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OPINION • 4 Bulk rate change will TUESDAY drive away students. April 11, 1995 ENTEQTAINMENT • 7 Extreme's latest leaves listeners wondering. Volume 74 No. 52 6POQT6 *9 YSU sweeps doubieheader at Cleveland State. youngstown estate xiniv^r.siLy indents to pay

MARLY KOSINSKI assistant news editor AND ANDREA VAGAS editor in chief

Over the last few months, YSU has faced many financial difficul• ties, including tuition increases and budget cuts. According to a report presented at yesterday's Student Government meeting, a decision was made by YSU officials to reduce the bulk rate of full-time student hours in an effort to increase the University's revenue. This decision to reduce the bulk rate means that instead of full- time students each paying $768 per quarter for 12-16 hours, they will now have to pay an additional $81 per credit for every hour over 15. This reduction is the first in a series to be implemented over the

AMY WINGER r next seven years. The report stated that the YSU administration even• tually would like students to pay for every additional hour over 12. According to Nizar Diab, Student Government's financial appro• Off-campus exodus priations chair, the reduction of the bulk rate will affect approximately 3,000 full-time students. He said, 'This decision could cause students to drop to part-time status or even drop out of college completely be• Although student enrollment has cause it is too expensive." been decreasing steadily, traffic Diab added, "I am totally opposed to it. It will bring student en• rollment down and hurt students who are trying to graduate early. I problems persist. YSU commuter know the administration needs the money, but they need to find other students inch their way to freedom in ways than to take it from the students." Student government discussed the issue at their April 10 meeting. bumper-to-bumper traffic from the Representative Scott Clark said that student government is looking into Lincoln Parking Deck at noon alternative solutions for raising revenue. Although nothing can be done for the 1995-96 academic year, Clark said that it is possible to find Monday. Noon usually provides the other revenue increasing alternative in subsequent years to avoid fur• worst traffic of the day. ther reduction of the full-time bulk rate.

See BULK RATE page 12

MATTHEW DEUTSCH The congressman's visit was precipi• "He will be talking about what initia• news editor tated by a phone call by Scott to the tives the federal government is funding congressman's office inquiring about the and which ones are up for discussion and Congressman Jim Traficant will visit possibility of Traficant talking to her stu• change," said Akpom. the YSU campus on Thursday to speak to dents. When his visit was scheduled and Akpom also hopes to draw upon two classes in the department of health sci• confirmed, Akpom took the opportunity to Traficant's experiences as a Mahoning ences. include her students in the event. County Sheriff and coordinator of a drug Traficant will address Marion Scott's In Scott's class, Traficant will address treatment facility in the Valley. consumer health class from 11 a.m. to the issue of health care. "We want him to tell us what he 12:15 p.m. in Room 3084 of Cushwa Hall "He'll be talking about health care in thinks are really the best strategies for followed by a talk to Dr. Kathleen Akpom's America," said Scott, "where we've been and controlling these problems," said drug use and abuse class from 1:30 to 3 where we're going. I've also asked him to Akpom. "It [the lecture] will be twofold. p.m. in Room 205 of Beeghly Center. talk about health care in the state of Ohio." It will be an update on what is happen• Attendance at Traficant's lectures is re• With Akpom's students, the congress• ing nationally and Traficant's own views stricted to class members only. It is not a man will touch upon the topic of drugs and about the local situation." University-wide event. drug regulation in America. Congressman Jim Traficant

ather at YSU to pursue quest for future

Quest "95 is a culmination cessful for its first three years, arship work, or art-form presen• sic; Dr. deBlois; Dr. Vernon JOYCE DORBISH and a celebration of the scholar• only to fall into disrepute for the tation. These new awards are of• Haynes, psychology; Dr. Nancy copy editor ship and research activities, which past three years, according to fered from six colleges on cam• Mosca, nursing; Dr. James many of YSU's faculty and vari• deBlois. "Only last year did we pus, which will result in 12 win• Rogers* counseling; Dr. Ray Opening ceremonies for Quest ous levels of students work on begin to revive Quest," she added, ners, two from each college. Sev• Shaffer, accounting and "95, a celebration of scholarly ac• during the year. Their presenta• "It's a wonderful thing for the enty presentations are offered this finance;and Dr. Mansour tivity on YSU's campus, will com• tions and displays are being of• spirit of our community." year, with 25 being student hope• Zenouzi, school of technology. mence on Wednesday, April 12 in fered for all to attend on Wednes- Added to this year's Quest fuls for the Dean's Quest Award. All presentations and displays Kilcawley's Ohio Room as Dr. C. day,April 12, and Thursday, April awards, for the first time, is the YSU faculty will display their are free and open to both campus Susan deBlois, education; James 13. AH events will take place in Dean's Quest Award. This award works in the Ohio Room on Thurs• and community. Handbooks that Scanlon, YSU Provost and James Kilcawley Center's conference offers $100 dollars to the gradu• day, April 13. list all dates, events and times will M. O'Neil, Ph.D., Universtiy of rooms. ate and undergraduate students, This year's inception com• be available in Kilcawley Center. Connecticut, deliver respective Quest has been an annual who submit an outstanding re• mittee for Quest "95 includes Dr. opening remarks. event since 1988. It proved suc• search paper, student paper, schol• Laura Buch, Dana School of Mu•

™ in ii 2 THE JAMBAR TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1995

CLARA VALTAS police officers, three sergeants, is needed. tion, he became uncooperative, ment. The subject who received assistant news editor three lieutenants and two dispatch• Because YSUPD has a mu• and he refused to give his name. the money was never seen again ers who work at YSUPD in full tual aid agreement with YPD, The man was previously ar• by the victim. Editor's note: This story is a re• time positions. YSUPD has jurisdiction on city rested for being on campus ille• Adovasio questioned the vic• sult of Assistant News Editor To help fill out YSUPD, streets surrounding the University. gally and since he failed to appear tim and asked him to fill out a Clara Valtas's trip with a YSU around 90 Youngstown Police YSUPD jurisdiction extends as far for a court hearing, he had an ac• deposition, which is a statement police officer on his beat. Department (YPD) officers fill in north as Saranac Street, as far east tive capias, which is similar to an giving the victim's side of what part-time as needed. These offic• as Andrews and Logan Avenues, outstanding warrant but is issued happened. As the victim was fill• "We've been ers are used for parking detail, as far west as Belmont Avenue and by a judge against him. ing out the forms, Adovasio went into an adjoining room to make called guards sporting events, traffic officers as far south as Wood Street. Because the active capias was some phone calls. Adovasio said YSUPD officers have the power and we've (during large events), as* rovers issued through YPD, the arresting that it is important to verify the been called (people who check on Lyden to arrest on city streets within officers took the man.to YPD to victim's story. By talking to security," House, Wick House, Weller House these boundaries. spend the evening in jail. people who saw the victim and the said Sergeant and Kilcawley House) and a vari• On any given day, a YSUPD While this was transpiring, a unknown subject together, Mark Adovasio, YSU Police De• ety of other positions. "Our main officer has to deal with a multi• person who claimed he was Adovasio double checked the in• partment. "We are police officers, focus is on the campus. That is tude of different situations. Take, scammed out of $50 came into the formation that the victim gave. and it is our job to keep the cam• why so many units are used to for example, a recent night when police department. Adovasio said the reason po• pus and the area surrounding the work these different areas," said Sergeant Adovasio was on duty. lice ask victims of a crime to fill out University safe." Adovasio. Petty scam depositions when they first come to Adovasio, as well as John J. According to Adovasio, TVespassing suspect The man claimed that he was the station is because the incident is Gocala, YSUPD chief, and Gocala has worked hard trying to A man is arrested for asking sitting outside Cushwa Hall and still fresh in their memory. Filling George Hammar III, Crime Pre• establish better communication for money on campus property. was approached by an unknown out thedeposition immediately pro• vention officer, expressed the con• between YSUPD and YPD. YSU YSUPD issued the man two cita• subject. The subject asked him if vides more accurate information cern that many people did not con• patrol cars have radios that carry tions — one for trespassing and he would like to purchase some than if the person waits a period of sider the staff of the YSUPD to be YPD frequency. Adovasio said another for possessing drug para• computer equipment. The conver• time before doing it. actual police officers. that these radios can let officers phernalia. As the arresting offic• sation ended when the victim gave There are currently nine YSU know who is in the area if backup ers questioned the man at the sta• the man $50 to view the equip• See COPS page 6

KILCAWLEY NEWS

The Kilcawley Center Board will be accepting applications for office space in Kilcawley Center, and membership on the Kilcawley Center Board for the 1995-96 academic year.

