Two Last Quarter TD’s Spearhead
_ 28-27 Come-From-Behind Victory
by Bob Bellafiore
ORLANDO, Fla, — The Albany
State football team raised nearly
$7,000 selling raffles and sponsor-
ing @ show on campus in order to
jel 1100 miles to play a football
ame. They did nor go to all that
trouble to lose,
Outsized, outnumbered, and pro-
bably out-talented, the Danes were
not to be outdone, Two
touchdowns by fullback Chuck
Priore within four minutes, 20
seconds of the final quarter ted
Albany to a thrilling, 28-27, com
from-behind victory over the
University of Central Florida,
Saturday night in front of over
14,000. people Wn: the Tangerine
Bowl.
"It (the game) was a classic,"
suid Albany head football couch
Bob Ford, “There couldn't have
been much separating the Iwo
teams!”
Early in the game, the Danes
found a fot separating them from
the Knights, though — namely 14
first quarter points by thelr hosts,
Albany stopped UCE on their
d then moved the ball
from the Dane 30 to the Knight
28-yard line, But Dario Arango's
45-fleld goal try was short, and.
UCF took over, Facing a third
down and-15 yards {0 go on his own
34, Knight quarterback Mike
Cullison hit split end Rickey
son on the left sideline for 42 yards
and a first down, Five plays later,
tailback Turner Davis ran off right
tackle for the final yard, With Tom
Hungerford's kick, UCF led, 7-
he Danes next possession netted
them minus six yards, and Dave
Hardy's 34-yard punt put the ball
‘on the UCF 48. Two running plays
moved the Knights to the Albany
Bruce Collins gave UCF a first
down on the 40, Cullison was too
Jong on a Bomb to Sampson, but he
hit on his gext three passes, setting
pa first-and-goal on the 10, After
a Davis two-yard run, a five-yard
delay-of-game penalty, and two
ullison keepers put the ball on the
one, Davis got his second
touchdown of the day, With 10
seconds remaining in the opening
quarter, UCF had a commanding
14-0 advantage.
But Albany struick right back in
the beginning of the second quarter.
k Burger, halfbuck-turned split
end:turned kick returner 100k Scout
Ryerson's ensuing kickoff on the
Albany 16, ran to his tefl, and cut
up the middle into the open field
With nothing but end zone in front
of him, But a lunging Sampson just
caught Burger's foot, and tripped
him up on the UCK 28, Levi Louis
carried iwice to the 17, and a middle
tun by Priore gave Albany a first
and-woal on the five, A Louis pitch
got two, Priore netted wo more,
and Bob Nearing took it over from
there, Arango's extra point was
id the Danes cut the lead in
The Knights got a big break on,
their next possession when an over-
ly aggressive Jerry Wierzbicki ran
into Hungerford in punt formation
on a fourth-and-seven, giving UCK
the ball back,
the Dane 33
A broken play lost two for the
Knights, but Cullison came right
back and hit Jeff Froehlich over the
middle for 13, Fullback Mark
Goode ran for six, and Calvin
Bryant Went right for five more,
Cullison then found Sampson open.
in the end zone, and the Knights |
went up 21-7,
Albany closed the gap just before
with another dose of
Burger's speed. Taking the pitch
from quarterback Mike Fiorito on
the Dane 32, the senior co-captain
broke from the clutches of UCK
defensive back Bruce Gordon on
the 35, and sireaked down the
sideline for 68 yards and a
touchdown, making the score
21-14,
In the second half, the Albany
4-4 was impenetrable, saye for one
time, Cullison put strikes of 27
ards to tight end Mike Carter and
31 yards ( Froehlich, and-upped
the lead 10 27-14, Hungerford chose
this time to miss only his second ex-
{fa point try in two season, and
opend the door for the Albany
comeback, “1 don't know what
happened,"* said UCE head football
gouch Don Jonas, The kid just
never misses,"
That possession was the only
chance the Knights had (o score in
the to final quarters, as they never
gain entered Dane territory
“IL was a Tittle concerned about
Our physical condition,” Ford
noted with the Florida heat in mind
“But in the second half, we got the
offense on the field, and by the
fourth quaster, think the physical
conditioning began to swing in our
favor."
The momentumebegan to swing
than that
any got the ball with 4:16 to
ko in the third quarter by virtue ofa
26-yard punt by Craig Turner. The
Danes marched down to the UCE
six, and faced a first-and-goal, On
fourth-and-inches, though, Louis
was stopped, Albany didn't score,
but they had emotion and the clock
both on their side.
UGE got nowhere on their first
Series of the fourth quarter, and
as forced to punt, The Dane
special
Bowen returned Turner's boot 42
yards to the Knight 22. A Fiorito:
to-Bruce Dey touchdown pass was
nullified by offsetting penalties, but
Priore picked his way through the
middle to the nine, Fiorito seramb!
ed for two, and Priore netted three
more, putting the ball on the two, A
penalty put Albany on the one, set-
ting up Priore's dive over the top.
Arango was perfect again, and the
Danes were within a touchdown,
ms excelled again, as Don
nd a first down on
-
Chuck Priore had (wo fourth quarter scores in Saturday's 28-27 Albany
win over UCF in Florida, (photo: UPS)
That's when the Albany defense “Someone's got to lke charge and
feally tightened up. Cullison hit come up with the big play, and we
Carler on a crossing pattern in the just weren't getting the big play
middle for 16 yardsandafirstdown As has been the ease from day
on the UCE 35, Mike Stapp tried one this season, the Dane offensive
the right side, but Hd Ragule and tine stood out, Behind the quintet
Tom Fogarly were there, Cullison of Mike Arcuri, Brian Bennett,
looked for Froshlich short, but Glen Magrai
Hardy and Wiersbicki broke that and Jim Esposito, Albany rushed
one up, On third down, Cullison's for 308 yards against a team that
pass for Carter went off the pi
receiver's hands, and into those of a. fun,
diving Hardy on the Albany 49. work running the football,"” Ford
The Danes just systematically said proudly, “1 think they went in
parched down the field after that. honestly feeling that we couldn'r
Priore went over 100 yards for, the run against them, And we did."
day by bolting for 17 on a fullback think it shows @ lol of
ive, Burger went right for five, and character
three more Priore runs pul Albany down here, not think about the
on the nine, Louis ran the left end othe
for three, bul the Danes almost game," said Danes defensive end
blew it on the next play. Fiorito Tom Pinto, “We never broke.
threw to Dey in the end zone, who ‘I'd just say we maintained a lit
was hit immediately, UCF tle mote poise,"
linebacker Eddie James tipped the “and a little greater intensity,"
ball to Billy Giovanetti, but he ————
Great Danes
couldn't hold on, and Albany gota
vs.
UCF
Scoring Summary
George Brodeur,
des itself on defense versus the
“That's a pretty decent night's
that we could come
attractions, and play the
Ford concluded,
second chance, On fourth-and-two,
Ford called for his money-man.
Priore went through the middle and
cut left 10 the daylightvand the end
zone. Arango hil his fourth extra
point of the night, and Albany had
the lead for the first time, 28-27,
with 6:18 left in the game.
It was all Albany defense from
then on, A Collins. interception
snuffed! out UCF's last-ditch effort,
and the Danes just ran the clock
out
“1 guess I'd have (0 say the key to
the ballgame was our king ta
Bame,"* Ford said, “Every time we ae
Hot into ahole dnd it looked like we Cet ws 119, cn
were in trouble, we camé up with
the big play from our kickin
game,"
"The special te
just terrible,
nS Were terrible, Kesiing
Jonas said, Ucyocarer 47s, Samos
Trailways to Offer Gym to
Alumni to Station Runs
by Sylvia Saunders
Students going home weekends
and holidays will no longer have to,
take cabs, trek down State Street or
find their own way to the
downtown. bus stations, Adiron-
dack Trailways Bus Company will
provide a free weekend shuttle ser
vige to the downtown bus terminal
according
to Trailways Supervisor of Opera
effective November 21
tions Rudy W. Trocger
The shuttle service will run from
the uptown campus and Alumni
Quad 10 the bus terminal on Broad
way. The initial schedule will begin
next Friday and continue each Fri
day and Sunday thereafter for the
remainder of the schoolyear, Vaca
tion periods may include additonal
service; schedules will be announc
ed.
The regular shuttle will leave the
Uptown campus gym on Fridays at
12:15, 3:15 and 6:15 p.m, Physical
Plant Director Dennis Stevens said
the gym location was chosen rath
than the circle) so students could
Wait inside the building
The shuttle will then leave Alum
ni Quad's Sayles Hall on Partridge
Street at 12:35, 3:35 and 6:35 p.m.
Return shuttles are scieduled 10
leave the Trailways: terminal on
Sundays at 4:15 and 6:15 p.m, All
the shu
they are direct connections with
buses bound for New York City,
Long Island, all points cast
(Springfield, Bostén), all_points
west (Utica, Syracuse, Rochester,
Buffalo) and all points north
(Saratoga, Glens Falls, Saranac
Lake).
In addition,
Trailways may run extrit shuttles,
We'll have to play it by ear. If we
need extra ones, we'll make the
le buses are scheduled so
Troeger said
necessary adjustments,"" he said,
The shutile bus plan hay been in
the works for the last several weeks,
according 10 Stevens. Trailways
decided to ruin the shuttle at the re:
quest of Stevens and due to the fact
that their business was slightly
down from last year, Stevens made
the request after budget cuts forced
him to eliminate SUNYA bus ser-
Vice to the bus terminals,
Free Trailways buses will shutile riders between campuses and stati
Contact Office (a sell Greyhound tickers.for same service,
“We understand budgetary cuts
and want to help the students, They
major portion of our
business," Troeger said, “At the
same time, we're hoping {0 increas
our business,
are a
Trocger added that Tyailways
feared the winter months Would in.
erfere with business if students had
to find thelr own transportion:
[rocper said the cost to students for
continued on ave five
Greyhound Will
Begin Charters
by Beth Sexer
Beginning in January,
Greyhound Bus Lines will be sen-
ding charter buses to pick up
SUNYA students at the circle to
ransport them to “any standard
Greyhound destination,” according
to SA Greyhound agent Debbie
Gaioni.
SA will sell bus tickets at the SA
Contact office, said Galoni, and
“in return for this, Greyhound has:
agreed 10 come up to the SUNY
Campus for weekend bus runs!”
every Friday afternoon and Sunday
eveninus
Greyhound will probably send
buses {0 the circle that are schedul-
ed for popular student destinations
The buses ‘will proceed to the
downtown terminal ‘so that
{ransfers may take -place when’
nevessary."’ However, according 10
Guioni, the timetables and
continued on pase thirteen
Where Has All The Faculty Gone?
Dean of Student Affairs Neil Brown
Brown (old the
ASP he favors student representalion
by Ken Gordon
Not a single voice was heard in
opposition to permanent student
representation on the University
Senate in an open public hearing
held Wednesday
The hearing, which was held to
allow both faculty and students the
opportunity 10 voice their opinion
{0 the augmented committee on
Nominations and Elections, was at
tended by over 100 students, one
faculty member, and three of the
giaht faculty members of the com:
mitice.
Nominations and Elections com:
mittee chair Kendall Birr explained
that because of other commiiments,
ot all the committee members
could attend the meetings. He add
ed that the last three open hearings
Were mei with “galloping apathy,"”
In spite of this explanation, many
iudents were still distraught, feel
ing that they were being cheated by
not having faculty present to hear
theit opinions
Cop Car Crashes Answering Call
red light and siren, Conditions sur
by Patricia Branley
While responding to a distrauight
le caller in Sayles Hall at ap:
yximately 6:30 p.m, on Tuesday
evening, a SUNYA campus police
car was involved in a collision at the
intersection between Washington
Avenit: and Partridge Street, accor
ding tc Assistant Security Director
Jolin Henighan
“The damage to the police car
was extensive while the other two
vehicles involved were not severely
damaged," Henighan said.
He added, “Since the accident
occurred within the city limits of
Albany it will be investigated by the
Albany,City Police
According to
there is a discrepancy between the
police records,
story of the police officer, Fred:
Rainville and the driver of the se
cond car, Carol Green. Green
claims that the campus police car
only had on its red light, Rainville,
however, claims he had on both his
rounding the accident are still under
investigation.
“Although no one Was injured,
Rainville was taken to Albany
Medical for examination,
He was met there by his supervisor
who was also on his way to the
tadio call, He had to remove the
setvice revolver from Rainyille's
posssession,"* Henighan said,
Henighan explained, “There is a
continued on page nine
“Apathy is a bunch of erup,"
said SASU's Janice Fine, “The
future of public education is in the
students... the fulure of SUNY is
us."
Former SASU president Sharon
Ward sald she was ‘appalled that
only five members of the commit
rey?” including the two student
committee members, SA president
Sue Gold and Siudent Union chair
person Jim Tierney
Ward pointed out that in her
travels across the state she found
that “the smaller campuses have
really good student representation
fon the University governing. bodies
in the order of $0 percent
“A body that does not represent
is illegitimate,’ said Ward, “and
eventually either falls apart or is
taken down,"
Faculty chairman of the Universi
ty Senate Eugene Garber called th
problem “a paradox.'? Asked why
the Senate does not want student
participation there, the English
Department professor answered,
©The Senate itself has nothing to do
with its own membership, The issue
is decided by the State University’s
faculty bylaws. .
p to, Garber, student
posts were not renewed in May for
this upcoming four year period
because “ihe faculty wanted 10
Study the
Senate,"
Following the decision in May,
President O'Leary called an
emergency facully meeting, and
proposed to extend the student
Senate involvement for another
year, This was accepted, A special
‘ad-hoc! study committee was
Organized this past summer 10 con-
sider future student options in the
university government,
According 10 Birt
{ce's purpose is to draft some revi
sion (0 the bylaws that will be sup:
ported by a majority of the faculty
composition of the
the commit
body.
Bitr said that so far the commit
ee has put one referendum that
presented five options to the facul
ty:
Making permanent the current
system of student representation,
and adjusting the graduate student
membership.
