VOLUME LXXVI
PUBLISHED AT THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
ALBANY.
STUDENT
PRESS
AT ALBANY BY THE ALBANY STUDENT PRESS CORPORATION
October 24, 1989
NUMBER 35
William Sloane Coffin, president of SANE/FREEZE: campaign for global
security, presented a speech on "Waging Peace, A Positive Agenda for the
90's" on Thursday in the Campus Center Assembly Hall.
[BCS UAT GL
Adam Pratomo UPS
"Week of Action" organized
to promote student rights
By Ian Wagreich
SENIOR EDITOR
Students across the nation are gearing
up for a week of. action to dispel the
public attitude that students are apathetic
and to fight for student rights.
The United States Student Association,
a nationwide student advocacy group
supported by SUNYA students, hopes
this week, dubbed “A Week of Action”,
can get students across the nation to focus
their work around ‘the theme “education
is aright.”
“The ‘education president’ is about to
hear from the education generation,” said
USSA President Julianne Marley.
Marley said students have been viewed
as apathetic in the past, but efforts like
the week of action campaign and mass
movements, like the 30,000 students rally
in Boston last week, are quickly showing
people that students have a voice.
Student advocates are using that voice
to call for a stop in tuition likes, increase
Weather
Unseasonably warm. Bottle the
stuff and save it, because come!
February, it will be in great
jdemand.
Halloween seen as dangerous at
isome schools, causing administrations
ito curb festivities.
See Page 6)
federal funding for education, and a host
of other complaints during the week of
action.
In New York, the Association of the
State University is organizing activities
across 64 campuses.
Wednesday, students will testify in
front of the SUNY Board of Trustees on
issues of bias and the state of students’
accessibility to higher education.
Judy Krebs, SASU President, said
students will address recent racial
incidents at SUNY New Paltz as well as
rape and anti-gay issues at the hearing.
Krebs, who is the student
representative on the Board of Trustees,
said she will also address issues
concerning the SUNY budget.
Also, students participating in the week
of action hope to show other students and
administrators the efforts that
handicapped students put in getting to
class.
Krebs said students will walk through
routes the same as the disabled to get to
class one day this week.
Other state student associations are
also participating.
In Wisconsin, this week is dubbed
“Higher Education Awareness Week,”
and a massive voter registration drive has
already been initiated.
New Jersey students, as well as many
other states’ students, are focusing their
energy on opposing potential tuition
hikes.
USSA vice president Julius Davis, a
SUNYA student on-leave, said students
are beginning to make their presence
known and the week of action should
bolster the student movement.
“We are clearly a diverse yet unified
movement,” Davis said. “Students realize
we must work together to make education
a priority - it’s up to us.”
r= Coffin speaks on 7 PEACE mm Homecoming plans are
finalized for the weekend
By Catherine Hoey
Purple and Gold reversed its decision
to move the Homecoming parade from
Saturday Oct. 28th to Friday Oct. 27th
after meeting with the Inter-fraternity
Council (IFC) last week.
The meeting was organized in response
to the dissatisfaction of the Greeks after
the announcement of a change to Friday.
The Greeks felt they had not been
adequately consulted.
Brooks DeBow, vice president of the
IFC, and Marci Farrell, member of Purple
and Gold services in charge of organizing
the pep rally and bonfire, both agreed that
it was a lack of communication caused
the dispute.
“T am just happy we were both able to
sit down and rationally discuss the issues
that we both adamantly believed were
important,” DeBow said.
The majority of the work must be done
the night before because of lack of
storage space.
According to Lee Goldberg, member of
Purple and Gold services in charge of
organizing the parade, many members of
the participating fraternities and sororities
had midterms and would be. unable. to
complete their floats by Friday afternoon.
“We want people in the parade to be
happy as well as those watching it,”
Goldberg said.
The date was originally changed
because it was believed that more people
would attend. People will already by on
Student gallery opened
By Kimberly Pratt
campus Friday afternoon, but may not
arrive by 11 am on Saturday morning,
Goldberg said.
Farrell believed they would draw a
larger crowd if the parade was held
before the pep rally and bonfire. “The
parade would end up at the pep rally and
bring people with it,” she said.
Two years ago the events were
organized this way and it produced a
livelier turnout according to both Farrell
and Goldberg.
Goldberg said as long as Purple and
Gold has the co-operation of the Greeks
in Friday’s events as well as the parade
they should not have any problems.
DeBow said, “The fraternities and
sororities have pledged their support to
the pep rally and bonfire.”
The pep rally is scheduled to begin at
5:30 pm and the bonfire will begin at six
o'clock. Free hot dogs, hot chocolate and
apple cider will be available.
Radio station WCDB will deejay the
bonfire instead of a band, in order to
provide a wider variety of music.
The parade will begin at 11 am on
Saturday. The majority of floats will be
made by fraternities and sororities, but
other SUNY organizations will also be
Tepresented.
Anyone can enter the parade. Groups
can carry banners as well as having
floats. A cash award for the best overall
entry and trophies will be presented for
best banner.
Thursday night was the beginning of what the student art community at SUNY
hopes will be a much needed outlet for the display of their artistic creations. The
student art gallery, also known as “Gallery 313,” is appropriately located in the Fine
Arts Building, room 313
Students and faculty were both present, browsing and discussing the displayed
pieces with several artists also in attendance.
The SUNY Art Council began accepting students’ submitted work on October 11
for critique and judging. Selections were made by October 16 and 32 selected
Pieces are now part of the first of many shows on exhibit in the gallery.
This first show was the culmination of over a year of hard work by a few art
students. The process began last year when funding was first sought by students.
‘Two students instrumental in this drive were Tawanya Olsen, President of the Art
Council, and Council member Chris Dacek.
First a petition was circulated which quickly drew over five-hundred signatures.
The proposition was brought before the Student Association for approval. Locating
a room for the gallery presented a problem, but through shifting of existing space
room 313 was made available.
Many students at the exhibit Thursday night expressed the need for this type of
arena for their work. Jena Webster, Vice President of the Art Council, said, “We had
always wanted a space for our works. We wanted to make the art community
stronger.”
Displayed artist Monica Rabinowitz said “The gallery downstairs is for the
professionals. We undergraduates have never had anything.” In many schools
undergraduates will get their own shows when they graduate but SUNY has never
had the resources to do this.”
Olsen talked of the need for the gallery. “We wanted to have an ongoing forum
for art students to interact and learn the gallery process, sitting in the gallery,
publicity, as well as display. We felt we need something permanent to motivate
people.”
Funding has been a problem over the year for the SUNY art program. Junior
Christ Dacek, instrumental in the gallery opening, said the problem is, “in this
school, art is really downplayed, The art department does not get money because
they aren’t treated with respect. The art department is fully worthy of respect.”
Olsen said, “We are underfunded but we have qualified faculty, nationally an:
Continued on page 23
2 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS _ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 , 1989
NEWS BRIEFS
5)
—
The World
Lessons in reform
Berlin
(AP) After years of resistance to change,
East Germany’s communist leadership
conceded Saturday there may be
“important lessons” to be learned from
reforms introduced by Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev.
Thousands of pro-democracy activists
tallied to keep up the pressure for change.
The official ACN news agency said
East Germany’s new Communist Party
chief, Egon Krenz, spoke by telephone
with Gorbachev about his reforms, which
have given non-communists seats in the
Soviet government and allowed more
open discussion of the nation’s problems.
After years of contending Gorbachev’s
political and economic reforms were
unnecessary in East Germany, ADN said
Krenz acknowledged “there are important
lessons to be learned form Soviet
perestroika in the German Democratic
Republic. Perestroika refers to
Gorbachev’s reforms.
Extradition sought
Bogata, Columbia
(AP) Authorities began extradition
proceedings against two suspected cocaine
traffickers, and the drug war injured six
more people when a car bomb exploded in
front of a Caribbean port hotel.
Police said the alleged smugglers, both
wanted by U.S. federal courts, were
brought to Bogota on Friday after they
were detained the day before in other
Columbian cities.
Police arrested Nelson Cuevas Ramirez,
55, in Cartagena. He was charted by a new
York federal court with possessing
cocaine and conspiring to distribute the
drug, according to an official
communique.
The Nation Ge
Wealthy avoid taxes
Washington
(AP) A handful of the wealthiest people in
America are still able to avoid paying
federal income tax despite repeated
congressional efforts to close loopholes.
Of 529,460 couples and individuals who
reported total income above $200,000 on
returns filed in 1987, 595 paid no tax, the
Internal Revenue Service says in a new
-PREVIEW OF EVENTS
report. Those 595 had income averaging
$600,000; two out of every three had
capital gains averaging $490,000 apiece.
An additional 33,805 over-$200,000
earners paid tax ant an effective rage of
less than 15 percent, typically less than a
middle-income family would pay. almost
3,000 paid less than 10 percent.
The estimates were reported without
comment by the IRS in the quarterly
“Statistics of Income” compilation. The
IRS has been required since 1978 to
estimate the number of high-income
people who legally avoid paying any tax.
Trains collide
Upper Sandusky, Ohio
(AP) A passenger train broadsided a
freight train at a crossing early Sunday,
injuring four people and overturning two
locomotives and two cars, authorities said.
Amtrak’s Broadway Limited, headec
west from New York to Chicago with
about 230 people aboard, hit the
southbound 116-car CSX train at 5:43
a.m. at a crossing near this north-central
city, Wyandot Sheriff Michael Hetzel said.
The impact of the collision knocked a
freight car off the tracks and into two
outbuildings, pushing one of them into a
swimming pool at a nearby residence, said
Andrea Just, a spokeswoman for CSX
Transportation in Baltimore.
Racism protested
Chicago
(AP) About 750 blacks and supporters
angry about “acts of racist violence”
staged a peaceful, three-mile march
Saturday through the predominantly white
neighborhood where Mayor Richard m.
Daley lives.
“No part of this city is off limits to
people of my race,” Alderman Allan
Streeter, who is black, said at a rally at a
South Side church where politicians,
clergy and civil rights leaders gave
marching orders to the group.
“We're here to say to Chicagoans we’re
not going to be afraid anywhere in this
city,” the Rev. Benjamin Chavis Jr. told
the marchers. “We must not let acts of
racist violence in Chicago continue
without a national protest.”
The Stote alll
Cover up denied
Buffalo
(AP) A citizen group concerned with
health standards at the West Valley
nuclear-waste plant did not intend to
cover up the findings of a report that
showed low cancer rates in the West
Valley area, a spokeswoman said.
Carol Mongerson, a steering committee
member of the Coalition on West Valley
Nuclear Wastes, said the group withheld
the report of two State University at
Buffalo researchers because “it never
occured to us that we should release it.
“Tt didn’t seem like news to us then, and
it doesn’t seem like news to us not,”
Mongerson said,
The West Valley facility is located in
Cattaraugus County, south of Buffalo.
Companies ‘love’ NY
Albany
(AP) A New York City marketing firm
that has represented Coca-Cola and Home
Box Office will now be responsible for
franchising of the “I Love New York”
logo, state officials said.
The Cuomo administration has hired
Hamilton Projects to find companies that
want to use the logo in advertising.
Department of Economic Development
spokesman Bern Rotman said Saturday
that Hamilton will get a percentage of
each deal it finds, but he said Hamilton
will get a percentage of each deal it finds,
but he said that percentage hadn’t been
determined.
The state earlier this year decided to
charge royalties for use of the logo after
allowing free use of it for years.
This was so the state could control the
logo was used and could also make money
from it.
Silhouette street scene stands silently shadowing statehouse.
Armando Vargas UPS
Korean Student Association
Free listings
TUESDAY, October 24
Chess Club meets at 7:00pm
inthe RAT. For more
information call 426-1633
INYPIRG's Energy Project
meets at 6:30pm in CC382.
Call 442-5658 for information.
INYPIRG's Environmental
Presentation project meets at
7:30pm in CC382. For
information call 442-5658.
Class Council of 1992 meets
at 8:30pm in CC370.
Philosophy Forum meets at
18:00pm in HU290.
WEDNESDAY, October 25
Pre-health Association
presents "Research
Opportunities" with speaker
Dr.Stross at 7:00pm in LC6
American Marketing
Association meets at
7:30pm in SS256. All are
welcome.
NYPIRG's project for
Education and Test Reform
meets at 6:00pm in CC382.
For info. call 442-5658.
Albany State Outing Club
meets at 8:00pm in LC5.. All
are welcome.
International Programs will
hold an information meeting
for a program on China at
4:00pm in HU290.
Stand and Deliver will be
shown for free at 8:00pm in
the Assembly Hall sponsered
by NYPIRG. Discussions
about racism and sexism in
education and testing will
follow.
THURSDAY, October 26
German Club meets at
12:00pm and 4:00pm in HU
second floor lounge. For
more info call 438-4509
NYPIRG's Small Claims
Court Action Center meets at
7pm in CC382.
NYPIRG's Bank on This, a
project on banking services,
meets at 7:30pm in CC382.
For info. call 442-5658.
Feminist Alliance is
sponsoring ‘Take Back the
Night’ march at 8pm at the
small fountain. For more info.
Call 438-5085 or 426-4018.
Students for Choice is
having an interest meeting at
7pm inthe SA lounge. All
are welcome. Call for info.
489-8847.
meets at 7pm in HU 132.
FRIDAY, October 27
Who's Who nominations and
self-nominations are due at
5pm, Student Affairs, AD 129.
FOR YOUR INFORMATION:
On Campus meetings of
Alcoholics Anonymous are
presently taking place, and will
continue throughout the
semester. Call 442-5777 for
mofe information.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 2
-—- DIGEST —
Breakfast to be held
Parents of SUNYA students will get their
last chance to meet with University,
[President Vincent O’Leary during a
‘Homecoming breakfast this weekend,
\O’Leary announced earlier this year that}
he will resign in May.
According to SA Parent Weekend
‘Homecoming Chair Scott Leemon, key,
faculty and staff member s will join
O’Leary for breakfast with the parents.
‘Among these are Dr. Carson Carr,
|Associate Dean of Academic Support!
Services; Jim Doellefeld, Assistant VP of|
(Campus Life; Warren Ilchmanr,
Executive VP for Academic Affairs;
Christian Kersten, VP for University!
Advancement; and Dr. Sung Bok Kim,
(Dean of Undergraduate Studies.
Speakers will include O’Leary,
iLeemon, SA President Fermin Espinosa,
land Vice President for Student Affairs)
Mitchel Livingston.
Tickets for the breakfast, planned for;
Sunday, Oct. 29th at 10:30 a.m., will be|
sold at Copies Plus for $6 a person.|
‘Leemon said he hoped all 400 tickets will]
be sold. Any remaining rickets will be|
sold at the door.
Prof. named to panel
A professor, at SUNY Buffalo was
appointed to head an independent team|
that will investigate the collapse of|
\Oakland’s 1-880 Cypress Overpass during,
(California’s recent earthquake.
Tan G. Buckle, a specialist in bridge;
land earthquake engineering, was|
appointed Friday by California Gov.
\George Deukmejian.
Deukmejian said the Cypress Overpass}
will be reconstructed according to the
team’s recommendations. He said the
team will also issue recommendations on|
future transportation construction
[projects.
Buckle. is a professor of civil]
lengineering and also serves as deputy,
director of the university’s National
(Center for Earthquake Engineer
(Research. He is the only member of the
team named to date.
ASP starts fund.
The Albany Student Press and Orion
Pictures present the Albany premiere of
ithe new Woody Allen film, Crimes and
\Misdemeanors. Help the victims of the
Bay Area Quake of 1989 by contributing
to the Earthquake Relief fund. Any,
lperson who contributes to the fund will
receive a ticket to the special screening,
ito be held on Wednesday, Nov. 1 at 7:30}
lpm in Crossgates Mall.
Tickets will be given to the first 200
icontributers. However, everyone is|
lencouraged to donate to the fund,|
proceeds of which will go to the|
American Red Cross, which is providing]
shelter, food and relief for the thousands
lof victims of the earthquake.
According to ASP Editor-in-Chief;
Morgan Lyle, at least $500 is hoped to be
lraised. “I hope that this community will
lreach into their wallets and contribute}
lwith their hearts. This quake has
devastated us all, and those in the Bay|
Area need our help.”