Applications may be picked up in the Staff Office and returned to Joan Brennan, Kilcawley Center Staff Office. Counseling Services All applications MUST BE turned Career Testing! in by 5P.M. April 21, 1995. visit or call for an 3043 Jones Hall appointment 742-3056

Now Being Accepted For Lenten

Student, faculty, and staff are strongly encouraged to nomi• nate candidates for each award category. Nomination appli• cations and selection criteria are available at the Informa• tion Center (Bytes 'n Pieces counter), upper level Kilcawley. Presidents and advisors of student organizations have each 0 been sent nomination applications through their on-campus mail boxes. Deadline to return completed applications is PER SLICE Wednesday, April 26. Offer Good every YSU Annual Awards Banquet is sponsored by Student Friday during Lent. Activities and Student Government. The banquet will be held Thursday, May 25 in the Chestnut Room of Kilcawley Center. Tickets go on sale May 8. Kilcawley Center Pub TUESDAY, APRIL 11,1995 THE JAMBAR 3 receive YSU alumni award ANDREA VAGAS editor in chief cant contributions to our Univer• Association's largest event of the said. sity as well as our community." year. The fundraiser raises any• Cagigas currently serves on YSU's Afumni Association Cagigas, a native of Farrell, where from $60,000 to $ 150,000, the boards of a variety of organi• will present Donald Cagigas, PA, received a B.S. in business said Factor. The money "is used zations, including the Butler Insti• chairman and chief executive of• administration from YSU in 1963. for programs, services and ben• tute of American Art; Industrial ficer of Bank One Youngstown He also attended Case Western efits of the Alumni Association," Information Institute, Inc.; Lead• with its 1995 Distinguished Citi• Reserve University and Cleveland she said. ership Mahoning Valley; Ohio zen Award at a banquet on Thurs• Marshall Law School. Award recipients are chosen by Foundation of Independent Col• day, June 15, at Mr. Anthony's in His banking career began in a nomination committee, which leges, Inc.; Western Reserve Care Boardman. 1965 with a major bank in Cleve• searches for people in the area who System; Youngstown/Mahoning This is the fifteenth year that land and in 1971 his business in• meet certain criteria for the award. Valley United Way; Youngstown- the Alumni Association has pre• terest led him to investment bank• They also take nominations. Warren Regional Chamber of Com• sented the Distinguished Citizen ing with Roose, Wade and Com• Factor said the most notable merce and the YSU Foundation. He Award. The award is given to an pany. His career at Bank One be• part of the award is that the recipi• also chairs the Citizen's Advisory area business and community gan in 1974 when he became se• ent receives an honorary degree Commission on Mahoning County leader who has rendered excep• nior vice president of funds and and is the commencement speaker Government and the Youngstown- tional service to the greater com• investment management. After during the August ceremonies. Warren Regional Chamber of Donald Cagigas munity and who has distinguished serving as president and chief op• Factor said although the event Commerce's Economic Develop• himself or herself through profes• erating officer of Bank One is very exciting for the commu• ment fundraising campaign. Young; Donald W. McGowan, re• sional achievement and personal Youngstown, Cagigas was named nity, most parts are formal. Such Previous award recipients in• tired chairman of the Board and commitment by helping to en• chairman and CEO in 1989. traditions as the procession of clude Harry J. Bolwell, chariman president of Ohio Bancorp; Will• hance the interdependence be• "He's done so much for the those sitting at the head table and and CEO of Midland-Ross Corpo• iam G. Lyden, Jr., president of the Lyden Company; John J. Cafaro, tween the economic and educa• community. He's done a lot with the giant photograph of the recipi• ration; R.J. Wean, Jr., president president and CEO of Cafaro In• tional institutions of society. economic development," said Lori ent, which is revealed at the end and CEO of Wean, Inc.; R. ternational; Warren P. Williamson, Richard Amendolea, presi• Factor, executive director of the of the night. The event attracts Thornton Beeghly, president of Jr., chairman of the Board of dent of the Alumni Association, Alumni Association. She added, anywhere from 700 to 1000 Stancorp, Inc.; Edward J. WKBN Broadcasting Corpora• said the award "represents the "It's prestigious for us to honor a people. DeBartolo, chairman of the Board tion; Nathan H. Monus; J. Phillip most prestigious award conferred man who's one of our own." "The [masters of ceremony] and CEO of The Edward J. Richley and Ray Travagiini, chair• upon an individual and is reserved Factor said the Distinguished understand it deserves the respect DeBartolo Corporation; Mrs. man of the Board of Sanray Cor• for those who have made signifi• Citizen Award is the Alumni it's gained over the years," Factor Charles B. Cushwa, Jr.; Arthur G. poration.

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Media sent message that 'AIDS might Credit change be deadly, but it is also a badge of honor'

REED IRVINE AND too long ago, a person with syphi• who has made a journalism career will scare away students JOSEPH C. GOULEN lis or gonorrhea was treated as a of "outing" homosexuals, regard• accuracy in media pariah, not an icon. less of whether or not they want YSU has dealt another hard blow to its attending students. A CNN interviewer praised their sexual preferences revealed First we heard that we weren't receiving any additional funding Let's set up an analogy. Sup• Louganis for his "courage" in to the public, their friends or their from the state, then we heard there will be another tuition pose a 35-year-old man eats speaking publicly of his condition. families. The shocker in increase. Now, to top it all off, the University decided that we enough junk food and fried stuff In this instance, courage equates Signorile's article was his aren't paying enough for our classes. (For more information, to bloat up to 450 pounds with a with commercialism. Louganis admission that he regularly please see our lead story.) certainty of dying of obesity, high went public to promote a book that engages in unsafe sex, even though Here's what they want to do. Right now, students can take blood pressure, diabetes, whatever, rocketed to the top of The New he does not know whether or not from 12-16 hours and still pay the same price. (The 12-16 is within the next five years. If he York Times bestseller list in less he is infected with the HIV virus. called the bulk rate). Students pay an additional fee for any appeared on TV interview shows, than a month's time, with sales so His attitude is that he gets so number of hours above 16. would such a self-abusive person brisk that stores could not keep it carried away that he ignores the Students pay more for 15+ hours be treated as a hero — or as a fool? in stock. Louganis came through precautions that have been urged This is exactly what came to Washington as part of his 10-city on the homosexual community for Next year, the University wants to lower that bulk rate to 12- mind recently as we watched the publicity tour, and sure enough, he almost a decade. He is not alone. 15 for the 1995-96 academic year. This means that if students 1988 Olympic diving gold medal• showed up at the White House to Signorile cites a recent study from want to take 16 hours so they can graduate within four years (like ist, Greg Louganis, making the receive a warm welcome from the Centers for Disease Control it's supposed to be), they have to pay an additional $81 for one rounds of the talk shows and dis• President Clinton. that two-thirds of the homosexual credit. cussing his infection with The only media criticism of men surveyed had had unsafe sex Financial aid benefits lost the HIV/AIDS virus. He within the last 18 months. has been omnipresent, Louganis has been around long Then Signorile First of all, how many three-hour classes can students take beginning with a clucking proceeded to slough blame that will add up to 15? Most of the classes available at YSU are Barbara Walters on ABC's enough to read and hear the away from himself for his four hours. So if students can't afford the additional $81, they 20/20 and continuing life-threatening conduct. may have to drop below 16 hours. That could mean sacrificing through Oprah Winfrey, warnings about unsafe sex. He maintained the financial aid benefits, not graduating within four or five years, morning shows, CNN and Nonetheless, he faces death "Byzantine" AIDS sacrificing their competitive edge because other students will uncountable other places. organizations are to blame. graduate sooner and get in line faster for jobs, and so on. Now what's our because of his admitted unsafe He quoted Greg Scott, an If students have to pay more to go full-time, they will opt to gripe? It's this. Louganis is AIDS activist in go to another school completely. Not only will the University be a grown man, 35 years of sexual misconduct. Washington, "None of us, losing the students who are enrolled in classes now, but they will age, and apparently intel• when we go for testing and also lose potential YSU students. ligent. He has been around long Louganis concerns an accident at counseling, are truly told that enough to read and hear the warn• the 1988 Olympics in Seoul when we're supposed to be responsible." Potential students will go elsewhere ings about unsafe sex. Nonethe• he slammed into the diving board One chore we perform at Ac• They will lose these students because one of the things less, he faces death because of his and cut his head. Although he bled curacy in Media is monitoring students want to know when looking at a college is the rate of admitted unsafe sexual miscon• profusely, he did not tell the attend• such homosexual newspapers as students who graduate within four years. This rate will decrease if duct. ing doctor that he was infected The Blade, a tabloid weekly pub• with HIV. Luckily, the infection this (or we should say when this) goes through. For these reasons, we have lished in Washington. A recent full was not passed on. The decision for this year has already been made by the trouble fathoming why this man is page ad invited men to a nude administration, but no decision is made in stone. Through your treated as a sympathy figure, even At the same time they glorify dance. A tag line said, "Please Louganis, the media are giving letter-writing efforts, phone calls, camp-outs and the like you can a hero, by the media. The message don't attend if you're easily being given to other homosexual short shrift to a more important make a difference. The administration is serving you. You are the shocked." men is that AIDS might be deadly story: the responsibility of homo• Must our limited quotient of one who takes classes here and who has to pay for it. Stop the — but it is also a badge of honor. sexuals for the AIDS epidemic. In sympathy be squandered on per• madness! Write your administration today. Our media are lionizing a man who February, The New York Times ran sons who do the sexual equivalent is dying from a sexually transmit• an opinion section article by gay of running across an eight lane ted disease — and remember, not activist Michangelo Signorile, freeway during rush hour? AMBAR

The Jambar was founded ANDREA VAGAS Editor in Chief in 1930 by Burke Lyden STEPHANIE UJHELYi Managing Editor and has been awarded the Associated Collegiate Press MATTHEW DEUTSCH NcwsEdiior All American five times.