No. | and establishing a policy
Whereby voles on academic issties
would be separately;
separating student and faculty
continued on page thirteen
recorded
Discover
Hillel
and the
today’s
World Capsules
Hostages May Face Trial
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) The president of Iran's
Supreme Court and head of Parliament's Islamic
hardliners was quoted Thursday as saying the assembly
will have to d fhether oF not to put the 52 U.S.
hostages on trial ifthe United States fails to meet Ira-
nian tetms for their release, Iran's prime minister, mean-
while, conferred with Ayatollah Rubuliah Khomeini,
possibly on the hostages, and government officials were
Said to have discussed the U.S. reply (0 Iran's demands
in meetings throughout the day. Ayatollah Mohammad
Beheshti, leader of the fundamentalist Islamic
Republican Party which controls Parliament, was
quoted by Tehran's Engela’s Islamic newspaper as say-
ing the government would first have to judge the
American response before any trial decision by the
Parliament, The secret reply was delivered to Tehran on
Wednesday by Algerian intermediaries who received ft a
day earlier in Algiers from Deputy Secretary of State
Warren Christopher. "If the proposed resolution decid.
ed by the representatives of the people does not really
Fesult in anything, and the Majlis Parliament decides on
their trial, they would be put on trial in a judicial
Court,” the newspaper quoted Beheshti as saying,
Guv Squawks on Taxing
NEW YORK (AP) Gov. Hugh Carey warned in a
(elegram to Treasury Secretary G, William Miller Thurs-
day that retroactive tax rulings on state bonids could do
“irreparable harm’ 10 government financing projects
He asked Miller 10 make it clear that a recent Internal
Revenue Service ruling does not have any affect on Bat~
tery Park City Authority construction loan bonds issued
last May as being free of federal taxes. ‘Failure to do so
1 once will result in irreparable harm to the financing
Prospects of the state, its agencies and its political sub.
divisions, most notably the City of New York," the
governor said, "The effect of a retroactive declaration
Of taxability . . . will be to destroy investor confidence
In all securities issued within my state," he said. The IRS
said interest on notes of a political subdivision whieh are
Sold in arbitraye, oF simply to make money, was subject
to taxation.
Union Leader Convicted
ALBANY, N.Y, (AP) Anthony Scotto, the Brooklyn
longshoremen's leader, must surrender his union pe
tions as a result of his federal conviction, the state's
Highest court decided Thursday. The Court of Appeals
refused to hear Scotto's Appeal from lower-court deci
sions stripping him of his union posts. The eourt thereby
upholds the fower-court rulings, Scotto was convicted
by a fede st fall OF obiaining more than
$200,000 cash payolts from two waterfront
Businessmen in New York City, He remains free as he
Appeals his conviction to the U.S, Supreme Court, A
Union colleague, Anthony Anastasio, was also convicted
of labor racketeering charges. Both men were stripped
Of their union positions by the Waterfront Commission
of New York Harbor, but challenged the action in
Court. Seotto is a vice-president of the International
Longshoremen's Associ and president of the
Brooklyn local. Ana president of the
Brooklyn local. The Court of Appeals? ruling Thursday
barred both men from their union jobs. *
U.S. Military Plane Crashes
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) The fatal crash of a U.S. military
transport plane marred the start Thursday of operation
Bright Star, the first test of America’s rapid deployment
Force to defend Western oil supplies in the Middle East
The 11 men and two women aboard the C-141 were kill.
ed, military authorities said. A U.S. Embassy
Spokesman said the plane, one of several involved in the
1,400-man military exercises, was on its final approach
* 10 an Egyptian military airport when it crashed into the
desert dunes “in a fireball that lit up the night sky," The
plane crashed two to five miles short of the runway at
Cairo West Air Base during a banking turn under clear
night skies just before midnight Wednesday, according
to Pentagon spokesman Maj. Gen. Jerry Curry. in
Washington, D.C, He said an investigation has begun
but s0 far the Air Force has no idea of the cause. The
Correction
The number of tickets sold’by the football team for
the John Valby concert was incorrectly estimated in
Tuesday's issue, The correct estimate should read
**13-1400,"" The estimated profit for the team, $1,174, is
correct
\
plane was attached to the 62nd Airlift Wing based at
McChord Air Force Base, near Tacoma, Wash., he said.
The joint exercises of about 1,400 army troops and
airmen include units from the 101st Airborne Division
of Fort Campbell, Ky, Pentagon officials have stressed
that the joint Egyptian-American operation was planned
well before the outbreak of the Persian Gulf war bet-
‘ween Iran and Iraq, They say the two-week exercise is to
sive the’Americans the desert practice they need to live
Upto the U,S, commitment to defend the West's oil sup-
plies from Mideast oil fields, The war has cut off oil pro-
duction in Iran and Iraq and the fighting threatens the
Strait of Harmuz, through which sail tankers bearing
much of the world's oil,
Farmers Riot in India
NEW DELHI, India (AP) Telecommunications in the
strife-torn west-central state of Maharashtra have been
sabotaged in four days of agitation by Indian farmers
demanding greater government price support for their
produicis, news reports said Thursday, Police reportedly
arrested more than 3,000 farmers on rioting charges in
Nasik district, center of the agitation, United News of
India quoted officials as saying telephone and telegraph
links between Nasik city and several towns were inter-
Tupted after saboteurs ripped out telephone poles and
cut telegraph wires, Nasik is 90 miles northeast of Bom=
bay, The news agency also said (wo freight trains collid-
ed near Nasik but no one was injured. The accident was
the second since peasant protesters sabotaged railroad
tracks in the area but officials did not say if the collision
‘Thursday was the result of the sabotage,
Abscam Trial Continues
NEW YORK (AP) One of Abscam's leading men has
ended his live and videotaped courtroom performance
on behalf of the prosecutions’ case against Reps, Frank
Thompson Jr,, D-N.J. and John M. Murphy, D-N.Y
The actor, undercover FBI agent Anthony Amoroso,
W48 seen on the TY screen Thursday in U.S. District
Court in Brooklyn a Pennsylvaniea con:
gressman 10 accept $50,000 in bribe money and failing
to get Murphy to admit hie had received part of ut earlier
payoff, But the day was not a (otal loss for the prosecu
tion. The tapes also showed the curtain coming down
on the current. Abscam scene, On Feb. 2 when
Philadelphia lawyer Howard Criden, indicted four times
for Abscam offenses and convicted once, was nabbed by
FBI agents, At the time, hie was sitting ina Kennedy Air
Port hotel, supposediv waiting to meet an Arab sheik
He had been summoned by Amoroso and conman Mal
Weinberg, who posed throughout the two-year wnder
Cover operation as representatives of non-existent Arab
sheth.
Cabinet Transitions Begin
Cabinet fransitions Begin
WASHINGTON (AP) Advance teams for Ronalg
Reagan's new administration began fanning out into the
Cabinet departments Thursday to take stock of the
policies, problems and last-minute surprises the
president-elect will inherit Jan. 20. “We're trying to
identify the time bombs before they explode,” said one
top official in Reagan's transition office, which an
nounced the team leaders assigned to the 13 Cabin
depariments on Thursday. Most of those named were
department officials in the Nixon and Ford administra.
tions. Reagan's aides insisted that the appointed team
leaders are not necessarily potential Cabinet secretaries
The chief Reagan transition official named to ihe
Defense Department, William R. Van Cleave, said
Thursday that he will “definitely not’ become defense
secretary. Van Cleave, a former Pentagon official when
Richard Nixon was president, has been rumored as 4
possible defense secretary.
SUNY—B Research on Ice
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) Buffalo State University
created a center 10 study engineering problems in {
ing temperatures, The new Center for Cold Re
Engineering, Science and Technology was annour
Thursday during ceremonies at the suburban Amer
campus, CREST will benefit residents of Canada a
s the United States, said Dr. Robert L. Ketter
president, “We have been working to establish a
for Canadian-American studies here at the un
CREST can be an integral part of that endea
said, One project already underway is the anal
slaciers and permafrost on Saturn and Jupiter. ¢
home, CREST will study highway potholes and 1)
feels on local weather of an ice boom placed across |}
Niagara River each winter to hold ice in Lake f
Heroin Seized in Turkey
ISTANBUL
pounds:
Turkey: (AP) Security force
pure" heroin in a village in
Turkey, the Turkish state radio reported Th
haul was said 10 be worth at least $11 milli
Teported narcotics agents posing as buye
Mustafa Altan in a village near the Syri
sitid Alian was arrested with the heroin in his po
in Tuesday's raid and that he belonge
Underground organization trading drugs fo
The area was under the control of an extreme lef
dish terrorist group called *Apocular’’ b
Inilitary 100k power in Turkey two months ap
(aS SS
Campus Briefs
RSS
Up Against the Falwalls
Moral Majority is the right wing conservative group
Which has gained prominence since the recent election
for their support of the draft, a strong miliary, and
mandatory prayer in schools, and for thei opposition to
ay rights and abortion:
Tonight, community members will have the choice of
seeing Moral Majority leader Jerry Falwall speak at the
Palace Theatre, or of joining a protest rally across the
Street, at the Wew Federal Building
The rally i being sponsored by the Coalition of Com
mon Sense, a capital area organization which includes
ASUBA, Fuerza Latina : ISc
Hillel, SASU, NYPIRG and groups throughout the cre
The coaliion wishes to draw attention to the Moral
Majority's role in the election, A coalition member said
Moral Majority has attacked senators around the nation
for their liberal views and caused George McGovern
Birch Bayh, and Frank Church to be unseated, They
have also reportedly caused Democratic Senator Ted
Kennedy t0 lose the role of House M
Republican Strom Thurmond
and legalized abortion,
The rally gets under way at 7 p.m. The New Federal
Building isa short bus ride away on Broadway and Clr,
Yan Avenue, opposite the Palace. For mote informe
tion, call 463-4372 or 462.6138
ajority Leader 10
an opponent of ERA
Humanities Coffeehouse
With the Falwell appearance and protest, the
sand Fine Atts Advisory Committee will pre
fent their “Not Just Another Friday Nighi"t cof
fechouse at 8 p.m. in the Humanities Lounge, HU3ss
All are invited to the coffeehouse which will feature
Panel discussion on Falwell and the Moral Majority,
\_Coffee and refreshments will be served
~
Flipping For Easter Seals
You can take time out for Easter Seals tom
maybe walk home with. a $3,000. talkin;
‘machine,
Easter Seals is sponsoring a pinball tounamen
thway Mall and is offering prizes for most mon
highest scores, and random drawings. Anyone ea
in and play anytime between 10 a.m. and 9 p.in. ai
for an “Alien Poker" pinball machine, trophi
other prizes.
There is @ $5.00 minimum tu play, but it is for a
cause. Call 434-4103 for more details,
Days of Peace...
qn
The Albany Peace Project is sponsoring Pe
Next Monday through Friday, The purpose of th
Will be 10 educate and inform the community on
Fesistration, the arms race, and the military
One of the main events will be a teach-in on W
day, in HU 354 from 12-5 p.m.
Check out the Campus Center for a full sched!
+A Day of Action
Men, women,
id children from all over the north
Will gather in front Of State Office Building 22
day t0 voice their support of the Women's Peniagon A
tion taking place Sunday and Monday in Washing
Dc.
The Women's Pentagon Action is a coal
Women from the northeast who are marching on tt
tion's defense headquarters to protest “‘governimen
Violence against the earth and against women 0
vyears,"*
Building 22 is directly opposite State Quad. The
Pathy action will begin at 2 p.m. Anyone interested iP
Belting involved with the demonsiration or child car
1 yee bngae nie
See aa canes
eas dh 7a on be
Page Three
Albany Student Press ~
Lawyer Robert Hager commemorates Karen Silkwood Day.
sas
ee a
Photo: Mary Hemcbe}
"She was ordinary, moral, and right — and died for i,”
B, Z|
Follett to Throw Book at Crooks ip
by Mark Fischetti the
In the past, shoplifting at the Committe
University Student
(USIO), and two have
can call 489-6742.
Fillet’ SUNY Bookstore has gone
basically unchecked, but stricter
security measures have recently
begun, according to the new general
manager, John Feuerborn
Feuerborn, who came here from
the University of Washington last
March, has hired employees to walk
around.the store and watch for
shoplifters,
“Last year, the shrink
store was about $75,000
born says. Shrinkage
Joss of inventory, some of it due to
improper shipping by publishers,
but most of it as a resuli of shoplif
rs 10 the
ti
However, Feuerborn adds,
“Only about $0 shoplifters were ap:
prehended last year."
Since the plainclothesmen were
employed one month ago, 22
shoplifters have been apprehended.
Of them, 12 have been referred to
been put under arrest by the Univ
sity Police.
Depend of day
and the time of year, there are front
two to eight plainsclothesmen, none
of whom are students, in the store.
These employees constitute only
100 per week oF the payroll, on the
J there are times when
no one is on duty, according to
Feuerborn
“Bur we're going to try to always
Haye at least one person,” he say’.
Siudents steal merchandise rang.
ing from pens and candy to books.
‘One student said he did it on a
Feuerborn says, “Some peo:
ple actually can't afford 10 buy
books... the price of books is
ridiculous,"* he added
Feuerhorn suspects that em
ployees may also be stealing things.
“You like {0 think there's none
theft), but you can't
(inside
Karen Silkwood Remembered
by Amy Kantor
During the six years since the
nuclear power-related death of
Karen Silkwood on November 13,
1974, much speculation has been
raised regarding the energy. in-
dustry.
& News Feature
In commeration, ‘'Karen
Silkwood Day,'’ was observed
yesterday to honor the anniversary
Of the evening on which the 28-year-
ld plutonium plant lab analyst lost
her life in a car accident
awyer Robert Hager spoke at
SUNYA last night on behalf of the
Silkwood Fund in Washignton
D.C. Hager has worked con-
‘overlook the possibility,
In the past, the bookstore
teferted shoplifters to the USJC
Bui the committee's actions were
nol very productive, according 10
Feuerborn,
he says, One com-
mittee member who asked 10 te:
main anonymous said that the
referred shoplifiers had not been
many result
"As far as | know, there weren't FA
punished
Feuerborn hopes (0 reverse the
trend, he says, He is making sure
he:
that the referral hearings, which will
bepin next week, will result in
punitive action if the defendants are
declared puilly, and will exercise his
right (0 call the University Police 10,
make ar
According 10 John Henighan of
the Iwo
Campus Security,
arresied since the
shoplifters
work have
plainclothesmen bey:
heen charged with petty lareeny and:
telerred 10 Albany Criminal Court
SA To Aim For Coordination
hy Christopher Koch
Representatives from twenty of
the cighty SA-funded groups met
on Wednesday night 10 examine &
proposal for the formation of a
Program Board 10 coordinate ac
tivities of the differenct SA groups
on campus.