Contributions will be accepted in the]
ASP newsroom, located in Campus
Center 329.
-Compiled by ASP staff
Students for Choice plan to protest
By Sharon Rootenberg
The Students For Choice Organization
is in the process of forming a coalition
with other student groups, to maximize
attendance at a pro-choice rally on
Washington at the Lincoln Memorial on
Sunday Nov. 12.
The rally comes at a time during which
three cases that could overturn Roe v.
Wade are pending in the Supreme Court.
The rally is scheduled only seven months
after the last pro-choice demonstration in
Washington.
Daniella Korotzer, founder of Students
For Choice said, “The Supreme Court
came very close to overturning Roe v.
Wade in deciding the Webster case. As a
matter of fact, low income women have
File UPS
Students for Choice will rally In Washington, D.C. on Novermber 12.
essentially lost their right to have
abortions because the Webster decision
has made is fiscally impossible.”
According to Shannon Sullivan, one of
three co-coordinators of Student For
Choice, 450 college campuses have
already registered to take part in the rally,
and 12 countries are sending delegations
to represent them in Washington.
All East Coast organizations are
mobilizing and pro-choice rallies will be
taking place simultaneously in 44 states
and a hundred cities.
The massive coalition building effort
and diverse registration list for the rally is
a clear indication that “Support of
reproductive choice goes far beyond party
and ideological lines, “ Sullivan said.
Students for Choice have reserved five
buses to make transportation to
Washington more accessable for those
who would like to take part, and back up
buses are also being arranged. Bus tickets
can be purchased for $35 at their table
which is set up in the lobby in the
Campus Center.
Students who would like to participate
but can not because of financial reasons
are being advised to solicit a sponsor
among faculty members and other
students. Students For Choice has also
Continued on page 9
Stonybrook dorms damaged by rains
By Eric F, Coppolino
NEW YORK STATE STUDENT LEADER
Students at the University Center at
Stony Brook are getting what they call
the “pinball treatment” from the campus
administration and the state Dormitory
Authority after heavy rains damaged
property in hundreds of rooms there,
according to Student Polity Association
(SPA) President Sorin Abraham.
Abraham said both the campus
administration and the state Dormitory
Authority, which builds and maintains
dorms, have denied ultimate financial
responsibility flood damage in dorm
rooms there, each telling him that
someone else is responsible.
“It’s the pinball treatment, and we’re
the ball,” Abraham said. “Nobody wants
to take responsibility.”
In mid-September, more than 400
residents of Kelly Quadrangle, home to
1,000 students, sustained varying degrees
of property damage by rainwater, which
poured through temporary roofing
material on the building during recent
storms.
The University said Monday that so far
114 students have filed damage claims.
The entire 20-year-old roof covering
the complex was removed during the
summer and was in the process of being
replaced when severe storms hit.
“T guess they weren’t expecting rain,”
Abraham said.
Stony Brook’s Associate Vice President
for University Relations Dan Forbush
said the University had “expended
significant resources to alleviate the
situation, and has replaced textbooks that
were damaged. Action needed to be taken
and we took action.”
But Forbush said that because the
authority is responsible for operation the
residence halls, the University would also
seek reimbursement for the work that it
has done.
Dormitory Authority Executive
Director John Egan said this week that
while he was uncertain who would pay
for the damage, he was certain someone
would.
“The important thing is to reassure
students that they will be reimbursed for
the damages that resulted directly from
the condition,” Egan said Monday. “My
concer is that it be done promptly.”
Egan said that authority itself was
responsible only for the safety of students
during construction, and that the roofing
contractor, Maropakis Carpentry of
Brooklyn was responsible for property
damage that resulted from its work.
The company was awarded the
$444,000 contact by the Dormitory
Authority,
According to a University press
Statement, the roof was protected only by
a thin sheet of tar paper. Plus, when the
contractor connected the pumps that
remove excess water from the roofs, they
were all drawing on one circuit, which
failed when the pumps were activated.
SEAS SSPE RE SAP SAY ED LOE TL MET AGT MASTS
Martinez speaks at Board of Regents
forum on bilingual education
By Lori Hament
NEWS EDITOR
The State Education Department’s Board of Regents held a public forum on
regulatory and legislative changes in bilingual education, in which Fuenza Latina’s|
Vice President Guillermo Martinez spoke, representing minority students.
The forum, held on October 17 at Linton High School in Schenectady, was|
provided to receive public comment on changes in proposed regulations of current]
bilingual education policy.
A “Regents Policy Paper and Proposed Action Plan for Bilingual Education”,
approved last December, acknowledged the need of New York State’s Limited
English Proficiency (LEP) students.
According to Martinez, it is important for LEP students to learn English, but they]
shouldn’t love their own language and forget about their heritage.
Commending the. Board of Regents for its policy paper and proposed action plan,
which Martinez said is a package that will not only ensure the adequate delivery of|
services but one which has recognized the importance - social and economic - of}
fostering native languages other than English.”
“By the Regents focusing on the valuable resource that a bilingual society provides,
it is taking into account the changing demographics of our state” by that it “does}
possess unique resources of and cultural pluralism,” Martinez said.
Martinez restated to the panel (the Board) two “distinct realities” of this change in|
demographics.
“First, the fact that since 1984, there were 29 language groups in this state with
1000 or more speakers, and second, the fact that by the year 2000 nearly one-third of|
this state’s population will be minority,” Martinez said.
With this diversity and the need for well-qualified and educated people the need for}
a responsible system of education is necessary for these students, Martinez said.
“The Image of America - that of a kinder and gentler nation will indeed be tested|
by children from all over the world, ... upon arrival will be thrown into regular classes|
to suffer “the teasing from their peers,” Martinez said.
This “immersion, he said, may cause psychological and physical damage to al
child, which may result in abandoning school.
Martinez concluded in his speech (testimony) within the five minute time period
and said, “I would like to thank you (the Board) for showing such great concern and]
leadership - concern for every citizen of this state, and leadership in leading a nation
into an era where human relations are as important as any technology man ‘sas}_
| developed.” , |
4 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS _ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
Jail-N-Bail will be held to
benefit Cancer society
By Emily Elmstrom
The American Marketing Association (AMA) is organizing Jail-N-
Bail, a charity event to benefit the American Cancer Society.
Jail-n-Bail will be held in the campus center-Ballroom on Nov. 1
and 2. Sign-ups for the event will take place in the Campus Center
lobby beginning Oct. 25.
Jail-n-Bail works as follows; you sign up the name of the person
that you want jailed, as well as where they will be at the time of
arrest. Officers from the Reserve Officers Training Corps and the
Department of Public Safety then “arrest” the person and read them
the American Cancer Society rights.
The person is then brought to the Campus Center Ballroom, where
the jail is held, and appears in front of a celebrity panel of judges,
who sentence the person for their “crime”.
“Bail” is set, and the person must call friends to try and raise the
‘amount set. The bail that they raise willthen be donated to the
American Cancer Society.
The price of signing someone for Jail-n-Bail is $10 for students
and $25 for non-students. Anyone from outside SUNYA is welcome.
According to Jeff Luks, AMA treasurer, last year the AMA rasied
$30,000. eS year we hope to equal last year’s amount or possibly
raise more.”
“It’s for agood cause so maybe studetns could try and donate more
money,” Luks said.
Susan Gabrielsen, special events coordinatore for the Amercian
Cancer Society helped organize the event for the fouth year.
Gabrielsen said, “I’m very excited and it’s a lot of fun: There will be
local TV personalities and hopefully a comedian as the celebrity
judges, including Benita Zahn, Health reporter and news
anchorwoman for Channel 13.”
“There will be limousine service, provided by Tourch of Class, for
people who are going to be picked up outside of SUNYA. If you’re
planning on picking someone from the workplace, it is suggested that
you talk to their boss first,” Gabrielsen said.
The event wil take place between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. both days.
Several organizations, such as Univeristy Auxiliary Services,
Freihoffer’s and New York Seltzer, will serve free food and
refresh:
Kids to trick or treat on campus
By Michelle Madaffari
Halloween is coming a day earlier to SUNYA as the university will be visited by 150 boys and girls
for “Trick or Treating”, on October 30.
Barry Robinson, former State Quad board president, and a Resident Assistant in Melville Hall on
State Quad is organizing the event, which is in its third year. The children will Tange in age from three
to 14 and are members of the Albany Boys Club. Most are from underprivileged families in the
downtown Albany area.
The State Quad Board and Residential Life Staff are sponsoring the event. Last year approximately
93 percent of State Quad participate. This year, Robinson is looking for one hundred percent. Melville
Hall is the center of the operation, and its residents are heavily involved. The volunteers will distribute
candy, as well as signs designating which suites and halls are participating. Then, in groups of two,
they will chaperone 10 children around the Quad to receive their candy.
Robinson also anticipates that other Quads will participate in the event, by inviting different
children’s clubs to the University. Colonial Quad is hosting a similar event on Oct. 26, organized by
the Minority Assistance Program and two R.A.’s from the Quad.
Robinson is excited about the program thought he said “The people on State are looking more
forward to it than the kids are... It’s great to see how the residents of State Quad and the State Quad
Residential Life Staff are coming together to help get the children of Albany off the street.”
Fraternity to sponsor "fast"
By Colleen McGuire
In a continuing effort to raise
money for the American Cancer
Society, Zeta Beta Tau is asking
students to participate in a ‘food
fast’ on Wednesday Oct. 25.
Members of the fraternity will
be sitting at dinner lines Oct. 23-
25 requesting that students give
up their dinner on Wednesday.
University Auxiliary Services,
who is sponsoring the event,
offered to donate an undisclosed
amount of money to the
American Cancer Society for
each meal relinquished.
“We appreciate the fact that
UAS is helping us out with this
event,” ZBT President Matt
Kluger said.
“Over the past three years we
have been able to donate over
$6000 to the American Cancer
Society - and we’re very happy
about it,” Kluger said.
ZBT’s monetary goal for this
‘food fast’ is $5000.
“We hope people realize that
ZBT does in no way profit from
this event,” ZBT Vice President
Scott Leemon said. “UAS makes
a direct check out payable to the
American Cancer Society.”
In addition to the ‘food fast’,
ZBT also set up various sites for
aluminum can donations. These
donations sites are located at
Crossgates Mall, Stuyvesant
Plaza and the Campus Center.
Various business in the
community, along with the
school, also made donations to
the benefit. Among those who
contributed are Tukego, in
Stuyvesant Plaza, Hip Printing,
on Central Avenue, the Greek
Age and the university gym.
G WEEKEND
—= {2 | ——
TUESDAY, OCOTBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 5
Suicide awareness and prevention are stressed
By University Counseling
Center Psychologists
Before you finish
reading this article someone in
the United States will try to
commit suicide. By this time
tomorrow 60 Americans will
have taken their lives. Nine times
as many will have attempted
suicide and many will try again.
Suicide often happens to “nice”
people in “typical” settings; it is
not restricted to the eccentric.
Many lives have been lost
because someone was not
believed to be the “type” to
commit suicide.
2 Of Middle
the many
mental health Earth
issues faced Roots
by a
university community, suicide is
perhaps the most dramatic and
frightening. For college students,
suicide is the second leading
cause of death. Studies report
white male adults 20-24 years
old have the highest suicide rate;
Afro-American males 18-24
years of age have an even greater
tate of suicide compared to Afro-
Americans of all other ages;
persons aged 65 and over are
reported to have the highest rate
of all age groups. But the gaps
among age, race and sex factors
a ESS EES
Special Student & Youth Fares to
from New York on Scheduled Airlines!
DESTINATIONS ow | Rt
LONDON $175 |$350
PARIS. 215} 415
BRUSSELS 195| 370
ROME 275| 550
STOCKHOLM/OSLO- 250| 460
COPENHAGEN 250| 460
ZURICH 215| 405
FRANKFURT 215} 410
MADRID 235| 450
‘Add on fares trom Boston, Washington, Chicago.
Pittsburgh and other U'S. cities. Plus $3 dep. tax,
$10 customimmigration tee.
CALL OR WRITE FOR OUR SPECIAL FARES TO THE
SO. PACIFIC, AUSTRALIA, SO. AMERICA
Eurail and Eurail Youth Passes available moe
1-800-777-0112 SF //
212-986-9470
WHOLE WORLD TRAVEL
17 E. 45th St., Suite 805, New York, NY 10017
Part of the worldwide STA Travel Network
have begun to close which makes
such demographic categories less
teliable as prediction aids.
If the incidence. of suicide
seems high, the incidence of
attempts that do not result in
death is shocking. Over five
million people now living in the
United States have attempted to
kill themselves. Because many
suicides and attempts are not
reported, experts believe the true
figures are higher.
Counseling Centers across the
country report the psychological
problems of university
populations are more numerous
and more serious than during
previous decades. Suicide was
once considered a component of
largely depressive disorders;
however, it is now recognized as
a component of many
nondepressive mental health
syndromes as well.
Recognizing suicide cues from
persons at risk is an important
task shared by all
communitymembers. Sometimes
there are broad hints; sometimes
: all points.
WE MAKE
HOME
DELIVERIES.
Trailways has the perfect way home from
college. Take the bus to Long Island,
Central or Western New York. Because,
when it comes to a relaxing ride, we're
the only course to take after school.
Contact your local Trailways ticket agent
to learn about the many daily departures
from the Downtown Terminal that will
take you home whenever you want. Ask
for the reduced Trailways student fare.
For your convenience, and at no addi-
tional charge, tickets and information are
available at Copy Plus at the Student Center
Friday afternoon departures direct
from the SUNY campus connecting to
1:00PM 3:10PM
there are only subtle changes in
behavior. When people are
suicidal there is no single trait by
which all of them can be
characterized.
A suicide attempt itself is a
warning; 80 percent of people
who take their own lives have
previously given warnings of
their intention to do so. Another
cue is the suicide threat; people
who commit suicide often make
direct threats of self-destruction
and comments such as, “You'd be
better off without me.” “I’m no
good to anyone.” “I might as well
be dead.”
Any significant change in
personality or behavior is a
“POSSIBLE” clue especially
when accompanied by a loss or
major change in life
circumstances. Another cue is
when a _ person makes
arrangements to get personal
affairs in order, such as giving
away possessions, settling
finances, reviewing wills and life
insurance policies. Other cues are
depressive symptoms such as
sleep disturbances, appetite loss,
4:15 PM
a5 Hamilion Siveet, Albany /436- 9651
Copy Plus, SUNY Campus/442-5656
weight change, headache, general
aches and pains, nervousness,
lethargy, crying, inability to
concentrate, decreased sexual
interest, loss of interest in friends
and activities, lack of
communication, isolation, and a
sense of hopelessness.
Paradoxically, depressed
individuals often commit suicide
when the symptoms appear to be
improving, just when family and
friends begin to relax in the belief
the crisis has passed. Suicidal
people generally have the
unwarranted belief they cannot be
helped. Treatment has proved
extremely successful in helping
individuals return to full, active,
productive, and enjoyable lives.
The cardinal rule in suicide
prevention is to DO
SOMETHING: GET HELP. If
you are concerned about someone
else don’t wait for other signs to
develop; don’t decide to think
about it for a while. Do it today;
tomorrow may be too late.
Help is not hard to find.
Assistance is available to
Auto service
aus
‘COUPON,
Lube, Oil & Filter
Lubricate your vehicle's chassis,
drain old oil, and add up to five
quarts of new oil
and install an $1 4.88
new oil filter.
Reg. $ 24.95
= MOST CARS
mmm m mmm oxpres Oct 20, 1969 mame
COUPON
WINTER
SYSTEM CHECK
$14.88
© Inspect Belts & Hoses
© Top-off Antifreeze Fluids
© Pressure Test Cooling System
© Check Battery
ummm expires Oct 29, 1900 wane
members of the University at
Albany, SUNY community at the
Division of Student Affairs,
Department of Health and
Counseling Services through the
University Counseling Center
(442-5800, HCS Bldg, Room
230); University Health Service
(442-5454; HCS Bldg, Main
Lobby); Middle Earth Hotline
(442-5777); and, 5-Quad
Ambulance Service (442-5151).
Other types of assistance are
available on-campus from:
University Police Department
(442-3131); Chapel House (489-
8573); and the Employee
Assistance Program (442-5483).
