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Mon, 02/16/2026 - 19:08
Edited Text
ACLU accepts Young Democrats case for student rights
by John Risdon
News Editor
The Young Democrats club, which
staged a protest and news conference
Monday morning at Carver Hall, is
seeking legal action against the university becauseof a decision made by
President Harry Ausprich barring the
group from using campus duplicating
services.
The group claims their rights were
violated by the decision made on Friday, Oct 28. The American Civil
Liberties Union accepted the case by
phone. An ACLU lawyer is currently
negotiating with a campus lawyer and
also legal council representingthe State
Higher Education System.

Ann Wilson , advisor of the group,
commented on Wednesday, "It is not
clear whether we have a right to use
the duplicating service. President
Ausprich could have made the decision. It was his personal decision not
to allow this. A case of this type clarifies exactly who is right It's ironic
that the students are paying the legal
fees to fight against student rights."
Thegroup'smainargumentrevolves
around the fact that school printing
services produced pro-life posters for
a meeting held last Sunday which
advertised "A special message from
George Bush to follow."
Young Democrat President Faith
Warner said she believes Ausprich

made the wrong decision.
"He made this decision because he
didn 't think we would fight back ,"she
said. She added that the group intends
to take the case as far as they have to
because their rights and the rights of
all students are at stake.
At Monday 's press conference
Ausprich defended his decision against
the Young Democrats as he maintained, "The stated intent of the prolife organization is very different from
the stated intent of a political party. I
cannot see the close parallel expressed
by students and others this morning.
That is a judgement call, that is my
opinion . I do not see them as analogous and I do not see a pro-life group

as a third political party which would
put out a roster of its candidates and
will call for a general election a week
from tomorrow."
According to Wilson, the ACLU
representative was referred to a SSHE
system lawyer who agreed that the
Young Democrat club materials should
have been printed because the pro-life
groups materials were printed.
The question of whether the pro-life
group is partisian or not is a major
inconsistency in the decision rendered
last week and the Young Democrats
are using this inconsistency to fuel to
their argument
The group also claims that the decision counters the University Mission

Statement of May 8, 1987 which states
"the university seeks to extend the
academic environment from the classroom into other student activities and
strives to foster openness in communication."
It continues that the university
community is committed to the principles of personal and academic freedom within the framework of ethical
responsibilities.
Warner said the mission statement
supports the group 's position since
they are trying to foster openness in
communicatiuon. She commented,
"We are standing up for the civil rights
of everyone, not just those of the Young
Democrats."

Wilson and Warner said that the
material to be duplicated would have
been distributed to registered democrats and both claim that students
should get the information.
"In a student poll taken by social
statistics students," Wilson said, "46
percent stated that they were not informed of candidates and issues and
wereinterested in learningmore."This
indicates a need to educate.
Wilson added, "One thing that the
media hasn 't picked up on is the fact
that we were not asking for the university to pay for the cost of printing our
material. We have used the service for
the previous three years and have
always paid f or k."

by John Risdon
News Editor
In the wake of the Young Democrats club protest on Monday, another
protest took place on campus, in which
a group of nearly 30 concerned Mass
Communicationsand Communication
Studies students gathered outside of
the Waller Administration Building to
air feelings of dissatisfaction toward
the administration of the major.
The students wereaddressedby John
Baird, dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences who explained steps being
taking toward improving the chronic
lack of open class sections and problems concerning a businessclass titled
consumer behavior, which is arequirement for advertising majors which
closed during the first days of scheduling.
Baird stated, "In mass communications we are doing three things. Another section of consumer behavior is
being added and at least some of those
seats will be open to mass coram students.
"We are continuing our two parttime public relations professors and
we are beginning our search for an additional faculty member."
The dean admitted that in terms of

mass communications, "We've had a
very big demand for the major and
we've been caught in a sense unprepared for it"
Baird also spoke on the current situation effecting the Communication
Studies department
As Mass Communications was
closed this sem ester, a large number of
students who had amassed credits in
the department in hope of being accepted, turned to theCommunication
Studies department as an alternative
major.
Now both departments are in a situation of having too many students and
not enough professors to teach them .
"We didn't foresee that Mass Communication students would all come to
one area," Baird commented.
He switched back to the Mass
Communications department by noting the numbers involved in that department
Baird pointed out,"With six faculty
members and 160 official majors,that
works out to 27 students per each
faculty member. This must be some
sortofarecord.We have more biology
majors, but more biology faculty."
Another question that was fielded
by a student concerned the advice

Academic Advisement was giving to
students concerning transferring if
they could not get the classes they
needed for their particular tract.
Baird countered that by stating, "I
would like to know the context that
information is being given in. If they
are telling students who want to major
in advertising to go somewhere else
because advertising is not being offered than that's good advice and is
responsible.
"If they are telling students to transfer because we're having a problem
staffing things that's, nuts. We are
trying to resolve these problems and
we will deal with the situation . I am
not standing out here to tell you we are
going to do five things and are not
going to do anything about them.We're
going to handle it, we're not sending
students away."
A student asked about the possibility of a minor in Mass Communications and Baird replied, "With each
faculty member with 27 students to
advise, that would not be a wise thing
to recommend."

we had a legitimate need for more
mass comm faculty. I made that case
last year to the provost and president.
We did get another slot allocated. As
I say its not as if we were unaware of
this for some time its just that we are

understaffed and did hire part-time
staff."
When asked if he felt that the department ever had enough faculty since
its inception three years ago the dean
commented, 'To some extent that's

probably true. It takes an incremental
building up of faculty to get to what's
called adequacy. I think by most
peoples standards, they would say that
mass comm has not been adequate and
is not adequate now."

Mass Communications students question administrator

Bush
predicts
win over
liberalism

by David Hoffman
LA. Times-Washington Post Service
Republican presidential nominee
George Bush, attempting to boost
Republican voter turnout, declared
Wednesday that his election "will be
a mainstream mandate'* and "a rejection of the failed liberal policies in the
past"
Bush defined this "mandate" only
with the slogans of his campaign:
"peace through strength" and "keep
this economy moving."
Bush has been criticizedby political
analysts in both parties for focusing
his campaign on relatively narrow
issues and not seeking a voter endorsementof more difficult and ambitious goals, such as those Ronald
Reagan brought to office in 1980.
TheRepublican nomineeseemed to
be answering this criticism with brief
remarks at a rally with favorite son
former President Gerald R. Ford here
Wednesday afternoon.
"If I win this election, it will be a
rejection of the failed liberal policies
in the past and a confirmation of your
belief in these traditional American
values,"Bush said. "If I win, it will be
a mainstream mandate - that is what
this election is about.''
"President Ford put it well, on foreign policy it ispeacethrough strength,
we'll be prudent, we'll always be
prudent, we'll never waste money, but
I will not gut the defense buildup that
was the parent of our currentpeace,"
he said. "Now let's go forward and get
a deal on conventional forces and strategic forces. "

Baird then declared that what is

needed is to increase the number of
faculty to 10 professors.
He stated. "I've felt for some time that

Dean Baird explains policy to protesting Mass Communicatuios students

Photo by John Risdon

Ford told the crowd he was
"shocked" at the way Democratic
presidential nominee Michael S.
Dukakis invoked the legacy of presidents Franklin Roosevelt, Harry S
Truman and John F. Kennedy,
While these leaders opposed Hitler
and latercommunism,he said,Dukakis
had opposedReagan-eraoperations in
Grenada and Libya. Ford said this was
an "insult to the image" of the earlier
Democrats.
Bush is using the final days before
the election for a series of get-out-thevote rallies and efforts aimed at states
where campaign and other polls show
the race extremely close, such as Illinois where he held a rally Wednesday
morning and will return on Thursday.
The Bush electoral strategy has him
primarily in Ohio,NewJersey, Illinois
and Michiganthis week under a calculation that requires Dukakis, in effect ,
to win at least one of those states to

have any chance, given good news
everywhere else, to get the 270 electoral votes he needs. Bush is well
ahead in New Jersey, slighdy ahead or
even in Ohio and Michigan and in a
dead heat in Illinois.
Growing visibly weary from the
campaign,Bush hasbeentripping over
his lines in recent days.
In a speech at the University of
Notre Dame this week, he declared
that he and Reagan had "stopped the
slide show."
What he meant to say was that they
had "stopped the slide." Wednesday,
Bush endorsed the ~ mainstream news
and the mainstreamvalues.'' He meant
"views."
Instead of answering Dukakis'
populist appeal, Bush Wednesday
simply appropriatedit "George Bush
is on your side of the great divide," he
said, mimicking the Dukakis slogan,
"I am on your side."

The atten tion starved Unknown Mass Communications student making a humble protest on Monday.

Photo by Jim BeiiEndorf

Rules proposed for new dorms
by Dawn M. D Aries
News Editor
Despite previous announcements,
new dorms at Nelson Fieldhouse are
not going to be available to students
spring semester. The dorms will not be
ready for residents until next fall.
The delay g ives members of the
new dorm committee, which includes
10 to 15 students, more time to decide
on rules and regulations for the buildings.
The committee is headed by Ed
Valovage, resident director of Schuylkill Hall, and made up of on-campus,
off-campus, and transfer students.
According to Jennie Carpenter, director of Residence Life, proposed
rules are currentl y being considered
and analyzed.
Because it is an established university policy, no alcohol will be permitted in the new buildings. However;
Carpenter said that compromises will
probably be made in other areas.
"There has to be a decision reached
on extended visitation ," said
Carpenter."What I think we're going
to look more seriously at is not having
people move in who don 't belong
there.For example, we want to avoid
boyfriends 'moving in'with girlfriends
or vice versa. We need the proper kind
of policies to protect the rights of all
the people in the apartment."
Carpenter noted that the upper
campus situation willbe very different
from the dorm regulations on lower
campus.
She explained that the policies on
lower campus are targeted toward
freshmen, who make up the majority
of residents.
Another concern of the committee
is the number of resident advisors that
will be available.
Three R.A. positions and one resident dean have been proposed to accommodate 380 students who will live

in the new dorms. Carpenter noted that
the R.A.s will live among other students in the buildings as there aren 't
any one person apartments.Upper
campus R.A.s will primarily deal with
emergencies and security.
Parking is also a consideration.
Specialparking stickers will be issued
for 260 spaces available for upper
campus residents. These students will
not be permitted to park on lower
campusbecause they are within the
perimeter outlined in the new parking
regulations.
Despite rumors that people involved
in sports will have priority to live in
the dorms, Carpenter says the topic
hasn't even been discussed.
It has been proposed that students
who have lived on campus for three
yearsand have more than 64 credits at
the end of this semester will be offered
upper campus residency. Next in line
will be students who have lived on
campus for three years and have at
least 45 credits.
The new dorms will probably contain 60 percent women and 40 percent
men, which reflects the student population on lower campus.
Rent will be the same as lower
campus, but residents will most likely
have an option of signing a nine orl2month lease. Residents will have to
pay their own electric bill, but basic
cable will be provided and the same
phone system will be available. Students might also be able to keep the
same apartment year to year.
There will also be a central office
where upper campus residents can get
mail.
"The apartments really came out
nicer than we expected ," said
Carpenter.'The builders really utilized the space well. The apartments
are energy-efficient and there are
concrete walls to reduce the noise
level."