The proposal arose in response ta
a perceived lack of communication
between the SA and its eighty
member goups and between the
member groups themselves
The proposal calls for the
establishment of a program board
which will be made up of ten
different
representatives from
categories of student groups within
the SA, such as academic and
ed bya
cultural groups, to be ch
director who will
between the board and the SA.
“There
more communication and coopera
en SA and tis member
Sue
Gold, who, along with SA Vice
vy and Assistant
irs Cathy
tion
said SA Presien
President Brian |
Director for Student Aff.
for the board
Gold said
been a need fora program board at
SUNYA but that SA simply has not
created one, “Although I know the
leaders of the different groups, the
jor contact belwee SA and its
groups right now is through the
erve as a liaison
5 a definue need for
prepared the proposal
hat there has always
submit a request for funds whet
they want {0 sponsor an event, With
the establishment of a program
¢ this meeting"?
Nussbaum stressed that the board
continued an page nine
board, there could be much mon
coooperation and communication
between SA and ils groups,
Right now,’ continued Gold,
“there is a lot of overlappne of
events and lack of planning betwee
the groups
could correct this. We could coor
dinate resources
a lol of money is saved,
making sure that different grou
events don't conflict with eac
other on ihe calendar
Levy agreed that
more cooperation in evenis and ac
tivities, but our biggest concer
right now is to get this boar
established so that groups can get
together (o talk about problem
that affect them all,”"
Most of the twenty SA group.
about the proposed program board
lane Sidoti,
Speakers Forum chair
who helped to orgnize the meetin
aid she recognized the need
board last year
“1 was on th
budget committ
ast yeu
‘equipment and resources that cou!
have been shared among the grou
but weren't, simply because 1
groups weren't talking to a
other," she noted
“We've been meeting wi
Ieaders of different groups
The program board
nd events so that
5 well as
‘there must be
and 1 noticed a lol of
1 dividually, for the last couple of
Weeks, bul We couldn't get throug
1 10 everyone, so we decided 10 call
p
h
n
id
Bs
he like we'll have to consider
ii something, but that all depends on
a food prides next year," said Zahm.
Photo: Kart Onan
UAS Manager E, Norbert Zahm
th
Says cash fo be reinvested.
tinuousty on the Silkwood case, and
has extensively researched the
energy field,
Business agent for the Interna-
tional Ladies Garment Workers
Union (ILGWU) and executive
committee member for the newly-
formed national Labor Action
Coalition Judy Conley preceeded
Hager in speaking at the NYIRG,
CAN and Speaker's Forum-
sponsored event,
This is the first yational labor
coalition ever,’ said Conley. Her
group, she informed, started with
seven unions and now encompasses
25 labor organizations mostly in
upstate New York; it currently
setves more than 100 thousand’
employees. ‘We're very anti-
nuclear,” she said.
The main fight of her coalition is
against utility companies, which
make use of toxic chemicals, “It
Costs billions to build nuclear power.
plants, It costs two billion to niain~
tain them, and three billion to clean
and store radioactive material
mess,"" Conley explained,
Hager spoke next, in place of Pat
Austin, also. a Silkwood Fund
member. She felt ill and could not
attend the meeting.
“Silkwood was a symbol of
feminism, labor, civil rights and the
environment," said Hager, “She
‘was an ordinary person who had the
courage to do important work." He
then retold the circumstances sur-
continued on page thirteen
»
y
\
i cat!
\
¥
Thai Roane Ks
Follett SUNY Bookstore will beef-up securily measures,
Plaincforhesmen Tired (0 offset $75,000 1oxses,
rep
NS
To provide additional sifety 10 students fn 1
Physical Plant Direcior Dennis Stevens hay made two changes
return tips
on Swan Street had 10 get off al either Bag
ny well, We're
nother change is th
stop at request on Northern Boulevard, Stevens sa
dicated that while Northern Boule
Fstop, it should be a prime exit stop.
Stevens added th
operates as before
(Buses to Make New Stops )
at Northern Blvd., Swan
e downtown a
ervice after 6 p.m,
A reuuilir Sion at Swan Street has been added for bot pick-up and
1 makes sense,"* Stevens said, “Formerly students living
e or Lark and walk, It's
ting much more use at that stop.
cust-bound bus drivers (going down) will
d that students in:
necessarily be made a
rd shouldn
i despite these changes, the balance of the system
SY)
UAS Net Income Over 200 Grand
by Ken Gordon the st
Accordin
Services (UAS) General
iliary
Manage
J a net income of $107,746 in the
fiscal yea
Board Rate Increase Credited
ie 10 provide services to the
students of SUNYA
These services include food ser-
to University Aux
E, Norbert Zahm, UAS vice, the Rathskeller Pub, The
Mousetrap, the bookstore, check
cashing, vending machines, bowling
alleys, the Mohawk Campus, and
July 1, 1979 to June 30,
1980. n
This figu @ Was up $201,691 from The Glenn House in Camp Dip:
the previous year’s net loss of pikill.
$03,946 "A lot of people wonder where
Zahm said the main part of this that $107,746 income goes,"” said
se in Zahm. "The money never actually
profit was due to an iner
"regular board rates of eight percent,
and an increase in residence hall debts
VA
corpo
tion,
“It's hard to say whether board
rates will increase again next year, $0
but if they do they'll only go up a some of
minimum amoupt, It would took
is a non-profit membership
moves anywhere, [1's used to cover
from past years, or 't
reinvested."
“Next summi
ie major semodelin
this income from
vestments to cover the costs," &
plained Zahm.
The Campus Center ¢
cording to Za
jon that is contracted by
controller, bet
use cach group must
We want to do
feteria and
snackbar areas will be the main
focus of the remodeling efforts, ac-
Nanuer
Queens
Yonkers
Carle Place
Por
Aurhorivy
Brooklyn
CHARTED BUS SCHEDULE
FOR THANKSGIVING:
Leaving Circle
(Nov. 26) Time
3:30
3:30
Leaving
Designated
Meeting Spot
4:30
4:00
4:30
4:00
4:00
4:00
Tickets sold in Campus Center Lobby
Nov. 17, 18, 19, 20 9-2
sponsored by Delza Sigma Pi
deta gs?
Attention
Fuerza Latina is
having a
Teti Gemeral
Assembly
on
Nowember 17
at 7 p.m.
in BIO 248
November 14, 1980
Albany Student Press
——
Nominations now be-
ing accepted
Editor-in-Chief of the
ALBANY STUDENT
PRESS.
The Editor-in-Chief must
be a full time student at the
State University of New
York at Albany for Spring
Hand Fall 1981
for ==
—
EDITOR
in
CHIEF
Nominations must be
recieved in the Manag-
ing Editor's Mailbox
(CC 329) no later than
December 10,1980.
The election will take place
on December 11,1980. A\
members of the editorial
board are eligible to v«
Cae
i ae
Vee
Sexual Awareness Week
Schedule of Events
Monday
Non, 17
-About Rape
“Abortion
-What is the S.R.C.
Tuesday
Now. 18
-Homosexuality
-The Bisexual Option
-Phil Donahue Show
with Dr. Masters
2:30-4 in CC Assembly Hall |
4:30-6 in CC Assembly Hall
6:00-7 in CC 361
1:30-3 in CC 361
3:30-5 in CC 361
6:30-8 in CC Assembly Hall
Westnesday
New 19
<The 80's New Male
“Shattering the Sterotypes”
-Sex Related Health Care
Thursday
Now, 20
-Human Sexuality
A Religious Perspective
-Sexuality and the Disabled
Friday
Nov. 21
-Contraception 12;30-2 in CE Assembly Hall
-Sex-Do you want it or don't you” 3-4:30 in CC Assembly Hall
1:30-3 in CC Assembly
4:30-6 in CC Assembly
3-4:30 in CC Assembly Hall
5-6:30 in CC Assembly Hall
ALL FREE?
ALL WELCOME?
Sexuality Resource
Center- 457-8015
105 Schuyler Hall Dutch Quadt .
L.C. 2
ISO ; 51.00
Gax : S150
Otwer : $2.00
ISO Hillel and Speakers Forum presents:
Cynthia Ozick
Noted Jewish Author speaking on:
Ow Jewish Dreaming-
The Ar
ists Dilemma
Wednesday Nov. 19
8:00
Tickers on sale in CC Lobby
Monday, 11/17;
Tuesday, 11/18;
Wednesday, 11/19
or at the Boor
Shopping Magic in City’s Heart
by Sue Smith
Buried in the heart of Albany is a
corner of magic called Robinson
Square, This historic “shopping
center, located on Hamilton Street,
7/10 of a mile from the Empire
& News Feature
State Plaza, was remodeled’ from
the late nineteenth-century
brownstone Victorian-style homes
and resembles Boston's Beacon Hill
and Washington _D.C.’s
Georgetown.
Robinson Square is a place that
allows one to indulge in Godiva
chocolates, country clothing, fresh
flowers, French magazines, cheeses,
ari posters, hand-crafted wood-
Working, yogurt cookies, antiques,
fine dining, and smiling faces,
Walking along the brick-lined
Pavement with the potted trees and
shrubs on either side, shoppers are
warmly invited into the specialized
variety each shop offers.
Make yourself at home in front
Zealous lovers of Albany's history turned a tired city block...
F ters,
of the fireplace in a 19th-century-
style living room at The Dutch
Trader, a shop designed for the
“Dutch-at-Heart,"’ While you're
there look for wooden shoes,
Droste chocolate, and other special
delights,
Le Chocolatier is the shop that
sends persons of any age back into
childhood days as they walk past
the giant Crayola crayon inthe
chocolates, sweels, cards, and su
: chocolate hoilips, Love Let-
he initial of a loved one’in
pure solid chocolate,'’ small
{rasheans filled with London's
Gourmet Junkfood, chocolate
bingoboards, smiling lollipops, and
The People Bisquit, ‘*for those dog
days.""
Passing through time and
distance barriers, Posters Plus
Galleries offers posters for those
searching for Broadway show
posters to others looking for
classical art, This two-year-old shop
moved from Central Ayenue 10
Robinson Square in June 1978
Says the shopowners’ assistant,
“People touring from all over stop
here, New York Stale has the
highest number of publicly owned
fine art. This really helped us,""
Moving from the elite world of
ari (0 the world df downtown home
traditions, one finds Bonnie Cook's
antique shop, The Atbany Colle:
tion, According to Bonnie's hus-
band, 6 definitely the boss, 1
just work for Her on Saturdays, She
has been specializing in antiques for
three years. Her specialities are
clothing, dolls, and quilts (although
the store is chock-full of unique
items) that she collects all over the
\d Europe.
was motivated 10
Cheese Connection
because he's “never seen a shop like
this." This “gourmet’s delight”? hay
145 different kinds of cheeses and
open The
No Shortage of Nurses, Says Expert
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) The
United States has no shortage of
ys Jerome Lysaught, an
expert in the recruitment and reten=
tion of nurses,
“By any common indicators that
nurses,
economists or planners would use,
there is no shortage of nurses in the,
United States," Lysaught said
Thursday
Lysaught made his remarks at a
conference on the national nursing,
snortage sponsored by the Central
New York Hospital Association,
course will focus
SPN 205 B
Spanish for Native Speakers Part Il
writing skills and Hispanic culture
TTH 11:15-12%35 *3 credits
For further information contact
Wilma Feliciano at 457-8356
Citing studies that indicate 350
Nurses are needed for every 100,000
people, Lysaught said the
Hospital Association statis
there are 500 nurses per 100,000,
Americans,
The problem is keeping them
working, he said,
Seven out of evety 10 nursing
positions turns over every
Lysaught, a professor of educa
at ihe University of Rochester
“We don't do much to
tract
on reading and
pre
STATE UNIVERSITY THEATRE
An Evening of
Lanford Wilson
directed by Jerome Hanley
November 18-22 December 2-6
8 P.M.
Three one act plays by this year's
Pulitzer Prize playwright and author of
the Broadway hit Talley’s Foll
Tickets and information:457-8606:
$4 general admission
$3 student/faculty i.d
$2.50 sr. citizens
$2 w/tax card
FE. 4 STUDIO THEATRE
k PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
2 =
them to stay
1979, the ay
nurses was $6 an hour, | have found.
that workers in supermarkels can:
make as much as $11 an hour. Any.
sociely that pays grocery clerks as
much as nurses i in trouble,” he
classes iy no solution, he
“They're just running
same track, This method just pro:
duces more nurses who drop their
lice Lysaupht said
Page Five
ssinto the exciting, Victorian shopping strip of Robinson Square, -
represents all cheese-producing «
countries, Mouth-watering: pates,
truffles, and caviar await the cray-
ing pallet.
Pinnochio greets customers
‘among the ceramic masks, woven
hangings, and jewelry in The Craft-
works Gallery, Peek in the window
{0 see the old-fashioned police car.
After gazing, touching, and
browsing through the goods of
Robinson Square's 20 shops, The
Restaurant on Robinson Square
with its hanging palms and woodsy
aimosphere, offers shoppers the
chance for a leisurely break with
reasonably-priced and generously-
portioned meals,
Th er of Robinson Square
is that without spending a cent, you
ve walked away with more
than you came with. For this row of
shops deals with much more than
producis, I deals with people —
and with history. And once you
know thai history, you'll discover
how magical this place is,
(Nex! week the ASP looks at the
rebirth of a clly neighborhood —
the history of Robinson Square.)
Student Nurses Blast AMC
by Bruce Levy
Students ai the Albany Medical
Center Schoo! of Nursing have been
protesting what they feel are out-
onable living and
educational conditions.