Off-campus emergency
assistance is available from local
police departments, the Capital
District Psychiatric Center’s
Crisis Unit and their Mobile
Crisis Team; and Emergency
Rooms at all local hospitals,
which is the case in all
communities.
In addition, “The Samaritans”
operate a suicide hotline 463-
2323 which is available 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week.
professionals
FALL TUNE-UP
install resistor spark plugs, adjust idle
‘ey engine parts. Add $ 10.00 for analysis
lectronie $39.88
ignition cars.
3.95 - $83.
sige EB s40.0010-0y1 85 08
MOST CAR}
‘Add $ 18 Fer VS.
mm expires oct 29, 1989 wu mmE 4
COUPON
ences
BRAKE, SERVICE
prclpperttinep
BEMIUM BRAKE
VICE er axa, ic or drum $99. 95
ae the above, PLUS @ Raconditon calipere/whoa!
ts
oe
BEEBE expires Oct: 25,1989 6
ST.
ETER’S HOSPITAL
COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC SERVICE PROGRAM
OPENINGS - SPRING 1990
EARLY CHILDHOOD, EMERGENCY ROOM,
PATIENT AIDE GERIATRIC, AND
PHYSICAL THERAPY (limited)
Interviews required -
call 454-1515
We now carry
BRIDGESTONE
high quality tires
*
ALIGNMENT
4 FREE SHUTTLE DAILY TO THE CAMPUS
10% STUDENT/FACULTY/STAFF
DISCOUNT ON NON-SALE ITEMS
* OPEN SUNDAY 10 AM - 4 PM
* OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 9 PM
|" WE OFFER COMPUTERIZED WHEEL
459-
FIRESTONE 83 wolf Ra Colonie
7700
OPEN 7AM-9PM M-F 7AM-SPM SAT 10AM-4PM SUN.
6 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS _ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
Crackdown promised for Halloween this year
(CPS)—From California to
Florida, campus and city officials
are swearing they will be better
prepared this year for what has
probably become the unofficial
National Student Holiday:
Halloween.
As with spring break, the other
nationwide collegiate festival,
many schools are promising
crackdowns and rule changes to
try to prevent some of the worst
excesses and even injuries that
have plagued campus Halloween
celebrations in recent years.
“This will not be a pleasant
place to be on Halloween,” said
Jack Dyer, director of university
relations at Southern IIinois
University (STU) in Carbondale,
which 18 years ago was one of
the first schools to give itself
over to huge Halloween street
parties.
But SIU’s_ much-copied
Halloween bash has grown to
host more than 20,000 people
who crowd streets, throw beer
bottles and hurt each other.
Similar problems have plagued
college costume parties at the
universities of Massachusetts-
Amherst, Florida, Colorado and
other schools.
No one is sure how all this
started, or how Halloween, of all
days, turned into the biggest
college party night of the year.
Emest Kaulbach, a professor of
middle English at the University
of Texas, says it derives from
students’ childhood practice of
putting on costumes and “trick or
treating.”
“Now it gives them the chance
to put on a costume and party,” he
said.
But it’s more than just an
excuse for a party, says Chech, a
University of Miami student who
goes by just his last name. “There
will be parties no matter what, but
Halloween is different because
there is more to the party than just
drinking five kegs.”
According to legend, All
Hallows Eve gives devils six
hours starting at midnight on Oct.
31 to do all the evil they can
before they have to go back to
@@ the best
BEN & JERRY'S
DBLIVERS!
BYBNINGS--10200 PH
SQNDAY THRA
THORSOAY
459-4425
ORDER DEADLINE-8:30PM .
INIKON ORDER $10.09
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
AND PUBLIC
SIGN-UP
Oct. 30 - Nov.
Between
LC3 & LC4
10:00 - 2:00,
A
[kN
hell in the morning, Nov. 1, the
start of All Saints Day.
The tradition of trick or
treating comes from treating the
devils well so that they won;t
play tricks.
On campuses, the tricks
sometimes turn dangerous.
Some revelers at the
University of Massachusetts at
Amherst vandalized local stores
in 1979, prompting UMass to
impose a five-year ban on school
Halloween parties.
In 1985 at the University if
Illinois Champaign campus,
windows were smashed, bonfires
were lit, fistfights erupted and
party-goers were showered with
glass from broken beer bottles. A
visiting Northwestern University
student was struck in the head
with a beer bottle, and lapsed
into a coma. He later had to
undergo brain surgery.
SIU’s 1988 “celebration” was
similarly tragic.
More than 300 people went to
the hospital because of
lacerations on the face from
broken bottles, one person was
stabbed and a woman was raped,
reported Tim Hildebrand, SIU’s
student president.
In response, many colleges and
college towns are moving to dry
up Halloweens with new rules
and regulations this year.
A University of California at
Santa Barbara committee made
up of students, administrators
and local authorities is going to
door-to-door to preach about
using alcohol safely, and to
discourage students from inviting
out-of-town guests to Halloween.
The committee also sent letters
Tony Pollock CPS.
Cal-Santa Barbara students at last year's party: After efforts to discourage
them, only about half the usual 30,000 people showed up.
to nearby communities, hoping
they'll discourage their residents
from going to Isla Vista, UCSB’s
town, to party.
The program is working so far,
said Diedre Acker, assistant to
UCSB’s dean of students. In
1988, only about half the usual
30,000 people showed up.
Boulder, Colo., police will be
out in force to impose public
drinking laws at this year’s “mall
Crawl,” the University of
Colorado fest that began as a
FREE MEDICAL EXAM AND THROAT CULTURE
YOU WILL BE COMPENSATED IF QUALIFIED
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 434-0140 MON - SAT
AMG
Albany Allergy & Asthma Services
62 Hackett Boulevard Albany, NY 12200
, Dedicated to Excellence in Clinical Research
SUBJECTS NEEDED TO
PARTICIPATE IN
CLINICAL RESEARCH
REQUIREMENTS:
¢ Healthy male
° Between ages 18 - 55
e Able to spend sorne time at our
new research facility located at
the Albany Medical Center
EARN EXTRA INCOME
For more information please call
(518) 445-8676
Monday
- Friday
8am-Spm
Eric K, Copland
Attorney at Law
Practice limited to Immigration Matters
Visas - Work Permits - Citizenships
488 Broadway - P.O. Box 4249
Albany, NY. 42204-4249
434-0175
Ostumes and accessories for an
original Halloween look.
DAYBREAK
CUTRAGECUS & VINTAGE JTTRE
FOR LADIES & GENTLEMEN
199 CENTRAL AVENUE 247 LARK STREE"”
ALBANY, N.Y.12206 ALBANY, N.Y. T2210
434-4312 434-4302
small party in 1909 and has
grown into a rowdy mass of
40,000 people, reported Frank
Grey, who heads the city’s
efforts to control the event.
University of Texas at Austin
Officials, in turn, take a laissez-
faire stance to Halloween, letting
the city figure out how to control
the 60,000-plus crowd.
“It’s a town activity, and the
university has nothing to do with
it,” said a university spokesman.
People dressed in costumes
gather on Sixth Street, a seven-
block stretch of bars and dance
clubs. The area is closed to
traffic and 214 police officers are
on hand.
“Of course there are minor
altercations,” concedes
University of Texas student
Booker Harrison, but it’s a
peaceful, well-controlled event.”
Linda Menchara of the Austin
city manager’s office agreed.
“For the number of people who
show up, the problems are
minimal. I don’t know if it’s the
presence of the police or what.”
Not coincidentally, SIU and
Carbondale are bringing out 300
police officers to patrol the big
Party this year, hoping
aggressive enforcement of
alcohol and container laws will
quash the worst excesses of the
tevelry.
In addition, SIU has forbidden
students to have overnight guests
in their dorm rooms. Carbondale
has banned street rock bands and
food vendors.
“Hopefully this will kill it,”
Dyer said.
In case it doesn’t, SIU will g°
on an unprecedented four-day
“fall break” during
Halloween,1990, closing
residence halls and pushing
students home for the holiday.
“Students are taking it pretty
well,” said student president
Hildebrand. “Something had to
be done. It was just too violent.”
yomaeepline as See
Cesena whinheatnnitr inner ete see
(TEA HA AER R OTE NR POURS Ra A" Pe
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 7
Campus controversy arises over "Last Temptation"
(CPS) — About 1,200 turned out on the
Oklahoma State University campus
October 4 to protest the cancellation of an
on-campus screening of the “Last
Temptation of Christ,” a movie many
have attacked as being blasphemous.
OSU’s regents voted to “postpone” a
scheduled screening of the movie until
the administration submitted answers to
“10 questions” along the lines of how
OSU President John Campbell felt about
the propriety of showing controversial
films on campus.
The campus’s Faculty Senate then
blasted Campbell’s reaction as a tepid
response to censorship, the regents agreed
to meet to discuss the matter further, and
students took to the streets to voice their
discontent,
The movie also provoked protests at
Harrisburg (Pa.) Area Community
College and at Northern Virginia
Community College (NVCC) in recent
weeks.
It promises to provoke more as the
film, released in 1988, begins to be
shown by more programming boards on
more campuses.
“It’s taking a lot of courage for people
to show the film,” said Dennis Doros of
Kino, the New York-base distributor of
the film which was directed by Martin
Scorcese.
Scorcese based the film on the 1955
novel of the same name by Nikos
Kazantzakis, who depicts a speculative
last temptation of a dying Jesus Christ
hallucinating that he had abandoned his
godliness to live as a man and make love
to Mary Magdelene.
The notion, which was based on a body
of early Christian writings that was not
supplanted as popular scripture until
almost 1,000 years after Jesus’
crucifixion, so offended some religious
groups that they picketed theaters that
showed the film when it was first
Teleased.
At Marquette University in Wisconsin,
administrators rejected a student
government attempt to provide buses to a
local theater to see the film.
Now that the work is moving directly to
campuses — which often show second-
run films — “Temptation” is drawing still
more protest.
At Oklahoma State, just about everyone
— from local church groups to Gov.
Henry Bellmon — except the regents
themselves seems to favor screening the
film on campus.
“I feel like eventually, ‘Last
Temptation’ will be shown,” predicted
OSU student government president
Kimberly McCoy.
The American Civil Liberties Union
has filed a lawsuit on behalf of a group of
students and faculty to reverse the
regents’ decision on the grounds it
violates the First Amendment.
It took a court decision to show the film
at Northern Virginia Community College.
A Loundoun (Va.) County Circuit Court
judge on September 23 shot down an
attempt by Michael Farris, a Baptist
minister and a lawyer, to legally ban
NVCC from showing the film.
Farris argued the state-run school
shouldn’t be able to show the film
because it would amount to improper
mixing church subjects with state funds.
The movie was shown as scheduled
SUNYA Students...
now you can get your RESU ME done
at CROSSGATES MALL!
SHIPMATES Shipping & Office Services
will professionally typeset your resume
using your format or one of ours, and give you:
¢ High Quality e Fast Turn-around «
e Reasonable Prices
(We word process cover letters & papers too! )
Ship yates
Lower Level near Penney's &
Northeast Savings Bank
Call 452-6078
an
FLYERS, POSTERS, NEWSLETTERS
HIGH SPEED COPY/DUPLICATION
WSpectraGraphics
FULL SERVICE COPY: PRINT-GRAPHICS CENTER
869 - 0232
olo <<
AGE DOCUMENT COPIES SO «
4G FT, BY ANY LENGTH) Le SS
COLOR LASER COPIES Ss a et
LAMINATING 9 ANY
(2 FT.BYANYLENGTH) = | SERVICE
<x
RESUME SERVICE = 1892 CENTRAL AVE.
COLONIE PLAZA is in COLONIE PLAZA
Central Avenue = just west of Rt.155 & Central Ave
LS hal
Ave Bt {| ___ -F 830 - 5:20
Western Ave SUNYA SAT 10:00 - 1:00
Route 20:
September 24.
“The fact that we could have lost this
case would have meant that no state
institution could show film, or any
controversial film,” said Bob Depczenski,
film series coordinator at NVCC’s
Loundoun campus. No one involved in the
hearing — the judge, NVCC’s lawyer,
Farris or Depezenski — had seen the film.
About 40 people picketed Harrisburg
Area Community College’s decision to
show “Temptation” September 22,
reported Teri Guerrisi, the school’s director
of cultural affairs. “It was the first time
we’ve had any kind of arts program
protested in 25 years,”
In recent years, films dealing with
religion seem to have replaced porn
movies as censors’ favorite targets. The
trend, helped in part because students
could rent porn movies individually from
local video stores, seemed to start three
years ago when “Hail Mary,” another
movie touching on religion, began
appearing on campuses.
The serious French film, which tried to
update the story of the Virgin Mary,
provoked Catholic protests at the
universities of
Oklahoma, Kansas, North Dakota and
Nebraska, among others,
Robert Reidenour of Daily O’ Collegian
at Oklahoma State University contributed
to this story.
WITHDRAWING ??22?2
Please be advised that Friday, October 27
is the LAST DAY to voluntarily withdraw
from the University and still be eligible to
apply for readmission for the SPRING 1990
semester.
Withdrawls from the University are now
being handled in the Office of Withdrawls
and Reentry located in the Campus
Center, Room 356.
THOS BROTHERS OF ZBT
PRESBNITs
"FOOD FAST '89"
| For every person who skips quad
dinner on Wednesday, October 25,
UAS will make a donatation to the
American Cancer Society.
PLEASE, DO YOUR
PART TO HELP FIND A
CURE FOR CANCER,
SKIP A MEALI
eeteessesipinsmmsion=aasaenesieaiaeieaemaseninemscasets it
8 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
Ry v
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28
1:30 OM.
Bob Dylan Richard Lewis Parade Pep Rally/Bon Fire
Friday, October Saturday, Saturday, Friday, October
27 October 28 October 28 27
8:00 7:30 11:00 5:30
RPI GYM STATE TO INDIAN LAKE
FIELDHOUSE INDIAN
Cultural Dinner Jazz Night Club President's
Saturday, The Hall Miller Band Breakfast
October 28 Saturday, Sunday, October
6:30 ~ October 28 29
10:30
BRUBACHER CC BALLROOM CC
HALL
‘FREE EVENT CASH BAR JLBALLROOM
TUESDAY OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 9
Choice
Continued from page 3
created a partial-subsidy list.
The group will try to help
finance as many rides as
possible.
The student group has been
suffering from a lack of
monetary funds. The National
Organization of Women helped
finance the group last year but,
according to Sullivan, although
they still back the group, they
can no longer afford to help
Support them financially. The
Student Association does not
fund the group either. For these
reasons, a table has been set up
in the Campus Center at which
anything from sweaters to baked
goods are being sold, in an effort
to raise money.
According to Cynthia Spilker,
a@ member of Students for
Choice, “There are many
fallacies concerning pro-choice
advocates. A major
misconception seems to be that
people who support the pro-
choice movement are also pro-
abortion. “We support the right of
woman to have a choice in the
matter. We don’t necessarily
advocate abortion,” Spilker said.
In the beginning of November,
the Outreach Committee of
Students for Choice, in
conjunction with the quad boards,
will be setting up a stand at
different quad cafeterias every
evening during dinner, to educate
students about the cause. The sale
of bus tickets to the Washington
rally will also take place at that
time, although students can also
purchase them in the Campus
Center.
Korotzer advised that students
interested in taking part in the
rally should either buy the bus
tickets, solicit sponsors, or put
their names on the subsidy
waiting list as soon as possible,
because the expected turnout
may cause difficulty in obtaining
seats..
Students for Choice meet
every Thursday night in the S.A.
Lounge at 7 p.m.
Lark Street
BENGJERRYS
‘VERMONT'S FINEST ALL NATURAL ICE CREAM™
now offers
| DELIVERY
to SUNY
o& 463-7182
i i ini i din,
Price Waterhouse, the recognized leader in international tax, has outstanding
ppettnine for Tax Pislelrels with superior credentials. Prior international tax
experience is not a prerequisite. Ideal candidates would be Lawyers who have an
undergraduate degree in Accounting or who have previously worked in Accounting
firms, Law firms, IRS or industry.