The new dorms are located close to
residential developments and Carpenter said some kind of open house picnic will probably be planned for new
dorm students and neighbors .
"I think there are some people who
are nervous about 380 students moving to upper campus because of the
increasingnoise level and the increased
amount of traffic ," explained Carpenter.
A neighborhood association for
students and residents has been proposed to promote communication
between both parties.An organization
such as this would provide solutions to
any problems thatmightarise and teach
students and neighbors to respect each
other.Carpenter noted that the delay in
availability of the new dorms is advantageous.
"I'm really glad. It's better to wait
and decide on these regulations now,
and then open it," said Carpenter.

Index

See Husky Notes to know
what is happening on
campus

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I

New BTE production
'Light up the Sky '

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E

Husky field hockey to
compete in national
tournament.

Page S

Commentary
Features
Classified
Sports

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Pa ge 81

naHHalaMi ^EaHBHEmBtamil

Students must continue to
stand up for their rights
To the Editor
This is outrageous.
Administration is skirting the issues.
Which issues? All the issues.
Greeks are wary of administration.
Sludents majoring in education are
dissatisfied with the Field Studies
program. Mass communications
students arc fighting to get classes.
Young Democrats are demanding
justice.
Wc can only estimate how many
students arc silentl y fuming about a
number of other issues.
And still there are no resolutions.
These are troubled times for
Bloomsburg University students.
Bravo lo those who arc standing up
for their rights and striving for
improvement.
Greek non-alcoholic parties have
become a household word.
Students with Field Studies are
writing letters and demanding
meetings.
Mass communication students held
a rally.
The Young Democrats club staged
a protest to.
The result of all this activity is what
students have come to refer to as
mumbo-jumbo (for lack of a nicer
term).

-""

In short,we're getting the runaround,
folks.
With the large amount of student
activism displayed recently you'd
think there'd be some changes. You 'd
think administration would start
responding to student complaints.
You 'd think improvements would be
taking place in front of our very eyes.
You 'd think we'd get some answers.
You're thinking wrong.
This is outrageous.
Of course, most of us have heard (he
typical, smooth answers.
Some authority figures say there is a
need to hire more teachers. If this is
true then what can we do to resolve
this?
Some authority figures say there is
an inadequate budget. If this is true
then how can we work to make it
adequate?
Some authority figures say there is
a need to decrease the number of
freshman admitted each year. If this is
true then what can we do to make
changes?
Some authority figures say there is a
severe lack of communication among
faculty, administration , and students.
What can we do to improve relations?
This is a plea to all students. Don't
stop now! If you haven 't got all the

-

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answers then keep pressing until you
do! Draw up petitions, write letters,
hold peaceful rallies, stage protests.
This school is a stepping stone to
your future. This is not the time to be
apathetic. Remember, your money is
invested in this institution in the form
of tuition.
Administration should be happy that
students care enough to demand
improvements and answers. If wc
don 't take a stand now then who will?
And when?
BU administration must start
respecting students as concerned adults
and answer questions in a direct
manner. Shame on administrative
figures who suggest we get our parents
to call the school.
Let's show them we're mature
enough to take care of ourselves. Wc
need positive solutions.
Once administrati on, faculty, and
students start working together then
positive improvements and programs
can be implemented.
President Harry Ausprich is holding
an open forum from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in
the Kehr Union on Tues., Nov. 15.
I urge all students to attend.

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SOVIET wssir^msl
WST WE PIP P0R
THETR&PPEP

Save the other whales, too

No tAbout to Transfer, By Andrew Davis
The heartbreaking image of three
Dawn M.D'Aries
trapped whales gasping for breath has
once again raised the rallying cry,
"Save the Whales." Even President
Reagan lent his voice to the
extraordinary operation to free the
leviathans from the ice.
But the vicissitudes of nature are
often beyond man 's control. No
amount of public concern could have
staved off the ice floes. Yet public
concern can help stop thousands of
other whales from being killed by
exploding-tip harpoons fired by
Japanese^ Norwegian and Icelandic
whaling ships.
Despite the International Whaling
Commission 's moratorium on
commercial whaling, a handful of
nations, led by Japan and Iceland,
continue to kill whales under the guise
of scientific research.
The results of research whaling and
commercial whaling are often
identical—thousands of tons of whale
meat to stock the fish markets and
sushi bars of Japan.
Although these nations claim the
research is necessary, the IWC rejects
their proposals. Nonetheless, last year
nearly400 whales donated their bodies
to "science"at the hands of harpooners
turned researchers.
The Commerce Department can
impose sanctions on any nation that
dimin ishes the effectiveness of the
IWC. Yet it took a lawsuit, brought by
the environmental community, and the
threat of another,before the department

A new breed of women entrepreneurs
emerge from role of corporate misfits

BOSTON—The woman beside me
is, by any measure, a success story.
The business she started three years
ago already has shown more than a
respectable profit. She has a dozen
people working for her now.
She talks eargerly about the
advantages of being her own boss, the
excitement of running her own show.
She tells me of her plans for the future.
But when I ask why she left the
corporation , some of the sheen of
optimism dulls. It's hard to explain,
she says. She had been there for years.
They were pretty good to her.
Then, she sighs uncomfortably, as if
reluctant to complain or even to
remember. For many year, she had
been "the only woman"in one meeting
after another.
"One day I was sitting there while
the men were talking about the game
Saturday. One of the guys made his
usual crack about cheerleaders.
Suddenly I was just so tired of it. I was
tired of having to fit in, tired of being
an outsider. I felt like I was wasting so
much energy."
It was like trying to work, she said,
in clown-sized wing-tipped shoes.
They slowed her professional pace.

This entrepreneur from Tennessee
doesn't know the businesswoman I
met last spring in Michigan. But her
success story had a similar subtext
Why did this Midwestern woman leave
a major bank to set up her own
business? After a decade, she was told
that she would never become vice
president unless she made some
changes in her sty le. Not her
management style, her personal style.
The powers that be thought her hair
was too red, her car too flashy, her
presence too, uh, feminine. She was
also a kind of misfit.
The third "misfit " I met last month
was in Florida. Her story was even
more common. The corporation she
left had no room for mothers. She had
not been able to bemanager and mother
in the same schedule. There was no
room in their business structure for
chan ge and so she went
into
partnership with another young
mother. Their financial and family
planning are now in a profitable sync.
These are not the only management
"misfits"that I ha ve met. Not by a long
shot But sooner or later, all three of
these women will pop up in some puff
piece, some personality profile

praising the new wave of women
entrepeneurs. And it is clear to me that
their success is in many ways a
corporate loss.
Women-owned small businesses are
the fastest growing part of the
economy. Something to brag about
Nearly four times as many women as
men have gone into business for
themselves in the past decade.
We don 'tkeep records on how many
of these women are refugee or
deserters or escapees (choose one of
the above) from larger corporations.
We don't have data on how many of
these women left because they got
tired of adapting to the corporate style
or lifestyle.
Indeed their former bosses and
colleaguesmightbesurprised.because
these were not the kind of women to
cry sexism at the meeting. Nor are they
the kind to sign their letter of
resignation, "Your former misfit."
The best and brightest are also, by
my sample, the most likely to pack up
their energy and leave. But anyone
who talks to these successes hears the
same set of stories.
There are similar tales, I am sure,
from male entrepreneurs. There are

many blue-jeaned men who feel
trapped in three piece corporations.
There are men who feel they can't
push through the ceiling, men who
want to make their own rules and hours.
They, too, choose to be on their own.
But women are still, almost by
definition , aliens in most corporate
cultures. Those who were once
satisfied, even pleased just to be
allowed into this male world, are
increasingly restless in the place.
The new breed are among the
liveliest, most exciting businespeople
I meet.I don't want to read failure into
their personal success. But few are
starting the next IBM. Fewwill become
the employers of hundreds.
And as they leavelarger firms, those
workplaces are diminished. They lose
another agent for change. More to
point, as these entrepreneurs walk out
the door, one by one, American
corporations lose another sourse of
ideas, of innovations, of energy.
And sometimes, after I have heard
these success stories, I wonder how
many of theirold colleaguesand bosses
ever realize the gap left by another
"misfit" who dropped a pair of old
floppy wing tips beside the exit door.

even leveled superficial sanctions
against Japan.
The United States, long a leader in
whale conservation, could pressure
Japan and other nations to end spurious
research. By enforcing the Packwood
Magnuson
Amendment , the
Commerce Department could cut these
nations' quotas forcatchingU.S. origin
fish. Or, the Commerce Department
could choose to enact the Pelly
Amendment, which would slash the
amount of fish that a whaling nation
could export to the United States.
This would be a greater deterrent,
since each year Iceland exports more
than $200 million in fish to the United
States (its largest market) and Japan
more than $500 million.Unfortunately,
the Commerce Department and the
president have preferred to appease
the rogue whalers.
When the IWC moratorium on
commercial whaling took effect in
1985, Japan refused to recognize the
ban; in 1986 alone, it killed more than
1,000 whales. Rather than impose
sanctions, the United Stales cut a deal:
if Japan would adhere to the
moratorium, it would allow a threeyear phase-out of Japanese whaling.
Within a week of Japan 's final
Antarctic whale hunt last May, the
Japanese announced a 10-year
research project that would kill nearly
1,000 whales in the Antarctic each
year.
When the IWC balked at this
proposal, the Japanese repackaged the
plan and lowered the kill quota. The
IWC rejected the second plan, too, but
the Japanese went on with the hunt
anyway. Facing the prospect of a
lawsuit brought by the environmental
community,
the
Commerce

Department finally took action,cutting
Japan 'sallocation to U.S. fishing rights
by 50 percent.
Later.PresidentReagan completely
cut off the Japanese fishing allocation
for 1988. However, the Japanese had
virtually no fishing allocation for 1988
to begin with. Clearly such empty
sanctions are no deterrent—Japan has
already announced its intent to kill
300 minke whales in Antarctica
beginning next month.
Iceland has killed nearly 300
endangered whales since it began
research whaling. The United States
has pressured Iceland into marginally
reducingthe number of kiljs, but again
has avoided imposing the Pelly
Amendment.
In February, Greenpeace launched
a People's Pelly Amendment, a
boycott campaign to pressure large
buyers of Icelandic seafood into finding
alternative fish sources. In response,
Jerrico Inc. (of the Long John Silver
restaurants), a major German
supermarket chain and the city of
Boston moved to give up Icelandic
fish.
The cancellation of these
multimillion-dollar contracts already
has prompted a motion in Iceland's
parliament to end research whaling.
So far, more than 250,000 people
have signed our petition calling for an
end to whaling. Action, not words,
saved the trapped Alaskan grays, just
as executive action could save
hundreds of other whales.
Japan and Iceland are determined to
kill whales. If the United States does
not act, the fate of thewhales will be
sealed as tighdy as a Alaskan ice pack.
Andrew Davis is assistant media
director of Greenpeace .

tQTjje f oizz
Kehr Union Building
Bloomsburg University
Bloomsburg, PA 17815

Editor-in-Chief.
Karen Reiss
Managing Editor
Glenn Schwab
News Editors
John Risdon, Dawn D'Aries
Features Editors
Bridget Sullivan , Melissa S. Menapace
Sports Editors
Kelly Cuthbert, Sean Ryan, Lincoln Weiss
Photography Editors
Jim Bettendorf , Jennifer Moon
Production/Circulation Manager
Alexander Schillemans
Advertising Director
Susan Sugra
Advertising Manager
Amy Crimian
Assistant Advertising Managers
Jim Pilla, Lisa Mack,
David Marra, Jodi Donatelli
Business Manager
Adina Salek
Assistant Business Managers
Kris DaCosta, Carol Yancoski
Sales Managers
Bob Woolslager, Vince Verrastro
Copy Editors
David Ferris, Chris Miller
Contributing Editor
Lynne Ernst
Advisor
John Maittlen-Harris
Voice Editorial Policy
Unless stated otherwise, the editorials In The Voice are the opinions and
concerns of the Editor-in-Chief, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions
of all members of The Voice staff, or the student population of Bloomsburg
University.
The Voice invites all readers to express their opinions on the editorial page
through letters to the editor and guest columns. All submissions must be signed and Include a phone number and address for verification, although names
on letters will be withheld upon request.
Submissions should be sent to The Voice office, Kehr Union Building,
Bloomsburg University, or dropped off at the office in the games room. The
Voice reserves the right to edit, condense or reject all submissions.

