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" ' : . Millersville t , University's Student Newspaper Since. 1926 ...... ' ' : , ' VOLUME LXIII, N®. 3 --16."- 1 PAGESPAG WEDNESDAY,; SEPTEMBER; 26,199026, 1990 MILLERSVILLE , PA 17551 NONO.3.3-16- __- hitij_ __ m-- ' - . : I
StateSt te I teachers support walkout .
' S : . . [ . , Union in , possible votes , , strike . - ' favor- - of - - : - Y/4 ' . "' ,; 3)) useus " /" We are looking forward to an faculty probation period as an objective... . k'i" ; I BY - ' . JOHN-PAUL CARDOSO , ' ' ,. , impoimproved dialogue at the of temporary faculty, 4)) use of Shewell also said that SSHE . . ' ! ed . . ." ' News Editor negotiating table , and we hope teaching technology and 5)) schools would be prepared for a . ' ,; ' . . . ° " - .. walkout.. " universities L , . that significant progress can be. competitivecomp titive faculty, salaries.. "All the are ; f . " - , A strike has been authorized by made next week, Swinsick said In a Sept.. 19 news release , establishing contingency plans in ' ,4 ' " " : in a prepared statement. . ' , " , the a strike ," Shewell , faculty members at Millersville Tinsman said "Frankly the event of . ' ' ' ', University and the other. 13 Edward Kelley Jr.. , SSHE Vice attitude so far of the Office of the said.. :universities' of the State Higher ChancellorChanc llor for Employee and Chancellor about the non-salary- If a walkout does occur, it will . :" " . System .; Labor Relations said , "The issues been negative as to be the first such action in the of Education has so ' ' According to the Association of (SSHE ) negotiating team is give the impression that they history of APSCUF and the t' ! ,'z . Pennsylvania State College and prepared to'Staytoo 'stay at the table as. have lost sight ofquality teaching SSHE.. 1 '., as a ; University Faculties (APSCUF) , long neccesary to reach ' 90.3. percent of union members settlement on a new contract . I . ' ' Caputo , discuss strike supported. a walkoutw certainly hope the APSCUF team Hauck lkout' if " - s prepared so.." , negotiations with the Office of is to do are offering are different but the , ' , , ' " the . The vote is not going to change BY . groups are from Chancellor did not move J. SCOTT GARIBAY . two not that far k ' not , . ' toward' a resolution. the state's position , according to Snapper StaffStaffWri1erWriter middle ground.. Compromise at ' . ' "Though" we sees e no SSHE spokesperson Scott K.. this point seems quite possible.. reason A' : " ' ' . ., , why a settlement cannot be Shewell. "Our negotiations will Millersville University President No one wants a strike , and I think ' ' - ' on course ," he said.. "The" Dr.. . . achieved if both sides are.... stay Joseph A. Caputo andDrand Dr. both groups will be working hard , results of the vote were not Verne , a reasonable we are pleased that " Hauck the Millersville to create contract that suits " ' the' 1e membership has given us unexpected. . APSCUF president , discussed the everyone. . ' , , pending ' The : think their support and shown a firm The state president of teacher's strike . with Hauck I there is a good - . commitment too our negotiationsneg tiations APSCUF, James Tinsman Snapper. Monday. chance that a strike can be avoid- ' Snapper , , ," : , five " outstanding . ' - ed.. resume again outlined "major Negotiations . teamt" Swinsick Snapper : What is the'possi-the possi on . , . , team said Bob '" . . . - 4w'' . 1 ' X t ' . " ? APSCUF's chief negotiator. quality issues" which he said bility ofa strike not occurring Wednesday , and both APSCUF <, - _ x . . .- : ¬ r. , Talks between APSCUF and needed to be settled. . They were Caputo : Promising.. The rere-- and the SSHE will be trying to , . > : ' ; the Office of the Chancellor. will 1)) the role of teaching associates quests of the teachers , and what " ' I resume today.. and graduate assistants , 2)) the State System of Higher Education See Caputo/Hauck/ , page 6.. '
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' department S . &I& science . . shelved 5 5555 . Librarv" ' . . , . ding majors , minors and those who made the. final decision to complete the program. She said ' ' 'BYBY program study.. because , RICH SCHULTZ seeking certification ,., learned from terminate the of of core requirements it ' SnapperS , ¬ ; 1fJper Correspondent Dr. Nancy Smith , dean of educa- The. program must be finished will be difficult for freshmen to fit " ' - tion, that their program of study by the spring of 1992 , according a four-year major into two years.. . Snapper photo bybyDeanRadinovskyDean Radinovsky , PboPhotographyPhotographyEditoto phy Editor
. . ' . Because limited : " , .; ', , . Tassia , - . Some may have to work throthroughgb. . of resources was. to.beto. be terminated to Dr. Margaret chairper! On Sept. 18 and 19 faculty members at each of the 14 . ' . . ' - '; . - ' ' " - ' the library . scierice.majorscieri . :m ,;jor- rwill'jbe,wilr . : ; . - ?; - 'irMjeprendentmd , studysttid options' , ' ' ., . be AiArt official at?t. the Office of son of'thethe library sciencesci nce depar Pendimt she universities of the State System cast votes to Approve:ppr'H'e a strike . Aofficial! of ' . " '' the ' ' tenninterminatedted byby.thethe spring of 1992 , AcAcademicdem C' Affairs said that the tment. . added.. . " . "' accordaccordingJ.g) . at the Office \v.as ¬ Approximately. - was. to "limited rere- library students . one-third officialsto decision \ due - Current science ' of ' - off Academic Advancement " ' - , those in't e program. are - - will sources , not the program's qua will be ableioable .to. finish their degrees the non Over 50 library science students , ' , lity or need.. Consultants and but some may have to , cram itional students , who now will ams ' Caputo explains ' expected their major would be alumni have been conducting courses into their schedules. . surely encounter scheduling , fifi--¬ upgraded to a masters'' level when studies concerning the fate of the Some students may eventeventuallyally bee nancial and family-managing- pro- were " they were summoned to a meeting major.. These consultants presen-¬ forced to chchangenge their major.. blems, TTassiasia said.. ' dung the first week of classes.. ted their findings to. university Tassia explainedexplai ed that Caputo has his gun ¬ . decision that , , See , page 6. _ - At meeting students inclu- PresidentPr sident Dr.. Joseph A.. Caputo , assured all students will be able to Library
_ _ _ . _ ._ _ , H. ' BY J.. SCOTTSC 'TT GARIBAY .. Snapper Staff Writer . : . Banned ",: . . . ' . , '. ti The issue of arming Millersville University Police, which has been books studied , debated , and analyzed for . years , has been , F i " . two decided ' - r" . . } I -S according to MU President Joseph '- + .1.. '. . < - Caputo.. challenged "Certainly" the arming issue has d : , . ; _ not been resolved in debate, but _ I . c .M BY GINNY LUTCHKUS have made a decision and issued Snapper Correspondent" the statement that the university _ _ police will not be armed ," Caputo ' . ' } . Around country an alarming stated Sept.. 20.. , ) yf' the on 6 ' _ . : "' " 1'ril number of classical books are "It is important to realize that 50 . .I ; " challenged or banned in public 60 the . to percent of students are ...... , . , , , : . ' . ,'.. { schools , according to a new to the issue arming the ", - high of i , " , $, . : ! concerned University University Police, Caputo said.. " fM i Millersville . " . . "' l. ; Store employee. . It seems some people , because t Nancy Rainey, who is in charge they have not been on campus for Dr.. Joseph Caputo of the store's' celebration of the last two yearsears or have not arm the police.. National Banned Books Week , followed the issues development , Two-thirds- of the faculty voted ' ' said she believes we all have the. think I just woke up one morning no as well , Caputo added.. " " right to read what we want.. and said 'We' shouldn't' arm the "A" committee researched the isis-- " " "As" a parentp rent , I believe we can university police ," he said.. sue thoroughly.. Virtually every " " restrict what our children read , but "Nothing" could be farther from aspect of the matteratter was looked . . - " . . ' . . ' . ' '. SnaPPcrphoto Dean RadinovskyRadinovskyPhotographyEditor ' ' " : SnapperSnappcrphotobyDephoto bybyDcan , Photography Editor it . carrycarryoverover to other the truth ; there is considerable at, he said.. shouldnt ' - a newew ' . families ," said.. , . . listeners recieved a boost from atop Ganser Library. It replaced an older Rainey work behind the decision done Caputo said he felt 52 percent "' ' Q$9,000$ , transmitter which was installed high model which last semester failed completely. . In accordance with the National by myself and many other was a large enough majority to be Banned Books Week -- - groups," Caputo added.. considered decisive. . brating the Freedom to1990Read , the He said the MU Student Senate "If"" I were to ignore student ' ' University Store is displaying held a student referendum where votes, no matter how close, then I : - . New , transmitter adds 'punch' to , nearly 1,200, students participated See Banned Books , page 6.. in , and 52 percent voted notot to See Arming Police , page 6..
, . spring semester by having the old . " ' mile radius of listenerQcapacity. . . . << ' : - . . : 'r . . . At . '. ' . " " " " ; BY DANA L. PASSEK. .. * . . .. ' " . , , ,_ ...... transmitter temporarily repaired . ; . . ' by A new feature of the transmitter .vw ,( . . ' ,1JiI'-.t"': , , ' " . "' " . ' ' " ' Writer - - SnapperS p StaffaffWriJer. - Career Information Day set Snapper, station engineereng neer- Nelson Kepper-- is a stereo exciter.. Anttonen said ';; " :: , ; : Comnsniaryf4cifu pihjop' ,: ,; 2 : . ling with the intention installing . ' inion ,4 , . f.4 of She event . 2.3 ' this is whatwhat.helpshelps produce the hopes this year's will > " . ) , . . . : . .; ' - : - Millersville ' . " . , } : :--.a- . : University's . " . ' . . . t. ; . BY A. WARGO ,' . .j < a new one during the summer. JEFFREY be largest in terms of alumni Editonals''pId' ...... ' . . . . . ' 2g; better quality of sound , or what he ltonous , '" . , . . the . , " . ,( " .. . k " ' ; . ' ' '.. :' < Q " "i : radio station , has " ' student operated ' " " ' Snapper Correspondent ' " : : ; ' - . as "punch.. . , participation". Roberts anticipates : :. . ;.{ ; . . new ¬ refers tot ',Letters. . the.Editbr'd ' . ;,' F. 1j' :22. J transmitter was . : , The . , . ) pur . ; - , : . ,.i : clearer and, sharper sound thanks . , " N.. " { " . : : , { ' . ' ' ' , , that 50 % of the representatives ' . "t ' : . : ; ' : . ' . chasedch sed from and installed - ¬ 1. ' , 4i nejw by Kep- Anttonen hash s noticed a - . Columns:. . . . .(; : . 3"3 4 ' . Staff . a n w - " w'transmittertransmitter installed on dif , ' , : . to , dif - ?'' . : ' ' . :, ( \ ," Students all academic -: assembled will be Millersville ' ' if . . .. : .: ... . . ' perling. . It is a new model - ' of stand t... ' , ( ;, . (: ' because in : ference Q-92's overall ; ' . ' V3 - sound n-OI1' h'.... ; . ; . \ July 33d.. . ' ;., , . . ;. , , . :. . . . ; , . i&& * &;. " . . .' . , . ' .ft . " ' the to alumni who have already ventured " ( . ; : . . . ings will be given. chance , . . ;; ' ')' " : ' . .J" . . }( ; . the company that produced the old since the transimtter was installed.. > ' ' ' - < V ; .' . : : : . ' i . ' ' ' + , Ra ''Oatifg&WilGe . rgelWil11r . ; ; ; . Dr.. Ralphph ;. Anttonen , adviser ¬ informally meet with several area into the work force.. . : &> * ' ,?" ,'t.a. G . : ' , qu . . H , " , . 't " , ' transmitter is no longer in - in . ' . ifea/ : busi The difference sound qualitylity ' t =" . . . , ¬ ' : , ' iii: ; . .1 - | ; - ' ; , ; .: , to , ,said'thesaid piepreviouso s trans employers at Millersville Univers Students will be able to discern SnappeJNewsSnapper News . . : . : ; . . :5..6. . * 1 the - " ' " . :5,6,7. . ness.. . ., ' , . '. . . . Q can only be felt from a listener's ' - - , ' " / '"' . ' mitter wasvas worn out and had to be ity's twelfth annual Career the Millersville alumni represent . . : : . ' ' . standpoint :, he said.. A deejay in In NatIoualtWDrlda, ltW r1d Newews .N> , ; h . . Anttonen estimated total .<. ,. , . : < . , . " " " . . - cost of A'' .. . < t>. " ' ::a, . . . ' " '" ? and " " ' < replacedreplac It was originally instal . ' formation Day at Brooks Gym ing companies therethe by black ; c , < " '' , : . & z 1O the FM ;'} e. : . ' ; 's3 ; ; :13 { the transmittert.ra. studiocantstudio cant really notice ' . tur $ '. .. ',9idOtl1/"tz'11t'1Z,13'' new including .'F. . . : parts . ' . < / . ' " . . ' . ' . ; . '' . . led when the switched 3.3 . attached to their . . ' . , . ; ' , { station ' October gold ribbons ' : 'i' ( - . :1k3 the difference.. It's sound ' . : ,;: the t ; . . , . of ! . .. and labor to be $$9,000. SnapperSn per'S'1fVeySurvey:...... ::9...... , ' , . from AMA to, FM stereo frequency ' According to Helena Roberts nametags , Roberts said. " , . ., ' < " ; ( . the broadcast that's different , not . . ; " J'' : : l- . ; over 10 years ago.. The According to , ? KaletdescopeK, . . . " : pVero ier transmitter Anttonen funding from the career planning and She said through conversations : . . : " . U.. : ; . , ) : . ; 9 ' the operationn of equipment , : " : . . " prj"tiid"; \ : . ' sr- , ' ' - ' . Ganser came a , this , may a.t. : ;, Y-. . .1 is located on. top of fromfroma special request fund . placement department event with those alumni students ,C n uu e . . ' .. Anttonenn said . . ' , " . . ' - - ' .. < v. " ' 1' ' ;. . I-- _ . ' , . < ! . ; ?' . . ; ';: . for . the ; . Library. intended the transmitter. will give an opportunity able to learn which courses , , tr' 11 . Some students be ., ; r : ...... , goitomtcs- - : . - " . . , " > - < "' , ia,; ; ' > : ' ' ? ' , '> , , ; " ; ' AM Program MattMa t ¬ - " .:': . ' \y: ; : : ' )7-V" ' . Director : of the money was allocated to.thethe to come in contact with approx alumni liked or , what \' :' . ,: . '' > ' ; - disliked tK' been to - : . . . transmitter had j/ . . . The old . , . / ' S- - . 'v . . , . . 1'""f ' 'Spy.SpyMag'azuteYpr-A. Jtf) ag ziae . v . v.. .. >, v. . . . . ' agazlne H. < .. . ' ' " ,,, / - Blasick.saidsaid ' ' * . ; " " | ' % Blasick overall that the sound ¬ . : . ' " " " and failed station from student senate andand'thethe imately 70 compcompaniesnies and organi- they would do over if they could 7.; ' ': .' ; "'' "'' '< -'-! to"' "' - : a weak signal /'f.p f emittingep t ngi / , " "%-, ; " "; ,; / mi .Movle'f".Revu.Review ...... 13 - difference was taken from Q-92's- ' productionproduc is clearer than it had examine employment (in to coursework ) , and Mom ws"s-! . te.ly. . 14.. zations to regard ' ' , complcompletely on Feb. Broad ; : ; , per.'SP9rt $ '.; ': . .AA\t5it\i6' \ ' . . > \ 1990-91- operating . ' been previously. . sSapper. Sports 'i . ) s suspended for 24 budget. possibilities. what skills future employees may . ' ' ' ' ' casting was . " " < , ' . ' ; " . ,. , . . . ' . : ' ::' ) ; (. : : . : ; , .j' ;r't'' b' ' ' . . . < , ' : : ' ' . RobertsRob rts is in charge of Career need.. MU ,Scoreboard' re oar"d :. ' ' .. . .. :;,1.I4.: A4n\J'. . . ; after the transmitter failed The . The.oldold transmitter is currently . ,, . , " : . . . hours station still has the same The .. . ' . : " ' . \ ' ' ' - - : ; ' that) day. . amount power being used by Kepperling for Information Day for her fourth arauderliia deriNote1te1 obk'k' . .. . \ of maximizing at i , ) .. . w. i5is\- . . ,, . . . ' : : , . ' ; , ' ' ' . See : Day , page 6.. . : '. ' ; ' . . :' 8; : ' - , : . " PAGE2 THE SNAPPER SEPWMBER26.1990.SEPTEMBER 26.199026 . 1990.. ' . ' CommentCommentaryOpinion/ ' _ Editorials l ' , , The strike threat : is' it real? . Students faced with conflicting signals .g. , , -: : . * ' tJC .. \ w J\) e.\ I / \ The threat of a strike by Millersville pressing mild concern over the prospect of University professors seems now more real a strike , and what that would mean ass far.asfar , as than ever.. In a strike vote , announced -¬ the disruption the academic is earli of calendar '''sap GlllF - er this week, 90.3. percent of faculty mem-¬ concerned.. But at this point , it seems as if 4U55 'I' V bers statewide voted to support a walkout if they still feel a strike is unlikely.. ' . , talks broke down once again. Even if a strike did occur MU president ' , : Negotiators for the Association of Dr.. Caputo tells us that all academic support L'rM Pennsylvania State College and University services would continue for on-campus- ¬ wily stustu-- ) . Faculties (APSCUF and the State System dents. It also seems unlikely that an entire rJ - ' . of Higher Education (SSHE ) have been try semester's worth of work will be lost for . ing since late summer to reach an agreement seniors on the verge of graduation..- .tIf] concerning a new contract.. The first thing that entered many seniors'' k'' Talks broke down almost immediately last minds when the possibility of strike began i summer when the SSHE refused to even to loom on the horizon was the very real J come to the bargaining table.. Preliminary possibility of not graduating on time , and , : I reports indicated that the negotiators for the consequently having career graduate Letters or H . SSHE did not even show up at the first school plans disrupted.. scheduled bargaining sessions last summer.. That does not seem so likely now.. We , Letters : Things did not look encouraging at all.. as students , would like to be as optimistic Library Science is history as Verne Hauck , who in an interview with " , alal-- the Snapper this , "The" Throughout this dispute we had heard week said faculty To the editor : Science Department will no basicneedbasic , need to educate our youth - ' most nothing from the SSHE itself.. From want to make sure that the semester is fin I would like to take the time to longer exist at Millersville and librarians arelf'e'' an importantimport nt ." what we knew, it seemed that there was no ished even if we strike. More power to ask you this question - What do ,University.. You can only imagine link in that process.. As library question that the SSHE was frustrating the those faculty members ! you think of when you hear the what transpired after that science departments keepke p ¬ ? negotiating process.. According to AP- Still , we have the unsettling rhetoric of word librarian I know what you statement was made.. Some vanishing and the interest.ininterest . in SCUF , there are "five" quality education isis-- APSCUF to deal with.. The remaining , think of, an older woman with people were shocked , others . librarianship keeps decreasing , glasses and a bun on her head were angered , but the majority sues"" standing in the way of an agreement.. sticking points mainly involve non-salary- of the little old ladies with the buns telling everyone to BE QUIET ! us were confused and hurt.. We Dr.. , , , on their heads will become James Tinsman president of APSCUF issues such as health benefits and the role You ' certainly don't think of four had many questions we wanted extinct.. The administration here . said, "If" the chancellor of the state system of teaching assistants.. years of college and eventually a answered , such as what is going at Millersville as' well as the will address these major issues , a contract Tinsman has this to say : "Frankly" , the - ' at Master's degree.. Believe it or to happed to us? Or will we ever University itself have performedperfo d can be completed quickly and there will be titude so far of the Office of the Chancellor not , that is what it takes to graduate? We were all assured a great disservice to a lively and . - no strike. about these non-salary issues has been so become a librarian these days.. that someone would work with dedicated bunch of students. . .. as Now , you ask the question - . We certainly hope not. negative to give the impression that they each of us individually to make I would like you to.thinkto think. for ' a The situation , as is stands now, is still too have lost sight of quality teaching as an obob--¬ Who cares ? I'm here to inform sure our needs would be met and moment of how you would feel ' I care close to call.. In the face of a "not" unexpectunexpect--¬ jective.. " youthat and that maybe that we could graduate.. How if it was your departmentdep rtment that you.shouldyou , should care ! Something ? ed"" strike authorization vote by the faculty , Well , facedfac d with the strong' words of too could we believe them now And was closing.. What would you very disturbing is happening here why weren't' we aware of this ? ? Edward Kelley Jr.. , SSHE Vice Chancellor Tinsman and the reassuring placaplacationsions of do Where would , you ggo _ Millersville ( , ) , , at no not the strike problem sooner ? Would you change your majorormajor, or for Employeep1p 9yee and Labor Relations , tells us Hauck , what can one say abouttheabout :' the out-- " - : and I feel you q ' " : ' ; f l , shouldshq be aware\aware, of p ? were " ' . ' : . ' , . perhapsr .flPs. universities$ , These were . : : , : . - :. , that "The'.negotiatingnegotiating team ispreparedis to come? We can onlyon1y..hJ;hope, e.ttO be as'opti-as opti- , The ' ? I ' TheTh le.ta'be it . , , that was given : : \ . ons , " , explanation gl.lest , xou ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - questions; . you you . thought it . ' ' ' : I' ' ' * ; mid - : ' : . ry s & ; , . < ' : as lOfig as imsttc'asmistfcsticr'as . , ! Eralick.-. : ometime& " stay the'tjable , necessaryriecess to Caputo, rt k imel ' ' ' , as'lopg 9ipd4 § . . , . : ' 'at 4tble . . ( . .w.o stay'athe ! ' to us for the 'closiirg . 'alli ' ( ' theclosing of the . never " ( hlt; ( ' tousfor efthe wouldld ' never have to( asksk ' . # . . "' ] { . ., - ' even'l tQ ; , w . _ is , an 4Jl p tQ.makemake , " ment.QJ1., new takes event this . " department . reach a settlementsett qnjewa contract/" He ( | . students . The first weekweek.of. of school, my was lack of funding. yourself.. Well neither did I, but " ' ' ' added , "I certainly hope the APSCUFSCUF team realize how important a full-time- , ququalifiedlifIed prpresencesence was requested at a This is a reasonable idea , ' I'm' faced with those very is prepared to do so.. " and dedicated faculty means to universitya meeting of both students and however ;, I fail to see the logic questions now ! ' Most Millersville University faculty mem-¬ community.. Let's' just hope we don't' have faculty of the library science when thousands and thousands I leave you with one last ' . of doldollarsars are spent on athletics - bers and administration officialsoffici ls are exex--¬ to learn the hard way.. department. As the meeting question Who cares ? Maybe progressed , my fellow students each year alone.. you should -- your department: . and I were informed that as of So you are still clinging to the , could be next ! ' the Fall 1991 , the Library question - Who cares? There is a Victoria B.. Spino the , - - .. A minor major bites the dust " s . ' . Don't waste companies- time To the editor : try to manufacture thebest. either form letter responses oror-nono- . I am writing in response: to the product possible.. For this responses , and unfortunately . . . L.S.majorsleftoutinthecoldL.S. majors left out in the cold article you published from SPY reason , they establish quality ' delay' replies 'toto serious andnd magazine. . assurance divisions.. Contrary to legitimate concerns.. While writing consumer SPY's' article , these departments complaint letters may seem: an are not happy to read anything Persons working in quality - a The Library Science major at Millersville those who are , currently working on appropriate hobby for some very sent to them.. They are assurance department are paid; to - University is now a thing of the past.. That library science major will be able to com bored individuals , it is not a establishedd for theth purpose of make sure the products we buy ' is unfortunate. . plete it without a serious rearrangement off game.. We have all purchased improving the company's are safe and durable.. When we . Biology , English , mathematics , psychol-¬ their academic schedules.. Current library products that turned out to be products( ) . People who send in waste their time with unfounded - " ogy : These are disciplines offered by just science majors must complete their course something less than we expected.. complaints such as "the wrapper complaint we are , in turn , We know all too well that " ' was put on crooked" are not only reducing the quality of goods and about every undergraduate institution inm the of study by Spring 1992.. They . just don't' make things like they wasting a quarter for postage , services. . nation.. Library science , on the other hand , Still questions remain : If the quality of theth used to.." but the company's' time.. Kelly Lynn Kinley is not something that can be picked up very program was not lacking , why must the lili--¬ But the majority of companies Complaints likeli e these receive easily without some serious searching. . It is brary science department specifically be a rare find in a university the size of eliminated ? We're' sure many students Millersville.. And becoming more rare.. never even knew the library science major It appears the quality of the programs was was available.. After all , only 50 out of apap--¬ Lyle . some life in LyleJuncheslunches . the proximately 8000 students declareddec1a ed the Put certainly not lacking. And the need for - ' ' ' ' ' ¬ To the editor : . My complaintc is the What kind of meal is ? major was also there.. The only reason major.. ButB t what's to distinguish library scisci-- meal only that Att given for the termination of the program ence from some other nearly obscure area I would like1i e to compliment the lack of taste and variety in the other times , when other foods " food service in Lyle Dining Hall food.. It seems that1 t just about are served , they lack taste.. I " . . this of academic specialization offered att was "limited resources Whether for their work in providing meals every other day there is some value my money enough to know means insufficient money (which we Millersville , like occupational safety and a ' for campus full of _hungry combination of hot dogs or that I'm wasting it by spending it , ? ' the :-¬ doubt ) or actual lack educational resources hygiene management Couldn't disci college kids each semester.. It hamburgers and french fries or on this food.. - in Ganser Library remains unclear.. pline have been phased into other depart takes a lot of effort to serve nachos that is served as the main John. Senwesky The 50 or so students who were called to menments ? ' hundreds of students at each "hot" meal"" of a dinner or lunch.. a meeting the first week of classes to learn For better or for worse , the major is elim- were ¬ inated.. Maybe next time the elimination of a: i of the termination of their major unun-- I derstandably unhappy about the decision major is being contemplated the students inin-- I . I . (see letter this page) . But at least most of volved will have more of a say.. HOSTAGES ? ' WHY THEY'RE NOT : , . , . , ' 1ltb:ij ttappa v HOSTAGES. . . , r GET READY. . . The Official Student Newspaper of Millersville Since 1926 University - : . Tf-t IS COVLD . ' THIS BeSEE- - Il - , : _ . :' SERIOUS' 0/ , . ' RICHARD REITZ , Editor in Chief JOHN-PAUL- CARDOSO , News Editor - } . ANDREW JANSSEN , Adviser DON A.. RENICKY , Commentary Editor ISABELLA BENZICK, Managing Editor . , RICH SCHMIDT , Assoc. Commentary Editor I / ' ERIC EVANS , Copy Editor NATALIE SWAINCOTT , Assoc. . Features Ed.. 1 ' / , ®' .. DEAN RADINOVSKY , Photography Editor LISA WIKE, Assistant Features Editor \ ' . C. i' i PHAT VO , Advertising Manager LEROY BOYER , Sports Editor . Ar ®. " N The Snapper commentary section is open to the views of Millersville students , staff and faculty.. Any opinions or cJ-- comments relating to campus , local, national , or international issues , or in response to any editorials , commentaries , or letters to the editor which appear in the Commentary section , or in response to anything appearing in the News , Features , or Sports sections , should be delivered to our office in the Student Memorial Center basement by 5 p.m.. . on the Friday \ w before publication.. STUDENTS \\ SubmissionsSubD ssions should be typed , double spaced and should not exceed 500 words.. Please include your name and telephone number.. AllAl1letters the writer in to . to _ letters must be signed by order be printed. The Snapper reserves the right edit submissionssubD ssions for style , grammar, space , or other requirements.. . Letters to the editor and columns written by the commentary editor or the commentary staff represent only individual _ opinions.. The Snapper editorial board is responsible for the contents of the editorial.. I , . . L.I i . ' ' PAGE 3 . 1990 ' THE SNAPPER . . . . SEPTEMBER 2626.1990 ------ ' :Heated- market melts Clark Bar in Pennsylvania.. They're' popular in Ohio.. They're' . ,. " popular in the southern part of Michigan.. They're' . " : . . . popular in West Virginia. . . " Oh sip ' f" % - ;yoU'hejOU't' > > Yeah , but Clark Bars aren't big in Los Angeles or . e i t akingcing " e , t lift, \he.\:, . BOB GREENE u , > Washington. . 1oilIf ; 4nit . ; New York City or Boston or If they ' mm3"heatheart. i / - ' ndudat S were , you can bet that they wouldn't' be teetering on i' antiartti-offys.) The Chicago Tribune ' ' the precipice, the way they are now.. Clark Bars are j . Wtd > onortheNEX\\be.; NIA undi g. -- " w manufactured in Pittsburgh - the same city where , ' 'I' 1 "R.EREE'wt4. , in 1886 , a fellow named David L.. Clark got started - ' .! ! our Jml1 JOur 1'nolie.. You probably know a guy like this : in the candy business. . Clark Bars have always been I ' . ' He's' worked diligently at an unglamorous job for made in Pittsburgh , a terrific town that has never i years.. All of his bosses agree that he's' good at what been confused with Beverly Hills.. ' ' 7 - "'' ! : ? he does.. He's' not a showoff; he's' not a blowhard or We are transferring candy production out of our i .I- . - . , Pittsburgh-area- plant in 1991 ," Grubiak said.. I ______a flashy self-promoter. He watches younger less \ ' ? ; t experienced colleagues get all the credit and all the There are three candy bars manufactured at that " raises and bonuses , and he never complains about plant.. Amazingly , two of them -- Zagnut and P.B.P.. B.. I , it.. He stays in the same no-nonsense- , working-class- Crunchers -- will continue to be manufactured by ' : - - :: town where he's always made his living , out of Leaf at other plants. The Clark Bar , though the , - - - - - . can , , tasty-every-day-of-its-life Clark . loyalty and obligation.. No one think of a bad diligent friendly Bar -- is included in ' . : : M thingng to say about him.. not Leaf's plans : > I '"' ' ' . . ' like to sell the Clark Bar brand to another . And then one day he's let go. Just like that. It's Wed . : . " . . company ," Grubiak said.. "I personally feel that a I . not your fault, his bosses tell him. Your work has been first-rate.