Intellectually challenging assignments may include:
~ Structuring mergers and acquisitions -
- Maximizing foreign tax credit utilization
~ Developing financial instruments _
- Advising on cross-border transactions
i i ji ity involving i tional tax
If interested in a challenging career opportunity involving internal ol
ort bel cacaltrigpaend yeu: se aintein comple caniidetcs Rc: Bieter,
(Office 3771)
* Sunday - Thursday only
Orders must be placed by 9:30
Orders delivered at 10:00 p.m.
55.00 minimum order
Pick up a price list dnd menu at the
Lark Street store,
Price Waterhouse
EXPECT MORE FROM US
153 East 53rd Street, New York, N.Y. 10022
An Equal tunity Employer M/F
WEEKEND SERVICE!
Friday and Saturday nights!
From Campus Center Information Desk
10:30pm - 12:30em
«A special thanks to Sigma Nu for
providing escorts for this much
FROM _ THE LIBRARY:
A Sunday - Thursday
: 8:00 pm - 11:00pm
SAFETY ESCORT
SERVICE
FROM ROCKEFELLER GRADUATE CAMPUS: needed service...
nday - Thursday
q So 10:00pm - from Draper Lobby
: (New this year!)
Be An Escort!
*call x5511 or stop by LC B-54 for
information
FREEDOM AD:
Sunday - baie
8:00 pm - 10:30 pm
Gan Library or call x5511)
10 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
Take out Lee Fong
tonight.
(He delivers.)
espe
oe
-
oe
sone
.
-
S
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 1 1
eee = = = COUPON a eee ty = :
Frigags
e NASAL ALLERGIES » ASTHMA
MUSIC AND VIDEO BUYERS |
We are presently evaluating investigational medications STOP PAYING TWICE AS MUCH tf ai
fot the treatment of these disorders in adults and ~ NOW you can save up to $200.00 or more on Compact LON Ne LB |
Sam veined pepens wel receve ir ec discs, Records, Tapes or Blank Videos. Buy ore at regular |
examinations, medications, Ski es! ig ani real ing FREE! oO igh 1
tests. In addition, you will be compensated for your time Bie Grower uae eines uot : ! f lf LZALS
Artists...Original Label...Rock...Country...Jazz...Classical. |
Comedy...Children... "IF IT’S SOLD IN A RECORD STORE
WE HAVE IT TOO." No expiration date on coupons and no I
forced buying. To receive your music catalog and 20 coupon’ jf
booklet. Send $10.00 to: NORTHEAST CONSULTING SERVICES 1
NAME, 176 FORTS FERRY ROAD
ADDRESS —S—SC~C*C*<LAT'HHAM,, NEW YORK 12210 1
C/S/Zip.
N.CS, Authorized Dist. For Federal Music and Video Club Inc.
For Further Information Call: 434-0140
Albany Allergy & Asthma Services
62 Hackett Boulevard Albany, NY 12209
Dedicated to Excellence in Clinical Research
Orilves
@/=m_=<c= == COUPON == 88 = = =
MINDS/GROWING BODIES
eDaily Specials
ebreakfast, Lunch and Dinner
¢Most Reasonable pi
anywhere
“The times they are a-changin’; He should know, he
changed them forever, and he’s changing them still. As his
September album ‘OH MERCY’ will prove...a splendid new
album.” TIME MAGAZINE
Only at the Gateway Diner
Next to Westgate Center
on Central Avenue
THE GATEWAY
Open
| welcomes back Suny!
We don't serve junk food, like
the fast food restaurants.
Unlike chain restaurants, we don't
use prepackaged, frozen, shipp
in. food.
Only fre nutritious food
prepared daily by our chef on
the premises.
IDEAL FOOD FOR GROWING
7 DAYS/WEEK 24 HOURS
.. ‘OH MERCY’ is the most deeply satisfying collection
of songs to appear from a major pop artist this year...
amasterpiece.’ MUSICIAN
Orders to take out!!!
482-7557
..."OH MERCY ‘—ten songs to play in the face of the hurri-
cane—will prove as resonant and lasting as anything he’s
ever recorded:* NME
Ten songs from the brilliant new album,
You'll Score More.
For Sure.
That's the Princeton Review Guarantee.
“Oh Mercy.”
Includes Everything Is Broken,
Pol al World,
At the Princeton Review, we guarantee your LSAT, GMAT or
GRE scores will increase after successfully completing our course.
and more.
How can we be so sure? Consider our documented results:
i i ‘ir scores
On average, Princeton Review students raise the:
9 points on the LSAT, 85 points on the GMAT;
. and 210 points on the GRE. Bob Dylan. “Oh Mercy.”
Our formula for success includes:
* Limited-enrollment classes.
On Columbia Cassettes,
Mi ed diagnostic testing.
¢ Computer-analyz en v4 Te es
¢ Proven score-boosting techniques. and Rotorde:
* Plenty of personal attention. Produced by Daniel Lanois.
i i are trademarks of CBS Inc. © 1989 CBS Records Inc.
* The best instructors in the business.
PALACE THEATER OCTOBER 27—SPONSORED BY SUNY
Classes are forming now.
Call 458-8552 for more information.
here eee
a —
PRINCETON .
REVIEW al
nevi ntl we Pann Unc h BeninalTting Coven
‘Taine
a
Aspects on Tuesday
October 24, 1989
Keeping Pace With Richard Lewis
Watching Richard Lewis perform
comedy is like watching the anxious
husband whose wife has been in the
delivery room for about 36 hours.
Technically, he is not even a stand-up
comic: he is a pacing, nomadic comic
who stays in one place only long
enough to tell us that he is currently
involved in the “relationship from
hell.”
Peter LaMassa
He is a veteran of numerous cable
specials, almost 50 appearances on
“Late Night with David Letterman”,
and is now in his first full season of
“Any thing But Love”, a situation
comedy in which he plays opposite
Jamie Lee Curtis. He is performing
for Parents’ Weekend this Saturday
night in the University Gym.
Lewis is so much like his character
on the show, Marty, that it is a
surprise to find out that he had to
audition for the part and that it was
not written for him. “Everyone in
town wanted to play opposite Curtis.
It was late in the process, and they still
hadn’t found. anyone yet.” According
to Lewis, after he tried out, she jumped
to her feet, and said “You’re my.
Marty!”
Then of course, Lewis, the president
of pessimists, wanted it in writing
before he got too excited. “I waited
until the check cleared,” he joked.
The relationship between Marty and
Hannah (Curtis) has been platonic so
far, save for one kiss in the last episode
of last season. Lewis says that they are
not going to become an item just yet. “I
think right now, she will be dating, I
will be dating, and she'll slowly come
to the realization that even though my
posture is horrible, I’m the one.”
Besides, he contends that the kiss did
not live up to its full potential. “Tt was
not a particularly great kiss, because I
had just eaten some lox, onions, and
eggs, and I had some salmon hanging
’
out of my mouth,” he explained. “not
to mention, the fact that I thought we
were going to do the kiss at the end of
the day, and I could floss. They rushed
me.”
Lewis is a creative consultant on the
show, so he gets to inject a piece of his
personality into his character.
Unfortunately for him, he does not
have final say. “I try to write in as
much sexual stuff as possible, but they
always edit it out. I’m doing it not
only because I think its good for the
show, but cab drivers all over the
country ar mocking me for not making
out with her yet. I’m doing it to
protect myself.”
Displaying uncharacteristic
confidence, Lewis says he has a good
feeling that the show is going to be
around for a while in its Wednesday
night slot. “Unless of course you want
to watch Jake and the Fatman,’ " he
reasoned. “But, at 9:30, if you miss the
first half of ‘Jake and the Fatman’, you
have to be a mental patient to watch a
guy sweat like he was in a sauna, and
not know why.”
Because of the sitcom, Lewis has had
to cut down on his touring, but still
finds he is doing his schtick during a
lot of his ‘free ’ time. “I’ve had no
choice. Most people take vacations to
Maui. I run to Letterman to do more
stand-up. It’s the Depression Tour, as
I'm calling it. At the end, I’m going to
do Carnegie Hall and then collapse.”
His appearances on Letterman have
helped him create a strong following
on college campuses. “Nielsen ratings
aside, Letterman certainly reaches the
college audience. He is a major force
and he’s been great to me.” The
Letterman-campus connection has
helped Lewis fall in love with campus
shows. “The shows are very
exhilarating for me. Theyre psyched
I’m coming, I’m psyched to be there,
and I try to time my breakdown for
exactly when I hit the stage. That's
why I never do encores. When I say
goodnight, I mean goodnight. They
have to carry me off the stage.”
"Initially, my mother was upset about me
talking about her. Now, she lives to be
mocked by me. She calls me before
Letterman appearances and says, ‘please
ridicule me.' You have no idea how happy I
am.
-- Richard Lewis
He claims that the nervous,
distraught, frantic (let me get my
thesaurus) Richard Lewis is not an act,
but the real McCoy: “I wish I did have
an act. I wish I could put on a puppet
costume, or something.”
I asked Lewis if he ever overcame
his neuroses to work on any traditional
hobbies besides therapy.
“Friendship,”, he said. “Friendship
and therapy have been the most
consistent things in my life. Show
business has a lot of crap in it.” He
said that the people he has kept in
touch with from high school and
college keep him from going too
Hollywood. “It sounds like a cliche,
but they really do keep you grounded.
“After getting a marketing degree at
Ohio State, Lewis worked by day asa
copyrighter while working at night for
free at comedy clubs testing out
material __ before comedy became a
“billion dollar industry.” He found
working in advertising boring, “I
knew I had another calling somewhere
- like a sick man inside of me yelling to
get out.” He blames this on his early
family life. "I really felt cut off
expressing myself growing up. I never
got two or three sentences together. I
needed a mike, a sound system and a
couple of thousand strangers.”
He finally got a job opening for
Sonny and Cher’s road act, freeing him
from day jobs and allowing him to go
to California. He worked hard for the
duo, but did not get the response he
thought he deserved because the
audiences were there for the “I got you
babes”, not Lewis’ open psychiatric
sessions. One day he vowed never to
open for a musical group again. “I
would never subject myself to an
environment that was not conducive to
comedy. It was too unfair, too
, difficult.” He has followed through on
his vow.
Ironically, his family has now turned
into his biggest source of material.
“Initially, my mother was upset about
me talking about her. Now, she lives
to be mocked by me. She calls me
before Letterman shots and says,
‘please ridicule me’. You have no idea
how happy I am.”
Many people compare Lewis’ style
of comedy to Woody Allen’s, because
of their similar upbringings and Jewish
edge. Lewis claims that rock and roll
was more of an interest than comedy
in the beginning, but Woody
eventually became an influence,
because he was so in awe of Allen’s
joke writing craft. He lists Lenny Bruce
as an even bigger part of his comedy
education. “He was so painfully
honest. I knew that if I did anything on
stage, it would be that.” Lewis had to
add, however, that Bruce was the
social critic of his time, “while I just
basically berate myself.”
Lewis is berating himself on the
networks, the concert stage, and (he
hopes) very soon on a cable special
called “No Life to Live”. “It’s an
autobiography about all of the duress
T’ve been under. It’s a neurotic ‘Rocky’
type of thing - basically, ‘A Nightmare
on Freud Street,” he said. What else~
would you expect from the foremost _
authority on psychiatric sessions from | #
hell?
j
Aspects on Tuesday
Big Dipper and other stars
Thanks to the good-intentioned,
hard working folks at the University
Concert Board and WCDB, three
emerging and stylistically different
bands will be gathered under the
Campus Center roof for one of the best
new music showcases to ever hit town.
Richard Crist
Boston’s Big Dipper, The
Verlaines, hailing from New Zealand,
and hometown favorites Dirty Face are
all featured on a triple bill Wednesday,
Oct. 25 in the Campus Center
Ballroom. Sponsored jointly by UCB
and WCDB, the show is a great chance
to catch up on what's soon to be hip
and massive. Plus it’s real cheap and
there’s draft beer for those old enough.
Big Dipper has been in Albany
on numerous occasions and made two
impressive appearances in Albany last
spring, one a headlining gig at QE2,
and the other an opening stint for the
Replacements at the Palace. The strong
Palace show suffered a bit from a poor
mix, but the QE2 performance was a
delight, showcasing the Boston
quartet’s formidable pop
craftsmanship, highlighted with “All
Going Out Together” and the single
“Ron Klaus Wrecked His House” from
their album “Craps.”
An underground supergroup
of sorts, with members from other
notable Boston area groups, Big
Dipper was named by Rolling Stone
magazine this year as one of the Top
Ten new bands on the scene for 1988.
New Zealand’s The Verlaines
alternate moody and exuberant feels to
their work, which includes “Bird Dog”
and “Juvenilia.” The SUNY
appearance will be one of only six
dates for the somewhat reclusive
group.
Albany’s own bonecrunchers,
Dirty Face, will kick off the evening
with new member and WCDB General
Manager Jim Caringi on guitar and
vocals. With a new album on the way,
the followup to their debut “I Can
Hurt Myself If I Want To,” the band
also has a date in New York City later
this fall. The former power trio has
made the best use of their distortion
pedals during paint peeling shows at
QE2 over the last few years, and “I
Can Hurt Myself If I Want To” stands
as one of the strongest releases by an
Albany band. in recent history.
Tickets are $6 for the general
public and $5 for students smart
enough to remember their ID when
buying tickets.
n the Ballroom
THANK YOU !
DON'T WALK ALONE would like to
acknowledge the following organizations
for their outstanding contribution to campus
safety by providing escorts through the
ADOPT-A-NIGHT program:
* Accounting Club
q Alpha Epsilon Phi
¢° Alpha Phi
“g Trish Club
9 Phi Beta Sigma
Q Psi Gamma
¢ = Sigma Chi
9? Sigma Nu
e ¢ Social Club
If your group is interested in community
service, is socially responsible, and wants to
make a contribution to the university
community, then the Adopt- A-Night
program is for you! ” WALK
WE CAN'T WALK
WITHOUT YOU!
For more information:
stop by the DON'T WALK
ALONE Office CC B-54
or call x5511
October 24, 1989
EDITORIAL
The ideal and
the everyday
Oct. 28,1989: SUNYA students awake to
Parents’ Weekend. Their folks are coming to
visit a campus at which no one feels out of
place or ignored because of their
background, ancestry, religion or skin color;
at which learning takes place in intimate
classes and faculty are accessible; at which
athletic teams are strongly supported. A
place where the administration is more
concerned with teaching than enhancing its
prestige, and where the students respect
themselves and each other.
It is, of course, a fantasy. On Oct. 24, 1989,
SUNYA is hardly Utopian. It's a good place,
but there's a lot of work to do.
It's perfectly natural for the school to want
to put on a good appearance for those who
Support it through tuition and taxes. And to
be sure, the parade, the football game, the
Teunion with loved ones, the opportunity for
students to show off the place they've sunk
their teeth into and made their own are to be
looked forward to. They're important, and
they're fun.
But next Monday, some real problems will
remain, and they must be dealt with.
Leaders of black and Latino groups have
Teportedly felt left out of the planning for
Homecoming Weekend. This comes at a
time when relations between the "races" are
disintegrating fast - and when that same
deterioration has convinced most educators
and students that the road to harmony is
paved with diversified education and cultural
integration. If these students were indeed left
out, the SUNYA community should be
ashamed, and the problem should be
corrected long before next October,
Students, parents and alumni will have the
opportunity to breakfast with President
Vincent O'Leary this weekend. It's a fine
gesture on the president's part, one made
poignant by the fact that this will be his last
before returning to teaching duties at the end
of this year. But this kind of contact with the
administration is a rarity. Most students’
contact with SUNYA management is in the
form of long registration lines and crowded
classes. And while New York State is quick
to attack the University's management of
finances in attempts to slash at the basics of
college education, it is willing to fund
programs of research that boost the system's
Status and cash value. Expanding he
University's horizons, to meet society's needs
and in the tradition that learning has a’ value
of its own, is important. But undergraduates
must not be taken for granted. SUNY needs
more people and the money to pay them.
Good people are working hard on all of
these problems. Good people, too, have put
together what will surely be another
successful Homecoming. But much remains
to be done before every weekend at SUNYA
will be one we'll want to show off to our
parents.
7 Sie ae a SORES RTE SAREE
==
el “i
CPs
“COLUMN
Democracy for East Germany
In recent months, international communism
has undergone some radical changes.