Interaction between candidates and media is minimal
by Eleanor Randolph

L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

Reporters covering the presidential
campaign of George Bush were surprised one recent evening when campaign manager Lee Atwater told a
television interviewer that the candidate had been "very accessible to the
press."
"I was out with him yesterday. He
went back and talked to reporters that
were traveling with him for about 40
minutes last night on the plane,"
Atwater told John McLaughlin.
That was the first time some journalists had heard about Bush's 40minute encounter with the media.
The session with journalists on the
vice president's campaign plane was
off the record.
No news came out of it, and the
representativesof all the media covering Bush - called the pool or "poolers"
- did not file a report to their colleagues to say the off-the-record
schmooze had occurred.
Somejournalistswho have been part
of these pools defend the time with
Bush as an opportunity to see him as a
regular guy, instead of the campaign
figure presented to the public.
However, other journalists are angry that the members of such pools -

Others have begun using binoculars
to get some idea of the candidate's
expressions while he is making public
appearances.
And Bush's efforts have been so
successf ul that the staff of Democrat
Michael S. Dukakis adapted his strategy in dealing with theirnews corps, at
least to the extent that Dukakis has
become less accessible than in the
earlier days of the campaign.
The result is that veteran political
journalists are stunned at the insulation between candidate and media.
Time senior editor Walter Isaacson ,
who was covering the candidates for a
few days recently, said, "It s astonishing, the difference. You can go out for
days and not have any exchange or
discussion with the candidates. It used
to be that if one candidate raised some
issue or some point during the day,
there was a press availability where
you could address a question to him.
"I think it 's important because it
allows issues to be raised and some
form of dialogue. . . not only an exchange of views between the two
candidates but reactions to the news of
the day," Isaacson said.
Bush and Dukakis, in the waning
days of thecampaign, have given interviews to various networks and newspapers.
But what has been missing has been
the routine, daily exchange with the
traveling news corps that once was a

crucial part of the mix of1 campaign
news.
"Bush can say that he's given 200some interviews,but that'sjust not the
same as being in the thick of it daily to
answer the questions like/Hey, you
just said such and such,but whatabout
... ' or, what they particularly want to
avoid is 'Hey, Dukakisjust said such
and such, and what do you think of
that?'" saidJames Gerstenzang,White
House correspondent for ths Los
Angeles Times.
Candidates and their campaignshave
made it clear that they have excluded
the campaign media from the process
because they do not want this other
news to "step on their message" - that
is, to interfere with theirplans for what
should be in newspapers and on network news shows.
For some reporters, the lack of access to the candidate is not as alarming
as the l ack of access to his staff.
Reporters covering Dukakis complain about not having enough access
to the candidate.
Most said last week that there was
plenty of time to talk to the campaign
managers who rode on the reporters'
plane.
Although some journalists have
access to top staff members on the
Bush campaign on the understanding
that they not name them in stories or
broadcasts, others said that on-therecord appearances by Bush staff

members were used by his aides to
repeat the themes of the Bush campaign.
The lack of access is one of the
reasonsthat some reporterswho fly on
the "pool"have agreed to the off-therecord sessions.Eric Engberg of CBS
News said the sessions are "very nonsubstantive. ... I view it as an opportunity to see him in a relaxed setting
where he's hot on his guard about
everything. You get a better sense of
the man."
"The others get their chance when
they get in the pool," said Engberg,
who recalled that Democratic vicepresidential nominee Geraldine A.
Ferraro tried to declare her entire airplane off the record in 1984.
"Wejustdidn'tdoit," he said of the
news corps following Ferraro.
For others, the off-the-record sessions have become a source of irritation to a news corps that seldom sees
the candidate up close. It is so much of
an irritation that one correspondent,
Dennis Murphy of NBC, recently
turned down an invitation to have
dinner and an off-the-record drink with
Bush.
"Bush is delightful company; he tells
wonderful.engagingstories.ButMitch
Locin (of the Chicago Tribune) and I
had spent the better part of eight hours
being held back trying to shout questions athim. ... Then, to be on the plane
and invited up for an off-the-record

chat, it just didn't seem appropriate,'
Murphy said.
For all the difficulty seeing Bush,
some sightings are accidental.
Newsday writer D.D. Guttenplan reported last week that he skipped the
usual press plane '"trail mix' of beer,
pretzels, ribs, stale coffee and more
beer that is the traveling press* idea of
breakfast."
Instead, he went to the gym where
he encountered the candidate.
As he exercised, Guttenplan wrote
that he heard Bush beratethe media to
one exerciser, complaining that he had
to stress his differences with Dukakis
"because those bastards in the press
won't" He then heard the vice president add that the media sure isn't on
our side."
Emboldened a few moments later,
Guttenplan said that on behalf of his
colleagues he decided to declare himself a member of the press and ask
Bush when he was going to have
another news conference.
'"At the word 'press,' Bush threw
up his arm angrily. "This is all off the
record.'" Guttenplan,likeBush .knew
that nothing is declared off the record
after the event, and Bush noted that he
has had 208 news conferences, most
during the primary season.
When it was pointed out that Bush
had not had a traditional news conference in 10 days, Bush said, "We're
trying to win this election."

by Lisa Ryden
and Kelly Adams
f o r The Voice
Satanic musical influence was presented in a video entitled "Rock and
Roll, A Search for God" shown Tuesday evening in thePresident'sLounge,
KUB .
Musical artists from the 60s to the
present
were examinedin the footage.
ATTENTION DIETERS: For those
trying to balance diet and exercise, Bruce Springsteen, Madonna, Prince,
the latest news on diet and nutrition Hall and Oates, Talking Heads, Miwill be available in the intramural chael Jackson, Rolling Stones, and
office. Current literature provided by Cheap Trick were among groups acTufts University may be viewed by cused of making some form of satanic
or occult reference in their music.
students on weekdays.
Songs and album covers containing
blasphemous mockery of Christianity
were reviewed.
Community nursing students are coPentagrams, satan's symbol, cruciordinating The Great American fixes, the satanic number of 666, and
Smokeouton Thursday, Nov. 17from lightning bolts referringto Satan 's fall
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in McCormick lobby from heaven were displayed on a
and Multi-A, KUB. Don't light up,
lighten up!

number of the album covers.
The video focused on Styx, a rock
group from the 70s, which mocks
Christianity in their name. Styx refers
to the mythological river in hell. Their
album, named Cornerstone, also has a
double meaning. Throughout the Bible,
Cornerstone is a reference to the
Messiah and the building of his house.
Styx uses a picture of this for the
album cover.
The Beatle's SergeantPepper album
cover was examplified as displaying
drawings of their favorite people, one
of them being, Alleister Crowley, a
leader of satanic beliefs.
The video went on to say that rock
and roll has a larger net gross than
combined mass media, close to 15
billion dollars a year. Music has historically been shaping society in an
unprecedented way.
Plato, the ancient philosopher, be-

lieved music to have a great psychological force. Aristotle, another reknowned philosopher, said music
should be regulated by law. Lenin, a
political philospher, said music was a
quick way to destroy society.
Protest music of the 60s featured
philosophic artists like Jimmy Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and the Rolling
Stones.
According to the video, these musicians believed the mind could be controlled with music. Hendrix felt he
could hypnotize his audience and when
they were most vulnerable he would
instill his beliefs in their minds, using
music to accomplish this.
Music was referred to being of the
mystical and spiritual essence, and
more than just a collection of words.
The video also presented the controversy of back masking. This is when
a hidden message can be found when

a recording is played backwards.
It is believed that the backwards
message can also be heard by the
subconcious when played forward.
Among the artists accused of implementing back masking were Queen,
Electric LightOrchestra, Cheap Trick,
and LedZepplin. All of the messages
refered to in the video were satanic or
anti-christian.
The video said the results of something is the best way to evaluate it. The
result of rock and roll music was depicted as death at concerts, high mortality rate among musicians, and an
increase in violent crimes among
youth.
Fellowship of Christian Athletes
sponsored the video.FCA President
Kevin Moyer said the hour-long video
effectively presented the implications
of music and religion without offending the viewer's taste.

whosejob is to share any bits of information with other reporters - are withholding information for themselves.
They also note that Atwater clearly
counted the exchange as evidence that
Bush is not isolating himself f rom the
media.
"My position is that when a pooler is
involved in a situation off the record,
the pooler must write a pool report for
the rest of us and label it off the record," said Maureen Santini, White
House correspondent for the New York
Daily News. "I'm just adamant about
it"
Forveteran journalists following the
candidates, the efforts by Bush to
socialize with journalists on occasion
but answer their questions infrequendy
are just part of a wider structure that
keeps reporters who regularly cover
Bush away from the candidate.
More than almost any previous campaign , Bush has kept his media entourage at bay, staged daily events for the
television cameras, given interviews
to more friendly local reporters and
scaledback general news conferences.
The level of frustration about viewing the candidate up close has become
so intense during the Bush campaign
that some reporters purchased megaphones to ask questions.

'Consumer Behavior
available to students

ATTENTION: Another section of
consumer behavior has been opened
for students needing the course to
graduate. Students must sign up today. Sign-up sheet is outside Dr.
Mereba's office , MHSC 101.

The Residence Life Office will release 125 on-campus students from
their housing agreement for second
semster on a first-come basis. Students who wish to move off campus
must come to the Residence Life
Office and sign a release form. If you
move off without approval you will
be responsible for next semester's
housing. Any questions? Contact
Residence Life at 389-4089.

Tuberculin tine tests for prospective
teachers and other interested membersof the university community will
be given in the University Book Store
Lobby on Monday, Nov. 7 from 10
a.m. until 2 p.m.. You mustreturn for
a reading of the test on Wednesday,
Nov. 9 at the same time and location.
Cost will be $1.50 per person.

"Living With Asthma , a free family
seminar, will be sponsored by the
American Lung Association of Central Pennsylvania in cooperation with
Geisinger Medical Center on Saturday, Nov. 5 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. in
the Hemelright Auditorium atGeisinger Medical Center, Danville.

Husky
Notes
Any Homecoming Sweetheart Candidate wanting a copy of the Sweetheart poster may stop in the Student
Activities Office on the top floor of
the Kehr Union and pick one up.

ATTENTION COMMUTER STUDENTS: There will be a general
meeting tonight from 2:45 p.m. to 5
p.m. in Multi-B,KUB. Guest speaker
John Bieryla will discuss the financial aid application process for 198990. There will be a question and
answer session to deal with concerns. The fireworks display originally
scheduled for Homecoming on October 21 was cancelled on that day
because of rain. It has been rescheduled for Friday,Nov. 4 on upper camPSECU will be on campus Tuesday, pus. Booms will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in and everyone is welcome. Rain date
Multi-A,KUB.Come see whatit's all is Saturday, Nov. 5. For more inforabout.
mation call 389-4344.

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Satanical messages examined in video

Dukakis invokes combative spirit

by Edward Walsh

L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

Invoking the fighting spiritof Harry
S. Truman's upset 1948 victory, a
combative Michael S. Dukakis vowed
Wednesday to cut off foreign aid to
any country that refuses to cooperate
in efforts to stem the flow of illegal
drugs into the United States.
Speaking to several thousand supporters in Daley Plaza in the heart of
this heavily Democratic city, the
Democratic presidential nominee said
his Republican opponent, George
Bush,would"riskourchildren'sUves"
if he put his running mate, Indiana
Sen. Dan Quayle, in charge of the
nation's drug interdiction efforts.
Hesaid B ush had refused to threaten

VV

a foreign-aid cutoff to drug producing
countries and, in a voice growing raspy
from the strain of the campaign,
addedf "He says he doesn't want to
disturb our relations with other countries by insisting that they cooperate in
the war on drugs. I'll cooperate with
other countries, but I'll be damned if
I'll let"these countries send their poison into the United States of America
and destroy our kids." In a television
interview Tuesday, Bush said he would
not automatically impose economic
sanctions on countries that have not
stopped illegal drugs from coming into
the United States, such as Mexico.
Bush's position has been that imposing sanctions as a first resort would
thwart the process and would disrupt

overall U.S. foreign policy objectives.
Dukakis took essentially the same
position on the same show Tuesday.
Asked for specific examples of
where sanctions would be applied,
aides to the Massachusetts governor
cited Panama but made clear that he,
too, would exclude retaliatory action
against Mexico, a major source of
illegal drugs whose political stability
is considered vital to U.S. security.
"He would certainly havecutoff aid
to Panama," said Tom Herman, a
deputy issues adviser in the Dukakis
campaign.
He said Dukakis had pledged "to
work with" Carlos Salinas, Mexico's
recently elected president, in establishing a cooperative anti-drug pro-

gram with that country.
In raising the drug issue anew,
Dukakis tried again to link Bush to
Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega, Panama's military strongman who is
widely suspected of drug-trafficking
activities, and to attack his choice of
Quayle as his running mate.
Dukakis said he would promise foreign leaders cooperation, including the
dispatch of U.S. militaryforces to their
countries if requested, but would also
tell them, "If you think you can do to
Mike Dukakis what Noriega did to
George Bush, if you think we're going
to risk our children's lives by putting
somebody like Dan Quayle in charge
of the war on drugs, then you're in for
a big surprise on Jan. 20, 1989."

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BTE comedy L
' ig ht Up the Sky 'lights up Bloomsburg skies

by Lori Ransicr
Staff Writer
Bridget Sullivan
Features Editor
Light Up The Sky lit up Alvina
Krause theatre downtown for the past
three weeks. A semi-autobiographical
comedy by Moss Hart, this show
pokes fun at backstage antics in the
1950s ihcai.ro world.
A new playwright has written an
outrageousl y expensive play, and it is
about to open out of town. Everyone
involved thinks it is marvelous , until
... opening ni ght. It seems like the play
bombs , (hanks lo the drunken
Shi iner ' s conveniioncrs who went to
the (ici'Inruiance.
I lie young playwrig ht , Peter Sloan ,
still believes in his work ,and promises
lo "fix it ," but everyone else has lost
faith in it. Despitcatlemptsofanoldcr ,
more experienced playwright to dissuade, him , Peter , his ideals shattered ,
g ives up and heads home.
Meanwhile , the reviews have been
published , and to everyone 's astonishment , tiiey arc j!,ood! The elder
playwrig ht , Owen Turner , has a letter
from Pete; to everyone involved —
saying, m elieei , "'¦loodbyc , and good
riddance. '" The producer, Sidney
Black , not. wanting to lose his
$j( X) ,O0O, cashed in on an owed favor
from an airline buddy, and had Peter
broug hl back to ihe hotel.
Determined not to lose Peter, the
producer , director , and lead actress try
something new
honesty . Sidney
Black says to the playwright , "You
thoug ht we were heroes. We ain 't.

Then you thought we were heavies —
we ain't exactly that either. We're
mixed up altogether like everybody
else." Black hands over the rights to
the play to Peter, which he feels gives
him the opportunity to be even more
honest. Admitting that he and his
cohorts had behaved badly, he thinks
Peter was worse. "You walked out on
yourself." Peter takes the cue, and his
play, and is determined to do it again
— but this time to get it right.
The set, a posh hotel room , actually
received a spontaneous round of applause the m-inutethe curtain went up.
The only way to describe it is "spectacular."
The entire cast gave wonderful performances. As an ensemble, they
worked very well together. However,
it is hard to single out any one or two
best characters.
Playwright Peter Sloan , played by
James Goode, was an idealistic, wideeyed country boy, who didn 't talk
much , until provoked. He was cute,
innocent and sweet, and his touching
idealism was tempered throughout the
play into a strength of character that
you could admire. Sloan was believeable, and you couldn 't help but to
like him and feel for him.
Carlton Fitzgerald, the director,
played by Martin Shell, "could cry"
over and over. The character was very
pathetic and somewhat amusing, and
even managed to be loveable through
all his considerable pettiness and
egotism. Shell did a great job in characterization, and was so memorable,
"[We] could cry."

for this entertainNan Lowell, played by Margaret serves much credit
Sidney, the producer, portrayed by old stage, primadonna actress ever
production. It
touching
yet
and
ing
David Moreland, was a wealthy, created. She's spoiled, selfish and O'Neill, is ghost-writing Irene 's autosometimes
want to
and
laugh
made
us
normoney-minded businessman , talcing knows exactly what her pecentage is, biography. Nan 's character is a
view
of life
touching
us
a
his first steps onto the stage of theatre. and what it should be. Amazingly, she mal person — maybe the onl y one in cry as it gave
theatre
big-time
proin
a
This is a guy who never "puts a foot has accepted a role without a single the entire cast. Somewhat shy and backstage
really
did
Li
ght
This
show
duction.
wrong," and doesn't know how to line in the first act. We get the impres- reserved, she is "new to the theatre."
Sky.
the
Up
handle the "failure"of his first theatri- sion this is way out of character for O'Neill's performance was becal endeavor. Believeable, but hard to Irene. At times, you feel like wringing lieveable, and she maintained her
Oops? I goofed? "
like until the very end when he admits , her neck, she is so conceited. Strim- relevance to the play, which could r
very easily have been lost.
"I didn 't do this for the money," More- beck's performance was excellent.
In the Oct. 27 issue pf The Voice,
James Sterling, Bill Lcnhart,Robert the review of 'An Evening of One Acts
land masterfully and memorably Owen Turner, the older, wiser,
more experienced playwri ght is Salsburg, and Marc Baranouski round did not list Nicole Matucila as playing
brought his character to life.
Stepanovna in 'The
Frances Black , Sidney 's wife, A. played by Rand Whipple. Through his out the cast as Tyler Rayburn — the role of Natalya
Editor and auFeatures
As
proposal.
'
William
,
a
Shriner,
Elizabeth Dowd, is a professional ice discussions with Nan it is apparent Irene's husband ,
I must apologize,
the
article,
thor
of
skater (thanks to her husband) who that Owen knows everybody (except H. Gallcgcr — the Shriner who brings and also say Matuella did an exceplikes to shop until she drops, and al- Peter). He is the link to the characters' the good reviews about the play, and a tional Job, along with all Involved with
ways loses at gin. Tired of being the pasts. Whipple 's performance was Plain Clothes Man respectively. All the production.
¦
- Bridget Sullivan j
schmuck who always got taken while sarcastic, witty, charming, and all at gave sterling performances.
deDirector Gerard Stropnicky
her husband couldn 't put a foot wrong, the right times.
she put in half the money toward this
failed production. Dowd' sperformance was likable, and one had to feel
sorry for her after her attempt apparently bombed. Her accent was awesome, her character was cute, and she
had a real rapport with Stella , played
by Karin Bowersock.
Stella Livingston, the lead actress'
spunky (and then some!) mother, was
a character. Addicted to gin games
with Frances, Stella won't lose. She
doesn't have much respect for rules,
either. Breaking Carlton 's almost
"sacred rule," she snuck into dress
rehearsal, and warned everybody of
what was coming. Bowersock — you
can't say enough about her. She was
that good. "Gin, goddammit all to hell
— gin!"
Bloomsburg students explore the Career Fair in Kehr Union Tuesday afternoon. Representatives from many local businesses,
p* Actress Irene Livingston, Leigh national corporations and graduate schools were present, offering Information and answering questions.
Strimbeck, was every stereotypical

Porsche revamps the 911; introduces Carrera 4
by David Mann
Staff' Writ*r
When it comes lo the popularity of
the various Porsche sports cars, Ihe
911 has , for nianv years, proven to be
the most desired model available ,
outselling all of ihe company 's other
offerings by nearl y three to one.
The proud Porsche company is,
however, well aware that the 911 's
selling success is not going to last
forever. After all , while the 911 's
iechnical and performance aspects
have greatl y improved during the past
25 years , it is a sports car that is beginning to bote even the most serious
Porsche traditionalist. This is due
mainl y lo the fact th at during its entire
!irc;ihe911 's body sty le has remained
virtuall y unchanged despite drastic
increases in power and performance
abilities. To the casual observer, a 911
from 1974 (the year that the currently

During the past 25 years, the 911 has
been improved practically as much as
is possible and they now had to produce a 911 model that is totally different. The challenge was to make a new
911 that would appeal to perspective
first-time buyers, while not turning
away those long-time enthusiasts who
love the 911 for its heritage and styling.
Enter the 911 Carrera4 — a completely new, four-wheel drive 911 that
promises to be the Porsche of choice
for the 1990s and beyond.
The Carrera4 (or 964, as it will be
designated from the factory) is a totally redesigned version of the 911
Carrera, retaining only 13 percent of
the components from a new 1988
version.
Viewed from the outside, the Carrera4 shares many of the 911 's original styling lines. While the wheelbase
¦¦ ' i s. ; . ¦¦ •¦-: were intro- and overall track dimensions are un¦ ¦ ' ..
;.;i!!\:.i) i - .-'o :: .-; o::;:cuy mo same as a changed , the company has replaced
the old-style safety bumpers with
brand new 1988 version.
Porsche had a problem in its hands. sleeker, much more aerodynamic
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wraparound shields which greatly
improve the appearance of this more
modem-looking 911.
Inside, the new 911 has been improved in many important areas. For
better readability during nighttime
driving, the instrument needles are
now illuminated. The cooling and
heating system has been greatly improved, providing optimum ventilation in all climates. Finally, the center
tunnel and gear shifter has been positioned a few inches higher from the
floor , allowing for smoother shifting.
Examining a Carrera4 from a technical point of view, it is apparent that
this car is a direct decendent of the
incredible 959.
According to Porsche, the four
wheel drive system of the Carrera4 is
based on experience gained from the
development of the the 959. Unfortunately, due to cost limitations the factory sacrificed the 959's electronically controlled, variable torque split
four-wheel drive system, opting instead for a more conventional (read
"less expensive") set up.
Other technical niceties include
power-assisted steering (a first for the
911 series), race-tested tire pressure
sensors that alert the driver if the tires
are underinflated , and a Bosch Anti-

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Lock Braking System (ABS).
In an ABS-equipped car, a compute r-assisted monitor prevents the
brakes from "locking-up"— a dangerous situation which can cause the
vehicle to skid and, in many cases,
crash. With the ABS braking; the traditional Fuchs forged alloy wheels, a
911 trademark for more than two
decades, are now no longer acceptable
because of wheel size limitations. For
the Carrera4, Porsche introduces all
new 16-inch diameter polished alloys
which have a clean , conservative look
and which are also very aerodynamic.
Since 1975, the buyer of a 911 was
forced to decide between a safer, better handling 911 equipped with a large
"whale-tail" rear spoiler, or a clean,
classic looking 911, without the extra
appendage. With the Carrera4, owners can have their cake and eat it, too,
because Porsche has developed the
engine grille cover into a retractable
spoiler. At slow speeds it remains
recessed, resembling the current 911
grille. Upon reaching 50 miles per
hour, the unique spoiler mechanically
extends, providing necessary down
force as efficiently as the currcnt911 's
spoiler.
Because of all of the additional
weightoftheCarrera4(the four-wheel

*ATTENTION STUD ENTS *

Higher Math

drive and ABS equipment add an
additional 300 pounds), the engine
had to be made more powerful to keep
it in line wilh the present performance
of a 911. The extra power, achieved
mainly by increasing displacement
and by employing the use of a twin
ignition system, adds 33 more horsepower to the already powerful , rear
mounted , air cooled , six-cylinder
engine.
Despite the heavy weight of the
Carrera4, performance capabilities
show a noticeable improvement. The
highly aerodynamic body and more
powerful engine together help to
achieve a top speed of more than 162
miles per hour with equally impressive acceleration potential.
With the Carrera4, Porsche is admitting that the power of the present
911 Carrera engine is as much as can
be safely transferred through only
two wheels. With the reserves of
safety incorporated into it, the fourwheel drive, ABS-equipped Carrera4

Book Review

'Merchants of Death 9
exposes corruption of
tobacco industry
by Eileen Power
L.A. Times-Washington Post Service

Checking





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N o w available to students

will prove to be the safest and most
versatile Porsche 911 ever manufactured.
The new Carrera4 will be seen next
to the standard 911 Carrera at Porsche
dealerships starting in mid-1989. The
price will probably be.quite high — at
least $57,000. By 199,6,..the.911 Carrera will no longer be produced and
the Carrera4 will take its place entirely. Porsche initially plans to produce the Carrera4 only in the coupe
bedy style. However, plan on seeing
an open roof Targa or Cabriolet version offered in the near future.
In addition, it is reported that a four
wheel drive 911 Turbo Carrera4 is on
the drawing board. Code-named 965,
it will probably feature a 4-valve, 3.5
liter, twin-turbocharged 400 horsepower engine capable of propelling
the car to a top speed of 185 miles per
hour. It is unlikely that this incredible
Porsche 911 will be seen before 1991
and it is expected to demand an extremely high price.

Merchants of Death: The American
Tobacco Industry, by Larry C. White
Larry White has put together a fascinating glimpse of the six major tobacco companies. The statistical information concerning health effects of
smoking is overwhelming: To give
one example: Each year 500,000
Americans die of cancer - 350,000 of
them due to smoking.
But Merchants is just not another
rehashing of the raw data that can
become numbing. White exposes the
tobacco companies' method of operation.
Itis simple: Money talks.Ms. magazine has proclaimed itself "the undisputed leader in reporting on women's
health." Yet in the first 151 issues,
there were 583 pages of ci garette ads.
During the period, there were no articles or letters to the editor dealing
with the effects of smoking on
women.
Much the same has happened in the
black community. Among its contributions, RJ. Reynolds gives the
United Negro College Fund several
hundred thousand dollars a year. For a

company of its size, the sum is a pittance, but many black leaders have
been quiet in their criticisms of smoking, even though the black community
has suffered hi gh rates of lung cancer,
asthma and associated illnesses due to
cigarettes.
When the tobacco industry is confronted by 50,000 published articles
on the dangers of smoking, the usual
answer is denial. Reynolds President
Gerald Long said, "Honestly, I have
not seen one piece of medical evidence presented by anybody, anyw here, tliat absolutely, totally said that
smoking caused disease or created it."
Lawsuits, such as the recent Rose
Cipollone case, and anti-smoking
bills across the nation are making an
impact. But the cigarette companies
are becoming l.iore powerful.
Because of the great sums of money
they saved by the ban on cigarette ads
on television, the companies have diversified and bought businesses ranging from Del Monte to Nabisco.
;.-.de are no easy solutions in Merchants of Death , and White does not
pretend to give any. What he has done
is profile a sad chapter in American
corporate responsibility.

1 ^
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Qet tickets now fo r the "Miss greet Athena Vagent ' on Oigv.10,
B sponsored by Alp ha Sigma Alp ha. Tickets are availablefrom any ASA "
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F sister. Cost is $1, $2 at the door. Come see 'Bloomsburg's finest f e A maleslAlso,A SAwillsp onsor a non-alcoholicdancep artyFriday,9{gv.4 A
E
E f rom9-12 at the house (69 Sesame). . Admission is $3.00 at the door.
Z
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LV.C Sports Up date
XT
L T.C. sports are. off and running this semester,events already
J^[
completed and winners are as follo ws:
® Softball: lst- UQ.
Soccer: lst- UQ. ^
Cross Country : lst- OlZ
2nd- TKE 1
I
' Zmt &IS.
2nd- ZI Q
"
3rd- AXA K
3rd- AXA
3rd- TEO
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Standings as of 10-2 7-88:
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$>ZZ-18p ts.
TKE- 13 pts.

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S X - 4 pts.

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Gamma 'EpsiCon Omicron
¦
With Cast week, being the 3rd week, of p ledging , many of our
serviceprojects are beginning to materialize.The. 4th p ledge class
' ay Care Center, and
has given their time to Special Olympics, the D
the University Thonathon. Special Olymp ics consisted of organizing
and pa rticip ating in games with the children at Centenial gym
every Saturday morning. Monday we assisted the Day Care Center in a ^HalloweenPartyby dressing in costumes and teaching the
childrenfraternity cheers. Last "Wednesday the p honathon netted
$4 700, which wellexceeded our $4300 goalfo r the evening.

^

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success!!
J Q,
A special thanks to all who made Theta Chi s sub sale a huge
1

'

Anthropology
Club explores
other cultures
by Kelly Monitz
for The Voice
Have you noticed the Far Side
cartoons on the bulletin board on
the ground floor of Bakeless? Or
the article claiming that Eve was
an extraterrestrial? The bulletin
board is one of the more lighthearted attempts of the Anthropology Club to raise visibility of their
major and club.
The Anthropology Club has
about thirty members, many of
them anthropology majors or
minors or double majors such.as
Athropology/English. But many
members are in other majors, but
are simpl y interested in other cultures, according to Dr. Aleto, Anthropology professor and advisor
to the club.
The club is very active for a relatively new organization. President
Pat Andrews says it's success is
based on curiosity about other cultures and enjoyment of each other.
" I try to make it interesting, he
said. " I want people to come
because they enjoy the club, not
just because it is something to but
on their resume. That 's why we
show films aboutpeople and religions from around the world ( At
their weekly meetings.)"
The weekly meeting is also a
time to plan, according to Dr. Aletto. The club is sponsoring sev-

eral events this semester. A trip to
Washington D.C to vest the Smithsonian is planned for this spring. In
cooperation with the Biology Club,
they are sponsoring are organizing
a lecture by Roy Smith, the new
director of Quest, the recent presentation by Professor Cynthia Bianchi was also sponsored by the
club.
Social events are also part of their
activities. Dr. Aleto says that a
recent cross-cultural feast, with
each member bringing a dish from
a different culture, was educational
as well as enjoyable.
Some members of the club will
travel to Millersville University to
report on the field school the Anthropology department sponsored
this summer. They worked on excavation of ancient artifacts at nearby
Fort McLure. Their work is featured in the display case in the entrance of the Bakeless building.
Assembl y of the exhibit was time
consuming, but Williams said
members of the club are very giving
with their time. " Everyone is very
enthusiastic."
Anthropology professors are extremely supportive of the club, Andrews said, they attend meetings,
advertise club activities and share
information on conferences and
programs with the club. " We owe
the a lot of thanks," Williams said.

-^

The T a l k o f
Stooms&uq
by Douglas Rapson
Staff Writer
It seems that 1988 has been an in
teresting year for Bloomsburg Uni
versity, I dare say, however, that i
has been the year of the Trendoid
The Trendoid is an interesting
creature, and one that has beer
greatly avoided by all of the majoi
biological studies. I have never en
countered this creature in any oi
my science texts. However, all on<
needs do is look around tht
Bloomsburg campus to spot i
Trendoid.
The Trendoid comes in manj
shapes and sizes. They can be seer
sporting Hard Rock Cafe T-shirt.'
from many cities in the warmei
weather. This does not mean thai
the Trendoid has ever seen thai
particular city, but they wouh
have their ecological neighbor
believe this.
Perhaps related to the chamc
leon, the Trendoid can change it:
appearance to suit its surround
ings. As the weather becomes in
creasingly colder, Hard Rock Cafi
T's are replaced by Hard Rocl
Sweat Siiirts.
Not unlike the playful otter , th<
Trendoid is oftentimes very amus
ing to observe. One cannot help bui
chuckle as a pack (flock? gaggle?
herd?) of these critters pass you bj
on the sidewalk. And , of course
they are all sporting their beat up
brown leather flight jackets, oi
mirrored sunglasses.
Although one can get up close to
the playfiri Trendoid , the best place
to observe their mi gration patterns
is from up high. I especially noticed
this a few weeks ago at the football
game.
(

Alchohol linked to sexual problems for women, violence
by Larry Thompson

Washington Post - Vol A n f U s Tiims Sirrut

The tragedy of Cheryl Arairjo, the
victim of the infamous New Bedford
gang rape in 1983 is, in large part, the
tragedyof the female alcoholic in our
society. Araujo , at the age of 22, was
raped on a pool table in a New
Bedford ,Mass., bar by six men as the
barroom crowd cheered them on,
ignoring her cries for help. Four men
were convicted.
But the town turned against
Araujo, and as Newsday correspondent Carole Agus wrote after
Araujo 's death three years later, "the
six men were defendants in that trial,
but Cheryl was the accused." There
were demonstrations outside the
courthouse to the effect that "a
woman who exposes herself drunk to
men deserves to be raped."
What it was in Cheryl Araujo s
background or genetic makeup that
predisposedher to the disease of alcoholism will probably never really be
known. It isknown that she was abandoned by her mother and raised first
by her great-grandmotherand later by
her grandparents. After the trial she
was unable to face the hostility of the
town, including bomb threats and
other threats against her life, and she
fled to Florida. She entered an alcoholic-rehabilitation center there and
reportedly did well for a time.
But in 1986 Cheryl Araujo was
killed in a one-car crash. It was, Flo
rida police reported, a DWI. Driving
While Intoxicated. Her blood-alcohol level was, the police said, three
times higher than the legal limit She
was 25 years old.
What is beginning to make the

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practices.The surveyors quickl y
difference in changing the prejudice specialists referred to a grow ing body
found
, however, that "of all the secare
of
perceptions
of evidence that
and misperceptions literally
tions
of
the questionnaire, this was
millenia is the sheer gutsiness of twisted by Western civilization 's
the
one
the
women seemed most inwomen like Betty Ford, Elizabeth view of woman in general and women
volved
in
and
several subjects exTaylor and Texas State Treasurer who drink, especially in public, in
,
¦
pressed
appreciation
for. having the
¦
• - <
Ann Richards. It is the persistence of particular.
opportunity to talk about it."
women's groups like the Junior
Says psychologist Sharon C.
In the 1981 survey, she said "one of
Leagues of America and alcoholism- Wilsnack, a professor in the departthe most striking things we found was
research organizations like the Na- ment of neuroscience of the Univera very high level of expectation that
tional Council on Alcoholism as well sity of North Dakota medical school
alcohol
would enhance sexuality." In
as groups like Alcoholics Anony- in Grand Forks, "The more I am
fact, noted Blume, "alcohol acts as a
mous. And it is the dedication of a working in this field, the more conphysiological depressant of the norsmall but growing number of re- vinced I am that sexuality is a critical
mal sexual response in women."
searchers around the country.
variable." Wilsnack, whose land- Still, Wilsnack found that, overall,
Studies, only over the past half mark study of a national representadecade or so, are conclusively dem- tive sample of nearly 1,000 women in approximately 60 percent of the
onstrating what conventional wis- 1981 offered the first major insight women surveyed reported feeling
dom has always known: that women into the particular problems of less sexually inhibited after drinking,
who drink, especially those who women who drink, is now beginning a figure that rose to 68 percent among
women who were heavier drinkers.
drink in public, are perceived as sexu- to report on a five-year follow-up.
However, she also found a strong
ally loose, fair game for any sexual
Both studies have convinced her
aggressiveness aimed at them. These that "of all the different variable s in correlation between sexual dysfuncstudies are finding clear distinctions our research that we ve been looking tions (lack of orgasms, painful interbetween the effects of alcohol on men at as predictors of problem drinking, course, low arousal) and heavy drinkand women, most strikingly the fact sexuality factors are always there, ing. She believes, she says, there is a
that because of their physical and completely interrelated with drinking strong likelihood of "the kind of vihormonal differences; more fat and and alcohol abuse and alcoholism." cious cycle in which some women use
less water, for example, women get At the conference, Dr. Sheila Blume, alcohol to medicate some sort of
sicker quicker, are more easily ad- medical director of the Alcohol ism, dysfunction , which actually makes
dicted and suffer more physical ill- Chemical Dependency and Compul- the dysfunction worse, leading to
ness than do men, and, to boot, are sive 'Gambling Programs of South more alcohol."
In her 1986 follow-up, Wilsnack
even more poorly treated by society Oaks Hospital in Amityville, N.Y.,
found
that sexual dysfunction was a
than their male counterparts. The described several studies that, as she
studies are also finding that although puts it, confirm "the whole ideaof oui major predictor of those heavy drinkwomen feel themselves less sexually society saying that the woman whc ers whose problem had remained the
same or worsened over the five years.
inhibited by drinking, sexual dys- drinks is fair game."
She also found that women who did
functions are inextricably linked to
In the beginning, said Wilsnack
alcohol abuse.
the national survey research cente;
At a recent conference here on with whom her group had contracted
women and alcohol, co-sponsored by to do the 1981 survey resisted any
the Junior Leagues and the National questions involving sexuality. "You
Council on Alcoholism, the first ever just can't ask things like that," she
to deal specifically with the subject, recalls them saying about questions
on sexual dysfunction and

not have drinking problems in 1981
but who developed sexual problems
were more likely to have become
problem drinkers by the time of the
1986 follow-up. The study did not
confirm.perceptions that the heavvdrinking woman waspromiscuous. In
reponse to a question about whether
alcohol made a woman "less particular" in her choice of a sexual partner,
only eight percent said it did. However, full y half of the women said
"somebody who had been drinking
had become sexually aggressive
toward them," Wilsnack said.
Blume, a psychiatrist, cited a study
conducted at the University of Buffalo by psychologist William George.
George prepared videotapes of dating
situations and asked male college
students a series of questions based
on them. "The only difference between the individual women in the
tape was whether she ordered an alcoholic drink or a non-alcoholic drink,"
Blume said. 'The students rated the
woman with the alcoholic drink more
sexually available, more likely to
engage in foreplay and more likely to
have intercourse.If the male paid for
the drink, they rated the woman twice
as likely." She also cited a study
conducted at a treatment center in
California where 82 recovering alcoholic women were compared with 82
non-alcoholic women in the same age
and socio-economic range. She found

that 38 percent of the alcoholic
women had been victims of violent
crime, compared with 18 percent of
the controls. Sixteen percent of the
alcoholic women had been rape victims, but none of the controls had .
Wilsnack also has found that early
sexual abuse may be a major risk
factor for problem drinking. In the
1986 follow-up study, she found that
among the problem drinkers there
was a significantly higher rate of
some form of sexual abuse. And, she
said, one program in Colorado began
to ask incoming patients about sexual
abuse and said they were finding it
among 70 to 80 percent of their patients.
"I think," said Wilsnack, "because
the expectations we have about alcohol making sex better, and how pervasive that belief is, and how it is
reinforced by the alcoholic-beverage
industry and advertisers, it is going to
be really important to start to educate
counselors and therapists not just to
the high risk of sexual abuse in the
background,but to the relationship of
alcohol to sexual dysfunction and
vicious circle in trying to use alcohol
to self-medicate. 'In fact," she said,
"it is not easy because traditional
values and taboos are so pervasive
that it really interferes with a lot of
alcohol counselors being able to even
identif y these problems and deal with
•hem comfortably."

"
"
'
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. wm
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¦



5
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»

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Fresh Flowers %jB/U&*
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$ £^
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Beautifully Arranged Bouquets
y^lJ
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Green & Blooming Plants
v
Helium
Dried & Silk Arrangements
lr>s I
Balloons
^^ V^^f
|£X) DAILY DELIVERY IN BLOOMSBURG
({
Hours: Mon, Thur , Fri 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
U
Tues , Wed , Sat 9:30 a.m.-5:30p.m.
Sun 1-5 p.m.
V
CHECK OUR CASH & CARRY SPECIALS

784-8892
m wm ¦
,
124 E. Main St. «—

WW))

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• BAM, broadcasts of the 1EST music! •
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(we need DJ's-call or stop by if interested)

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LIVE Husky Football!
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Bloom County
by Berke Breathed

THE FAR SIDE
by GARY LARSON

So! ... you STILL won't talk,eh?

collegiate crossword

So!... Out bob bob bobbing along again!

"Go get 'em. brother."

y//////// ^/ Z///j 6V^

© Edward Julius

Colleg iate CW8807

55
de plume
56 Alpine goat
1 Partner for Rogers 57 Peach or cherry
60 Address part
8 House sty les
(2 wds.)
(2 wds.)
63 River in Hades
15 Former Yankee
65 Finished (2 wds.)
manager
d'Amour ,"
16 Campus building
66 "
1958 song
17 Delighted
67 W. Indies islands
18 Cereal garnish
68 Pauper 's wear
19 Prefix: straight
20 Gridder Oickerson
22 College basketball
DOWN
tourney
1 Concerning (2 w d s . )
23 Bear: Sp.
2 Mix up
24 Goes backwards
3 Science of con27 Clamor
struction
29 Bookstore category
4 Egyptian emblems
31 Annoy
5
Arctic dwellings
33 Wen
6 Dakotas Indian
34
share
7 Aged
38 L.A. suburb
40 Gossip dose
8 O.K.
9 Small horse-drawn
41 Quebec peninsula
carriage
42 Baseball hal l-of10 Baseball s t a t i s t i c
famer Aparicio
11 "
longa , v i t a
45
consequence
brevis
46 Sweet pepper
12
Water
pipes
49 Chicago time
(a bb r.)
13 Ford or Banks
14 Methods (abbr.)
50 Ready for use
21 Sports o f f i c i al s
53
tse

ACROSS

25 Noted j a z z v o c a l i s t
26 First name of
former VP
27 Piece of sediment
28 New Rochelle college
30 Galbraith' s field ,
for short
32 Fra Filippo
35 Astray (2 wds.)
36 Sisters
37 Scheduled time
position
39 Playwri ght Simon
40 Boston time (abbr.)
42 Social reformers
43 River to the
Ubangi
44 Estimated
47
voyage
48 Passe" (2 wds.)
50 Soldier from Melbourne
51 French i nterjection
52 With pl enty to
spare
54 Verbal contraction
58 Impecunious
59 River to the Danube
61 Part of NC0 (abbr.)
62 Eggs
64 Half a Latin dance

JAR—Remember, you don't NEED
the lights on to eat and neither does
Freddie!

Government Homes from $1.00.
"U-Repair." Also tax delinquent
property. Call 805-644-9533

LEARN TO RIDE AT
GLENIRON STABLES

To everyone's favorite late-night
Partyfinden Margie Naughton,
Happy B-Iated B-day!! Love,
Dawn. (P.S. Who's this "Don"
character?? What ever happened to
Dan-the-love-kitten?!!)

.The Only American
%\
^. Certified
Riding Instructor In
Bfln
The 'Area.
JBHM
.Private
&
Group Lessons.
Yf>?V'r
.The Only Indoor Arena
r<3vjy
Lounge n ^ne Area
AlPlI W_- ^'' n
'
Vrftt ^B .Quality Horses Boarded &
Wl
\ Trained
¦j SV ft ..Come And See Our Gentle
School Horses.
T5HT*V f
Located on Rie. 254
@' J\ J
Jf
\' \\ ' Mile From Washingloiwille
' ^ . 437-9202 Or 437-J574TJ

Ask about group discounts for BU
students. Transportation available .
"CAMPUS REPS NEEDED" earn
big commissions and free trips by
selling Nassau/Paradise Island,
Cancun, Mexico and Ski trips to
Vermont and Colorado. For more
information call toll free 1-800231-0113.
• ••••••••• a « o o a » »

: wK %sf *** c %& %$ 4W if if^ ^: For rent Spring of'89-One female
needed for an apartment located at

M$ \f\ A$3* $f fii
£
$
{$3^
Jf
"„
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¦¦
->.£. IFM®^ M <§>^ 41
¦

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iBU^O?

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ICA.

*I

i¦ 102W. Main St. $150/month. Call
¦

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7:3 0 p.m.

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Upp€t Camp un

S lFl&Oira ©alt© s §®1L» IM@^@
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Attention RA Dave Sauter~Q.
What do the following words have
in common: Vanderbilt, Syracuse,
Army, Temple? A. They all beat
your Rutgers! Was has happened to
this "almighty" team?-Otis.
Glenn~I always do things worthy
of a personal.~L.E.E.

To the "Pt. Pleasant Canoe"er~
When's your next workout? Dying
to watchl—Mickey Mouse.
• a > «* > o * a ei
• ( ¦• • • • • o

College Housing for Spring '89.
Five Students. Also, many openings for Fall "89. Three to ten Students. Call 1-286-6630.

SPRING BREAK TOUR PROMOTER AND ESCORT. Energetic person (M-F) to tape sign-ups
: for our FLORIDA Tours. We fur¦ nish all materials for a successful
promotion. Good PAY and FUN.
I Call CAMPUS MARKETING at 1800-777-2270.

'

&

784-3186.

To that beautiful brunette in
Northumberland—Don't just sit and
stare... why not say "hi" and give me
your name? See you Tues. at 3:15.-Very interested.

Wanted~2 female roommates for
Spring '89. Non-smokers preferred.
Completely furnished
apartment.-$350/semester includes heat Call 784-2713,

ESSAYS
& REPORTS
16^78 fe>«*MOMfrom—alsubjects
Onior CMatog Today with Vrta/MC or COO

800-351-0222
$mm
VBHaF
inCam.ai3)477.Q22e

Tie-dye tee-shirts, HIGH QUAL- j Fred K. (Phi Sig)~Hang in there! I
love you, Jenny.
ITY, all colors, styles. Only $8$10. Call 784-6563.
OTIS FOR US PRESIDENT '88!
Paul Lonergan you are HOT!
Billy-Thanks for the best 8 months
(almost) of my life! I love you forever!-Carla.
• • • •a « « « c o e « 0 « « o «

To the sisters of Alpha LambdaThanks for making my day so special!-Love, Marc.

Needed: One male roommate for
spring semester. Close to campus,
above Uni-Mart. Call 784-9577
Nikki (342)~Stop acting like a
baby. Grow up. Act your age.
Lauren-,-Congratulations! We are
very proud of you! You will always
be # 1 in our hearts!!—Love, the sisters of Chi Theta Pi.

Looking for something diff went to
do on a Monday night? CGIA *ys:s
and hear a high energy and very
unusual comedy experience called
"THE QUIET RIOT", on Monday,
Nov. 12 at 8p.m. in Carver Auditorium. ADMISSION IS FREE. An
event no one will want to miss!
Sponored by the Office of Residence Life.

Hey J. Lee-Whenare we shooting
pool again? You better be listening
to my show today.-Joel.
Tom-Fall off any ledges lately?
To Kelly of Theta Tau-I haven't
seen you since the Red House
Homecoming weekend. Where
have you been? John.
Luzerne FirstFloor-I ordered you a
slice of pie, but I ate it all myself.«
Chris.

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NCAA Division II
Top 20 Football Poll

SchooKRecord)
;
1. North Dakota St. (8-0-0)
2. East Texas St. (8-1-0)
3. West Chester (Pa.) (7-1-0)
4. Texas A & I (6-2-0)
5. Portland St. (6-2-1)
6. WinsL-Salem (N.C.) (8-1-0)
7. Mississippi College (7-2-0)
8. Jacksonville St. (Ala.) (7-1-0) .
9. Butler (Ind.) (7-1-1)
10. Bowie St. (Md.) (8-0-1)
ll.Tenn-Martin (8-1-0)
12. Cal St.-Sacramento (6-2-0)
13. Millersville (Pa.) (7-1-0)
14. Albany St. (Ga.) (7-1-0)
15. Cal-Davis (5-2-1)
16. Indiana (Pa.) (6-2-0)
17. N.C. Central (7-1-1)
18. St. Cloud St. (6-3-0)
19. N. Michigan (6-3-0)
20. Augustana (S.D.) (6-3-0)

The football team hopes to bounce back and regain a top 20 spot as they play the #16 team in Division II , Indiana (Pa.) this
f hoiob, chrUUmtr
Saturday at home.

Mens ' Basketball prepares to
rebound in 1988-89 season

by Lincoln Weiss
Sports Editor
Bloomsburg University has a rich
tradition in college basketball. The
Huskies are always among the top
contenders for the conference title.
Starting Nov. 18, Bloomsburg will
begin its quest for the conference
crown.
Bloomsburg didn 't play well on the
road last year and that is something
that head coach Charlie Chronister is
looking to improve on. "We didn 't
play well on the road last year," said
Chronister. "We have to bring things
up a knoioh or two this year and win
games on the road. We feel we have
the people coming back to do that. The
key to our season is to win on the
road ."
This year, Bloomsburg will have 12
returning letterman , but much like last
year, have already suffered the loss of
a player due to an injury. Greg Thoyears, has gone down again with a
knee injury. He is optimistic about
coming back but that leaves a hole at
the point guard position.
"Craig Phillips should fill that void,"
commented Chronister. "He pressures
the other team on defense and does a
good job offensively. Our other two
point guards, Bob Coppolino and
Kevin Reynolds have gotten better
over the summer. Going into recruiting, we thought that we might have to
recruit a point guard, but now we are
not so sure and that is a credit to them.

What looked like a weakness may
now be our most stable position ."
Chronister said that the team really
doesn't have a center position. "We
don't look at players and say that's our
center. Wc have six players that are
6'6" to 6'7" and wc feel we havedepth
inside. Alex Nelcha should be one of
the top inside players in the conference. Dave Carpenter has become
stronger and we look to him to be
tough on the boards and his offense
should pick up."
The Huskies also look forward to
the return of two key players ' J their
lineup. Bill Connelly and Mike Simpkins return this year after a year suspension. Connelly is a key lo the
Huskies in terms of a big scorcing
threat and creating shots for other
players. Simpkins should contribute
off the bench and in a possible starting
role at one of the wing position.
These players became stronger and
Chronister. "Connelly is an impact
player and does a good job off the ball,
probably better than on the ball. Simpkins is playing well in practice. He is
not forcing things and is picking his
spots really well, he could be our fifth
starter."
Chronister said that he really does
not have a set starting five because of
the depth he has on the bench. "I'm not
kidding you on this but every night we
sit down and say who do we like,"
commented Chronister. "At point
guard we will start Phillips. Inside we

will start Nelcha and Carpenter and at
the wings we will start Connelly and
either Dallas Wilson , Jim Higgins or
Simpkins."
The last wing position is wide open
for a starting spot according to Chronister and he feels that that is important
to his team because he knows that
during a season an injury will happen
or a player will struggle. Chronister
feels he has the depth on the bench to
compensate for when these things
happen .
Also coming off the bench will be
S teve Mclchior who can play ifiside or
outside and has scoring capabilities.
Kyle Miller will also see some time off
the bench and he should help the
Huskies defensively and offensively.
Joining the Huskies this year will be
Robert Gluck and Christopher Parker.
Gluck, a 6'7" player from Quakertown is a good inside or outside player
and should contribute off the bench.
an inside player with good blocking
ability. His weakness, according to
Chronister is weight. Chronister feels
this freshman needs to gain about 20
pounds.
The Huskies pre-division schedule
includes the likes of Pitt-Johnstown ,
C. W. Post, and Indian a (Pa.).
Bloomsburg opens up it's season on
Nov. 18 at the St. Vincent Tournament.

The Bloomsburg Women's Intercollegate Volleyball team has had a
successful season this year. Coming
off of a convincing victory on Wednesday against the West Chester Lady
Rams, the lady Huskies upped their
record to 14-9. Evcnthough this record may not sound impressive, the
women have competed in their toughest season in four years. Facing such
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference teams as Shippensburg,
Kutztown , and East Stroudsburg.
When you consider thatBloomsburg
is just a club team involved in games
against varsity squads, one can't help
but be impressed. Although the team
can secure only limited gym time for

practice; they practice for two to three
hours, two nights a week and have
managed to accumulate some outstanding results.
The team has played in various tournaments and games including the University of Buffalo, IUP, University of
Scranton, Elizabethtown, LaSalle,
Dickinson, and the University of Pittsburg at Johnstown.
In a matter of just two months, the
team has traveled close to 4000 miles
total to play. This traveling was necessary since varsity teams are reluctant
to travel to a club's school.
The team is made up often very hard
working and dedicated girls. Despite
the fact that the team has been denied

varsity status for three years, the girls
are still willing to devote their time
and talent to a club team. The members are seniors Rachel Schrawder,
captain Amy Sechrist, and Christa
Seoul, juniors Denise Evans, Tracy
McCelland, and Kerry Schaffer;
sophomores Patty Broughton , Amita
Groover, Corrine Rogers, and freshman Hilary Rossi.
The team is coached by Michael
Mincemoyer along with assistants
Dave "Pasta"Ciabattoneand Jim Grier.
The Lady Huskies will host the final
tournament of their season on Sunday,
Nov. 6 at Centennial Gym. Play will
begin at 10:00 a.m. with Bloomsburg's
first game to start at 11:30 a.m.

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News f cr campus and
the community

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Next Week: Women 's Basketball
Preview

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Student
Athelete of
the Week

Michelle Carcarcy

Photo by Jim Betttndorf

by Lincoln Weiss
Sports Editor
It takes a full team to win at any
sport Whether it 's baseball, football , basketball or field hockey,
you need defense as well as offense in order to win championships.
The unfortunate thing about
being a defensive player is that
you arc usually overlooked even
if you were all over the field
making" big plays.
Take Michelle Carcarcy, this
week's Student Athlete of the
Week , ri ght link for the
Bloomsburg field liockey team.
During this past weekends
PSAC Championships, Carcarcy
was all over the field defensively
for the Huskies as they went on to
defeat Kutztown and East
Stroudsburg to win thechampionship.
The whole team played well,
began Carcarcy. "We had some
great passing, and it's not just one
person that makes a team look
good , we make each other look
good. We are really psyched for
regionals this weekend."
Carcarcy feels that there is a lot
of pressure on this team to repeat
as national champions.
"We sort of have a double
wamray on us," stated Carcarey.
"Since we were national champions last year and we arc the number one rated team this year, teams
will be pressuring us when they
play us."
Cancarey should play a main
part in the Huskies fate as she is
playing at right link.
Right link, as all midfield players, are the most important players on the field. They support the
offense while they must hustle
back on defense.
Their position came be compared to playing both offense and
defense on a football team. "It
takes the most skill, condition ,
and intelligence to play at link,"
said Bloomsburg head coach Jan
Hutchinson,
"Michelle (Cancarey) played
really well this past weekend, she
was reading the plays well and
intercepting the ball in many key
situation ," commented Hutchinson, "And she is the key to our
attack, she just plays with confidence."
Cancarey, a speech communications major from Eagleville,
began playing field hockey in
seventh grade. But she really became interested in hockey in general by playing street hockey with
her brother.
"My brother and mother really
supported me with my hockey,
said Cancarey. "My brother always tells me to go out there and
kick some butt, he really psyches
me up."
Cancarey would like to coach
field hockey after graduation and
she would also like to go into
international sales.
Look for Cancarey to be a main
part in the Huskies drive towards
a fifth national title in eight years.
Bloomsburg opens up against
Calvin (Mich) College in the first
round on Friday at Elizabeth town.

Huskies to play in
National Tourney
The Bloomsburg University field
hockey team will compete for a national title for the eighth-consecutive
season when they meet Calvin(Mich.)
College (14-2-1) in a first-round game
this Friday, Nov. 4. The contest at 11
a.m. will precede a 1. p.m. game featuring host Elizabethtown(16-3-3)
and Lebanon Valley(14-3-l). The
regional final is at 11 a.m. on Saturday.
Coach Jan Hutchinson 's club,
which won it's second-straight Pennsylvania Conference crown last weekend, will take a 19-1-1 record in the
tournament.
The Huskies are the defending
national titlists and have won four
national crowns in the last seven
years.
A pair of 1-0 victories over East
Stroudsburg and Kutztown, both of
whom also recieved national tourney
bids along with the conference 's
fourth-place team, Millersville, lifted
the Huskies to the PC championship,
their fourth in the past six seasons.
Susie Slocum 's goal was the lone
score in the opening game win over
East Stroudsburg, while Daneen Fero
scored the championship game winner against Kutztown.
Junior Sharon Reilly is the club' s
leading scorer with 12 goals and six
assists. She is followed closely by
senior co-capta;~ Cindy Hurst who

has registered 11 goals and four assists. Slocum, a sophomore, is next
with lOgoalsand five assists .andFero
has scored nine times and assisted on
four other goals. A total of 17 players
have had a hand in the Huskies' scoring, which has seen them outscorc the
opposition 72-7. Bloomsburg also
holds a huge edge in shots on goal over
its first 21 opponents with 823 shots
compared to just 178 for the competition.
Sophomore April Kolar,who was in
the goal cage during last's season's
24-1 campaign, has recorded 15 shutouts and stopped 118 shots. She has a
goals against average of 0.33.
This will be the second meeting
between the Huskies and Knights.The
squads met in the 1981 Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics for Women
(AIAW) national tournament and,
Bloomsburg prevailed 2-0 enroute to
the title.
Other regional pairings include:
William Smith (14-4) vs. Bridgewater
[Mass.] State (10-2-2) and Salem
[Mass] State (11-3-4) vs. Cortland
(16-2-1) in Cortland, NY; Salisbury
State (13-2-3) vs. Ohio Wesleyan (143-1) and Messiah (10-3-4) vs.
Kutztown (16-4-3) in Salisbury,Md.;
and East Stroudsburg (12-7-1) vs.
Millersville (9-4-4) and Lynchburg
(125-3) vs,. Trenton State (17-0-2) in
Trenton N.J.

The field hockey team has its sights set on back to back national title. If the Huskies
win it, they will be the first Division III school to win back to back national championPhoto by JimBtUcrdorf
ships.

BU Cross Country
places 9th at PSAC

The Bloomsburg University Cross
Country team competed this past
weekend in the Pennsylvania State
Athletic Conference championship.
The competition was intense with
BU running against 13 teams with
four teams ranked in the top 20 in the
nation.
The team finished ninth breaking
into the top 10 for the first time in ten
years.
The team ran at a tight pack led by
Craig Kock (37th) with a timeof 28:38
and followed closely by Scott
Hortham (45th) in 29:02, Mark Jobes
(57th) in 29:27, Mark Elsasser (58th)
in 29:29, Tom Kanger (60th) in 29:33,
Stan Share (62th) in 29:37, Chas
Bartholemew (64th) in 29:42. This
tight pack allowed Bloomsburg to
score 257 points.
The race was won by Chris Rauber
from Edinboro running the course in
26:00 and breaking the course record
by 20 seconds.
Edinboro, ranked first in the nation
in Division II, won the team title with
17 points.

The cross country team will be
competing at the regional champoinships this weekend in hopes to turn a
few more heads and prove to the nation that the Huskies are an up and
coming running force.
The runners that will be competing
for Bloomsburg at regionals are Craig
Koch, Scott Hortham, Mark Jobes,
Tom Kanger, Stan Share, Chris
Bartholemew and Ed Andrewlevich.

Overall Scores:

Edinboro
Shippensburg
IUP
Slippery Rock
West Chester
East Stroudsbueg
Kutztown
Millersville
Bloomsburg
!
Clarion
California Univ. of Pa.
Lock Haven
Mansfield
Cheyney

17
68
82
132
132
170
173
183
257
278
337
351
358
434

Leonard Bluitt is seen in early season action before his year ending injury. The Huskies hope to beat Indiana (pa.) without him in a
Photo by ChrULower
Crucial game.

BU Huskies to play last home
game against Indiana(Pa.)
The last time Bloomsburg University met Indiana (Pa.) University on
the football field , the 1985 Pennsylvania Conference title and a berth in the
NCAA playoffs was at stake. The
winner of Saturday's, Nov. 5, meeting
won't win the conference crown;
however, a spot in the national champoinship tournament could very well
be the prize when bids are handed out
in two weeks. The contest is set for 1
p.m. in Bloomsburg's Robert B. Redman Stadium , the site of the Huskies'
31-9 victory in that 1985 encounter.
Coach Pete Adrian's team was rated
13th in the latest NCAA Division II
poll prior to last weeks disastrous 5117 loss at Millersville, while Indiana,
which was ranked as high as third
earlier in the season, loomedjust outside the top 20 before the Indians 380 thumping of Slippery Rock. The 16
highest rated teams after the Nov. 12
season finale will be awarded invitations to the national tournament and
neither team can afford another loss.
A horrible second quarter performance, which included three turnovers,
which led to Millersville scores,
spelled the difference in last week's
loss.Leading 10-7 entering the period,
the Huskies allowed 23 unanswered
points to fall behind 30-10 by halftime
and werenever in thecontest from that
point. Millersville scored on its first
possession of the game only to see the
Huskies jump in front on a 25 yard
field goal by Mark Weiss and a 27 yard
touchdownpass from Paul Venesky to
wide receiver Jeff Sparks.
The Bloomsburg offense, which
has struggled over the past few weeks,
had several potential scoring drives
stopped by six turnovers which gave
the Marauders excellent field position
much of the evening. The Huskies'
only other points in the game came on
a 41 yard Venesky-to-Stef Kem pass
in the final period.
Venesky completed only 10 of 39
passes for 108 yards and was intercepted three times.
He had connected on 76 of 181 pass
attempts this season fro 965 yards and
four touchdowns. The senior has

thrown 14 interceptions.
Tight end Paul Lonergan added
three receptions to his club leading
total of 33 catches for 406 yards.
Sparks had two catches in the game
and has now caught eight passes for
162 yards and two touchdowns. Kern
has seven receptions for 187 yards.
The score was his first of the season.
Mike Medina, starting his second
game in place of the injured Leonard
Bluitt . picked up 73 yards to lead the
Huskies on the ground. The senior has
gained 245 yards on 73 carries and
scored one time on the ground and
once via the pass this season. Venesky
gained 67 yards against Millersville
and upped his season totals to 97
rushes for 201 yards.
Tackle Joshua Lee continues to lead
the club defensively. He registered 12
tackles, including one for lost yardage
and a caused fumble last week. He has
73 tackles and 11 sacks, both of which
rank first on the squad. Linebacker
Wade Pickett is next with 62 tackles
followed by end Steph Pettit with 50.
Like Bloomsburg, Indiana won its
first four games of the season, but the
Indians dropped two straight games to
fall from the national ratings. The
Indians have won their last two contests. A strong balanced offense and a
fine defense have helped the club
build its 6-2 mark. The Indians are
averaging 199.8 yards rushing and
194.4 yards passing per game through
the first eight outings. On the other
side of the ball, the defense is allowing
just 60.9 rushing yards per game,
which ranks second in the country,
and 128.5 passing yards. Last week
the unit held the conference's leading
runner, S lippery Rock's Greg Paterra,
to just 55 yards on 20 carries.
A pair of fine runningbacks, tailback Paul Palamara and Fullback
SteveGirting.head the rushing attack.
Palamara has gained 700 yards on 152
carries and scored seven times, while
Girting has been credited with 660
yards and 11 touchdowns.
Quarterback Jim Pehanick has displayed good accuracy, completing
113 of 202 passes for 1282 yards and

six touchdowns. He spreads his
passes around as five players have
more than 12 catches led by wide
receiver Andrew Hill with 36 for 566
yards and three touchdowns. The
Indians ' other wide receiver Rex
Pynos, has caught 19 passes for 223
yards and a touchdown.
The team's four linebackers are
among the top tacklers. Inside performers Kevin McMullan and Frank
Urbaniak have 91 and 46 tackles, respectively, and outside linebackers
Dean Cottrill and Bryon Whipkey
have contributed 71 and 58 hits.
Game Notes: This is the 13th
meeting between the teams with the
Indians holding a 9-3 advantage in the
series. Bloomsburg won the last meeting in 1985 to capture the Pennsylvania Conference crown and went on to
reach the nationalsemifinals posting a
school-best 12-1 mark. Frank
Cignetti is in his third season in charge
of the Indians with an overall record
of 25-6. He previously served as the
head coach at West Virginia and has a
seven year record of 42-33.
Bloomsburg's Pete Adrian is also in
his third year and has built a 22-7-1
record. The Indians and the Huskies
are the most recent teams to represent
the conference in the national tournament Indiana lost to Central Florida
(12-10) in the firstround last year, and
the Huskies participated in 1985.
Indiana has beaten Lock Haven
(31-17), Towson State (24-21), Edinboro (27-7), Clarion (51-10), California (Pa.) (34-0), and Slippery Rock
(38-0), while losing to Portland State
(20-17) and Shippensburg (24-23).
Bloomsburg has wins over Norfolk
State (14-6), Shippensburg (21-7),
LockHaven (17-6), Kutztown (14-9),
East Stroudsburg (18-7), Cheyney (30), and Mansfield (9-0). The two defeats have been to West Chester 9249) and Millersville (51-17).
Saturday's game can be heard live
on WHLM radio AM-55.0 with Jim
Doyle and Andy Ulicny providing the
play-by-play and also on WBUQ radio FM-91.1 with Joe Carmisa and
Dave Lunger.

here is action from Bloomsburg's 19-1.1 season. The Huskies'earned the number one ranking In the nation and face Calvin (Mich.)
Friday in the first round of the national tournament.
^^^

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