Feeling thai the administration
has unsatisfactorily responded. to
dated and un
$1.00 OFF
with this coupon
No waiting 8 siylisis o serve you
Hours
Tuesday: Friday 8:00.6:00
Saturday 8,00-5:00
offer expires 12-41-80
489-180
(Sere seeersorsecrescos
STUYVESANT
HAIRSTYLISTS
Stuyvesant Plaza
ANY HAIRSTYLE FOR ALL STUDENTS
os
their demands, the siudent nurses:
are now considering walking off
their jobs, acording 10 a Knicker
hocker News article e
The administration agreed to
liberalize curfew restrictions but
Would nol give the nurses Christmas
off or allow member of the opposite
NDWICH
Get 1 Free
sex {0 visit the nurses’ dorms, with
the exception of relativ
The students haye decided to
form a local chapter of the National
Student Nurses Association,
The students and their parents
ire also planning to write letters to
stating their
the administrators,
complaints,
Nursing Schoo! Director Marie
Treutler was unavailable for com:
ment
Trailways
continued from front page
cabs, ele definitely affected their
business
Charier Sale
Usewick said the
will hopefully make up for the cost
of running the service,
“Increased ridership affects the
quality of the bus service. If people
really use this service, we may ex-
pand it," Usewick said, He men-
tioned the possibility that extra
direct lines to Long Island and New
York City may be added,
Another reason for the shutile
service, Troeger said, is to muke
everyone mote aware of Trailways
service, especially the new routes
westbound
In addition, Troeger said similar
student shuttles have worked 2x-
tremely well in Oneonta and Dethi,
iudents mean a lot 10 us. On
weekends they are 50 percent of our
business, We hope to increase this
percentage."
For the Thanksgiving break,
‘Troeger sald buses will run Wednes-
day (instead of
3:15 and 6:15 p.m,
Director Dennis.
ased business.
| SA FUNDED _
Wc HAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREK
THERE IS NO A TURNING Back ~
amy
§.50K/ou"
|
Dear Rich,
The Woys
FOVEPVUTTITTUTUNNTVOUUTUUOUNTOOOUUUUUOUOOOOOOUUUUTOOUOUULOUUOPOUUUUUUUUCOVONOUULOLUUUOUOO OOO
TOE HGDHGTTER
Every Week
Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun,
LADIES NIGHTS No Cover
‘Draft- .25' Mixed Drinks- .50° Miller- .60°
Adirondack Late Nite Flyers
Friday-Saturday
Monday Mens Nire
Drafr- .29°
‘Come on home ro
where rhe country is’
—___ 456-9728
(om The Mouselnap «.
Wine and Gide Place
WY
SS
Judi Gartink
& Mark Diettontived
wore On Te
ay wy n lap
Vouturing Soft Bath
Noyember 14 & 15
CAMPUS CENTER
FRIDAY AND
9PM, TO.1) AM.
UMIVHISIEY AUNILIANY SHIEICLS
TROON ROOM
TURDAY
PRE-REGISTRATION?
YES!
ITALIAN CINEMA 318
5:45 to 8:35 (or beyond)-for students with laliar
language understanding
November 14, 1980
Albany Student Press
Page Seven
The Subject Was Safety at Meeting of Feminists
by Nora Kirby
The Feminist Alliance held a
meeting last Wednesday night in the
humanities lounge to discuss plans
women's safely on
campus and in Albany. Alliance
Chairperson Noreen McKeon said
she was disappointed with the tur-
nout of approximatly 30 students,
who were mostly women,
fastives. from A\
‘ampus Asso
Present al the m
ing plan
faction. They
fers (0 Mayor Erastus
ing him 10 pass the
5 in Albany. Letters will also
be seni to the parents of all students
asking them to pressure the Mayor
and the SUNYA administration 10
take action to make Albany and the
campus safer,
The third project the groups plan
isan attempt to get media coverage.
One student suggested trying to get
‘on the *Today’’ show. Another
student who works for the Albany
County Public Library may be able
ington Hotel suggested th:
bus stop be moved closer to the
hotel so it is visible from the lobby.
An emergency phone
installed on campus that provide
direct line to security for an
who needs help. McKeon appealed
to those at the meeting (0 ask peo-
ple not 10 abuse the phones because
the money is not available for
repairs,
Since the creation in September
1979 of SUNYA President
O'Leary's task force on safety,
lighting has been improved and a
full time police officer has been put
on duty at the downtown campus’
Draper Hall, and SUNYA security
has provided a student escort ser
vice
The task force has also sponsored
Self-defense classes for women,
There was a poor showing at most
Of them except the one at Draper
Where the problem is most im
mediate. The next class will be held
on Wednesday, November 19 from
2:30 p.m, to 4:00 p.m, in the Page
Hall gym,
McKeon stressed that students
must keep pressuring the university
‘and the Mayor
safely is not a
McKeon complained that the task
force did not take action “until a
rape occurred”?
The next Feminist Alliance
meeting on Women's safety will be
held on Wednesday, November $9,
and is open to the public.
-Gay - Lesbian Alliance
Releases Findings of
Sexual Harassment Poll
by Susan Milligan
mophobia on
ind Lesbian Alliar
Mike MePartlin. The group just
finished {allying results of their
campus-wide poll regarding
Homosexual harassment, and ty
When you need some
notes at3:00a.m., you find out
who your friends are.
found “many cases of discrimina-
tion and harassme
rths of the
have heard a
I of thal group are in faci
heterosexual, =
More half of those
surveyed h
verbally
y
#Hulf of those questioned who.
consider themselves homusextial oF
bisexmal have personally: b
objec! of verbal or phy
ment becuse of their
homosexuality.
One fourth of the
Who consider
homosexual know 4
encountered aude
iiination ab SUNY:
persons fico
ured
(questioned
io be
mie Who
or job
Hou due’ (0: hel
sexuality
© attended a cli
dents have
marks once
which oth
students with no Italan derogatory
Th., 5:45 to 8:35 (ibid.)-for
language understanding
ITALIAN CINEMA 318
is
TAUGHT IN ENGLISH
FILMS ARE SHOWN IN THE ORIGINAL-WITH
ENGLISH SUBTITLES
NO PREREQUISITES!
Undergradrate as well a5 Graduate
students are welcome
FILMS:
Open city
L’Amore
La Terra Trema
Senso
Bicycle Thief
Umberto D.
I Vitelloni
La Dolce Vita
Accattone
The Gospel According
‘ning homosexuals oF
y
ent of those
ridiculed for mentioning
pian Loples in class
) percent have been
ridiculed at work
eOne-fourth of thos
eyed
10 the survey
respond
ed 0 14
about their
DIRECTORS: 1
Roberto Rossellini
Luchino Visconti
Vittorio De Sica
Federico Fellini
P.P. Pasolini
Michelangelo Antonioni
sexual preference on
campus
*One:
If of those who anwered
ed 10 having
5. ‘ATE
B-LOUNGE
vent SAT. NOW. 15 it aa
La Notte Glapter 6, Someone you'know
Eclipse 9) py» is about to get a phone call
Red-Desert He's not going to like it, but he’s
4125 u/ rock’ T’ shirt & Tax card
voing to come through, Whe
CLASSROOM: HU-133 going to come through, When
$150u/ railher $100 w bah
eS faded
half of those questibned
hot aware that a SUNYA'
prohibit
s of sex
diseriminal
GREAT ITALIAN FILM
DIRECTORS
IN ITALIAN CINEMA
AS LITERATURE
You left the notes for
chapter Gin the library, A sure
Lesbian Task Force will study the
nd the im:
In addi-
results of the 3
plications of those
tion, the state-widi
ing Action Committee
es a need for the housing office
and dorm advisors “to give more
consideration to the problems gays
continued on page thirteen
, this is over, do something
ITALIAN CIVILIZATION 315 special for him. ‘Tonight, let it
no prerequisits if taken in English
be Lowenbrau,
| Mondays 5:45-8:05 pm
y : = ;
q - - ' i —— In apparent contradiction,
i j granny bashing _ however, $7 percent of the doctors,
{ also said they could conceive of a”
ee 2 eee Ss | JC PRODUCTIONS and METROLAND The Los Angelos Times reports diagnosis which—in the name of
i When tend has 2 tiple guitar ax : g3 - that “granny bashing" is a serious, 4 4 patriotism—they would probably.
Y te hood is the mumibex 3 origi sarikin sail tm SOTHERN NEW Present an evening with sowie probe petonyiay) In one case, The Times says, a go unreported, The Times says, {inols recently diagnosed breast , MAKE public, even against the can-
i ENGLAND Saar donee vont fs & form of nineteen-year-old. woman beat her because the abused parent i asham- ' cancer in an li-year-old girl, bellev- Cidate's wishes, Among the eondi-
[ & And will become the premier tational ax of 19% DAVID oe Asie ee Aieatold father with a hammer ed of being a victim or afraid of ed to be the youngest patient ever to ars She mae val
Toe 2 fav = and then chained him to a toilet for retaliation, . LAUT Cle]
i & Pad whe will be operiing the evening with 2 bee kez gue Parents senseless; and Richard seven days. In another case, a Husa a The Tbune cater, Cece cueabiins conaltlon auch es
i puny Gelles, University oO ee Misty dha. }
| ay oe an) pf, Rhode 74-year-old woman was kept locked have a cup tributevrising breast cancer rates to uliple sclerosis
if WIPRO na Ane aks : in the basement and was beaten by high fat diets and the fact that
alfa ‘aged Americans are her family whenever she tried o | Contraception could be just 8 women are postponing child bear- ¢sn again
} _—— hysically abused bytheir families e ce i
i come out. Such cases are not cup of tea away. ing. Early pregnancies reportedly
} . unusual, according to Helen Chinese herbalist Dr. Y.C. Kong reduce the risk of breast cancer, Crosby, [ls and Nash are recor-
November 14, 1980
O'Malley, a researched with Boston
Elderly Services. O'Mally says,
“We've found that in most cases
there was unreasonable confine:
it, over-sedation and even sex
val abuse."?
gic Kuhn, founder of th
Militant Senior Citizens Group,
The Gray Panthers, says adult
children who beat their parents
often are und
the stress of caring
for the aged parent—a stress which
can “eventually lead 10 “anger,
frustration and violence.
Many cases of granny bashing?
Albany Student Press
‘Page Nine ©
‘of Hong Kong's Chinese University
says scientists have found a
morning-after plant that works as a
contraceptive when drunk as a tea,
However, The Tribune says the
case of the 11-year-oldvgirl may be
the start of a new, unexplained
trend in younger breast cancer vic~
tims,
sick of pres.
Should candidates running for
President of the United States be re-
quired to reveal any dical
problems they have!
Most doctors apparently are
against this idea, More fan half of
550 physicians questioned in a poll
by Medical World News say they
erious m
ding together for the first time in
more than two years.
David Crosby, Steve Stills and
Graham Nash are reported to be
Working in Nash's Hollywood
recording studio on a new album
le eae >) oppose the passage of any law that for Atlantic records,
moral majority move Alihlough Kong has reluyed 4 would require US Presidential The LP will be the first by the
( se 3 reveal the plant’s identity until fur didates 10 make the state of thelr group since thei 1977 hit album
See m at t ther research is complete, he claims health known in detail “CS.N,!
/ Following its political success in Moral Majority's Vice President | women could easily grow it wy make
| HULLA- | aaa = moral majority organization is set earmarked half-acmillion dollars ‘ong is the director of the Hong
‘ ie BALOO | Saturday * November 22 © 8 P.M. ts sis on 2 The fora etude to ue TV—tn Gu | Kong brash OF Baraat
for their last appearance for 1980. _ || Coliseum Theatre Latham Si ap hw Sets MP wae moe ru af Wa Sm ue dn and
$1.00 admissionvith SUNYA ID | Le Rete #8 20 eee 00 ctl rt eh See nua Cw cancer boom [nin yennen site in Hoven Teint elo
=p = = Right,’" plans to hire a pollster fora ting General Foods and American decision not to accept an advertise» Kathleen Boyer, eonvineed student
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1980
1006 6th st. Renselear N.Y
(518)436-1640
——-
Tickets available at.
Coliseum Box Office
All Ticketron Outiets
the recent national elections, the
survey next month to determine
which programs viewers find the
most objectionable
According to The Wall Sireet
Journal, advertisers will then be
Is
asked (0 stop buying commerc
1 these shows; and companies that
don't give in face boycotts of their
products
Ronald Godwin says his group has
Home Products because those wo
companies sponsors such shows as
"Da Charlie's Angels?” and.
“Three's Company."
Warner-Lambert was tecently
dropped from the church's boycoit
list, but only after the company
Stopped advertising during
fea in order 10 ayoid conceiving
Breast Vineet is reportedly
spreading to women of all age
groups
The Chicago Tribune reports that
doctors attending a conference of
the Amer
expressed concern that breast
an College of Surgeons
cancer, which once primarily struck
r
military recruiters,
publication, called The
Quad, tejected an ad from the
military ad snuffed )
government Ie
Fecruiting ad was rejected on the
same basis (hat the newspaper ti
feverve officer (raining corps on the down ads considered “obscene
ground that the ad was and those for illegal term paper
and “exploitive,"” sales.
The college's student government The Quad editorial board hay
provides about $8XX) (dollars) a agreed thal, in the future, any ad
year in funding 10 the Hewspaper; submitted by the military, will be
“misteadiny
F i ee BUG LU De EG, Tt MTKIOe Tide sulent govetnment qulekly,sereeied andl says (he al wil be ac-
| UCD ¢ QUO weseome IN THEIR FIRST te ae ea rent oe iG Gell
ve Leda bles os oe doctors at Evanston Hospital in tls (Quad to ston rejecting military ads, | misleading?” or “explotive
i — AREA APPEARANCE EN SLOn I CINEMe BURL
: 2 £ 899 — 4309
Accident
continued from front page
Darlin.
Deb
law which says a service revolver
may not be in the possession of one
Who is not a sworn police officer, In
this case there was no problem in
anyone trying to follow this exact
THE s,
ros Mb
Eis ;
ty
vet .)
Xx ELEPHANT (gi Zags :
ia You ‘Tn retrospect, the incident to
Which Rainville was responding was
not very serious but it must always
ld ——-—
* Post Time Turtle Races «x
be anticipated ay such," Henighan,
said, "The problem,
ting in a bizarre
{ funny love story
ZIP-A-DEE-DOO-DAH!
is still in its planning stages. The
purpose of this meeting was (0 get
feedback from the §
changes,.if any, shoudl be made,
Nussbaum said -that meetings to
discuss the proposal will be held
# weekly until a’final plan is made,
Specially Reduced Prices on Drinks}} ‘We shoutd be teady to insti
“REE FINLANDIA :T Shirts the bo i in about a month,’
Fi E : predicted,
Golf Hats sii Hats
CINE 1:2:3:4:5-6
fT 58187 > NORTHWAY MALL © COLONIE
ee AND M Ol) Po at the LAMPPOST (Aegis Hel ee
RAV E N S He added, Due to the extensive
x * * ' fl .