Democratization of Eastern Europe and
glasnost in Soviet Union has brought bout new
per Des on foreign policy by the western
liance.
We don’t quite yet know what to ask the
Soviets to do to convince ourselves that these
changes are in fact genuine and irreversible.
For years since the conclusion of WWII, the
unification of the Germanies has been the
crusade of democracy. Now that there is a
chance that it may really happen, we must be
careful of what we wish for!
Arsalan Saljoughy
The public tends to view the separation of
East and West Germany in the same light as if
someone built a wall to divide East and West
U.S.! Additionally, there is a tremendous
difference between the division of Berlin and
the division of the Germanies. In historical
Peopeuye one should recognize that Germany
as longer been a divided nation that a united
one.
In the first century B.C., Rome conquered the
southwest of Germany, During the ath and Sth
century the northern tribes overrun the romans
and in the 6th century one of these tribes, the
Franks, established a vast empire.
Until the time of Napoleon I, in the end of the
18th century, the history of these more than
thirty Germanic tribes has been one of blood
and conquest among themselves and the others.
By the fall of Napoleon, the congress of Vienna
in 1815 created a German confederation of
oe with Austria and Prussia as the leading
Tivals.
Now we get to Otto Von Bismark, the
Prussian dictator who achieved the unification
of Germany after many bloody wars, Upon
becoming premier in 1871, following the
wishes of the Prussian emperor William » he
Unconstitutionally dissolved the parliament,
@4 Syein’ey COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE
ROCKY Min.
News -NeQ
THe DeuG War PRESIDENT?
and illegally levied taxes for the army.
He provoked war with Denmark in 1864 and
with Austria in 1866, After victory the north
German b was formed which excluded Austria.
With policies of blackmail and extortion, he
broua other German states into the
confederation: — =
Later, his expansionist policies provoked the
war of 1870 with France which ended in
French defeat, and until the accession of
William II he ruled the German Empire, which
he himself had created as a virtual dictator.
The expansionist policies of Germany and
military rivalry with England led to WWI and
upon the defeat of Germany in 1919, the treaty
of Versailles established the Weimer Republic,
Pee ie most of the German borders. The
eimer Republic suffered from great economic
and political difficulties. z
Germans who wanted to bring back the glo
days of German supremacy under Bismare.
brought Hitler to power, Hitler wanted to give
ermany what Bismark gave his fatherland
some seventy years earlier.
However, as we all know, he was not as
victorious as Bismarck in hi wars, and he
eee his fatherland into the misery of
lefeat. The point in all this pains that the pre-
WWII borders of Germany had been in place
for less than a century, and for a region with
some two thousand years of history the
unification argument based on historical
grounds has little credibility. :
Oreover, the formation of the unified
Germany by Bismarck was no noble cause to
attempt to restore millions of dead bodies left
by Bismarck around Europe attest to the
villianity of Bismarck’s reign. We must not
llow ourselves to condone evil for he has been
victorious in his battles. I feel that every effort
should be made to claim East Germany for
democracy, and this should be done without
any attempts at unification,
‘The writer is a graduate student in the Department of
Mathematics
Wie am T Topay -- ‘
THE EDUCATION PReSi
THe ENVIRONMe Ses
NT PResipent og
LETTERS
Alcoholism not covered
To the Editor:
How many students are in the University who have the
“Triple H” insurance policy? This policy is supposed to
cover a student in the event of an accident or in case of
serious illness. I am one of the students who bought the
insurance for the semester, and I have an “illness” that
they will not cover.
I have recognized that I have a problem with alcohol.
The illness led to serious depression, among numerous
other problems. I am also an adult child of an alcoholic
which causes more problems on top of the alcoholism
and the depression.
I find it very ironic that it is National Collegeiate
Alcohol Awareness Week, and the University is
sponsoring many programs around the campus to
educate students about alcohol abuse, yet the University
has adopted a health insurance policy that will not pay,
even a percentage of, the treatment that is needed for a
successful recovery.
It is a proven fact that alcohol is a hereditary disease,
just like heart problems or diabetes, and I find it very
discouraging for myself and students who might have
this problem in the future, that the University will not
help them to the degree that is needed..
I have to go to Minnesota’s Hazleden Foundation, for
inpatient treatment of my alcohol abuse, depression, and
being the child of an alcoholic.
Not only do I have to drop out of school for a while,
but I also have to come up with about $9,000 for the
treatment. I pay all of my own tuition and expenses for
Established in 1916
Morgan Lyle, Editor in Chief
John Jackson,Sandie Weitzman, Managing Editors
cori Hament, Raffi Varoujian
Raymond Rogers
Richard Crist, Peter LaMassa
Christopher Scirial
..Paul C. Webster
}ore, Cassaundra Worrell
Minority Affairs Editors.
Mitch Hahn, Bryan Sierra, lan Wagreich Senior Editors
(Contributing Editors: Dean Chang, Pam Conway, Ariella Goldstein,
Heidi Gralla, Bill Jacob, .E. Kane, Laurie Kellman, Stef McDonald, Evelyn]
Snitofsky, lan Spelling Editorial Assistants: Sue Friedman, Wayne}
Stock Greg Vitoulis Staff Writers:Maureen Begley, Eric Berlin, John
Chartier, David Cunningham, Tim Devane, Michael Director, Paul
Pomenico, Adam Hollis, Jerry Kahn, Brenda Kube, Gregory Locallo, Jim
[Lukaszewski, Gal Mayer, Stephanie Orenge, Fred Pasour, Rob Permutt,
Penise Pisapia, Andrew Schotz, Steven Silberglied Staff Artists: Jean]
Fogerty, Marc Guggenheim
Lara Abrash, Business Manager
Kimberly Weinstein, Associate Business Manager
Sarah Colgan, Doug Reinowitz, Ad Production Managers
Gareb S. Shamus, Sales Manager
Billing Accountai
(Office Staff: Elissa Estrin, Jeffrey HarringtonTearsheeter: Maria Panos}
JAd Production: Jacqui Butler, Christine Carr, Mark Dermott, Angeliquel
Gonzalez, Leisey Kirkpatrick, Cathy McDonnell, Greg Misch, Carlos Ortiz}
Jonathon Ostroff, Monica Rabinowitz
Matt Kussoff, Production Manager
Julie Biestin, Chief Typist
[Typists: Natalie Adams, Christine Elliot, Dawn Podnos, JodiSchwartz,
Pamela Stevenson Paste-up: Hal, J. Bond, Grinch, Sulu, E. Phillip}
loover, D. Darrel Stat. Chauffer: Mo's Car Service
Photography prinicipally supplied by University Photo Service, a
student group. |
(Chief Photographer: lleana Pollack ASP Liaison: James Lukaszewski
Editors: Donnett Barnett, Susan Copenheaver, Chau Lam UPS Staff:
ichael Ackerman, Jeremy Armstrong, John Cienki, Gigi Cohen, Kim}
[Glatman, Brad Kolodny, Teru Kuwayama, Jeff LaMarche, Ho-Young Lee,
Michael Lettera, Raquel Moller, Chuck Pang, Randi Panich, Anne
Philips, Adam Pratomo, Jennifer Salerno, Elizabeth Salkoff, Tom Shaw,
ichael Simes, Laurie Swanberg, Armando Vargas
Entir jht 1989 Albany Student Press Corporation,
ire contents copyrig!
all rights . .
The Albany Student Press is published Tuesdays and Fridays bet
August and June by the Albany Student Press Corporation, any
Independent not-for-profit corporation. f
Editorials are written by the Editor in Chief with members of the}
Editorial Board; policy is subject to review by the Editorial Board,
Advertsing policy as well as letter and column content do not
reflect editorial policy.
Mailing Address
Albany Student Press, CC 329
1400 Washington Ave.
Albany N.Y. 12222
(st
college, and i bought the coverage, assuming that I
would be covered for just about anything. Needless to
say, I am in for a rough couple of months.
Adopting a policy that does not cover subsatnce abuse
is, in my opinion, saying that the University does not
recognize thst there are 23 million adult children of
alcoholics in our country, and that alcohol and substance
abuse is not a problem facing college students.
I suggest that the University see about getting a new
insurance arrangement for the students that will cover
substance abuse, and in the spirit of National Alcohol
Awareness Week, recognize is a MAJOR MEDICAL
problem.
J. Hennessy
Event shortchanged
To the Editor:
‘We were very disappointed this week with the overall
agenda regarding the National Collegiate Awareness
week on the SUNYA campus.
While we concur that it is imperative that a positive
message go out to college students, with respect to
acting responsibly as well as the possible dangers of
alcohol consumption, we feel strongly that far more
could have been accomplished by highlighting alcohol
addiction, as well as the wealth of resources that are
available to those who think they might have a problem.
Furthermore, only speakers dealing with ACOA issues
were listed on the program. With the abundant number of
Alcoholics Anonymous groups in the vicinity, why
weren’t any of its members contacted? Getting in touch
with AA is as simple as opening a telephone directory to
the letter “A.”
Specifically, Alcoholics Anonymous in this region has
organized a public information service, with part of its
function being to send younger AA members to schools
in the capital District to help carry the message of
recovery to area students.
Our experience has taught us that any attempts at
controlled “responsible educated drinking” only left us
as well-informed drunks, usually resulting in disaster.
Our attempts failed utterly. The notion of “responsible
educated drinking” seems foolish to those of us who
intimately know the misery and despair of active
alcoholism.
The good news is, with the help of the program and
fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous, we now live
sober, happy and productive lives , free from the
obsession to drink. Our only hope is continued
abstinence.
It seems to us that, while Alcohol Awareness Week is
an excellent idea, far more can be done to carry the
message to those most in need: the actively alcoholic
students on our campus.
-Two alcoholic SUNYA students in recovery
Apology for Irish slight
To the Editor:
As the director for the Middle Earth program, I want to
offer my apology for statements made in the Middle
earth Roots article on Oct. 17 which typified certain
national and. ethnic groups' drinking patterns in ways
which were offensive and stereotypic.
In particular, we apologize to persons of Irish heritage
whom we certainly did not wish to offend, nor do we
wish to offend any. I assume responsibility for what goes
out under our name, and I failed to give this article the
review it deserved. I deeply regret the offense and will
strive to prevent any repeat.
-David P. Jenkins
Take back your rights
To the Editor:
On Thursday, Oct. 26 at 8p.m. a Take back the Night
tally and march will be held at the small fountain in front
of the campus Center.
On that evening, this same event will be held on other
college and university campuses across New York State.
This is in response to the six rapes that have occurred on
the Syracuse University campus since the semester
began. It is also in response to a national statistic that
says one in every three women will be reaped in her
il
lifetime and one of every three women will be a survivor
of childhood sexual abuse or incest.
In this country, it is estimated that only one in every
ten rapes is reported. These frightening statistics are the
realities that restrict women’s freedom at night.
The rally will begin at the small fountain and from
there the women will march around the campus to “Take
back the Night.”
During this time a men’s candlelight vigil will be held
in support in front of the Campus Center.
This is an opportunity for every woman and man to
end the silence and end the violence.
-Doris Waiters and Joanne Sirotkin
Dim view on power
To the Editor:
After reading Robert T. Schmidlin’s letter entitle
““Current’ views on power,” I was torn between wanting
to write a letter exposing his misinformation or writing a
letter that simply exposes the fallacy of his argument.
Since the latter is more fun, I’ve decided to do that.
The basic argument Mr. Schmidlin makes reads as
follows:
1.) Our economy is beginning to suffer from lack of
available electricity.
2.) Nuclear power is the most environmentally sound
way to produce electricity.
3.) Therefore, to avert a major economic crisis in the
mid-1990s we should start building nuclear power plants
immediately.
Mr. Schmidlin supports this argument by pointing to
Statistics concerning rising electrical demand and nuclear
power’s “impeccable” safety record (remember, I
promised not to question his figures.) He also states that
“the real question...is not whether we need more
electricity, but rather what kind of power plants should
we build?” It is here that my objections arise.
What Mr. Schmidlin ignores is that there are two ways
to “generate” new capacity. His way is to build more
plants. My way is to better use the power we already
produce. Let’s see which way is better for the
environment that Mr. Schmidlin is so worried about.
Industry experts estimate that the cost of nuclear
power is roughly 13 cents per kilowatt hour, That is more
than twice what he is now paying for electricity.
“Generating” power through increased savings is
much cheaper. New York could lower it’s commercial
electrical use by ten percent at a cost of .01 cent per kilo-
watt hour simply by installing reflectors in existing
lighting. I wonder which Mr. Schmidlin thinks is a better
way to meet our electrical requirements,by doubling our
electrical bills, or slashing them.
If this short letter hasn’t convinced Mr. Schmidlin that
efficiency is a better alternative than nukes for meeting
our future energy needs I would like to challenge him to
a public debate. But for everyone who truly is concerned
about our economy, and our environment, I would like to
invite them to NYPIRG’s energy meetings every Tues. at
6:30 in CC 382. Either way I hope Mr. Schmidlin will
call me at 442-5658 and we can arrange the debate.
-Andrew Greenblatt
The ASP welcomes all letters to
the editor. Please make sure
that your submissions are either
typed or neatly printed. Please
include phone number and [.D.
for letter verification. The ASP
reserves the right of editorial
review. For Tuesday's issue,
submissions due by noon on|
Sunday. For Friday's issues,
submissions are due by noon
on Wednesday. Please keep
letters under 500 words.
Li te
=
16 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS _ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
CLASSIFIED
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING POLICY
DEADLINES:
TUESDAY AT 3 P.M. FOR
FRIDAY'S ISSUE
FRIDAY AT 3 P.M. FOR TUESDAY'S ISSUE.
RATES:
$1.75 for the first 10 words.
$.10 each additional word.
Any bold word is .20 cents extra.
$2 extra for a box.
Minimum charge is $1.75
Classified ads are being accepted at Campus Center
332 during the hours of 10-4.
be paid in check or cash at
Minimum charge for billing is
Classified advertising must
the time of insertion.
$25 per issue.
No ads willl be printed without a full name, address or
phone number on the advertising form. Credit may be
extended, but NO refunds will be given. Editorial policy
will not permit ads to be printed which contain blatant
profanity or those that are in poor taste. We reserve the
tight to reject any material deemed unsuitable for
publication.
All advertising seeking models or solicitying parts of
the human body will not be accepted. Advertisers
seeking an exception to this policy must receive
permission from the Editor in
Student Press.
lf you have any questions
classified advertising, please
the business office.
Chief of the Albany
or problems concerning
feel free to call or stop by
——— KSEE
J (@) BS Students earn extra income and help
fight cancer. Flexible hours
Northeast Bartenders School competitive wages - 438-7841
Call now for information regarding
upcoming classes. 2 week course -
hands on training 452-4315 Classes
held in Albany
Would like to offer Discover Credit
Cards? Are you available for only a
few hours/week? If so, call 1-800-932-
0528 ext. 43. We'll pay you as much
as $10.00/hour. Only ten positions
available.
Think Spring - Out going? Well-
—organized? Promote & Escort our
Florida Spring Break trip. Good Pay &
Fun. Call Campus Marketing. 1-800-
423-5264 >
Wanted: Campus Representative or
organization to promote Spring Break
trip to Daytona Beach, FL. Earn extra
money and free trips while gaining
valuable business experience. Call
Kurt with Travel Associates at 1-800-
558-3002.
"Campus Reps Needed” eam big
commissions and free trips by selling
Nassau/Paradise Island, Cancun,
Mexico, Jamaica & Ski trips to
Vermont & Colorado. For more
information call toll free 1-800-344-
8360 or in CT. 203-967-3330.
Investors needed: Would you like to
make fast money and have a great
time in the p ocess, if so call Haris -
458-9181
Earn up to $500.00 a day at home,
everyday! Send self addressed
stamped envelope to: Ten Fold
Marketing P.O. Box 64899-V,
A Free Gift Just For Calling Plus
Raise Up to $1,700.00 In Only Ten
Days!!!
student groups, fraternities and
sororities needed for marketing
project on campus. Fo Details plus a
FREE GIFT, group officers call 1-
}-950-8472, ext. 0
Attention - Hiring! Government jobs -
your area. 417,840 - $69,485. Call 1-
602-838-8885. EXT R5715
SERVICES
Hesumes - "A good reflection on
you." High quality, elegant,
professionally typeset, 50 offset
printed copies, $50. 482-1201.