- . We all think you're' a great guy.. But company looking for a strong regional brand could ' ' ' do well with the Clark Bar.. ' afraid that , for us , it . .ratERTa you're out of here.. Business hasn't been so good.. I'm . . ' Sounds like a sadly familiar story from the will never dodo' well nationally.. But regionally. . . . " ' Yeah , yeah.. "Seriously" ," Grubiak said.. "It's" ' . AmericanA1 1erican workplace , right? Well , now it's about to . hhappenppen to a candy bar -- one of the bestb st, most warfare out there.. There are hundreds of candy bars : . competingcomp ting , for shelf space.. The problem is not . consistent candy bars in the U.S.. . the.Clarkthe Clark. Bar. for ! . . good s th true . . getting a ' -- Evil reinforces the The Clark Bar -- even the name sounds sort of Clark Bars out of store once they're in i ' " I read some of them this week, merit.. The very existence ofofde; de the problem is getting them in in the first place.. , ' steady and earnest.. The Clark Bar has been around BY: C.. YERGER ' , . PETER and found a large number to be Sade's' books on the first floor He seems to have a point.. I went to a candy - for most of this century.. Chances are , you've' eaten ! Columnist - Staff the literary eqequivalentivalent of X-rated- . stack Clark Bars -- " I balcony of Ganser Library a Clark Bar or two in your life -- although probably counter. There was one lonely of - I , . : ' .. movies what little plot there was testifies to and reinforces the fact so ,, . . , with their wrappers orange that they're almost ..,> _ , not lately because the Clark Bar has had trouble . . " , I. ... ' : " " 14.. . did not cover up the base that we are free within our red , and the word "Clark" in the distinctive dark-- , competing with heavily advertised superbrands. . i .; - ' the i ": There's a movement afoot by , . ' objective of describing as many consciences to express and be ' -- blue type.. .,.: ' ' Clark, Bars have alwalwaysys been tasty and filling { ; . among us take ' I.ther he, artistic to sexual scenes of various expressed.. -- But they were surrounded by candy bars young t chocolate covering a crunchy peanut bar but their potshots at the increasingly . ' : L , ' orientations as pages can hold. enough to be Clark Bars' grandchildren l. ' lack of pizzazz and excitement is about to do them . - National * conservative Nevertheless , there was one At one time in my life , 'my Symphony , PB Max , Choclairs , Munch , a bar ' . rEndowment? Endowment: for the Arts.. You in rE story that made a greater effort to idealism told me that things that - ? ' called Whatchamacallit , a bar called Bar None . . . y had to make a decision , and Clark Bar did * may recall the exhibit by Robert ' "We . contain a story line, and actually were evil could have no lasting not make the cut," said James Grubiak, senior vice candy bars with names that sounded as if they had .... which was Mapplethorpe'- . a profound philosophical good effects , by ddesigns gn or by sessions , had. president for operations at Leaf Inc.. , Clark Bar's' been devised ,at marketing strategy to give peppered withwi h naughty picturespic es, , : , conclusion. , which I give here circumstance.. I believe now that parent company.. the impression of fun and youthful exuberance. . or theth now-famous- Christian " - ' We' hope that you will be I was wrong ; I believe that which " -- " . And there were the Clark Bars.. What a name : , . I love Clark Bars , Grubiak said. . "Look cross dunked in a tumbler , of ' - convinced.... that true happiness is evil actually reinforcesreinf9rces the "People" them.. But the Clark Bars.. I doubt if the late Mr.. Clark, back in artist Andres Serrano's' urine.. around our company love lies only in the bosom of virtue : truly good , for only through public isn't' buying them.." Pittsburgh , used too many marketing focus groups Most conservatives called it ' ' questioning values can values be , when Clark B an. ' ' If God permits virtue to be The reason , he said , is that the Clark Bar is he named the Bar ' obscene ; most liberal called it and " : persecuted on earth , it is not for legitimately preserved something a " . " "Maybe someone else can make the Clark Bar a -. free' expression protected tby> y the s called "regional brand proved convincingly to others.. ," . ' us to question his intentions.. It By that , he means that Clark Bars are not success Grubiak said *First-. Amendment.. And , since it ' ' may be that his rewards are held Those values which are never Way.. Yeah, yeah.. Here's your hat , Clark Bar.. What's . nationally successful , like Snickers and Milky .*. Deemedeemed to be a chic thing for the ' worth ' " over for another life.. . . and after challenged are never "People" in certain areas of the country like Clark your hurry? And don't let the door hit you on your ' and UPI to pick up for a day . AP all , virtue its reward ?" keepingkeepi g ; the failure to promote " " way , old buddy.. = is not own Bars a lot, Grubiak said.. "Clark Bars are popular out ' i.or. r two , it even made national - questioning and debate will result " " This was , of course, a defense . . : news' . Conservatives in power : in an atrophy and loss of the , . . -> of living a pleasurable , - F tightened the noose on obscobscenitynity ) , ( ) , an argument right to expression thatthatwlll; wwillll be { {ljB 'aM/ ' '''''' ' ' d)10 ' nonvirtuous , ,, " .'. ' ;; life . \( ' Yucw" . .' -' ' & IILUI\ Llrr\B'/IM'ItM' !'/ " [ bit , and artists tried doing very difficult to regain.. \ .1 , not only of the Marquis de Sade a .;. vLLL!: . funding in protestpr . . !: Id ithout NEA test , : but also reputable Ili, ::'' r a brief moment, people who off That is why even repulsive 'PTor : - " philosophers; likelik Jeremy , "' ' , ideas must be preserved.. It is ,. didnt" give a spit about the First , memory , as Benthanxand. and if serves : Amendment sawsa it , being in. war if a generation forgets : ' Epicures. . What differentiates the -: defended. . ' . - . how horrible war really is, they , ' ' & is * " Marqui's writingsandwritings., and Bentham's < I'' ' ' will not be hesitant to find out: If a , , V,. Then, only silence. ' ; is only the manner representing .:--'r.; ' - the horrors are preserved and But silently , that freedomfre dom is , : ' ' the same viewpoint de Sade - , . " - -" right here on recounted in their full force ,; ;still- being defended , : preferred to use pornography , 'campus?' similar baseless wars might be " ; campus in a collection , of works , : , ' and Bentham a more expository i l avoided. . And as the suppression , ":' many, any, ' would outrage , . that. ' conventional logic. Both . . " ' . i? 0 ' : repulselse of the history of war would andrepulsep : frightenfrightenmany. many others andd proved to effective . , methods be i ' ' > ' ' . future physical , . resultresult.inin : .e rest in a wayay that wouldwouWinake . - ' ' deaths , , ; r the} st . . " miriake ' ; , ( ; :" //wft'n.c-,4e. , . , : ;.ff. " and . ' ", ; ' ' ' atleastaLat:leastleast"inin Justine/ # de ' ' : so the suppression ,: erranW, , / of ; MapplethoMapplethorpe( e aridnd'eJT' ) u'IQoklook ' , ideas ' . Sade's novel ; from , which. : I , . ' ? , ' : ' : ' / from.which : " ; . TI ' , ,; in '. results in future'deathsfuture deaths of the like1ike'amamateursteurs The works ) : quoted fairly intelligently put ' , ":- somehow ' mind.. . Ganser Library, have somehow , forth.. . , , " - ' . survived the batteringsba terings of book- ' - ' DoesDoes'thisthis mean that I condone The books represent . ' an ' :-;- censors through the banners and de Sade's' personal life? Whether . " acceptanceaccept booksnce "of. of the heavy "years , standings. di1g} as req nCter . : years . a reminder that I do or not is irrelevant to the responsibility - - * ' r to ward off , ' : : t-aa free society e iSts. . -- , : . ' exists " argument, that even:! intellectual death.. censors items and Do the ' . books are authored by the . The The are works considered pornographic and timid people, realize they are < The 1990 U.S.. . Supreme. Court..JCourt " " r- i ) Marquis' q is de Sade.. ' , .. . 'M or obscene can have redeeming murderers, ? ( ) ' ' - ' = ' PBS? captures essence, U.S.. . Civil War conflict series . PB'S'series . . the . of a ' ' history.. A large claim, that, but defensible, on five in the end (in Georgia and South Carolina , by Burns film of the battlefields today, and the old u'' . " ' ) , and won by the side photographs( , are "framed"" " by ambient -- p grounds.. " Sherman against civilians sounds , . - . . were . hoofbeats , cannon , musketry , steamboat whistles . , < , this , were the best at mobilizing an industrial base ; - : S At issue and not just for country i- : - The birds' you hear are the kind that calledcalled'at' the ' s for possibility self- The First , the wounds of which at ' two polarities of political , World War from F.. birds , GEORGE WILL . catalyzed Western recovering , was times arid places of battles.. The camera moves , ( government and slavery. The war , the the world is only just now : world's' noblest political career, Lincolns' . . The was prefigured in - the trenches at Petersburg , Va.. The sometimes at a canter, down roads and over ridges ' ' ' LincolnsThe ; . ' " ' die ' The Washington Post ( ' ' ) " a ' , at Cold in 'Walt"'Whitman'sWalt Whitman's phrase "condensed firepower that killed 7,000 in 20 minutes And the pictures are exquisitely married to words , nationalitynati I ality'"' : It completed the Americanerican founding, Harbor,; Va.that., was an anticipation the Somme. , of c: ' astonishingly rich - English usage, not ' ' century " settling questions unanswered in 1789.. It Two days fighting at Shiloh killed more ! ' , . only from leaders but from the letters and diaries of ' , , transformed democracy into a nation : wars.. Two " the foremost . Americans than all previous American . ' WASHINGTON' ' -- , a' ' \ soldiers and citizens. Sunday's episode includes a "t \WASHINGTON - At the battle of Shiloh a of suchs ch philosophic clarity and political unity that, percentercent of the American population died in the war.. " ' love letter ofofuhbearable, . beauty, written on the eve ; wounded:Wou ded Union soldier wwass told to leave his rifle, ; toldo , ) , ' in the nextcenturYnext century. , it could savethesave the world from And then there were the survivors of the first great (J-"! ' ' of the first battle of Bull Run by a soldier who was 1"and-go"" - . . He soon returned , saying , and -go toto the rrearar . ..He several'tyranniesseveral tyrannies akin slavery.. before and to modern war and the last great war modern to die there.. :":"Gimme another gun.. This blame fight ain't' got any ', , ' medicine : In 1866 , one-fifth- of the state of .' ' : 'c. " For more tl an a this argument has raged rear. Neither did the war.. than century Mississippi'sMissi sippi's' on artificial What e ? Was it an " revenues were spent The war was haunted by eerie occurrences. . ; this caused the war "irrepressible ' It was fought in 10,000, places , monsoon of limbs.. Wesley Culp was born on Culp's' Hill in ; conflict""? What , its core , was it about ? About 15 history. . beginning Sunday , and for the at - waf our And Was it worth it? Yes.. When the war began , one in Gettysburg.. As .a. a teenager , he took to wandering , " minutes into Burns'' - series, you learn -- Asa " . ... , Civil War" is magnificently ._ . .next four nights "The hour seven Americans was owned by another American.. wound up in . , . you see -- . - Virginia. Came the war he enlisted. ; : ' , the answer. ; on . , " . ' " >encohipassed; on public television. If better use has , . , ' Less than one the North's population - - = percent of He died few yards from the house in which he . = ' ' ' a - , seen it and " ' 'a' ' '' few . everevervei been made of television I have not ' 'X'ou'You see a century19th-- entury photograph , - . - was black, butbut'byby the end of the war 10 percent of was born, on Culp's' Hill.. be until KKenm Burns turns his , ' black ' do not expect to see betterter ' white of course , of a black man's back.. It is dieth Union forces were black.. One of them was a is ' . . ' ' prodigious talents to his next project.. . , hideouslyhid ouSly covered with scars left by a lash.. , about 12.. Burns' Because first Bull Run put soldiers in his kitchen , \ . . , - , ' ' Burns' handsome boy named Jackson '. " ' '" ' ,five . ; Virginia escape l't" " , 37 years went camera does not dwell the narrative does even camera pans slowly an photograph, up past Wilmer McLean moved deep into to t . . He'isHe is the filmmakerfilmm rfiveofwhosefive of whose ' not even up old . l;, , : the making of this. masterpiecem terpiece off national mention what we have briefly seen.. Burns knowskI pws the bare feet, ragged trousers , shredded shirt of the war.. He settled in Appomattox. The war ended ' into' ' ' , ; ' : - : " " room.. //J'. memory.; Our Iliad has found its Homer He has how to blend passion and delicacydeli acy Reticence can be "Contraband Jackson.. (Contrabands were slaves in his living , J " '' ' " " arid vivid .:' . .) was the way , the war with "no rear.Thatrear. _That e pain , That ':made accessible for everyone, the and its own emphasis: . that escaped to Union lines. ThenTh n the camera pans ofofthe ' , . _ and meaning of the event that is the hinge of 'Th Civil , War was the prototype of the great up another photograph , up over boots , fine is why it resonates so , and why Burns by \' poetry The * ' ' history.. . ' engine -- , cultural , .- the trousers , past a drum and snappy blouse , to the face enriching our understanding , enriches our our , , " of change- scientific- ' . : war ; . War , human rn wprld.. It was the , . . . . citizenship. , _ The Civil is thethe.largest.eventlargest, . event in. modernmod first modern war waged , ofDrummer Jackson. - - - - ' the ' ' ---To: , technolqgiqal'advanc, s-, , ximize technological replaced by computers To rn . , advances maximize . books be r , , must ' - - - than the archaic device it was in . on -- that are being automatically.. Checking out would become a more efficienteffi ient the hardly keep on top advances , ' ' : simple process in that only copies files would be late nineteenthcentury. The phone alone , has made in computersof(in our own country and of downloaded , redefinedredefinedcommunicationcommunication. with the improvements ); checking back in would be eliminated. . ;"c" I , abroad given it bby twentieth century technology.. ' the has not experienced significant Also , the chore of reshelving would disappear. . ' Because book < - ' , . GARIBA J. SCOTTSC ? GARIBAX . . p on many , it no longer? a candidate What could be done in our library could be done T. ." The phone is simply one example ofmany every change in over 450 years is . ' . , , . ' ' , , all overov r the . . Libraries as dayday.objectsobjects, which , improved: by technology , are for improvement but an object which must be nation we know them ' - ' - ' " " Staff Columnist bettering theili lives'oflives of Americans.. Technologyhas- completely replaced.. The computer is the perfect would cease to exist and "book banks" would , replace them. Eventually everyone could obtain , w , source . . , " become the nnew adrenalin of our nation ,a of tool to accomplish this task. ' ' . home, or even personal patch . . , power and vitality that must never be hindered. . taketake'manymany man hours to properly units to into libraries " , actually " , Books ' " ' with.. The , money There/, arear , - however , everyday. objects. which , time and hassle that the The twentieth centuryce tury, like nono' other , ttimeme' in - " organize or use.. Ganser is a perfect example of the books because of societal , taboos- and frivolous eradication of would save would be " are waste . . . caused by the utilization of books. Our I.. history , is explosionan of technology. , Progress in sentimentality , have escaped or delayed the changes astronomical : ' library holds hundreds of thousands of books , computers ; and sciencescience.are:. are rocketing Computers, used to their full , be die (machines , and innovations that progress demands. . The most if extent can --" which constantly demand cataloging , checking in America and the world into a new age off fast; paced blatantl tant exanexampleple of one of these objects is diee book.. implement that America uses to rid itself of the ' , - , and out, and reshelving.. Certainly if these were ' " , ,,;change. , artifact our society has protected so long with ' Since the introduction of9f'movable'movable type by Johann ' . easy of cheap tasks , the University would not have .. : :. , t . \ America. has seen major .changes in medicine ' useless emotionalism. (Bibliophiles love to spout AmericaS' ' ; deny . , , simple to us hours of library time weekly that we . ommunication , transportation , production , and Gutenberg in 1450,. oniy'aonly 'aa few relnivelrelatively drivel about the inherent value in the solid , tangible Communication ' ' ' " in the . ' many inventions (such as the rotary press and linotype) _ have enjoyed past. many other fields Through innovationsi and . aspects of books as opposed to the cold , impersonal / ; : : But significant improvements brought- about by have contributed any change at all to the making of even desktop computers are now capable of facets computers..) - - of ' '. . ., -y.. technology the twentieth ' century hash 's presented us books;, or: books themselves . BooksB oks are still just supporting massive amounts of memomemory The America learn the .' ' must that the best interests of ' " pages . memory capacities attainable by larger computers Owidi amazing : objects.. bound as they have been for centuries. The nation lie forsaking , withith transformations of everyday\, ' in sentimentality and embracing "iThe" ' book , by all practical standards of progress , ' a arere almost unlimited. . he, phone , for instance , in only thedie'pastpast 30 years . is ' logic.. We must realize as a people that there is far .. . :. With just a little hard work and unconventional yhas,has gone through wide ranging changes. . relic.. J more inherent value in the silicon and steel of a data i - thinking ; \ Improvements such as call -waiting ; - The computer , onn the other hand , is now an computer systems that could turn our bank than in even the most beautiful leather-bound- , f callall - " ' . . " " eleven a forwarding-, , beepers , answering machines , mobile evereverydayeveryday"object'whichday objectwhich is entering higher stagesstag s of story library into one story computer lab gold leaf book if we are ever to maximize the . . ; " ' call . .:: nes technological evolution every year.. America . can could be developed. Cataloging could be done . units- , andd fax machinesinach . have mmaded the phone far ' advantages of technology. PAGE 4 TITHEE SNAPPER SEPTEMBER 2626.1990., 1990 , , Proposed fundraiser would lessen anti-Greek- sentiment - " IDs and keys on the table they simply sit down and Furthermore , the Greek organizations couldco ld get clean up oronto. to change the tablecloths. . Additionally, . . relax.. BeforeB fore long , a cheery Greek will come to the . ." ppublicity through the SnapperSn pper covering suchsuc events.. less food would be wasted if the "customers"" or- ' . ' table with a notepad and a smile and say, "Hi." . My . . Image-wise- , the Greeks could not go wrong.. . dered only whattheywhat they wanted rather than grabbing name , ' a blah =: is whatever I'm member of blah kappa would also reduce the anger -" everything that appealed them on the RICH SCHMIDT ' " This plan felt by non to way back to f , and I'll be your waiter/waitress/ this evening. . . '.. GreeksGre ks on those Wednesdays when the dining hall their table. . . k'' ' ' - The patrons would place their orders and the ¬ - + is dominated by Greeks.. Much resentmentrese tment is gen- To keep things in order, the serving could be con j-- Associate Commentary Editor Greek would scurry back to the lines to fetch the " erated on those occurrences. . Trust me.. fined toto.one. one side of the dining hall or Lehr dining ; :, '" :. " , food.. Meanwhile , those waiting for their food could :, room.. Students in This program could be implemented perhaps who desire to dine a conventional frequent the salad bar or simply converse among , . t - twice a month, ideally on Thursday nights.. Thurs-¬ manner would be free to do so.. Greeks. . Everybody knows who they are , every themselves.. When the food arrives , the customers day would be good because most students are still I encourage the people in the position to act on body has an opinion of them.. Either you love them a small the and would pay fee for services even on campus , tired of getting food all ( - this get in touch.. It ' to try ; as I pointed . , on week and.thus-and . thus can't hurt out or you hate them generally your view depends leave a tip they so desire.. After the meal is ¬ if meal. deliv, - ly more likely to pay to have someone else get it for before , there is no capital investment in this except - . ' whether or not you wear the letters on your sweat - ered, a few brothers and sisters could mill about ' . : ' ' ' them), and thethe.students, students would remember to bring for the Greek's' time.. , . shirt.. If you don't , chances are you don't have a " everything all right here?" and " I ' asking "Is Could some money for the service if the Greeks advertised This program would bring the two separatedseparated'stu-stustu--¬ strong liking of the Greek system.. It seems that " ' ' get you something else to drink? . , - ' in the Snapper the previous day.. dent groupstogether in a fun , profitable and'use-fand ' - l they're always in the'waythe way trying to raise money or . use ' . . , , . Gordinier would also benefit.. I don't know how manner.. " tossing a keg.. . The cost would have to be reasonable. . I think 50 ' ; , the Greeks manage to occupy theth building on those With this fund-raising- activity in motion, no oneone , Such differences within a society are bad.. Con- or 75 cents per tray initially (including drinks) and Wednesdays , but perhaps they could offer to stick could legitimately say that "the" only serving Greeks flicts cause anger , frustration and war.. We need to then 10 or 20 cents for additional beverages.. This around after the waiter/waitress/ program to help do is beereer at parties. '" bring the factions to the negotiating table and work spare change could add up to a substantial amount.. ' ' ' ' out all of the problems. . A table of fivefiv could easily'easilyspendspend, five dollars in a The negotiating table I have in mind is actually a sitting , ' ' and it would only take the Greeks a few Grumpy oldld man' hhadd few worriesw rrie's' : series of tables.. I have a plan that would benefit the minutes to serve the customers. . A few dozen tables ' Greeks , "regular"" " students , and even the school.. served and the Greeks would have 'aa healthyhe lthy profit . ' they fascination Grumpy "' us. hold such a deep ,Old Manan would like us My plan? Let the Greeks act as waiters and wait- from an activity that requires no initial investment' , BY ROBERT KREIDER with.. They ' seem to take the to believe.. , , , . Columnist don't ' in Gordinier. . - Staff -' resses like pretzel or T-shirt sales.. time to appreciate the little things However , ' you stop and ¬ ' ; when 'yo stop The way this would work is simple.. Hungry stustu-- This activity would also serve as an opportunity ' , ' think Of all the charactersch racters that the in life, nor do they seem youback maybe10 or 15 years , dents enter the dining hallh ll in the typical fashion by for prospective pledges to meet the members of the interested in the same things I " it becomes quickly apparent that giving the checker their meal card.. They go in and frats(rats and sororities. . New friends could be made and show Saturday Night Live has ' ' ' ' this is . Today's' givengi ven life , none was whenhen growing up.. Some of trulytruly'notnot the case. find an empty table.. But instead of throwing down respect for the Greeks would be established. . to none has captured them even appear and children are growing up in a my , attention and appreciation to be soft , ' ' more than Dana Carvey's' lazy, content to sit in front of a worldfull. of problems that did - " . "Grumpy Old Man." He is the TV or a video game just wasting not exist to most of us a decade - . ' .,' a the day away.. I'd' hatejustto think ago. ''' , personification- of process that . Columnists battle overGulfover Gulf, Israel has gone on for years in that I am already experiencing the For example' , remember when American society whereby the effects of a generation gap. , But non one ever-talked about using ' ever-- : flict in the Middle East.. older population soon comes to there doesn't seem toButbe anyny sun screen, or what factor lotion In a column run in the New York Times last feel out of touch with the people other explanation for the way I to use in order to avoid first . feel.. degree burns while at the beach? week , Rosenthal attacked Buchananas consciously and technology of today.. ' anti-Jewish- , berating him for what he called' his The problem is that this In my day we'we didn't' have Remember when no one knew DON A.A . RENICKY " " ' 1 "venom about Jews ," and his - . "' He process ssternsems to be up , these newfangled, . what an ozone layer was' and s : speeding cartoon a _ ' , ' ' column Buchanan characters like Mutant Turtles or everyone laughed at thethe'ideasideas of devoted his to denouncing mainly , entire "anti because our younger . ; \ , ' Commentary Editor ' . [ ,. - in the possible. . ' generation . FLIPPITYPITY global warming and recycling ? : " ' ' most forceful terms To Rosenthal's is becoming socialized Transformers. FLIP - "p. ' - ' ,, ; '; .,, way of thinking , Israel's' role in the United States'' in modern things: that we as FLOO! We'd sit and watch the Remember when AIDS was not ' watch and 4-- presence in Saudi Arabia was not nearly as clear as college students only came to' same BugsBunny cartoons an epidemic and the idea of sex ' Buchanan , , all , realize a few . over and over again until our only held a sense of fascinationfasci atio , thought and Israel of nations was short years ago. our. Opinions , by ' : their very nature, are tough things to " , one certainly not "beating the drums.. . . for war inin.the. the Today, you may haveh ve a seven eyes glazed over and would pop not of fear ? Remember when deal with.. It is often draw ,, extremely difficult to the Middle East.." or eight-year-old- - child operating out of our skulls like( corks out soda camec e in bottles and you lines betweenb tween one man's' opinion , his bias , and his ' Pat Buchanan , rarely daunted byy anyone'sany me's' computers or even VCRs to such of a bottle.. We'd' crawl around could throw out an aluminuma1umin cat} evil . ' intentions. No two men publicly demonstrated rhetoric (including his own), shot back with more a degree of skill that they can on our hands and knees feeling without beingbe ng jumped and beaten that point more effectively in the last week than did accusationsaccusat ons. This time , in a column published last even get that 12:00: to stop , for our eyes and moan and by a gang of renegad ' professional pundits Pat Buchanan and A.M.. . " . ' , ::1 week in the New York Post , he accused Rosenthal blinking on and off.. Dealing with groan , "OH NO.JNO , . I shouldn't environmentalists ? ' Rosenthal.. " " ' , ' of being in a "conspiracy" with the B'nai B'rith'' these little technological terrors have watched that same cartoon These are all new ideas and On the. eve of the Jewish New Year , Rosh - ," Anti-Defamation League (anap. organization that works can even be slightly intimidating, over and over but by then it concepts that 10 years ago werewer$ Hashanathe, conflict over allegedly - , a bitter anti-Semitic - ; was too late.. We were blind and virtuallyv ally - . tod y' to eliminate anti-Semitism ) to stifle his views. He and it sometimes makes me feel : But today' - : ° remarks made by Buchanan, erupted between these - " " ' . helpless, but we were . happy, they formforI nonthe vocabularyv of-mosjot accused Rosenthal of "a contract hit , and wrote as if there's a little bit of the l cabularyofm04mo4 two men in the pages two New York ¬ . ' " of newspa- sarcastically , "Well" , there goes the B'naiB 'nai' B'rithB 'rith' Man "Grumpy" Old Man"" in me, just because that's-' - the way things elementary school children.. 4 =' : pers, with accusations and harsh words flying in all - < $ of the Year Award.." . waiting to come out.. were and we liked it that way ! ' PerhapsPerl ps today's' children ddQ directions.. , ' At this point , hardly anyone saw theth humor in We didn't have these new, have more things to worry about For those who do not make a regular habit ' In my day , we didn't' have' ' : of ' . fancy video games either.. We than we did while growing upupj Buchanan's sarcasm. Conservative, demigod ¬ these newfangled, - reading the editorial pages , some background - ' dollar-eating ' infor William IF.?. Buckley wrote a column (run in the New ' ' ' didn't have Nintendo , and no But reminding them of the past * . 1 we' were mation is necessary. . Coke machines. If we were Game Boy . we . York Daily News) offering to mediate the dispute either. If wanted certainly cannot .hurt Maybe ¬ ' , ' ' Pat Buchanan , a syndicated columnist (often . thirsty and didn't have enough , ' apap-- between the two writers.. New York Post editorial-- to play , we had to go outside that's' the best lesson 3 caca(1$( ' ' \ . ¬ * ' change , we just stood there pearing in the LancasterLancaster.NewNew Era) and TV commen in ' . " - ' , , ; 'trdi-- - and do ourselves.. We'd run in learn from the "Grumpy page editor Eric Breindel printed a long , critical edidi- - it " Old just , tator , was once White House Director of ' the hot sun and sweated until our .:"' . o al , sure , differ-- ; ' the smog and acid , with our Man.IfMan ,If we forget our past anand . tortorialta1 making readers understood. the " - rain ' . _ i - Communlc n.. Hg'also' ' ' ' "we-shrivelecCypweshriveled\? \! . up! /, a dried \' . - Communicationstions' under Ronald ReaganReag He' also ; . ! !like , : ' H$ 'b ".t1 -' \esh. , , ' ' th "cvlywayy-- . wfe ' sEQof . tongues [ up, iir' things , ? iriro ! rf'P all . , en'cebetweenbetween papers o those : our , , used to be w ' - ence , the pap, r s iniohs'andsand of ' up'orir the : . imohsiand"tliose , ' efn" ' ' swelled ' " : it { so . served as an aide to former President Nixon.. Since ! " 'fprunelqonprune., ._,§oon. 1.. " wouldwbutilget4.g.,get so badb _ > : . : * . ! : , ' . : , ; , , , . ; tp! aide 'BuBuchariaiiNobel-PeacePriBuchananharian : NobelNobeI.PeaPeace wiimerand'H l 11st ,; pruneQ' ' ' to - .dq e.s blue ..itzin: pain, , , .onlyt.condemnonlyo . condemnn em , ourselvesp se.l.v -; ' . : ' Prizewinher nd"H6lcSist$ ' ' ' "ri/faces" screaming . yst ourselves, . ; W : ozlt' ' ' / ' . . " ' ' T that ouro tongues siveltupup ' . ; ' would ! his stint as a ReaganReagati.adviserheadviser.he,, has a - . ' " ; reputa . - , built . . . : 1 ' . , ., . maintaining a status quoquo'titat, will survivor WieselWiese1.Said disgraceddisgraceeithe ' ' ' andblind asbatsas bats..But. But' wewe.werewere . that will " Elie Wiesel.saidBuchanansaid Buchanan dthethe, bats But. ' ?"i"mh 'our heads'uirtilds "untlh'veuntilwouldwe ' :"' ' ' ' ' ''' tion as one of the nationmosrnation's"mosracerbicnations most acerbic and harshly * uf'hheads couldn't d , ge''tQto memory of the Holocaust.. KaKalmanman Sultanik , vice : happy and hadhad fun , becausebbecause'-usee not allowall , positive chachange to bre the ' ' conservative columnists.. His commentariescomme taries, which breathe- and turned blue in the ' , ' president of. the World Jewish Congress , said that's the way things were and result.. Instead of criticizingcriticizin$ . ' . . - give one the illusion of cutting right to the heart of ' " - face We'd, just startst rt rolling on we liked way ! ' children , - it that " for having it too easy, Buchanan's comments "amount to , mitic dog it the - anti thethe'boiling'\boilingling hot asphalt like ' matter, often are little more than thinly-veiled . " an . " even : Your , your might . more beneficial to point gerel. And Rosenthal came back antievenevenfiercerfiercer than eggthe"in ' recollections. of be and carefully executed exercises in the ' , egg in a frying pan , but we . , laying of before , telling New York Post'reportPost reporter( r Lucette ian childhood may not be this out that there wasn't' always a ' . , ' ' always blame.. ' were happy because that's the . . Lagnado thatat Buchanan was a "dangerous"" " and exaggerated. . ButB t the fact remains hole in the ozone layer. , or thatth ] ' BuchananB , Americans , . way things were and we liked it ' chanan like most other likes to lay " " - " " " , 1. that grew ' "evil" hate-monger who spews" out uglinessuglin ss. \ ' the world most of us the water and air wasn'twasn't'IDwaysalways blame. . It represents a sort of - , ¬ thatwaythat way. ' ' I self sepa- Buchanan simply said, "My" response is -- read ' up'inup in iss far different from that of dirty and polluted. . :¬ . rating writer from any , ' . both reader and personal re-re-' " ' , keep telling myself ' todayschiIdrentoday's children. It almost seems children come to accept these my column. . : _ I that I'm If the self. sponsibility in issue under consideration. " Some would polarize this conflict into a conserva-¬ too youngyo ng to be feeling this way.. as if they have it too easy, with , things as a factfa t of life, or as theui , as ' ' Last month a panelist on the PBS TV talk - games. i ," tive versus showdown. . But , as ' - But sometimes when I talk to their and, way it was then the criticisn; " liberal Buckley's atat- ' ' ?) show "The McLaughlin Group ," ' high , Buchanan turned tempt to mediate thisth s conflict shows , conservatconservativeve young children , I just- dont motorized Big Wheels. And should come , or the good ol01.. his attention to the crisis in the Persian Gulf.. - " , He ex columnists appear to be split on the question tof understand some of the things that's' what a character like "The days may trulyly be lostost forever.. J pressed opposition to the prospect of war in the , . 1 U.S.. . in Gulf.. ' : _ I _ , . _ involvement the , - r - . . Persian Gulf because;, as far as he could see , - - the One wonders , though, what would transpiretr nspir . Jfif " ' )f - - - United States' direct interests are not threatened.. - Rosenthal attacked , say, the Catholic Churchjnin . - - , - . - , " . Church , - : , , . , -- That is as long as U.S.. interests do not include the - . . Rome as vehemently as Buchanan has attacked . . - . right to buy cheap oil.. I . , own . : Israel. Granted Catholics do not have their I " n '" _ . . .1..1.. .:". - , Buchanan the United UA :> . , ' . . ' ' believes the only reason . .- - ; 'ppoint1rt fLfromIron1 \MUufeehtte\ l \ :- ' U.N.-chartered nation-state Roman Catholicism : _ . ' ' : States is in Saudi Arabia is Israel.. "There" are only I ° " ; has long been absent from the sphere - toasnt fto the FirstIIStCtienC1Tt : , , ' two of world. * \\70'' t groups that are beating the drums for war right ' ' i'3' tot\with 1\\ . 