SCREAM *Special Prize for entering LGC CED
* Prizes for your turtle WinnMing]} éesisionand we do not mow at this
continued from page three
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT as:
Record Coop t $ THE LAMPPOST TURTLE”
Polace Box office ‘
Tox A- Song Tickets on sale at
Drome Sovona Quad Dinner lines e 2
*
| Seconds of Pleasure
eeks of Tour Ng
@
AND THE = Eee
HE 4 ' +: by a dorm staff member
* vr R SILENT * Prizes for bringing a turtle sie es
| N eC: your own turtle he ae
DAY Ov EMBER Zl 6:00 PM Gal 1S My Tiny time what will happen.’”
ALACE THE AYRE — Easy to reach & SUNYA bus = . 9:00 Starting Time =, SA Aims
| “CHALLENGE
no turtle soup available
originated byFinlandia vodka
on Sunday & Monday WITH TRAX CARD
(ONE TICKET PER TAK CARD) WITHOUT |
P
‘Mom get well soon,
Love; SAG
evenine¢
SP FUNDED
We Will Not Yield
Gary Silverman
University Senator
This past Wednesday we went before a
Senate commission, asking for continued
Student representation on the Senate, Per-
Sonally, I have a problem with this request.
I find it hard to ask for, what would nor-
mally appear to be a natural right, Yet, as
we have seen in both the history of our
country and our university, political rights
must be fought for. The faculty’s wish to
grant Us representation and review it every
two years,seems (0 be as ludicrious as a bi-
yearly review of civil rights or sufferage.
This university is as much ours as itis the
faculty's, It is felt, by a few faculty
Members, not the students representative
body is the central council and that the
Senate should be exclusively theirs. This
opinion is absurd. Senate decisions effect
the entire university, whereas the central
council only effects the students. Clearly
the issue here is not the division of power
but rather, our ability to retain a democracy
in this university. Will we allow the univer-
sity 10 riv/ed? Can we allow an authoritarion
body to make our decisions? 1 say no! and
the student body will say =< no!
We only want what is fair, For too long
we have made concessions and subor-
dinated our views. The time has come for a
change. The student body will accept
nothing less than full representation. But by
this we do not mean a student take over, or
even a 50-50 student-to-faculty ratio
{although that proposal might make the
most sense). We ask, no, demand, that the
status quo be maintained, This means that
the faculty would still outnumber student
reps by almost 2-to-1, We deserve nothing
less and we will stand for nothing less.
If the faculty chooses (o reduce the
number of students, thus rendering our
yoice meaningless, they may force us to
concentrate our power on areas outside of
the system. A reduction of senators, might
bring about the withdrawal of those they
allow. The harmonous relations which
might have existed will cense to, and then
the possibility for conflict will exist. The
tense atmosphere which will ensue might
cause the break-down of faculty-student
communication, If this situation does not
seem threatening, one nceds‘only to look at
the violence and turmoil that existed prior
to student representation,
The point 1 am trying to make is this: the
faculty should not, and cannot,
underestimate the power of the organized
student body; We are ten thousand strong,
and if all will not participate, a substantial
number will, at least enough to make a dif-
ference, I pledge that we will rise to this oc-
casion, Mobilization can take place, and
if necessary. The lobbying by students
to stop the budget cuts, and the rally at the
capitol are only some of the examples of
our ability to take action,
History has shown that when basic fun-
damental rights were granted and then
revoked, mass rebellion has occured. This is
{rue of the United States, Americans refuse
to allow their voices to be repressed and we
are no exception. The student voice will be
heard, and the faculty's decision will reflect
where it will be heard. University Senate
can function with student members, this is a
proven fact. Therefore, the faculty can
cither allow us to remain a viable part of he
University community, and the decision
making process, or alienate us, causing the
Fepression of free speech and the free flow
of ideas, The choice will receive a set of
proposals concering student representation,
and senate structure, They will be asked 10
order their preferences, choosing from
Various options. 1 urge them to consider
these choices and make a wise decision,
Wednesday's meeting was filled with
students and the support for this issue is
growing, The faculty's vote will serve to
create the aimosphere which will exist on
campus. If we are expelled, then the
hundred at the meeting will become a thou-
sand. If a fight is what is necessary then that
is what will take place. The students will
prove that the faculty cannot end our
Fepresentation with the stroke of a pen or
the raising of a few hands,
UCB & QBK
To the Editor
We can sympathize with Jim Diamond
and WCDB, but we feel that he is not fac-
ing the situation realistically, By co-spon-
soring the Rockpile concert with WQBK,
Mr. Montanaro was acting on his better
judgement, and on behalf of the University
fas a whole, If, by using these methods he
ccan secure better responses o UCB. spon-
sored events, it is to everyone's benefit,
As well as working with the university,
‘community, UCB works with the real world
to a much higher degree than probably any
other S.A. funded organization, In a world
of highly paid performers and profit seck-
ing competition, a non-profit organization
such as UCB must seek more efficient
methods of promoting and selling its pro-
duct, In reality, this move is a positive step
for UCB. Working, as it does, on a loss
basis, any actions UCB takes to improve its
income will.benefit S.A. and the whole
university community. The gain from such
an improvement would not be profit, it
would go directly back to the students in the
form of more UCB sponsored events.
Wouldn't it be nice if UCB could tell con-
troller Somach that they did nor lose money
on an engagement? Any such improvement
would reduce the drain on S.A, funds and
make UCB events less risky
In his letter to the editor (Nov, 11), Mr
Diamond said, “You've got to sacrifice
something to be unified,"* We feel another
sacrifice comparable to the $11,000 loss
from the Marshall Tucker Band concert is
too much to make, Maybe WCDB should
make a sacrifice and understand.
obert Folehetti
—Thomas Lustik
—Douglas Wolf
__Let’s Be Serious _
To the Editor:
This letter is in response to Jeanne
Marty's (Nov. 11) letter condemning .
But Seriously Folks, Just because Marry
dislikes the editor of ... But Seriously
Folks and took offense at an article about
Pop's Pizza, she insults the entire
magazine. Obviously ... But Seriously
Folks. is_not National Lampoon. The
writers did the best job they could. In fact, 1
have eyen received a few compliments on an
article 1 wrote for the magazine, Apparently
not éveryone shares Marty's view that .
But Seriously Folks is a waste of time
If Marry does not like the magazine she
does.not have to read it. Better yet, I would
like {0 see Marry write a humorous article
viewpoint
0 we can all see how funny she can be.
Any moron can criticize other peoples
work, the trick is to come up with
something better. I would like to see Jeanne
Marry come up with something be
(Judging from her humorless letter to 1
ASP, I doubt she can.)
—Andy Schaeffer
Peace Week _
To the Editor:
Each day this country moves closer to
nuclear apocalypse. Although we alread
aye 9200 strategic nuclear, and 20,000) 1a
tical nuclear warheads, we irrationally pr
duce three to six more nuclear weapon:
day, To add to this insanity, our politician
like President-elect Ronald Reagan, talk in
terms of escalating the nuclear arms race
Vice President-elect George Bush talk
about “ winning" a nuclear war.
“The U.S. is planning for a nucle
war,”” says retired Rear Admiral G
LaRoque. ‘We have nuclearized our
ventional forces. Seventy percent of ou
naval combatants carry nucleal w
and Navy officers are prepared t0
them
Buta nuclear war cannot be won,
survived. A recent top-level U.S, govern
ment study concluded that, at a minimurs
140. million people in the US and 113
million people in the USSR would be killed
in a nuclear war. In such a conflict, th
analysis concluded, ‘neither side
conceivably be described as a winner
According to Wednesday's New Yor
Times, President-elect Ronald Reagan's r
tional security ddvisers have advised tha
“the United States needs to have ‘sulic
military standing to cope with any Jeve
voilence’ around the globe.’ "
Our bodies are what the military is he
ing will give’ us “sufficient military stan
ding," This is what draft registration is al
about.
The SUNYA Peace Project is an
Ofganization attempting to come to grip
With:these grave problems. Qur purpose i
to promote peaceful relations of the United
States throughout the world and {o educat
n the importance of non-violently solving
our problems. Obviously, the above fact
show that our government is not attempting
to deal with world problems non-violently
but instead advocates the use’of destructive
and senseless force.
Thus, November 17-21 has been declared
“Peace Week" by the SUNYA Peace Prc
ject. The purpose of ‘'Peace Weck
educate people on various aspects of war
and peace. The events planned to achiev
this goal are:
*Tabling in the campus centc
MUSIC REMINDS HE OF GIRLS.
How IM GOIWS
THIS OOT.
How
Does
Religion
Effect
You?
See Centerfold
Columns
Ribbons
Of Euphoria
Waterbury
Dining
Reviews
Stuntman
Muddy Waters
George
Thorogood
Joan Jette
Diversions
Hubert shoots,
Fred fails
& MOPECo.
| worth of
Seniors.
What's the best way yo Go
To senior Week for free?
= _ WIN! The Class of '81
T-shirt design & slogan contest.
Resign a T-shirt or come up with
.a slogan for our senior year
Ist prize 2nd prize
$25.00 $19.81
worth of’
senior week tickets senior week tickets
Bring your entries ro the SA office (CC116) Questions?
Call Gary Scharsky or Frank Bairman ar 7-8088
Are You Thinking
OF, A Career In Law?
Are you rired of waiting for a
Pre-Law advisement APPOINTMENT?
The Pre-Law Association's Peer
wdsisement Office, in the rear of
CUE, is now open on a walk-in basis,
weekdays from 100m bpm.
Use us...We Can Help
For further information
call our office al 457-8340
ot Chis Beny at 457-7782
ive
= ist day Mur
rae
= "THE LOUDER ANE COnNA TURN THIS PaRTouT
fala, ION Ge ea
HENWAYS U-LOUNGE
GF pm?
1.50 w >
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i
AS 2.00 w four
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Wit rer! dS
LY BE THE LOUDER
=F 15, You Miss Ours
59 FUNDED You miss 7H, 5 OUTY
TALKING
HEADS
More Songs About
Buildings And Food
Gy
SCHENECTADY
483 State St.
*377-2802
ALBANY
211 Central Ave. 446
434-0085
SARATOGA
583-8884
Pst MITCHELL
My
Grateful Dead
WORKINGMAN'S DEAD
BONNIE RAITT
Sweet Forgiveness
(eeiafineiny
ASE a
‘bate ac ce iy
ae?
THESE ALBUMS OR TAPES
Hong
SALE ENDS SUNDAY 11-16
GLENS FALLS
234 Glen St.
798-6055
HOURS
Mon-Fri 10-9
Sat 10-6, Sun 12-5
Broadway
id
November 14; 1980:
= The Student Notebook
Ribbons Of Euphoria
It was the 90th day without a woman and
Eb was forlorn. How was he to break such a
streak? Maybe it was in the stars, or maybe in
his hate
So Eb grubbed up three-fifty and went
across the street to Sam the Barber. Eb
always felt sorry {or Sam the Barber because
every time he walked by and looked in the
window, Sam would be sitting alone in the
dimly lit shop reading the paper. Every time
Eb walked by, Sam would look up from
teading the paper, thinking he had a
customer. But Eb would always speed up his
pace and look away.
But today was different. Today Eb would
walk by the little shop and when Sam looked.
up from reading the paper, Eb would smile
and walk in. Yes, today Sam the Barber
would have a customer
Unfortunately, it was Sunday
Cal Klein sweater, brushed his teeth, match-
ed his socks and tied his sneakers, A quick
glance in the rust and spit framed bathroom,
mirror gave him the encouragement he
needed. It was sure to work,
Eb even felt different. He was reborn. He
was also ten minutes late for class, Grabbing
his Jacket, he dashed madly out the door
‘Just as Eb was fying out the door, a jogger
was running at full speed up the street, The
two collided, sending the jogger into the
bushes and Eb into a fresh, oozing puddle of
thick mud, The bags of garbage he knocked
over in fight ripped open and coated him
like papier mache. Slowly, he struggled to
his feet and two blocks away, a little old lady
cringed at the echo of Eb's profanity,
It was the 104th day without a woman and
getting desperaie, He'd tried
“The 90th Day
everything. He'd even gone to 8 Colonial
Quad party, He was about to abandon all
hope when something happened, It was
right after Felix's back gave out and Oscar
was going o have to cook in the contest
when Joe-the-roommate made the brilliant
observation: “Hey, Eb. 1 think i's those
sleazy Joints you been hanging out a.’
"Yeah?"
“Yeah,”
A litle lightbulb went off in Eb's brain.,"Of
course!” he thought. “It's those sleazy joints |
been hanging out ail” Suddenly, it was all s0
obvious! The reason Eb hadn't met any de-
cent women was because Eb was never in
any decent places, No more sleazy bars for
him; from here on in it would be at least third
class all the way,
The following Saturday was beautiful
Everyone. was going to a weekend-
and Sam was closed on Sunday
Eb's haircut would have to wait
another 24 hours,
But Eb,
about the haircut on Monday. In.
thinking maybe his
problem was the way he dressed
Maybe, just maybe, g
tured on by ripped jean
T-shirts. Eb didn't take this notion
too seriously, but then again, 90)
days was a long time. Eb thought.
“What the hell
something.”
Tuesday dawned murky. It had
been raining all night and today
But Eb
was determined to go through with
the new approach. He was going
fo try a whole new routine. He
Woke up, actually showered and
Joe-his:
being Eb, forgot all
= stead, he w
Gotta try,
promised to be the same.
shaved; borrowed
long multi-keg party at Dippikill
Everyone except Eb, With: clean
iclothes and clean nails, Eb was off
to the library, With his accounting
text tucked safely under his left
jarm, and My ret Garden under
ithe right, Eb trotted uptown. He
had blow-dried his hair to that
looks-wind-blown-but-still-neat
stage. His shoes matched and he
felt confident,
mastered some
He had even
library opening
lines the night before, His favorites
were, “I can really relate 10
Raskolnikov, you know?" and “I
just Jove that soft buzzing of the
lights, don’t you?"