Resumes by Mail: Why pay more
for amateurs? $45/10 Resumes +
Free Personalized Stationery and
Envelopes. Call, leave name,
address for Free Questionaire.
Return, receive Resumes by mail.
Professional Image Makers. 383-
3220.
‘Typing Services - Term Papers,
Academic Papers, Reports Done
on IBM Computer. Professionally
prepared, Quick Turnaround,
Reasonable Rates. Call 438-3187
Word Processing : Resumes,
Papers. Reasonable, Fast - Creative
Resumes 432-9513
Need a paper typed? $1.25 a page!
Call Donna at 442-6327.
Reports, resumes professionally
done. Fast and reasonable. Call
AMS Word Processing 371-1298
Resume Service: 30 professionally
typeset Resume; 30 matching blank
sheets, 30 matching envelopes. All
for $30. Calll for appt. 393-4445
FOR SALE
“Attention - Government seized
vehicles from $100. Fords,
Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys
Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-602-838-
8885 EXT A5715."
“Attention - Government Homes from
$1 (U-repair). Delinquent tax
property. Repossessions. Call 1-602-
838-8885 Ext. GH 18697."
Is it True.... Jeeps for $44 through
the Government? Call for facts! 1-
312-742-1142 Ext. 4253
'77 Olds Wagon about 177K miles.
Asking $400 or best offer. Call 370-
4023.
HOUSING
Housemates Wanted: 2 female
housemates needed for 3
bedroom apartment on State
Street. Near busline, bars, has
beg bedrooms, a basement & it's:
cheap - Only $167/month. Call
Kim 472-6810.
GETTING
PERSONAL
Adopt. A caring couple wished to
give newborn good home with
love, security, and strong family
values. Expenses paid. Call Bob
and Karen collect any time. 212-
799-2753.
Adotion: Happily Married Couple
want to share loving and secure
future with newborn. Expenses
paid. Call collect. 516-223-4232
Adoption: Happily married couple
wishes to offer newborn a home with
much love, warmth & security.
Legal/confidential. Expenses paid.
Call collect evenings. 718-984-4329
Adoption: We long to open our
hearts and lives to a baby to love
Heritage and history will be
respected and valued. If you're
pregnant and considering adoption,
call collect Rachel and Doug
(802)375-9586 or adoption
counselor (802)235-2312.
Adopt: We want to adopt and infant.
If you know someone who wants to
give a baby a loving home, call
Marie & Eugene collect. (516)795-
6880. Legal/Medical Paid,
Adoption: Loving couple wishes to
adopt infant. We'll give your baby a
warm and happy home. Expenses
paid. Legal/confidential. Call Janet
and Bob collect. 718-891-7497.
Adoption: Hugs, mierry-go-rounds,
fun and a loving family. We're and
energetic and stable couple who
want to adopt an infant. If adoption
is an alternative you're
considering, please call Nancy and
Stephen collect at Friends In
Adoption: (802) 235-2311.
French Tutorial
Beginning, intermediate and
Advanced intermediate
Call Philip at 482-1946 for more
Student Association
Thanks for everything. You were all
helpful and understanding in my
“decision.” I'll be around so watch it
Chicago, Ill 60664-0899 information. Me or MOE
Houseperson Wanted Typing - Papers, reports, resumes, | Happy 21st Birthday
PT/FT work for self starter. Flexible | Fast Accurate, reasonable - $1.25 a | Caryn Gerstman!
schedule including child car, cooking | page. Call Eileen - 456-8774 ae
(a must), grocery shopping and light
housekeeping. Family of four in
Albany with children in school
full-day. Car needed. Student Okay.
Call 465-3600 evenings, weekends.
Word Processing - Term papers.
Pickup and deliver at Campus
Center. Next day Service. Call Lori at
456-2821.
Overseas Jobs. $900- 200 mo.
‘Summer, Yr. round, All Countries, All
fields. Free info. Write ISC, PO Box
52 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625
Professional Typing/Resume
Service. Xerox work processor.
Copies. Evenings. 472-9510.
Waring!!!
Your Parents are coming so Party
while you can with Z@E & IIEX at
the Social Club (288 Lark)
Drink Specials Drink Specials
Thursday Oct. 26 9:00 til...
Hey Snotty!!!
TEX
We had a great time. We're "Dye-
ing" to do it again!
Love,
AE
The D.N.H. continues - 18 Days left!!
Psi Gamma
Adildo, a dresser drawer, a
pineapple, a boot, a wiffle ball bat
and - is that an ass? What a mixer!
Sig Lam
To: The Dance King
Just thinking of you!
Love,
Big D.
To the "First Annual Sing-a-
long,""Heads, shoulders, knees, and
toes!"
Love, The Girls from 902.
The Sisters of EAT congratulate
Audrey Kingsley on her
appointment as Constitution Chair
for Pan Hellenic
TEX
To the president - | have one and
only one question? Where are alll the
extra rooms? Next time you stop by,
don't bring you know who! I'll call you
soon. P.S. get better quick
Homecoming Parade Saturday
Be therel!
To the sisters of DPhiE,
Thank you for giving us the chance
to share in your sisterhood. We love
you and we will make you proud!
The lota Pledge Class
Fall ‘89
Dear Naomi,
Carry on with the challenge. | have
complete trust in you and hope that
you have a successful New Year
Love,
Our Man in Israel
EAM
As usual, we had an amazing time
mixin’ with you!
rn’
3
Warning!!!
Your Parents are coming so Party
while you can with ZOE & ITZX at the
Social Club (288 Lark)
Drink Specials Drink Specials
Thursday Oct. 26 9:00 till...
| Got Candy!
Beth and Debbie
Just thought I'd say Hi with this little
personal.
BK
1-800-992-FROG!!!! (WHICH GOES
WITH 1-800-GET-LAID)
Anyone interested in being manager
or scorekeeper for the Varsity
wrestling team, stopby the wrestling
room Mon-Fi 00-5:00
Publicity and Public relations person
needed for the Varsity wrestling team.
Some experience preferred. Stop by the
wrestling room or contact Joe Demeo at
374-4717. Small Stipend offered.
‘S500Iweek, part ime, make your own
hours, call Mr. Bross at 518-452-0244
ATTENTION-ALL SOPHOMORES
1992 class Council invites you to
Participate Tues. notes 8:30 in CC370.
CLASS OF 1992!
Sophomore Class Council meets Tues.
night- 8:20 - CC 370
LARA-
Thanks for finally “talking” everything
out. | know that itis definitely part of the
vast improvement being made within
the paper.
The MEs
Chris, Lori and Raffi-
Things are really looking great in news
and sports. Keep up the excellent work.
You guys are really making us proud,
The MEs
Mom and Dad,
Another personal to remind you that |
love both of you very much. Dad, | hope
you finally forgive me, because | relly
am sorry. Mom, by the time you see
this, we'l probably already be back from
New Orleans. | know it's going to be
great!!!
SandME
To the ASP:
It's really nice to know that I can come
up to visit, get drunk, and be treated with
the same respect | got when | was EiC.
‘Some things never change.
Bryan
Moe and Lou:
Ina few short weeks we'll be basking in
the glow of a warm sun, treated to
southem hospitality, eating the finest in
EAE cajun cuisine, and drinking til the sun
Thanks for a gret Mixer! rises (in China). Don't mind them,
Love, they're just jealous.
AOE Ruben
DPhIE John, Sandie, Moe, Lori, Raff, Lou,
Another great mixer! You guys are
great let's do it again real soon
Sig Lam
Jody,
Here it is! You're a terrific Big Sis! |
love you,
Lynn
Homecoming Parade Saturday
Be therel!
Michael (foufi)
I'm glad we're working it out. | love
you!
Sue
To Dani, Delo, Ben, Cranston,
Lionel,
you finally made it!
Warning!!!
Your Parents are coming so Party
while you can with Z@E & ITEX at the
Social Club (288 Lark)
Drink Specials Drink Specials
Thursday Oct. 26 9:00 ti
Dozens of Yellow Tea Roses Orly
Rejwan on your affilation with
Gamma Beta.
Love,
XAT
Gee you look so Elenagent.
ZAE
You guys are great and | really can't
thank you anymore. Brotherhood
has taken on another meaning. Phi
Alpha
Grunion
_—— eS
Do You take requests? How ‘bout
John Cougar Melenacamp.
Chris, Ray, Pete, Rich, Kim, Gareb,
Matt, and the rest of you maniacs:
Cheers, and great fucking job.
The Watcher
Tampon delivery for one |.W. Will you
pay the COD charges, please?
Am,
Good luck on midterms, stay healthy
‘cause I'm so psyched to see yalll in 4
weeks! Love
-Bo
Pee,
Let's keep our 7 a.m. conversations
down to a minimum-o tay? 1 more to
go! I'm psyched for you-keep on
gunning.
Abr
‘Shoot the whales, because you never
know when one of them will come up
and bite you in the ass! And once you
flay, make sure you have a fork!
Bryan, Mo, and Lara:
New Year's resolution; to peruse each
and every pub to which we have not
been yet by May 1990. (Of Course, for
‘some it will be easier than others)
JohnME:
| think we've finally gotten our shit
‘together. We are a great team and I'm
glad you're around. Keep up the great
job and enthusiasm.
‘SandME
Lettuce allspice work tumip whorled peas
Everyone born in vivo:
EGG,
the symbol of life
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 17
WPYX &
UNIVERSITY CONCERT BOARD
PRESENTS
With
G.E. Smith
aay Christopher Parker RPI
INEFQ 442-5657 —
18 _acsanystupenr PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
LD, SA
PRESENT — -
WIT S 2
BIG: DIPPER
iS
With Special Guests
RLAINS
UNIVERSITY CLUB Wednesday
S.U.N.Y.A. CAMPUS CENTER BALLROOM
_tickets $6.00 at the door
$5.00 with college !.D.
WIN TICKETS!!! Listen to WCDB 91FM E
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 19
NYPIRG
PRESENTS A _FREE
SHOWING OF
STAND
AND
DELIVER
Starring Lou Diamond Phillips and
Edward J. Olmos
WED . LO/25 8300
ASSEMBLY HALL
Discussion on Racism and Sexism
in Standardized tests to follow
CAREER EXPLORATION???
NEED SOME EXPERIENCE??
Take Part In An
Internship
Representatives from RJR
NABISCO will be on campus
to present information on
their Winter-Break
Internship
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25
7:15 P.M.
ES 143
For more information, contact the
Career Development Center, LI 69
| WARNING!!!
YOUR PARENTS fiRE
COMING, $O_ PARTY
WHILE YOU CAN WITt
X@®E AND IIZX
AT
THURSDAY, OCI. 26
9:00-TlL..
DRINK SPECIALS : 150 BUD BOTILES
150 YODKA DRINKS
16 TO ENTER 21 TO DRINK
PROPER 1.D. REQUIRED
CAMPUS FORUM FALL
SESSION 1989
TOPIC:
"BIAS RELATED VIOLENCE"
IMPLICATIONS FOR CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY
Speaker:
DOUGLAS H. WHITE
Commissioner, New York State
Division of Human Rights
and Chairman, Governor's
Task Force on Bias RelatedViolence
with reactions from: GLORIA DESOLE
Office of Affirmative Action
VIVIAN GORDON
African and Afro American Studies
AARON BROADWELL
Anthropology
RABBI SILVERMAN
Temple Beth Emeth
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 25, 1989
12:15 - 1:30 PM
CAMPUS CENTER BALLROOM
Free and Open to the Public
Jointly sponsered by the Divisions of Academic Affairs and
Student Association
ro ‘
20 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
SPEAKERS FORUM PROUDLY
esents
RICHARD LEWIS
Parents WEEKEND
October 281TH 1989
7/ckets on sale NOW!
in the Campus Center
$10. w/tax sticker $12. w/out
7:30 pm UNIVERSITY GYM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 21
OCTOBER 25%’ AN ANONYMo)S
DONATES 29522 70 THE AMERICAN
ICANCER SOCIETY IN ExcHanage fok
|THE (PRISON MENT OF SUNY JDNIOR
JOE ALBANY AND JOE'S LEAST
FAVORITE. PROFESSOR, ByHoLoay'S
DZ.I.M, ABVTUNCLER .
Novempet IST: THE TWO “Cemmipts
lave TRILED TOUETHER. ANP Te
70 RISE BAIL-70 EREN THEIL
AEEDOM. EXACTLY yltAT HAPPENED
be fe lia Te READ ON!
EES Diese
Eh PROFESSOR. -~
Ns EXPERIENCE HAS Bova
AUS CLOSER TOHETHE 2. WE
HAVE THE BEAIN NINES OF
SPECIAL DELETIONSHIP
Hege . nou), ABovT my
mivreem GOADE ... ¥
lr rook. HovesS FoR HELGA 4 STEVE To POST
len1). HELGA INSISTED UPON MAKING HEIDELE
WEEP ITI EULL"” FEST, AND STEVE SPENT THE APIECE)
INOON TEACHING BASIC MATH TO THE GAWD
KUNION PorTLe oa INTHE MeAn/TIME, TOE
VRIED HIS DARNEDEST To BOND? WITH HIS. FROFESSOE
oS Wen BAIL (FINELY)
© ere eae Tae He
aire) AA gy! A POSITIVE Note.
—
FORCED TO
with HEIGA THE PHYS EP TénCHES
AND JOE'S mIpTELM GLADE Pema
UNCHANGED, BUT BOTH CONSIDERED
E EXPELIENCE WORTHWHILE WHEN F
oe HEALD How much mone} WES
POISED Fok THE AmeZICAN CEL.
Society OV THE. BEHALF.
HumBte> By A. MELE ZOmINUTES (|
THESLAMNINER THE DUO ACCEPT WILLIN AL!
TIONS FLOFRSED By THEI BAIL — Pi
THIS 13 ALBANY | SEE? THE GUY IN THE
foro Bund RAS To MAKE he bulf on
E1oh BUNY'S i <A
ee ee ete |
THE PAIR MSO MANA E> TU LEBEN
AOLEAT DeAt MovT FRISON LIFE.
ro
SIGNUPS; OCT. ae 9-6
aes &.¢C Losey
COSTS : STUDENTS 110
7— — PROFeSGORS #15
Logiups : Nov, I-2, 7b
,-- 115 TIME You PAID
Your DEBT To Society:
JOIN THE FIGHT VS.
Chice!
22
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
~ MAYis sust AROUND
7 (SFOX. FubeweE's
THE MAY DEPARTMENT STORES COMPANY
WHY WAIT until May to set your post-graduate career goals?
Spring to action this Fall with the company that’s committed to
your career success. . The May Department Stores Company!
As one of the premier retailers in the country, The May Company
invites ALL MAJORS to apply for one of the retail industry's top
professional opportunities! We're proud to be ranked by Fortune
magazine as one of the most admired corporations. And we're
proud of our 14th consecutive year of sales and earnings record
growth! Our dedication to career training and development is key
to the success of each May division, and your professional goals.
‘dIANYOO AHL
The first step of your career begins with The May Executive
Training Program—a nationally acclaimed management training
course designed to enhance your skills and performance. This
structured 13 week program offers individualized career support
systems and the best combination of classroom and on-the-job
training. Ultimately, it’s designed to prepare you for your first | |
position as well as a successful May Company career! |
Inaddition to the industry’s most competitive salaries, we provide
outstanding benefits including generous merchandise discounts!
If you've got the leadership qualities we're looking for—
commitment, drive, people skills, management potential and a
solid academic record—we want to meet you.
Interested candidates are encouraged to attend our Open House
on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1tam-3pm, in CC # 375. Bring
your resume and meet with Alumni Representatives from
G. Fox, Lord & Taylor, and Filene'’s. Light refreshments will be
served. Casual dress.
Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1989
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
23
Gallery
Continued from Front page
internationally known.”
The Art Council is open to
anyone in the SUNY community.
Anyone wanting to get involved
can attend weekly meetings on
Wednesday at 5 p.m. For more
information call 442-4020. The
gallery hours are Monday
through Thursday 9 am - 9pm,
Friday 9 am - 4pm, and Saturday
and Sunday from 12 pm - 4pm.