MARLY KOSfNSK! Assistant News Editor Vie Jambar is published twice a week during fall, winter and CLARA VALTAS Assistant News Editor spring quarters and weekly JOYCE DORBISH CopyEditor during summer sessions. The views and opinions expressed RICHARD GOTT Assistant Copy Editor herein do not necessarily reflect those of The Jambar staff or KASEY KING Advertising Manager YSU faculty, staff or administra• tion. Subscription rates are S20 JODI BROWN Sales Manager per academic year, including summer sessions. TOM PITTMAN Entertainment Editor Utters/Opinion Submissions \ DENNIS GARTLAND Sports Editor The Jambar encourages letters. DAVID CALER1S Photographer All letters must be typed, double- AMY WINGER Photographer spaced, signed and must include the writer's telephone number. CAROLYN MARTINDALE Advisor The telephone number is used for confirmation purposes and will OLGA ZIOBERT BooVhsper not be published. All letters are Would You Believe... subject to editing and should not CAROLINE PERJESSY receptionist exceed 250 words. The Jambar The first issue of Reader's largest is, of course, Asia. Empire State Building in New encourages students, faculty, staff HOLLY CORNFIELD Compositor Digest was issued in 1922. York in 1945.That doesn'thappen and Youngstown residents to anymore because of safety write letters to the editor. The • The first coed college in the Jambar reserves the right to edit Twelve U.S. states have no United States was Oberlin. regulations. Contributing Writers or reject any letter to the editor. death penalty. Texas lead the states • • Russia's land area, compared Andrew Gordon • Tracey Coleman in the number of executions since The Continental Congress . Tfo Jambarj%ikxmtey Center with that of the United States, is Nnamdt King • Ron Navarra 1976 — 92, to date. Florida adopted the Declaration of Youngstown State University; about twice the size. Brad Heller • Shawn Carroll follows at 33, with Virginia at 25. Independence in the City of 410 Wick Ave. • Valerie Fata • Peggy Moore New York has had none. Youngstown, Ohio 44555' Brotherly Love — Philadelphia. Utah's Mormon population is Willie Oddis • Brian Gorby or e-mail us at! • • about two-thirds of the state, while Joe Simons - [email protected] The smallest of the continents Not many may remember, but about 25 percent of Idaho in terms of land area is Europe. The a B-25 airplane crashed into the residents belong to that faith. TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1995 THE JAMBAR

Doing a good job? An A8C-Washington Post pott indicates how well Americans feel President Clinton, new GOP congressional leaders are doing their jobs: Approval rates, percent; JONATHAN BALCOMBE dents who, during genetics labs, Unfortunately, many bright, com• assistant director for education with the would secretly allow fruit flies to passionate students respond to this humane society of the united states rouse from their ether-induced by turning away from careers in stupors and fly away, rather than such fields as medicine, veterinary For several decades animal dumping them into a dish of oil medicine, or nursing, where such dissection has been a routine part called the flymorgue . Emboldened qualities are most needed. Less of the biological sciences curricu• by my success as a subversive fly sensitive students may be hardened lum in high schools and colleges. rescuer, I approached the profes• by the exercises, the consequences Many students have forced them• sor of my entomology course to of which are open to speculation. 62% 35% selves to participate in dissection express my objection to killing There is also quality of edu• nate majority teat House Speaker assignments, overriding their good adult locusts for a lab exercise by Robert J. Dole cation to be considered. Teachers Newt Gingrich instincts, because they thought snipping off their heads with scis• who continue to use live animals they had no choice. They do! Here sors. He allowed me to knock them in dissections or other invasive date is my story about confronting the out with ether first. classroom exercises are apparently dissection status quo during the By the time I was a graduate unaware of or unmoved by the fact course of my studies leading to a student in animal behavior, I had that more than a dozen studies doctoral degree in animal behav• become convinced that classroom ior. have been published showing that dissection and vivi• students using humane alternatives section did more learn anatomy and physiology as harm than good. As Facelifts: so much pain, Think twice about well as or better than students who a lab instructor for use animals. Abundant resources participating in classroom an introductory biol• are available for learning anatomy, so little for people to gain ogy course, I cam• exercises that are physiology, genetics, toxicology paigned successfully But we think about it. We and other animal-related fields that for providing stu• trade stories. The woman whose harmful to animals. do not require animals to suffer dents the option of children didn't recognize her after and/or die. These include films, If you think it isn't not having to pur• her facelift. The aging actress, her computer simulations, models, chase and dissect a face virtually immobilized by mul• books or a trip to the local veteri• good education, fetal pig. In my two tiple facelifts, who wanted yet an• nary clinic. other. then speak up. lab sections, nine of the 40 students Finally, there is environmen• Here's a book, Beauty Knows chose to learn with tal protection. Many of the animals No Pain: The Anatomy of a Suc• harmed or killed for classroom use DIANE WHITE In high school biology class, humane alternatives that year, and tribune media services cessful Facelift, by Paula I didn't look forward to the man• they performed better than most of are caught in the wild. Populations Lochmandy. The publisher sent it datory dissection assignment. I of frogs and sharks, for instance, the others on the final lab exam. A huckster materializes on my to this office in hopes that some• chose the fetal pig over the cat, have been seriously declining in one would write kindly about Why object to* dissection? television screen flogging some ar• because it was easier for me to dis• recent years, and while the specific what's described in an accompa• First, there is the animal suffering thritis remedy and says she is Julie tance myself from an animal that I impact of their capture for class• nying letter as the menopausal involved. Investigators of the dis• Andrews. The woman is obviously didn't share my home with. The room use is not known, it is cer• years. "I'd never thought of a section trade have documented an impostor. dissection took up several weeks tainly not ecologically beneficial. facelift as a means of self-empow• cats being drowned in burlap sacks But no, the voice is that of of class time, and I eventually got Moreover, the world needs people erment. Where have I been? and prodded roughly into crowded Julie Andrews, unmistakably. It is used to the pungent smell of form• who value environmental steward• gas chambers, rats embalmed with Julie Andrews, with a facelift. The Beauty Knows No Pain is not aldehyde and the greasy feel of ship and compassion for life. Dis• formaldehyde while still living, effect is curious. She resembles not the most felicitous of titles, imply• fleshy bits that clogged the sink section fosters neither. ing as it does that it's worth going dozens of live frogs piled into so much a rejuvenated version of drain by the end of class. I also got So think twice about partici• through any agony to look good. sacks for days or weeks without herself as some other person, some over my initial reluctance to cut pating in classroom exercises that The book is a discursive, upbeat food and sickly turtles kept in woman who won third prize in a into the flesh of a once-living ani• are harmful to animals. If you account of one woman's surgical filthy, overcrowded holding tanks. celebrity-look-alike contest. mal. By the time I reached my think, as I do, that it isn't good overhaul. But the perkiness of These sorts of cruelties are com• I add Julie Andrews' name to sophomore year as a college biol• education, then speak up. Other• Lochmandy's prose is undermined ogy student, I had participated in monplace and, though inexcus• my mental list of famous people wise, your teachers will continue by more than a dozen pages of classroom dissections of rhesus able, perhaps not surprising in a who've been lifted a little too far. to think everything is A-okay with color photographs of her in vari• monkeys, frogs, dogfish sharks, business where the "merchandise" Ivana Trump. Roseanne. Burt their choice of teaching methods ous stages of recuperation. pigeons, mud puppies, crayfish is going to end up dead anyway. Reynolds. Faye Dunaway. Bruce and little will change. By exercis• and several other invertebrates. Jenner. Jane Fonda. Eddie Fisher. Fresh from the operating Then there are social con• ing your right to learn biology Raquel Welch. Phyllis Diller. Cher. room, turbaned in bandages, sur• cerns. A principal goal of life sci• without harming animals, you send gical drain tubing sprouting from But I never got over the nag• Joan Rivers. Robert Stack. ging feeling that dissection wasn't ence education is to teach respect a strong message that you care the top of her bandaged head, she I don't understand why a the right thing to do. Surprisingly, for life. Dissection doesn't teach about animals and the environ• looks like some cut-rate monster woman wouldn't want to look like it was the "lowly" insects that first respect; it undermines it by devalu• ment, that you care about society's in an Ed Wood movie. On subse• Julie Andrews, even an aging Julie inspired me to act on that feeling. ing the lives of other creatures to values and that you take your edu• quent pages the bandages disap• Andrews, but there's no compre• I was among a small group of stu• the level of expendable objects. cation seriously. pear, the bruises fade, the stitches hending another person's vanity. come out, the incisions heal. After Toss in the pressures of the celeb• a few weeks she looks amazingly rity life and it passes all under• self-empowered, especially around standing. the neck and chin. Beauty knows My Calvinist superego wants no pain. For Paula, anyway. But to believe there must be some not for everybody. Faustian bargain involved in get• Not long ago I saw a TV docu• ting a facelift. But the woman who mentary about a facelift that fol• looks back at me in the mirror lowed a woman through the entire <«M CMS OFflCfc, wonders if the bargain might not process, from the pre-op planning be worth it. More and more, in the sessions to recuperation. It was short days and long nights of very graphic. The blood didn't middle age, the subject of cosmetic make me squeamish, nor did the surgery creeps into conversations snipping and tucking and stitching. with friends and even strangers. But you know when you're getting We stand side-by-side staring into a chicken ready for roasting and the mirror. We put our hands be• you slip your fingers under the skin side our ears and tug gently at our of the breast to loosen it so you can faces. We ask each other, "What insert garlic or herbs? That's what do you think?" the surgeon was doing to the No answer is required. The woman's face. chances any of us will have a No garlic or herbs were in• facelift are slim to nonexistent. volved, but he was tooting around Maybe if we lived in Los Angeles under her skin as if she were a Per• where everybody does it. Maybe due Oven-Stuffer Roaster. I might if we were on television and had consider a facelift someday if I to look good for a living. Maybe could get that image out of my if we had the money. Facelifts are mind. But I'm reminded of it ev• not cheap. - ery time I look at a chicken. THE JAMBAR TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1995

continued from page 2 P OLICE LOTTED After getting enough infor• sition. Adovasio informed the vic• housing." Again, Adovasio mation about the subject, tim that the possible subject was stopped to make sure that nothing 4/5 Criminal mischief was reported when an automobile was Adovasio asked the dispatcher to not the person he was looking for, was amiss. scratched with a key in the M-l deck. send the subject's description over and that he would try his best to 4/5 An alarm was accidentally activated by the cleaning crew the radio. This way, YSUPD, find the man who did the scam. Follow-up call Also while on patrol, inside the Bursar's Office in Jones Hall. YPD, campus escorts and parking After filling out his report of employees can help look for the what transpired, Adovasio began his Adovasio responded to a call con• 4/6 A checkbook was found in the F-5 parking lot. It was subject. patrol of the campus and the sur• nected to an incident that hap• pened a few days earlier, when a returned to the owner. No checks were found missing. A few minutes after putting rounding area. Adovasio looked for man was beaten and robbed. 4/6 A student claimed her car was struck in the M-I parking out the subject's description, a call any suspicious activity, and when he The man said that the same deck resulting in a shallow dent. There was no indication of an came in saying that the subject saw any, he investigated it. people who robbed him came to accident. was spotted by a parking em• his house, kicked in his door and 4/6 A man who had prior arrests on campus for trespassing ployee. Adovasio immediately left Unruly children threatened his life if he testified was arrested for asking for money inside Cushwa Hall. The the police department to see if this For example, while patrol• against them in court. The man ran person matched the description. ling, Adovasio saw a person be• man was issued two citations, one for criminal trespassing and out of his house and said he was Unfortunately, the person did not ing carried to a car. Adovasio too scared to go home. The man one for drug paraphernalia. fit the description of the subject. stopped to question the people so asked Adovasio if he would check 4/6 A man sitting outside Cushwa Hall claimed he was When Adovasio returned to that he could find out what they the house to make sure that no one scammed out of $50 by an unknown person. Once the person the police department, the victim were doing. Later, Adovasio spot• was inside. received the money, he was not seen again by the victim. had completed writing his depo• ted a group of children "rough- Adovasio went to secure the man's house. When he discovered the front door was open, he called for backup as a safety precaution, CLUE PLC so that he would not have to go into the house by himself. FREE ADMISSION When YPD officers arrived, Kilcawley Pub they went into the house to check it. There was no one there, so Adovasio locked the front door APRIL and returned the keys to the man. culture in your HOWL it ^ MOON PIANO BAR Stadium patrol ODD GIRL OUT (9:30 P.M.) Adovasio also made a sweep of Stambaugh Stadium, checking & CYCLONE SISTERS (8:00 P.M.) it to make sure that there was no are a YSU THE DISTRACTIONS one in it (except the cleaning crew) and to make sure that all the MUSIC CHARLENE DICALOGERO student you doors were locked. every By this time, Adovasio's shift was almost over. He ended the THURSDAY evening by making one last patrol, and more and save WORLD IN A ROOM again checking for anything sus• night HOWL «u* MOON PIANO BAR picious. YSUPD officers are more some cash. MOONLIGHT DRIVE 9pm-11pm than guards or security persons — Student Discount Vouchers are available THE TWISTOFFS they are police officers. Members of YSUPD have the same powers through Student Government offices in as the members of any other po• lice department. The only differ• „. Jl, the upper level of Kilcawley Center for ence is that YSUPD is responsible Monday Musical, Youngstown Playhouse for keeping YSU and the sur• For further information on bands rounding area safe and crime free. and Youngstown Symphony performances. ? Student & other activities call 742 - 2326 gActivities

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TOM POTMAN songs entitled "Everything Under over even on the CD players in mm- entertainment editor the Sun," which includes "Rise 'n mainstream record stores. Shine," "Am I Ever Gonna Another song, "Evilangelist," In 1992, the contemporary Change" and "Who Cares?" is packed with topical Christian Christian publication Cornerstone Opening and closing with a references, such as, "So many magazine called mainstream rock music box version of the trilogy's claim to come in thy name, prom• group Extreme's Three Sides to last piece, "Who Cares?," the ising peace they'll bring, lest ye Every Story "more Christian than nearly 22-minute third side in• taste the fruit of the vine, they're most Christian albums." cludes such soul-searching lyrics just wolves in sheep's clothing." Three Sides was a follow-up as, 'Tell me, Jesus, are you angry? But refreshing messages such as to the band's almost unfollow- One more sheep has just gone these are somehow cancelled out upable Pornograffitti, whose top astray," and "Am I ever gonna when countered by the lyrics from 40 hits "" and change? Take it day by day, my "Naked," "So you want me to take "" placed the band's will is weak and my flesh too it off, just to see what's underneath music on the playlists of adult con• strong, this peace I seek till thy my cloth, I'll show you I'm every temporary, college rock and pop kingdom comes." inch a man." rock stations at the same time. Cornerstone criticized Extreme's previous musical People who rushed out to buy Extreme's "gratuitous" use of one and lyrical diversity is what made Pornograffitti after hearing the expletive in Three Side's opening this band especially appealing for Every Brothersesque "More Than track, "War Heads." Now, with last me, but their main problem seems Words" were either cheesed off at month's release of Extreme's even to lie in their finding an audience. more Christian Waiting for the the fact that airplay songs and the Last year, the band opened for Bon MIC. rest of the album were musical Punchline, secular music lovers Jovi's national tour, and lead singer Rock band Extreme's latest offering, Waiting for the Punchline, is worlds apart, or they were im• who enjoy the occassional Chris• played the lead in satisfying enough, but the group's past messages are harder to find. pressed with Extreme's almost un- tian message hidden within their the London revival of Andrew defmable blend of acoustic folk, music will likely embrace the Lloyd Webber's Jesus Christ Su• The disappointing Waiting for one to expect one. heavy metal, funk and even rap. band's latest offering. perstar. the Punchline is a major let down No promotional tour has been But it was Three Sides to Ev• But don't expect to find Wait• Waiting for the Punchline's following Extreme's Three Sides announced by the band, which ery Story that caught the attention ing for the Punchline in Christian first single, -'HipToday," was pre• to Every Story. While like its pre• should be headlining by now, in• of the usually secular bashing music stores. While the album is miered on The Late Show with decessors it is packed with incred• stead of opening for the likes of Christian media. The album, which packed with not-too-hard-to-find David Letterman, but the forget• ible guitar work by the band's real Bon Jovi. A&M Records has done is separated in three "sides:" God references, such as in the table song, which is the album's heart, Nuno Bettencourt, the lyr• little to promote Extreme's latest "yours," "mine" and "the truth," opening track, 'There Is No God," best tune, is not receiving much ics and tone are confused—not that entry—they probably don't know devotes the third section to a sym- the album's second track, "Cyni• airplay on Northeastern Ohio ra• a theme is necessarily necessary, which audience to target either. phonlcally enhanced trilogy of cal F*ck," will likely be skipped dio. but the band's previous work leads

William Wilson

RICHARD GOTT tics of various planets, because it Youngstown—The Beat Cof• notes assistant copy editor is the government that is causing fee House, located on Lincoln Av• the medical problems he encoun• enue adjacent to YSU, is pleased In the late 1940's, L. Ron ters. to announce the exhibition de Hubbard serialized the adventures "Her Majesty's Aberration" is (vice): ritual objects by William F. of an intergalactic doctor in the about the crimes of a queen who Wilson II, science-fiction magazine Astound• seizes the crown from her son and from April ing. Published under the pseud• throws him into a dungeon. Ole 1 to April Youngstown—The Young• three grand works at 8 p.m. Sat• onym Rene Lafayette, the seven Doc is called in when the queen's son becomes ill from malnutrition 30. An stown Symphony's Masterworks urday, April 22, at Powers Audi• short stories became popular and disease. Hubbard criticizes opening grand finale concert will provide torium. among many of the magazine's readers. Now, over 50 years later, humankind's quest for power. reception an evening of some of America's Question: Who was born the old stories have been brought 'The Great Air Monopoly" was held best-loved, and most familiar March 21, 1685 in Eisenach, together in a book entitled Ole Doc deals with the issues of greed and April 7. classical music with Music in Germany, carried the Baroque The exhi• Methuselah. deception. In "The Expensive Time and Space, preceded by a movement to its peak, and ate bition is William F. Wilson II The stories feature Ole Doc Slaves," Ole Doc Methuselah must unique meal opportunity. massive amounts Methuselah, a member of an elite try to maneuver some kidnapped free and open to the public. The Toccata • » of beer glazed group of600 physicians called The aliens back to their home planet de (vice): ritual objects fea• and Fugue in D * •ham? Answer: Soldiers of Light. His mission, as without appearing to break his tures 3-dimensional wall sculp• Minor will defi- § edict not to tamper with politics. *••'"".;.•.* w"J Johann Sebastian a Soldier of Light, is to help en• tures, which are assemblages of nitely be familiar < *'\ = '"* liach! sure the preservation of mankind. "Plague" is the most intrigu• discarded electronic components, to some, since -. ^••h'V •! Join the sym- He is not subject to any laws in the ing story of the bunch. The humor• found objects and primary ele• the Johann [ ' universe except not being allowed ous satire shows Ole Doc scram• phony for a zany ments of wood and metal. The Sebastian Bach mm ^4o^H ' to engage in any political activi• bling to keep a communicable dis• joining of multiple components masterpiece ap , V&l indoor Bach-yard ties. ease from spreading throughout BB0 creates an energy-charged device peared in two | ,^"^21 - celebrating All of the stories take place in the galaxy, therefore destroying all human life. During each step, he that reflects themes such as reli• Walt .J^*ff*f$5 the master. They the future; a time when space Disney encounters bureaucracies that keep gion, parapsychology and primi• will be featuring a travel is common and hundreds of movies, Fantasia and 20,000 him from stopping the infection. German menu with several Ger• thousands of worlds have been tive cultures. Leagues Beneath the Sea. The Hubbard doesn't seem to view man beers and wines available. colonized. Ole Doc also has an Graduating from YSU in 1993 government favorably. Richard Strauss classic Also unusual side kick; a small, 500- with a BFA in graphic design, Wil• The BBQ will begin at 6 p.m. Sprach Zaranthustra, can be rec• pound alien named Hippocrates, L. Ron Hubbard died in Janu• preceding the concert. ary of 1986, yet his books continue son currently works as a freelance ognized from the movie 2001: A who is formed entirely from gyp• BBQ/Concert combination to be republished as mainly best• graphic designer and as an illus• Space Odyssey. But Pictures at sum. ranges from $33 to $52. Reser• sellers. During the last few years trator at Ventling Memorials in an Exhibition, although not yet vations must be made in ad• The book contains many of his life, Hubbard also wrote the Champion, OH. He has exhibited used in a movie, started as a su• strange, quirky events, all of which vance. In addition to a delicious 1000-page novel Battlefield Earth extensively in the Youngstown perb piano score by Mussorgsky are written well. Hubbard dazzles meal, you can also join Young• and the 10 volume "Mission area. Exhibition credits include the and was transformed by Maurice the readers with descriptions of the stown Symphony Orchestra's Earth" series. Steel Valley Exhibitions, Butler Ravel into a dazzling orchestral impossible by utilizing humor, ac• Hubbard is best known for his principal flutist, Walter Mayhall, Institute of American Art and work. In the '70s, classic/rock tion and suspense. Seasoned sci• highly controversial book for concert conversation at 7 , the national music fusion masters Emerson, Lake ence-fiction fans will find all the , which presented the p.m. of the classic elements of this genre festival. and Palmer put their spin on the basic doctrine for the Church of Ticket prices for the Music in Ole Doc Methuselah. The Beat Coffeehouse hours Mussorgsky's work in their . in Time and Space concert range Hubbard also brings his own Simply, Ole Doc Methuselah are: Monday—Friday, 7 a.m.-lO breakthrough album, Pictures at from $11 to $27. Call the Sym• philosophies to the.book. For in• provides a brief glimpse into the p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-lO p.m. and an Exhibition. phony box office at 744-0264 for stance, Ole Doc Methuselah past when science-fiction was closed Sundays. The symphony will play the reservations. tampers dangerously with the poli• wildly whimsical. 8 THE JAMBAR TUESDAY, APRIL 11,1995 E NTERTAINMENT

YSU Theater welcomes former Moscow Ballet designer

TOM PITTMAN and Greenleaf Productions of Los The Pennsylvania State University claimed drama Wenceslas Square entertainment editor Angeles, for which he recently fin• with a B.A. in technical theater. by Larry Shue opening on April ished production of the untitled Clepper joined the university 13. Wenceslas Square will be sequel to Bob Clark's perennial theater during the recent pre-pro• staged in the Spotlight Theater and YSU Theater recently wel• holiday classic, A Christmas Story. duction of Moose Murders, which will be the first "full round" pro• comed Gregory Clepper, a profes• Clepper, as the production's sce• featured the theater's largest set to duction at YSU in 12 years. sional technical director for 17 nic designer, created an "off-kil• date. Clepper said that he was im• Clepper said that the Spotlight years. Clepper has recently com• ter" house in Cleveland where the pressed with not only designer will be more intimate for the tell• pleted an East Coast tour with The sequel was filmed. John Murphy's set design, but also ing of Shue's tale, since it largely Moscow State Ballet as master car• He has also worked for The with the Ford Theatre's recent depends on the play to determine penter and assistant technical di• Cleveland Playhouse and as stage renovation. the success of a play's setting. rector. carpenter for The Carousel Dinner 'The house looks wonderful," Drawing from the Shue's own With a working knowledge of Theater, and he has also lent his Clepper said. He added that "from experience, Wenceslas Square tells all aspects of technical theater, he skills to works as varied as The a technical standpoint," the facil• of the return to Czechoslovakia, in has previously been associated Lyric Opera of Cleveland and The ity is "beautiful." 1974, of a former college drama with such famous companies as Candlelight Dinner Playhouse, He indicated that he would be professor, who is researching a The Bon Bon Picture Company Chicago, IL. He is a graduate of even happier with the University's book on the explosion of artistic Ford Theatre if it had "ten more creativity that flowered under the YSU MEDIA SERVICE YSU Theater's new technical now-overthrown, liberal Dubcek ALL YSU ORGANIZATIONS AND fly lines." "Then we'd be in really director Gregory Clepper. good shape," he laughed. government. The University Theater will The cast includes YSU stu• Harding. The drama will be di• PRIVATE STUDENTS present its fourth production of the dents Angelo Filaccio, Mickey rected by Dr. Dennis Henneman, 1994-95 season, the critically ac• Kessler, Kevin Kakascik, and Lu communication and theater. RECEIVE 33% OFF!!! A "First Nighter's Buffet" dinner is planned for opening night on April 13, at the Wicker Basket WENCESLAS Restaurant in YSU's Kilcawley Center, the price for the buffet is That's an average of $82.50 reduction in fees for the SQUARE $10.25 per person. Advance res• hottest DJ service in N.E. Ohio. Just call HOT DJ ervations and payments through the University Theater Box Office Derrick Wray at (216) 544-8553 or (216) 399-1670 April 13,20,21,22,28,29 at 8;0%m. are required by Monday, April 10. and book any time during spring quarter 1995 to Ford Theater and Kilcawley Center are handicapped accessible. receive 33% off any performance. April 23 at 3:00 p.m. ^ For a fee, parking is available in (That's by June 10, 1995. Contract and deposit required.) Youngstown State University Theater the Wick Avenue parking deck and in the Spring Street surface lot on HOTDJ, the professional disc jockey s weekdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Bliss Hall, Spotlight Arena Theater x J Service you can get for a song! Due to heavy demand for tick• For ticket information call 742-3105 K ets, advance reservations are nec• essary. Tickets may be reserved by calling the University Theater Box Office at 742-3105. Box Office hours are from 10:15 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. Due to scheduling conflicts, THURSDAY the performances of Wenceslas APRIL 1*TH Square will be presented on new SHOWTIME dates: 8 p.m. April 13,20,21,22, 28 & 29 and on April 23 at 3 p.m. 8PM in the Spotlight Arena Theater of MUSIC Bliss Hall. CYCLONE The price for tickets to the S I S T E R S general public is $6. Special rates EVERY onJ fry for non-University students, senior citizens, and groups are available. THURSDAY FREE ADMISSION There is no admission charge for NIGHT VP Student YSU students who present their KILCAWLEY CENTER PUB current I.D. cards for reservations. THE

Comedy Club ON LOCATION every Wednesday night

Sponsored By: YSU Chapter Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) Featuring MOHAMMED EL-RAMI Band Dinner, Dancing and Entertainment Date: April 21,1995

Time: Dinner at 7 p.m. 9 Place: Kilcawley Center Chestnut Room (YSU) I Tickets: I Students $12.00 * at the Kilcawley Pub Adults $15.00 I iponsored by: II* Tickets available at Student Activities • 9 Student 8 'Activities TUESDAY, APRIL 11,1995 THE JAMBAR 9

Rapper to squal if Miami coach doesn't start his favorite QB

Editor's Note: In January YSU Sept. 2, he'll come forward with Head Football Coach Jim Tressel information about NCAA viola• DENNIS J. GARTLAND II Continent) conference games." was interviewed by the University tions within the Miami program. sports editor Funge believe the toughest of Miami for their head coaching Campbell claims he has games will be against Kent and position. Dr. PatSpurgen, a friend enough violations to give the YSU swept a two-game Wright State. He said, "We must and advisor of Tressel stated thatprominen t collegiate football pro• doubleheader at Cleveland State play errorless baseball." He added, the job was Tressels if he wanted gram the death penalty. this weekend. YSU won the first "Every game is important, espe• it. There was speculation Tressel In the past few years several game 5-1 and the second game 6- cially conference games. Last year stayed at YSU because he wantedforme r UM football players said 3. we missed the tournament by just to stay close to his family and that Campbell used to pay them The Penguins improved their one game." didn't want to move his young chil•for their performances on the foot• record to 15-8 overall. Today YSU travels to Kent dren. Others stated he didn't takebal l field, offering up to $500 if In the first game YSU scored State. Wednesday, Wright State the job because of speculations players scoring a touchdown in big a run in the first, second and sev• will come to YSU for a 3 p.m. Miami is guilty of NCAA viola• games. Campbell denied the accu• enth innings and two runs in the game. Thursday YSU will travel to tions. Dr. Leslie Cochran believessation s at the time. fifth inning. Jeff Santa started the Duquesne and this weekend C.W. he stayed with YSU because it is Coach Butch Davis says that game pitching three scoreless in• Post will be in town for two double- the #7 university in the country. Orh e won't be influenced by outsid• nings, allowing only one hit. headers, the first Friday at 1 p.m. maybe Tressel staed at YSU be•ers in terms of football decisions. Assistant Coach Brian Funge the second noon on Saturday. C.W. cause he wants mature fans whoTh e newly hired Davis replaces said that YSU took Santa out be• Post is a member of the Mid-Con• don't act like children, constantlyforme r coach Dennis Erickson, cause he felt soreness in his shoul• Jeff Santa tinent Conference. degrading the coach and second who now coaches the Seattle quessing his actions, like Luther der. John Murphy replaced him RBIs and one run each. Both of Seahawks. and pitched well. Cambell is doing in Miami right Miami Athletic Director Paul Kalmbach's hits were doubles. He ft* Clint McKoon drove in Mark now. Dee agrees, adding that also added an RBI. Jake Corbett SUP* Wazevich for Cleveland State for had two hits, two runs, one RBI and Campbell's threats are useless. their only run in the sixth inning one stolen base. COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE "Coach Davis has to do what's best while Murphy was pitching. The Penguins finished the for the University of Miami," Dee John Silvey led the Penguins doubleheader with only one error. Coral Gable, Fla.—Although the said. "He'll put the best II play• with three hits, one run and one Funge said Palumbo is on a hot first kickoff is still months away, ers on the football field." RBI. Brad Zeigler and Jamie streak right now; he had four hits, an off-the-field controversy is al• Collins, a fifth-year senior Palumbo added RBIs. Jason two runs and three RBIs. ready calling attention to the Uni• from Miami Lakes, is competing Triveri scored two runs. The game was played at Gor• versity of Miami's football team. against Ryan Clement and Scott In the second game YSU was don Park. Funge explained that it Rap star Luther Campbell of Covington for the starting quarter• propelled to victory with a big sec• is a pitcher's park. The wind blows 2 Live Crew fame is threatening back job. Tabbed by many as the ond inning. The Penguins victim• in off the lake. If a ball is not a line to blow the whistle on the Hurri• starter last year, Collins eventually ized Cleveland State starter Marc drive the wind knocks it down. The canes football program if the start• lost out to senior Frank Costa be• Stout with four runs; Palumbo and wind turns a lot of home runs into ing quarterback job doesn't go to fore the season opener. Matt Kalmbach both had doubles outs. Ryan Collins, an African Ameri• Teammates say that if Davis in the inning. Funge said, "This week is very can. chooses to start Clement or Palumbo and Kalmbach led important. We play every day until Campbell says that if Collins Covington ahead of Collins this the Penguins with two hits, two Saturday. We cap it off with 4 (Mid- John Silvey doesn't open the season as start• year, the quarterback may opt for ing quarterback against UCLA on the Canadian Football League.

YSU takes part in softball cluster, Sammarone is strength Ail-American

YSU—Chris Sammarone, a center for the past three seasons and three-year letter winner on the YSU football team, has been named to the 15th Annual National Strength and Conditioning DENNIS J. GARTLAND six innings, allowing nine earned Association (NSCA) All-America Team, announced Head Athletics sports editor runs. Trainer Dan Wathen. YSU won their third game 9- "This is one of the most prestigious awards in college Ijjp The Lady Penguins partici• 7, defeating Central Connecticut athletics," Wathen said. "Athletes are chosen on the basis of improve• pated in a Mid-Continent Confer• State. YSU was up 6-1 going into ments through dedication to conditioning," he added. "Chris ence softball cluster this weekend. the bottom of the sixth inning, but Sammarone certainly exemplifies the aforementioned criteria." They played six games, two each Central Connecticut scored six Sammarone was among 165 men and women from all sports against DePaul, Troy State and runs. In the seventh inning, and divisions in the NCAA, NAIA and junior/community college Central Connecticut State and Michelle Gongwer and Wereb ranks to be chosen, and becomes the fourteenth YSU athlete to be came away with a 3-3 record. reached bases on errors. Along honored by the NSCA He was selected to the I-AA football squad. In their first game YSU de• with Griffin, they scored on an er• In addition to Sammarone of YSU, Marshall, Boise State, Stephen F. Austin State, James Madison, Pennsylvania State, New feated Troy State 5-2. The score ror by the third baseman. Griffin Hampshire and Northern Arizona were other I-AA teams with was tied going into the fifthinnin g led the Lady Penguins with two representatives on the team. The Penguins last season captured their when Wendy Wereb singled. hits, one run and three RBIs. Leslie second straight I-AA football title (their third in the last four seasons Kathleen Griffin moved Wereb to Molaskey pitched seven innings, while earning runner-up laurels in 1992) and with a 61-9-2 overall second and reached first base on allowing three earned runs. The mark, will enter the 1995 grid campaign as the winningest team in an error. Tami Sinn grounded out Penguins committed two errors Kim Givins Division I (that includes both the I-A and I-AA ranks). advancing Wereb and Griffin. that resulted in four runs. . Last year, both Drew Gerber (football) and Jen Windau Chris Notareschi singled, bringing YSU lost the fourth game 4- runs, two hits and two RBIs. (women's volleyball) were named to the All-America squad. Wereb home. Notareschi stole sec• 1 to Troy State. Sinn scored YSU's Wereb, Gongwer, Notareschi and Following are the all-time NSCA YSU AU-Americans: ond, then Griffin scored on a wild only run in the sixth inning. Sutton each had two runs. 1985/DanielIe Carson/Women's Basketball pitch. Jen Sutton singled to bring YSU lost the fifth game 0-5 Gongwer had three hits. 1986/John Zelenak/Footbail in Notareschi. The Penguins led 1988/Jim Zdelar/Football against DePaul. Wereb and DePaul finishedth e weekend 5-2. Kim Givins finished the game 1989/Paul Soltis/Football Notareschi each had two hits. 5-1, Troy State finished3- 3 and without allowing any more runs. 1989/Jenny Woodward/Women's Basketball Molaskey pitched a complete Central Connecticut ended 1-5. 1990/Brett Greer/Football Notareschi led YSU with game, allowing five earned runs Notareschi is leading the team 1990/Dianne Rappach/Women's Basketball three hits and two runs. Givins al• and registering two strikeouts. with a .366 batting average, 15 1991/Pat Danko/Football lowed two runs. YSU won their sixth and fi• RBIs 14 runs and 26 hits. Nepjuk 1991/Mona Jackson/Women's Track and Field YSU lost their second game nal game 14-1 against Central leads the team in home runs with 1992/MicheUe Medure/Women's Softball 11-0 against DePaul. Tracey Connecticut State. YSU started the 4. 1992/Jerome Sims/Basketball Nepjuk and Kim Cobbs each had game with a nine-run first inning. YSU will travel to Kent State 1993/Drew Gerber/Football a hit for YSU. Cobbs pitched all Sinn led the Penguins with two Wednesday for a 3 p.m. game. 1993/Jen Windau/Women's Volleyball 10 THEjAMBAR TUESDAY, APRIL 3,1995

revenues rise

MARCO BUSCAGLIA he said. "I'd go to a game every est in the sport is a result of in• College Press Service night if I could." creased media exposure and im• Before leaving for the head provement in the game itself. "It When the NCAA first decided coaching job at the University of helps to be on TV, but people need to hold a men's basketball tourna• Wisconsin this season, Jane to see a quality game when they ment in 1939, organizers of the Albright-Dieterie built a solid pro• turn it on," said Bruno, adding that event would have never guessed gram at Northern Illinois Univer• 27 games were nationally televised that it would be more than 40 years sity and received the fan support this season, up from 19 last year. before the women's teams had a at Chick Evans Fieldhouse to back "The product has to be up to the tournament of their own. it up. level of the exposure." But then, they probably didn't "The students were really sup• Teams themselves are im• imagine that women's competitive portive at Northern," said Albright- proving, Bruno said, thanks to in• basketball was even possible. Dieterie. "It means a lot to the team creased participation of women in In 1995, however, women's when you have people up in the high school athletics. "Girls com• basketball continues to make great stands yelling and screaming." ing out of high school used to think leaps in popularity and profitabil• NIU graduate Brian DesBiens their playing days ended when ity. And on many college cam• said the women's games were a they graduated," Bruno said. "But puses, the fans just keep on com• little slower than the men's, but with more programs around the ing. just as exciting. "What was lack• country and more media coverage, "The men's team always gets ing in slam dunks was made up for they realize that they can continue a lot more publicity, at least nation• in three-pointers," DesBiens said, in college." ally, but the women's team is be• who attended home games often. After gaining national cover• coming a big deal on campus," "The women really played a good age on CBS the past two years, the said Tony Miller, a University of brand of ball." NCAA women's basketball tour• Connecticut freshman, where the Atlantic 10 commissioner nament will be moving exclusively women are undefeated. Linda Bruno, who chairs the to ESPN for the 1996 season. The "Little by little, you see more NCAA women's basketball com• sports network will increase the people at the games and hear more mittee, says the sport is starting to number of televised tournament people talking about them in class. get the recognition it deserves. games from seven to 23. Every Monday ait The teams are so popular already, "People are realizing that the The additional revenue from 4 jp-jmu in Kilcawley and then it just keeps coming." women are playing basketball in the new television agreement will Miller is one of thousands of Room 2068 ^ its purest form," Bruno said. help supplement a sport that has students who attend most UConn "These are well-coached teams already become financially stron• Open to all ^ men's games. He's also become a that play hard from start to finish. ger in the past few season. "We're devoted fan of the nation's num• Anyone who thinks it's novelty selling out of Final Four games far ber one women's team as well. "I should watch a game." in advance," Bruno said. "Every just love the game of basketball," Bruno says the growing inter• extra bit of revenue helps."

Interested in

1 Monday- Wings $2.50 lb. | writing 1 Tuesday- Sausage Sandwich $1.75 1 I Wednesday- AH U Can Eat Pasta $4.99 | sports for I Thursday- 8 oz. Strip steak $5.95 f The Jambar Friday- Beer batter $5.95 \ i Thursday Friday & Sunday | call Dennis Where Great Food & Great PeopU 1 Richie D Saturday Joey K | 742-3095 Make Great Times! DJ & Dancing Live Bands DJ & Dancing 1 featuring... •Chicken Wings Beef-on-Week Sandwiches •Weckburgers Grilled Chicken Sandwiches NTRAMURAL M EN, vV OMEN AND Co-REC •Pocket Pizzas Steak-on-Weck •Taco Salads Hot Dogs & Coneys •Buffalo Chips Onion Rings & More! •NTN Interactive Television •3 Big Screen TVs Entries •Daily Happy Hour, 3-9 p.m. •16 Beers on Tap Due OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! 11 a.m.-2:30 a.m. Flag Football (M, W, Co-Rec) Apr. 11 Apr. 15 & 16 Co-Rec Volleyball Apr. 11 Week of Apr. 15 Now hiring all positions Soccer (M, W) Apr. 11 Week of Apr. 17 Softball Apr. 25 Week of Apr. 29/30 Apply in person Downtown across from National City Ultimate Frisbee May 2 Week of May 8 Bank (formerly Dollar Bank). Look for the Big Red Racquetball Apr. 18 Week of Apr. 24 Badminton Doubles Apr. 18 Week of Apr. 24 Awning; M- Men W- Women Co-Kec~ Men & Women Don't

Intraneural Sports Beeghly, Room 103 Secured Free Parking After 5 p.m. - . Phone:. 742-3488 nffico Hmirc 0 a m ~ 4 rt.m TUESDAY, APRIL n, 1995 THE JAMBAR 11

PERKY & BEANZ by Russell Myers

I WANT YOU TO KNOW, 7 1 ( ZOOPiE,THATT. PIC NOT IN FACT I NEVER (J: I came back from be a ticket Muh to a rock con• PUOHB yOU YE5TERRAY/ CALL FBOFLB WU05E vacation wiih whai 1 ikwglii cert you attended. A sou• UNE IS PUSY FROM was a mcmerm>, tnu my venir is "an item kept as a <1:30TD6:I5 PM AS stickler-1 or-proper-I:ng I ish reminder of a place visited," SUE TALKS TO SOME gra nil fat her insisted it was a such as a niatchbook from a OTUER FKIENP 5ME souvenir. What's the differ• restaurant. Thai's how author OBVIOUSLY LIKES ence'.' Jeff Rovin explains it in SETTER THAN ME.' A: You didn't say what "What's die Difference? A you brought back. But a Compendium of Common memento is a "keepsake of a Confused tint! Misused person or event that lias Words." (iiallantine Books). come and yone." 'I7iat would

Place a classified ad in The Jambarl • Ads are based on a 25-word limit. • Ads must be prepaid by check at The Jambar office. To pay by cash, exact money must be paid at the Bursar's Office in Jones Hall. We cannot accept cash in our office. We also cannot accept classified ads over the phone. • Classifieds will be accepted weekdays until 3 p.m. • Rates are $1 per classified advertisement for campus and non-profit organizations, $4 for non-campus and business ads.

FOR SALE HELP WANTED HOUSING MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MACINTOSH Computer. Com• Nautilus Instructors—Experi• Parkway Towers: Administration, Renee\ I hope your Hawaiian/Ital-: Wanted: Old toys, kids books, plete system including printer ence Necessary. Aquarobic In• faculty; A 2 bedroom suite, walk• ian eyes read this. Myrtle Beach Disney, Star Wars, D&D fig• only $599. Call Chris at 800- structors—Some swimming ing distance to YSU, Generous liv• 2001.1 have a song I am record• ures, art and comic toys. Call 289-5685. background—Will train to teach. ing room, equipped kitchen, laun• ing for you. Call me. Donnie, 757-0584. LOUD VOICE, IN SHAPE, EN• dry, parking, heat/water paid. $435 (419) 886-4400. Brother WP-3900DS Word Pro• ERGETIC. Call Maureen at the plus electric. 759-7714. The Coalition for Diversity cessor/Typewriter. Two years YMCA 744-8411. Do Europe $229 anytime! If "CFD" meets every Thursday — old. Complete with monitor and you're a little flexible, we can help Northside. 5 blocks from YSU. Noon to I p.m. in the Gallery of IBM compatible disc drive. Spell you beat the airline's prices. *No Driver/YSU person for local Quiet neighborhood. 3 bedroom check, address book, spread Hidden Charges* *Cheap Fares Kilcawley Center. This week's lumber yard. Safe driving record apts. with studio space. Pay own sheet. Excellent condition. Call Worldwide* AIRHITCH™ 800- topic: "Affirmative Action: required. Hours Flexible. Call utilities. 743-71II. 448-7867. 326-2009. [email protected] What's All The Fuss About?" Ev• 759-7115. eryone Welcome to attend this dia• MISCELLANEOUS logue. Sponsored by Cooperative HELP WANTED HOUSING Attention all Greeks: Greek cloth• Why are we here? Develop your ing sale on Wednesday, April 12 Campus Ministry. Needed immediately; Computer University housing available for own philosophy of life. Develop and Thursday April 13 from 9 a.m. tech: part time position for fast spring quarter. Contact Housing inner abilities. For a booklet, call to 1 p.m. in Kilcawley Center. growing computer business. Call "BOAR'S HEAD LUNCH" Services at 742-3547. 1-800-882-6672. Write to Megabytes Computer Service. Wednesdays - St. John's Episco• Rosicrucian Park, Dept. MDC, 19 Shopping days 755-5577. pal Church, Wick & Lincoln Ave. Apts. for rent. I bedroom, private San Jose, CA 95191. until . Price is $4. Menu each week is: bath, walk to YSU. Utilities pd. Chuck Sabatino's Cashier Wanted, Cuzzy's Cafe in baked chicken, mashed potatoes/ Stove and refrig. $250. Dep. req. Pregnant? Considering Adop• (of the YSU Bookstore) the Phar-Mor building downtown, gravy, salad & dessert. Sponsored 759-2039. tion? Consider Us! Academic Birthday! flexible hours, apply in person. by Cooperative Campus Ministry. couple unable to have children of Apartments for rent. Corner of their own desires to give a child Have a paper due and don't have 11:30 a.m.-I p.m. Lifeguard — For small apt. com• Park Avenue and Elm St. 2 bed• a wonderful, loving and secure time to type it? Call Sue at 757- plex in Boardman. Must have all rooms — all utilities furnished. home filled with a lifetime of 3439 and save yourself the hassle. current certifications. Reply to $380/month. 2 bedrooms — ten• happiness and hugs! All calls Great rates. MRTH, Inc.. 5385 Market St., Yo. ant pays gas and electric. S225/ confidential. Please call us col• OH, 44512. month. Phone: 759-1212. lect (216) 527-5225. Skydiving organizers: The Cleve• land Parachute Center is looking for people to organize groups of $6 to $10 1st time students to learn to skydive! Call anytime for further information at 1-800-TLC- JUMP. Make $6 plus tips delivering pizza's. Part time - flexible hours - will work around school M Glamour models needed. Great schedule. Must have reliable transportation with pay, publication and travel. insurance. Apply at: 4161 Market St., 400 N. State St. $1,499 BHG. P.O. Box 2475, N. Canton, Girard, 433 N. Main St. Hubbard or call 534 5636. OH 44720. Includes: DOS- Windows- Works- Prodigy- Modem and MUCH MORE!!

Truly Has Everything This beautiful residence hall for women, located features supplying their share of full-comfort mid-campus at YSU, is truly first-rate. Single and living. double occupancy rooms are completely fur• Sound expensive? Not at all. Thanks to the large nished, including linens, telephones, and free bequest of the Buechner family, which completed cable. The building is fully air conditioned, and the building in 1941, more than half of all residents' staff and guards provide professional, room rental is still absorbed by the.Buechner 24-hour security. Weekly maid service, ex• rv' fund. The remainder required fcom residents quisitely decorated lounge areas, quiet study" f \ including 15 meals per week, is $788 p„er Kilcawley Center Bookstore environment, on-prerhise dining room and ! | quarter for double occupancy ,and $858 per home-cooked meals, fitness room, quarter for single. Payable weekly. 123 Spring Street and laundry rooms are other Buechner Hall Your inquiry is solicited. Youngstown, Ohio 44555 620 £ryson St..(off Spring St.) Phone (216)744-5361 216-742-2399 12 THE JAMBAR TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1995

CALENDAR AMPUS continued from page 1 According to Joe Multari, TUESDAY, APRIL 11 secretary of legislative affairs, SCHOLARSHIPS TO BE AWARDED TRAINING as far as he knows, YSU is the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will hold prayer meetings at 11 BY AMERICAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION OFFERED BY only university planning to implement this new full-time a.m. in Ward Beecher Hall on The tri-county chapter of the American Diabetes Association will LOCAL HEALTH tuition distribution. Multari Monday and Wednesday and in be awarding $6,000 in scholarships to area students for the 1995-96 CARE CENTER said that the University of Cin• Room 252 of DeBartolo Hall on school year. cinnati has a bulk rate of 11- Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. There is still time available to get scholarship applications from The MCCDP/Bertram Katz 18 hours, in which students pay the organization. Students who have diabetes and will be attending Center, a comprehensive health no additional fee until after Dr. Gabriel Palmer-Fernandez, college in Mahoning, Trumbull or Columbiana counties this fall can care facility that specializes in they exceed 18 credit hours. He philosophy and religious studies, call 758-4887 or 799-3092 for an application. chemical dependency, mental added that students at Ohio will speak on "World Hunger and health and healthcare services, The deadline for completed applications is May 19. University pay no additional Moral Obligation" from noon to will be conducting volunteer train• fee until after their hours ex• 1 p.m. in the Scarlet Room of ing sessions this month and next. ceed 20. The sessions will involve support• Kilcawley Center. The event is RIDESHARE REGISTRANTS CAN WIN RADIO ive housing for persons living with Student government has being sponsored by the YSU Eth• also suggested using some of ics Center and the Center for The ED ATA RIDESHARE! program, as part of its spring quarter AIDS in the community. the $25 million expected to be Teaching and Learning. marketing campaign at YSU, will be raffling off a free AM/FM radio/ The training sessions will oc• cur on Monday, April 24, Wednes• raised from President Leslie cassette tape player to YSU students who register with RIDESHARE! Cochran's capital campaign to during the quarter. To register, students can contact Richard Lallo or day, April 26, Wednesday, May 3 The American Institute of Chemi• and Monday, May 8. All sessions compensate for the cal Engineers will hold their Lisa Fascia at 746-7601 or complete the application included in the University's financial woes. RIDESHARE brochures located throughout the campus. The raffle will be from 5:30 to 9 p.m. spring quarter meeting from noon will be held on June 5 at the EDATA RIDESHARE! offices. Registration for this training to 2 p.m. in the Pub's small party is available up until April 21. RIDESHARE!, a commuter assistance program operated by the room in Kilcawley Center. The Orientation Day, which is on Eastgate Development and Transportation Agency (EDATA), offers To advertise in meeting will concern elections and April 24, is open to anyone, but The Jambar, spring quarter events. free ridematching services to all interested applicants. YSU students registration is required for the who register with RIDESHARE! receive a free list containing the training sessions. call Kasey or Jodi names and phone numbers of fellow students with whom they could For more information, call at (216) 742-3095. The Environmental Awareness ride to class. 797-0070. Council will conduct an Earth Day discussion and organizational meeting at 2 p.m. in Buckeye Suite Don't have Youngstown State University III of Kilcawley Center. sex New Music Society Dana New Music Festival XI Students for Peace will hold their in the dark. Music in South Africa weekly meeting at 2 p.m. in Room 2067 of Kilcawley Center. The Ii' you're in the es. plus HIV testing, counseling and referral. Chestnut Room, Kilcawley Center ulty lounge (Rooms 121 and 122). Now we know vou mav be a little nervou-. about Support provided by YSU Student Government. YSU Multicultural Student Services, The Ohio Arts Council, The South African Music Rights Organization (S AMRO), The The event is being sponsored by commi; in. You'll mid we're < .irinj*, iinder>l.mdme, South African Department of Arts, Culture and Technology, The New Music Society, and sensitive. We'll help vou lee! comi'orubic and YSUMusic and Physics Departments and the College of Fine and Performing Arts. the College of Arts and Sciences Vk&4s AH concerts are free and open to the public \ fa *e< ure ami an*wer all vour question* in plain. >trai^hi v and is free and open to the public. talk. We're att'ordabie and everything i* contidential. §SS^V' For more information call 742-3636 _ Make the smart choice. Come to Planned Parenthood, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 12 j~~ Would you like Lo be paid Lo studv? ~~l A QUEST keynote address, For an appointment, call P; Planned Parenthood Check out the new course offered by Alpha. "What Causes Men to Commit Ogilvie Square Eajt 77 East Midlothian Blvd. •tl8 Souih Main Avenue J5S49 St. Route 170 Youngstown. OH 44507 Acts of Violence Against • Warren, OH <«81 Calcutta. OH 43920 Administration: 788-6506 399-5104 385-2503 738-2487 Women?" by Jim O'Neill will be presented at 10 a.m. in the Ohio Room of Kilcawley Center.

Cooperative Campus Ministry will sponsor a "Boar's Head Lunch" from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at St. John's Episcopal Church on the corner of Wick and Lincoln NOW YOU CAN. . . Avenues. The menu will consist of Deceive even more money for your donation, baked chicken, mashed potatoes Be a Peer Assistant starting fall in the First bring this coupon for a $10 cash bonus. and gravy, salad and dessert. Year Student Center, helping freshmen with 7116 Histot Club wiU hold a meet_ their transition to college. L U^PI^SL jx&gwSjsS^^ JI*t?B ! y ing at noon in Room 2036 of "Lcumenicat itilcawley Center. Dr. Bill Mullen, Requirements: English, will speak on "Negro Story Magazine and the Black Attend YSU full-time during the 95-96 academic year QoodFriday Service Response to World War II." 2.8 accumulative grade point average or higher The Golden Key National Honor Society will conduct a general Sophomore thru Senior status meeting at 4 p.m. in Room 2063 of Kilcawley Center. Officers will Applications and position descriptions are be elected at the meeting.

available in the First-Year Student Center THURSDAY, APRIL 13 Aprtf 14,1995 Intervarsity Christian Fellowship located beneath the Bookstore in Kilcawley will hold a chapter meeting at 1 Center West. ^Ipon p.m. in the Scarlet Room of Kilcawley Center. Completed applications must be returned Ofm 'Rpom of OQkawUtf Center by April 21,1995. co-sponsored Sigma Alpha Epsilon will hold by their Jeopardy/Putt-Putt Rush Party at 8 p.m. at the SAE 9faman Cathode Campus Ministry and Cooperative Campus 'MinistryHouse , located on 850 Pennsyl• Any questions, call 742-3746 vania Ave. Headers are needed. If you wouUtUfe to help, phase contact Sr. Total the. 'X&man Center 747-9202