Eb got off at the gym, even
though Dutch would have been
closer. Bul Eb always got off at the
gym, because he hoped the
ails on the
that he was a swimmer or a
roommate's pressed corduroys and
Connoisseur Obesiere
I would have liked to have addressed you,
dear readers, under happier circumstances,
but unfortunately the dark hand of fate hath
intervened, You see, three Fridays ago, after
publication of my eritique of State Quad's
to offer the food a
dining facilities, I retur
chance for vindjeation, But this was not to be
the case
Rather than receiving a congratulatory
smile or warm accolades, | was greeted
with cold shoulders and not-too-friendly
Warnings about fuiure reviews
Not to ignore the constructive suggestio
my readership, | left in a hurry
my seat, unaware of what was to come.
My first bite was a shock, I didn’t have to
tip and tear the meat off the pattie like an
‘ape with a gazelle part. The meat was actual
ly pink and almost tender. It tasted like real
ground beef, The dressing was perfectly
blended and not acidic, It was rapture
I gambled thai something else might taste
just as good. Swifily | went to the soup
cauldron, before someone wok
this dream, It was vegetable soup, Real
fresh, honest vegetable soup. | returned to
elp but cry out in
fot that it was a con
me from
my seat and couldn’
delight at the taste
bus would. think’
Wrestler. Girls were always Impressed by
swimmers or wrestlers, at least the girls Eb
always met. That was how he met Flo: he
had’lled and told her that he was a varsity
wrestler, But Flo found out he was lying
when she pinned him once in a minute and a
half,
Besides, the brisk walk to the library would
tedden his cheeks and give him that out-
doorsy look
Eb was surprised at how crowded the
library was, But then, the last time Eb had *
been to the library was three years ago dur-
{ng orientation, Somehow, it didn't look
familiar
There were no seats in the lounge, so Eb
found a desk in the back, Opening his ac-
counting book, Eb looked around, surveying
the territory, Nothing. Maybe this wasn't the
Way to go about It. Maybe he should just go
back to —
Suddenly, a beautiful female caught Eb's
eye, interrupting his train. of thought and
causing 2 small amount of spitile to seep
from his lip and run down his chin, The
female sat down next to him, smiling, Eb
wiped his chin conspicuously, He was smil-
ing} too. Leaning closer, she whispered,
“Are you studying for the test in 211?" Eb's
lips formed the word "yes" but his vocal
cords forgo! to send up the appropriate
sound. Nothing came out, Eb felt foolish sit-
ting there, nodding his head, mouthing the
word But the female didn't seem to
notice, She was too busy bending over,
teaching for the textbook, Eb, in his excite-
ment, blurted something about Edgar Allen
Poems, astro:physies and how he preferred
black holes. The woman in Eb's accounting
clas leah along caldiootiessreasians
ed away,
NEXT WI
Woman
112 Days Without 4
‘ Sebastian Caldwell Spalding Ii}
A Dining Critique Of Chateau Waterbury
chew their food more slowly and drink by
sipping and not guzzling. Theirs was an at«
titude of feeding their bodily temples rather
than nuzzling slop as fast as they could.
I mentioned before that the food i
markedly better. This | do not attribute to
some magical skill on the part of the cooks at
Waterbury, but rather to the fact that the por
tions they must cook are smaller and,
are cooked in a more common’
therefore,
fashion, 1 would guess that these chefs stir
thelr soups and sauces with spoons and not
oars
And now the famous Spalding scale:
Thinking that if at anymore on
State Quad or perhaps any of the other up
ild be in peril, | fled
was here J
town quads, my |
eastward, toward Alumni, It
found something amazing about this tiny lt
tle island in a swamp of lower midd
the food here isn’t that bad!
Let me qualify this, 1 do not mean thot itis
any different from the food uptown, nor do!
claim that it 's of better quality. What Is so
pleasing about this food is that it tastes like it
has been prepared individually, not by the
hundreds
My first meal was lunch, There were the
usual hot lunch items — ground beef patties,
weiners and pot pies. [took my usual double
decker hamburger and went to the condi
ment counter to get my chopped onions and
Russian dressing, Filling two glasses of soda
water (the only substitute for Perries), 1 took.
in chowderdom or bisque-making, but
far exceeded my expectations
I finally settled down and began to ex
amine my surroundings, The first feature 1
noticed was the ceiling. It was clean, made of
acoustic tile, and not covered with
mysterious white squares (inverted butter
paities). Hanging from these ceilings were
chandeliers. Although they were riot crystal
{they had gaudy Inile brass shades on each
of the bulbs), they were a welcome selief
from those god-awtul flying saucer light fix
tures which plague the uptown quads.
The people that dine here are another in
teresting feature. Although they appear to be
no different from other students, their dining
behavior was quite the opposite of their up:
town brethren. | noticed a perceptibly lower
noise level and a generally more relaxed at
titude about their seating. These students
Service . (still no waiters) 0
nliness and sanitation aa)
Menu (variety and cuisine). 2
Preparation of food 5
Variety of appetizers, ete, 3
Taste and quality of meal 5
Price 7
Ambience oh
otal (out of a possible 80) 32
While certainly not a Four Seasons or ¢
Windows on the World, Chateau Waterbury
does have some advantages over the up-
town quad cafeterias, The fixtures, acoustic
tiles and pseudo-elegant surroundings add
much to the experience. By far the most im:
pressive feature is the clientele, There is a
Jack of tension and anxiety surrounding:
eatery, making i! an almost normal diner and
not a ‘choke and puke” bar and grill, @
In using myth, one must take
care not to confuse the image
With fact, which would be like
climbing up the signpost in-
stead of following the road.”
— Philosopher Alan Watts
JSC-Hillel: One of the largest
6) Fhe Jewish Student Coslition
F (JSC)-Hillel is one of the largest
and most diverse groups on cam>
pus. I's 375 members fall into every level of
the political spectrum,
To meet the needs of is members, and the
needs of the university community as
whole, JSC-Hillel is composed of fourteen
Cindy Greisdorf
Fommittees, According (o the group's presi
dent, Marla Oberlander, the most popular
committee of the coalition ts Students for
Israel, This group is designed for people con:
The JSC-Hillel membership fee is $6 per
year. Membership privileges include a dis:
count at all group events and a subscription
to thelr monthly newspaper, The Spirit, The
group has a 40 member general board and a
five member executive board that is elected
Jn the spring. They receive $11,035 from
student association funds; In addition, they
generate $5,000 of thelr own income
According to one member of the group,
JSC-Hillel is very low-key, “t's not a radical
organization," he said, “they don't send you
a letter every year telling you to renew your
membership. My participation In the group
was limited to the bowling league and
Members feel that JSC is
low pressure — if you
just want to be ona
bowling team, they won't
ask for more.
Perhaps the most unique and Innovative
program offered by JSC-Hilllel is the Free
University. These informal, noncredit
minicourses are run by the cultural commit
tee, "Wher people join the group we ask
them what they'd be interested in,” explain
ed Oberlander. “We try {0 do things that you
wouldn't ordinarily have on campus,” About
five courses are offered each semester and
they are taught by students or community
leaders,
JSC-Hillel Is constantly trying to offer
more activities to the university community
“We hope to start a Shabbat (Sabbath) din
ner every Friday night."said Oberlander,
“We're also trying to start a choir.”
The group is also trying to work more
closely with other Student Association
groups. According to Oberlander, when
some JSC-Hillel members learned that a
speaker lecturing on OPEC would be in the
‘Albany area in December, they approached
NYPRIG with the suggestion that he speak
on campus. NYPRIG will sponsor two lec
tures, one of which is called Oil and US
Forelan Policy:Implications for Israel and the
Middle East. “We feel that it's important to
be aware of what's going on in the world,”
Oberlander said
eligion — Organized and Not — Its Impact on Students
Campus Crusade for Christ: Open to outsiders
wes falling apart. | was having
COO fyerorsers wits school, my folks and
my friends, And then a girl { knew
asked me {0 go with her to a movie
At the end of the film, a prayer flashed on
the screen and I was invited to ask Jesus to
come into my life
“Y'm Jewish. But | figured 1 didn't have
anything to lose, so | prayed to Him and ask
‘ed Him to help me. Later that night | walked
on the podium, and something had happen.
ed, My confusion had halted, the emptiness
was gone, | was at peace. That was last
March, and I've been growing in the Lord
ever since,”
That night Steve Brickman was “born
again” during the Crusade sponsored film
Dream Weaver. He became involved in the
SUNYA® chapter of the international
organization, Campus Crusade for Christ
(CCC)
Marie Cortissoz
although it clearly hias a social side. Those in
volved are Christians with a shared purpose
that of “making the gospel of Jesus Christ
known and helping Christians to grow in
God" explained Fred Hitchcock, the
organization's president. As staff member
Doug Anderson says, “T
to be a part of Crusade if you weren't
evangelistic.”
The SA recognized group of about 50
holds bible study classes, a regular "Colle
Life” meeting every week, and sponsor
of the gather
ings are designed with the idea of sharing the
'd be no reason
various social activities, Man}
belief in Jesus with others. Crusade en.
courages bringing people to activities, and
this seems to be the way that most student:
cemed about or interested in Israel, I's ac
tivities range from discussing Aliyah
(settlement in Israel) to sponsoring an Israeli
coffeehouse
Oberlander added that every commitice’s
popularity varies according to the activity Its
currently sponsoring. She stressed that non
Jewish member are welcomed by the group.
‘You don't have to be Jewish to join JSC
Hillel,” she said; "you can even be a com
inittee ehairperson If you're a non-jew."
nobody ever pressured me to get more in
ices," Zionism. “But the general board Is very
representative of the group asa whole,"she tending the church they have always gor
share in the use of the Chapel House located added. "With forty people you can rarely to. So, what binds them together? Virtual
but we do our all those Involved with Crusade share the
volved or to go to
JSC-Hille! pays about $1,000 per year to
‘Oberlander said
Oberlander admitted thot
sometimes occur
because of politic
on the Perimeter Road behind the physical agree on something totally
education building. Chapel House is run by best,”
the Chapel House Interfaith Committee,
which consists of Jews, Lutherans, and about JSC-F
but this year w
reach out to people
She added that the World Jewry Commit
tee has expressed an interest in working with who
ASUBA, “We've also been approached by about,” says Hitchcock
the Feminist Alliance fo-give a Jewish The background of the individual seem
perspective on a women’s radio show,"
become part of CCC. “Friends talk to friend
nd up coming to see what it's all
unimportant. Members come from Pre
tant, Catholic and Jewish homes. “I fee! I'm
npleted Jew,” said Brickman, “I really
friction does a cc
tween group members love my Jewish heritage, but for me
orientations, such as something was just missing
Yet many of CCC's members continue at
feeling that thay have been “born again’
Oberlander Is very proud and enthusiastic they have made a conscious decision to ac
{illel. "We're really growing,"she cept Jesus as their personal savior. The
Catholics. JSC-Hillel uses the said. “Obviously I'm biased to some extent, have asked God to assume control of their
bullding for both conservative and liberal ser really making a move to _ lives:
All, too, share a fervent desire to express
their beliefs to others, because they fear that
people who do not accept their teachings will
be damned. “Those who hear of Jesus
Christ and reject Him will be seperated from
God for all eternity,” said Hitchcock
Crusaders evangelize in different ways. It
is perhaps nfost natural for them to want to
concentrate on family and friends. At their
meetings they speak of people on their “10
Most Wanted List” — people who, they are
praying, will have an opportunity to hear of
Christ's teachings. One SUNYA student
who has a close friend in Crusade, said
They fell you about it because they
‘and they care what happens. Thi
something that fills their life and they want to,
share it with you. However, a lot of tin
they can’t see why you don't want io hear
about it so they just won't stop
nas held
Periodically, Campus Crusa¢
dinner line spiritual surveys, consisting o!
four questions about a person's religious
beliefs, These take about fifteen seconds to
answer, but there's a catch, If you fi
out a further survey, someone from Campus
Crusade will come to your room and re
and explain to you a booklet entitled Four
itual Laws, Since the questionnaire is
never identified as being CCC spor
many students do not realize what they have
gotten into.
never thought for a minute someone
was going to try to change what | believ
said student Jane Leigh. “They tried to make
me see that my life was out of tune because |
don’t believe in Jesus, and they kept trying
to make me choose a picture that showed
my life
Another student, Annie Greenfield, ex
s being disorganized,” she added
plained Hi
experience this way: “As soon as
T knew what was happening; | made it clear
med {0 be a ‘sell
that | wasn't interested. I 5
Crusade she joined another group, Albany
Evangelical Christian, or AE
The students in AEC share many of the
same beliefs with those in Crusade:
however, there Is a somewhat different
focus. Those in AEC evangelize on a per
sonal level, and are more likely to practice
“non-traditional worship,” according to one
member.
Although there are some students, such as
Brickman, who are involved with both
groups, there seems {o be relatively litle
overlap in membership. There is also a dif
ference between the two groups concerning
adult staff, While AEC has one paid staff
member for the entire Albany area, CCC has
four full-time paid staff at SUNYA alone
Some AEC'ers f
the student persp
that this. compromises
tive
However CCC staffer Doug Anderson
denies this, and cites the existence of a Work
Committ
members, Indeed, there seem to be close
friendships between the staff and many of
the students. Although Anderson and other
staff members
composed of students and staff
have had no formal guidance
training, some of their time is spent counsel
ing students who have come to them for help
with personal or religious problems, Said
Anderson: "My text Is the Bible, so my
the
nds a significant amount of time
counseling Is from, that perspective
staff also
evangelizing on campus, and following up
on people who express interest In the group.
of the bible study classes are
tall does lead several of the
person groups
Campus Crusade 4s not SA funded so
their income comes from contributions
However, the staff is not maintained by the
SUNYA chapter of CCC but, rather Is paid
by the national organization. That money
relates how God had reentered his life to
murmurs of approval; or another describes
how had had failed, prompting sounds of
dismay. Generally, though, Crusade's
meetings are upbeat
A lot of singing goes on, and almost
everyone enthusiastically joins in, Clapping
hands and. stamping feet. As the grovp
sways in time to the music, a lot of smiles are
exchanged any many of the studenjs reach
out to lay a friendly hand on a neighboring
shoulder,
A‘ their last meeting, with the music over,
Hitchcock turned to some “family business."