Good Luck,
on
Midterms
When you party,
remember to.
Its as easy as counting
from 1 to 10.
Guests:
1. Know your limit —stay within it,
2. Know what youre drinking,
3. Designate a non-drinking driver.
4, Don't let a friend drive drunk.
5. Call a cab if youre not sober —
‘or not sure.
Hosts:
6. Serve plenty of food.
7. Be responsible for friends’ safety
8. Stop serving alcobol as the party
winds down.
__ 9. Help a problem drinker
by offering your support.
10. Seta good example.
Beer Drinkers of America is a non-profit
consumer membership organization
‘open ony 1 persons over the age of 2
1/2 roundtrips from New York
LONDON 169
PARIS. 205
ROME 259
foundtriy
SAN JOSE C.R. 340
Taxes not included.restrictions apply.
‘One ways avalable.
EURAIL Passes issued on the spot!!
FREE Student Travel Catalog!
3 St
ausser = PSone
212-954-9595 413-256-1261
(213 cil 1261)
Counseling Psychology
degree programs in the areas of Counseling Psychology. Students
may work toward a Master’s degree, a Certificate of Advanced
Graduate Study, or a Doctoral degree.
All counseling courses are taught by licensed psycholo-
gists. Class size is limited to encourage individual participation.
The curriculum includes analytical and theoretical courses as
well as practice-oriented courses. In addition to classroom work,
all programs include applied experience in a supervised
clinical environment.
Graduate School, Boston-Bouvé College of Human Development
Professions, 107 Dockser Hall, Northeastern University,
Boston, MA 02115.
For more information and a free brochure on the Graduate
Programs in Counseling Psychology call (617) 437-2708. Or write to
Boston-Bouvé College of Human Development Professions
at. Northeastern University offers part-time and full-time graduate
Northeastern
IN| University
Anequal opportunity/
tive action educational
institution and employer.
eI wasnt rubbing
it in—[just wanted
Eddie to know
thescoreof ..
last nights game?
‘ise arat
Go ahead and gloat. You can
tub it inall the way to Chicago
with AT&T Long Distance Service.
Besides, your best friend Eddie
was the one who said your team
could never win three straight.
So give him a call. It costsa
lot less than you think to let him
know who's headed for the Playoffs.
Reach out and touch someone?
If youd like to know more about
AT& products and services, like
International Calling and the AT&T
Card, call us at 1 800 222-0300.
2 dl)
The right choice.
24 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
How’re you going to do it?
Reeling from revisions!
Inglins
—Engulfed in English!
Close a deal on an IBM PS/2 before the
semester closes in on you.
Before you find yourself in deep water this semester, get an IBM
Personal System/2.° Choose from five different packages of hard-
ware and software—all at special low student prices. Each
system comes with easy-to-use software loaded and ready
to go! What’ more, when you’buy your PS/2.® you can :
get PRODICY~ the shopping, information and enter- va
tainment computer service, at less than half the retail oe
price. And for a limited time, you can get special
savings on your choice of three IBM Proprinter™ models*
Don’t miss the boat. Come in today.
For More Information Please Contact:
Frank Spadafino At (518) 438-7686
Claire McMahon At (518) 432-8867
Andy Weyant AT (518) 442-6790
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 25
you going to do it?
. i “My chem lab report is due Monday.
My English lit. paper is due Tuesday.
,. My economics paper is due on ednesday
dnd the big games tomar:
S/2 it!
Now, super savings on PS/2%.
Be ready for this semester with the IBM Personal System/2*
Choose from five complete packages of hardware and software—
all at special low student prices. What’s more, when you pur-
chase a PS/2,® you can get the exciting new PRODICY®
service at less than half the retail price* Strike while the Ei
prices are hot. Pick the PS/2 that’s right for you. 6
Model 25 Model 30 286 Model 50 Z Model 55 SX Model 70 386
8525-001 8530-E21 8550-031 8555-061 8570-E61
Memory 640K *4Mb 1Mb 2Mb 4Mb
Processor 8086 (8 MHz) 80286 (10 MHz) 80286 (10 MHz) | |80386SX™ (16 MHz)| 80386™ (16 MHz)
3.5” diskette drive 720Kb 1.44Mb 1.44Mb 1.44Mb 1.44Mb
Fixed disk drive 20Mb 20Mb 30Mb 60Mb 60Mb
Micro Channel™
architecture f sx cs ies Yes
Display > Monochrome 8513 Color 8513 Color 8513 Color 8513 Color
Mouse Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Software DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0
Microsoft® Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft
Windows/286 Windows/286 Windows/286 Windows/386 Windows/386
hDC Windows Word 5.0* Word 5.0* Word 5.0* Word 5.0*
Express™ .| hDC Windows Excel* Excel* Excel*
Express hDC Windows hDC Windows hi
a Windows Express Express grok are
lanager™ hDC Windows hDC Windows
hDC. Windows Manager Manager ee |
Color hDC Windows hDC Windows hDC Wipdows
Color Color Golor
$2,299 $2,799 $3,499 $4,699
IBM Printers Proprinter™ Ill w/Cable (4201/003) $369 |
Proprinter X24E w/Cable (4207/002) $499
Proprinter XL24E w/Cable (4208/002) $669
|
“Microsoft Word and Excel are the Academic Editions. This offer is limited to i
r : qualified students, faculty and st j
8525-001, 8530-E21, 8550-031, 8555-061 or 8570-E61 on or before October 31, 1989. Prices quoted ds pot hie ret an IBM PS/2 Model
do not include sales t i
Processing ch s. Check with your institution regarding these ch: ; ilabili ita he prmeton
pre sang hares Chee yo eg) g charges. Orders are subiect to availability. IBM May withdraw the promotion at any
IBM. Personal S) i
ystem/2 and PS/2 are registered trademarks, and Proprinter and Micro Channel are trademarks, of Internat
siesta trademark of Microsoft Corporation. PRODIGY is a registered trademark of Prodigy Services Company, a pervect ORE ai eee Corporation aN A
~ Windows Manager and hDC Window's Color are trademarks of HOC Computer Corporation. 80386SX and 80386 are trademarks of Intel Copano OOM Corp 1989
24 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
How’re you going to do it?
Reeling from revisions!
Inglins
<4
Swamped by sociology!
—Engul, fed in English!
Close a deal on an IBM PS/2 before the
semester closes in on you.
Before you find yourself in deep water this semester, get an IBM
Personal System/2.° Choose from five different packages of hard-
ware and software—all at special low student prices. Each
system comes with easy-to-use software loaded and ready
to go! What’s more. when you"buy your PS/2. you can
get PRODICY.® the shopping, information and enter-
tainment computer service. at less than half the retail ...
price. And for a limited time. you can get special
savings on your choice of three IBM Proprinter’ models*
Don’t miss the boat. Come in today.
For More Information Please Contact:
Frank Spadafino At (518) 438-7686
Claire McMahon At (518) 432-8867
Andy Weyant AT (518) 442-6790
“This offer 1s limited to qualified students, facult
; 'y and staff who order an IBM PS/2 Mode! 8525-001, 8530-E21 |
or before October 31, 1989 Orders are subject to availability. IBM may withdraw the promotion at any time eae, Bor ee pedes wee!
IBM. Personal System/2 and PS/2 are registered trademarks, and Proprint a trademark, of Inte :
trademark of Prodigy Services Company, a partnership of iBM, and Cue ‘ORM Corp. 1969 memational Business Machines Corporation, PRODIGY isa registered
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS _ 25
How’r
4
Now, super savings on PS/2’.
Be ready for this semester with the IBM Personal System/2.*
Choose from five complete packages of hardware and software—
all at special low student prices. What's more, when you pur-
chase a PS/2,® you can get the exciting new PRODIGY®
service at less than half the retail price* Strike while the
prices are hot. Pick the PS/2 that’s right for you.
you. going to do it?
“My chem lab report is due Monday.
My English lit. paper ts due Tuesday.
My economics paper ts due on Hednesday
And the big games tamarns
time without written notice.
ca a a A Sa A SS SSeS SS SEES ES
IBM Printers} Proprinter™ Ill w/Cable (4201/003)
Proprinter X24E w/Cable (4207/002)
Proprinter XL24E w/Cable (4208/002) $669
$369
$499
Model 25 Model 30 286 Model 50 Z Model 55 SX Model 70 386
8525-001 8530-E21 8550-031 8555-061 8570-E61
Memory 640Kb *4Mb Mb 2Mb - 4Mb
Processor 8086 (8 MHz) 80286 (10 MHz) 80286 (10 MHz) | |80386SX™ (16 MHz)| 80386™ (16 MHz)
3.5" diskette drive 720Kb 1.44Mb 1.44Mb 1.44Mb 1.44Mb
Fixed disk drive 20Mb 20Mb 30Mb 60Mb 60Mb
Micro Channel™
archit ie = Yes Yes Yes
Display * Monochrome 8513 Color 8513 Color 8513 Color 8513 Color
Mouse Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Software DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0 DOS 4.0
Microsoft® Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft
Windows/286 Windows/286 Windows/286 Windows/386 Windows/386
hDC Windows Word 5.0* Word 5.0* Word 5.0* Word 5.0*
Express™ .| hOC Windows Excel* Excel* Excel”
Express hDC Windows hDC Windows hDC Windows
hDC Windows Express Express Express
Manager™ hDC Windows hDC Windows hDC Windows
hDC Windows Manager Manager Manager
. Color hDC Windows hDC Windows hDC Wipdows
: Color Color Color
$2,299 $2,799 $3,499 $4,699
\
*Microsoft Word and Excel are the Academic Editions. This offer is limited to i
‘ qualified students, faculty and staff who ot A
8525-001, = ooh 8555-061 or 8570-E61 on or before October 31, 1989. Prices quoted do not include Pe fe Raueitier
processing charges. k with your institution regarding these charges. Orders are subiect to availability. IBM may withdraw the estes at any
'BM, Personal System/2 and PS/2 are registered trademarks, and Pro} i
printer and Micro Channel are trademarks, of International Bi
Pose trademark of Microsoft Corporation. PRODIGY is a registered trademark of Prodigy Services Company, a partnership oneM andl Sean Oe hee es, &
C Windows Manager and hDC Windows Color are trademarks of HDC Computer Corporation. 80386SX and 80386 are trademarks of intel Corpoiation OM Cor 1989
‘26 —avsany STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989
Soccer
Continued from back page
and around a Colonial
defender. His left-footed shot
was tipped by Binghamton
goalie Adam Nappell and went
in.
The win was Albany’s tenth in
a row, which is also a school
record,
Binghamton coach Tim Schum
also felt that the field played a
M-x-country
Continued from Back page
and Luciano. At 10:40 and
10:41 respectively came
McNamara and senior co-captain
Mark Aliman.
By the four mile mark
Brandeis and Dartmouth were
dominating the field. The first
Dane to cross the line was
Kranick in 20th place with a time
big factor in the outcome.
“The conditions hurt us,” said
Schum. “Three of past four
games went to overtime. We
needed three days rest.” This
type of fatigue can be important
ona sloppy field.
As Dane technical director,
Vlado Sergovich, points out,
“Running in mud is like running
with weights on your ankles.”
The only thing left for Albany
to do is wait. They will be
of 26:49 a personal best for him,
which earned him Dane “runner
of the meet” honors.
“The competition was intense,
but we ran as a team and our
depth showed,” Kranick said.
Next came Allman in 30th
place in 26:53. He was
extremely pleased with his
performance and said, “We are
looking good as a team and
continue to run strong.”
Choose from Ameri
tion of name brand eyeglasses and contact
lenses. You'll get 2 free CD’s or 3 free cas-
settes plus 10% off your purchase (see the
coupon below), Come in today and ask for
full details!
E CD's |
re
10 % “OFF
COMPLETE EYEGLASS OR CONTACT LENS PURCHASE.
i MINIMUM PURCHASE $85.
NNOT BE COMBINED WIT!
OOD AT PARTICIPATING:LOCATIONS.
Practicing this week not
knowing their fate until
sometime next week.
“We can now make a
reasonable argument to be in the
NCAA's,” said Nardiello. “We
are a state power. We’re
legitimate.”
A lot will happen between
now and the a announcement of
NCAA playoff bids. Today,
fourth-ranked Cortland will take
on fifth-ranked Ithaca. This
In 33rd place was Spencer in
26:58. Following him was
McCullen in 36th place and
27:02.
“The conditions were really
slow, but we ran well and the
team is coming together,”
McCullen said,
Rounding out the Dane scorers
was McNamara (47th, 27:17).
Also having strong outings was
Colllins (50th, 27:21) and
Vision's wide selec-
OTHER OFFERS. |
ERS"
an Values In Sight.°
‘Grossgate Mall
120 Washington Ave.
Albany, NY 12203
weekend the SUNYAC has its
annual tournament at
Binghamton. The ICAC will also
have its tournament before the
week is through.
Albany’s status is much better
now than before the toumament
began. Only RIT has fewer losses
in New York. The Danes may
make the NCAA’s because
Binghamton and Cortland, who
lost to St. Lawrence last week,
Luciano (64th, 27:51).
“We are being consistent and
hopefully we can bring it down
another notch or two,” Albany
assistant coach Kevin Williams
said.
One important factor for
continued Dane success is a
healthy team. Currently two of
the Danes’ top seven; Joe
Ahearn and Mike Uss are out.
Some of the runners still have
both have three losses. Those
teams had been two major
obstacles for Albany.
Albany's win over the tenth
ranked Colonials (NCAA,
Division IIT) give the Danes good
reason to think that they will be
playing next week.
But for now, the Danes’ fate
has been wrestled from their
hands. The waiting game has
begun.
more potential.
“We are still looking for some
breakthroughs,” Williams said.
“We are still running close and
we are on Our way to peaking at
regionals,” Albany head coach
Roberto Vives said.
Albany’s season really beings
now. The next three meets are
the key races. First comes the
CTC’s. next the State
Championships and finally
regionals. Regionals are the most
important meet in which the top
four schools qualify for
Nationals.
The team is pushing toward
that goal and if they progress as
they have been their “true goal”
as Vives says can be attained.
W-x-country
Continued from Back page
19:33.97.
“I was flowing through the
first mile and felt really strong
the whole way,” Mack said.
Following her was Kerry
Charron in 40th place with a time
of 20:05.47.
“I felt stronger as the race
Progressed and we ran good as a
team ” Charron said.
The next Dane to finish was
Buneo (49th, 20:18.17) followed
closely by Shultes (50th,
20:21.87).
“We all ran well considering
the conditions and we are
running in packs,” Buneo said.
Rounding out the Dane scorers
were; :sophomore Dawn Dansky
in 81st place with a time of 21:12
and junior Diana Peralta (placing
89th) in 21:22.
The Danes had a strong effort
considering that not only was
there tough competition, but also
they were without the services of
one of their top runners;
sophomore Colleen Shine. Shine
Was nursing a twisted ankle and
she is needed for the important
upcoming meets. (State’s,
ECAC’s and regionals.)
Despite Shines’ absence,
Albany still was competitive.
“Amy ran a tough race and
Kerry is running well,” Albany
coach Ron White said.
Also running well was Diana
Peralta. She is improving with
every meet and looked good in
this race.
In addition Buneo ran a very
tough aggressive race. She
looked strong and picked up the
pace as it progressed.
The Danes’ next meet is the
State Championship. Following
that is the ECAC’s and then
Tegionals. The team is looking to
|
Sorts
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1989 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 2/7
Danes defeat Norwich Cadets; Pedro hurt
- JIM LUKASZEWSKI UPS
Albany fullback Pete Pedro, shown here running against
Norwich, left the game with an injury later.
By Christopher Sciria
SPORTS EDITOR
Call it a hollow victory. The Great Danes beat
Norwich, 27-19, Saturday night at University Field, but
they may have lost much more in the process.
Albany fullback Pete Pedro separated the joint between
the collar bone and the sternum during the second quarter
after rushing for 47 yards. For the senior it may impede
his chances of becoming the all-time leading rusher in
Dane history.
Pedro, with his 47 yards, has to get 110 more to break
Tom DeBlois’ record of 2,680. Pedro currently has
2,571. With two games left, it seemed to be a sure thing.
The injury was first thought to be a separated shoulder,
which would have been more serious. Pedro will not
practice this week but will probably play against Hofstra.
More will be known at the end of the week.
Defensive tackle Chuck Gianatasio had to be driven off
the field after suffering a contusion of the lower leg. He
will not play against Hofstra this weekend.
Despite the rash of injuries to hit Albany, the Danes
did beat the Cadets behind an explosive first quarter.
Albany quarterback Pat Ryder rushed for two
touchdowns in the game’s first six minutes. His runs of
31 and 30 yards were part of yet another spectacular
offensive performance.
Ryder has been doing this so much this season, you
almost expect him to do it every game. He had 100 yards
on 22 carries. He was also 8 of 19 passing for 68 yards
and a touchdown.
The senior himself is the third leading rusher in Dane
history. Ryder has 2,133 yards. His 599 carries are an
Albany record.
Albany got the ball back after Mike Cerminaro
recovered flanker Mike Pugleise’s fumble at the Norwich
44 yard line.
Pedro had 22 yards on this drive, the big carry, a 20
yard run on fourth and one from the Cadet 35. A face
mask penalty advanced the ball and gave Albany a first
and goal at the Norwich nine.
Kevin Adams, who had 78 yards on nine carries, took
a pitch from Ryder on the right side and scored to give
Albany a 20-0 lead. Tony Chechile’s 19th consecutive
PAT of the season upped the Dane’s advantage to 21-0.
Norwich took the ensuing kickoff and drove 53 yards
in six plays for their first points. QB Dave Skelley
passed 14 yards on fourth and 13 to Pugleise. The PAT
made it 21-7, Danes, 5:09 in the first.
Albany scored its last TD of the night in the second
quarter when Ryder threw a 10 yard pass to tight end
Brian Lindsley. Chechile missed the PAT, his first of the
season. That made it, 27-7, which was also the score at
the half.
The Dane defense earned their pay in the second half.
Even though they gave up 12 points, they stopped the
Cadets three times within the Dane five yard line.
“That’s the character of our defense,” Cerminaro said.
“Tn between the 20 we’re as tough as ever.”
“Can we play goal line defense,?” Albany coach Bob
Ford asked. “We sure had enough time to practice it. We
played pretty solid defensively.”
Norwich did score on a Tim Burhill one yard run and a
five yard pass from Skelley to split end Jason Barrett.
Both PAT’s were missed, so the score was 27-19, the
final, giving the Danes their fourth win of the season
against three losses.
The Cadets dropped to 2-4-1.
“Our kids never quit,” Norwich coach Barry Mynter
said. “I’m proud of their effort, but I’m disappointed in
the outcome.”
Against the Cadets, Albany may have won the war, but
may have lost one of their best players in Pedro. The
Danes will host Hofstra on Saturday at 1 PM. It will be
homecoming and Parent’s Weekend.
Volleyball team finishes third at Ithaca Tournament
By Jerry L. Kahn
STAFF WRITER
In a tournament in which many of the
best volleyball teams in this section of the
country competed, Albany finished third
Out of ten teams. The October 20-21
Ithaca tournament was the Great Danes’
best finish of the year.
“Friday...we played the best (in) the
year,” Albany coach Patrick Dwyer said.
_ “We worked a lot on our hitting this week
(and) it showed.”
On Friday, the Danes’ first opponent
was the University of
Rochester, which is ranked fifth in the
Northeast region. Albany defeated them
by the scores of 15-4 and 15-8.
Next, the Great Danes’ faced LeMoyne
and swept them in the best of three. The
Scores were 15-2 and 15-4.
“Everybody played in the LeMoyne
match,” Dwyer said. “They have a very
young team, too. They are Division II but
they lost to everybody.”
On Saturday, the Danes’ were finally
beaten. They lost to Ithaca by the scores
of 10-15, 15-9 and 12-15.
“We pretty much gave Ithaca the first
game,” Dwyer said. “We just played
terrible. Ithaca played well, too. Ithaca
wound up beating Rochester Institute of
Technology in the consolation match.”
Next, they faced Bates, which won the
Eastern Connecticut Tournament on
October 13-14. Bates is the top team in
New England and is second in the East
Region. The Great Danes lost again. The
scores were 6-15 and 5-15.
That left Albany in a three way tie for
second with Rochester and Ithaca. In the
tiebreaking, the Great Danes came out
ahead due to the point totals.
They faced Cortland, which is ranked
tenth in the country and first in the North
East Region. Albany lost again. This
time, the scores were 5-15 and 7-15.
“Cortland and Bates are very good
teams,” Dwyer said. “We felt totally
outclassed.”
Finally, the Great Danes played Easter
Connecticut, which is ranked third in the
East Region. Albany was able to emerge
victorious with scores of 15-9 and 15-11.
“Our best matches were our Ist and
last,” Dwyer said. “We played well in
both of them It’s the first time... we...
ended winning at the tournament. So that
was a big hurdle. It’s tough to reverse a
lot of ... the pressure and disappointment.
Saturday was a depressing day until the
end.”
Despite of the fact that the Danes did
very well in the tournament, there is some
bad news, too.
Albany’s 15-13 record, which is not
indicative of mediocrity but is due to their
having played against many of the best
teams in this part of the country, will not
allow them to compete in the State
Championships, which they have won for
the past three years.
Their inability to compete is not due to
the NCAA rules. It is because of an
Albany rule, which states that teams
whose winning percentages are under .650
are not allowed to participate in
postseason play. There fore, even if the
Great Danes win the rest of their matches,
they would not be eligible to go since
their record would be 2-13 (.606).
“This is the first year that we haven’t
gone to States,” Dwyer said.
Their next meet will be on Tuesday
October 24 at Williams. The Great Danes
won three of five from them last year.
“Williams could be a tough match,”
Dwyer said. “They usually are. It should
be a good match this year.”
Women's tennis competes at States and NY Open
By Maureen Begley
STAFF WRITER. ;
Often in a tennis tournament, a team’s success is
dependent upon the draw and the competitiveness of the
Other teams,
The Albany women’s tennis team faced bad luck in the
draw and very tough teams in two recent tournaments,
the NY State Women’s Open and NYSWCAA (the State
Div. III championships.)
At the New York State Women’s Open, an invitational
tournament played a week ago, Albany was pitted against
eleven teams, They were mostly from Divisions I and IT
a are consistently known to be of the “best” in the
it.
The highlights of Albany’s matches were the one and
two doubles teams and Albany’s number two singles
Player, Lisa Glendenning.
The number one doubles team of Lisa Granirer and
Lauren Herman lost to Fordham in the first round, but
moved on to beat Army in the first round of consolation
action.
After beating Albany’s number two team of
Saglimbeni-Sharkey in the second round, the Danes lost
to Comell’s number two team in the quarterfinals of the
consolation rounds, 6-2. 6-4.
“They played very well,” Albany coach Nora Breen
said. “They were very competitive against some tight
competition.”
Another highlight, Breen felt, was when Albany
number two doubles team of Krissy Saglimbeni and
Denise Sharkey split sets with tough Colgate’s number
one team.
They wound up losing, though, 6-1, 3-6, 6-2. They then
went on to lose against Albany’s Granirer-Herman in the
consolation rounds.
In singles action, Albany’s number two player, Lisa
Glendening lost in the second round of the consolations
to Hamilton after losing to Cornell’s number two and
beating a player from Queen’s college 6-2, 6-2.
“Lisa played great,” Breen said. “It just doesn’t show
in the results. She’s very competitive, she hits very hard.”
Albany was a bit more fortunate at the Division III
State Championships; the NYSWCAA. Out of a field of
16 teams, Albany placed seventh.
Albany’s biggest highlight of the tournament was its
number six singles player; Lauren Herman. Herman
advanced to the finals of the number six tournament
peers bowing out to Skidmore in three sets, 6-2, 2-6, 6-
Other singles standouts for Albany were Sharkey and
Granirer,
Sharkey, playing in the fifth position reached the
semifinals before being defeated by William-Smith 6-2,
6-3. In her first round, she upset the number two seed in
the tournament, from Binghamton 4-6, 6-3, 6-3.
Granirer reached the second round before facing a
tough draw. She lost to the two seed in her tournament,
from University of Rochester, 6-3, 7-5.
“She had a great match,” Breen said. “Her opponent
‘was a real tough player.”
And in doubles action, Albany’s number three team of
Saglimbeni-Sharkey reached the semifinals before losing
to Ithaca 3-6, 6-4, 6-4.
“Overall, the team played well, as well as can be
expected with such a good draw,” Breen said.
Albany, 4-3, plays Amherst today at 3:00 at home.
a
SEE ie ROEDER LD
Sports
Tuesday
Football team wins- See page 27
Intrasquad hoops scrimmage-Fri 4pm
W- tennis vs Amherst-Tues, 3pm
Men booters are University champions
Great Danes upset #10 ranked
Colonials; still up for NCAA bid
By Andrew Schotz
STAFF WRITER
This year’s NCAA Division III soccer
tournament may include something that
hasn’t been there since 1978 - the Albany
Great Danes.
Nothing definite can be said yet, but the
Danes made a strong statement to be
included in the tournament by capturing
the 1989 University Center Soccer
Tournament, held here at Albany.
The Danes took first place by defeating
Binghamton, a two-time defending
champion, 3-1, Sunday afternoon in their
regular season finale.
In order to reach the finals, Albany
shutout the University at Buffalo 2-0
Saturday morning, and Binghamton also
advanced after a 3-1 triumph over Stony
Brook.
Albany wasted little time in producing
its familiar early lead. In the tenth minute
lof the first half, Chris Chruma passed to
Marty Hearney, whose hard, left-footed
shot went just inside the left post.
Buffalo very nearly knotted the score in
that same minute. Dane goalie Brian
Lehrer dove to his left for a low Buffalo
shot, but the ball eluded him and smashed
into the right post. The ball ricocheted
back a few yards, and with Lehrer still on
the ground, a Buffalo forward sent a
second shot toward the empty net.
Sweeper Ken Perkins, tournament co-
MVP, however, stepped in front of the
follow-up and sent it out of bounds.
Twelve minutes later, Perkins was also
involved in a spectacular offensive play.
Albany had a direct kick in the Buffalo,
half, about ten yards past midfield.
Perkins, who takes all of Albany’s
offensive free kicks, lofted a long drive
inside the penalty box. Scott Goldstein,
with a running start form the right, dove
high in front of the Buffalo goalie and
headed the ball in for a 2-0 Dane
advantage.
Two excellent saves were made by
Lehrer, both on shots by Buffalo’s Tom
Feeley, in the 25th and 34th minutes to
preserve the shutout. This was the tenth
game this season that Lehrer, has not
allowed a goal, which extends his team
record. The Danes’ broke another record
by obtaining their 13th victory.
Over 100 people were on hand to see
the afternoon match, which featured the
tournament’s number one and two seed,s
Binghamton and Albany, respectively.
On the line was not only the
championship trophy and bragging rights,
but postseason opportunities for both
teams. An Albany loss would most likely
ehd its NCAA tournament possibilities
and make them probable contenders for a
ECAC spot. If Binghamton lost, pressure
would fall on them to take the SUNYAC
tournament to secure a NCAA bid.
Albany (14-2) had the first shot on
goal, but Binghamton (14-3) had the first
true scoring threat,
Mark Hollander intercepted Dane Billy
Knapp’s backpass header to Lehrer, but
Lehrer pressured Hollander into shooting
left.
The Danes received another scare in the
tenth minute. A hard shot was fired by
Binghamton in to a crowd in front of the
goalmouth, Lehrer snared it after it had
caromed off at least one player from each
side.
Albany had a few offensive chances of
its own in the first half, but neither team
scored. The action was slower and more
deliberate than usual because of the
playing conditions. A tremendous
rainstorm Friday had reduced the field to
ARMANDO VARGAS UPS
The Albany soccer team won the University Championship with a victory over Binghamton.
large patches of mud.
Albany coach Aldo Nardiello was
actually very pleased with the 0-0
halftime tic. He felt that one end of the
field was sloppier and tougher to defend.
“We were defending the swamp,”
Nardiello said. “I was just happy we
survived that mess.”
Just three minutes into the second half,
the Colonials found out why Nardiello
was relieved. Hearney sent a low cross
into the Colonial penalty box. Ordinarily,
the ball probably wouldn’t have gotten
through, but Binghamton fullback David
Schneider couldn’t pivot in the slop and
fell. Lee Tschantret was there for the
Danes and tucked the ball into the near _
comer,
Perkins came up with two more saves
for Albany in the second half. A high
Binghamton cross from the right was
barely tipped by Lehrer into the crossbar
and back out into play. Perkins’ header
prevented a Binghamton open-net
opportunity, Three minutes later Perkins
was there again when Binghamton’s
Holander chipped the ball over both
Lehrer and Knapp.
Binghamton kept pounding away,
though, and their perserverance paid off.
With only 15 minutes left, Hollander took
a pass from Larry Breslow and
hammered a shot toward the right post.
Lehrer managed to get a hand on the ball,
but couldn’t stop it and the game was tied
1-1.
Albany struck back four minutes later.
Scott Goldstein outjumped a Colonial
back and headed the ball into the crease
where Yves Limage’s diving header made
it 2-1 Danes.
With under eight minutes left,
Tschantret, co-MVP for the second
straight year, dribbled down the left side
Continued on page 26
Dane x-country teams host Albany Invitational
Men finish sixth; Dartmouth takes first place
By Michael Director
STAFF WRITER
This past Saturday the Great Dane
men’s cross country team hosted the
Albany Invitational.
It is the biggest invitational in the
Northeast and there were 24 teams
competing in the varsity race. Albany
finished a respectable sixth with 161
points.
The winner was Dartmouth who
dominated the field compiling a perfect
fifteen point score. The Big Green is
ranked fifteenth among Division I schools
nationally and their strength showed.
Finishing second was top ranked
Brandeis with 70 points. Next came South
Eastern Massachusetts with 126 point.
Finishing fourth was Williams with 128
points and fifth place was taken by South
Connecticut with 146 points.
Albany also beat some good teams
including Division I Colagate and
Division III powerhouse Ithaca.
The conditions were less than ideal for
a cross country race being cold and
windy. The course was also very muddy
and this adversely affected times.
At the mile mark senior-co-captain
Chris Kranick was leading the Danes.
Following him closely was sophomore
Joe McCullen. About five places back
were sophomore Gregorio Luciano and
senior Dave Spencer. Seniors Scott
McNamara and Steve Collins were also
running tough about five seconds back of
Spencer,
As the race progressed it became
apparent that Dartmouth was superior. At
the two mile mark, five of the top seven
runners were from Dartmouth.
Pacing the Danes at this point was
Kranick in 10:25. Following closely
behind were McCullen and Spencer in
10:27. Seven seconds behind were Collins
Continued on page 26
Women take seventh; Millersville wins title
By Michael Director
STAFF WRITER
One of the most difficult tasks for a
cross country team is to run in an
Invitational.
The competition is tough and there are
more competitors than in a standard meet.
The Dane women’s cross country team,
competing in the Albany Invitational on
its home course rose to the challenge and
placed seventh out of 19 teams.
The overall winner was Millersville
with 39 points. Following them was Ithaca
(62), Williams (85), Dartmouth (154),
Trenton State (158), Middlebury (207),
and then Albany with 225 points.
Considering Millersville and Dartmouth
nationally ranked Division II and I
schools, and not forgetting Ithaca who is
one of the top three New York teams, the
Danes performed will,
The course conditions were not good
with muddy stretches which are not
conducive to fast times. In addition it was
cold.
As the race began senior co-captain
Denise Buneo took it out hard. She was in
the top five followed by sophomore Amy
Mack. At the mile mark, Mack, the
Dane’s number one runner, was moving
through in 6:07. She was running very
relaxed and 6:07 is her best split, for a
first mile,
Following her in a pack, were Danes;
Buneo, junior Tricia Shultes and senior
co-captain Kerry Charron. This pack
passed through in a span of about two
seconds.
At the two mile mark Mack was the
leader for the Danes. Trailing her was
Buneo who was followed by Charron.
Shultes was beginning to slow down at
this point falling off the pace of Charron
and Buneo.
Mack was the first Dane to cross the
line in 22nd place with a time of
Continued on page 26 — :