1 - . But the , point is; Buchanan . " power - has ' ' now in the Middle East , and that is the Israeli i515eqlA1'tD tt . : . strayed precariously from a tenuous premise for , l'bTet ' , : no ' 'iTVTV ' Defense Ministry and its amen comerincorner in the United 'tn tttathtl citcl'cnc . expo set ' ; , ,1 other apparent reason than to prove himself right ' . . . , . , " " ' ' , , States , a "McLaughlin" Group" 'Ai'Q\ith\ prames'f41aJ te1S , ; Buchanan said on . ! ' that PAPs'PA and everyone else wrong. ' " ' show a few weeks ago.. , are . . . " Most Jewish people do not agree with Buchanan , including A.M.. . Rosenthal. The kind of vigilance with which Buchanan hasas Rosenthal writes a regular column for the New defended his opinions in the last week is too often! . York Times. . He used to be the executive editor of valued more thanan the pursuit of the truth of the mat- newspaper , and he still writes news articles as itself.. This recent war words , and Buchanan's' that ter of ' ' ¬ J well.. He was not amused with Buchanan's sugges- obstreperous rhetoric in particularparticularmakes;, makes that clear. , tion that Israel is the driving force behind the con- As in any war, the first casualty is always truth!Uth. Learn prevention from past crimes . - - , . - , no - - . During ordeal , she , - murdered. her Of course nno one wants to be - BY JOHN J.. EBERLY - ' was screaming bloody hell.. She , embarrassed by calling the police Guest Columnist : - was surrounded by apartment and finding out they've' reportedrep rt d - - - a - To ' ' - buildings with lights and noisemaker and not an actual 'be prepared' is a time- ' _ _ watching faces in the windows.. SOS. . However , another timetim - ' _ tested and worthy motto.. You Submiss- She died in full view of an tested and worthy motto is 'better' should be prepared for class by " . safe than sorry.. ' having sharp pencils and a indifferent audience. What . happened here at MU on Sept.. 9 notebook.. You should be - - As human beings , we have got - is a watered-down version of ' prepared for a cross-country ' to ststopp being - , what happened to Kitty self-centered and - drive by stowing a spare tire and to' ':' . , , start looking out for othersothers.-It'ItIt , ' . . Genovese almost two decades ' i an extra case of oil in the trunk. ' ago in The Big . isn't freshmen walking toto'thetheirr , . ' , ' And you should , apparently , be Apple. It is cars but people who ignore . . . prepared for walking on the MU amazing that all this time has . . police whistles , . ?, screams , and . passed and yet no one seems to . campus at night by arming 1S 1i , gunshots . who are responsible for . . : , have learned a thing. . Sub teeth.. Submissionsissio Policy i yourself to the . policy " allowing abductions, rapes , and " , What we need is a little civil On Sept.. 9, an' MU freshman murders. . We have got to help our The $Snappernapper commentarycomm ntary section is open to the viewsvi ws of alliall ; and social responsibility and fellow humans, ' was blowing on a police whistle it's the only right - ! some common sense.. you Millersville students , faculty and . : ! If hear : staff. The deadline for allletters"ll-all:lettersttersi . and decent thing to do.. ions " " as she was being abducted. Can a police whistle or a - ' scream , : ; ;: anyone honestly believe that at and commentary; 5.. . . , Fiid- ' away.. ' submissions is 5:0000 pm the Fridayy"Qeforebefore don't just turn Don't just If we don't' start helping ' least one of the people walking - ' ! idiotically assume that everything others , then one day we , may publication.. All letters shouldsho Ild , the wr'! er 's : nearby didn't' know what the ' too be signed include writers . . , is OK. Check it out. If it's too be the victims of a horrible ' j whistle meant ? refuseI to believe scary - daytime telephone numberr, and should beb limited to 500 wwordsrds. : ' or dangerous for you to in-in crime , with the added people are that stupid.. Or pleasure of that ; . ! tervene directly, at least find a watchingw tching passersby ignore our . , . maybe they are.. Maybe next time ' Unsigned letters or letters to third, partiesparti s, will not be printedprin ed.i phone andnd call for help.. plight as we scream our throatsthro ' : ' , ts _ : some screams from the Students , faculty or ; . staff interested in writing a column ' raw.. ; . regular shrubbery will be 'just someone , When we as citizens of MU ; having a good time.. ' Gunshots should submit a letter of intent with, a short bio and a writing and , Kitiy , America shirk our decency Let us aid all future Kitty , ' ' ; , in the dorms ? 'Probably just a and , \ humanity by ignoring crimes Genoveses and MU freshmenfresh en by sample to Don Renicky , commentary editor , The Snapper.. , party. ' ' and the victims of crimes , we learning to careBycare. By learning: to I , In the 1970's' , in New York brand ourselves.. We slap giant lend a helping hand.. Or at least I . City, KittyKi tty Genovese was labels on our foreheads that say by learning to pickpi k up the phone . : , '. stalked, attacked, and eventually 'Uninvolved' Insensitive Lout.. ' and call the cops.. . . , ,SEPTEMBER 26.199026, 1990 THE SNAPPER PAGE5 _ Snapper News , , - - - - : , Physicist discusses science education ' Police Log . , ( , in engineering . . science . .. and Predicts shortfall. Predictssh'orfallin I - - A MUPD ¬ " warning from the to - foreign continue import . scien- be made up women , minorities development "a misappropriation of Several police departments in Lancaster County have reported BY- ALLISON. MORGAN tists and the other is to increase and immigrants ; this has to be the of funds.." Littlewood said he was ' unique incidents of telephone calls from a person who identifies 'Snapper Correspondent the participating rate of source--there is no other solu- appalled bby the federal money MMMMMHMMMM, n MMMMHMMHMMHMIIlMIBiBMB himself as either a State Police Trooper or a local police officer 4 . Americans. . tion ," Littlewood added.. shifted from civilian to govern- working undercover.. The victim is told that her line has a trace on There will be fewer scientists Although the number of Littlewood said at the moment , ment research and development. . - ¬ . it and if she gets an obscene telephone call she should stay on. the -and engineersengin rs in the United States Americans getting Ph.D's. ' in scisci-- "''25 percent of schoolchildren are ""Between" 1980 and 1988 , de-¬ " de- ¬ line and answer all the questions . .' . twenty-first- century , . ¬ of of the caller In several by the acac-- ence . and engineering has de-- black or Hispanic , and by the year fense spending went up 83 per- de instances the victim was given the telephone number of the State cording to Dr.. Peter B.. Little-- creased, LLittlewood:. said there has 2000,472000 , 47 percent of all schoolchil-¬ cent while basic research went ' or local police , but told not to contact the department until after the wood. , a physicist from AT&T& been a slight increase in total dren will be black and Hispanic. . " down 24 percent ," Littlewood ' :>' ' ' obscene telephone call.. When the call does arrive the caller asks Bell' - Laboratories. . PhDs. due to foreign students. . "These" people are essentially said. " ' "' many vulgar questions' , often getting the name and address of the -"By"By the year 2010 , it is We" should be very grateful (for unrepresented in all science fields; "In the 1980s , we actually saw a ' ' . , , victim. When the victim does contact the police department they predicted' that there will be a foreigners filling the gap ) because we need'toneed do better.. " shift in the way wew spend our contact " to ' ' know nothing of the supposed investigation or telephone trace.. shortfall ofof'halrahalf a million science we are already not producing He said it was important to do money from non-defense- to dede--¬ ' Currently the University Police know of no such investigative and engineering Ph.D's. in the enough . PhD. . natural scientists better to keep up with competition fense," he added.. " enough practice taking place in Lancaster County.. Please contact the United States , Littlewood said and engineers that we expect to from Japan and Germany, espe-¬ Another way Littlewood thought ' all , SeptSept.18. 18 in a lecture on " ," s . University Police for obscene threatening , or questionable "Issues in need he saidid cially with . 37 percent of , Congress was misappropriating ' " with telephone calls.. Science Education in , the Littlewood himself is a foreign Germany's' undergraduates major- funds was through support of : ' " - -Gordinier ConferenceConfer nce Center. student.. He was'bornwas born and educat-¬ ing in engineering. . "big science.." " ' " Prank phone calls reported "Now is a great time t-too get youry u ed in EnglEnglandd and received his un- Littlewood said only six percent He questioned "big science"" ex-- - Two residents of Tanger Hall reported receiving several obscene Ph.D. in science and engineering . dergraduatete and doctoral degrees . of the undergraduates in !penditures such as $30$ billion fforr the relephone calls Sept.. 14 , . because you arere going to get from Cambridge University's' UnitedUn ted States are majoring in en- a space station and $8$ billion for on police said. The incidents are under " ' ' - investigation by University Police. . rich, Littlewood added.. . Trinity College:. He is nationally gineering. . the superconducting supercollider. . : He used statistics to back up his known fforr his research on density He added that Japan produces Littlewood proposed $30$ billion success in Cash stolen from wallet claims of financial 'the waves , phase transitions and the same numbern mber of engineers as should instead be parceled out in ' - =: " According to police, Miguel Perez of Gaige Hall reported the sciences. . high-temperature- superconductive' the United States, but they have $50,000$ , grants individual -¬ . ' to scisci- "'' . theft of $20.00$ . from his wallet which was left in an unlocked There are other ways of getting , was only the . entists doing . ty which the topic of another half of population. basic research. theth - " room in dorm. rich besides being a stockbroker lecture Littlewood made in "Federal spending for the civil- Citing a study of grants for scien-- . Roddy- . " . or a.a lawyer , Littlewood said Sept.. , 19.. tific ati , Science Centerr . . ian research and development for research from the NationalN nal f' have ¬ " These rewards to be articu- Despite his. expatriate status , West Germany and Japan is grow- Science Foundation , 42 percent lated and. made clear in ways that Littlewood has devoted a great ing enormously , whereas the of grant proposals rated excellent ' ' people in elementary school can deal of his lecture to the develop- Unites States, while still ahead of in 1980 actually received money, " . informs Greeks . " Video begin to understand. - . while . ' ment of home-bred scientists. other countries such as the United only 20 percent do now * , " , a. . "' Once. the rewards are clear , Demographically' , by the year Kingdom and France , has rere--¬ Littlewood's' lecture at MU was will flock the sciences ," he . kids to , - 2010 , only 15 percent of our mained moreor less behind Japan sponsored by the Physics that most Greek organizations added.. ' " ' - - BY RICH SCHULTZ work force will be made up of and West Germany! , Littlewood Department , MU's s - - stress leadership , community - v ¬ ' . scholar ser Littlewood proposed two - ' Snapper Correspondent solu- white males.. This is our tradition said.. dence program and the American vice, character-building- , honesty tions to amend the shortages ini al source for scientists ," he said.. He considered government in- Institute of Physics. Visiting and loyalty as desirable qualities science and engineering. . One is to . "'' and Scientist Program.. A Pledge Rights Program was , The rest of the work force will vestment in military research in their members. . , presented Sept.. 24, at 8:45: in the Student Memorial Center's' All-- Keim , also a Greek charter ' " ll'iY Purpose Room by Student Affairs member, discussed the "rhetoric tip' ' New York's Cuomo has bright future and - Council. . and the reality of Greek life.." problems! , " the narrator would SpeakerAllTom Hipple , a Millers- Greek charters express ideals of BY BILLY HOUSE . conclude in Stone's' adver- ville University senior, related his brotherhood and sisterhood , while Gannett News Service - and - tisement. . "He's" ' solved none of real-life experiences with alcohol actions of fraternities sorori " " and drug abuse.. Because a ties are at times in conflict with ALBANY , N.Y.. . The them. of . - those ideals , added Keim.. - , drug-related attempted suicide , he apparent disintegration of his But that commercial , or any ' opponent's' campaign leaves other, will not be comingco ng from was permanently blinded.. Keim aimed his address at Hipple stressed the adverse inin-- pledges.. Pledges should realize . New York Gov:. Mario the financially strapped Rinfret fluence drugs can have on ' what it means to pledgepI dge oneself, .. r Cuomo , a potential 1992 Demo- , campaign , said state Assembly- one's life.. He pointed he stressed.. - cratic , man John Faso , who quit Wed- out that college He added that be presidential , candidate poised for a smashingsm shing re-election- nesday as Rinfret's' campaign students are too compliant with. havior of pledges and members . ' " ' . the presence of drugs on campus. . should reflect Greek ideals and victory.. , manager.. ' Polls show He said the problems of alcohol stress the universality of human- Cuomo's sunny future " restlessness among < and drug abuse the ity.. contrasts sharply with the , ;NewNew York voters about the are same as ' y . > they were six years ago when he A professorr at Oregon State F glqfimlyglo m1y forecasts faced by other economyQn my, taxes , crime and the ' . : discovereddis , over d . . The drinking University, KeimKe m believes trialtl :0general. . them at , incumbentsin I 1beI ts nation'y . , , TI ree .0general direction state ' nationwidele Three of , *' ' - , . ' ( ' : :;; - - 'gamgamess played and the way drugs college administrators and Greek ;: ; . governors - , :,;:g . ;,:. : Faso :said.they. they Democraticpeinocrati.goveriidrspe octati . .govei' ri from wernment but- said " ' , ; , , . . , . ' , ' , are used may1y be new, but the organizations should. act as : .Nprlheaste0Northeastern.states , :. , show that votersjio... not ,, . ll.states. facing higher also Faso ' ' , connectbut problem with compliance with partners.. They should work taxes and'spendingand spending cuts didn't their problems to :but drugs on campus still exists , together to bring fraternities and - - Cuomo , '. even seek re-election Mass- - " " ' ' Hipple stressed.. . sororities closer to the ideals of ' achusetts's' Michael Dukakis , "That's' s because he's got " lcohol is the number one brotherhood and sisterhood Connecticut's' William O'Neil' and : somebody to blame for Alcohol set ":' " killer among men and women 18 forth by their charters , he said.. Vermont's' Madeleine Kunin.. everything ," Faso said.. "It's' . " . ' to 24, said Will Keim , in a Hazing was also discussed in New , , , either George Bush's fault , or In York howeverr " - - " " ' ' video, "Demythologizing the Ani the video.. The anti-hazing law, ; Cuomo's GaPchallengerGOP , challenger Pierre Ronald Reagan's , or the result of " - mal House ," which followed Act-175- , prohibits hazing by any Rinfret decided this week to shut the Middle East crisis , or the ' Hippies' speech.. individual or student organization . down his- campaign unlessunl ss he .stock. market crash , or the S&L& In the video , Keim reviewed Briefly defined, hazing is any gets more financial and moral bailout , or Social Security.." . Greek values and how Greek brutality..or. . . forced physical ac- ' support, . But gaffe-prone- Rinfret has ;af ) . i members should be more aware of tivity which could adversely affect ' ft , " ' ' " .' "It's not that Cuomo's stubbed his toe on the campaign 7-i- : ''Rr r r" , these values.. , the physical or mental health and unbeatable, "' bemoaned - trail so many - ' ' ;' - / Re times most " is - . ;'w' 'aa , - "There no room in the Greek safety of the individuals , accor publican consultant Roger Stone.. - recently by calling Housing "' . -rwily" " ' system for dead weight , he said.. ding to Act 175. { yYvX ' " ; . . . ..lr , tea "It's largely. the fact that no one Secretary Jack Kemp a "Cuomo . lrv " " Nationally acclaimed Keim Keim said that pledges should , has exploited his weaknesses. . lackey" thatt at many Republicans ,I - talked about the behavior and atti- simply say "no"" " to hazers because i Stone envisioned anti-Cuomo- do not take him seriously , said . tudes of Greeks.. He pointed out it is against the law.. i 1 . commercials that would Suffolk County . GOP Chairman ------J emphasize that New York is John Cochrane.- . i yv entering ; ' ' 5 " ; a recession its high William Cunningham , a .; taxes are reducing business Cuomo campaign aide , had little Millersville ranks as r ; K profits its credit rating is the sympathy for the plight of New r - ' " ' third-worst in the country ; its York's Republicans . "There's' an Mranks' f largest city is under a siege of old Irish toast : Confusion' to the 'best value' money photo by Heidi . Miller , staff photographer for i Snapper L , . ' " - crime and illegal drugs. and enemy , Cunningham said.. ! . Percussionists in the Millersvllle University - Marching. Band Millersville University ranked c - violence @ MU has recently been swamped w threaten to paralyze its @Copyright 1990 , USA 'took advantage of the crisp fall weather to hone their chopsc ops forfo ' forty-second- nationwide among court system.. "Mario" Cuomo has TODAY Apple College - by perspective students who wish r next home game.. / Infor , offering . the had eight years to solve these mationTODAYNetwork public universities the to "get" more for their money.. " , " " ' "best education for the buck , There have been between 7,000, according to a recent survey by and 8,000, applicants each yyearar to Money magazine. . . ! fill the 1,300, slots alloted for - MU was the only institution in Off-campus crime gets college attentionn. incoming freshmenn.. . - the Lancaster area mentioned on , Money's' t - - TThee study taken from , provide prospective students with Administrators . He says issue- the list.. In addition , it was one of " ' the students , tot become a big issue.. Best College s' BY DENISE KALETTE "Guide to America's statistics or warnings about is whether schools are "creating" a I've' been warning people that this only the seven public institutions ;" much ea t - . Buys estimated how eachh Gannett News Service . crimes " ' across Pennsylvania listed ' t off campus, even in places reasonable risk of harm" . by not is something colleges need 'toto to be on 17 , i 'instution might cost based where large numbers of students warning of dangers . address.. " ' with such an honor.. - ; ' If they don't they could measures of academic perform Universities , which traditional- l , ¬ liveve or congregate. . Michael Clay Smith, professor face whopping legal settlementssettle ents, In addition seven state institu- ance and then, compared the esti-¬ : dissociate themselves from tions made the ly At least eight states, including of criminal justice at the he says.. , list of the private mated costs with the actual costs.. crimes , off campus , may have a Florida , require state' schools to University of Southern Missis- Informed students can take instutions.. ' ' ' " t - to warn students ofof'crimescrimes ; sippi , " " ' Parents prospective duty rep'oreport' campusca pus crime;, but'thosebut those says a landmark"landmark"19841984 precautions , says Jerrold Witsil , and students Analytical factors considered in - _ occurring beyond theirth ir borders , laws do not - California Supreme Court have suddenly noticed the value t ' . ' target off-campus case director of public safety at the study included the graduation - - ' < says topa top campus lawyer.. crime.. established that colleges have a Princeton University.. Most of a quality education , and have rate of the institution , the SAT a " - | That might come as surprise , "You simply cannot ignore the duty to warn of on-campus- Princeton students live on recently considered state universi scores and class rank of incoming - & , to ._many. . admini trators and - " .d . " ' ' ties over private institutions - , - t-to- administrators off campus issue , says Edward .dangersngers "I've been expecting campus , but Witsil says the be freshmen the student-faculty ratio campus. . police.. Few universities . , this off-campus- housing , cause of the rising cost of -¬ in the , and the Lynch Jr general counsel for the issue campus. was shaken by the edu classroom number - off ' ¬ all , routinely report on-campus International , Association of particularly at institutions that off-campus- murder of an elderly cation MU President Joseph of books in the institution's lib- , they almost never ' < Caputo said.. . crimes and Campus Law EnforcementEn.for. ment don't have adequate housingh ? si g for woman during the late 1980s. . rary. I...... q. ' . Saint Louis University's , < " TYPING : . NewBBSI ' AcademicAc de lc Year In MadridMad ''d I . : 1 - i : My/ home.. Will pick-up- , ; COMPLETE CURRICULUM : English , RealtimePalChat!! and deliver.. _ , Liberal , & V , Spanish Arts Business " E , : MaId : . , Administration , TESOL, Sciences , 293-902325 -.9023 8987962.. " Hispanic ...... a . HlspanlcstudlesStudies , , . 5. train. . * " . , . 26, 199O u..u..f..0. , Wed Sept SLUlnSLU In MadridrldlsB"emb"rOIAAlEOEIs a "member: " of AA/EOE/ ed ' . ' 0 . ; . ; 1'1' . . i . Gordinier'GordiinG rd i er Dining® i r8 i rltg HallH GraduGraduateecoCoursesesoflo/eddoffered duringng . " - Session/ : Summer Session 44OO® ® - 7e7:30-: 30 p-. m - pmP . Apply NOW for Spring , Summer and Fall - In . More than 1,000, , students the ProgramProg m. i t s.P-y. [ , Contact : sr , ' , In . III Saint Louis University Madrid , ' Louis University'' r . I Saint ! 1. " , i I I ). L ' ' . E. Murlllo , , 4Jr " ( " J 5 5 . Bravo 368 Study AbroadAbr ad Coordinator , . HOT. HEREHER . Irl 4. IT' , I . IT' ! I. . . ITS ITS . I . e ' . Ill' . .III.I4"I, + I ' Edfficlo.GonzagaEdiflclo . Gonzaga , Planta Baja Admissions Office II .qty i ' Uir . III" I " ! I B F 5 P Y A Z N E.. t.t r.jliilll'tp' THE_ BEST 0OF SPY MAGAZINEMAG Madrid 28015 Spain 221 North Grand Blvd. IU : - TelTT41:593.3783l 593-3783 .. Louis , MO 63103 ( EVERY St ,<" ._... Toll-! tel : - -? - & WEEKWE EK. I I I I I I I I IffiBiP I I I I I I I I I I r 1- : PAGE 6 THE SNAPPER SEPTEMBER 26199026 ,. 199Q : Banned books . ; : . . : : ; ' . ; . ! / : ' ' h ' . , . : "College' BriefsBriefs. University Store celebrates to read ' ; " . right . : : ; : . . : c , ; : ' ' ' . ' : ; : . . . - i : : . . ., .. , ' . , 1.. ' . ; > ' fromfrontpagepage : . ; . . ' , ' . < " ' . " < . i' ? . : . ,' : ' . . ' ' ., ' & & . , . , , , . " . or banned books until oBsQBSCMmENln' TRITRIAL BEG115.BE&bfSt' challenged " * : .{ < Jirector : $'C irtem . T' " Dennis BarrieBa rle,.4iiect94u ctor"OfCinofCntcitcfCmcitmatft uatiComempotatyi Contemporary AArts tenterenter, Sept.. 29.. : ' : . . goes9ftS'oon , ? ;'Mottdaynd obscenity* tY * #; ;. ' hiS;is is ; ' ¬ ' g , dnriatritrial$rIalMindaytoi. .! istbiga1tery.,hi gallery IWs theOrst'the rst Rainey said individuals , gov- ' iJ \ °% lu ! -. ' , -- ; ' " ic . ; - ;,'t'tideme agallgalleryhashasbeenbeen ..1indicted ;onon'obscenityabsceftUb chargeschar . BariieJand: ernments and public high schools - . iadtelm nitt ' - < ' < ' myFS tr'S, 7t+ K"N'", ' +yiY { d'' ' , '.' .' ; ' < , z JJ .!P ''MMt'14NkcM,3P'-- : 'cha rge pvitlxitb , it J:11 thegafery: gaUcry ar harg :. milderft\\ atxorsOts ; pandedng'obspan Ienng ob \byty + t have challenged to ban such . ° ' ° : . I : re G3 fY ; ' , and illegalg use!1 of a minot Inn nuditt.uijity. dit ; ted material chai'gesch tge' books as the Holy Bible and t'' e r1'91 ? . : ,ft arieuted : The . ; < stemm from:phdtogr'phsbytphotograbbs.ot. phs.bYJhby * fatere .; " ' ' ': ' ' ' , ..s nip hsJ RobertR bett Mapplelhorpe . Websters their ''k'ii . - ; * " >.. ' " r' Dictionary from ' . pi:7arnM: t " , ; > " , . " . J . ; f ' ?; ' : : , ; ' , ' v. ;,' . , , r, ,, < . . , : , . : ' " ' ' . : :, ;;. . : : . ; < > ' ) F . : ; . . '. . ." , : " > > - - h' } . \ /' - shelvesshe ves ; ' ; ' - . " : : ' : ' , : : ; : ' : ; , : < ', : : ' : " . : > . >SCHO ..M. aIS'' *: s ) ;* ; , "' rnGRHIGIGBl,SCHOOL.L :MAWTHTRiISKJWS KEY * These challengers believe they " ; : . - . . " ' ' woo.taketafee fc,. 'scfeo l-a1A.J.sJgefeca , nd'geom' ansetryW sucC e.Q -.. ) Mfoioritfet. who talihigh 's ®l ' and eo tetry succeed. ia. . are protecting themselves , their - ' ' . : % - h ' '' : - s- '< I-.i collegecoUeotteg .atthsatt'-'tlthee' stejrateaasameS1 n tirateratei-;as whitestwhitwMtes ,says$$&$>r:aCpla:CollegeCo1te| g 'J1Board stiffstudyrmat''t; It families and. communities from / nhti ; : " s1ioW -. , ' . - . w-i ticopie) sts ptitswh, take ma& courseso dd (oSt shows la 1c miiit, whoM basic & < ises, dd almost immoral ideas and are attempting low ''' sfcutsdenlswha . ' . . :' '' ; * : ( ' ' ' ; ' ' , asasW, wUege , sJbeytaea&elr & afHtientpeersaTlttentffhi its, Expertslaxperts'saysayythetftd: study; , :. aswellwellnm'toltininccollegeasthetrtncit]. , E' rofs ths) , preserve low> v to their system of : " ' 3fYe t' : SJiows"the'i ! fcdy ; , ;:georne aafg" ; appearsa Ise ,81 . g , tef e geotnetfy, k . . . afterar"briLiafter, algeM i shows the taken. . kappcais.u " . , jto t < : " , . , . . , bhIn. yapp . , " , , , , , " .. . values, she said.. ' ' "its' ." ' ' 'Yv"' . . '° ' µ 'p"' ( " "M1 :'* * : < most Curriculums > ' ' * * % . M.jJE . " * * ' . * WKA ** + * +A ± rti Wt M.. . * . . . * 1 . - * FvA t1 . . rSH ? 4T . toUgl* . ; n r* ': ri.lfnMtu.w.AM A A.-KS- * rk * }< MU ,tougher; y; s-itz. 1.thi-,;; ;1.991"e.ditio.n. t ? t sophomore cutktac& impartedd oilo theIt . 91ditiopoftrJj.. 'oN Q ; ' ; ' . ; * ; , - v - - - - . Frorid > - * ,. , - & - .Fmner.sAlliiaA * * *> * * '* * MWlW-WV-**anaci* ? wj-V >**iVWHv, * * - * * dmd. **MV* bUVUkThi a&westT * * *i * !vh+*V R* ckies//V- VW* ? , -ftltM. f , ; ietsFlondaandareaswestOfthe/ _ _ _ jj BiagB frl M , . gy : . _ _ _ . _ M < > > aM M cPr s j8.jmffiM - JIM ajm a M aj ilM a MM M MiMM fr M fr ' ' ' ' " ' j-j Snapper photo by Dean Radraovsky , - sfeotthl) ' , i1 c 1 are SnapperphaobyDean RadinovskyPbotographyEditorPhotography Editor Ife ....wwarm a. : st areas::saculdsh&uMloQl& ( Ok waur'ri t a. y vbutl ii(ppeopleplentla coastal ssh u1Hlook' ' In University In the . Ginsberg, . Steinbeck , :- ' : '; & ' > - book Rainey cited as a The most recent display the banned past . outo t forf9 J5 ; ; § :.* , when.ea. :therer: isiH' closestapproaclrtlo'ses' st*:appmach1 One 'Je? c-2 )IP5.99. n 'f! :bethe , l'! P of , 219 $ - . . p . . - -1 . : : . ' . . - ( few ; ' , . ; . , ' and are a . ; j" .J-\\ been Rushdie just : : ' . ' " . who have Shakespeare ( 1:97S.- . . ; . ' " ' ' classic which has been banned Store lists books and authors , . . th ) , o Barlli'SUlce 975.' : ' ' ' .' .' " : . : - J1WnrtoEarth 'snwe ; ' ' < " < - - - , " ' . . - ; ' ; : : . : ' ' : " . : ' ' , , , . , . :" ' ,' : ' . wnat DOOKS ,: : . : : , . > , : , : : : . !v"" : , : : : : < , , . . ' 1500's's and to as individual to decide ,: : . ,: <.: , \ :, , y ;, . " from a school was J.D. Salinger's continues be just Ft"'Y' , , : < - - The Huckleberry J r' ' . Adventures of - / . " ' > \ NASD"SUNDAY : ( . ' : . : "J one : : ; , . are in poor taste , and no one : " : IB " ; . . . : . , , The Catcher in the Rye , which " " strong today. . ,O''CONNORO'CONNOIi "SVBP; OIENAErfsuND .Y. . ' : > , Finn for its "racial slurs , Rainey , . . . ' ° - : ' ' ' ' ! * was banned from a high school Last February , Salman Rush should be able to make that , SevernlhundredSeveralSeveriirhl&ndr4&1i f - ' ic 'i ld AIDS$ . activistsCtiVi tS cheered SundayBunda said.. " if $ sad cnvists ' " : pro : ' The Satanic Verses, decision for them, she added.. when : & d-O- ' : ' in . Annistone , Alabama die's book , h the lawyer s lvisfev secused-ofofddisdlsiupdugtiriga'Jmstbsg a'inasaa masj faptaped a, library > " - \ #( lor a l Huckleberry Finn is "a per . ' : * ' " ¬ The University urges . ; * ! } - because it was considered "unac- " was not only banned in parts of Store copy : of csubfksnzUofsu' to CardsialJoinJo1fin 'O'Connorfront'(O')'Connoto&aors& r frontfrnf'dOOr( door in, . ennial target for censors , Rainey ' at : ' ' { > ". the world , but the author was students to view the display of New Y: , r.me. men and'tbret1 e Wdmeawsvomengoon, >. n : ceptable and obscene" . ' YorkrkFoFour. iandaitd' threei i nggo:on trial Mondayfor said. / ' ' : ' go into , Rainey challenged and banned books and , ng, ; rrly'r ( << : : In addition , John Steinbeck's forced to hiding tieSpas d s i4 tl tanfi:and teisttn8dst1ntf:armst to a December ',. ' ' ' * . : " , "f" ' _ ...... ' . . , ' .4 ' ' " - - \ " : . rdt ' " t ' . , said is ¬ said.. become involved. T-shirts dis 1/\09/ "IU, ' fu ,' . P' ' + S Cato ' . . also Rainey her point . disturbance att WA aL , ' Mice and Men was empha- 7 V 'ba. . , Patrfek's, ' , ', : - . . 4 Of " , . , . . " , , : , . t' ; . " " ' , . " . " ; ' . " the , banned . : , , : ; , ' . : . . , .. , : , " . , in sized by a incident Although this type of behavior playing slogan "I read ' " " . removed from a high school recent at . ' - h ' " / ' : : ' ", will - ' ; : : . Alabama because the book con- Freeport High School , DeFuniak usually does not stifle a writer's books" be on sale through ItoHOUHQR A&JtESf& E0 FFOER OTE1Eil'u R DEATHS) : .' , ' , $ : . ' ': ' ; : - ; . ' tained "profane" use of God's' Springs , Florida , where Stein- creativity or originality, it does out National Banned Books 4PpAppalachianAppalatianTrailI :Trail1; ai:1iaifeershiketsand! e 's.,1tnd'offici.a1ssa, Md officials%:, saidd theywere, ' .relieved. , - ( . . " ' restrict a ' t <> , Week.. . ) ' !"' ;" . reader's right to, read S . name.. beck's Nine Stories was removed , Sundayd y afafterer thearlesi . offpavIdDat) ; ."Ca"fey"HornaSeyey" HoriH m inIB: thel staying\ of:a "- " - accordingaccord ng to MU sophomore "The best for students to ihe'-l7emtsyliraliiaAg& -- - ' { ; , from a writing class because one way couple on diethe"PFeaamylvsma-lgg of. the tiptr il.Hmn. ,HomMom , 38.remamed38, iemremainedned la . '- Other books found the language in a Laura Hartzell. . . help promote their freedom to read custody without balj;* ;Jfe--. wasw mHaipet:Harpers' .J&try& :ry , '' , Va.. , recently challenged parent , withoutbaiI- 3arrestedeste4iHin s ; , . . , .fe W " : H' . . . ' , , + < . . .. 'o " .. wW.A. ::4 1.. .."': ' ' .' ' ; . _..' < , ' . ' -' - _ . . ' ' ' ' . , "Everyone has the is not only read the banned ' . _ ..... , . V . . ' - . , , . right to A..Mj' ; " include The Grapes Wrath , particular story offensive. to .anandd..h a . witb banga'fugnivUi from3usdce'.uw.u'' ce < v of .Q..wUu " . " ; : v , ',' ' ; . : ' . . ' ' ' . . , ' : < . " ; " " , " , : : - : : . , : : , " choose what they should read , books , but to discuss them also , . : " ' ' . , : ' . , ; . ; , because of its vulgar words , Allen Rainey said the battle to ban . " ' > >; : r< . , ) , ; ' " > ; ' ' , . " -t :. :v'' " F ' ' "LAIJNCICALLED f , ; , . added.. ; : , < ; Ginsberg's Collected Poetry and books began as early as the Hartzell said. "It is up to the Rainey TITAN LA'UNCIf.CALLD( OFFt: ' ' ' < ' ! " , : . " '- . . Air UndisclosedUn4iSc1 sedftechnicalct al problemsnrQ ms MtetJ. dtett ir.Force"s. Forces' scheduled , ' ' ' " ' ' ' ° .. ' . + , ,' : : 1 < ' :' ' ' j _ ' ' n l1..ofof theh 'TittTitan) 4.took'et"Witl, .jsksket wM 'j st mhmteVIeft's left'irI.: mli the / . lawn tlf.the 1itas"4xockef4 dust 5 minut left . ' - . : ' :coimtdownooui oWn.: .Setretlut.lattnchnn 1i* . ,, 'F1Fla.. had . _ , TheseThe secret laaacl from CCapee Caaaveralw.v ral, ;, hadlieenbeen , Hauck ' ; < : ' , 'sScheduledh forhofor%shshordyl11ly aleftetU*, midnbtranald) dniMt1mthvigBt m&& ®caHeaica offabtiut'31/2offaboutab ut33 1/2/ " w - ' < ' ' ' ' < . rr & ' . not . laterlat * . was'notwas:not If asew' launch d wa&& . :' . hourshourSlaier kwasIt known a'tleew . set " datwas should effect , - students " . , strike , Pending ; < ' : ' : . , . : -: ' ' : ' ' . " ' ' ' ' - ' . : . ' ' , : ' . ; ; : ,. . ' . ' : , , > ' .: : . , ., to - " fromfrompagepage 1.. percent yes vote authorize Christmas break to work with.; very low turn-around rate at : : ' ' : GREEN " TIV ' ; ' . : ; . . ri f ENPEAAC STS' ARElSTEDtREST D; , > . . APSCUF mean Millersville. rs . GREEHFBACIE"AACIThSTS . to strike as far as Certainly may The teachersteach would. ' ' . there be some ' . ' '- , , overoyez. *IthtiuDi1 g ( eS < : With bring the best out of the situation.. negotiations ? . delays not want to bee gone that. long.. The'battleThe .battMttle jsiaiag the ocean floorfl"escalatedescalatedala i, a'a in the schedule a strike " if " ' ' ' . , ; , " ' ' , : Vist ; :'r''eseeard; ship ; ,: Snapper : Will the dorms Hauck : Actually , the high go , Snapper: Dr.. CaputoCap tof;, does 'GrGreenp ceactivist:1Iainingeac .herseJftovtberself to a 'i s bff th.wth. ' does into effect but we can * ' ' " . ' ' : > : 1 close there is a strike ? percentage yes vote to authorize University have any Oregon coastrtastt'TlrteCQ) ; } ( 8 GuaWd acmsted® JKafltanaDeSnoyersDeseoy cs; and 12'12 if work it out even in the event of a the t14t O . . Cc : ' : No.. university other activists ,'seizingtb' seizings mng.three"small, three .small Inflatable bboats) ts.ant\.and, a diving ;, Caputo The APSCUF to declare a strike may strike to finish the semester. Not contingent plans in case of a . " \ 5 " , ' : : 1 - :- : v .: Tfe ,' 143-fooif-fQot": sM>> 1O -coada-ciEliigg.. v rn- , has every intention of providing be an excellent deterrent to a strike ending the a strike ? vessel 143 shipP \ ( , j ' ' ' SEPTEMBER26.1990;EPTEMBER 26.26 . 1990 ' ; THE SNAPPER PAGE 7 , s College crime statistics rising : a " ' . . . .' . . , ' . . : Gainesville murders spark concern ' 4 - . 1 " ( )- the recent murders Christa Leigh Hoyt, a Santa Fe it's' a safe place , noted Jeanne ' J , . - Morrow , housing directordirec or at the " if CPSfive ,: college students within student at her apartment. , t"ttn . " nreehree.days. days in Gainesville , Fla.. , The--. next day, Aug.. 28 ,. Santa Fe UniversityUniversity of Illinois at J .: The - ¬ .vere.unusualVere 'unusualusuaI , crime watchers say student Tracey Inez Paules , 23 , Champaign-Urbana , where a stustu-- . 4 - ;( ' - . - nurderjs, a more common crime. . and her roommate , UF senior dent was murdered in her off ' , > ' - r .I. . RicardQ da . , 23 , campus apartment in . n. . 'Tobo , n . campuses . nationwide than Manuel Toboada23; ' . , . . Montana State , Ball State , St.. post . were stabbed to death. . people think , found' mid ' - . Hard statistics are hard to find, The brutality and timing of the John's , Louisiana State , North " "utut crime observers say theyve' . killings prompted widespread eastern , Wesleyan and Oklahoma ' ;cen surprised. student panic on the UF campus.. State universities , the University teen by the results of , : ' , :' for of California Berkeley , 'i : everal recent studies . the prob-- Many apparenapparentlyy left home just at and of {' ° A ° ' , , 'droy ° - . . ; ' "'' . : , , S'.ek. ' 1.. ' , $ . u tmjjm:m.. The, rate of victimization is as classes were starting.. Some. Ithaca Stephens Hunter and . 'r .h ; ' " . ,. Carroll , , T iigher. . than anyone , stayed hheld.large slumber colleges among others J had known who 7N ''r . ' , : . S protection . Still othersoth rs have been the scenes of violent en x jaysays Jan .. parties for J Sherillerill. ofof.thethe Campus " .ffolence. Prevention Center, basedbas d bought weapons . crimes recently.. . / . 't'Maryland's1 ' Towson State Uni-- They could find weapons Another reason students may be ; ' . ' jersity; ' . - ' advertised in the Inde¬ shocked to hear of violent crimes , . . readily - ! . on their campuses is that schools Though peoplepeople.havehave not been pendent Florida AlligatorAlliga or, the ' . ' themselves mislead them , Morrow studying the phenomenonphenom non for campus paper , which suddenly . I . . :. longsome. ongng, , some statistics seem to found itself with an influx of ads added - . " is ( show. " murders for mace, teargastear gas, and stun guns, "It constantly reinforced to increase"an in IVJIIIersviUemersvme students were not the only ones rodent populationpopu ation was out in full force last :-. Alligator students) what a friendly , warm fndd other violent crime at colleges said an advertising - ' " enjoying summer's' last breath.. Millersvilie's! ' week.. See'GertiSee Gerti for details on p.. 11.11 . icross the countrcountry, added Clarinda representative who didnt' want environment the campus is, she... Raymond , Sherill's' colleague at her name used.. said.. . . ' - ' . , - - campus . - Students , moreover , may not Fowson-JbwsonF wson . . Some campus leaders never f ' - Raymond said the murderers are theless saidUFsaid UP. is a relatively safe know about campus crimes be Strike delays classes at Temple ' ' ' Qften " . - , cause their campus newspapers $ftenten other . guess we place.. . . students . ' - ' - " ' . (CPS-Students) at Temple a union to present their grievances Temple professors last went on cannototherrule out. that Ithe Florida "I think , security, on campus is don't report themthe University in Philadelphia and at to the administration. . strike in 1986.. Students , tired of murders '"' said MichaelBrowneMichael Browne, Campuses ,; worried about the ', . " were committed by a incredible; ' s ' . ' ' two othercolleges found most of During the past few school waiting for classes to beginb gin , went Sjtudenttudentr',' Raymond said. UF's' . : student& body , president.. school's image and protecting . their classes canceled when they years , teaching assistants at the home during the 19-day- - t . 1 " ." . victims'' privacy, often refuse to inter On Sept. , police arrested "Campus crime. hasha been down. refuse ' . . . were caught in the middle of labor universities of PennsylvaniaPenns lvania , ruption, effectively shutting down edwardward Lewis Humphrey , 18, a reveal campus crimes to reporters.. ? . at Missouri battles between their teachers and California-Berkeley- , Wisconsin , the campus.. University of FloridaUFFlorida . (UF) fresh-- Multiple slayings, are rare at Editors Southwest ,: - their administrators. . UUtahtab and Minnesota , as well as at At Bridgeport , striking ¬- nan1an , . colleges.. The most notanotablele - State;, West Virginia , Oakland and ' ' prof pian; for questioning in the case. . The. in ' Professors at Temple , along State , and essors , ¬ ;- universities Michigan Cornell secretaries and mainten- Police added . have stance occurred in December , Southern' Arkansas might ' o ' : with Union County Community PurduePurdue'universitiesuniversities have tried to ance workers , protesting pay cuts othersuspectsotherer ,suspects in the off-campus- 1989? , when a'gunmana killed 14 have sued during the past year to College in New Jersey and the form unions to try to improve brought on by budget problems , . ' . . force administrators to give them urders..of three UF and two . female students and wounded Santa University Bridgeport in ¬ pay, benefits and working Sept.. . . 133 a; - information about crime in theirthe r of Conn- their vowed 4 to shut down the Santa Fe Community College .another people. at .the Univer-- . " . ecticut , all spent the first week of conditions. . university.. . . . $tudents.. sity of Montreal. . . . communities. students September " - - i ' were . on strike, delaying the "The back-to-school periodp riod is Officials resolved to keep IWoPwc! days before, police arrested Some. 1,990, violent crimes were Whatever the reasons for the ' start of classes.. ( strikes) occur ," said Steven$teven Michael Bates , 30, as a reported onon'campusescampuses in 1988 , the false sense of security , students when most campus doors open by hiring " At , , . Temple the few classes held Perry Robinson director of the replacements , and bringing in Suspect , in the murders.. While' most recent FBI census of crime often inadvertently contribute to s . - - sincence the Sept. 4 start of school college division of the Washing administrators and other searching his room Sept.. 15;, in America found. While the FBI the campus crime rate by leaving staff were taught by graduate students. . ton , D.C.-based. .- American ¬ qualified to teach.. , . Feder policeolice found numerous personal report.isreport is often misleading , the doors unlocked or taking ill-- - " " . Many of those classes, however, ation of Teachers (AFT), one ofo ' have every intention . ' ,-, ( We to writings on Satanisni'Satanism.along. along with number probably did not rep advised nighttime walks around ' were expected to be canceled three major teacher's' unions.. remain fully operational ," UB knives , 'aa hangman's' resent all the violent crimes campus alone. several and. - soon . sdon , as teaching assistants - Temple offered the teachers 5 said.. noose in Bates'' apartment. . because colleges were not "It's" ' important to make students threat President Janet Greenwood . - I ' : ened to mount a two-day walkout percent wage hikes for each of the Meanwhile , the 10,000, students PolicePo c found the bodies of, 17- , required to report them.. realize that propping open a door ' " in support of the professors. next two years , but members of Union County Community -: at ear"old-" ChristinaPowell, and her In January , 1990 , Raymond's' could endanger other students , ¬ ' ¬ The teaching assistants , who the Temple Association of Uni- College found many of their , - - group, rreleased a survey showing Raymond said , adding administra- oldroommate Sonja . receive a $6,500$ , annual , . ' ' ' . ' stipend versity Professionals the local classes canceled Sept. 5 when Larsonson, in' their apartment .Aug.. . thatmat 36.percent36 . percent of the nation's tors also are often lax about . ' , .. no health benefits for working chapter the AFT , want bigger professors and administrators . and of . , . . had been victims preventing crime.. ' 26.6. Both were18UF freshmen studentt of . ' ' " 20 hours each week , want to form raises.. couldn't settle on a new contract. . ' . . fJoth were partially nude, and hahad violent crimes.. Yet students "Schools must realize that more. . ' . been stabbed. . typically don't' think of their importantimpo t than hiring Dr.. Wonder- 1 : Eight hours later police found campuses as. dangerous. . . ful is to provide as safe a campus " ' " . naturally a possible, he added.. Professors speak .. ; must s , body , They want to good the(he stabbed decapitated of , believe English - - . - . , . . . ' ...... ' . . . . ' : ' . . : : . . . . . " . . : , . , ( )- to student well enough to be understood by maintained Sabol , who said , ' " . ' complaints students. . "numerous"" . that they their Fumo's office got . - . sometimes " ' , . " . . . CPS - - , ' haveave' troublet uble understanding Some schools Syracuse, Tem complaints from students having . " '; . . /oreignreig1.\"bprn"bprn college : , ple and Stanford universities , trouble with instructors in com- instructors. . '. .\ , . . / > " ' - ) ; - . . " . : ' " ' ' PgnnsylvariiaR nnsylyani.ahasg yl"ai !. , has .1becomec me the among others hold courses to plex courses like the. sciences . J ! ? " : ' " ' . ; : : , ; : : " ; ; . . ' 'j' . mo'sVrecgotrecentJ1.t1 t' ' 1 assis . " most r , ,gtattatetQaf \ to, pas. _§, ;a . help graduate teaching assistantsants Under the newPennsylvania . . . law . - ' . ; , . " . . . : . . : ,. .. . : . . . ' ' ' . ! - . , '; - ...... '_'i' r . { .- . . . . ! _ ' . . , . : . . ' . - ii . ; . . . ? : - . . . %. . ; < .1 . , . : ' - fauiririg'thkng campus - with their English. law, schools.nowschools now have to certify ' ?. ' J ' : .r-to' " " ''fmui t all instruct . ' . illr " " : " -fiari. ; : e- , . : . with . r- : . ' , { ! ' . " , - . , . . ) , - - ¬ 1 : : j . . . ; : : - 1 . .. . ; ' . : ; ; . ; , .iT .l .prs.be.qrs . , - .tQ'the . ' , . , : : . uentan-English.-: complaints .to Department . f' . , , . , : . : . Auen Student about state - ) , . j inEnglish of Edu HQti- . . Ot hav . : , : .JH. : i ; the.state . . , " ' '", s ' _ . Thi . is ( their are 'J all ing understanding cation that instuctors m. . this law not the first of its trouble their kind) around: , but I won't' give the instructors began spreading about fluent in English...... , .. - . 71',''I"" impressionimpress o that such laws are 10 yyearsars ago , when foreign-born- , ...... , , - . ' . : ' . . . .NOI- plentiful.-They're. , The . . plentiful re very very people began to for a grad students themselves > . 1OI account . . ' 1hey' D . ' ' "' . . . students . , ;, . - seem to new sparse , , do not mind the , sparsepar /'r..si\.id" -said. . \. Jerry. Sabol growing percentage of the grad " / . " . . spokesman; for Sen.. Vincent U.S.. . . regulations. "I think T.A.S should , . state uate students. on campuses. Fumo, the bill.. , - speak good English ," Jun Mie , a ' Fump who sponsored Schools of course, often emp YOUR Missouri , Illinois , Ohio , loy grad students to teach lower-- Chinese teaching assistant at the Florida, North Dakota , Texas and level courses and lead discussion University of Pittsburgh's' math " Oklahoma also have laws rere--¬ groups. department. . "All students should ' ' , quiring campus instructors to The" loser in the whole thing is understand (the coursework ) " " . " prove that they can.speakcan speak. English the (undergraduate ) student , completely. ,,5.. .' , , .: : , " : . '+ ' ' - . that ; ' Beware..TheBeware. .me NOIO, that bizarre College ' students still hard , work . character that yuks pizzas is out there ' ' . . Nay 'c. - somewhere pn campusc He could be - ( )- olIege who on Sept. 1 released his and most the political rhetoric M0-0- CPS students today of disguised as anyone. . A.A major jock.. . . ¬ , - - work justju t as hard as their prede survey of some 2,400 under- justifying cutting federal funding Psych teach :. BowHead : Even your big CPS - ' ' ' ' ' ' -- . likelylik ly 30 , graduate students at 74 campuses colleges has based on the rivalsmascot But most , he's .' r ce , - :' cessors of or 40 years ago a of colleges been ' N i- ' - ' ' hanging out. searching torpizzafor pizza 'cause j University California at Los spanning the years 1983-86. . notion that today's students don't ' of likes to trash 'em out make the . he trash'em out- ', Angeles stustudyy claims. . Students rated the frequency and work as hard or know as much as crust soggy, splatter sauce all/ around} N ' ; ' their involvement 142 . . quality of in their predecessors. , The assertion seems wrong. to disagree 'the box and toss on thewrongthe wrong " ingredients- before he overnights it to with shelves full of studies saying activities "that would contribute to Reformers , however , are unun--¬ - w.rwrongwron placelace so itll' be good and ' the . n9 you colleges are easier and students their learning and development in sure that Pace's study contradicts coldld when you it.it. . 4vcold when getet ." - ' are as in the college. their contentions. . ' . Give Domino's not well educated as , ;Don'tDon'rgetget juked. ' Pizza*'!' 'aa ring and some serious pizza , past.. Pace then compared the answers Students may work as hard , but pizza- " , fresh , made to your order with the a ,crow . Students today "spend the to data found in logs some college their knowledge still may not be hot MOD' - will your ' best ingredients will:- be at door , < oaN , same amount time on academic students kept during the 1930s as broad as students the , - . ' of of past in 30. minutes or . Guaranteed. . ' less idea ' . . workork averageav business or and . Gene I.. ' as the . rage 40s. said Maeroff of the Domino's Pizza.. Nobody Delivers danad work ' ' . - " ! - - governmental at a full- me means , on Carnegie - j Better.? . ' employee "For all it is that Foundation for the Ad " " , ' ...... " . " . C.. ' . time job, said UCLA Prof. average , things are no worse than vancement of Teaching , which . . ; Our drivers carry less than S2000. ¬ " . ' Robert. obert Pace of his study of stustu-- 50 years ago , Pace said.. wants to require all students to UmiteddeliveryareaLimited delivery area. . ; . ' " ' dents'' work.habits..- . Much of the college reform take more humanities courses , , . . . to NOlo.'and " < . << . "" o1 r NOIO . and The'" NOp cnaractercna '" aft. ;reciiweflre Ij imjemanis' . " o' - ' NOmd, > , , ",, 'I I " esogno $ gn inn " * by WIWi'l , " I.. 'DofnuiosODmn-ouas" PizzaP'UJI.lnc': . Inc NOIDNOi ' Gavmahwi" ' ' , "This had not changed much movement building since -- graduate. . , , , " . . . . . - 1983 Vmton' Productions. l"c'"' Wwea-n.nukemtDewt, . - w-. * -* " . \ since the 1940's' ," added Pace , 4 I I I I'' I- . . " , . . . o . . . . , NEED t- " ! WE ' t "We accept Pizza Hut Coupons , MUAB&A-ZVIDEOMUAB&A-ZMUAB & A-Z- VIDEO . I u'' - ; e . - . PRESENT : I ' ' . . _ , ...... ' ' ' , SELFSTUDENTS . . . . . Fall 1990 Cinema Series . . : , : . fAHt l Lt'' !® - t , ; 5W Millersville 9119 , y' 872-9119872 , . . $ ' v. ' : EARN UP TO . : ' 1Ic , - ' I . . , 1't : 81S19-B . [UAB tlOIHR I. Leaman Ave Movie Schedule '!' / Qm . " ' 'j . . _ . ' . _ . ; - -.------.--.----_ . -petjV . r.------, : Friday, Sept.. Crlmes"I land Crimes, 28 ' nd . and" ,. . , ' . ' , , " 1" . . . . " . i " i r- ' ' ' 16" ONE TOPPING : Market ctcreditdit carts on campus.. f. . ' " ' > Mlsdemt : ' : MisdemeanorsIsde rs ' , I' , - , ' ' eal . , . " ' hors!. ' . . I ' . - $ . ' " Flexible Lancaster ONLY$7.99ONLY $7.99 " " hours.. O PIZZA ' " . , , : : : M- . . . J' . , My'Left ' . II ! , 250 Harrisburg Ave.. . ' My Foot , U . . . . Left ' , . ' s. 4'\h\, ' 'I . ' C ) " " Call . ' 295 . Value $2.01)$ . . , " " . Ca ( \ Value$2.01) . . ' \ : . . Us : . : ' ' ' . Only 10 positions available...... _ ' ; . . . 'r , , ' ,, . ; , . . : . . . . . " 'SundSunday , Sept.. 3. \ ; : My'LeftMy] Left Footp . . . ' 30 . . , ft . , . , , ' ' . v - i . . . / ( . ' . Hi' _ Bridgeporto I ': " HEb ' " . . . . ' . 1" . . ' . . MI ' . ; . CritnOs"and Misdemeanors . . em f' . 1669 Old Phila . . . CrimesCrlm . andnd ors r PhilaPk . ' . r " ' Pk . = ' ' ' ' < . ; :! '' ' ' - 291 : Call :1' Now . . . . "II m , ' tII , . ! ; I , . : , I Friday , ,5., 5 , , Tango and" Cash t e , , " . . October , ' ' , " ' . 1 - . 11'1" . ' 5 . . EXPIRES " " ' '' , y ; - 1 ''''' ' , , . - . $ " . . . . " ' Elizabethtown 367-6886367 $ "kdOrtan_ _... "" . On.. c " mnfinptu...... < NatviHdwnlurtyMncf...... , .. ... " I 1-800-950-8472 I nn-p-nO.0. . 1 ; : 20 , Ext . " 36.6 ' - - nounaauNanNdrnMar' 10 Iidh \ SteelSt MagnoliasM agno00'1' . " " . . " ee . . 6886 " " " . " offrr01' Our " ...... , . . . " " In " . . " las ' " Mrry. " * itun. 120 . . . . . M . . . dfmfl . Otlmty. limited. . " . , . . JC. . dinasdounwyk" " ndmfxh-namnn.dnon.nd.0. - utt. ' . tnfun. . uft " , . - 311 S.MarketS. Market St.L. I . 1 -"! : $ , " ' - d . c . .. ..h _ " ' _ " , i - " ; ' ' " " ' : ! Ime , .. . | : a' . ; : . i : . . . _____ 7 : : M : . , Opens at L . .. , : 4:00 P.M.. . . . y . Steel gnolias ------. SundSunday October 7 . Magnolias . ' " - - - Steel . . . I . . ' ' ' . ' : ' ' " ' : : 1 V'G' , ' . . ' 1'11'1" , " ' ISl 1 . FASiFIJND . FAST 1 . . " , , FUNDRAISING , ' , . , : , ' : TangoIi and Cash . + , , , ' " . . " . - . -- - - - , ' '' . " , . . , ' : : ' ------. I ------. : . - - - e.---y. ------r. T ' : . w---wr-rr-.e . : , . : . . -u- - . ' : r- ; ' r------: v : . . " r ' e , . r'---rwro------. ' 1 1 ' . P ,- 1 ' ' : PROGRAMG. rJr : 11 : * beg . . " , ! : - ' , : LARGE PIZZA The'flrst' bire begin >. . . 1' ' ' ' ' A FOR The first feature will at - . . . ! ! '; REETOPPING af S--- , $2.00. OFF . ' " ; ' .r! 2.00OFF ;--J6iTI16"THREE.TOPPING16" . 'I ' '< : . ' ' . . . - '. ' THE PRICE OF A : will In the , ' i I . - : p.ra.. . be beld :" 700 , . ANY LARGE - m ' PIZZA " . 'I ONLY . I ' , -I'I PIZZA $9.99$9$ 99 , . "' . . . i i I. " SMALL ' PIZZA : I ( I. . SMC - RooitL IN , '1 " . , . (VaJueS3.01)Value $3.01)$ . ) . . $ . ' " : I : I . I - (CheeseValues2.49)Cheese ) (Value 2.49). ) , , usr 1.1. 1 ' " ! . : : I ' : . . ' 1 1 . * . : ' ONE 1 o : ' 1 . I' 11 adm.'w/ID.All. . . Vft, . . adm. I Free / ' . . . $10005. 1 all 1 I. 1 . ° WEEK. ID. . i I I 11 . " '" . . , . " ' m. - , . 1 . 1 1 . . . . - 1 ' °. 11 s-l.GO$$1.OO. , ' ' . . .. / ID.. uu I' . . ' a 1 , " % II , . ' 11 e out . I. ' - - . el - Earn up to $ in one week I EXPIRES - . I. EXPIRE010a1.00EXPIRES 1041-00. - . EXPIRES 10-31-80- .- , $1000 I : 11 . . . . . , . i ' . " " " , . ,, . . , . . . . . , . . . , . . . . , ...... , .. . . , ...... A"" ;.." _ " . . "':...... _...... , ...... Mill. 0.Onctwompnpuij...... _ ..,...... ' ...... , ...... ,...... out 1'nedo..waavn-Kmuon- 10 1 1 - _ sMJiwhnyalnohoIh nmumdmmnu.rtn oa.wnaar0. .Na.Ie.hn.alM 1 for your campus organization. . , . , 11' , " << , . ,...... , " . .. Dob..., ...... attrtMd..q...... , ,, , ...... 0 ...... _ ...... , : . . .01' OvrifiMtfAnmu "" Dtlnttyftttl ...... - .. .. 00. a/ - . . ' . nr1ralbMS20. l1h-yanhnad.nnnaea- . . : p.yarn. I . ' rD Omaryanh.dmq.ne dfnO 0. . " I . _ " ' IpOdn mwnlan.w' - . . . . . " " . . . din"' O.dh.nsar. hnh. hwde.w" . 1 " ' . Ovo".Im.O I d , , ., + ' 11 .. . , I . . , , ,t - ' . dwa 'ow C.. .p.ndwn i1 1rn.C..* . awn Says y , _-'tC.ban ______B. ______Our Name itItAll" . % , . . . _ All ' L .0.-1_ ; . .L. wr-wwr-rrwyd . ---ww--wwrrrw-1- e.-w--rrwwr-rrr--r-nn-- . - ea--rr-- - - fI't1 Plus a at iI .ww.rr::.:. ::; .J : - JE- ww---- : : chance . ' * sn z $5000$ more! - , - ' . ! i-- - ' . - , - L . _ MTlM . LERSVILLEE ILLE . This program works ! I . No investment needed.. ! II. . . . S O ...... ' 0 ' " AZVIDEOVF1. - - - . . " ) . . ' ' . . Call ( . . . , . ' . Ext 50 . . . - ' . . , . I " . . . . . ' " . . . . ' 'LLP . . L... . 898 1 , PAGE8 THE SNAPPER SEPTEMBER 2626.1990. 1990 - -- - . . - ' i :'. " ; - ? > . t n- ' . . Navy BY JOEL J.. SMITH All the dropouts have to be Air Force and reserve full-time- Army.. is in the area of re-training- our Reserve troops handle a variety . " reservists , and said they may have " . "' , : Gannett News Service replaced with new officials "They had that hanging over. officers , Simpson said.. We of tasks such as medical :" ' taxpayers foot the bill.. According fewer problems because most of "their'headtheir ," Simpson said.. " found that the leaders did not services, water supply, transport head . - We ' The Army and Marine reserves to officials , it costs an average of their personnel als have servedl didn't' s nd perceive themselves as and refueling. . Recruits must sign ' have to send very many to important also' . : spent more than $2$ billion in the $16,300$ , to train each Army in the regular military.. . . . full-time- duty the message as they are.. up for eight years of duty, but .. for to past five years training new $$12,200, Technically the dropouts are . . " " reserve replacement and spread. , "The single most important part can choose from three to eight . . ' , .' i . ' ' - \ . currently : " . ' . , , ; > , troops to replace tens of fort a Marine infantryreservistinfantry reservist deserters but the ' , ( . . yearsjiof . . don't thetheequation--isthe, ' ) of active reserve status. :;j Why we'enforcewe enforce the , of equation the immediate year . . . . . , , , ' . . " ' ; < ( . , , military ' , . .s \ % " , { , drop . . . . ' " > theg dropo " . > : thousands who out each ; labels tl gpoutsP \\1ts.ts contract? Simpsdn said.. "About ) s p tY; , .,; ,, Yl.gPj.do. ,: wjll .' Actf. sjatuLrejiuire.sy Sl ! $. (, .. spending.spe. ing " / $ " they . . | supFrAhsuperyisp\yhatP? \ JI \ ; '' ed' * ' . . ' ' ': ' eta + 1 - - ' ominar ; s.'tOminJdet ' . . . . , tiommajraef year. . , . which has ' , ; . , : . , The Reserveeserye said when'rns bet , ' ; dirpctjimpact: ,( . Army Bell . , -a , . answer , /fu'f.spl oneIweejcgnd . " which v thethebestbest .answer'.is'is the cost of ; havey a rf JPt.1PtCt.o. ,; .onthe, ' . soldierier . eehepda'emda' month and two . di .0new : ., . ' ' , , e. ' - . ' . dropout has id , The retentionret ntion problem the biggest problem contacted . him he saids he tqld . . . 'is conta ted jie .. . ;. summer in training.. ' enforcement Unfortunately it'it amtandand.whetherwhether or not they stay weeks each , particularly critical now.. a he was longer }: . ' ' / The published booklet telling him no iJtinterestedrested 'cvould.probablywould , probably be greater than the reserves. ." Capt.. John R.. , Kachenmeister , - United States plans to activate at officers how to keep Bell was removedrem ved from. active :' ' , command thereturn. TheTh mostm st likely . candidateca didate to a unit commander at the Army , " , least 50,000 reservists by reserve troops interested and reserve status in , July, seven ' . , Mich.., "There is no net gain of drop out of. the reserves , said Reserve Center in Inkster October because of the Persian . 232,000, enlisted, months after signing up.. . . ' > . active. Of enforcing the contract.. Our Simpson , is. an unmarried man said he has had his..sharehihis share of ' - ' . , ' . ; Gulf crisis.. The reserves , Army Reserve troops retention problemp oblem has been . . , .v. : ; 20,000 The .; . approach hasbeen to want people who has been inthe program: dropouts. ' ; - up drills this " . supplement the full-time military stopped showing for escalating since the military draft . " that want to be in here.. between one and two. years.. "They thought they. were going :' " . when regular troops are shipped year.. ended in 1973.. ' = . . " to playing . A 1989 study of the retention "They come back from basic be out Rambo and " overseas.. . , Before that, military officials e, the shooting . other with paint In the past 12 months Marines issueiss done under contract to training and. experience a each Officials say , a : d it is cheaper to , , said if reservist stoppstopped Army , also found poor disappointment balls.. They aren't' having, any officials said nearly 4000 ' that because it will ]; discharge. reservists than showing up for drills , he or she. i leadership was another factor.. as fun _ We lose those.. But we ' reservists out of a force of never be exciting as basic end prosecute them , ' } for breaking their 44,000, have dropped out.. would be activated into thee "The" biggest effortff rt we've had training ," Simpson said.. up with the dedicated ones.'" contracts , according to a copyrighted story by The Detroit ' ' - * * * ; . . . S , . News.. A study walk L.. in found most A , Saudiudi Real-life M SH faces difficulties Arabiai. . : because . MASH ' away of boredom. N.C.. . , and other facilities have being shortage to end soon.. Mean- saids id Maj.. . Leonardo Thompson , "It's" ' a terrible financial burden BY KIRK SPITZER treated in wards where working since early August , ' a health 34 , a - , at " Gannett News Service been temperatures were, if not cool , at while it doesn't present surgeon on the system , said Lt.. Col.. . thoracic to build the hospital and care for least comfortable. . hazard , Ball said , because only Walter Reed hospital in, James Simpson , who is in charge :1:' - ' 28th sick and injured soldiers. . _ cases are being , . . , . a.a native COMBAT SUPPORT WashingtonDC and . retraining reservists nationally Outside, mechanics worked in ; of . : . HOSPITAL, EASTERN SAUDI The facilityfa ility has been operating transported in the ambulances. ofPensacolaFlaof Pensacola , Fla.. . . ' the blazing sun to clean and non , for the Army's Forces Command ' : ARABIA Snake , for the past two weeks and - ' More serious cases are evacuated Thompson was forced to. bites heat . in Atlanta.. ' re-start failed engines.. It has - . . and power failures are all part another 20 or so staffers are . .by:. helicopter. . . operate on one soldier to relieve Army Reserve and Marine of become a daily routine.. ' a few . severe swelling gs the day's' work at this Spartan, expected to arrive within.awithin . "This" facility ' The biggest medical in one of his llegs Reserve officials said that 8.7. . wasn't made for - out the of " emergencies so far have been due to.ato .a.a snake bite.. The patient wind-blown hospital in the Saudi weeks to round staff this environment , " . percent of their troops about Ball said. - Arabian desert.. 289.. " snake bites.. Two soldiers were was later flown toto . Army - "We're' everyone ' an 24,000, this fiscal year missed pushing everyone very - It has not been easy.. ttreated after 'bbeingiIg! bit by a small hospital in Germany, where he is - It is the first major Army . hard to " small . year make it work.. mandatory weekend and summer ' , hospital in Saudi Arabia and will Most ' but potentiallyp deadly snake that expected to fully recover.. . drills and were removed from The hospital is built . ofthe early patients treat many , if not most , of the of treated at the usually lies coiled in the sand , Generally speaking , support. . , hospital were from active reserve status. inflatable rubber sections that ' . hospitals are larger . and have seriously wounded if war breaks { its own ; striking as a target moves by. Other military services say their give it the look of a - staff working long hours " more out.. ."Snake bites out here are very specialists on duty than the . and unused , reservist dropout rates . caterpillar stretched darkalong the to the heat many are "This" is probably the first level serious because of dehydration ," mobile hospitals ;, which were , 3 . But suffered dehydration and heat substantiallyially lower less than desert. because . substan of the heat ' in , of real , definitive care where we . which prevents the body's natural popularized the movie and . exhaustion.. None were seriously percentper nt for the National Guard and dust , there haveh ve beenb n.' . * * * ' - can really operate on and ' defenses from fully responding , television.seriestelevision series MASH. . which tries to rehabilitate " continual breakdowns of the; 16 injuredi ured. , hospitalize a soldier , . . I said Lt. . . dropouts and the Air Force, turbine engines that supply air to Ambulance drivers are working - Col.. Mike Ball , of Fayetteville , Reserve.. Navy Reserve officials a , . { ' . N.C.. . , commander the - under handicap as well. ) of 200-bed cool and help support the. dpdo not keep figures but their early , - > . . ' Because of a shortage of diesel . Tom facility. structure.. . either! 'rIotnWolfetoWotfe to discharge also is low.. * rate fuel , ambulances are being " Because of military regulations , . Doctors, nurses and technicians A recent study commissioned - the location and defenses the in some sections the powered with JP-5 jet fuel , . . . by the Army indicates reservists of of ' : , - which limits speeds to , only 40 . medical facility cannot be Vietnam-era building were quit for a number of reasons , in 9orf:Yor . - . miles per hour or so, instead of . speak revealed. stripped down to \ ' ( . ( including : , boredom poor Army doctors and medical 'Wednesday to cope with the heat.. the usual 60 mph.. leadership , inferior training, lack , Ball said he expects? the fuel personnel from Fort Bragg All of 60 patients , however, were ( >> of promotion and low pay.. ' . ( " - T Tom 'Wolfe ;, author of Bonfire' of the Vanities/ , " ">> " - . { Mo1J-- york' / ' OctoBer 3 as [ speak onn Money in 3..as. part NASA to spacecraft willwi ' ( Y fever! OctoBer( . aspartfart launch " < < - " " ' . - { BY I.. K.. BROWN of the Junior League fortes' the and handed petitions by a . "The" choice is whether we're' of ( In to KSC shuttle. That mission, Spot Gannett News Service . security patrolnuclear a featuring.'fO-tionafCynationally' - recognized, . chief Jim Morris.. provoked similar protest and legal going to start following Lecture Series featuring r speakerssp r . ! CAPE CANAVERALCANAVERAL, Fla.. There were no arrests' or action before its October 1989 different set of values , where the . - . - . . > 1 , NASA is downplaying the chance disturbances. . ' . environment is placed No.. and ' . '; ' * ' . flight. ' ' " Other speafc the - series are : " . - . -. ' for catastrophe when the shuttle Protesters said they plan to "It's" ' not that we think Ulysses dollars and expediency are ranked speakersrs for 1990-91 " - . . F.; . Discovery lifts off next month seek a court injunction to halt will blowupblow up.. But as we launch No.2No.. 2 and 3, Hirsch said.. 9pvem6er8{ 8 $RoBert. . ?Kennedy. nne yjrJr, a efinicafprofessorclinicalnicaf professor: at 7 ' ' ' - ' ¬ ' ' '" with a Discovery's launch, now sched- more and more of these things'we If there were an accident that School{ . ' powered Pace University' of Law will! speak. (, onof! ;. Our : ' , uled . - ' ' . :. spacecraft for no " - . . protesters at a earlier than Oct.. . open ourselves caused even a minute amount of ' ' - < ; - 5. up to an accident ' ' " ; ; ' ; . - ' . . ; . :' . 'En'V ron1nentaf . , ' _ " Environmental' Destiny ' : . Kennedy Space Center rally said The Ulysses solar probe, nestled that we all will live to regret ," Ulysses'' plutonium to be released . ' . ; . ! . - . { , O , BC : Saturday. . in the shuttle's' cargo Gagnon.. into the atmatmospheresph re, thousthousandsds of . March 6 Mary! ; Alice Williams' , ABC 9ffewsws . bay, said . ' ' " ' . ' " . "There are alternatives to contains 24 pounds " ' . people could die from cancer and corrrespondentcorrTesp01 R..or/ori tfii.cs. Cism. . of highly "We're urging NASA en.t. willunitspeafwi spspeakon.. / Ethics in JournJournalism ' to !! ' . , '. putting nuclear power into toxic plutonium , which will be reassess its reliance on . environment might never . . ' . nuclear . - Ll . . " the ' ' a April>lpri! 9 ---14''WilliernJif' Stargelle , TittsBurgh(/ Pirate , wiwill!! " " ' ;. ' ( former; ' space , said protest organizer used to power Ulysses' power in space ," said Daniel recover, Hirsch said.. " " "' speaspeak.onspeak. on 'lJase6afCBaseBallwithWillieStargetl' witfiwith'Williee StalJeCl . , Bruce Gagnon , of the computers , sensors and scientific Hirsch , president of the Alternate technologies and ' ' . . - powerpow r sourcess are ' Orlando-based Florida Coalition instruments throughout its Committee to Bridge the Gap, a probably , . ' for Peace and Justice.. - - feasible , but itI would five-year require . - mission to study the Los group that .lJ1t.eIhe' . lectures willwi{[ Be heldfie. { in the. at the Stran .Capitof. Angeles co . About 150 demonstrators sun.. monitors the use of completeplete redesign and testing , Strand' nuclear . i {{ ' which could Performing Arts. Center, 50 9prth{ / . George( Street, )Yorkr//(;, AllJil ; participated in Saturday's rally , Plutonium generates power in space.. put off planetary ' . ' heat .r;i . launches ' lectures wi{{ Begin 7:30: p.m.. . which began with speeches and through the natural well into the next will at . . decay of its Ulysses could be rebuilt with : ' decade ," he . songs just outside KSC's radioactive particles. . - added...... main The Galileo energy-generating solar panels , llcfetsfor'fJictg.ts( for the four lectures are priupriced at $42$ , $40$ , andan $38.$ entrance. . The protest then moved spacecraft now heading toward but that would mean waiting until © 1990 , USA . Copyright Single ticket( . price is $15.$ . for: more informationinforma call845cad, 8457005.- 7005.. to KSC headquarters , where Jupiter was the first plutonium-- the mid-1990s- to launch the TODAYTODAApple/ College Infor-¬ demonstrators lined up single-file- powered . mation Network . " probe carried into space spacecraft, he said.. "f , " ...... " -' SEPTEMBER 26,199026, 1990 THE SNAPPER PAGE 9 ". : . ' , . SnapperJR. . JL Features " . 1" i , . 'f'' i-- . : . top zpsons 3L CosbyC MU SimpsonsJL sby " at Si popularity. in * , , / / ' . - Despite . Cosby Show (one percent), an advice-giving father included he . ' The he is adorable . ' , , hhe . leading in the ratings war against loser (onepercentone percent ), the noise is witty he shows affection , he . Snapper Student Survey The Simpsons reruns , an over- makes (one percent ) , he is is funny , he has unexpected good IAt1 whelming majority of Millersville , time laughing about them percent of the students surveyed authoritative (one percent ) , and comments and he is a cool , too.. "' University students prefer The who prefer The Simpsons he looks like my dad (one parent.. : , to rere-¬ of the expressing their fondness for die percent ) . Twenty-one- percent chose '\ Simpsons according the - Fourteen percent . ' sults of a random survsurveyy by The students . surveyed prefer The devilish ten-year- old.. Tied with Homer Simpson for youngest daughter Rudy ' \ ' ¬ . . . The as I ' Snapper- of 100 MU students.. Cosby Show to Simp- Reasons for choosing Bart second place with 21 percent is Huxtable as their favorite Cosby :1:; : - The survey shows that 79 sons.. They say their favorite Simpsons character baby Maggie. . Reasons for Show character.. Everyone #:\r, ' " 4 f I.. ' $\ (. LWTL1: percent prefer to watch The "The Cosby Show teaches included he is devilish (seven choosing Maggie as their favorite choosing Rudy said it was . I ," . > - ) " ' Simpsons. to TheTh . Cosby . \ moral behavior and grown-up percent , he runs everything Simpsons character included she because she is cute.. i. . . ' Show. ! . h(1'( ' . ' c' . Jn1o : values.." (three ), he ¬ , They say percent is funny (three trips when she walks (six Fourteen percent of the stu-stutu-- . " " . , "The Simpsons are more true "The Cosby Show presents a percent), he is a brat (three per- percent ) , she is adorable (five dents surveyed who preferred f . - I to life.You. can also relate to the good-natured family we can cent), I want to be Bart (two percent ), her pacifier! is cute (two The Cosby Show said they had family.. " watch and learn valuable lessons percent), his snappy comments percent ), and she has no attitude no single favorite character . " "The" Simpsons is a funny , as a result.." (two percent ) , he is energetic (two percent ). ' because they work well together " , . "The - (two percent ), his voice . weird exaggerated way of life. It Cosby Show demon ' is cool Eldest child Lisa Simpson as a unified ensemble. is like real life:."' strates that there is a time for (one percent), he is the leader of received ten percent and loving Theodore Huxtable , the "They" are the model family for playing and a time for reality.. " the show (one percent ), and his mother Marge Simpson received Huxtable son, Olivia , the step- ' ' " style ( ) . the 90s.. Its humor is not The Cosby Show is filled one percent five percent.. . . daughter of Denise Huxtable and ' - ¬ outdated like most other comedy with funny , unexpected Adoring fatfatherer Homer Simp: Other characters receiving Peter , the chubby next door . com - " , . , - . shows.. ments and actions by Bill son is second in the favorite votes include the bully the con neighbor boy all received one " . " : Simpsons clerk and Otto the . . . "The Simpsons presents the Cosby. category with 21 venience store vote each. '" view of today's' society realis-¬ The Cosby Show has been a percent.. Reasons for choosing busdriver. . Six percent of the students tically, and if that means making wonderfully ' made show for Homer Simpson included he is Heathcliff Huxtable , portrayed surveyed preferred neither show.. fun of things most people would several years because of the lovable (four percent ) , he is a by Cosby, is The Cosby Show The reasons for preferring " L like to , so be it.." . sinceritys and shown by lolovinging father (three percent ), I character receiving 35 percent of neither The Simpsons The ( ignor warmth. or HdL " . "What kind of a society would the entire cast." can relate to him (two percent), the students surveyed who pre-¬ Cosby Show included no reas-¬ : Snapper Graphic by Todd Metzger this be ifweif we couldn'tcouldn'tpoke' poke fun at Bart Simpson is the favorite he is so typical (one percent), he fer that show.. on , I like Married With Children , our imperfections and have a Simpsons with 35 is. so stupid you have to love him Reasons for choosing the and I don't' watch television. . character . : : : :: - : : :;: ; : :: :: ::: : . : : !; ; ! ' ; !; ; } ? !! ; ;!;;; , ; / f : f ::!:tiiiiif I:6...... Fraternities . . . troubled . . . . nationwide . . tIjiJtt-. . . : , . . valedictorian, ' ; Local ! I , starts MU .nISIDg..IJaRising frat ! ; at : " : : : : ::: : : ijiliji11 ; " ' jjj! :d\ : :: :::.::: : : : ::: : : : ::::: : fJ i!!! ! disagree.. "Since 1984 , We've I \ tJ BY JOHN LARRABEE . . . . . In ...... her, four years to come at t attracted students because we : :BY LISA WIRE GannettNewsGannett News Service ); WIKE. . MU, Heisey has two things she .memucrSriimembership made it was clear we did not have : Assistant FFeaturesealures Editor , ' " . . would like to accomplish. . Fraternity chapters on 805 fraternities , says Dean Earl L When Colby College trustees campuses inn the USA and Smith.. "When" this thing became . " : The "I would like to meet people voted to dissolve six student having the highest fraternities public , many our students CanadahaveCanada have risen to 5,328, - of I . a - and develop lasting friendships.. I years ago , students rank in graduating class re-- -; protested ." . from 4,500, 1984. were very upset. : - ( -r would also like to graduate in the since . with bonfires and snowball fights [ceives the prestigious honorh nor of j . Says student Jonathan Starr , 1 FraternltjrrnembershipFraternity r Rbeing . membership : on Fraternity . : : ing named valedictorian. What honors program with a high Row. , 21 : " come here ! "A lot of people 1. 4 . jmotivatesmotivates anaha . individual to such grade average ," she said.. Then they thumbed their noses point . because they know there are no : Academic( cademic success ? _ at college administrators by ff: :. , * fraternities. . The negatives of . DianeDi e Heisey, a native of Mt.. ______shrouding their clubs in secrecy, ¬ "Being" academically suc-¬ ' frfraternities outweigh the pos- : Joy and a graduate of Donegal koo ! meeting in off-campus- apartments , ."' ' t9.# . . F282,85282,85, itives.itives. -" is tough , but just : " cessful : and rented halls.. They no longer High School , said she does not. Itm r1 Counters David Sullivan , ' stick with it ' give had ties to national fraternities but .-. have a primary motivation when and don't. j : I- > '. ' whose : > " - l/t . son was suspended - . .) : kept their names and ;J> itt comes to her academic achieveac ieve- up. ' . W 202202,5001, 500 Greek " . jQO ' ... . "What they've tried to do is " . . ' rituals. . inentsnients ' -- Diane Heisey : ;' I I ' blame campus-wide- problems " is just something I :11111111111111 This year Colby got tough ; 20 School - In likeli e hazing and alcohol abuse on ' thousands. - : , <:have' to do , so I do it.. I never 0 Lambda Chi Alpha members , " , . Heisey said more demanding _ t the football team.. !' * " . - - . % _ , ' Ii think slacking off, she said.. % : : including two-thirds of the of : , 90 . classes and fewer cliques are two 84 , - . ; 4s.1. The Colby controversy '': Heisey, at. computer science ' *. )it t ; prospective football starters , are cli - main differences she noticed (Source National .. . , ' ' - last spring when a state : , , - _ suspended for the fall semester maxed one tnterfrafemrtjr.Conrerenee- major' is of six valedictpr-valva1dictor-dictor- Diane Heisey tntrfra1emIt(.Conference between high school and collegecoi1 . . . . 1-ians1 -:.ians who started at Millersville ge for keeping their fraternity active.. trooper investigated a ruckus at a ' ' " " ) ! J ( KeithCarterGNSKeith Carter, GNS . J4 " " "People on campus are friend- The Colby suspensions are part rented hall He found 50 young University'' this fall.. . "I did not have much time in [ ' ' . - ... ' ' ' ' . , ' , O in a -. She said her parents and a few . ' school m' ly jip oneoneparticular. particular grQgrqup'shunsp.'shuns' of a nationwide crackdown on men candle room some in high scbool'to'b'tobecto'becomec n involved " ' - candle ; ' ( , ! ! ; ! . . . _ : < , as . ' ' ' . . id fS she. . . j " , fraternityfr tf ,rnity behavior.. Membership their underwear chickens ran high school mathteachetsmath teachers'havehaveb ve ' many'schbelinn manrsch, I activities.'Ialsoctivities. also outsiders said J : ' I' - ' " - ; - ' ; Xeac1ership ' : ; ' - d ' ( : " :. -.is. - on the . What the officer first ¬ ' < Although academics is a key tship is'up , this year thefloorfloor ' :1i , - but -' contributedcontribut d IB fief academic! succ-c . , ' riy " . , ' t \\w.with"mytl fri academics : : , ' . . . . hadlittledlittle time siithmy, friendsnds , ' " , ,. . , 282800 year ; " - ' ' ' * '- ' ' " t" ' - ' . -: ; ' ' " " thought , i " w s' : mainlyftl - - factor.iinfactor . n college , Heisey. said "Il'1rI' .f. ! ' on manymany . . campuses , t'waswas a satanic cult was the cess; but was self- because there was always - . it home :: US ' " that meeting people and social- -o . especially in the Northeast , Lambda Chi Alpha initiation.. I motivation"' that has hhelpedlped her work to be done, she said.. V'O'n.er 1C'ece ' . v . f r ? . izing are also very important. . theyre being pushed out or . . , and Documents discarded the \succeed" Location affordability theth at "Staring" your ' forced to change.. , . ' "I"'1 want an occupation that size ofofthethe university are thethe.three. three at four dorm scene found their way to school " walls sc - provides- me with good financial main reasons every night while studying scheduled Time-honored frat house administrators. . Heisey . said she " ' " ; - '. ' '. will drive you crazy,"' she saidsa d.. S The FourtliAnnualFourth Annual Millersville traditions drinking , hazing , means and I alsoalsowant, want the per- chose Millersville. . ' Annual - Campus reaction to the O'Sonalz1;:d sonal satisfaction' that ' also Heisey said there is no formula University Student Leadership harassing women and exclusivity ' results She likes the atmosphere controversy is mixed.. from. doing the best that I can," and feels comfortable with the or system she uses to achieve Conference will be held on are now unwanted anach-¬ . - * 1 f> academic . , , 1990.. ronisms.. " !Heisey said.. size of the campus. . excellence Monday October 1,1990. "When I talk to my friends who " 'S.. ' v\(;: Heisey said such academic suc-- "It" is possible to walk across "Being academically successful The conference will take place The Maine Civil Liberties go to schools with fraternities, all :" " is tough, but just stick with it and in the Student Memorial Center Union argued for fraternities that I are hell . ' l"cesscess" requires some sacrifices campus in just ten minutes , she ' hear stories. If you can't . . don't' give up ," she said.. from 5:30: to 10:30: p.m.. . Topics they are exercising their right to along the way;. said.. . get into a frat , you have no social ¬ association. . " " ' of discussion include Parl- life , he says.. "At Colby , you : a judge ' " ' iamentary Procedure by Rich But state ruled don't have to be Joe College. . l MU Will , Leadership Decision Making otherwise last monthm nth , saying " ' Nobel , to speak at at'MU "This a , . Prize winnerwinn r isn't big campus so , - Colby fraternities would violate rt . by Paula Banzhaf , Survival .q,1.' ' Tech . " you don't' need a stepping stone ¬ " niques for Officers and Members the rights of other students "to ' * Camilo JpSeJoSe Cela, 1989 Nobel lated into English , include stor- Duarte. . " However , in "The " t' ' ' to find friends , says JanJan Fortin , ' , poems , writings " ¬ by Jennifer Crissman , Advisors' associate with each other and gain Prize' ' in Literature winner , will ies plays and Hive" , said to be his most acac-- 21.. "You" ' need Greek ' ' ' an education fraternity-free- don't > in a ' . at on travel.. , also was - , Roundtable by Gary Reighard and ' deliver a public address He pub complished novel he recreates " . letters ; you can be yourself.." - Carol Myers , Leadership Self environment.. Millersville University Friday, , usherli her of a literary monthly in daily existence in Madrid in the . " ' - Assessment Mary Klinedinst "It's not because we drank , and : September' 28.. . Spain from 1956 to 1979.. aftermath of the Civil War with by The Committee to Halt Useless . . . ' . ' . ' -> .- and Goal Setting for Student it's not because we hazed. It's Campus f:'f''v-. Awarded the Nobel Prize for Since 1942, when his first gentleness and feeling for every Killings claims 50 ° " ' Organizations by Paula Banzhaf. . because we were Lambda Chis ," college . his total astutely contributions to novel, "The Family of Pascual aspect ofo life.. students have died in " All interested people should says Jason Mazzola , 20 , who hazing incidents 1..thei . . the field of literature , Cela will Duarte , made its appearance , he . The recipient of numerous since 1978.. A.. , will work as a waiter this fall ,: ' 111 1 a.m.. . in Gordinier has prevailed as the foremost , including the National contact Edward Thomson speak at ' awards ' instead of being in school.. © 1990 , USA ' Conference Center's' Old Main figure among prose writers in Prize for Literature in Spain , he Associate Vice President for Copyright ' ' figure " Student Affairs , in Student Officials at Colby , a liberal arts TODA Y/Appie/ College Infor-¬ Room.. The'talk, in Spanish with Spain.. David Ross Garling , "In also has received honorary doc-- the TODAY 1,700, ' mation Network ! , World Literature Today ," notes -¬ Life,. Office , Hull Hall.. college of students , don't English) translation is free and , . ' torates from colleges and uni I , . " " open to the public.. that Cela's' national prominence versities in both the United States - - - - ". ", i and international fame is a result ' Although not widely known in ' ' and abroad.. ' ? two , Scene proves bland ' :the United States, Cela has been 'ofof the popularity of two of his Cela will be honored by the Ultra Vivid rather - " :.: novelist of Spain works : "Pascual Duarte"" and rthe dominant City of Lancaster at' a special shaggy hair , sunglasses , and The entire time they played was . . " .'",' for more than 40 years. He has "The Hive. BY PATRICIA POWELL baggy jeans.. To contrast this look not very long.. Very disappoint- .. . . ceremony on , Sept.. 27 , Thursday . .> _:rlectured throughout Europe and Some critics credit Cela with Snapper Features Correspondent was the bass player , who stared , did oblige the -¬ : ing but they aud ! ! , a at 7:30 p.m.. . in the City Council , Latin America , as well as in the the invention of tremendismo almosta most unwinkingly at some by performing a one-song- I " ' ¬ ience ! . - Chambers.. The public is - I . fiction dwells on ¬ U.S.. . type of . which wel Ultra Vivid Scene is a band that . ' fixture in the audience the entire encore which was about ten min- . ' come ] . life ; elements to attend the ceremony and In'In addition to numerous the darker side of is hardly known and rarely show.. utes in itself.. ; , - this are "Pascual" a reception that follows.. : novels , his works many trans-- of abundant in reaches conversation level when Despite their stage appearance , . In its entirety , Ultra Vivid Scene " . . . - " e ...... ' ...... " ...... one is ...... discussing I . _ " _ _ _ _ . _ . _ - . _ _" ._ _ . _ _ _ . . . _ , music. have - . _ _. . _ . - ...... - . ' ...... ,.J1' ...... - - .- - . . .- " . . . . 'ItJIJ- . . . . their music was good , - . . " . " " . . . ..- . _ .. .. - - . ------JO- - '- '- - - - .J'- '------.v - -' - ' - .. .. quite ...... - - - : - .------:------: .------PI------proved to still be a mystery, and 1ii ' . always thought of them as a stustu--¬ forgiving the acoustical properties I --n ' they probably will not attain con- . ' . dio band, that occasionally gets of the Chameleon.. They seemed : , versational level when music is . F ' ! . together and cuts an album.. I was to enjoy playing with feedback ' - Ville View is onoDthethe air - discussed.. . right.. . ¬ - and their sound seemed more l"" . . disdis-- . ! : ...... UVS played the Chameleon torted than their album , "Joy" This does not mean they were eeGo.G sGee..e on Sunday " not good ; they were.. It just Club in Lancaster - . t1 - : . night to an eager under 21 crowd.. 1967The lead singer also had a means they are more studio- ' . Ville View is a television magazine show Their appearance was that of a fascination with a certain four-- oriented than a live band.. Thus , ' " " 1 - sixties the "new" their live performance pales by i revival or letter word used often between 'by.the. University , bobbed , comparison to their album.. by Millersville Manchester look with songs.. . produced the - ' : ' - - - - - CI - 1':1 j ! 1111II -0- -0- - -0-- - -C- -0-- - -C-: - I ; _ . . . - Communication andnd ThTheatreatre' Department) -0- I ! '.. . 'I' . - I\K\ 4 , I'' . .... ' " ...... IIIII ! . . . ' 1 . Mill.I ... . . ' " ' \ , "- '1ll1i11""liill . I III1R'll, i :. IS I!li ' . - ; : - - = /lhlll/ '. r-! ! . . more . , -'l 1. .111111 , S ., you want to findfi d.oout moreore about - , . ; L- , = - So if tto t ' . :: soiflouwa- .iton.want..to ! ' . __ , . find_ . 11 ' . gl 'Ville' People , VIe Sports. and IIIOUsJEHOUSE PIZZA lUL _ [ .. : :; . ! ! . . . . . a . . e ...... ; ji ' ' ' urn . . . DeU. . . . . a ...... 1 , : , ? , happeningshappeni gs at the'Villethe Vine f'loaso' Picsont Coupon Hofoto! Oidoring ' 1 01 W.. . . t 101 FREDERICK ST. . ! . ; . - ' . S Phone (717)( ) 872-2131 Tunee in. to 'Ville View. - T to'Ville S LARGE . / ' - 717872 \ U ' - . . - " or (717)( ) 872-2791 U MEDIUM . : - . . - FOR , ...... A . . ; ...... " ' e. 16 "' , . S : Buy any Largo 16" Pizza for 'Iheth PIco ofo . ' I a M dltjm ($1.00$ . V.I".t , , . > FREE DELlVDELIVERYRY AND CARRY OUT - Medium PizzaPIZZJlII.oo v " ' : i , . . : : . . . ,ThursdaysTh Jys . 7:00p.m.: FROM 11:00 A.M. at . rst U ' t ' ' ' . ---6.. . ' U . OJ ±: . MOUSE-- PIZZA: . , . , - !: . . , , . i' -ig- ' IEIz4 ,0101ot w. rfia3EnicK . U : U wrnwEnIcKsr . A . M . - .Ch . " ) .sf( - U OPEN 7 DAYS at 1030 A.M. On ub4rbaaCabie-CfiannCable Channel"eI22l.2222 : MILlJEItSVILLE. . 8122131872 2131 077-2791 ' Suburban S ' j < 012.21QI' 1 . . " U I . ", ( - 21Z ) U. " Not limit - " will oUior' cll IUn . vall c"w" . a-- ...... - I .. . ..:...... " ...... " . . p., ...... U ...... f" ' . . . " . ' ...... r . U U U U U U ; ...... U U tlor' : ...... " . ' ...... J''...... or...... a . S . . . . C U U S U . U U U U U U S . .US .v..r r r -. \ PAGE 10 THESNAPPER SEPTEMBER 26199026. 1990 I - I . KALEIDOSCOPE c e { j b J t 0 , ' : . _: : : 3 7:30 p.m.. 5 p.m.. . 6 8:00rp.m.. . oo . . 800 6 500; pm ______u n Oc '"' ' " " ' ' . Social salirisl The Children's Bound For The ChildteChildtin'sfs ohe" ' " " Tom Wolfe will Hour ,; a powerful Glory , the lIour.af lour , .a powerfulorrut Gallery Exhibits Ministry ' " ' United Campus Students for Choice discuss Money" &&amabyUlliandrama by Lillian sloryofWoodystory otWoody dtamaby llian - "' , Gallery exhibits by Ralph A.D.. . meeting on Wednesday , ever al the Hellman , al Raft- Guthrie , al the Jlellman , al Raft- MU students for choice will , . : , . ers Thealre , Dutch- - .. era Theatre , Dutch , . , : . . MeatMeatyardyard Dan Gilhooley and Sept. 26 7:30 p.m. at Potter show Strand- 1 the . - Strand . : documentary film For informa- er math For infor- For informa-- , er Hall For infor-info -' " - . r' Carol Pylant will be shown at the -. : " lion , call 845-- malion , call 872- lion , call 846- . WI 812-8; 2-- . House.. Find out about Millers "Abortion For Survival" on nationllmalioo ' : .mt.. :1: 7005.. 3129.. . 1111.. 3129.. . ' Pennsylvania School of Art & s: Monday or . ville CROP Walk.. Topic for thethe Tuesday Oct. 2 or 3 at ' : . : ' . . 8 8:00: . . 8:00p.m.: . 10 11:00: . . 10 7:30 . . : . . ; . 'L 200 p.m. pm 9 a.m. pm 10 8:00p.m. 10 , ': ', . 1.. - " " " ' " ' 8I5i8'1 min ' Design through October Ad 8 p.m.. . - - " s Free Cinema - " 's ' : , ' , evening is "Hunger. . in the SMC Bound For The Czech Phil The Children lecture 00 Para The Children StudentStudeni recitaliGi ; Purpose " ' " "' ' . mission is free.. For further ¬ Glory . the harmonicCOrChe-- Hour/ ; a powerful Current"CurrenlSlaleofState of diso"thediso' , the 1990 ," a powerful byclarinelisby clarinetist , ' infor- Room. . All welcome. . Hour , story of Woody Slra aslithethe Strand- drama by Lillian Economic Re-- heal foreign dramadra by Lillian Nikki Shockey mation , call PSA&D& v, 396-- - at,396-at Homecoming Picnic Guthrie& , will be Capitol PerformPc orm-- Hellman , al Raft forms in the So. film , will be al ' , al Raft- in Hellman n Lyle Auditori-1Audilori-- I - " the - 1 shown Arts , viel Ul on" - - 7833.. The John Newman Association al the ing Center , en Theatre Dutch Union by ers Theatre , Dutch urn,, AdmissionAdrr hsion Bike Race - ! . [ - .CapFor - Mountain . For York For ticket er Hall. For infor- IlerbertLevhHerbert Levine , ilol inform- er . For infor- is . " ' ;: hail free - picnicc " " - in alion, -. - , . is having a homecoming "Rage in the Bush" mountain informationStand. call information , call malion . call 872- SMCRoomSMC Room call 846 mationcallmation , call 872- United Church of Christ 8461111.- . 8461111.- . ' 3129.. ' 129-130.- . 1111.. 3129129 . ' , on October 13 at 4:00: p.m.. . at the bike race to be held in the area on ' ' You are invited to get together 12 8OOp.m8:00: p.m. 12 8:00: p.m.. . 13 8:00: p.m.. . 13 8:00pm.8:00: . . ', 12 815:' pmpm'. . pm 14 7'30'7:30'p.m.: . . 12 7:37:30: o pmP . m.. " ' " " ' ' pm'j , 111e OnemanshowOne show - John Newman House.. Any Creek Drive between the Palmer "heChildrcnsChildren's man Facultireci 1 Two Legend The"TheChildrensChildren's Cinemapiaa" P r .. ' with other UCC students on rreeleenneonon '' " " Cine ; f jIDe! Hour ;, a powerful by Ossie Davis , bby pianists - Cowboysary hour;, ' a powerful " be : alumni are welcome.. building and the research pool on technologicalooglcal ti Doc " diso will Sunday , Sept.. 30 , 7:30 p.m.. . at dramadramabyLillianby Lillian actor , writer , oihyash Beam and and"Durralo dnmabylilliandrama by Lillian ' ! literacy by . shown althe'the ; Oct.. 27.. Registration is at 7:30: Dr HellmanIlel lman , al Raft- ddirrc lor and star\ - Bills' Wildild West Hellman , al Raft- . : Potter House (near Gaige Hall) . ri s " SlrandCapitolC . , Samuel Micklus ersThealreers Theatre , Dutch> ! - ofof"Do the Right LeonaLean " as lfie ersThealreera Theatre , !Dutch> - Strancketmto : . ! ! ! Show alth _ Summer Missions Review a.m.. . the race is 9 . . : ' ..Do.IeRlgbl. Woskowiakinin For ticketlickelinfor-- and at a.m. For J . Lehr 10 . ' ta loin LehrD'Din . - Thing , min Lyle. . ' . er . For mfor-- ' . r.IOR er Hall For mfor- ; Lyle. Admiss- Strand. r'Or m.in- Hall malion, call ; Girls' High the Inter-- - 109 Roomoom. . - oration calls Three students of more information , call " - Tickets , $3.50 , oration , call 872 L . . 872-0631.. malion , call 872- $ formation , call malionoaIl872- = . ion isi free. 846-184ti - I ll 1.1 . a . in the . - . 3129.. _ . A meeting will be held Sept.. 27 Varsity Christian Fellowship , 3129 intheSMCSC 8461111. . . 14 ; p.m.. . I4 : . 16 : . . 19 8:00: p.m.. . 23 7:30: p.m.. . 24 7:30: p.m.. . 2S 7:30: . 108-109- 730 _ 8OOp.m.8:00 pm. 730 p.m. pmI'' in the SMC Room from organization will be sharing their , Crop Walk TheTheYorkSym-York Sym - The" Cbildren's' . Film Passport"' American" Jay&TheTech-Jay & The Tech- Filmfilm"QueenQueen" of JazzqJazz quartetelJon-Jon- - . ; " " " "' alhanCilleyand 7-8 p.m.. to discuss details about summer missions projects in the The John Newman Association phony Orchestra: Hour , a powerful to Poland will Song , the story niques and The 'lIearts"' Hearts will be alhan Gdl:1.: . and J - - f - 1 - - the SecondondVISlonVision School - : will perform at- dramabyLi1liandrama by Lillian bcshownalthebe Shown at the of Woody Guth- -Skylinersa, a shown at j High for SMC All-Purpose Room at 7:00 is sponsoring a crop walk . - on the - IfcllmanatRaft-Hellman , al Raft- - newillrie, will bo Rock & Roll Slrand-Capilol- will performormatat . Strand Roll - - girls.. Wear yellow. p.m.. . October 28.. Participants will 101 Performing ers Theatre , Dutch- PerformingStrandArts shownsh wn altheat the Revue . altheat the PerforatingPe orming Arts the Slrand-Capi-jard.Capi- 101. - ' Arts Center. For er Hall. For infor-- Center. For StrandSlrandCapilol.apitol. - . Center. For . For.infdrm-For . infdrm leave from the Millersville ¬ 846-- the bor- information, call mationcallmalion , call 872-- information . call For information . StrandFor information , information , call ationcallalion. call . , United Campus Ministry Orchestra Performance ough park at 1:00: p.m.. . for a 5 or 8461111.- . 3129.. 846-1111.-. . x11846.1111.call 846-1111.- . can0111846-1111.846-I- l ll. 8461111.- . 1111.. IS .;i s . 27 8:00: . . : . 30 :OO . . : U pm. . Join us each Tuesday afternoon The Fulton Opera House 10 mile walk (10( or 20 miles 26 8:00: 0ppm. pm HungAback2:00 pm. 28 7:30: pm. . 30 7:00: pm. . pm !I.. for " " Hunchbaclc " 19671967"Lav.m."' e- University Jazzsaxoplion-aophon-- "Thellunchbact The fjlm"QueeQueen iep.m. Love: . " L of Eugcl Clark Memorial Center ) . " " Eugenle " Clamber Series J in the Student lauches its Commonwealth bikers ism Christopher of Noire Dame of Noire Dame Hearts" will be will deliver the Rock musical shown atI I " " . presenta the - )d, 3:00: to 5:00: p.m.. . Look for Bank 1990-91- Music lIollydayIloll day and will be will be shown at shown al the sixth annual MU Hair perform ..Ih Ar , from National Quartetand. - - the - " " Ills Quar\cl\ will the Slrand-Sttand-Capi-apl- the Slrand-Capl-- - . Science Lecture- cd I! Stand xdiaTraincadl3 n? table marked "Listening Post" Series with an encore perform- 101 Performing Strand Capitolpllol PerformPc orm-- LyleLykDimo ! . the Monastery Trip perform al the tel PerformingPc orming Performing Arts ship. For ticket DmmJ . For ? Arts Center . lIall. For ticket where Chaplain Pam will greet ance by the Glenn Miller Sociology ? - - . Arts Center Arts Center. IFora Center . For in. information call 109 major History maj- , ' For information , informatIOn , call . - Forstrandinformation , information call information , call formationforma Oll , call 8723407.. . f; and have Orchestra. . Tickets for the October ? ? ' , -. , - . students or faculty in or Christian Catholic ? Well , if 846-1111.call - . 8461111.- . 846-1111.- . 846-1111.- . caII846-11l1 3357. , ' 1 formal conversation about what's 3 performance are $18.50$ . and you answered yes to any of ' ' i - - - ' happening in their lives.. may be purchased at the Fulton these , you might be interested in box office Monday through - - . 1.. Sat taking a trip to the Dominican : Club , 11:00: a.m.. . to 6:00 p.m.. . computer . German urday Monastery in . Tom helps Lancaster. The losers - ' ' : 1 The Millersville University's or by calling the Fulton's Quick John Newman Association is . [ ! enenouenoughugh - Wham She thrusts her finger down, with German Club invites you to at Charge at 397-7425.- . sponsoring the trip on Saturday , _ ¬ force tot register on the Richter Scale.. Then; she lIght- tend weekly meetings on Tues- Sept. 29 , leaving from the New- Fulton Opera House the for< the resit : p.m.. . in Room 229 , : ly lifts her hand and repeats process f ?r there:refitt.. days at 5:00 man House at 3:35 p.m.. . and . Folksinger Tom Chapin will be . < " . ofberof her name. , , 5 Byerly Hall. Anyone who is returning to campus around 5:45: r' BY THOMAS . E. K performing at the Fulton Opera ' : KLIMCHAK interested in taking educational p.m.. . Call Tracy 872-9724- < " are sso " . House on Saturday , October 6, at at if "Why you hitting the keys so hard? I ask. trips, talking with exchange you want to go.. Snapper Columnist "I"1 ' like typing ," she . Hmm.. The 8:00: p.m.. . , and Sunday , October FeFeaturesJures don't replies students , playing games , and dis--¬ dis physical strain must be too much.. " covering Germany both polit- 7, at 2:00: p.m.. . Tickets for the ; " I performances are $12$ for adults Relations Club , ically and socially is welcome.. Ah, the 1990's' are here.. There is another type of person. . This person eex-> - and $6$ for children under twelve. . The Millersville University We must now adjust to t Future sales and activities will be the "new" way"" doing pects the computer to do anything and everything may be purchased at the International ¬ of everything and anything. . . Tickets Relations Club wel- away.. discussed. Specifically , we must become " right Having no use for such things ais{s Fulton box office or by calling comes you to attend their FridayFrid y, friends with "The . instructions , ' Computer.. " Fortunately , I " general knowledge or proper care , he is Science Lecture the Fulton's Quick Charge at October 5, 1990 : myself am "computer 5,1990 meeting at 7:00 " very - for a computer.. ! . - literate" and ' " The Robert Y. Garrett Mem 397-7425.- . pm. . in Room 108/109/ of the frequently flaunt my knowledge by orial Lecture in throwing out such phrases as " - ill several association with SMC.. We will be discussing "Is your RS-232 So illwe sit down and I show him how to do Peace Coalition th y..S.. interface paralleled the AAASAA (Lancaster Chapter ) upcoming educational trips , - with your I/Q/ card to create the little functionsfuncti ns here and there.. He picks it up righj " The peace coalition meets so maximum " will present a lecture on "Retinitis cial activities and fundraisers at parity in that DOS environment ? Many away ahd proceeds to wipe out every program in itsi : p.m.. . in SMC , . ' Pigmentosa : Shedding weekly at 9:00 people are very impressed by such entirety with button.. ' - Light on the meetings. . stylistic and the pushpus , of a . | Rooms 129-130- to discuss - with * Why Some of the Amish have cur professional use of the lingo. * " "Why" did you do ?" " Trouble Seeing at Night" by Carl rent events and to understand As a result of my vast knowledge and experience , just that lI ask through den1c en" Poetry Reading . ' . ched . . ,' . methods of conflict resolution.. I am teeth. A. Frankel , . . " occasionally asked M.D. The lecture will At 3 p.m.. . "The Commons"" to show someone else how be to use a computer. . I usually held on October 4 at Franklin Bicycle Club Coffeehouse and try to avoid this by His only response : " ' . , poetry reading "I'm testing , something. LeaLeave falling over a fit and , in of coughing and , Marshall College Stager Meetings are held every Tues- (at 7 p.m.. . ) will be held every politely explain me alone.. " Building , - . that I only have 24 hours to live before my - . ' - ' , 102. day at 8:00: p.m.. . in the Phila- Sunday at 30707 N.. Queen Street: , ap ' . . This ' the Lancaster , pendix explodes. Of course , after I have been type doesn't like to ask too many question delphia House across from in the basement of " - Leadership Conference , dragged out and often puts himself th t--- . Studio . . ! screaming and crying from under a into situations that ateare library parking lot. A. " The Student Life Office and the table , I am happy to help anyone work with a difficult to climb out of. I usually don't' worrworry about ' . , are coordinating . .. c ;, ; , " . except the : "'' V Senate j . . when questionsqu Student , Squp, . ] ! computermputel " tthis stions"becObecome Kitchen TrTripp IItInterVarsity, rV r ity. . . ' I " e What) at is dieth ;{ ' *' 1 " ' ' " . _ : ; ' passw J.'d.' :! ' ' the Fourth Annual Millersville The John AnUrbaitpreseniationAIL. be , , SeveralS y ?" > "WMchl3atk, you usese " or "' , Newman Association Urba pr will pe " Severalr distinct types of people emergem. rge passwordthis Which"Which'b' do you ? ! , around a Why willlJe < . k ' ' etiat9P! " * - ' . ' ' \ ! use"Wlir" : ' ; , p , , c : - - - a ; : , }, University Student LeadershLeadership has scheduled 'a - 'Tn 'night ri' "cdtI iiJeri'"m:'HSevfirsFlypelfirsr-ttypepe th n1 s- me d1 c1 i1 ar@h@? \&vietS'Sudde tlvbombing Ska \ y trip to given Thursday'lughtvThnrsdad : , Septa27epv. : , uM firs thinks machine -i Viaretheilklaiets-" ' uddellybombhlgl N bfblaske" , o . " Wash ymghr 27 tthilsltette isthadeisihade & - - , : ,1, " J ,-,' " ' - " " , ' Conference for officers and mem: " ington D.G.. . 7 : ' pcp .h. i. ' 'S' ' glass.. THis perSonperson fears - iictu 11y"n S.tl' ' " : ' - during fall break to at 7007JOO'p.m.hi. "in'inin'- the SMC'SMCC of that ihe actuallylias'theactually has the ad m; - ' l' on " - that Insteadinst of treatingti ii thetli comterwith-iespectc \vit on ; ' t e t/; this bers of campus organizations work at S.O.M.E.. . . . (So Others Purpose- Room.. Urban isiaisiSj a ability to break the thing.. To put it bluntly, she is \ / 1 : : person treats it as though it is an' ' .; October from 5:30 to 10:30 Might Eat) . We need volunteers mission conference for college paranoid.. Sometimes I see - people - * old football buddy ' sit ) - panic He pushes it around , slaps it on the back , tries to p.m.. . at the Student Memorial to come feed our fellow brothers students at University of Illinois. ting at computers.. ) - " " give it a beer, and has a grand time with . He - seses Center. . Preregistration is neces and sisters.. For more infor- An Urban Mission Conference "What's' wrong ? I inquire nicely.. it iiuses - . - " ' ! the disks as frisbees (which do fly well) and hits 'the sary dinner (contact the , , ! ! " hitSthe for Stud mation call the Newman House will_ 'be-be held over Christmas "It isn't working I think I broke it Oh , no is, . monitor in the same way he would kick a tire.. At ent Life Office in Hull Hall ) at x3350.. break.. the calm response.. _ "Is" it turned on?" times like this , I like to just sit in a. corner and whimper.. "What" ? It has a switch ? I think I lost it ! " The . . conversation goes downhill from there.. Once Most people , however , fall between the two MU joins the ter troupe , student . theater the computer , flashes on trouble really begins.. extremes. Some people talk < to their computers (a , < These unknowledgeable persons are scared to bad idea because computers have a big enough ego Apple Tree"" and "West" Side her spare time , but she also has BY CINDY SHELTON death , and that leads to problems.. as it is). Others simply use computers as paper- Story.. " ; she some- " another pursuit hopes some Okay, now type in your name ,"' say.. weights (one the Snapper CorrespondentStaff name/ I of more practical uses ). And many. " Klahr won the role and a day to do cartoon character "What" ? Now? You mean touch it ?" see the computer for what ' .( it really is (a'neata neat way to chance to travel , . halfway, over the voiceovers. " games ). , \ "Unless you have some mental powers I don't' play While many us returned to globe.. She iss traveling with - on ' of For now, Klahr has started on know about, yes , you'll have it.. " ' to touch (It should Millersville University in August , National Touring Musicals and her tour withhashigh hopes.. She be said that a petrified As ' person has no sense of humor computers dominate our , world ;, we should all " preparing to start our classes , one will be on the road for a total of world'we will be appearing in1n York , Sept. when Dealing with a computer. . ) The hand slowly familiarize ourselves with these friendly machines. . ' ' ' 'student'' made the choice to take a eight months. . - *¬ 29 , at the Strand-Capitol PerPei-- hovers over the keyboard. . We wait.. The hands drift After all, you never know when your command yeary off to pursue a dream.. During time, Klahr will be e at that forming Arts Center.. The matinee over the first key.. We wait again.. The room grows module will match the baud rate of the hard drive Amy Klahr , a senior at MU touring hundreds of cities in the 3 . . ' show is at p.m. and the silent as sweat beads on the person's forehead. . The and cause your whole bit-mapped- system to rere-- with a major in special and United States and Canada , with a . evening show is at 8 p.m.. tension can be cut with a chainsaw. boot.. . . elementary education, decided to chance to end the tour with an audition in New York City and overseas stint which may include' take a chance at winning the role touring Hong Kong and the ' - . of Minnie Fay in the musical Orient.. ) guide ( . Starguidel- " " . : , * ¬ Collegiate Star "Hello Dolly.. Klahr appeared in one pro ( . **** This role was not unfamiliar to duction at MU , "Perfectly" " Klahr , who had played Minnie Frank, in her sophomore year.. E.. G.. . - T. with Mann and Charles. Fish III Fay before at the Dutch Apple After this tour is over, Klahr 1with . ' , Theater.. She also appeared in plans to return to MU and get her . - ) . - - "Seven" Brides for Seven Broth- degree.. i--' " " " " LIBRA AQUARIUS GEMINI f ; ers , "Singin'' in the Rain, "The Klahr enjoys doing acting in ( - Sept 22)) (Jan 20-Feb- 18)) . (May June21 June- 20)) The post office has . 23been slow to deliver The gills of fate are full with celestial The stars reveal a brighter outlook than , ' " ' ' don't -- - lately but despair somewhere, some- waters of good tiding for every Aquarian.. you'd expect. Be prepared this week to be ' New one is1s thinking of you.. Sending yourself mail Don't towel given a strange . . . ' worry < MU or even unlesS& , minister arrives at off bathe for fear of giftdont unless.thethe". is a ' not only waste of time but also a waste of rinsing off the fluids o1 positivity.. Lucky package leaks something wet and sticky: . relatively new idea.. I want wom- pride.. item : : . Lucky of the week Patience. . item of the weekw k : 100% cotton shorts.. Lucky item of the week: Bounty.. . ' , ' BY NATALIE NOVOTNY en to know such an option is ,. Snapper StaffStaffWriJerWriter open to them.. I also wantto, be . SCORPIO , . PISCES CANCER there for women who feel the ( - ( 21--July 22)) ', " Oct23-Nov21)Oct 21)) (FebFebl9-March20)- 20)) : June July , need to talk to a female ," Nov March ' pastor The sharp taste of a preIpremiumium cheddar A bacon sandwich may save the day for a It's time for a change in your life , so do The Millersville University Rev.. Keckler said.. ' cheese is the best descriptive : of how your Pisces this week -- you will have a surprise some packing. . Collect all of your morals and Protestant Ministry has acquired A very important idea to Rev.. week will go.. It is advisable to keep an roomguest who will be hungry.. Try to beliefs , stuff them in an old suitcase and a new minister.. Rev. Pam Keckler is the idea of the ' ; _ " extremelextremelyy open mind , and closed nostrils.. budget a few bucks for John Herr's. . Lucky heave them off a bridge and into a riverjriver Keckler will serve a one year "ecumenical . " . ministry. The word : > Lucky-item- of the week : smellingsmell ng salts.. item of the week: A well-stocked- 'fridge.' . Lucky item of the week Ballast.. interim at MU.. ecumenical means "all" faiths.. " - , Her goals are to keep programs "I" believe all faiths should ( . SAGITTARIUS . LEO i going chiefly A.D.. ) , to get work together. . I hesitate to call ARIES LEO - ¬ (Nov - 22)) - - involved more with - any programs ' ' 22-Dec (March 21-April 19)) (July 23-Aug 22)) . non Christian because ' ditional students and commuters , Start saving for Christmas , it's closer than This week will bring the goodness of a The big cat purrs this week , that scratching that excludes Jews and other ' to ¬ you think.. Investing in long-term- . . s is dozen Popes , so the good.. , extend invitations to all mem- groups.. I want everyone to feel CDs be ready to enjoy the time under chin must really feel ThereTh, er ' , as, is have.. Be Tels bers of the campus community to that they can come to me ," Rev.. unwise stockpiling Roger Daltrey you careful taking tests ; Aries tend are no fleas to scratch and plenty of squirrelssqui , . : ; come to A.D.. . and offer a albums. Lucky item of the week A fine to bring downown the national SAT scores.. to chase , so catnap and romp . week*. to Keckler said.. all . sense of eye-hand- coordination. . item : : spring break service trip.. Rev.. Lucky of the week Ballsmania. . Lucky item of the week Catnip.. : Keckler campus _ likes the , _, . : Rev.. Keckler is presently a ¬ " and has found Millersville stustu-- , :: V"' ' . / - ; senior at the Lancaster Seminary. 1 ; dents to be very warm and CAPRICORN TAURUS , She earned an , VIRGO , v undergraduate and . ( - f \. positive. Dec - , 23-Jan 19)) (April 20-May- 20)) (Aug - ) . . masters degree in nutrition from " ' , "Millersville is very open, it's Romance blossoms this week as every The potential teacher strike could playa big An omen fromSeptlast week will prove to beb Indiana University , and spent small enough to allow anyone to fabulous babe/hunk/ yearns for YOU.. Gals-- part in the near future.. Be ready to travel and . positivepositi e. Long romantic walks and.aand , a night eight years as an elementary be a part life here ," Rev.. wear something . - of clinging and fuzzy. Fellas-- spend money.. A rental car would be a good out will prove to be enjoyable.. Be careful school teacher.. ' Keckler said.. don shorts , no matter how cold it is.. Lucky idea ; we're not sure if your car can make . with your , an She also as a it finances error ,could send you served day care item of the week : Reebok - : " pump high-tops. . Lucky item of the week Unfiltered Camels.. into debt.. Lucky item of the week : YourY r datedat :. center director and a student pas-¬ "The" Listening Post ," a new tor at the First United Church of program started by Rev.. Keckler Christ in Carlisle, Pa.. will be for both students and ' IF YOU WERE BORN THIS WEEK : Play with allall.the. the toys you With that in mind , act young and stupid this week.. We're in collegec9 eg , Her interest in ' ministry began faculty members.. Its function received as gifts and don't share with anyone.. Cherish the celebration no one will complainc when you set that car on fire.. Extra specialsp cial four years ago.. will be for people to get together -- friends may come , age is . think , lucky item of the week: A long trip to a place that only you and a few and go but forever. Just next year , '"' ' ' Women in the ministry is a in a relaxed atmosphere to talk.. you'll be a year older.. Now is the time to live the way you want to.. other people know about. I . C SEPTEMBER 26199026 , 1990 THE SNAPPER PAGE 11 - ° ° a : ' by Bill o ( o G < - - :: : A SMALL RED . AT THE CONTROLSCON.1i. \. , ITS PILOTING OVER THE\ \ QUIZ : \ . d _ n\.S _ U' i r4iJ " O OTHER OUR . \ .' 'WORLD. U . SPACECRAFT; NONEE TUfM LIFELESS ( ) , + i ®/ ' ,&J& \\ E 1.. G 5"S _ M/Il ur r ' 1'3 65'' . . HERO , . . OH HIS' BREPBREAKSS THRBUGHN\ \ FEARLESS. " REFLECTS. o " > GIi . I5 THE CLOUD COVER SPACEMAN. \ - SPIFF.:' UNUSUAL. . . . ,: \ ! .l Mission OF: MSTERIO( _ ,.. ..TO SOMEHOW CRASH / EARTHING c ' ; 1 I PLANETS G AW SXSTEMPLANETCU' !.' * ; 5 lL/6/ E/QbG/ AIN , ' ,, -_ TOGETHER .' 1 H ' i . = > . - : .. - . " _ ? I , . . 60i Cs - _ := ' '\' _ ' =' - - a > - A - ANCHOR\ CATCHES( .. \\ IMPERCEPTIBLE AT THE & PLANET . IN SCIENTIFIC MISSION TOt THE\ \ C \\\\ES( FIRST , . BREAKING ORBIT , 6 r 1 > ONr, ; ly\\ I I 0U Po cHewer CJP 11To, JOIN Th DISCONDISCONERER. WHY1UATAT HAPPENS NIHEtJ OH AHILLSIDEI.' PLANET SUMLX MOVES , TOWED PICKS OP SPEED , HURLING ", ..cJUST WHrR; 170 oo ( Lj WHERE > - OUR VJHTIL , . PLANET GRMMl SOU Sr1OEJngoLjcEJngo- ' TWO PLANETS COLLIDE , SPK E SPIFFr DOWNSHIFTS ALONG BX HERD , TOWARD 5 . I SH05S 'tOU S Af ep J # FEDERAL : 5./ ( ' 51AINED . TUfN ( ® a ( : 4100 . DEG "f'fI" . 'R6 MAN SPIFF DROPS ANCHOR ! ANDGUNSAND. \) G\JSOUS\ S uP IE ,' , . "LJtJ:. 1NE. ; I n RU65" \ PING GONG1( : wrrNE55 THE ! r i \Iv ''to"" . < . MOTOR . ARRE I//, / / pE51R0sED ? U I peS1RotS5P, MfJM . PRCRIB CDRTAINS'1I' I . ... ' ...... I ! ; ' \i ; ...... :. . '. bITNTj .. _, , __ ; . _ 1 ' I _ _ % > ; .. PULLED B'i' SPACEMANSPI\CE\ M WITH NO TIME TO LOSE: , THE PLANETS CRASH , GWDlNG WAND TIMETIME PASS HERO + = ( SPIFF, PLANETPLM ET 6( IS OUR. COTS LOOSE THE SHATIERIt3G'ITNW\TH\ AWFUL FORCE/ 6 5 2 WR PAPERS © . I . 1 ABOUT TO ANCHOR , ' BE\NG1 SMAVLER , FORWARD . : ' \ COLLIDE\.. \ AND FUE5 TO PLANET S 'BB'\ IS I Geelll '( 9 ' TO ONLY , REMAINS ! . I HOPE/M wm PLANET55/! OUST/ 6 ' ' > I 'TlWt/T1ulE ? JVST i , PAre e5NES u / I T \ THE - NOTiCe. , . . SHED STY _ a FIRST PROBLEM .!' - ' ' ; I , . .' . . ' II .0 ' . 1 - - 7 vh" : &> . IOOOUn IPressSynd'cate' . T11ETORTOI5EAND1H TORTOISE AMP THE HAIR1MPGANTHAIRIMPHAf.R IMP'ANfAMT TO . . ' ' . . ROBOTMAN by? Jim Meddick :. GARFIELD . by Jim Davis ? DAVr , > . ' . { QUI E LE iJM/ A\J'i'\ ,9'; 9.ZI ' GQ ( LETS SEE..IHNYE. . w..VHAVE.. ; AN \ Neff . {) QUITE A LITTLELl RAINSRAINSTORMORM ( GEE,1G EI, HOPE NONE Of \ ' IlL 1 WW NAPE\' ; SOME. 5EE..1. \F WERE' RESC\.IE\ - \ WE '" ; .. . ,/ - < A - > W HAP LAST NIGHt' , E.HE.H,60H.BOV6, BOY & ? tN E FOOD GOT WET 1HTHROUGH6\-\\-\ . SNSNACKS-\KS- : 1HKT1141\ \ I\lMONt\'U ND) JOY, , 3 SNICKERSSN\C\\ \ IRS; , , S ANt> RUSHED\ > IWMEDf(WtLYLV K. \ \T - . , ;.. 5ALTINE ? - ) . , . . ' POCKETS 1 COULD \ () US & VENUE al\R 2 ox TO LK LWMNE'S . . N\\( .', HGU\ \ ffth \ oxESs JACK \ , m "" \ \ ' \ ( ' ; ' > "\ , OVER' \: . UNTIL OFOFJUN\JUNIOR\ ) JAIMTB\ [ , 2 ' W IRE t>OOf\\ . " ' \ \ CLl\R\ pppMfpEt; W>= ' : , WE'RC'RE'R , A .. RESCUER . BARS BUTTERFINGERS, . . . 1 . .? , //o.u ? C f II t ' ° . THIS RAIN JS NEVER. p I ' I'I M ''AV ,5, 9.22 p THAT'S IT.!' QrOINGrTO p STOP. LETS' . LETS' GO& ! / I PACK OP AND GO HOME/ a RENJ/TOREP /I-Zb- wE PICKED UP DONIT Help" ! Tm' stranded I " 0 o , COMEMEwfrBABOARD, REP m FMBER an c I > I I on an island with BOYS DlD A TTAE SENDING ? OU IIM person::. , 0 0 \ KETTLE annoying fat u ANY ' _ FIND lSS o' z ? , ld M6SSPIGE , =; , r' IN ASotLE[ . f - I , . . . '- F K & ERIVESTbyERNEST@ by Bob . . FRANK ERNEST ® Thaves . ' . . ' . . . . , , . \ ____ ' : " ' " _ _: .,. _tA . . 0 - _/ _' I.A! , . f/; , " ;ii : SHELIe , ' REALLY . SAW \: -, Y , ; ' . t0\:3i 1J.. ; " " nl "rI" ° . : ' : " ' ' ''i ' : . . , ' . , d , ; 6 'CHiSNEp.HER'; IFe I ' / : I : ± _ D ' 1Fi erbf911o@ I 10 - . "( ! PATE WITH j I i- \ . . G . ME i , . . \mo n \ ! . 1' ' __ ' HI U , r1'C LIDdO.S . '! 't ; AND) $SH .S. \\ \' . U'' ' \ . , SAYS $14E . I . . $ L " " ' -. ..c ' - \ . 'i-- . " . XfJ\\ I'N WS SHE \ ' : . 4. : " " " " "AN . 8e :,J . / ' z , ; " : ' : , . " ro'' ; ' U t2r ' ; : " . ; t f JAPp fjrnB? , . r' f G i . . ... " - . . ; . :, :. _ : " " : " ' ' ; ' ' . '' & e , : . ' ' j' , :: , ; INGLi I ;. . SNG&.f. !. ' _ ? f' - _ ' : ; ' . ' " ®, "HNER ts$ A STRYAr zy A () A. ® , K ; ' oLT . ( ? . FfOM - r A u -- . A'uNI' " ' . . -F oUS, gO'J-- lJII' PE ,, ' ) ' 1) , ., " .II\IA\ / F. K GoiNG r""' '(UJGHN HIS g.\\ "re IV FUNKuN : ' " 1 : .< , ° l .c - " A MOf/jc/MOWjC F-IS"S To , 'i".Ml.f. IPbafL'Fe ; Tod / / " ; : ' . . . P.c.lO'NING' A - \ ' '1-1\ " " - . ;: ' - : "M 'ST Y... : ,\-IAVtS\ : . . . :' : ' : ff Inc : ; 990 NEA , - ' _ : . . . , ) ' by , ' ' 1/f/E'S/ !/( A CHAP . . IN II + ClMII{ p , mvAarunK d KIN/$ & 77.fa? . '1NEMI6iA'YJPACEMf6HrY' 5PAC ' 4 . , 'me ...... 0 :$4/(6fIIAIJ( ( GI"" : $ / , . rg . ' ) . . - . -- = < : : . . :; ... t-.cJ.- - -= " -- " , (.." ' ) . . . ' - - " ...... + . , , . . . / ;. . .r ... .. 9ltO... . \c --tr" "r" :?" .1'' i: n. \ ' tht ' ...... c.\...... , - ...... , ...... Ct ... .l'. '. . . . r...... /'... ' . r ' BHGARIMSgfi 9RlA If! f you don't v/a/cfo/ / ft, I chop off.. /.J'. . tP5Wi ATmCKNb/ - E NO rso>-/t.. . : , II . Hdrjr77feWItfDRXST ? ' - / TELEVISIONVISION TRIVIA MACH\ . . BWB-TVBe7U6E BIMBOSM84 TL ' ES' PCAA - 8 , 2 "Because" JuliowouldwantitihatwayJulio would wantit1hatwaywant ittticff way. "' ; X98 r1PUN- "r" : : : . yr nv t PtAIEX ' y CriNEDGr'NTAI; r * 1> ' ' ' ' " # '4 I IiYWENIS"7o ,1, ' , , h THE mUPPET SHOW ' ' # ; y-- , ' in! ,c nmemoryofJimHensonmemory of Jim Henson y , , . 1.. Who\ was Dr.. Bunsen Honeydew's' I° assistant ? l 2.. Who' was Jim Henson's's' long time creative , ' ' . . ' : partner in the show ? . _ ,...... , 3VV3.. \lVhatwas1heWhat\ was 1he name of1heof science-fiction- . . : . . 1 e the ' . . : ' ' : . :. . ' : " "' L ; . . seserialal ontheon the show? ; , 'j);' . ' / : 1 : . A. : " . . . Who\ was alwaysalways1he first person talk . \ &Vvtiowasalwaysthefirstpersontotalkon m'tt%? 2/: the to on . . 1 : ' . , . . . : the show? , S.WhatisGonzo5.. 'v'Yhatis' ' is Gonzo ? ," I ' 6.. What\ was Miss ' ' > Piggy's pet name for 50UH5K63Q GI NG1ftUR'IAl'' I ! =6ETAPIAAI, A EVE g . ERE/ ; . ' We ' . ' aaRaaRrRU ( ) Kermitthethe Frog ?? weCCN/'r/ f4 : - 4- r # stfx " , vE StWPI2 ; , (1g ; / 1I ; ' LV IN1fIe ' IfAStc17 l'E' . 7.. \ 's 6Jl 'J PWTA , , k. V\hatwereWhat were Kermit eyes originally made yys . L4C Wfni1Y . ' PAST. . . . 1M15. r ECO from? . J ? 1 . & Y , . : . . 6.. Who\ was ' foreign ? ' . 1 ' wasthethe shows cook . 8 . . . . 9.. V\hatdidWhat\ did Fbzzie Bears' laugh sound like? . ( 10.. What\Miatyear'syears' show run/ on '. f. f diddidthethe _ ' 1V? ' . / syndicated - : , . , : ' . - - . % ' . , ' I8-9A6I. I '01 iIDJJ11M-mJCh\.I1{ { { \ Mu-h\ '66 J31Q : \ 4fJa . . 9yLsy 'mOsoI ueuaPtoIuE ? . lISP3:1h\S! : :111.1.8: . 'g sl\eqpt'eis\ qa81yauod ! 'L. 3UU3! }[ ' , ! !. . : \ . aUdl8nu8 9 "aUI.L"S9tamlo4o.I < "S . 71yes1s pm gp- " " . ual in'9 ! , : , ;) : . ;°; JJBIS o11noql101 inoqe] SB/KI! / Moqs\ ;sqjtp jsanSsa aqj uiiojui! pjnOM\ JOJOODS) S >' . : U : ' : . i . ,..33Edsaaedsuls8ui! say! , , : 70zoJlucyj' JjueJi'Z! ' wJ3JjaX esg-ifl'I' [ sa3ASNV: ! . ' 'f a' . . rt'1..d11 . .. t % ; ' : ...... 4 _ J.u.IN' ...... '_ ii ...... // /i' ' II . 'I' t I f r SEPTEMBER 26.199026 . 1990 PAGE 12 ______TIfESNAPPERTHE SNAPPER - ______- - - . , . , Y < : ; , , . r :' , " In September beware hopefulnesss . - 't' ' ' stories makes one a better per , From Spy Magazine . ' AMERICA'S' SELECTED SASATIRETIRE son," saidsaidCartlandCartland, , for whom a : / . / ' /gL.. , ,a ; p RY , it HOTTEST reader is clearly a reader. (Nope , r - FROM In September , beware hopeful not this typeoftype of behavior, either.. ) t MAGAZINE.. f.. ness.. The temptation , of course , , ' , " Cartland's stories wouldntt . f ' -- I is.toto do preciselyprecisely.thethe , II . is . opposite I I I I I I I'I I have helped much in Detroit p I I I I I I I I I I i I . M M M - H MI. \ to become touchingly , naively li _ When the Pistons won the NBANB ! hopeful. . title , eleven people , includinincluding $1.5$ . billion Hubble Space Tele¬- Sharpton , acquitted after his ... .' , Hopeful that getting in shape ' three little children , werekilledwere killed, in ' to work an , scope fails due to lawyer, Alton Maddox called the . will be easier when the weather , - nightlongnightlongcelebral-.cerebral-. celebr absurdly obvious error, and un- prosecuting attorney a Martian -- the course of - cools.. tions. "Death" is an ambiguous - . '. \ - believably , former congressman behavior of a type we have not -\1- Hopeful that getting in shape , ' thing ," remarked the Wayne Robert Garcia has his conviction observed'beforeobserved before -- ,declared that will be unnecessary when the County Coroner's' Office iinyestiy'esti - overturned, and Al Sharpton and "all" the Reverend' Al Crook'' ' '| (I cardigans -- ' cools love those " gator, "who" can say those people ' . . . ! ). Adnan Khashoggi and Imelda stories are over , mentioned they're so cozy ' wouldn't' have died anyway?" So Marcos (a new Rainbow Coali-¬ God , and had a party at the ' Hopeful that your fifth-grade- it was just like in Mecca -- fate : If tion?) all get acquitted of a cum-¬ Cotton Club.. teacher will be nicer than your . - $ ulative total of 73 charges on the the Pistons had allowed them fourth-grade- teacher ever was.. eliminated in the 4I same warm Monday.. Jay Stein , president of MCA selves to be , Hopeful that come Labor Day . ;' , semifinals , no civilian lives u Beware hopefulness . Recreational Services may not . . you will miraculously find within would have been saved.. ' After his acquittal , Khashoggi be a crook either , but he is ' yourself a new commitment , , . dedicated to We have definately not 1; : however unwarranted , to your thanked his God and announced emptying other ' . .observed. this type of behavior Mecca , people's wallets. Commenting on . job.. that he was on his way tp - before.. , but then went by way.oftheway.of. the Nile the new Universal movie-studio Hopeful that the beauty from way of '' -- the Nile, a New York City resres--¬ theme park in Orlando -- the one Franran Stephaniee Trutts time the productionpr duction department to ' ' b up until next spring; , taurant where he threw a party.. with a Hard Rock Cafe and 12 wontwon t be " whom you sputtered some- lame , ! is her . prisontermterm - - (Lucky for him he dallied.. If other restaurants , boutiques sell- which when her. ad-hoc aphorism at the office out :¬' s the verdict had a ¬ ing themed merchandise attached for attempted murder is sched- , ' 1 ing wwilll1 surprise everyone and go come day earli- , ; uled to end.. The Connecticut ani- ° a er, if Khashoggi hadn't' partied to every display in short, the one ' N: " to a movie with you.. - all night , he might have been in with the largestlarg st variety of licens-¬ mal-rights activist , who tried tto * Hopeful that the movie you see - , blow up the chairman of the won't' be quite as thought-free- as Mecca in time to stampede to his ed merchandise " . uses dogs to train / ' - - death with 1,400, other unfortun-¬ anywhereshowon earth -- Stein said, company that Ayef k / the summer's $10,000-a-second$ , ¬:. . $ " ' . surgeons work surgical stap f t' ate Islamic pilgrims. . "It" was "I don't want anyone going home to killathons (Fox studio chief Joe " \ ' fate ," King Fahd said of the mas- with money in their pockets.. " lers , wanted her own four dogs Roth on Joel Silvers' profligacy ' " . , . . . . toto'visitvisit her in prison.. The judge , in producing the $62$ million "Die" sacre.. "Had they not died here , Ah the customer is always . sa , - . concerned about setting a prece-¬ " : " ¬ they would have died else broke. Harder "He is not irresponsi- ;" where..") And so lately, is the world's' dent "for" all sorts of animals ble.. He has a big appetite and a . Marcos thanked her God, did a most celebrated Queens-born- refused.; . Trutt's' lawyer , while SnapperphotoSnapper photo by Deb , staff wide "). Grove photographer very vision" , ' .; admitting that "it's" ' easy to make a knee walk up the aisle , St.. casino operator But sales of Marilyn McKenzie , a , , , ' , of senior Russian language major traveled Hopeful finally that itsiesreallyreally " A-, , - Patrick's' , had a party, and went "Trump" : Surviving at the Top"" joke about this" -- precisely to Russia this past summer to study the Russian language.. autumn , and not spring, that ': - on to television to say how "the" (file under : Humor , Facetiae ) said he would appeal anyway.. See related story on page 13.. brings renewal.. . ' ' ' : . people"" had bolstered may provide Trump with a few OurOur.'guess. guess No judge is going Forget it.. The summer was a little her ' during her ordeal.. Then she join- months of living expenses, if the to want to be held responsible.for. for hard lesson in hopefulness.. You - ' ed Khashoggi at the Nile , satat second-time author's guess is . an epidemic of Americans sitting believe conniving ' esq start to that " ¬ Lifestylesyles BriefsJr down with a microphone! and right. "People love reading nega- down across from incarcerated Lif ( : will nish-- . ! , scoundrels really be punishp ' : sang.. tive things about successful loved ones during visiting hours )' . . , ' : : ed.. ' HIGH SCHOOL MATKMATH *TSS IKEY . . , ," said.. " makes them and yanking'geckosgeckos and spider . E ; people he "It yanking ' As the Australian state parks ' ' You dare for the first time in ¬. ties ? 'geo su ) . Viet- MinoritiesMinq whoho take highgh. schoolsch l ,algebra and geometry succeedd: in spokesman said after a mob feel better.. Precisely. monkeys and miniature . , of . ' . . - decades to imagine that exploring ' . . ; ! , . says , . an college at the same rater as whites,; ;, sa 's a College, oUege..BoardBoard study.4t.It ,, 7,000, was killed in a Tasmaian Speaking of suddenly undead namese pigs from handbags and$! teas' study/ and . . 1 space is worthy thrilling ' shows - ome students who take . math courses do almost ; -- , - 1980s figures , Moammar Gad-- tearfully pressing the pets'' snouts bask ¬ penguin stampede 7,000 pen low : You begin, almost , to feel sor-- ' ntorp Th sor. . -- as well in college as theirir moremo afflaffluentiitpeexsrit peers.. Expertsperts say die study : , -- . hafi was back in the news, for against the reinforced glass and guins, not 7,000 Tasmanians ' low . . i . . ' : ' ry for Donald Trump. ' > ' - , . & ' "' . . shows ,the real key appears to'be.geametryto {e.ge. gex metryUy, taken afteraft r algebraa1g b in ' placing huge orders for arbara doing it all Barbara " % , 'aJn' this legally ! * have not observed type , * We * . ' . ' " . ' ' . . - " ' mostmostcurriculums . ' :. " romance novels a Not in their country.. , curriculums . But then Trump pulls his PearlPe rl of behavior before.. Of course , Cartland at Pearl ' ' ' ' ' " , and : " : . . ' - - - a London bookstore.. "The colonel Our advice to Trutt to all: . . OFFi; Harbor Day. sky's-the-limit beatbe i- that was week or so before ' - GOLF MEMORABILIA, TEEING OFF ' ' - - ' hopefulness . . . ' - : - . knows that reading my love Beware. , ' :, " the-Jap casino challenge, and'theand the Mecca. Golfniemorabilia. memorabilia to.theth fore'infor 'in \hthe antiquesandantiques and dthe " J Golf is comingto ' ' \ collectibles field.. Many items made prior t :tO930;: ! are considered ' ' . ' . : " : " : ' ' : ' :' : > ' : :: o. ' : . PREGNANCIES COST TAXPAYERSTAXPAYERS'MORETAXPA V 1is MORE: . ', r. X : /: ' - . AmericanAmeri an taxpayerstaxpa rs spent $2L5$ 1.s. billion lasttast.year. year ttvtojhouse}bouselouse;, ffeed, new ' nell ! &;,That lJkf . ; nage ; new look . educate anda d babysit the families .headedbead by teenagee ; niotherswTbatmpmer&$ a , ; : . ?* o*' Snappy . . " ' . I'hlit needs. ' . ' ' : : - : . . ,- <; ; f-<; , 111 percent fromfrotti.1988, 1988 ;, aareportLy-report -byp&y & . . i' figure is up t per ent accordingt , ll t the . . ns ReaS : , growing; , . Center for Population OptionsOpti . Reasonsns inflation the . ' ' , " , ; . : number;. of teens having children andanand an increase infunding for , ' ' ' . ' . : . ' '- , ' - ' . : Uding . , , , : major federaleral supportport prpprogramsrgramszincludinggr ,Jncincluding MMedicaidcaid , , . < > : .majorf, , . < ;, ' ' ' / ' '' f' . , " " ' , : ' :: : ' ' . ;, : ' ; . ' ' ORE'TEENS GIV NG 'nffiTl . . MORE TEENS GIVING BIRTH : , . . . . , , , . . . -t . ' ' teenagers birth accounting . . , " . 1988 .488,961.488. 488,961'teenagers,96.1' gavegaye-birai/accouadng; far. ; , . . In , . $$25 ' , ' ' . percentper ent of all U.SbirthsU.S. ;, births, aaccordingo dirig toto'thethe. IJ.S. , Center ffor'Healthalth : . liS ' ' : OOQQO ; . The birth raterat wentwent'.from.from S -9- for everyev 1'040 gutsif , agedg d ". StatisticsStatist cs 504, I ! . ' . : ' ' . . 15 to 19 in 1986, .to'S3.6. to 53.6: . inin..1988.. .1988. 1988VThebirth, The , ,birthblrtb rate ,badhha beea//b en :, . ' ; ' ' ' ' ': ' ; & . ' f.; vet JiQOGOQ JQi ; gr , 6S.3.3' . > ' ' .declininginin that agee groupuP'smcesince 1910'wben1970 when 6&3'oery& of every l , " " $ . " . . . ' . ' ' I. . * ' : ' " ' ' - : : : f . - ' ' ' - . ' . . . ' - . girls had a babybab ;. 3 , 'V , , - " Bring drawings to The . Snapper , , " \ office . . / fi " . ' - ' ' : ' ' -1\ ' ;" ' : " . ' ' . / , " . : J. ' . : ' ' ' ' ' ' : >' ; ' : " ! . . : , . ' . ; . " : ' . i' , : : ' > >, . on : .. MENTAL-HEALTJ- CARE COSTSCOS.TS.'RIS. . RISINGG : . : , : ; the basementba ement floor of the' SMAC . ' - ' \J' . ' - ' ' MENTAL : : - . , \ ,Chemical and4. ent l- ea1th.. problems} iti e-tlSi.. dependence . v , . S . ' mental' will ,' the : be printed in The Snapper : . : 1987 , In the two: years, Finalists workplace! cost. 1023$$10 .31lIbonmbillion? in followingtbe'f ' ' ' . ' .. = . - - . . - R.. says . . } average : , : , . , annuallynnualallyfSaysy;, ays th - that costincreasedcre ei an percentoft2.perc?/; n.H , fie for a campus vote.. { 1 : . National Institute on Alcohol Abuse: and Alcoholism.. JnmIiI an effort too ' i . ' ' . : .. . ., buse: , :cut theth costsofcosts,9femployee, employee mental? -health and substancesubstanceabuses1 bstance, t e , ' mental ' , N - -- . treatmenteatm , more employersp oy s demandingdi more mapmanaged, carecarei'v:>, , : .m re . : . tt! . are . pQ . ' " ' , , ' TWOTwo'brilliarit"films" ., , brilliant, . films ares arrive' in Lancaster ' : ' . pa , . ' .. HARDWARE packs , a punch / , . ks'a ' Ii . nothing. . 1 HARDWARE (R) film spares youyo It * ** * 1,, begins , and immediately grips ______2 . r 1 you in its world of orange. sky, ' forced After nearly sixsix'monthsmonths on the population control through k f editor's' chopping block to avoid sterilization , and post-nuclear- war " " poisoned citizens.. an "X" rating , Hardware hit radiation . theatres last week.. The bulk of the film takes place ' A stark look at the future of our in the heroine's apartment.. This world;, - it is similar in tone to space restriction serves to ° _ Road Warriorr and Blade RunnerR nner, heighten' the tension , when in fact but much moremore convincing in its it is due wholly to financial grim pessimismpes imism. limitations. . Stanley chose to limit the' number of sets so healthy Dylan McDermott star's' as ' " amounts of cash could go into the . "Mo ," a soldier home on leave specials cial effects.. Indeed , for the from "the" wars.." In the - ' Christ : mas spirit, he buys his sculptress reported budget of just under lS' , ' m' rnastmasterpiecerpiece girlfriend Jill (played by Stacey seven million , the film is terrific 'Scdrsese's mafiais ' " fia ' ' . . " " , : ; - < - s' . , . Travis ) "scrap metal" that turns iriscopei i ope. Rather than add an u i0' freaked viewers cringe: One par- ' ' , ' : unavailable GoodFellas ( R) ' , out to be the remains of a 50 million to the R- , : ticular example., comes . * * * ** when government project : an ¬ budget (a la Total Recall) and Harry learns that another man has . arti , , . , ficially intelligentintellig sol-- jump back and forth to dozens of(,) " nt robotic f . . . , c ' , , expressed some interest in Karen.. - ' -, - , , " , . Once sets, . utilizesu lizes one set --S . . ,=,If there's' a . to get involved dier. integrated into the sets Hardware . there's' how This poor guy (he even looks like , , "' '. sculpture she , the with\\ frightening efficiency. . with.ititl1'theIthe.rhafia"1afia'" handbook, Martin is working on ' a victim ) becomes the receipiant of ' ' ' : Beyond ¬ , ap- . device begins ! the impressive ap Scorsese hashas'takentaken that volume a brutal pistol whipping in full to reassemble . - Mixing reggae , an Elvis Inpersonator , old Fords and a strange - - - rid , the ' itself.. Once this occurs , the action pearances lies a depth ellas . and turned it into GoodFGoodFellas a '64 un ' sense of humor with some fading heavy metal songs, Dread view ' of his friends and ' ' , -- - &. . . . crime doesn't stop.. common to most life story.ofstory. of an asp ring - Zeppelin is becoming a hit on collecollege: e radio stations.. aspiring Corvette. Strangely , such violence science boss'andboss' a d his criminal doings . Richard Stanley's' directorial (films! , a runnrunningng symbolism really got Karen turned on to the - sirlnirrln-the.movie.HarryI1 In , , , . rry Hill (Ray . , . debut (most similar in its visuals between the characters (and sit themovie"H - gangster . . ottatconnectsLiotta) . nt events ' to The Hunger ) is definitelydefi ly in a uations) in the film and biblical - l :. connects importantimport GoodFellas is loaded with ' " {( . is rom. : past through) narration class by itself.. Inspired by a characters This parallelism not tom; his stereotype-based- that filled ' New group combines humor ; . ; : ¬ trip taken war-ravaged- obviousb ious this is not a message ,while the viewer, observes the ap the theater with laughter through recent to .. . } . propriatescenesPJoppropriateate scenes. . ' HHe tells of his Afganistan , the film strikinglyis film The added insight that the " every scene , including many of ' : "' " directordire tor and screenwriter give us 'rjset;-; r.Qugh. : familyfamily".with. with. visual and claustrophoclaustrophobicallyically , the ' the bloody shootings.. Karen and i - with reggae building. r.. realistic.. The characterization is through the symbolism is il- Zepplin excitement and glamglamor. ' - " rise Harry's wedding ,was a non-stop / Wh: the go intense , each character bordering Uiminating': , however , and raises Whenn suave character can - ; episode of over-kill every. male '' ' " no further as a bachelor , a new . on caricature. . The entire film is ththiss beyond the level of the year's and Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak cousin was named Paul or Peter, ' ' " narratornarr tor is , one of extremes -- it is very other action fantasies. . BY RICHARD REITZ Hotel.. introduced his future ' . ' every female was a Maria.. The wifewife'KarenifeKar:Karenn (Lorraine Bracco ): aMaria violent , very emotemotionalon l, very In the same vein as Total Editor in Chief But Dread Zeppelin should not wedding gifts all consisted of en-en - ' ' dark.. NooneNo one came out of this Recall, this film creates its own be written off as another Zeppelin :' " veloped various thicknessesic nesses : ' .: FrpmF: thist is'' point the moviedevel-movie "devel-- of t an \world\v' r1d, and . ' is - , ' '9 : , " movie without a pale face and succeeds. IrisIt Total rip-off band like Kingdom Come " ' Dread Zeppelin ! ¬ ' tps"a,ps"aa dual plot.. On one side we filled, with bills displaying , is 'R'Recalls only competition they perform the songs with a $qpf one. the por- upset stomach and that one of calls real for - - for - )have Harry trying to keep his trait of Ben Franklin. . the best indicators that , it is an science-fiction film of the year , style all their own.. ' ' IRSUnRecords si1J , . complex and , profitable businessb sS Supporting roles were filled by effective thriller.. and, it accomplishes more with Tortelvis , who has on numerous ' ' . running On the. other side thereth re is RobertR bert DeNiro , Joe Pesci , and like Aliens and lesss . It is not a film for everyone you a occasions professed to be the lele-- ' Much The l' What category would put = : ' karen{aren being kept in the dark( about Paul Soryino. As if born , be Abyss, the strongest character of -l the , the sex , the group who plays Led gitimate son ofPresley , sings with ' ' to violence music : ' doings. Eventually . the . two , . , - ! , it with uncanny the , criminals language an Jits'is the these characters flush the film is a woman the . is explicit and hits ZeppelinZeppelin'remakesremakes a reggae resemblance to plots! come back togethertogetheduid: and the out the action in a convincing aforementioned Stacey Travis as hard. It is , however , highly beat ? What if you added a large king, and appears like the king in " " , . , ¬ movie builds strength and power. . manner.. I kept expecting one of "Jill.. Her performancepe formance is.theis . the recommended due to its artistic ElvisEIvis impersonator on lead vovo-- his later years.. True to form, thistl s contains a . and me individuality and merit.. Similar He is backed Jah film' them to pull gun shoot finest in a film full of convincing . to cals ? up by Paul Jo ' . - . , ' all ;.the elements off a true mafia just for{or watching them at work.. onesones. However , the actors take a The; Cook , The Thief His Wife WhatWhat'youyou get is Dread Zeppelin , on rhythm guitar , But Mon on story: payoffs , hits , babackstabbing,; From the first bloody moment to back seat to the cinematography.. and Her Lover and Wild At the most unusual group to hit the bass, Ed Zeppelin on percussion- mistresses , drug dealing ,; and so the scrolling of the credits This movie is unlike anything Heart, it is a terrific example of a music scene this year.. And with ist, Fresh Cheese on drums, and - < ' ' <; . " " on.. The fact that GoodPGoodFellasellas is . .GoodFellas. GoodPellas is a film to be seen.. It you've seen before , and director director's eccentric. vision their debut album - - , Carl Jah , who Tortelvis has called : : ' ' The ' ' . ¬ basedbas d onn a true storyt ry makes it allll' is undoubtedly theth , deepestdeepestyodyyou Richard Stanley definitelyhasdefinitely 'has a , Brought uncenspred to the screen.. Zeppelin seems"Unto have " the top 500,000, guitar . Dread eses-- "one of ' ' ' . . . film ' the more intense can get into organized crime with career ahead of him in thehorror Hardware is not a happy , but. tablished a category all their own.. players ever to live in the - " . . - , : & . , - " r --.The- The film has some grim mormo- five. bu and still get out with genre.. is as striking a didi- it will please. any fan of the ' about it, this is Richmond , Virginia area... r-r bulksks It ' There's no doubt ! ments / pay. makema e easily your life.. (Wonderland 4)) . rectorial ; the cinema.. (Pacific 4)) . , - that. . debutdebut.1lS.as I have seen unusual stuff. In a music world Actually putting the humor be , , that overrun with groups attempting to side, there are indications on this , - - remake and improve upon classic album that this band can really ! songs (usually with dire results ), play.. Whether or not Dread iMUMU spends' nds summersummerohiin it is almost refreshing to hear a , Zeppelin will stick to this format , . " . . . . , " Russia, . , , studentstudents . , " " . , : . . . ' " . , - . " .1" , ' ' ' . . - " . , " group attempt to play Zeppelin remains to be seen , but for now, . , " , summer' - ! . . " , ' ' ' . ' . ' in r , - ; , } , . ¬ ; , 'and"twand two wreckss of trips toto' cities " she said.. . " . songs with wit and blatant irrev they seem to be headed towards , . , , xplaifled, , ( a many - available , , ! to thejp, hat * " j that songs , h " fPJ '? } , \ ' ( . ffi . ' IlYiY SHAIN , I ,1 " " S . \ ' " "i " ' ' I jfa' ARTZ ' ; . / , , ' \ S. : : ' ; " " . - . v tJ ' " ; status ' / . niQgr ' . . II (in ( , , erence. The fu- ' lu 1f , . dreaded "fad" , iricludrg"Lenitigr'aridRigaRiga , uak fW" , g that ' ftd i4 . MBKenzie maya'' "smdentsbuyjiis'ea'casjndthen, , n , , ; tudensbuy-. MtKe w * " so " - " : } u.x ,,: d' i 'w also ! l1 Sd" ? > 'used ,. s"iia'f A ' : : said .195JJ. L . . * ! M1I ; ' , , * "V _ . . . ; < ' \ * cas ; zir also . . . " " - - - , S ; . ..tpJ.VUaudthenb. . . * t * . - I .".... ., " . . . . . - ; . . . v L1S-jfyiP? iJJ ' iij tV b ; S"Hriner-St"Ul-: , .J'i!' er 5tq...., . [ ita- _ / R.oI Il..1"& .. - ' d : vi.'i.iJ-.tf\. - , ' r.- ' . t . fJ.J y - 't-- ! -r , ' : " - a. ffi.e 1sof by " ' the R . . QiaT- . ) _ 'i . ) , explain. . This is not a brilliant album , . this group could rest in , pr . " " , , aU" . : tfJ' Jiaq , e lure.off . , p , W1U-' ' _ urih- . , p'.uu1\; -jure of ' " : " . . iuiqere /appreciatet ; of . tO:; furtherri lle V' ? .1. _ fiurters. . l.e ; " theswiftness ' \ the ' . "" " ' :" jp ' ' ' It , . , taJ ' = ' . ' . : . . . ! ; = . ii'eJ 1 I' ' , '. ' ,,- ' . . , ; Th prcfglataiamTw1S"i as . : - CQ: .tS f..n se I cars standards , but you. . abilitability , and possibly :\i 'I'\ ' ' " Thp, . (. ,. held,eld at the. rVic , conveniencehvemerl , cpncec.Qncepls. i ts , newnew. arid useduse cars traditional their to adapt \ . 1" service c .ahdin6jndm I II ' . .of P : . " - ' < q ' : ' . - , . > Mauri e . appeal. change format when '{ v country Maurice Thorez"InstitThorez Institutete in , ,. can't deny its humorous their the nov \ TravelingTraveling'toiaaveling.fto .a fforeign; reign ntty ' Mos' ernizationofofoftliethetheUSU.S.. . . , and correspondingtheireir corresponding . large ' " - ; < - cow.. The'instituteThe institute teathes foreign ' " range 10 From the. opening track , a combi elty subsides. . dan!anj be'e an educational , reward , Ira general: , theretl re is a line for range in pncesprices. ' ' , " : : . " J ' . - languages to Soviets and Russian . w ' . th ' inn nation "Black Dog" and But for now, they seem to have e. , Russians? ing; exciting. and nging everything. If there wasn't.alinewasn'tasn't line Why the interest of life ' ' " " : . .. to foreigners . . . . ' g , " McKenziecKenzie revealedreye led is the - "Hound Dog" where lead singer established a unique formula for pportunity that one can reap the it .wa. wasn't worth goingo ! too it . out : " JIt. on' ' : the ' - :. ¬ " ! ' - \ , life When McKenzie and .: , : st nding i1c the l 1g-- Tortelvis sings "You ain't nothin' successfully performing clever re- other i positive benefitsand experiences stustu-- McKenzie( said. >, V' standing diffdifference in lang ': . " - : dents arrived at the instituteinstit " ¬ . but a black dog, this album will workings of songs by Led fr-o they - uagege that attracted her. , She to'corrieXJust ask t stat , fronn . McKenzie , "Stores n.for. for years to coxtiJust; statedd dif . : ' dif \ . :, ' iyn - found thet e Soviets were already . . ' would like see more students amaze you at how low. this band Zeppelin so many hold dear. , M Mc- from way to Millersville's own, Marilyn fer the. U.S.'s in the for own" ' ' " " , ' - '"- ,; ' stoop.. So what kind music does :t". "..f\.enZle.,.. . : . involved in their exams and the that they are set up.. There were choose her area of study for she will of I Kenzie-$\ ,. ! : " Zeppelin purists will be - Zeppelin play ? It seems 1 completion of their sos , , "romance languages are Led Dread 1 McKenzie. , a senior, Russian studies. stores that specialized in drinks (eels of " - of say they play Led Zeppelin { languagenguage major, trtraveledveled to Rus-- that the institute , during her stay , stores thatth t only solds ld bread , etc.. going out and Slavic languages fended by this cheap rip-off safe to ' " " :; all . . are going bec )me important, as classic songs like "Moby Dick , songs the way Elvis Presley and i sia this past summerta) study the held basically foreign She, said that, the Russian to become ' : " " ' ' , ,- I - students.. on-¬' these areas in Europe become : "The Immigrant Song , and a Bob Marley would have intended t' Ru lanlanguagein'itslanguage!g ';. .ro9motherer, . supermarket equivalents have on JRussian, ssian': . , , ' ! ' ' " ' { " : ' :its ' stronger "Heartbreaker"" " sound. . , " not and more involved with combination of them to . . That howeverr did not dampen a ly . items , to choosech os from ' . few land ' ' ¬ the U.S.. . " . The Russian LLanguage ImIm-- their trip for they were housed in such as milk , baby food and . ' [ on . When asked to reflect on her mersion Program , which, , was a hotel for Soviets and their jarred andand.canned. canned food items.. slimmer Computer workshopsshops ¬ wor offered - were summer . experience , McKenzie sponsoredonsored by the American professors were all native Rus-, McKenzie expressed the " " . ' ' rS Russi that 'she . CCouncili if of TTeachersach of Russiann, sians .,. . . . . , groups awe over their first said could have been "' " " " "' - " . University will "Introduction to Lotus" (two - " . - Millersville allowed foreign . students"'thethe op- Traveling' ovoverseasrseas is a.a !.great breakfast in their Moscowhotel. . voted the "most changed per " ' ' Moscow ¬ ' ' ' ' . " offer a variety of six-hour- sections ) , Monday and Wednes- : . "' son. pprtunity to hor their Russian opportunity.'toto . see how other is breakfast ? It was more At first she was very " to hone/f see This ' computer workshops, this fall at day, October 8 and 10, and !i in . We , as, A homesick and just wanted to go SkillsdUs"byby , offering insinstructiontio. 1.. people live. as Americanser cans, like our idea of lunch.. They ' ' - ¬ : : " the Willow Street Vo-Tech Monday and Wednesday , Nov- . , many - . homeh me. "At the end, I became sad phoneticsp, onetics , grgrammarmmar and classes take so things fo'rgran-for gran served beef tongue and qther " ' School.. ember 26 and 28 , Thomas E.. jbiii conversation and the study off ted ," remarked McKenzie. . assorted . meats , cheeses, cucum- because I didn't want to go f. . ' = assorted " Open to all interested persons , Mertz ; The.stu. s.t1j7- " " . home , she said.. periodicalsc ls andnd media.. , . "The much needed necessities bers and tomatoes, she said.. P, 9d 'Pt . ' ¬ f ) sessions - . ' a1 the workshop are sched ' ' deciphering r ¬ . )1cKenze'sMcKenzies; goalg is to become " " ( dy of media'mvolvedmedia involved of Americans , such as'as tootht oih McKenzie did find the Russian ' "Intermediate Lotus" two ) uled from 6 to 9 p.m.. . These the terminologies used in Soviet paste , .S9apsoap, deodorants and thee Metro system to be far superior atranslator for an international sections ) , Monday and ' . "hands-on"" - " noncredit workshops magaziness , nnewspapers and ohon ever popular toilet paper , can't' be to ours.. She said that they were corporation in Russia.. Wednesday , October 15 and 17, . " are taught by Millersville science television and radio.. - found over there , " McKenzie much more efficient and free of "Looking from my perspective and Monday and Wednesday , . . . . ' . " ' . " " -. " "- ' . - .:. - department professors.. ; . . - . program , . ; as major and the field December 3 and 5, Thomas E.. ii5):" The eight week ; also'stated.also'st t d. graffiti than ours.. awlanguage " Offerings, with their dates and . . I . to go into , the weeks ; ran from June 14 . . '. . . , . "A" . . Iwantwant eight Mertz whichThe through !" . Russians rarely buy their own . subway car came ' wn about ; ' -. , : ' ,. : ,' ' - ' : " ," . instructors include , approxr - , . ': -.everyevery " were not enough she said. Augustugust 4 consisted of made /products_pro uctS forforeignig'n . ( 20 seconds , Mc KenzieK nzie . when . " . . ' : ' ' ;' - " ," Fee for each workshop is $80.$ ' , : ; ' . ' * She wishes to return shortly "Introduction to Computers ; schooling . : innatelymately six weeks of ; versions off the prbducts.areprproductsducts are said ; ' . ¬ To and more . register for . ' ¬ she said, " Soviet Mondays, October 29 and Nov- ti. . McKenzie remembers thethe dif- for "The way the ... ______,, - ...... , , , , . . ,, . . _ _. - . " nA""wv"-uv1.u." " " .m "" " .m"" " " " " " ' . ' dif ember 5 , Blaise W.. Liffick ; information, callca11872-3030.872-3030. . M""m 'n' ficulty the natives had in comp- Union is changing now I would :, k . ' r rehending how an American love to'beto be theretothere . to watch it - - ! ! - ( - . change in front of me.me."' . student could afforda car. She ' , ¶ Cove live band . Pirate's hosts ' . - : On Sept. 27 , Lehr Dining opened for major recording art ' _ Room will once again transform ists such as Mark Farner (ex-- - , into the popular Pirate's' Cove Grand' Funk) , Flamin'' Harry and > - , , dill Nightclub., . The non-alcoholic- Rick Cua (ex-Outlaws.- .) . - dance party. will feature the rock The Pirate's' Cove Nightclub ' ' music sounds of Defender. will open at 9 p.m.. . , Thursday MANOR ' ' music' ' ' , Defenders rock music blends evening (Sept.. 27)) , and will ' ' ' the best of classic rock with both continue until midnight in Lehr - / ' : : CINEMAS- I / contemporary Dining sounds and power Room/Gordinier/ Dining - CENTER . q . MANOR SHOPPING it . : rock originals.. The band offers a Hall.. The menu features a variety with Kefifi . MANOR ' \ Ranck . , , . 399-3301- - l - o . l - perfect mix for pleasing any rock of non-alcoholic drinks from mursdaThursdayY , 7-l7-10 p.m.. . 393-3300 , . ' ' ! : ' \ - , ! : on Q-92 FM and roll crowd.. Pina Colada to fruit Dacquiris, t ItI"" DaringtobeDifferentDaring to be Different ALL DDAYY PRICE $3.50$ . ® In existence since 1985 , Defen- and hot and cold snacks from the ' . * der is quickly making its mark in Gallery.. There will be a $$1 cover .y. ,'. (<[R) DAYS 'OFOF THUNDER South Central Pennsylvania by charge with an MU ID , and a $2$ , . , FUNNY ABOUT LOVE (PG13)) performing actively in Lancaster charge without. The Pirate's' , . " and surrounding counties.. Over Cove is -¬ . sponsored by the Uni _ WILD AT HEART (R). i , . S the year , the versity Activities Board. . , ° .past band has , - . - . . . . r. . DIE HARD>2.R(R) . r ' - . ' ' MY BLUE HEAVEN (PG13)) , S ' ' 'T-- SPRING BREAK f ;, JUNGLE BOOK (G) / - ' . , PUCKTAIL.S .(G) CHRISTMAS BREAK TOURS \ , ' GHOST (PG13)) Individuals or student organization - PRETTY WOMAN (R) " . . " . promote our Tours.. - needed to Ski/Sun COMING ON FRFRIDAYDAY. SEPT. 28TH / 4 PACIFIC HYPEHY E (PG13)) EARN MONEY and FREE TRIPS to :. . , : Cancun , Daytona , Vermont , . ® MANOR SHOPPING CENTER Montreal. ' Call HI-LIFE- - - - . { : (& ' : .. 18002635604. ' \ MILLERSVULEMIIURSVILLEPIIf, PIKE RT1.. 999)) .. .. rnw'nIAVELSNP . - , . , \ Ii , , a ' . I'' . " PAGE 14 . , SEPTEMBER 26.1990J990 , THE SNAPPER 26 , " . . . , " . u. . ' < ; . " ; 'q ' l - ' { : ( : ' , : > < : : : : ' SWWSK5SSra SSeSia 30B 6SB . s' : ; , " > ! , ' . , ' o ' ' ' ' i 0 , ; : :: , ' : : . ; , : < J , ; ' : " ' . ' ' ; lP:1 ; ; . : 1i\nTtJt . tXHB// .' & .; : i" SNAPPBRfS. . WEE&LY.COLrEGE . . , < > , " . , , , . , . . . . \ ' \ ;' : < ' < ' ' :: ' ' ' ' " " " " t'// ! > " ' " : . . : t : l\ ;' g- ; : : : 1 \1 ; . : ' , : , \ JJ. ! 7 ;: . , O \ J ; , f , . . MU ; \?{ ; . ss1loNArl ? r: i . : ! , T , ' ' F , UNT1 "Ii ;: < . .zPROFt, . , O " , . . , , < . . " iliifib- , , pl. SiONA , .. L " E , ) J . . " " ," ' ' ' ' " " , " , ' ' ' ' , "- " , Y , 1 ' , " . " " , , " , P , " , < , . " , " : , . . , ' , " . " _ . <' S' " " ' , . . . , . I' , , > " } . 0. ' " : " " . . , . . " ' . : . . " ' ' v. . , ' . . , > . r' " ,, < . . . ", , , , " ) , . ' ; . ' " '. " ' . ' ' 'c . " " . ' -' 7" : . ! ' .u W " ' " " " ' ' ' ! ;°,: ' ! . , °' GAME ' '. 1ZZ9: , : ., ! } . 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' .w" "; ' '' ; . - , . . , \ _ " ' , ' : : : ' : V" ' Saturday, Sept. 29 West Chester 7 , '' . : , ' , , UQlV11\, ', /U' : ' ' ', pm ' , : . > 1'0 , / ' . / : St : < . at , , oroo . , ' " : . , , , . , . . ' < . : , , " .\.... , " , , ' . , 'X I . ' \ , ' < ' ' ' ' '''M ' " " ' " " : " ; ' ,. . ' ' ' , ' : . :' 7 ; , ; : ' : f : : ' : : . , ' " : : : > : , 'Y: : j> : . : : : : , . , "' . lH' Cay . , : , : \L\: ;l, : : ' , : / , SOCCSOCCERR ' bry.Jrt" : . , . .i > " . , : . . . . " , % > , , ; t . , " ;< . ; ', , ; ;.' >/:; < . . . , ' : t>( . , " . , , . > , , } ° r ' ' "' ; t j ,> - ? . .t t t'ft , ' ;APR'EROFESSJOb1FESS1ti A fr ' , . : 'sn"f ; i -< __ % " ' . ' s , % 07 _' \ , , Saturday, Sept.. 29 - Delaware , 11 a.m.. . Si x , ' ts # ,af. , Sitft ? l l s7 : n", si w.a3'' ' i t < , Gb , ; , ;( .U , . d3i: ? ,9, , ; ," tf tom. , ; C ' ; ,rls ',':. TuesdayTue day, Oct.: 2 - Kutztown , 4 pmp.. . k"roa, ' L yf 'r vf yea', v t e , ; Denver at m6 A1QW , , " . " , , " " ' , , ' , ' " : . , , : ' ; " r. , ' > . , ; , : ; FIELD HOCKEY : ', < ' ; ( ! '; .; ; - ' < :{ " ,<< ' ;4' .:J"" : 'n'' <. , . : , : c : . \ ' " < + : . , , ' . : , At ' \-'H ' : < \ < . 'j' , . ; . ' 'f ' , , , . " y ' ; : ' . .t'' ' ; . ' ' ' . ' . , . " i-- \>1' > ;. 'at " .ruUu. rS' , < ' " . . md\M" "- n < ;. . . , . , . ' , " ,, -f , . ' . ' . ;. , , ' ' ' ' ' .' v. - ' ' ' : " '. - " . ' ) . ' < : . ; ;. < ; / ' , ' , . < - : 'u < ' ' ' , . ; .' . ' ' ,. ' t.r " , ;' <> , ,} ' { :: ' :; : . ' , ; , , : < . y : 'b-.. , < . . ; . > > . < " . > , - : >- . F , . < , " - > , ,- " ; , , : , Sept.. Shippensburg , . . ' , , , : " .z1. , , 7 Wednesday 3:30 . - " , 26 at p.m. ' 1,4'' : , ,: ;; V /t,1 " < ' \ ! IiJ3 " / .' @ ' ' ' \ ., . " t - . " , ' teti.'t3ttnttOJt@ - . , " ' , . : ; ', : , , t""r" < ,,, , .' ; : ' / 'Vf , ' , ' < ;. " " ' . . , ' , .' 3'' , , . , "' , /i'7; 1 , : ' . " ( " ; . . : ,; f < : . ' Saturday , Sept.. 29 - , PA , p.m.. . - , . ) , ' . ' . . .' / , ; Indiana ' . : " ;; " . , ' ' ,. ' . , \ ' , " //tJ/ /.: " . , . < P1 1' '. ' . ' " . : "( ' ' ( 1 : Oei"cl d. i"q"\ i" ' - , . . ; ': \ i - ' ; ' Sunday , Sept.. 30 Slippery Rock p.m. ; :: ' , . : , : , " ; . { - : : ' - ; ' > ; : . ' . , < ' , :' , ' ; . ; : Z' . .; ':. -l'' ' :: , ' ' X. : ( >" : ' $ , ; ' , i , " : , , . A ; . ( : ' < : , f ' . . . . , . \ . . tr- " , ' > , : " " , , , , , ;: 'i' .. . , < , . , . PtJlt . " , . < < : , , , " , " , ' ; } , . : " ! .! ) , : , . , : ' ' . ' ;\'I'' ,uc' . , : , " ;! , . ' ' ' 't' ) . / / , . , . " . 1"1 ( ' > . . t/ ' , . , ; \ , "y > ; .,' " , ' ' x'' / ' " " : - <- ' ' ' ' < ; " , ' . > ' , I WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL , "bs i ? ;. J. < : > , - c )y , .y--' ; ' , ' , ' t: "< l ;, : . ; ;', ::3-: - \ : r9": " iJ>; ,"i" , , lzJ"" " ; . ; \ ; > . : : \" <. . , ; ; , ' ; .L : /' ' ' : ' < J. . " t ' , ,li ! , ;. > ; , / , . : { < / 1f . : ; y"t' h , xy1\, 't.i'' ! ;: - '" i . tf.rk: > > < ;' , ! - < " V ' : < , : << 1 , > < " o 1i' tf ! . , " ) ; " t Y > " ' $ \ o "" ; \ .' , " , . * " !" ; /;{IC' , , \ \1'f" ' :. ' ' ' - : " ''oM * '' ' ' ' - "' \ {, f> ' . ' , , ' ' , ' M z * < /l'ffb , ' " r- ' tjY &. , § f ' a * > ; ' : , , . { ' ! " . \ -1} ' ; - . Yft kf , ; ::: . - . < Saturday , Sept. 29 at Bloomsburg Tournament , all day. ;; ,' " : > : n. :) ' , ;- , < :: 29- . > . : . St ' < 0"4 lK'": " t- ? 'iSanDre . ,. , & * . , _ - " " r ' , . . . , , itt . " , [ " " , m > " , , . - , .. .. , , , , , < : " < " , . .ww-w , - ', ' > y , , , ' ' < " , ' 'o' ; ' . : " ,> , '! , > I; ; , , , > - ' < ' , ." , < " ' , . ,. ' , , ' ; ' ' , . > Pp7-{ : 5 . , " , ' '( }. ' : ''' ' . , . Tuesday, . - at West Chester, 7 p.m.. . :1 ? > y " ' rr-; ' : ) ; : ' '' < ',6, 2 ; < ' / U. ' Oct ' " ft ' " " & % ks ' , .D. ; '- : ' ;' - : ' ; -vl- ,. ' - ; : ' ' ; ° . . -\'f-i\ ; ; < ) ' ': % '+ ' ' : , : ' { ; : , : : 1''; < { , ; , s.. . ' . , ' . i : : , : , :>jo3';' ; : <, : ' ; , , : 1 1ff; ; ' ?, /1121i . , : i\Y'': - . \ ,. " ' ; , | < 1f t 3 . . \ . $ / - * ' > " f " . , . f1 : " *, ;.. ' ,: . , , ;A . 'tt : : < . , , \" , : ,- ' j-Y1" / : > 'J ,'t , n' : '} . ; "A"'z' " '. t :: ' : ; : ; S- *> , \ ' > : ' < ' " . ; ' N JIDrJrmAOOItIlRtAJL > ; : : '" " i HIK\n WOMEN'S TENNIS - ' : < : r1t.i' , ; : . ; ' . ; , , . : { ' ( 7 . ptac F s APIUI "' ;( acC"X'asb.A, ' you w.uiWjn IluW ) { .t' aside : Uefun y " ! n < tl fwMtJe" . QwliUettnytu ' -5VCac, , asideVf'w" > f&< > - ' ' , . iiL.} , . .. . , s , ' " . , >- < ', ' " , , . " . " " ; . .. : , , ., . i " ! " : ' { ' , |f' h #. ' \ iiJ.-. ' ' : ' , | . ' t . D ' ' . : : : : ; , ' ' ; ; " > ; .J . . : , . - , 3 . . . : . ; ; : kjr , ; ; ; . ) Thursday Sept. 27 at Kutztown p.m. : ' ; ; ! . :, j/ SOCCER Fosters- for intramural soccer are due in.n. the Intramural , t :/ ? , : . , 'ir ! are'du < ? 'k'l - . . - . j&&$,' < . ajtfo'lSi - 1 . . roiizt.isiirii ' ' i-iSrt ,;; rF * L* -2.f .* ; * ifi tt *. ' SaturdaySat day, Sept.. 29 Cheyney , , p.m. " vi'' C - * t1>> ' t ' - - 9il fu to MfJ " { Wilt , , +- 11ie.totani. ftrd r , ored.h.L. . Office , . . l " . . today Sept. will be held on < , . , 26. . & i , The captains meeting . , : w'' " ' . , . " > " " , . ' Y.\1".\ , ,, . , , ,< , > " ' . " , " m" . ; ?- . ,' . ' . . !" ' / " , ' ' > , < ) . ' , " ,> ' < . " < ' . . . , , . , - X&-4-) . . " ,, < < . . : ... ' , ( ' , w2. . . \ ' : O ' . : < : , ; \j . at : . . * '.. : ,1.t. Jb1.. . : .Cyu Z'i' .> ' Sept 25 4:30 in room 129 the SMC. ' 'l . of : > ' " ' ' .i 1r. i tJ , , , , . : ei ' , . : : . ' :; :; ; ;'theIndianap' . 1P. : ' ' ,: . : i : WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY ' ): { ' Jp ,, atl, . , , ,0i' ( : ; - , . . " " ' " PROMOTE SPRING; BREAK f. . JIM Hours flexible , benefits. available . HIM . . - " ' . . 1948.1987 . < H DESTINATION FOR 1991.. EARN CASH " ' . ' ' ' ; COMMISSION , FREE TRIP AND For more informationn' call xx'-3516--3516. today, PRESENTLY BUYING VALUABLE WORK EXPERIENCE. .. , . ' tl r ' "' : . < ;- ' - see : , , BASEBALL/FOOTBALL/ APPLY NOW CALL STUDENT TRAVEL or. stop in the Snapper office and see the , , ; " - . - ' . , - - - , SERVICE , . . . Sports ment 1-800-265-1799., . DepartmentDepar CARD COLLECTIONS - TOWELSNP.vt ; " , -wutrer-..... SERVICE1 , , SEPTEMBER 26.199026 . PAGE 15 \SEPTEMBER THE SNAPPER . I . . ' : - - ' ' Overall. record at 3-3-1 .. ' 11Q1d1 ( , ID.1ID. dl(9Jf " ____JMU . . ____ . g . MU Lock Haven in key matchmatchupup ( )) ( ) ( ) - beats > ) ) 0 ' - - flt 1bffJk ' N .. There'"' waswas'somesome suspension of 'BY.BYKELLY-BY- KELLY GERHARD " championship this season.. '* ' varsity players (at Lock Haven), Snapper Staff'WriterS Writer ...... :' Staff said Coach Miller. . . . " + " r, "k Early favorites for the this the aF" " ;r u -,, , But did not affect Lady * Millersville raised their confer-: national title are Brigham Marauders drive to win.. The Irish ::enceen e record to - , by beating Young and Virginia.. .. .. " +.Lock Haven on WednesdayWedne1 ay 4-3.- . "We were very realistic about BYU , which features the ... the situation ," said CoachCo ch Miller. i:* Scoring goals for the Lady Ma--' and talented arm of heisman ' - - candidate Ty , - J..rauders'were. auders were Amy Marberger (2)( ), In non-conference action Miller Detmer com " I - Valley I petes in the WAC conference 'Shannon Rothermel , and Tina sville beat Lebanon by a - - Wenger:*Wenger.. score of 2-0 last Tuesday.. to (Welterweight Athletic Con . things ' ' ) , - ference not known for *b Marberger'sM ' goal opened the . Senior Captain Sue Elliott Captain college . , anything in sports : : scoring 5:44: into the game and, started the scoring with an : Virginia , who also has a goal, - unassistedunassistedshot,shot at the 12:45: mark an Eagle Rother- " following ponder QB in Shawn Moore, is * the first . great :'mel took a feed from Marberger to of ftrsthalfhalf , - .... a member of the basketball- .*give MU a 2-1- lead at the added the final . . . . Becky Kerstetter rich , football-poor- , ACC . intermission.. . Marauder goal in the final minutes V . It was a strange week in conference (the former " > -" of the first half on an assist by , J- Wenger scored three minutes . . the world of sports , and a Always Clemson Conference ' Rothermel. . v.intointo the second , and the lead . . , few mym until Virginia beat the Tigers half . items grasped . '. , . . " Breachedreached 4-1- on Marberger's' Although. the Lady Marauders , ' attention( . . two weeks ago ) . ' 'C' second goal of thethe'gamegame midway scored only two goals , they ''S First of all , Notre Dame Each team is undefeated , ' , " ;::through the half.. practically , dominated the entire ; has to be the luckiest football has already beat its toughest . , . ,_ game.. /sc " team on the face of the earth.. foe , - , Fla.. and . , " ' l\t. However , MU seemed, lose . \ to ' ' _ 'a 54 S 'S . the second week in a BYU- , , For and has ; > ; " was /' . Virginia-Clemson : control as Lock Haven scored "I wasw s very pleasedpl ased with the ' " row, the Fightin' Irish pulled no one competitive left on its -;two unanswered goals to make it defense: ,"' Miller said. two' . . - . out a dramatic fourth-quarter . - - schedule. : . µ ' . close... tX P..t.. ' 'Hk / Miller also said. that Millersville d ' 14 victory against a team from ' , l "' , 0:: We had a real breakdown de-- also had many opportunities . to Michigan , this time beating 1 .;7 r V , ' . 1 . ' . . r4r ' , . - ' ' . M : ; " . , but failed to make . + yt cs . + Michigan. State 20-19 on a fensively, said MU Coach Carol score the -S t !. . ' .:zr'w.' ., .- :- . 'BY'' BY / Snapper photo By Cynihia'SheltbnCynthia 'Shelton, staff photographerphotograptie'rJ- ' :Miller. . ' touchdown with 34 seconds ; connection . ' . - MU ar. !- Sue : ' THE AGONY OF DEFEAT captaincaptaln SueElliottEHiotTevadesevades a remaining. . LEROY g , W.: - "' had many chances to score Millersville considers them- We in ' 2-0- LVC ' ' Lebanon Valley defender the Marauders win over last The touchdown was set up - -: elves fortunate more than two ggoalsals ," said Miller.. ; . 80YER selves). to come up with Tuesday. . The Marauders are 3-3-1- - on the.the season. by a reception of a tipped ;-=the win, considering that last year ' statistics . The do not lie. four.. have to do is put the ball in the pass , the second week in a '.: " " Lock Haven was the Division HI Millersville had 25 shots on goal We"' did dominate the gamegarnet, cage.. row to >:- ' that has happened the SportsBdiPorspbtia EditOT NationalChampions., . ' ' " . : as compared to Lebanon Valley's Coach Miller.. "Now all we . . other - , said . In action Irish.. ": non Millersville playedplay d thist is weekend A few conclusions can be .. . in the Bloomsburg Tournament , drawn from these events...... where they played to a tie in their First of all , football teams Things to ponder about : . . first game and lost the second. Since the Eagles have . from Michigan choke when ','' Millersville played first . their the game is on the line. (see tight end Keith Jackson back ' .ga. e with .; , _ game St Lawrence which , . . in camp and have beaten the Rose Bowl losses i.e. BpBo. > " ended in a scoreless tie.. . Schembechler ) Rams , does that make them ? . ' . , William Smith defeated the Lady Detroit's fourth-quarter- Super Bowl contenders ' - 4 Marauders 2-0 in the second Tampa Sunday again ? Nope.. - loss to night e : 4 ,. . , . ' , ' + ' y. game.. ; . . . , .f r ,. - " 'a..i' ' ; ;a , is more evidence. . Is there actually a con >S. ' r.I , Bloomsburg won the - ' ; ' .a. tourna Second, Notre Dame needs spiracy to oust Buddy Ryan ? ,.. } 'u ' Sk ' . ' a ,. . t4d " . , ment. ' : , '. i/ , 7akd.r'' o , a so.. ' : / tlu'y' + ' a freak play sort of miracle I think" .55. ' '" , " v We were really flat on you might say, to occur in . Isn't' it ironic that Gary Sunday ," said Coach Miller.. Y4 each of its remaining key Brown got hurt on his first Goalie Angie Lutz had a games.. play of the game against , tournament turning I a. te tremendous Let me tell you folks, the Rutgers after speaking out . ; away 101 0 shots against St.. rt Irish will not, let me repeat , against Joe Paterno in the rM1" . . , Lawrence 16 against " ; ,' and William WILL NOT win the national papers last week? t ..5 ' , . . ' . Safl'Y c ; . ,. ,.a. Smith. . the 'v r ' _ rit . t championship.. You heard it Why do Boston Red 7c7 4. , , , y , ' p ; ' Miller said that they could've here first.. Sox always collapse in o , . : , ? . , 7u " easily won both games but they ? w N. . ' All devoted haters September f. , - Ar r ar r Irish " : , . . . K34& " " were not from the heavy h'' ., & ? "KiW" S2POT Wi'' rested now cheer frantically. . " Why is it that the Expos " V \ may ' , , W ' * ' ' / ''iSr o rlr ' : schedule they had that week.. the a swept the Pirates and the s " " While Irish have ; , "Our team is still very young , $ . 'ti ' quality ballclub and have a Mets in straight games last zw ° - . ' ,a + . ' . . 's : ; .g' ' said Coach , need to get V6ff"a R great quarterback in Rick week but then were swept in ; " ; Miller ia.1 ¬ to . - .s . .v. our bodiesbodi . adjusted. thele dede-. , Philadelphia this weekend by ; Mirer Notre Dame lacks onei + ' - l . . , mandingmand g schedule. . - , -nt - ? ' , a 'R'', ' -Sr'' key ingredientingre'di that will Phillies ,1 P ' ThisThi&.week&. . eek the ladies begin their determine this year's' national Isn't it great to see the ,; . J , ar t. . a :rra: "? , - first week of conference play. champion..a. . . weak schedule.. Phillies playing the role of --S -i # - - Today the Marauders, now 3-3- The Irish , now 2-0- and spoilers ? Definitely. . 1 overall, travel to Shippensburg 1 , Do the Mets ' Cynthia Shelton, , staff ' ranked # in the countryco try still you think IN A CLOUD OF DUST - Poised for the attack , SnapperphotobyCynthiaShell'sSnapper photo by ! ? photographer ', . . before Sunday to ' . coming home on have key games remaining are tired of seeing left-handed- game , , MarauderMar uder Robin Mohr fires a shot against won a key PSAC conference game , this week : a.m.. .' and . face IUP at 10:30 against : Miami , Fla.. , - pitching ? I cur Lebanon. Valley.. The Marauder field hockey team defending: champion Haven - . : upending ! Lock 43. Slippery, Rock at 2:30 p.m.. . ; ¬ How are the 3-0- ? ...... Raiders ...... - . - . . . . rently ranked 9th at - - . . . ' . . . Pitts - > ,. . : : . . "C-C" " ; : , , . . . : ; ",; ' : , , ' ;. ' : . . . . ' > " . - Bowl , T.p.'V - S ' . burgh , ranked 25th; at Ten Does Bo know Super . . . nessee , ranked 6th ; Penn too ? ESU sweeps MarMaraudersuders [ : p> ( ) Jl S! QtlS State, not ranked but always Why did TNT show a n ' Cheyney ( .' 9)), Kutztown fitiiti against Notre Dame ; Tampa-Detroit- game as its' . & tough fromfrontpagepage 16 ' Oct S&t ' _ _ . _ _ _ _ - _ - -_ Sunday -. . - ,. (Oct.'l6). 16)), East Stroudsburg Cal , 5.. national broadcast | VHVJVVW Oct and' and at Southern # ' . ' . ' ) . ? Certainly not for the nothing- . (Oct. 30) Henderson booed in NY It should also be mentioned night compared to Brooks ' gym , and our players will just The Marauders' next home that the Irish play these teams ratings.. , , . 1 BY TOM LULADA runs scored and 25 stolen bases answers to all these , is Thursday , , The Nov . a span six weeks with . . have to get used to playing in a match in of " . GannettG nnett News Service in 65. games last year for the gym.. ' against Shippensburg. a blowout of Navy thrown in questions and more next big Yankees.. Those statistics pale % . : between Pitt and Tennessee.. week in Marauder Notebook. . NET NOTES The Marauders ¬ ' when compared to what. he ac-- gym , the Marauders' ac It will definitely be . a Next week will be baseball , Brooks will.bewill . be featured in an article - . in NEW YORK When Rickey be . , a very small complished with Oakland in the awards forecast . home court is Voll - miracle from the heavens if playoff and Volleyballyball East Magazine , to be . Henderson,. led the Oakland final 85 regular-season- : a ' - something which games , tuned.. gymnasium , written by this writer (Leroy Athletics into Yankee Stadium the Irish win the national week so stay . " ' ' .294. batting average , nine home Pennewill getsgets you into the Boyer). - said -eearlyrly this September for a runs , 35 RBI , 72 runs scored and ' because . the .game quicker of The article will feature the . - ". three-game series against his 52 stolen bases.. . ." . ' closeness , - strengths and weaknesses of the former team , he was treated to a < (Q) ( )m. ''I!' ? : : He reached base safely in a ! . . a ; - A1 ®NiAL&&II..mP'Q...... IPitI' ® ll JE.ITIImJF. . - squad , . goalsg a1s , player itA . Lady Marauders , now 2-4- team / pro Bronx cheer whenever he stepped 80 85 games The -- remarkable of those I " ' files , a goalsthe ' me - overallveraII and 1-2- inm the PSAC review of season to toto'the plate.. and went on to be the Most -¬ Val : date, background of coach Scott ' ,, , continued conferconferencence . uable the American , DEFENSE WINS IN NFL : action ' His ststayy in New York he Player of I . : Pennewill , and will include - competition last night hostingby . was acquired from Oakland in League playoffs and a leader in Winning with defense is back in vogue in the National Football > - photographs taken by Snapper ' , East Stroudsburg.. MUwill, parr-: December 1984 , then traded back OaklanOakland's's sweep of San Fran- League.. Scoring is down 10 points a game from the first three , photography.editorphotography Dean Radi-- BlBloomsburgmsburgparTourn-- . editor . - 1989 , teams held their ticipate in the to the Athletics 1989 cisco in the earthquake-marred weeks of and the five remaining unbeaten ' ' in June.1989-June ': - novsky.. ' - I . . ament this weekend before em was that unpleasant.. World Series.. . opponents to an average of less than nine points Sunday.. Four of ' - ' ' ¬ " : on a four-game road trip . , scored 20 points less.. Remaining unbeaten Giants , . barking ' No date is known on the rere-- Many Yankees fans resent "Everybody concludes that the five or ' . for the month of October.. lease of the publication,; but more Henderson because he never did Rickey would have eventually Bears, Raiders, 49ers, and the Bengals.. . . ' . ' infonninformationtion will be available next for them what he. did when he done the same thing in New York ' - . ; on the road trip are ' ; Included . did ; ' FAVORITES : week. returned. to his hometown he in Oakland I dont. believe HAVE GOOD DAY IN NFL . of (Oct.. 2)), , games at West Chester ' ' ! " . Don't missitmiss itt.. 'Oa1dOaklandnd. For all of his individual that, said Syd Thrift, head of the Most of the favored teams were winners Sunday in week three of ' accomplishments - he scored Yankees'' front office when the NFL season.. Results : Redskins 19, Cowboys 15 ; Oilers 24, ' 146 runs in 1985 and recorded a Henderson was dealt back to Colts 10 ; Chiefs 17 , Packers 3 ; Giants 20 , Dolphins 3 ; Bears 19 , : , : - team-record- 93 stolen bases in Oakland.. "His" support systems Vikings 16 ; Bengals 41 , Patriots 7 ; Saints 28 , Cardinals 7 ; Tennis roIIsto9-0rolls to 9-0 win _ ' " '88 he never brought them a the castcast'the, the total environment Chargers 24, Browns 14 ; 49ers 19 , Falcons 14 ; Eagles 27 , Rams ' - -the ' ; whoho defeated Alicia Thesing 6-3- , World Series championship or are a vital part of what he's 21 ; Raiders 20 ; Steelers 3 ; Broncos 34, Seahawks 31 (OT) - , - ' : - '. ' division title.. . . . r: BY TARA BOYER - .; . even a _accomplisheda Buccaneers 23 , Lions 20. - From Henderson's' standpoint , Correspondent . , Charlie Fox , a Yankees coach Snapper 6Improving theirrecords tot the ' ' the Big Apple left him with a sour " .500.. . mark were Lynn. Hutsko, at the time , recalled , "When he FOYT BADLY HURT IN CRASH : taste because he was tagged by . . Foyt, - ' The MU Women's' Tennis team Gretchen Ranzinger , and Julie . was with us , he was a dull A.J. winningestst driver in Indy-car history, suffered serious some there asaas , a selfish, lazy star . ' . He leg injuries in a - ' Swarthmore.9-0. - on Sept. Hambric. . ' player. He wouldn't steal. single-car crash at Sunday's CART shutout . who squandered much ' ' - . / . their record Hutsko defeatedd Kenya ¬ of his. wouldnt want to do anything. Texaco/Havoline 200 at Road America. Foyt , 55, was airlifted to '21 to improve overall. Ander- ' ! , ' 'immense talent.. " . . ,;, " son - - ; . ' He was a complacent player. Milwaukee County General Hospital in critical condition - later - . . . 6-4,6-16-4 , 6-1 RanzingerRanzinger.defeateddefeated to 2-2. ' " That' label was affixed to : upgraded to satisfactory - with a broken left knee and left and a :' "Overall as a team we played Mariana Albert 6-0- , 6-1- ; and ' This much is certain heel Hend rs n . ' right foot.. The , well," said head coach Barbara Hambric defeated Miranda Mich-¬ Henderson during the 1987 Since he lleftft the Yankees , their dislocated race was won by Michael Aridretti.. ' , "'! =: season , when a hamstring injuryinj " good ael 6-16-' '1 , - . ' fortunes have headed in opposite : Waltman.. This. was a . ' . "l_ In action, Merrill limited him to 95 games and . While the Yankees match for us.. We dominated the doubles6 and . directions. r' owner: George SteinbrennerSteinb , a HOME AT LAST BEATS UNBRIDLED : ::' match.." Kerns defeated Donato and The- nner..inin endured one of the worst seasons ' Home - At Last pulled away from favorite Unbridled to win the $1$ 6-1- , '6-1- ; Kelli bizarre press release , claimed , ;: " & MU sing Hutsko and ' inn their history Henderson : 1 "At F&MJmatchF&M Xmatch(match which - ' Lou Piniella - million Super Derby in 2:02 for 1/4/ miles Sunday at Louisiana " ' Giangiacomo upended Anderson ' be emerged as the league's' top MVP lost 8-1)- ) wew didn't play to ourur ' ' " Downs in Bossier City.. Without Stakes , . - Preakness winner Summer } " . lieved Henderson was "faking ' . . 6-3- , - ; ' ' ' ' " . and SarahDavisSarah , Davis and then candidate by heading Oakland's . aabilityb'l' . . " candidate Squall, who was scratched , the Super llty " , ¬ it... . Derby figured to be an easy 10 , GenayGe 1ay6and Kim Schreiner6defeat surge toward a second straight ';, "' win for Kentucky Derby winner . won . . That.hurt. hurt me more thantl an - win Unbridled. But Home At Last The Women netters won everyry. ed the team of Albert and Micheal That, any World SeriesS ries championship.. ' ' opened a lead in the final quarter-mile- win 3 1/2 . : - thing in my Baseball , , to by 1/2Itmgths./ lengths i individual match by straight sets 6-16- 1 , 64.: . career. the 'InIn the process , he is assuring ,\ " except one.. Only Tina . " criticism when I first hurt my for. Genay "We have depth and a good himself of immortality as he is :: fell behind one set to none against " hamstring and the aggravation I ' blend;, Waltman said.. expected soon .to. to surpass Lou EARNHARDT GAINS ON MARTIN : ," said.. - :: Petra Janopaul.Jan pau1.. Genay rebounded,, went through he as - base Martin Sunday as the . That depth and blend shoshouldld Brock the all-time stolen Dale Earnhardt gained five points on Mark - .. . ' ' , m ' nicely to defeat Janopaulin the carry the MU'Women's TennisTen is But New Yorkers membersmbers' leader.. , NASCAR Winston Cup driving championship goes down to the ;: : : . last two sets to win the match Team a way of the media , and members of the Away:Away from the bright lights final five races.. Earnhardt trails Martin 16 points after finishing : long in their of by ., - - . , 4-6- , 6-1 , 75.7;5.-. PS Yankees organizationorganiza m wiwilll always , , Goody's' 500 at .\ upcoming PSACAC matches against ' New York Henderson has second , one spot ahead of Martin in the ;'f, the severity of ' In other singles action, Cindy Kutztown and Cheyney. . doubt gained allll the glory baseball has Martinsville , Va.. . ' hamstring injury in . s:; . ' Henderson'sHend rson's to . Merrill defeated Leslie Donato . The Lady Marauders travel to. . offer ' ' . . , 87.. . :: 6-3- , 6-4- , to improve her sisinglesgles Kutztown tomorrow';; before. r Copyright© 1990 , USA . Copyright© 1990 , USA TODAY/Apple/ College Information " ' ¬ . . . r 1 . College 4. _record. to.3-1.- . Also upping her hosting Cheyney on SatSaturdayrday at Henderson batted .247 with TODAY/Apple/ Informa- . Network , recordrecord to 3-1- was Kristi Kerns , p.m.. . three home runs , 22 RBI. 41 tion Network . . ' . ' . . 16 . SEPTEMBERS 261990. ! PAGE THE-SNAPPER -rPER Snapper Sports 1 -- - . --- , Marauder Soccer unbeaten streak reaches five To begin the scoring , Brent goal , the Eastern College came to town BY HARRY FLANAGAN unassisted his fourth of on Saturday , Sept.. 22.. , Moyer took a pass from Dave season , just 2:21: into the half.. Snapper Staff Writer Helme and headed a shot past the Grine's' goal gave MU a 3-0- Scoring was nil during the first ' - a Crusaders' goalie four minutes lead.. half as MU could not form sustained attack.. Chalk up two more wins for into the game.. The scoring did not stop there.. ' Even with no sustained attack , the Millersville Men's Soccer This was all the scoring the Dave Wellborn had an un--¬ ' un ' team.. Marauders would need as MUs assisted goal at the 19:22: mark.. It Millersville's defense was still any Last week , MU shutout Sus-- defense clamped down and was his fourth goal of the season.. able to stifle Eastern quehanna' University and outlast- allowed no Susquehanna shots Matt Lasecki completed the offensiveve . ; began - % ' ed Eastern College in overtime. . on goal.. scoring with about seven minutes The second half score Millersville seemed to On Tuesday , Sept.. 18 , the At the 39:22: mark of the first left after taking a pass from less and , turn up the pressure. . TL' Susquehanna Crusaders came to half Chad Meyer scored his Mickey Hackett.. ii - Grine started the MU scoring Biemesderfer Field.. team-leading- sixth goal on a The final score of the game at : By the beginning of the second header.. Second-year- man Duncan stood at 5-0.- . 3:38 on a penalty kick.. It was Grine's' goal in as many half , Susquehanna was sending Smith had the assist.. Peter YovinoY posted his fourth second a games.. up smoke signals but no help The second half started with shutout of the, season in goal for However , two minutes later , M arrivedarri . bang as Larry Grine scored an the Marauders. . ved MU a . " ... . Eastern squirted a goal past . " - . . . .' , "" ...... ,' ' " - - goalie YovinoY , tying the game at : - - . 1-1. a Later in the half, Bill Bohn broke away from the pack and ' r went one 'onewithon one , with Eastern goalie Gress.. BohnBohn'shotshot wide left and MU could not capitalize on . ' an excellent scoring chance.. . : ' ' . Millersville's second best scor-¬- Pi . V scor .V . . , ' VV ing opportunity came at 16:08: w when Moyer fired a shot on goal that the Eastern goalie somehow deflected.. The ball ricocheted off the goalie , hit the crossbar and bounced back into play.. Regulation ended with the score knotted at 1-1.- . , With 2:57: remaining in the 15-- . ' " M Tyr ' , , ' . minute overtime , Rob Bramble 3' r fired a bullet that just evaded the Eastern , diving goaltender giving + " ' + " ' ° : " i w"esP' EdM? , J 2 / . : MU a 2-1- lead.. . " ' V V VI VV , , , The first overtime ended and V ° MU seemed poised to win their yV- VV ' + c " ; = . ' VV e , VV . : " . . cex , e'tTg ; *7" , , ' 1 D' " i V' vv rv4.rkCif | i 4i sixth game.. ' ' " *s'" ¬ - - X ? ? ' Eastern College could not mus- Snapper photo by Audrey Cheesman , staff photographerr , , . " ! " " t 41f? - / < -- ' - ; , , . - v - -Afdl* Vi-,.; ter any offensive in the second YOU CAN'T' STOP ME - Brent Moyer outruns an Eastern defender ' overtime. . It seemed all Eastern's in a 2-1- MU victory on Saturday.. The- Marauders upped their ¬ - , ' energy was spent trying to pre- record to 6-1-1- - and increased unbeaten streak to five games. . z 'a their vent MU . - - MYgoals_ goals - NO TIME FOR PUSH-UPS An Eastern player Snapper photo by Audrey Cheesman , staff photographer The Marauders , now 6-1-1- , Game time is 11 a.m.. . The tough Marauder defense , - - on falls down trying to stop Marauder midfielder Marauders won both of their games this week, overall 0-0-1 in the PSAC , MU continues PSAC play on , held off any Eastern attack, - . on Bill Bohn.. - - pull continue action Saturday against , Shawn Meals. Looking is The beating Susquehanna and Eastern 2-1 in OT.. Tuesday as the Marauders host . ing away with a 2-1- win.. ' - - 0 DelawareDelaw e at BiemesderferB field.. Kutztown at 4 p.m...... " > . , . , . ' , . ' ' . " , , . , > , . : . ' . . - , ' . " ' ' '' ' " '" , "- . ' , " " , ; ' . , , , , , ( : : " 'A; . . . , ' ' ' Es ; : , T, , '. , .A. ' , _. ' flEl . ' '. . ,, < , , , " . , , '> - . ' " ' . . " , " ' " , ' ' . " . . . . ' . ' , . " ' . , , , . , ,t> . , ' " 'A'' , , " , . " . . , .". , " " ' surge ' , ' ' .Hi ' " ( ,; lifts " Second-half MU ' . . : : ; ' ' Bears : ; ' ' . over " " ; ; : ; ' " ' ' , ,' ; :: ' : ; ' .Z. >> . '.' < ; ' < ' " : . , , . : : i yard drive to tie the game.. . , > ' . \f ); ; ,\ f" > )[ ; 0' tailback Ron Porter and fullback Fagan mixed in a few Porter : ' : ' ' \ / " : : : = / : : . BY : - .Q. , LEROY BOYER ' ,}..f't':8 ,t\ atbilti . willl iosr . ;CtWSi { , who 5 6 . f M. a WChes r Breault completed " \ , . . , araudei tea . W.i" the of ; , " , Barry " ; . . . Foster out around end ;. . . . , . tardv. . . , runs with a seven-yard- ' . ' ' . . ; ,,w.. . screenscre i . "lI ' ,, n t" ;;. . . "7."v" . ' + . " .k..1.1.. " , . . . Sports Editor a. .}; ,' . , : :, : ' aWu1ay\i11, b ' , ' esoqtJ S . : , .,. .v, . passes to four different m, frst'oo! U t'ol 'm& Zt , " . ' ; " receivers " . w . " ) , . . something they done so well ,, < " , had pass and a key - , " /Fr't.l"' . " " > , PtO'' e ; . o " personal " : , . L ' { " ' . ; sue ' ; ' ; yard " / ; > '.' ni.v ! , ' !;\ tl ( << " " . f' ilfl . 'nn the drive , , . , " , 'tn jit, the before a ry over 'fo during capped the drive , v.w y " - ,, wA'U\ueen. ; . , exo.t, h . t; week in victvictory foul K1Kutzitown"tztOWIf'tO . ) ; , ; . e : , . ,' * " " ' . penalty against to \ t'' ' ' ' .. I\Z . " Momentum is the key. ' ' ;:; ' . , / . 1 ,. : " : : ! ' "\ ; ' , . , . .i" " ; , .th . ( , ' . " p , ' ; ' , < ' ' " , : , < . - " . : - M : . a ; \V'I tr , ,c tie """ ' , 'w . ' ,"i , . . , < . , <. with an TD pass ( - .' , , A - , were - to e " .A , " , , ,'y"" Southern Connecticut but 'A' 'YO" 4 u-Y " , ' . ' ' ' S A ' " - ' _ . . \ . / . set up a ' " ' " " - _ e M yard ' . ? The Marauders a the Maraudersrauders with firstr- : ) -Ii ' ' Ito ' VM " ( . used fierce $ f- U-iM. , { , thee'1 " " ? , " < . ' es " ' Steinmeyer. . ' . aE" . wtlt3 gameame ;, themeRM1$1IteJ: . $ e , : . ft.'S 4: " 2 getting very an ' " " , " " strung well W > Wile ' by ' ' > out - at the KU 15.. , ' <-: ;.t'l"h'-' ' " %. . ' " 1 ' . ' ', :' , ' . ; . }. ' " ' $. " , ' " ' i" . " . : ' s1r ' third quarter , led by a " 1 ' ' ; x' e , : rally ; " ' .J ' ' ' ,; ' ' " . ' : -< : , - 'v' rl ' ' < : , - .. and fi , , <, > ' . > , : : , ' ;. ' ;; ; ' : , ¬ ,N { , I'tw1) e.s'. . > ' : ; ' Myers ' " UQma'; ) ' ) ' >; - the PAT , , ' .r-t Dean : / added > , for " " aggressive KU defense . " " ' " . espec " - , ' > - '' ' < - yards " " " : , ' : ' ' . 'e' " Foster rumbled . " 'Jt'J' ' for four . ' ; : = ''' ' motivated and fired-up , ' . t- ..A" ' . . "d" a.. ;. defense ' ' ' , - wif - l ' Dean ' ; . , . ; : . . : ; ; ; :.sVUOoJ! J - KU to make it 7-7- with 10:29 left AFspetW.'IIi"pa ture as. ,-rauu- added to i'.to ;, a pte- td ' . en < fawrenr , -w9" di4e ially its' linebacking corps. - " " > : ', ; , bas. game and Porter travelled 11, , V" , " : to'recaptureto' the momentum it had the final - : ,' ; ; ; : " .e! ' , : fi ' first . by< $ On fCZUe. . in the quarter. /b tt eAnn" } < / " tcarn cl " t1r , $ dSt" , Their offense was becoming and . ttttriit' " i . , . , ' ; ; f " o . - " y giving MU a " ; " ( : :: lost an 21-10 with om ' . , " " Y ! to inspired Golden Bear lead , 1t v'J4" . r ' ; . , ; ,, . (i' l""Jjit. ira : , . , : ; " . w ' . , predictable , as they were often : ' . Kutztown took the lead late in ,: an t t.Vwuvt !y.U < ;: :h. : ' '> ; , .t ' ; " 5:24 left in the third,., ; ' ' ' . ' << squad for most of the first half . ' - ' : : :' , " 1 ; " , as rs . 'Bi.-. ndss H' on' (ir : first MyersMy kicked " am $ . the quarter , faced " not remit .y i "hfat. with third down and long < . . . " . t . . " " . @ , . : : - " : " " i . :' . " - Kutztown made a brief . .; : ' ' ,, attempt . ' and dispose of Kutztown " . . :" A ' ' ' " : " : : ) ' ' ' goal KU r" \ :. , : Jt situations , making it the a 25 yard field to put up t .11r-'S.' (' 1 ; , ] 17 easier for , : ' .> ,, , ; , : < ; ; ; : at a comeback driving to the MU ; y/ , } , . . : ) : : V :; : in , : . the PSAC conference opener - : > /, ' \ { KU defense to shut them down. 33 ' 10-7 with 2:00 minutes left in the for both schools. . on two Breault passes of 13 . , KU quarter.. "Momentum" is a big factor in The defense sparked the and 11 yards , but were stopped " whole team , and Breault and the The Marauders started to ' football , MU head mentor Dr.. when Scott Martin sacked Breault offense led the Bears to a 10-7- switch the momentum midway - Gene Carpenter said following on a key fourth-and-four.- - . , through the second quarter, -¬ d ' ' halftime lead which could have stal ladies his team's comeback victory. From there the Marauders been much worse.. ling a long Golden Bear drive Millersville , trailing 10-7- at the drove 67 yards on nine plays to Seeing this , Carpenter and his with a key interception. . half, scored on its first three make it 27-10- , with Porter diving - Kutztown , following a stalled claim title offensive coaches made the the final : 12thsecond possessions of the second half to yard with 14:23 left in : left MU drive at the KU 21 , drove to years.. last season take a 27-10- lead and never look necessary halftime adjustment the fourth quarter.. She sat out Marauder 10 on plays , BY TARA BOYER . RUN THE BALL UP THE Heim missed the . the five after transferring. back , beating Kutztown for the extra point. - Snapper Correspondent " . including a 30-yard- pass to "This collegiate tenth straight time and 14th in the MIDDLE The drived ve featured the stronstrong tail " was her best I - " ' * back Mike Donnelly , and two 18-- ' race , said White of Zerby's per-- l'' . last 15 contests.. ' The MU Women's Cross ; : yard passes tight Jason . " - ... ' to end formance. "She has really im Millersville , known for its ; : Country team placed six runners " . tzto 11Y Freeze.. proved in the last two weeks.. . Millers ille .K J , MiEetsville 27 Kutztown. in the superb defensive unit made a . . , the top ten to win Slippery , . . ', , ' " The Bears were stopped , ; ; . ... that into . < .. went key change in strategy at halftime : . . . , . . Rock Invitational on Saturday , White said that MU . ' , ' ' ' : ' ' . ' however , on an interception by " ' , " ' 'MillersvUleM'll- " , : , the "looking to place fiv to overcome a aerial t vilIe . ' 7 0 14 6 27 their second consecutive victory.. meet five brilliant et . ' ' . : Robert Mims at the one-foot- line , "' - : - . : , (runners ) the ten.. ' by Golden Bear Kutzto-wn, , 10 0 0 7 ,17, 1 : : < Leading the Marauders , - in top show junior 11? ' cur . " . " :. ' a play Carpenter called the most ' " ' The did even quarterback Andy Breault , a < : . , . ' , rently ranked 12th in the nation in Marauders better " . : ' :' important of the game. i . . Division II, to victory was - than that by placing six runners in product of nearby Elizabethtown. ; " two- : , C , "The Mims was . " - - XU'O' interception by - MU - sier 69 run ( kick } " fcfijMd7f time - Kellie the top ten.. .' Breault, who finished the day Foster Metro , ?, BJ'f . " " All-American "Boozer ' j7 # ' ' " . 0'- ' ' the key, Carpenter said. "If they : 31 KU -, Steiflmeyer 18 pass &oiaSre&() ; au1t!t'MyeisHckKU(Myersyers , -7- who finished first out or"allall the Finishing right behind BoozerBooz r , with 383 yards on for 50 fOnt, lreault° kick) KUU 7.MU7 .MIU \. - of - were to go 17-7- point ' " . up at that . . . . ( : ), KU 25 , > were Connie Shepos (20:13)r(20 13k (a Kutztown school KUr- Myers25yatdFGMyers yard KU.1QU JOk " runners in the collegiate team : passing PS . KU30rMU7MV1.. . the * ' :' we would have been in trouble. : ! - { } . .. ..e- , , DeBerardinis (20:14)( );, record), passed for 220 yards in MU Foster) 24241UJiroil (HeiPltdckHeratin* kickkz , M0' 14 Kt1.10..10 . competition. . Andrea ' l48f*# -' Instead we made the stop and - , " , : 4 Porter 11 . . <, ; -1q' and Karen Gentzel (20:18)( ) , the first half , literally raping the MU . runReimkickronHe( kiek) , MCMrJ21iK; U'1Q " Boozer finished the course in a who " " * 2lI drove the field.. : , " ' down - - 1 . ' . ' . - . , : : finished third , fourth , and fifth Marauders secondary with a MU Porter nut (fckfc.Me4. ) MU27/1XMtL27MU KU! 10 " time of 19:37 , just 4 seconds 27tKU/(" ' , . : ' > ' "e ' "We were lucky to be down ' . , underneath game.. KU - SteininSteinraeyerS meyeryer 3 from Bieaiilt>rea (Myers kickck -M0-27'1 ,-113'17X3TJU1,7? behind Sue Barowski. . overall , respectively. short passing pas lt ) ? ;, , . ,, " ,, -; , . " , , t. 107; at the half he continued. . - had all to . ! . , . ' , , - - Also placing for MU were He day throw and ' . "Kutztown" was the same Barowski a former not Zerby, Trudy Derr (21:15)( : ) , who : found open receivers who The Marauders used the quick- running of Porter and a key 19 in the second that was ican from Ashland CollegeAll, is an team half it finished tenth , and Erica Hack--" seemed to be his second or third ¬ yard pass fromfr <;> m Bill independent runner sponsored by ' ness and strength of their offen- Fagan to ' in the first.. We dampened their : : option.. ' the ¬ mmann (22:01)'w(22:01)( ) , who0 finished 22nd J sive line to run over the Bear Burke on a third-and-15- - from the ' ¬ Nike Athletic Club of Alleg- " enthusiasume by pressuring Bre- : "In the first half we wanted to - KU . heny , PA. The Marauders continue actionactio - defense , running the ball tackle- KU21.21 ault and our running game took " make sure we covered all their "We had an excellent perfor¬ this - the Bloomsburg ; to-tackle- for most of the second Burke had a great game for over.. " - Saturdayat " - receivers and only rush four and mixing in short passes to MU , hauling in seven passes for - " mance , commented Marauder Invitational.. MU won , the meet- " half Coach Ketner put it best : "It ¬ . ' " " people , MU defensive coordin- KU . 94 yards.. Head Coach Keith White.. "The last season with Boozer finishing: confuse the defense. The was a great shift in momentum inn . ator Jim Ketner said.. results were devastating. . Kutztown , behind passing " times are really impressive first overall.. " the the second half.. . ( a , are : "He Breault ) had all day to Porter , who was held to 36 of Breault, once again drove deep SIDELINE CHATTER : Foster considering it was muddy The Marauders arear ranked 12th: " . throw and usually found his open yards on 10 carries in the first into Marauder territory on the was named PSAC Eastern sloppy course. . in this week's' Division II Wo-W - " receiver.. In the second half we - Coach White was very pleased ' . : ; half, erupted for 112 yards on 16 following series , but were stop DivisionDivision Co-Player- of the Week , men's Cross Country poll. , ¬ with performance Mary -:; just shifted some down lineman carries in the second half, includ- ped on a fourth-down- play from tying ESU's' Johnny Davis for the of California Poly San Luis Obis- . up some - - blocks Zerby.. - - to set one-on-one ing two touchdowntou hdown runs of 11 the MU. 5 on a sack by Tim honor.. He was also named to po0 is the top ranked team , follow¬ " the " . Zerby , a sophomore , finished . and turned up the pressure. and 1 yards , respectively.. Naylor.. the Division II ECECACAC honor roll.. ed by Air Force and Navy. - for best , Bryant , award intensity'Pennewillintensity ;, Pennewill said.. "We-WeWe'' linebackers on blitzes. . The results to 65 yards.. MUMU-KU-KU- games in the past , ; ' ' " rushing plays travel output Naylor , winner of the BY LEROY BOYER were flat;, unmotivated. . The . were productive. ran 21 yards on the first scoring quickly to make the game Sports ' -; Porter Vince Lombardi award for best Editor " electricity of the game just wasn't in look like would be . . ' ' Breault was knocked around play from scrimmage , followed it a blowout. defensive output; Tom Burns , the " . ',1 ' there.. , : , 24 the second half always under by another run by Porter for On MUs second play from , Triple Effort award (Attitude , It was not a good night for the Pennewill said that a factor' . , ! constant pressure. He was sacked yards , setting up the Marauders scrimmage Foster took a pitch Hustle , and Desire ) for offense ; Lady . . . Marauders, " could have been the fact that the four times , twice on fourth-down- with a - - at the KU 24.. from Fagan and headed left , Scott Martin , MU was totally destroyed by the Triple Effort , was ; gameg me was the first divisional, . ' . plays and another in a key Fosterfirsttook the next handoff scampering 69 yards down the ; , Shippens-- , award for defense and Burns perennial powerhouse - game MU had on the road.. third-down- and long situation , and up the middle , 24 yards sideline for a touchdown.. - " ' " burst the Trenchman award given to the burg last Tuesday 3-0 in their "Playing in- (Shipp's ) Heiges . . and had two passes batted down. for the touchdown. ' Brad Heim added the extra best lineman of the game.. only contest of the week.. ' Fieldhouse might have been a Brad Heim's extra point made point and MU led 7-0- with just The Marauders, now 2-1- , favored by " While the MU defense was The Red Raiders factor , said Pennewill.. . having fun stopping Breault and it 14-10- with 11:4011 :40: left in the 25 seconds gone in the contest. . overall and 1-0- in the PSAC , Marauder head coach Scott " ' ' "Heiges fieldhouse is huge to . , this But Breault home Saturday , the Bears , the Marauder offense third quarter. rallied the Bears return to host Pennewill to win the PSAC East, play in, especially it being ourur ¬ Following a Marauder defen- mixing his receivers very well , to arch-rival- West Chester , 1-2- , !-' made a few adjustments and at defeated the Ladyady Marauders first road divisional gamega e.. Its , MU demoralize the MU , - started to rohrol . . sive stop on four plays defense lead Biemesderfer Stadium , game time 15-2,15-715-2- , 15-7- , 15-9.- . . " ' own 49.. ing Kutztown on a - , 72-- . . " The Marauders tried to run started at its play 7 p.m. "We played with a basic lack of See ESU Sweeps , page 15 , , S IIk , .BASKETBALL RETRACTION The Men's ? ; . : : , : MEN'S ? I : . . f v , . } " t'y i kr"avh"t'\1." 4St" ' ' . fl: , ' )".w t ! " . . \ t' i ' - , . Saturday.; overLockover Lock Haven. . Basketball team will begin its' 1990-1991 season on Tuesday Nov. . 27 at home versus Lincoln, not Tuesday, Nov.. 1 as stated last . . - - lastweekweek - . from gamgames two meth Snapper football . ' ResultsR ts the in week of contest. Sorry for the mistake. . " ' ' are as follows : . " . ' . , - : 'lP 'rFCQCQrrnALI1.) ), . . ' TURKEY TROT The annual Millersville University Turkey AC . : ; College : WyomingWy ming 24 , Air FForcer e 12 ; Georgia 18 , AlaAlabamaa , J77i7 Trot will be held on Sunday , Nov.. 18.. The event is sponsored by State 28 , 0; Michigan 38 , UCLA 15; Virginia , Duke ' CG Penn Rutgers 59 . John Herr's Village Market , Sport thirst quencher, and Turkey Hill TA ll1c ' ?' ; . 0O'Holy'CrossHoly Cross 17, Penn 3 ; and Widener 33 , MoravianIi3.3. . , ' Minit Markets.. Proceeds benefit the MU cross country and track : Overall ' Eastern Division ( .f.E. . ( ) w L 1 ' fPSAClYl L 1 fA&. _ 1 fE fA Professional : Philadelphia 27, Los Angeles 21 ; Los Angeles 202 , teams' . ( L'I scholarship fund. - 1 1 EastStroudsburg 0: . 46 , 14 PitPittsburgh 3 ; 19 15 ; ; - 0 0 2 0 ' 90 47 burgh Washington , Dallas Tampa Bay 23 , 20 , ' ,14 Dallas Detroit The Turkey will be run on a 10-mile- course through .'0.. Trot ' 19 , ; ; : 1 Chicago MinnesotaMinnesota.l6. 16 , OT San Francisco 19 , Atlanta 10 and and Manor Township roads and will MILLERSVIU.E. 1 0 o ;j, 27 17 2 0 86 59 Millersville Borough streets . ' Denver 34, Seattle 31 , OT.T.. 1 : . dyL ' - . ' 67 begin at 1:30 p.m.. Mansfield 0 0 .d. 0 0 2 0 67 96 ...... ", , . 0'- .1f 0' . " ' ' . ., ...... ,., '...... ,. " -. .. - ...... '.. .". '.' ''. .. }'...... ' ...... l'. '...... '. . .l'rl'.N..W. ' '. . .. . J , . \l'.v.\ For registration forms and more information contact Joel Bloomsburg 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 29 no" .l'.l' Hoffsmith at 872-3823.- . ' " ' Kutztown 0 1 0 17 27 I 3 0 61 .87. 87 . GOLF TEAM WINS TOURNEY - The MU team of Tom : ' Ross claims week two Cheyney 0 1 14 46 0 0 36 133 Eason , Jason Arnold , Rick McLaughlin , and Jason Auge combined 0 4'0 : 4' , -a- to shoot a 312 to capture the 16-team- Aureus Fall Invitational at Larry RossaRoss a frequentfrequ nt winner second place , as he owned the of the Snapper basketball contest , ' ( . in White on . MU , which only entry with, two wrong.. . : Mountain Laurel Resort Haven Thursday. ( ' entry Western Division ( . ..f.E (Overall ) W PSACl L T . fA _Yi. L T .fE. fA ran away with the top prize actively competes in the spring, outdistanced York College , who I. I in Weischedel incorrectly picked Indiana I . week Snapper Weekly: secon"g 318.. 2 0 0 97 7 2 0 115 35 two. two of the Holy Cross' 17-3- win over Penn finished second" with 0. ' . Coll ge/Pr fessional Football, . ' . 1 1 1 . - and .th California . 24 19 I 66 96 / . the Georgia . He had a 0 0 : win Contest.College. '. ' : , 0.' very close tiebreakertiebr a.ker guessgUess . 1 . of41. SlippcryRockSlippery Rock 0 0O' 442 7 I 3 0 70 99 ' ? _ - , Ross'.comRoss . completedleted the 14-game For , ' his efforts Weischedel will Edinboro 0 0 0 0 2 I 0 108 43 ' 0 contest with only one incorrect. e e , receive a free coupon for'one'freeone 'free . . . Ross for answer , Georgia's' 18-17victory18-17- : victory one; 0 dk Y.. : % Shippensburg 0 1... , 0 19 24 2 2 0 67 57 meal at the SMC , 1.,0 ' . GallGalleyy uptoup to a Jl ' ' : ' . . overover Alabama. He correctly $5$ value.. ' ' ' Clarion 0 1 0 0 42 1 2 0 38 77 guessed theth tiebreaker score of * *Just in case you were ' .Q 1 . Lock Haven 0 2 . . 14 97 3 0 42 149 ' . , , 40 as. Pittsburgh and Syracuse , - wondering the contest will played to a 20-20- tie.. ' ' . contain two games ,which will be . ' ° , For his excellence in picking , " , + ; ? :} < . , , , , RESULTS (, , ), called Pennsylvania"Penns games atiS,:, i, hisr ; af Srsr; SACP Sept 22) : lvania' of Ross will receiverec ive a coupon for " ' ' the week" . , That. is the reasonre son MILLERSVILLE 27, Kutztown 17I Indiana42, Clarion 0 : ' : ! one ; ;, - -; free one-topping pizzafrom behind the MoravianMQravian , etc.. games . 14 ' ' " . , StroudsburgEast 46.46, Cheyney California 24.24 , Shippensburg 19 Domino's Pizza , Millersville.. . ' in the contest. , - . " ' ...... 7 Ross shouldsh uld be a familiar . ::::::: . ark Edinboro 33 , Bloomsburg 6 . Slippery Rock 42 , Lock Haven 7 name , I was reallyreall . pleased with the r.i. " to Gia" those. who follow Snapper amount of entries this week, a 22 contests, as he won the Snapper ' :: : :: : i ; entry from the Denver :1975 ( ) turnaround Steeters PSAC SCHEDULE (Sept.. 2929) basketball contest twice last :; p CQ previous. week. rr $ . . . # ' , . _ 1 ; : _ , ' 'to 19729 West Chester at MILLERSVILLE Shippensburg at Slippery Rock semester. , winning in consecutive ' . ,' " , WasWtonIsst - ' Green Bay - ". ' . _ : ' weeks.. .Ke p' up e - the :. good w Packer EastStroudsburgEast at Mansfield Clarion at EdinboroEdinb ro ' . .Keep up good woworkrk and , ,/1y/ / :' > : : ' > :{.,:ij'iii 'i:! : : $; ? ::,. :: :isisi'ri:' :. . A whopping totalt tal of 37 people ,. .; .. . 19/ ' ' ? :: remember..youremember, you can only play V4 ' Kutztown. at Bloomsburg Indiana at Slate! I960 ' - Towson ' ' ' entered this , . . 1 & , : week's contest many . , . . ; Exctades-strifeye&rs.1982andt987:: , ' by . . v ) atdudasaviiteyears .!982and,98i', , winning. : California Cheyneyat Lock Haven at: Northeastern were . of whichhich.viere.in. were in the running for , Contestentries- can be returned Source : USATODAY( research John Sherlock. Gannett News Service ' . ' ' - ' . - ' . . prizes until thee'very end.. . to the Snappernapper . 'i , " .to' , office in thet e . ! was , ' - When all was said and , . . saict done bottom ofthc.SMCof the. SMC, placedoror.placed in ATTENTION Jim Weischedel outdistanced the the contest box; at the SMC Front - - * , - DANCE INSTRUCTORS restrestt t the the race - of .th pack in . . f race for , , . Desk . ' . " , Desk.-- . , ' ' . . " . . _ _ _ . __ _ .'.:. _ . _ _ _ . _ . _ . . .. . = _ L . ; _ , , . , . . . Fraternities , SororitiesS , Clubs, and - : : . .u.u.u. . : ------J ! ' ' Inter : ike ! Individuals. . 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