An announcement was made about a Chris:
tlan singer coming to campus and Hitchcock
gave a little pep talk concerning bringing
friends to CCC sponsored events, Then, a
guest staff member from Kings College in
Briarcliff, gave a talk on Christian
misconceptions. A short excerp! from the
motion picture Jesus was shown followed by
Individuals making arrangements to see the
film together on Saturday night. With the
meeting over, people clustered together in
all and large groups to talk
Three girls are talking about the recent
job' to me but I couldn't get her (the Campus comes from contributions raised from the
staff's families, ri
Crusader) to leave
Crusade's President Hitchcock, however
maintains that the surveys are not Hitchcock, the staff attends regularly. The
misleading, since the questions are clearly “College Life” meetings are conducted in a
religious in nature. He attributes the criticism warm, friendly atmosphere, and many close
{o the fact that peoplé may (il threatened friendships within the group are evident
by what they ore hearing about Jesus
Naturally, people from a non-Christian
background are going to be a little cautious
about hearing something new,” he said
Not everyone in Campus Crusade agrees
with that. "I love what Crusade
not all of
it," said o Another girl, who ask:
ed not to be identified, cited the surveys as The group lives vicariously through
one of the reasons she left the group. She
said she wasn't comforable with the peer a
pressure to evangelize, After she left_tend_to_be
Although Crusade
er, people in Cru
1 special effort to inclu
faces.” Those in the “fellowship,” as they call
the group, refer to the love and support they.
receive from each other. As Brickman noted
sdoing, but about the time when he first became involv
the methods advocated for doing ed with Crusade, "I made more real {riends
in two nights than I had in a lifetime.”
Sharing Time
4s and supporters.
meetings are led by
ade also seem to
@ the “new
and disappointments,
Experiences recounted
Christ-centered. A_member
(Double Take
something
ether than
Tlever really thought of myself asa Jew, [am
Gre more aware of myself as a woman and an
American, | sympathize with some of Israel's pro
blems as a political state and | would be just as indignant
about Hitler's Holocaust if he had murdered six million of
people. I have had no religious training — |
someone els
only attended services at summer camp. To me they meant
two mosquito-ridden hours on a hard bench after which we
Would finally get our mail
Ellen Weinstein
Twenty Two years ago my mother Joined @ chapter of the
Anne Frank Society to please her mother-in-law, The
women agreed that the first baby born to a member would be
the group's mascot, It's the only thing I've ever won in my
IMe. They even had my picture in the local newspaper. Ifonly
they could see me now
Thiee years later we moved away from the Anne Frank
Society and my zealous grandmother. Perhaps if we had
stayed in Florida things would be different now. 1 might be
spending early Friday evenings in temple instead of at karate
My one claim to
fame as a Jew came
fas an accident of birth
matzoh balls clastes. might never have known the taste of pork, lobster
ior a Big Mac with milk, Thank you, God, for giving me toa
secular mother 1
el My mother is not an irreligious woman. She just never in:
an e Pre ees prey nicneaia Ove
very young we lit candles every Friday night, And of course
Jwe celebrated Chanukah, My parents are divorced and my
Bar Mitzva He yaaa vag ariel ue ciiman Verne
i ' shiksas, my Uncle Del calls them. | used to love visiting him
Over Christmas vacation because of the huge tree we would
have with piles of presents beneath it. Asa child who had the
best of both worlds, | preferred Christmas
All my cousins went to Hebrew school. My uncle is pres!
dent of his temple and | have an aunt who teaches Sunday
school, She takes her religion very seriously and does not
appreciate our lack of respect, nor the comic relief my family
tries to bring to her Sedars.
Poor Aunt Ginny. Perhaps the worst moment of her
religious life was during a Passover about ten years ago. The
children all perked up when she served matzoh ball soup
“Ooh,” cried adorable Beth, “Maizoh balls!” "Meatballs
said cute little Ben. “Pingpong balls," chimed in darling
David. "King Kong's balls.” shouted Kenny the brat (my
od
the first of many evil eyes that my aunt would cast our wa
brother), looking cherubic in his yamulka. We then rece
‘over the years at these solemn occasions.
As the years went by, it was aur sense of humor that m
Jong ordeals, such as Bar Mitzvahs, endurable. As we a¢
older, our mother sometimes joined our game, lending it ar
air of sophistication. Her greatest moment was at my Cousin
Ben's Bar Mitzvah, Throughout the entire ceremony the can
tor stood up there rocking back and forth. My mother, who i
very sentimental at Bar Mitzvatis and weddings, turned to me
with tears in her eyes and whispered, "My God, he looks like
he’s going to have an orgasm!
‘One thing lam not is hypocritical, Lam a fanatical agnostk
in my disdain for organized religion. 1 can appreciate and
Fespect other's religions, but not when they're team efforts. If
it makes them happy and they really believe in what they're
doing, I think that’s great. But | was upset when my brother
agreed to be Bar Mitzvahed. He was 16 and had never been
to Hebrew school
My uncle told my brother that if he st
the Torah during my cousin's Bar Mitzvah, he too would be
Bar Mitzvahed. Mother loved the idea, so did Gramps
even my brother thought it sounded gre
feral ways they could have
od up and read from
Now, I suppose there were si
done this, Kenny could have taken a crash course in Hebrew
maybe Evelyn Wood or Stanley Kaplan offerd one. But
my uncle's no schmuck, He sent my brother a tape of a
Torah reading with the words written out phonetically. Ken
hy memorized the sounds and went through with it. My
brother got a K-Tel Bar Mitzvah
Mother cried. Gramps was thrilled — {wo Bar Mit
the price of one airline ticket from Miam), 1 was disgusted
Didn't anybody else think it was wrong? | regained some of
ihe my good humor when my mother presented Kenny with
iis Bar Mitzvah gift — the classic gold fountain pen. But | still
time | see that picture of Kenny with a talis on
cringe @
joulders gracing my mother's dresser
pseudo-Bar Mitzvaby
1t was about the time of my brother
that my mother began to lament our lack of religious fervor
My sister had married a goy and didn't seein concerned
about how she would raise their children. When | went home
for a three-day weekend in September my mother complain
‘ed that I shouldn't have gone out
Yom Kippur. reminded her that | was home only because
my family and
ay night because it was
had a long weekend and | wanted to se
friends, That evening my stepfather’s p ;
ner. "Ah," said his mother, “you're home for the holidays?”
ints came to din
[don't disbelieve in God. But I can't say that I believe It
Him. When I think of God, { think of George Burns. In the|
movie Oh God he portrayed the only God that | could ever|
id the world, put two people in it, and
believe in. He crei
the rest is human history. 1 don't believe that he had a divine
plan for us, If anybody with the power and good intentions}
that He is reputed to have wouldn't have let the world turn}
out like this. But maybe all that power went to. his head.
That's it: God is a crazed despot
don't believe in organized religion or “houses of we
hip”
for myself. some people need a steeple or mosque to speak|
o God, that’s fine. But if there js a God, then He'll hear you!
wherever you are. However, if you are one of those people!
who believe that God hears you in shul better than he hears
me when I'm taking a shower and talking to him, I'd call you
a misguided sheep
The thing that bothers me most about religion in general is
the sndbbery. It seems fo me that we're all worshipping the
same God, Call Him God, Allah, or Jéhovah — all those|
names represent the same entity. When you come tight
Jigions are used as a means of attaining in-
to become @ divinity. Almost all
down to it, all
dividual perfection
religions emphasize some type of moral code similar to the!
Ten Commandments. If we could achieve these qualities
We'd be Gods. God is not a person: It is a way of life
So maybe Aunt Ginny will say I'm a bad Jew because I
don't go to temple. And maybe my mother will be upset i
don't marry a Jewish man. But if 'm happy and not hurting}
on}
anyone, I'll do what I have to do to full myself as a per
because, first and foremost, that is what Lam, ry)
Yes," | said with a big smile
rash or student attacks, One gil, who lives in
poorly lit building in a questionable
neighborhood, says, “I'd be so scared if it
Weren't for God.” You find yourself wishing
that you, foo, had enough trust to walk
alone, unafraid
Anyone in Crusade is ready, and eager, to
discuss thelr belief in God. Those interview:
ed for this article questioned me about my
faith, asking If they could share the “Four
Spiritual Lows" with me. Apparently well
versed in the bible, those | talked to refered
to the scripture in answering questions, oc-
casionally even reading passages aloud
Many of those strongly involved in
usade attend bible classes regularly as well
yer times" and "College Life." And,
because so many of those Involved are close
fiends, they get together at other times for
activities or “fellowship.” There seems to be
« very informal censure against smoking and
drinking, although anyone is free to do
ther, "Obviously, in a room with 50 people
not smoking, you might feel a litle uncom
fortable lighting up a cigarette but you cer
tainly can,” said Anderson
ade has provided a redirection for
many of fis members, "i's whal gives me
sirength, love and hope for the future,” said
Brickman
"You go ouside and you remember it's
God's world — and it's beautiful” he added
*Maybe Christianity is a crutch, But i's
always there and it 4s an unbreakable erutch
Feouldn't ive without." °
c
fliddy Waters, sporting a new band
AM laying to a very enthusiastic
‘audience, was clearly elan and
dignified at his first Albany appearance at
a8 Scott's on Thursday night, November
cro a blues tradition, Muddy’s
band came on stage and played three songs,
including Elmore James’ classic, “Dust My
Broom,” All the musicians got a chance to
‘spollight thelr talents by soloing many times.
Ellis Albright
Mojo,” playing on harmonica, got things
started by announcing if was “star time, and
when I say star time, Ido mean star time ,
the father of the blues, Muddy ‘Misstssippi’
Wrters."" In his usual gray vest and slacks,
Muddy was ready to “get down to business,"
and play some blues,
“County dail," a slow: blues tune from
They Call Me Muddy Waters, was the open-
ing song, "Driftin’ Along," which pronoune
ed his preference {o get high on “reefer, no
cocaine," was next, The tempo Increased a
bit with “Baby, Please Don't Go," a standard
recorded on A.K.A, Muddy Waters and
Muddy Waters at Newport, “Country Boy,"
@ song recorded on a lesser known album,
Muddy Waters, Folk Singer, followed, Mud
dy treated the crowd to a sizling slide solo in
this song, which brought a standing ovation
from the crowd, “Everything Gonna Be
Alright" from the 1974 release Unk In Funk
end a Jimmy Reed tune, "You Don't Have
To Go,” came next, A slow blues, “They
Call Me Muddy Waters," from the album of
the same name, brought on some of Mud-
dy's patented facial expressions, He then
rested his guitar, and performed the classic
"Got My Mojo Working.” The crowd was
cheering him on as he walked from one side
of the stage to the other. Muddy walked off
as the band went into a closing shuffle, After
2 few minutes; they came back out for an en-
core, “Mannish. Boy" from Hard Again
brought the crowd to their feet as Muddy was
jumping up and down on stage. Again, the
band went into a shuffle as Muddy left the
stage, We were treated to a final encore,
“Sweet Home Chicago,” a blues. classic,
Even though Muddy sat this one out, the
‘crowd was alive; dancing and clapping along
“with the band, For the third time, they went
Into shuffle and called It a night
Born McKinley Morganfield on April 4,
‘i915, in Rolling Forks, Mississippi, Muddy
learned from the great blues singers of the
Mississippi delta, such as Charlie Pation, Ed-
die “Son” House, and Robert Johnson.
After his early study of harmonica, Muddy
took up bottleneck guitar and perfected his
style. In his earllest recordings for the Library
cof Congress th 1941 and''42, he revealed
himself as a master of the fierce, declamatory
delta blues. His insinuating, rhythmically
complex guitar work, centered'around his
striking bottleneck slide style, became Mud-
dy's trademark,
He came to Chicago in 1943, and
established himself as the earliest and most
successful artist to electrify and and adapt
country blues to modern urban forms. It was
Muddy’s six man band that laid the founda~
tion for future blues bands;
Muddy’s first Chicago recordings were on
Aristocrat, and then on Chess Records,
where he stayed until the mid 1970's. His
recordings from 1948 untill the early 1960's,
his first great period, were responsible for
laying down the framework of blues and rock
and roll, There js not a single artist today
Who will claim he was not influenced by
Muddy. The Rolling Stones even took their
name from a 1950 Waters song, ‘Rolling
Stone,” and were heavily influenced by his
siyle, They recorded a good number of his
songs in their early days, and even did,
“Mannish Boy” on Love you Live (1977)
Muddy's band was the training ground for
Virtually every Chicago blues musician of any
consequence. The list Includes: Jimmy
Rogers, Little Walter, Junior Wells, Buddy
Guy, Otis Spann, Fred Below, Luther
Tucker, Big Walte Horton, James Cotton,
Matt Murphy, S.P. Leary, Francis Clay, and
Pee Wee Madison, to name but a few, Most
cof them went on to form their own bands,
and of course they were based on that of
Muddy's, Most of his best known songs were
recorded during this period. Among them:
Muddy Waters — At sixty-five, he
‘Got My Mojo Working,” "Hoochie Koochie
Man," “I Can't Be Satisfied,” Rollin’ and
Tumblin’,” “19 Years Old, ‘I'm Ready,
“Long Distance Call,” “9 Below Zero," and
a host of others which became blues stan-
dards in the years that followed.
During his second period in the mid
1960's, Chess wanted Muddy to make more
saleable records. Included among those
Were his two worst LP's to date — Electric
Mud and After The Rain. Both were aimed
at the psychedelic crowd, and that once pure
blues sound of the Muddy Water's Band,
was turned Into a pseudo Haight-Ashbury
electric mix.
‘he black audience, which supported him
during the '40’s and ‘50's, were now getting
into the sounds of Motown and soul. Must-
Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye,
clans such a:
Joan Toughens Her Act
here are a lot of semi-tough ladies
F ut there today, One of the frst
‘and toughest spent her early years
under the scheming of sun-punk producer
Kim Fowley (Dyan Diamond, Venus, and
the Razorblades).
Ed Pinka’
Toon Jen has run away
Runaways to form her own
ti ”
from the
group,
Blockheart, staking her claim as an original
punkette
The Runaways were five ladies with
limited talents and seductive leather looks
Their album (even a live one, in Japan, of
course) featured songs by Fowley (your
mom would hear it and ask why gitls don't
Wear dresses anymore) and Joan Jett (songs
your mom would hear and then demand
that you throw the, album out)
F9 Joan Jett ha
run away from
} the Runaways to
form her own
group,
Blackheart, stak-
ing her claim
yen original
Doing much of the material off her new
album, titled Joan Jeit, at her Sunday night
J.B’s show, Joan’s music has a very
raunchy-garage sound with lyrics dedicated
to only the most urgent topics of young lust
S&M, lousy lovers, etc
Opening with the first song of the album,
"Bad Reputation," Joan and the Blackhearts
— Eric Amble, guitar; Gary Ryan, bass; and
Lee Crystal on drums — filled the small
crowd with apprehension and amazeme:
The sound carried unlimited power while the
Iyries struck fear into the males who don't
relate {0 chains
Following with “Don’t Abuse Me” and
“You Know What You Got," Joan took
command of the stage. moving among the
band and sending piercing looks into the au:
dience
Toning down the lyrical intimidation a bit
with "Woe Is Me" and a cover of “Wooly
Bully,” Joan then went back to her younger
days and performed some Runaway hits,
minus the Fowley sugar and spice
“You're Too Possessive,” "Teenage Sex
Machine,” andg"Black Leather” were ex
ecuted in a sivle that would make the timid
blush. Jett ended the show with the Stones
“Star Star” only to be brought out by the
craving crowd for three more
The first, another Runaways classic, was
aided by the crowd during the chorus (yeah,
yeah). Then came a cover of the Isley's
“Shout” before Joan ended the show in fit
ting fashion with Bowie's “Rebel, Rebel.”
' Maybe the band was too cute, and the
music too meshed, and the rebel lacked a
cause, but Joan Jett has stopped running
away from silly producers and is now being
What she always was — tough °
Aretha Franklin, and Diana Ross, whose
songs topped the charts, were now in de-
mand. Fortunately for Muddy, there was a
blues revival going on amongst the white au-
dience, Bands such as the Blues Project,
John Mayall’s Blues Breakers, Ten Years
After, Canned Heat, and the Paul Butterfield
Blues Band were responsible for turning
them onto the blues for the first time. This
‘was a very significant turn.of events for Mud-
dy, “They're (the young whites) more
responsive, the young blacks are more in:
terested in the jumpy stuff. The whites want
to hear me for what I am."
In 1977, Muddy joined forces with
Johnny Winter and James Cotton. They
subsequently released Hard Again, his first
bum for Blue Sky Records, which was
‘produced lovingly” by Johnny Winter
Hard Again recaptured that good old Muddy
sound, and some say itis his best album to
date. Since then, he has been touring exten:
sively throughout the United States, playing
to sold out houses, and is, on occasion, join:
ed on stage by his “young friend,” Johnny
Winter. Im Ready (1978) and Muddy
“Mississippi Waters — Live (1979), both on
Blue Sky, continued to capture Muddy at his
best, which brings us back to J.B.’s on
November 6.
At 65, Muddy Waters still has what it takes
to give a great show and get a crowd on its
feet, Although his new band was not as
“crack” as his previous one, they were very
adept at reproducing the classic Muddy
sound. The crowd at J.B, Scott's witnessed a
historic event; this was the first time Muddy
has played in Albany, and hopefully not the
last. If you missed him this time, be sure to
catch “The Father of the Blues” when he
graces the stage of J.B.'s once again. @
Legs Don’t
Fail Me Now
— Laurel Solomon
hicken Legs, is the group that has
G emerged out of the remains of Lit
tle Feat, the classic American band
whose career ended abruptly with the death
of lis main influence and inspiration, Lowell
George, Chicken Legs's an apt name for the
group; wobbly, yet feigning strength, and
possessing the latent abllity to reach the
heights of their former incarnation.
Consisting of four former members of Lit
tle Feat (Paul Berrere, Richie Hayward
Kenny Gradney, and Sam Clayton), and
three members of the Catfish Hodge Band
(Catfish Hodge, Dixie D. Ballin and Mitch
Collins), the band has maintained, to a
the sound that Lowell George
degree,
helped to shape
On stage the group looks good, with Cat
fish jumping around, his eyes popping out of
his head, ai
baseball cap and pigtails. Both of them
with strong, blues-influenced styling, lending
strength and intensity to the
band’s original music sounded good, paling
only when played alongside some of the
Feat songs such as “Apolitical Blues"
“High Roller.” The. magic was still there for
the audience though: they were full of en.
thusiasm for both the old and new. An in:
teresting inclusion in the set was Elvis
Costello's “Pump It Up.” done in Chicken
Legs’ unique style
d Dixie looking adorable with a
ing
and
Chicken Legs is a good band that could be
great, and probabl intime. They
seem to be a little unsure of their identity at
will be
this point, but with the quality of their must
clanship and songwriting abilities they should
soon be able to atiract both diehard Feat fans
‘and newcomers alike”
Badge, a southern rock boogie band,
opened the show. They were fairly typical
sounding, but great 10 bop to nonetheless.
The mood of theentireshow was celebration,
which was indeed called for, as it was the bir
thday-of J.B. Scott's own Vinnie, a man
who helps bring to us a lot of the great music
we hear in the Capital District °
buember 14, 1980.
‘Sound & Vision:
wouldn't go so far as to say they
don't make movies like The Stunt
Man anymore. I can't ever
Imember seeing a film quite like it. It’s
irky and eccentric, and above all, enter-
ining, but it's nothing like Hooper, an in-
rior film I'm afraid {oo many people will be
pecting to see when they go in.
im Dixon
Fe Sint Man fs a melodrama — or at
Jas it disguises liself as one. The premise is
ai a young fugitive from the law named
‘ameron. (played by, Steve Railsback) ac-
dentally runs Into a movie unit shooting on
cation, The, director, @ certified
hegalomeniac named Eli Cross (played by
Peiés O'Toole), happens to be in trouble
ith the local police himself because one of
is stuntmen Is missing and presumed dead
stunt for which he
er a dangerous c
hadn't gotten the proper permits. Cross con
incés the police that Cameron Is the missing
niman, saving both their necks. Of course
his means Cameron, to avoll blowing his
ynly.cover, has to do stunts,
The movie is worth seeing for the stunts
hone. Director Richard Rush sets up one in.
ane hairraising sequence after another
One particular highlight has Cameron doing
Miho Charleston on the wing of a biplane
hich isin the air, Flying, (It bears mention
n the context of The Stunt Man, Eli
(Cross is shooting a World War I film which
takes place in Europe on a California beach,)
In comparison to Hooper
directed by Hal Needhatn, a former stunt
Stunt Man could stand on
‘8 superior action {ilm
man himself
the basis of
Jone, Where Needham simply set up stock
stunts and did them in front of a camera
Rush dogs innovative,
qui nd pus the camera right in tt
unusual siunt se:
middle of the action. The viewer is privy to
Cameron's point of view as he goes through
a fight scene on a rooftop, falls, bounces off
an awning, crashes through a skVlight and
lands in a brothel scene. Ill admit it's unlikely
that a director would set up such a long stunt
sequence, but i's too much fun to care about
such trivia
So while Rush is making sure you're never
bored, he gives you a marvelous
melodrama. Cameron falls in love with the
Jeading lady, (Barbara Hershey), who's been
having an affair with Cross. Then he begins
to wonder if Cross wants to have him killed
While allowing for a good deal of comedy,
there is quite a bit of suspense surrounding
the climactic stunt, which Cameron becomes.
convinced is a deathtrap,
While this is the movie's primary ‘selling
point as entertainment, thematically the
movie is largly about illusion versus reality.
The question, while Rush never beats you
over the head with It, comes up again and
again, When Cameron first encounters the
movie company, he's on a bridge, where he
sees a vintage Deusenburg, He tries to hitch
a ride with it, The car tries to run him down,
and he dives to get out of the way. When he
looks back, the car is gone, apparently over
the side, Then a helicopter appears out of
nowhere. He's seen a stunt and hasn't realize
ed it. He rescues an old lady from drowning,
and finds that she’s not really drowning:
she's really Barbara Hershey in make-up (If
that won't make your day, what will?), In a
crowd of onlookers, Cameron watches a bat-
tle scene shot on a beach. When the smoke
clears, onlookers start to scream as they ook
i
Steve Railsback (I), and Chuck Ball Ia The Stunt Man, an adventure lm
with the subtle theme of reality versus illusion,
New Thorogood Boogie
nyone who was not at J.B, Scott's
is past Friday night probably
missed one of the hottest shows in
BAlvony this year (and maybe in years to
some). Appearing for two jampacked, sold.
1@ George Thorogood and the
Scott Tannenbaum
earoversy who consisted 0
bri bass, Hank “Hurricane” Carte
id Jeff “One Cymbal” Simon. As soon as
fhorogood and the Destroyers ambled onto
fy Blough
on sax
the stage, one could sense this was no or
dinory Friday night at J.B. Scott's, George
wore an expression on his face that said
"We're about to blow you people away.”
They launched into Chuck Berry's "House
of Blue Lights.” One realized George was
going to make good with his claim with the
first few runs up the neck of his Gibson
atted across
the stage doing the Berry duckwalk, He then
led to go. into the audience to see
was doing and to
of his guitar work up
hollow body electric. George s
how everybody
demonstrate some
| ter,
Fear Of Falling, Flying, ying
at the carnage after something seems to have
gone wrong. Dead men and dismembered
pieces of body are strewn all aver the sands.
Then the dead men get up, pick up thelr
decapitated heads, severed arms, and legs,
and go to return them to make-up.
Rush integrates: these elements into the
film more subtley than a description of them
Would lead one to believe, These scenes
Work seperately as pieces of drama or com-
edy. It's when taken a5 a whole that a theme
comes across, Rush obviously wants to make
‘a movie first. As Cross says at one polnt
about his own film: You have to engage
them first, and then sneak the message in
while they're not looking
Eli Cross Is one of the best parts Peter
O'Toole has ever had, It's » par filled with
bambast and great lines, At one point, when
he has taken Cameron up into the alr in the
ditector's crane to. explain the magic of
movies, he says "If God could do the tricks
we con, he'd be a happy man.” He's also.
allowed to look like God. He's shot fra
either in his
helicopter or crane, almost constantly
Steve Railsback, best-known for his por
frayal of Charles Manson In TV's Helter
Skelter, \s excellent as Cameron and over
due for star¢om, Barbara Hershvy, through
no {aull of her own, Is something of a weak
Cink as the leading lady. Her performance js
good enough, bul for once the script Isn't
Her character Is left undeveloped, It's a pity,
but the fault isn't enough to hurt the film
The Stunt Man is an oddity. It has taki
this film quite awhile to get distributed (i was
angles, and is in the air
being shot at more or less the same time as
Hooper) and the fact that itis unusual {s pro
bably why, That Twentieth Century Fox
finally had the guts to pick it up and put itn
the theaters Is something the movie-goer
who's sick of the ordinary should be grateful
for e
George Duckwalks At J.B.’s
“There’s lousy music, and
there’s blues.”
— G.T.
ad
close. He jumped back onto the stage
belied out the last few notes of the song.
Without taking a moment to caich his breath
he launched into “Who Do You Love.” It
was fairly obvious who the audience loved
tonight
George then welcomed the audience and
Johnny Cash's “Cocaine
mpo country rocker that
jumped into
Blues," an up
had the crowd dancing back and forth. John
‘One Bourbon, One Scotch,
followed, which began with an
morose rap Hooker's
Rent Boogie" and turned into a
tragicomical farce drenched in alcohol. It
was fitting, then, for George fo remind the
audience not to forget the bartenders and
“Kids from Philly, an In:
new album,
The next song,
sirumental featured on the
More, highlighted the whole band’s ability to
Mound out gutsy, inspirational music, Calling
the show the “Friday Night Jamboree and
{ootenany,” George asked the crowd if
they'd mind some obscenities and upon
d the Destro
ond of the four
response, Guorge ns drove
into “It Wasn't Me,
Berry rockers of the night
After much chaotic ning,
Thorogood picked up his white Gibson slide
guitar and whipped into "Madison Blues.”
Thorogood wanted to do it with the rest of
the Destroyers holding the beat, which whip:
ped the audience into a raging frenzy.
George then slowed it down for just a mo
ment with "The Sky Is Crying,” a great im-
provement over the original by Elmore
James, The guitar playing started slowly,
the’ se
gradually progressing info a feverish pace,
bringing the house into an uproar once
again.
The band then banged out “New
Hawalian Boogie" with the audience join
George in screaming the appropiate *hehs.’
“Can't Stop Loving’ followed, which
highlighted Hank Carter's fine bluesy sax
playing and Jeff Simon's thrashing drumm
ing, Thorogood asked the crowd what they,
ind Chuck Berry's "No Par
0 Gi George
wanted to he
ticular
planted his snakeskin shoes on a stagefront
fable and fondled his guitar lovingly, spilling
‘out Berry licks and cackling with delight.
George leaned over to my companion and
said,"'Pretty good, huh,
understatement of the evening,
George and Co, propeltad into the fourth
Berry tune of the night, “Reelin’ and
Rockin’,” with George duckwalking and stut
terstepping at stage right and throwing an oc
casional high kick. The encore followed,
which was “Move It On Over,” with
Thorogood and band cracking out the music
‘at a frantic pace that literally brought the
house down.
Place followed,
surely the
The only criticism | have of the show Is
that Thorogood did not play enough songs
off his new album. He played two, but the
first, "House of Blue Lights," is nothing new
ina Thorogood concert, for this has always
been the opening song for a great majority of
his shows since 1976, But surely this can be
overlooked, for Thorogood isn't a white boy
doing black roots music, he's a great free-
spirited guitarist taking his favorites, improv:
ing them, and then blowing the place out
with them, .
‘November 14, 1980})
Be bent, and you will remain straight
Be vacant, and you will remain full
Be worn, and you will remain new
= Chuang Tzu
Some people go barefoot, so that others
Imay travel in expensive cars. Some live only
thirty-five years, so that others may live
seventy, Some people are miserably poor,
so that others may be exaggeratedly rich.
[Some people claim to speak on behalf of the
children of the world who don't even have a
plece of bread, But not Il
You see, my dreams have been
lansweréd, or 80 I've been told, The Police
fare a rock group and the law seems like
some kind of joke. Bables are born
H*hooked'" on junk and junk food Is all we
leat: The Pope Is sill making rules for a game
lhe supposedly opted not to play. The
children of flowers have become the “towers
lof society” and earth-mamas simply have
lbecome mamas, