth ing about what it meant to be a
good citizen on campus. On some
campuses there was a low-grade decadence with no guidelines that could be
debated inte lligentl y."
When Dr. Boyer asked college
presidents about this, they squirmed.
They felt they were not in charge of
student life, but were held accountable when trouble happened.
Now , public attitudes about adults
have gradually changed and so have
collegiate ones. The drinking age was
raised in most states and the campuses
followed suit Indeed, it is worth noting that nobody at the BU rally protested the new restrictions on alcohol
in dorms.
Colleges are pulling back from the
sort of freedom that set undergraduates adrift, the freedom that seemed a
lot like neglect. Butthat doesn 'tmean
they should retreat to the old rules of
paternalism, regulating student life
from the dean 's office.
Dr. Boyer repeats the ambiguous
words of a student he once interviewed: "We don't want the univeristy involved in our lives, but we want
someone to be concerned about oui
lives."
It is a subtle distinction that any
parent of a college student has to recognize. And so does any administrator.
What BU has done under its combative president, John Silber, is to
reassert institutional authority. It
never engaged students in revising the
code for communal living. It just laid
down a new law . Guests out by 11
p.m. No overnight visitors. BU behaved like an authoritarian parent and
the students rebelled at being treated
like children. It was utterly predictable.
In the passage to full adulthood,
college students want guides, not
overseers. They need the sense that
there are community standards and
older adults who uphold them. But
they also need to feel like substantial
and welcome participants in the community, and not like subjects.
So, at Boston University these
days, even those undergraduates who
find Liberty Hall a noisy and disruptive place are raising the banner for
the dubious right to "say yes to
guests."
That whole idea dates from 30 years
ago or more, when th ings were different. Priorities have changed since
then.
Having firm beliefs in anything,
especially religious doctrine, is no
longer fashionable. If you make any
sort .of stand for religion or moral
integrity, you 're likely to be accused
of being messianic by people name
after cucumber-like vegetables.
Worse yet, people will compare you
with TV evangelists.
Strong feelings for the family are
out of vogue, too. The nuclear family
of three decades ago no longer exists,
at least according to the magazines.
No point in developing strong ties to
someone you 're going to divorce in
three years.
National pride? Unconstitutional.
With all the old values gone or
applying for workman 's compensation , what are the values of today 's
citizens? Grade point averages and
yearly income.
Tell you what let 's change that for
a day. I'm not suggesting that it 's
wrong to strive for good grades, or
that making a lot of money is necessarily a bad thing. I am saying that
these things should be of secondary
importance in the grand scheme of
things.
Let's get some new priorities in
here. Cinnamon rolls obviously go
near the top cf the list but that goes
without sayir.g.
Our society tells us to look after our
own interests first because "no one
else will". I propose that for the rest of
the day we look after the best interests
of the first person on our immediate
left whose shoes match our shirt
We spend way too much timetrying
to ''get ahead". I think we should put
our efforts into falling behind instead.
We 'd cover twice as much ground
that way and the end effect would
probablv be the same.
For this one day of alternate importance, let 's put a high premium on
scratching cats on the ears and special
emphasis on humming unrecognizable tunes.
Remember to stop and smell those
little red flowers that make women get
so mad if you forget to buy some for
them.
Get to know your universe. Stop
and have a long chat with the stars
some night They have a lot to tell you.
Tomorrow you can go back to your
old priorities. If you happen to sec two
small green people from Pluto, one
named Zaknar and thc other called
Brad, tell them that they need to phone
me before next week's deadline.
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg,PA 17S15
Editor-in-Chief
Karen Reiss
Managing Editor
Glenn Schwab
News Editors
John Risdon , Dawn D'Aries
Features Editors
Bridget Sullivan , Chrissa Hosking
Sports Editors
Kell y Cuthbert, Scan Ryan, Lincoln Weiss
Photography Editor
Christopher Lower
Production/Circulation Manager
Alexander Schilleninns
Advertising Director
Susan Sugra
Advertising Manager
Amy Oilman
Assistant Advertising Managers
Jim Pill* *., Lisa Mack ,
Jodi Donatelli
Business Manager
Ailinn Salek
Assistant Business Managers
Kris DaCosta, Carol Yancoski
Sales Managers
Bob Woolslager, Vince Veiuisiro
Copy Editors
David Ferris, Chris Miller
Contributing Editor
LyiinoKmst
Advisor
Jolin Maii ilen-ll ni ris
Voice Editorial Policy
Unless stated otherwise, the editorials in Thc Voice arc H IP opInUniN nml
concerns of the Editor-in-Chief, and do not necessarily rolled Iho opliilmm
of all members of The Voice staff, or the student population of llhuiinstinri ;
University.
The Voice invites all readers to express their opinions on Iho oriltorlul pii||o
through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must lio N I|*II .
ed and include a phone number and address for verification , «llhmi li mimos
u
on letters will be withheld upon request.
Submissions should be sent to The Voice office, Kehr Union Uulltllng,
Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at thc office In tho Ramos romii'. Tho
Voice reserves the right to edit, condense or reject all siitmilssloim,
Biologist gives lecture
By Bridget Sullivan
Features Editor
Cell biologist Dr. David Flcsch,
of Mansfield University, presented a
lecture on population growth and
nutrition titled "Welcome to Your
World ," Mon., Sept. 19 at 8p.m. in
Carver Hall.
Flcsch introduced the studentdominated audience to how rapidly
the world' s population is increasing,
while food supply is diminishing, by
handing out sheets of paper to cach
person as they entered the auditorium. These sheets had the names of
countries printed in bold letters. The
countries included the United States.
Latin America, Africa , Indi a, Japan ,
Russia, Pakistan, and Europe.
An audience-partici pation lecturer, Flcsch had the students geographically locate themselves in thc
aisles of the auditorium according to
which country was on their paper.
Then Flcsch explained that 8000
years ago there were 5 million people
on Earth . In 1987 lhat number expanded to 5 billion. Flcsch demonstrated this by having one person the
equivalent of 50 million people and
continued to randomly choose members of the audience to trace Ihe history of the human population of the
earth from 8000 years ago to the present.
Through this exercise, Flcsch
demonstrated in 20 years, the entire
world population will double.
Sixty percent of the world's popu-
lation is in Asia, according to Flesch,
and by the year 2000, that percentage
will reach 75.
The United States, while being one
of the wealthiest nations in the world,
only possesses one to two percent of
the population on this planet.
South America and Africa are the
most rapidly expanding countries in
regards to population.
Flesch said that experts predict that
this earth can hold 10-14 billion
people, which is three to four times
the present number.
Flesch demonstrated the increasing
overcrow/ling problem in our world
by having every person in each country huddle as close together as possible at ihe front of the auditorium.
After realizing how uncomfortable
such a situation is in terms of the
entire world , the studen ts were allowed to return to their seats.
"How do we feed you?" Flesch
then asked his audience. He then
became "Chef Pierre Donutski" who
prepared "meals" for everyone in the
world.
These meals consisted of doughnut in small brown paper bags, with
each doughnut representing one balanced meal.
As the members of each country
went on the slage to receive their food
it became apparent that the distribution of food in the world is very unequal .
But the most interesting aspect of
the food distribution , Flesch pointed
Friend of Biko to
speak at Lehigh
BETHLEHEM-Donald Woods, a
former South African newspaper
editor whose books on his friendship
with slain black leader Steve Biko
inspired the movie "Cry Freedom ,"
will speak at Lehigh University's
Packard Laboratory Auditorium ,
Monday, October 3 at 7:30 p.m. The
talk ia open to the public free of
charge and is sponsored by the Lehigh University Visiting Lectures
Committee.
A fifth-generation white South
African/ Woods, as editor of the
South African newspaper "The Daily
Dispatch", attacked the racial policy
of apartheid in his editorials. During
his twelve years of editorship (19651977), he was prosecuted seven times
by the government for violating the
laws restricting criticism of governmental policy.
In 1977, he was arrested and punished without legal process for publishing details of the killing of Steve
Biko, a young leader of South African blacks and Woods' friend.
Woods was subjected to a banning
order which forbade him to write,
speak publicly, to be quoted in the
press, or to speak or be in a room with
more than one person at a time .for
five years.
Three months after his arrest, following attacks on his family by officers of the State Security Police, he
escaped from South Africa with his
wife and five children to the neighboring country of Lesotho.
When he reached London in 19787
Woods was appointed director of the
Lincoln Trust, a foundation which
supplies information about aparthied
to the international media. In 1985,
he was appointed special advisor to
the 49-nation Commonwealth Secretariat in London.
MANDATORY PHOTOGRAP H E R S
MEETING
AT 9 P.M.
THURS., IN
THE VOICE
NEWSROOM
"Biko," his biography of the slain
leader, and "Asking for Trouble,"
Woods' autobiography were used by
director Richard Attenborough as the
basis for the film "Cry Freedom,"
released in November, 1987.
Woods also has authored "Black
and White," a book on the South
African situation , "Filming with Attenborough ," a recently-released
chronicle of the making of "Cry Freedom ," and "South African Dispatches," a collection of the "Daily
Dispatch"editorials that provoked his
banning.
"Cry Freedom," starring Denzel
Washington as Steve Biko and Kevin
Kline as Woods, will be Shown September 28-29 at 6:30 and 9:15 p.m. in
Lehigh University's Whitaker Laboratory Auditorium. The film is open
to the public for $2.
Bloomsburg Fair
informatio n
out, was that "No one offered to share
their food." Wealthy countries , like
Europe, received their food while a
poor country, such as Africa , would
also go to get their own. With half the
people in the Africa, India and Latin
America having no doughnuts and
starving, no one from Europe (or the
United States or Japan) offered to
share any of their food.
An the 17th century, .3 percent of
the poulation staved, said Flesch.
During the 18th century, 1.2 percent
died of starvation. That number
reached 3.3 percent in the 19th century and/Today, in the 20th century,
seven and a half percent of all the
people in the world are expected to
starve to death on this planet,"Flesch
said.
Pollution is also a contribution factor to the problem of food distribution ,
according to Flesch.
Pollution is destroying our resources (such as water)," Flesch said.
"Illness can also result from pollution ,
"Flesch pointed out."You can 't help
people if you're not healthy."
Flesch tried to show that "as population varies over time, it increases
over time."
The purpose of the exercise was to
"illustrate the difference between
countries with low and high population density and then compare them to
the per capita intake of food , which
varies depending upon where we
live."
Flesch said,"Food is bird to distribute. The behavior of people tonight is
tyupical of everywhere... it's hard to
share with people that far away."
f
&M©ra©[ii]iMTa
IKITOKY
Students interested in working
security for the Pat Benatar
concert may sign up for
interviews at the Student
Activities office in the Kehr
Union Building. Work Study is
not necessary.
The Men's Varsity Basketball
team is looking for dedicated
college students to fill the positions of secretary, team managers and student assistantcoaches. Please contact
assistant Bill Whitney at 3894371 or stop by Rm . 240 in
Nelson Fieldhouse to make
application as soon as possible.
Al pha Phi Omega ,
Bloomsburg's only national
co-ed service fraternity will
hold rush meetings on the following dates: Thursday Sept.
22 at 7:30 p.m.; and Monday
Sept. 26 at 8:30 p.m. All
meetings will bc held in the
Blue Room in the Kehr Union.
All are welcome.
Men 's
and
Women 's
Horsheshocs competition will
begin on Mon., Sept. 26. Signups have becn extended today
until 3 p.m. at the intramural
office.
Aerobics are in Centennial
Gymnasium Monday through
Thursday from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
wilh Sue , 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. with
Cheryl, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. with
Linda , and on Friday from 5
p.m. to 6 p.m. with Chris.
••••••••••••••• a
An error was made on
page 33 of the Pilot concerning thc Kehr Union Mail
Room. Note: "Unstamped
mail of a political nature may
not be filed in student boxes."
^
HOMECOMIN G
SCHEDULE
Sept. 22 Sweetheart
pictures will be taken
Oct. 10. 4 p.m. Deadline for Float, Banner,
and Residence Hall
Decorating registration *
Ott. 10-11 Primary
Sweetheart Elections
Oct. 12 Freshman
Sweetheart Elections
Oct. 14 Deadline for
Office Decorating registration
>
^
The Protestant Campus Ministry holds worship every
Wednesday night at 9:30 p.m.
in the PMC house chapel (368
College Hill). All are
invitedlCome fellowshi p with
us! Thanks! Any questions call 784-0703.
The Campus Lawyer is
available to students on
Tuesday nights from 7 p.m. to 9
p.m. in the office of Dr. John S.
Mulka, Kehr Union.
Pat Benetar with special
guest The Del Lords appearing October 5 at 8 p.m. at
Nelson Fieldhouse. Tickets
will be on sale in Multi A.
An
open
hearing
on
Communication
and
Coordination will take place at the
University Forum in McCormick
Human Services Center today at
3:30 p.m..
The Men's Lacrosse Club is
looking for experienced lacrosse
players and those looking to get
involved
with
lacrosse.
Interested people should contact
coach Bill Acierno in MHSC.
Students enrolled in 60.201Field Studies in Education I
with Professors Collins and
Doby will meet in the Hartline
Science Center at 6:00 p.m..
Previous meetings had been
scheduled for Carver Hall. The
next seminar will be on
Monday, September 26, at 6:00
p.m..
The Gray House, located at 312
East St.(next to Arcus Brothers)
is holding a non-alcoholic party
Sat., Sept 24 at 9 p.m..
Rush
TKE International
Fraternity Mon., Sept 26, at 9
p.m. and Tues., Oct. 4, at 9 p.m. in
Kuster Auditorium. Open House
to follow.
• • • • • •a
• «* o o « « o «
ATTENTION:
Education
Major with junior / senior
standing. If you have a GPA of
3.5 or better, Kappa Delta Pi
Honor Society invites you to an
Orientation
Meeting
on
September 29, 1988 at 7:30 p.m.
in the Coffeehouse, Kehr Union.
The Community Government
Association is sponsoring a bus
to the West Chester football
game on Fri., Sept. 30. The cost
is $2, non-refundable. The bus
will leave Elwell Hall at 3 p.m.
and return after the game.
Tickets can be purchased today
at the Information Desk in the
Kehr Union.
%rjp §|f
The 1988 Bloomsburg Fair
%SJ^ %?
g
fv |v Paradeof Stars fv f .
SEPTEMBER 24 thru OCTOBER 1, 1988
~
~
SAT., SEPT. 24 - 8:00 PM
DEMOLITION DERBY
RICKY VA N SHELTON & THE FORESTER SISTERS
THE
^gg§-%
Visitors to the Bloomsburg Fair next yj z r h, RECORD
KHIN ,
week are encouraged to stop at The ~e
p WAREHOUSE J^=y
American Lung Association of
Central Pennsylvania's Snowman 122 MILL ST'^^^ DANVILLE, PA
275-5551
Tree. The tree will be located inside
the front door of the farm museum
Stocking a wide
building and fairgoers will have the
variety on
opportunity to hang a snowman on
NEW & USED
the tree when they make a donation
*compact discs
to the Lung Association. Donations
records
*
of any amount will be accepted and
money raised will help the local
*tapes
association , which serveices
Northumberland, Snyder, Union, Hours: Tue-Wed 12-6
Thur-Fri 12-9
Montour, and Columbia counties.
Sat 12-5
Free pamphletrs focusing on flu ,
Closed Sun-Mon
emph ysema , asthma, cigarette
smoking, radon and other lung
Bring in this ad for a
related topics will be available to the
10% discount
public throughout the week.
TUES., SEPT. 27 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
MON., SEPT. 26 - 5:00 & 8:30 PM
NEIL SEDAKA
08
jf
^
_
;'
LP^Ilfe
'
,¦ i . . .. . .. ..
_ .
.....
I
THE OAK RIDGE BOYS
on your favorite selections
I
I
- -
. . .
THUR-, SEPT. 29 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
WED., SEPT. 28 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
|
TIFFANY
THE LETTERMEN
*
with Special Guest Attraction
ALABAMA
EXPIRES OCT 31. 1988
Proa n-nlrck
d rree
uoKe .I
11 q
__
I
I
¦ —i
L^jttjl
'
iMifnWii
I
I
I
TTUTrCT
&
Order any large pizza and
,
get four free cans of Coke
j
Onecoupon per pizza. Customer pays I
applicable sales tax on Coke.
1
Expires: 9/26/88
|
Domino's Pizza Delivers
I
Bloomsburg
599 Old Berwick Rd.
„.,
im i m m t m, mm mm mataMmms, mmmMm P ^SS '^^il 'Lm
I
HOLLYWOOD STUNT
WORLD THRILL SHOW
|
|
mm
SAT., OCT. 1 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
, ltf
m,
s JETS
THE
"
CHARLEY PRIDEvUJ ,
-^D ^^i^-
TflSfc,
J
I $ 2 00
$2.00 Off any 3-item pizza.
\
I Off!
[JF-JJaTuBEil
I
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i
"
I
Pnv-HM
I
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®
I
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 9/26/88
.
Domino 's Pizza Delivers
Bloomsburg
599 Old Berwick Rd.
Phone: 784-6211
FRI., SEPT. 30 - 6:00 & 8:30 PM
J
I
I
I
I
..
\7?....... .
.
. ..I . i...-
..
...„„„„ ..::*,,
—
¦
I All Week long: • Free Band sheii Attractions
I j$j ^
I Other Editing Fair Features: * pitting zoo *
is Kiddie Rides * Free Horse Racing Monday thru Thursday *
I Biggest Midway in the East * Robinson' s Racing Pigs
...¦,,-.- T-
.
i
Ticket Information
GROUNDBOx oFFiCEON i
r™^^™s^T,^s
sah ^S^^W^g& DC,
Sat & Sun Sept 24 & 25-9 AM397
to 8 PM
^
Mae into-mat R^ne?!?
^
Fair Week-9 AM to 9 PM
JWDu-irg rc-zt ateo ^-z oo*
Amnesty Tour rocks Philadelphia
Over 40,000 people signed petitions to support the rights of humans
all over the world , as well as the freedom of political prisoners.
The creator ofthe Amnesty International tour , John Healey, came out to
speak on tour promotions between
sets.
There was also a special video presentation of thc thirty articles in the
Declaration of Human rights during a
45-minutc intermission , enli ghtening
the audience about tlie Amnesty
cause.
The Philadelphia show is one of
only three in tlie U.S., and was thc
only east coast performance. The tour
continues to spread its message as it
will perform in many locations around
by Lisa Ryden
for The Voice
Bruce Springsteen 's powerful twohour set kept thc sold-out audience on
their feet during the Amnesty International concert at JFK Stadium in
Philadelphia Mon. night.
Thc show opened at 5:15 p.m. wiih
Joan Baez , Tracy Chapman , Peter
Gabriel , Sting and Springsteen singing Bob Marley 's Gt?; Up, Star.d Up.
Baez then went on to sing Arr:zt:ii:g
Grace.
.
New artist "Tracy Chapman followed with songs from her debut
album , Tracy Ciy ipnutr... Songs she
performed included Revolution. If Sot
Nov.-, and her recent hit . Fast Car .
among many others for almost an
hour.
Chapman then returned to the stage
to introduce Stins. who was most
impressive performing duets with
Peter Gabriel . Set Them Free , and
Every Breath You Take with Springsteen.
After a short intermission Peter
Gabriel fired up the crowd with such
popular tunes as Shock the Mon.*tey.
Sledge Hanur.cr, Biko. In Your Eyes ,
and a dynamic duet oi Don ' t Give Up
with Chapman .
The long-awaited Springsteen
brought the crowd to tlieir feet with his
bristly rendition oi Born in thc USA.
He continued for nearl y 2 hours playing old favorites like Jung leland ,
Born to Run , Thunder Road ,
Hometown , and yet another duet—
this time with Sting—of The River.
The show 's finale was a regrouping
of all the artists to sing an Amnesty
theme song and an encore of Get Up,
Stand Up.
Everyone knows what the united
Suites Constitution is, and that it 's
been around for a long time. Actua lly,
that document was 201 years old last
year.
Wc celebrate the Constitution for
its role in American history, its significance in modern government and
its role in the continuation of our personal freedoms. At a time when personal freccdoms are under attack , it is
good to have the protection of the
Constitution.
Few governments have endured for
over 200 years. No other constitution
has lasted so long.
Almost two-thirds of the world' s
national constitutions have been developed since 1970; onl y 14 nations
have constitutions predating World
War II. Most nations have developed
two constitutions since 1945.
By these standard s, thc Constitution
of the United States has proved remark ably durable.
As a nation , we celebrated thc bicentennial of the Constitution last
year. It is importan t that we conunue
to remember to celebrate the histori c
signing of thc document in Philadelphia on September 17, 1787.
The Bicentennial Commission ,
headed bv former Chief Justice War-
ren Burger , encourages us to mark this
occasion
with
appropriate
Constitution Week activities.
At Bloomsburg University, we
marked the event by ringing the bell
in Carver Hall toweron Sat., Sept. 17,
1988 at 4 o'clock p.m.
Students from Drs. Ted and Lorraine Shanoski's classes participated
in the bell-ringing ceremony.
** Lorraine Shanoski , of the curriculum and foundations department , is
working with her students in developing materials on the Constitution for
use in early childhood and primary
education settings.
Ted Shanoski , of the history department , uses thc Constitution as a theme
in his American History classes.
Both professors were recip ients ofa
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship at Oklahoma State
University this past summer , titled ,
"Thc Constitution: Its Roots and Sig- i Thc bowling alleys in Kehr Union are being removed (after much controversy) to provide a new location for 'Cheers', BU's popular
nificance."The institute dealt with tlie I
philosophical , historical and political
aspects of the United States
Constitution.
house , and numerous small tables, called The Heard. Future attractions
The Shanoskis are currentl y in- by Lorie Audenricd
and the dance floor complete with include a games night, a funk/rap
volved in plannin g and carry ing out a f o r The Voice
This Thurs. night , Sept. 22, the flashing lights and loud music. And of night with a rap contest, and a videteaching project on the Constitution
with the Millvllle Area School Dis- Progra m Board will once again open course, Cheers has a bar, offering a odance night.
Also, one night in Nov., Cheers will
the doors to Bloomsburg Univer sity 's variety of affordable , non-alcoholic
lively non-alcoholic ni ghtspot , beverages, including the popular have electronic boards set up at each
table, from which a person can send
Cheers.
strawberry dai quiri.
Thc idea for a non-alcoholic ni ghtGreek organizations are also in- messages to someone else at another
club at BU has originated back in volved in the functioning of Cheers. table.
In addition to being a place to meet
1985. The Program Board had put
According to Jim Gilliland , advisor
together a dance club atmosphere in a to the Program Board , "The fraterni- new people and dance the night away,
Night Class. It was a good idea , but ties and sororities offer great support Cheers offers an alternative to the
didn 't go over very well at first. So, the [to Cheers] . We couldn 'tdo it without Thurs. night party scene by giving
Executive
Board of the Program them." Fraternity and sorority mem- students a chance to go out with
g
'
Board made some changes. The re- bers perform many tasks at Cheers, friends , in a nightclub atmosphere.
Gilliland says, "The turnout has
sulting product opened in April of such as waitressing, bartending and
i 1987 with the name Cheers, after the even bouncing.
been terrific. We've gotten really
familiar television show. It was a hit at
Cheers also offers various forms of positive feedback; people really enjoy
each ofits monthly openings.
entertainment on different occasions, it!"
Cheers is held every other Thurs.
The nig htclub atmosphere of so it does not become, as Gilliland puts
night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Cheers comes from decorations and it, "the same old thing."
balloons put up by Program Board
This Thurs., for example, Cheers
members in the Kehr Union Coffee- will be featuring a j azz fusion group
I
I
I Enthusiastic contestant in the popular Campus Win , Lose or Draw game in Kehr Union Tuts, night.
~--;r :*|
,
''*""> h fa'"«» *'° |.j :g;:;;: ;|
thc world.
U.S. Constitution
celebrates 201 y ears
I •-
—
non-alcoholic dance club.
Photo by Chris flower
i- n
Cheers' offers social alternative
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Bloomsbur g
EtoursiMon-Wed i0:O0 A M - 6 . 0 0 PM
T h u r - F r i 10:00-6:00 PM
Sat
10:00 A M - 6 . 0 0 PM
I
s
367-19 19
Trying to relax tn thc sunshine while studying is a rare activity these
days, with thc cloudy skies that have been shadowing the campus
lately. There will bc even less of the sun from now on , as today is
officially the first day of autumn.
Pholo h J!m Brttelytorf
Ji
New Quest director named)
Roy Smith a nationally
*
Hnown innovator and developer <>r outdoor adventure
and icadmiiip progra m* *has
I>c«n appointed executive director of the QUEST program at Bloomsburg* University, awoi-dhitg to .j otm
Trathen , director of' student
activities.
Smith replaces ClHir.es
Conn-elly *>vi«) resigned in
July to accept a position with
the PrJiK 'fton University
Education Center,
¦"We're fortunule in having
a person .of Hoy's outdoor e xperiwu.e and management
Skills directing our program,"Trmhen said, "A Jong
with his creativity and vision,
tehns ti good track record in
fundraij- ing -and is an outstanding speaker in (he outdoor movement. He is a dy-
namic, higli-energv Individ'
utal.*"
For the past year. Smith hasbeen the d .rector or Wilderness
Forum , Inc. of Crested Butte *
Colo, ife also J.as heen a consultant to the Kellog Foundation on iendership training and
teanibuiidingprogram.
Working in ^university environment is not new to Smith as
he was associated -vith wilderness anrt outward bound programs at the University of/
California at Santa llarhara.
Anttcoch College in Ohio,
Oreat Lakes Colleges Association and Prescott College in
Arizona.
In 1-UH5, with support of the
National Geographic Society
and World Wildlife Fund , he
organized and led s Yale University biological reconnaissance of Omo Hiver Valley in
Southern Ethiopia.During two
different periods, t967«*?6 and;
1-986-K7,--he worked with the
Colorado Outward Bound
School School.
fn tiie 1970s, his accwupilisfc*-*;
ments included ski expeditions
in Alaska and tM Arctic Circle,
ascents of Mt. McKinley in
Alaska and MU Kenya io Bast
Africa, a first crossing of tbe
Sea of Ctn ti-r. in Mexico in a
kayak and a descent «f the
Colorado Uiver through the
GrandCanyon.In W66, he -was
a member of the British expedition that marie the first ascent
of the 20,000 ft. Alpamayo
Mountains in the Peruvian
Andes.
Smith has a bachelor «f arts
degree in education f r o m
Prescott College and a master
of arts degree in human ecology
from Yale University.
Oldies remain goodies 9Sweet Charity 9 sings and
Musical comedy, Sweet Charity , will be performed at Mitrani Hall October 13th.
by Melissa Harris
Staff Writer
Do you ever get the feeling that you
are in the wrong time period.? As I sat
in \h&Voice office last night , minding
my own business, I listened to the
classic rock block on WBUQ and
realized I was bom about ten years loo
late to have experienced most of (lie
great rock classics of thc twentieth
century.
Not to say that anything is wrong
with today 's music; in fact , I like progressive and pop music. But there is
something about tlie music of llic
70s...
Artists like The Ste ve Miller Band ,
Steve Winwood , and Billy Joel were
in their prime as they turned out Take
a Chance , Mag ic, and New York.
Who can forget the lonely melody
oi Piano Man and the fitting lyrics of
Meatloafs Paradise by the Dashboard Light 1. Ten years ago, many of
these songs were climbing UiCvCharts,
ahd guess whal? They are still selling.
Ten years down the line , will we bc
able to say the same thing about Poison, or Motley Crue?
I am nol putting down anyone 's
tasle in music , but we must realize thc
time fram e here. When I was ten , a lot
of these groups were popular. But at
that age, I don 't tliink I cared about
music , and in thc process, I missed a
lot.
History was j ust passing me by and
I was more concerned with which
boys had cooties. In the 70s, groups
like Chicago , The Beatles , America
and other artists like Billy Joel were
laying the groundwork for some of the
Trya Macintosh today-yOU
JTiay winaSonyDiSCniail'
Nowthatanew s-chool year is
underwaywehavean idea that'll
make both you and yourparents
; r
If^-jraMMnMMMm^M.
songs we listen to now. If you look at
an old Chicago album you will see the
song 25 or 6 to 4. If you look at
Chicago 18 , you will notice the same
song, just updated throug h new mixing.
Billy Joel's Uptown Girl and Ma tter of 'Trust would not hav e sounded as
they did it Piano Man had not come
first. More than ten years ago .TVze
Beatles did Hey, Jude.
Steve Winwood was producing
songs thattoday havemadehim oneof
the most enduring performers of the
decade. These are the songs lhat history is made of.
I just hope that someday, when I
have kids , they will learn to appreciate
things faster than I did. Maybe some
of the greats will be great just a bit
longer.
feel a bit more confident come
finals time:
. Get a Macintosh'computer to
help with your homework.
toyou 11never have to spend
another all-nighter retyping a paper
just to purge a few typos and
dangling modifiers. You'll be able to
dances into Bloomsburg
One of the showiest song and dance extravaganzas in Broadway history, Sweet Charity, is coming to Mitrani Hall
theatre on Oct. 13, at 8 p.m.
Winner of four 1986 Tony Awards, including "BestRevival ,"lhis internationally acclaimed 1960s musical comedy
sensation had Broadway audiences cheering and is now delighting audiences across the country in this 1988 national
touring production .
Sweet Charily was conceived by award-winning Director/Choreography Bob Fosse ("Cabaret", "Pippin", "All that
Jaz z"), and the hilarious book was written by comic genius Neil Simon("Bri ghton Beach Memoirs", "The Odd
Couple"). With music and lyrics by Cy Coleman and Dorothy Fields , thc celebrated score includes such memorable
standards as "If My Friends Could Sec MeNow ", "Hey Big Spender!" "I' m A Brass Band" and "Where AmIGoing?"
Based on Nights of Cabiria, thc world-rcnowcdFcllini film , Sweet Charily, is tlie tale of a lovable New York dance
hall hostess who metaphorically wears hcrhcart on hcrslccvc—or actually, for lack of a sleeve, hasit indelibly tattooed
on her arm.
Legendary dancer Gwcn Verdon created llic title role in the ori ginal production , Academy Award winner Shirley
MacLaine starred in the classic 1969 film version , and television star Debbie Allen won rousing approval from the
critics as Charity in the 1986 Broadway revival.
All tickets are general admission: SIO for adults and S5 for students. Tickets may bc purchased at the Information
Cen ter, Kehr Union.
Sweet Charity is sponsored by the Community Arts Council as a special fund-raising event.
If not for yourself, do it for
And if that isn't enough reason
to look at a Macintosh today, here's
your folks.
^
«L
another:
tte power to be your best,
Right now, you havethree
chances to win one of Sonys
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Discman CD players—includ- / ^
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ing the exciting Sony Pocket Jj r*'
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*^
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Enter: September 6th-September 23rd
For "Buying Advice and Ordering and Advice "
Contact Dave Heffner at 717/389-4781
*%
Apple, thc Apple I IIJI .) , I ¦••perCard, anil Macintosh are registered trademarks, and "The power to he your hest " is a trademark , of App le Computer, Inc. Sony Discman is a trademark of Sony Corporation. No purchase necessary. Odds depend on number of entrants. Sec your campus Apple reseller for complete contest details Prizes may vary from product shown.
I
Bloom County
bv Berke Breathed
THE
my
FAR
SIDE
a
by
GARY LARSON
Anatidaephobia: The fear thai somewhere,
somehow, a duck is watching you.
, .
Ancient exterminators
117 Wsct Mniti St.i-r.ef.
Btotmvsfmt-g , P A 17015
Hariri 7 1 7 -307- \?,?,2
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 .
W G* tveico.ne- \\ou to j o i n us ot Russell 's .
Jfor fi n e rflnitir i and a r c l o K t n r j o t m o s p lict c.
From o u r d i n i n g room to our onr tj ott 'If
f i n d t n n m j dcXigfit fti f experiences .
PCease r f o v i s i t t t s .
WHERE ARE THE PARTIES?
Sell your Roomie! Advertise ih * HIRING! Government jobs - in your Burn Luzerne Hall Fire Alarms!
THE VOICE! Five cents a word.
area . $15,000-568,000. Call (602)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •a•
Box 97 KUB!
838-8885. EXT 7842.
The Crossing Restaurant and Lounge
e a e a e s o a « o a a a a » « a a a
at the Buckhorn Quality Inn is now
Sugar Pic Honey: I got a picture in a
[
accepting applications for bartenders,
locket; That says Baby I love you.
;
16£78
to
choose
from—all
subjects
B.S. Lily
j waitresses, cooks, dishwashers, and
Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD
j|mangemcnt trainees. Experience is
The "AWESOME FOURSOME"
p
pm 800-351-0222
helpful but not necessary. Trar.sporEsuiau&aiuasr
in cam. 12131477-8226
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rule forever.
Or , rush $2.00 lo: Essays & Reports
ji talion provided if necessary. Apply to
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN . Los Angeles , CA 90025
Custom research also available—all levels
. 1 Mindy at 784-6155.
—
ESSAYS & REPORTS
'> o v a o 9 « w e « « 0 c > o a a e
VOICE
CLASSIFIEDS
I wish to place a classified
ad under the heading:
-Announcements
- For Sale
-Personal
-Wanted
'-Other
I enclose $
for _ words.
Five cents per word.
We also serve soups , salads avi d"- sandwiches
all day Cong , Please checfe out our Passport
and Visa at RusscCf' s bar .
sjcLii>
>jsSJC e Music Honcici y N i g hts !
, **f ^^if.
**y: sfe sjejfc Hi
*
*K**>j<**^ :*^ |4ir»*3
*•*!*;>K *^***t:****-^**«
£•*
Ie.
fj
. ;Ljfc 'r : •_-*fe? I
j ^••^5|jjjjfi| ^^
——
_,
'
„
Send to: Box 97
KUB or dro P in
the Voice mail
slot, in Union
before 12p.m.
on Wed. for
Monday 's paper
or Monday for
Thursday 's paper.
AH classifieds
MUST be prepaid.
Hey Boogic-I mean Martha or is it ' Melissa Cooper-Roses are red, violets are blue, revenge is sweet and so
Abby? I still don 't know?!! Here's
arc
you. See now did you really think
your personals! Luv ya Boogic2
1 I'd say something bad-actually, I
couldn't narrow it down. Love, Kath .
LEARN TO RID E AT
I GLENIRON STABLES
^I& ^M^^l#1.^*V. ^^ ..tp
\*w vB '- * f m£
SEPT.26 "
til il [< **-8& MON.
TUES.
4
UM^ &
.j ^**R.$-iloi&^
OCT.
»r *« W ll j£j .
» r\ !fc ' ; -.
^ "' * _^^T\ ^L ^
Ask about group discounts for B.U
I Students. Transportation available.
!
WELCOME BACK
STUDENTS !
Reproductive health care for women
Birth control information and services
Pregnancy testing and counseling
Education programs
Resources for term papers
t^
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y
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#H
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With Lounge In The Area '
•Quality Horses Boarded &
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And See Our Gentle
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yfflJ8P* l 1 School Horses.
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\i *• , 1 Mile From Washingtonville
ft
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Were here for you. we care about you *
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¦
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Family Planning Inc.
1123 °,d Berwick Road
Bloomsburg ,Pa 17815
387-0236
ll
• • •( • • • • • • • •q• t a c s
Beautiful- I can't believe" what a
lucky man I am to have met you. I'm
looking forward to tomorrow.
oaaaaoaoaa aaaoae
Have personal concerns? Masters
student in counseling needs clients.
No charge. Ask for Wanda. 7840521
Melissa Cooper LUST!
What's a MOCO?
The Burger King in Danville is looking for some people to work second
shift , 4-midnight, 2-3 or more times a
week. Pay starts at $4.25 an hour.
Contact Rick McCormick at 2751106 nr stein hv
ATTENTION: SORORITIES; FEMALE STUDENTS , FEMALE
PROFESSORS. AVON BEAUTY
VISION - Personalized Computer
skin tone analyzed is here!! Have
your skin tone analyzed and stop
guessing about which colors are right
for you , know for sure. It's free with
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(717) 928-7634, NO CALLS ON
TUES AND THURS please.
xMelissa
? ?¦ c •/-.* • • "US • • • • • • •
Cooper- Did you have a good
"Scnga " Weekend? Aunt Mildred can
call anytime for Mike. Love Your
Sweet, Unrevengeful Roomie. P.S.
"Put one foot infront of the other."
•••••••••••••» e 4
Taz/Sag- It's in your stars: We will
meet again- Cap the fiancee.
• • • • • • • a » a» a « e S e
Margie, Sign your name across my
heart, I want you to be my lady. Your
love muffin.
Walkins Welcome-Split Ends
Beauty Salon-784-2250. Open 98p.m. Discounts to students!!
•
Medals Count
Louganis 1 accident revives danger of sports
"~
THROUGH 22 EVENTS
Country
<7
R
S
USSR
6
1
4
China
1 2
4
Bulgaria
3
2
1
USA
2
2
2
East Germany 2
1 1
Sweden
0
2
1
South Korea 0
2
1
West Germany 0
1 2
Australia
1
1 0
Czech.
1 1
0
Romania
1
1 0
Yugoslavia
1 0
1
Poland
0
2
0
France
"1
0
1
Hungary
0
1 1
Japan
0
1
1
G. Britain
1
0.
* 1
Ital y
1
0
0
* 1
Surinam
0
0
Turkey
1 0
0
Finland
0
1
0
Belgium
0
0
1
T
11 By GerriKobren
7 L.A. Times-Washington
Post Service
6
They fl y through the air with the
6 greatest of grace, and then one of
4
them , the one that many sports au3
thorities consider the greatest diver in
3
the world, hits his head on the diving
3 board and you
suddenl y realize these
2 charming young
Olympic athletes
2 could be in dangcrof
losing more than
2 gold medals.
2
Greg Louganis ofthe United States,
2 gold medalist in the summer
Olym2 pics four years ago and again in
Seoul,
2
stunned the sports world during the
2
diving preliminaries Monday when
2 he rose off the springboard for a re1 verse 2 and a half somersault
in pike
1 position and hit his head on the final
1 rotation , before entering the water.
1
It was not his first accident. During
1
a competition in the Soviet Union in
1979, Louganis hit his head on the
board during a somersaulting dive and
had to be pulled, unconscious, from
As of Tuesday night midni ght EST
the water.
Basketball
| He recovered that time, and he recovered this time, going on to take the
Men 's
gold medal' in springboard diving
Group A
once again.
Team
W
L Pts
Still, questions remain. Just how
Yugoslavia
2
0
4
dangerous are high-level competitive
Australia
1 1 3
sports?
Cen. African Rep. 1 1 3
America's insurance companies
Puerto Rico
1 1 3
seem to think they 're very dangerous
Soviet Union
1 1
3
indeed; two years ago major AmeriSouth Korea
0 2
2
Group B
Volleyball
1
USA
Brazil
China
Spain
Canada
Egypt
3
2
1
1
0
0
Woman 's
Group A
Team
0
6
1 5
1
3
1
3
2
2
2
2
W
L
Pts.
South Korea
USSR
Bulgaria
Australia
Group B
1 0
2
1
0
2
0
1 1
0
1 1
USA
Yugoslavia
China
Czech
1 0
1 0
0
1
0
1
2
2
1
1
Soccer
Group A
Team
W
L
T Pts.
West Germany 2
0 0
4
Sweden
1 0
1 3
Tunisia
0
1 1
1
China
0
2 0
0
'
j
;
l
\
I
\
I
Iraq
Zambia
Italy
Guatemala
1 0
1
1 0
1
1 1 0
0
2 0
Soviet Union
South Korea
USA
Argentina
1 0
1
0
0 2
0
0 2
0
1 1
3
2
2
1
1 0
0
1 0
0
1 1 0
0
2 0
2
2
2
0
| Australia
1 Brazil
s Yugoslavia
:| Nigeria
3
3
2
0
Men 's Group A
Team
W
Soviet Union • 2
Brazil
1
Bulgaria
1
South Korea
1
Sweden
1
Italy
0
Group B
Argentina
USA
France
Netherlands
Japan
Tunisia
Pts.
0
1
1
1
1
2
4
3
3
3
3
trophe, she believes. Volleyball players are separated from their opponents by a net; basketball players can
be called out on foul for body contact;
fencers wear a lot of protective gear
and blunt their foils with buttons.
Boxing, which can be exceedingly
dangerous at the professional level, is
less so in high-level amateur competitions, according to Bruce Mathis,
assistant executive director of the
U.S.A. Amateur Boxing Federation.
After a national championship bout in
the late 1970s, he recalls, a fighter
passed out from a brain injury , but he
later recovered, and in Olympic competitions, Mathis says, "There have
been no serious injuries that I know
of."
Part of the reason is in the protective headgear and gloves, he believes. Part of it is in the rules: There's
no bonus for hitting hard, as there is in
pro boxing. In amateur fights, a body
blow earns the same point whether or
not it knocks the opponent down.
And part of it is in the expertise of
the partici pants. According to
Mathis, if you 're good enough for the
Olympics, you are good enough to
protect yourself.
"Every sport has injuries," he adds.
"But in a survey done several years
ago of the dangers of all kinds of
sports, including mountain climbing,
we were rated relatively low."
-Sign up now for Swim and Stay Fit. A non-competitive program designed to recognize
dedicated swimmers. T-shirts will be awarded. For more info - come to the intramural office in
the Kehr Union.
Women 's
2
Great Britain 1, Argentina 0
-Stay in shape with Aerobics. Classes are every evening starting at 4:00. Check the intramural
office for times and places.
Team Handball
Monday 's Results
Men 's
Pts.
Japan
South Korea
East Germany
USSR
Group B
1 0
1 0
0
1
0
1
2
2
1
1
China
Peru
Brazil
USA
1
1
0
O
2
2
1
l
"I'd be fooling you if I said it wasn t
dangerous," says Hauschild , a competitive gymnast herself from 1982 to
1986. "As an athlete, that 's something
you take into consideration every time
you step onto the equipment. One slip
of concentration , and you could be in
trouble. But in the long run , with the
right equipment, in thc right environment, it can be done safely."
Ellen Eason , professor of physical
education at Towson State University,
says, "It 's very difficult to do anything
physical and not have risks of injuries," But she points to the particular
perils of gymnastics: "It is probably
one of the most dangerous sports because we're asking people to throw
their bodies around bars and into
space," she says.
Water polo can be dangerous too,
she adds: It's a contact activity, with
a lot of possibly illegal contact below
the waterline, where officials don 't
always see it. Greg Louganis, "one of
the best in the world ," proved that
diving has its hazards, and equestrian
sports are high on her risk list too,
since riders can fall and horses can
trample them.
Weightlifters, working alone, can
suffer back injuries from the strain , or
have bone crushing accidents if they
drop the weights.
But most other Olympic sports do
not have that same potential for catas-
Field Hockey
Pakistan 8, Kenya 0 (4-0)
USSR 3, South Korea 1 (1-1)
0
4
0
4
1
3
1
3
2
2
2
2
0
0
1
i
Greg Louganis knows about that
one too: He was standing on a lower
board at.lhe 1983 World University
Games in Edmonton, Alberta, when a
Soviet diver, Sergei Chalibashvili, hit
his head against a platform. He died a
week later .
"Diving gets a bad rap because of
the people who are injured diving into
shallow pools and rock quarries,"
Suriano points out. In competitions,
where'the water is of known depth and
the participants arc experts, thedanger
is far less, he contends: "This sport is
fairly safe. We don 't have the kind of
injuries yougct in sports like gymnastics, wrestling, high school and college football."
Gymnastics , in fact , has claimed
some victims too. In the World Championships in the Netherlands in 1987,
gymnast Tim Daggett fell during a
dismount , broke his leg, severed an
artery, and nearly lost the leg. Harrowing as it was, Daggett recovered lo the
point that he tried, unsuccessfully for
a spot on thc team this year.
More recently, an American
woman gvmnast competing in Japan
suffered a paralyzing injury when she
missed her footing while running forward, toward a mount, and hit her
head on the horse, recalls Penney
Hauschild , assistant gymnastics
coach at the University of Maryland,
College Park.
Tuesday 's Results
Men's
L
-Interested in Karate or Self Defense? The Intramural Department is sponsoring a karate class.
Learn how to defend yourself. Every Monday and Thursday from 8:30-10:00 in the Dance
-Studio. All are welcome.
South Korea 22, Hungary 20'* '
USSR 24, Yugoslavia 18
Sweden 21, Algeria 19
-Do you like to be involved in sports? Do you need some extra cash? Officials/Referees are
needed for all kinds of intramural games. Contact Intramural Office 389-4721.
Tuesday 's Results
Men 's
-Don't forget , Betterball Golf Rosters for Men and Women are due on September 28.
Iceland 22, USA 15
East Germany 25, Japan 18
Czechoslovakia 20, Spain 17
Water Polo
Tuesday's Results
Baseball (demonstration)
Hungary 12, Greece 10
USA 7, Yugoslavia 6
Gymnastics
Monday 's Results
Netherlands 6, Taiwan 1
Japan 7, Puerto Rico 1
Men 's Team Medals
Tuesday 's Results
Canada vs. South Korea
USA vs. Australia
Gold: USSR
Silver: East Germany
Bronze: Japan
To Thine Own Self Be True
Join PSECU
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can insurers refused to issue liability
coverage for the U.S. Olympic Committee, and the committee had to form
a company of its own, called Panol.
Faced with a similar crunch, the governing bodies of some of the affiliated
sports federations insured with Panol
also.
But this had little to do with athletic
hazard , contends Kenneth Clarke,
Ph.D., assistant executive director of
the Olympic Committee. Rather, he
says, "The insurance industry retrenched in 1985-86; besides the
world of sport is not well understood
from thepoint of view of risk management. They figured , 'Why take a risk
on something they didn 't understand?' "
In any case, he adds, individual
athletes have medical costs paid by
their own health insurers first, and by
their federations or the United States
Olympic Committee if they do not
have coverage for treatment of injuries. "Historically,"he says, "the typical bill has been under $10,000."
Even in competitive diving, a Superman sport of aerodynamic maneuvers and high-speed entries into the
water, injuries are more often wearand-tear punishments than life-threatening accidents. "I know of only one
serious accident in the sport,"says Joe
Suriano, diving coach at the United
States Naval Academy in Annapolis.
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Country
Cross
B.U. men and women travel to Penn
Student
Athlete of
theWeek
State for Sp iked Shoe In vitational
Husky Football will square off with Kutztown on Sat. at 1;00, come out and support the team
photo by Chris Lower
BU Football to host Kutztown
Leonard Hlu ill
I'htito by liavi Saulrr
by Dave Sauter
Staff Writer
Congratulations are in order for
Husk y running back Leonard Bluitt ,
as lie has been selected this week's
Student Athlete ofthe Week.
Bluitt earned this honor based
upon his outstanding performance
against Lock Haven last Saturday
and his overall effort throughout tlie
season.
On Saturday, he shredded thc
Bald Eagle rushing defense for 135
yards on 30 carries. For thc season ,
hc had handled tlie ball 91 limes for
386 total yards , averag ing 4.3 yards
per carry. He's also scored four
touchdowns.
On carrying lhe ball an average of
30 times per game. Bluitt commented , "I just want to do whatever
I have to do to make tliis team a
winner M
»
"If ihey wanl mc to carry tlie ball
fifteen times, I'd like to carry iv 16
times. If they need mc to carry il 30
times , I'd want to carry il 31 times,
just enough lo make sure we gel thc
win. "
Bluitt , however , docs nol wanl lo
hear talk of quarterback Paul Vcncsky and himself replacing graduated stars Jay Dcdca and Tommy
Martin.
"I feel offended saying wc must
replace Dedea and Martin , because
they arc two totally different players. With myself and Tommy, our
roles arc similar , but we're two totally different backs."
"Paul and Jay arc two totally different quarterbacks. We're doing
lhe same things they were doing, but
actually we're creating our own
paths."
The talented senior running back
has confidence in this year's team ,
presently 3-0.
"I think this team is capable of
going far. We've got a strong defensive unit with "Tex "Lee and Delmas
(Woods) and all types of players that
are impact players. If they can get us
the bal l and hold us up strong, 1think
the offense can get us some points on
the board , and we can go a long
way."
With Kulztown coming up on
Saturday and West Chester the week
after , Bluitt had these thoughts.
"I feel good about my performance so far, but as an athlete , you
always want to get better , and you
always think there is more, beyond
what you 've already done."
"Right now we're concentrating
on Kutztown; we can 't overlook a
game. But in the back of your head ,
you can always hear West Chester.
You have to have them in your
thoughts a little bit."
Bluitt and the rest of the Huskies
go for their fourth win Saturday afternoon at 1:00 in a home game
against Kutztown.
A win here would put
Bloomsburg at 4-0 going into the
battle against West Chester, a key
PSAC matchup.
The Bloomsburg University football team will put its perfect 3-0 mark
on thc line in thc Huskies' secondconsecutive home game this Saturday, Sept. 24, when Kutztown visits
Redman Stadium in the Pennsylvania
Conference Eastern Division opener
for both teams. The Hall of Fame Day
contest is set for 1 p.m., and the eight
newest members of the university 's
Athletic Hall of Fame will be honored
during ceremonies at halftime.
Thc Huskies won their lliird gatne
ofthe season with a 17-6 triumph over
visiting Lock Haven last week upping
their current win streak to six games
dating back to thc eighth contest oflast
season. Kutztown evened its record at
1-1 last Saturday with a 21-15 defeat
of Shippensburg.
A steady rain hampered play
throughoutmosl of thc Huskies' game
with Lock Haven , and there were a
total of seven turnovers between thc
teams. The Huskies held a large statistical edge over the Bald Eagles but
four interceptions , including two in
the endzonc and one at the Lock
Haven one-yard line, stopped potential scoring drives.
Thc defense continued its fine play
as Lock Haven managed just nine first
downs and 32 yards rushing in the
game. Thc Bald Eagles did pick up
208 passing yards , however, and 86
yards of that total came on their lone
scorcof the day. Bloomsburg has now
allowed three consecutive opponents
onl y one touchdown per game.
Leonard Bluitt went over the 100yard rushing mark for the third time as
hc gained 135 yards on 30 carries and
scored both of the B loom slj urg touchdowns. He scored a one-yard run in
the opening quarter and added a threeyard scoring run in the final period.
Bluitt has carried the ball 91 times in
the first three games for 382 yards and
four touchdowns. In addition , hc has
eight receptions for 49 yards.
Despite throwing four interceptions in bad weather , Paul Vcncsky
completed 12 of 19 passes for 134
yards. Hc has completed 30 of his 54
pass attempts tliis season for 333
yards. The Huskies have scored all
seven of their touchdowns on the
ground. Vcncsky has also run thc ball
35 limes for 79 yards.Tiglit end Paul
Lonergan has been on the receiving
end ofthe most pass completions with
12 catches for 149 yards. Wide receiver Jeff Sparks has four catches for
another 83 yards.
Defensivel y, thc Huskies have been
gelling good performances from several players each game and that set up
an early touchdown. The Huskies
scored all of their points in the first
half of thc sloppil y played game, and
lhe Golden Bears managed just a field
goal in tlie third quarter.
The contest is the first of six-consecutive Pennsylvania Conference
Eastern Division games for thc Huskies. Kutz town plays Western Division member Edinboro next week and
then faces five straight division
games.
Thc game can bc heard live on
WHLM radio AM 55.0 beginning at
12:30 p.m. with "Husk y Countdown "
followed by thc play-by-play with Jim
Doyle and Andy Ulicny.
Pouring rain and tough Division I
competition didn 't stop thc Men 's
and Women 's Cross Country teams
from making a strong showing at
Penn Suite's Spiked Shoe Invitational . Each member of thc men 's
team posted season 's best five mile
times on PSU' s national championship course, while two members of
thc women 's team took home awards
for their performances.
In the women 's race, Penn State's
Wendy Nelson claimed the victory,
covering the five kilometer course in
18:31, three seconds ahead of teammate Anne Marie Quinn.
Thc Huskies top finisher was
Brcnda Bisset, 12th in a time of
19:40. Close behind was Laurie Alexander, Mlh in a time of 19:51.
Awards were given to the top 15
finishers.
Otlicr runners scoring for the Huskies were Pam Mitchell , 16th in
19:58, Julie Saville, 21sl in 20:32,
Lorecn Miller, 28th in 21:23, and
Bridget Hedman , 32nd in 22:09.
Penn State captured the team
crown with 24 points oudistancing
runner-up
West
Virginia.
Bloomsburg finished third with 68
points. It should be noted that both
PSU's and West Virginia 's women 's
teams perenniall y compete in the
Divion I national cross country
champoinships, making them the
women 's toughest competition to
date. Men 's teams from Ohio
State .Southcrn Florida , and James
Madison traveled to Slate College to
challenge PSU's lightning quick five
mile Blue Course.
Despite a steady downpour which
turned certain sections of the course
into mudholcs , many runners posted
outstanding performances.
Battling the mud and rain as well as
top notch competition , Pete Wcilenman of James Madison bested the field
with a time of 24:26. Penn Slate's Brian
Laird was second in 24:33.
Bloomsburg 's Craig Koch was the
Huskies first runner , finishing 33rd in a
Ume of 26:51.
The Huskies varsity squad was
rounded out be Mark Elsasser, SOth in
27:41, Che Bartholomew , 55th in
28:04, Tom Kangcr, 57lh in 28:17,
Scott Hotham , 59lh in 28:35, Mark
Jobes, 60th in 28:43, and Stan Share,
61st in 28:51.
In team competition , Penn State
edged out Southern Florida by eight
points.
Although Bloomsburg finished fifth
out of five teams, every member ofthe
Huskies squad improved on their times
from the first two meets. With continued improvement, the team hopes to
finish among the top six at the Pennsylvania Slate Athletic Conference championships.
Saturday, the BU cross country
teams will face a pair of PSAC foes in
their first home meet ofthe season. East
Stroudsburg and Lock Haven will
travel to Bloomsburg for a 10 am start
at the Nelson Fieldhouse.
NCAA Div. II Top 10
1. North Dakota St.
2. Central Florida
3. Indiana (Pa.)
4. St. Cloud St. (Minn.)
5. West Chester (Pa.)
6. Cal State-Northridge
7.W. Salem State (N.C.)
8. Troy State (Ala.)
9. Texas A&I
10. East Texas State
Difficult weekend for tennis
women 's tennis had a disappointing weekend at army
by Kelly Werkheiser
Staff Writer
This past weekend spelled very few
triump hs for the Bloomsburg
Women 's Tennis team as they traveled to compete at the West Point
Invitational.
On Saturday the Huskies were challenged by Canisius. While not overpowering the opponent , thc match was
close as Bloomsburg took a loss of 32.
Bloomsburg 's Chris Labosky defeated Wendy Tubbert (6-3,6-2) to accept the only singles victory.
In doubles play, Jayme Arlow and
Leslie Troglione gave Bloomsburg 's
tlieir only otlicr victory as they defeated Kellie Kandcrfcr and Mcagen
Bucket , (6-2,6-3).
In tlie remaining singles matches,
the Huskies were not as fortunalc . Jen
Johnson of Canisius defeated
Bloomsburg 's number one player,
Nancy Buie (6-3,4-6,7-5). Cath y Von
Luchrte lost in three sets(7-5,0-6,2-6)
to Michele Teffyman . Also Jeanne
Cancelliere suffered a loss (0-6,2-6)
from Molly Evcrz.
The match with Pace did not fare
well for the Huskies either as they suffered a severe loss of 5-1.
Again Leslie Troglione, a lirst year
player, came ihroug h for the Huskies
by overpowering Joanne Mamp (62,6-1).
Chris Labosky suffered her first loss
of the season (6-7,5-7) to Theresa
Rogas of Pace. Nancy Buie and Cathy
VonLuchrte were upset in singles (0BU Soccer sutlers two losses. Huskies host Susquehanna on Sept. 27
6,0-6) and (6-7,6-7) by Bea Ellemerer
photo by Rob Samtmann
and Chclsie Rose.
In the final singles play, Jeanne
Cancelliere and Jayme Arlow were
not successful against Pace as they
lost (1-6,2-6) and (3-6,0-6).
Senior Cindy Hurst scored the
The Huskies also lost to Army 5-0.
only
goal in BU's fourth shutout of
This weekend altered their once
the
season
against Pennsylvania
winning record to a mere 2-4. BU
Conference
rival
East Stroudsburg.
hosts the University of Scranton at 3
Alicia Terrizzi assisted the score
p.m. on Sept. 24.
which came wilh only four minutes Wilkes
1
remaining in the first half.
0
"The game sounds a lot closer than Bloomsburg
it actually was,"said Head Coach Jan
Hutchinson. "We were really dominating in the first half."
Defensively, BU goalie April Scranton
5
Kolar had two saves. Hutchinson
Bloomsburg 0
stated, "Their (East Stroudsburg)
defense was just trying to keep the
ball out of the circle. They really
didn 't get an offense going."
Hutchinson added , however, that
1
BU missed a penalty stroke and "let Bloomsburg
up some in the second half. East E. Stroudsburg
0
Stroudsburg got down to our circle
but didn 't score."
The Huskies racked up 49 shots on
goal and 29 penalty corners to East
Stroudsburg's five shots and six corners.
The shutout victory raises the
team's season record to 6-0, and BU
has defeated 30 opponents in their Men's: Fifth
overall '
last 31 games.
BU hosts William Smith, St. Law- Woman's: Third overall
rence and Drew University this
photo by Jim Bettendorf
weekend.
Hockey
Still undefeated
Scoreboard
Men 's Soccer
Field Hockey
Cross Country
PSU Invitational
Field hockey continues Its winning ways and ups its record to 6-0
I
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Media of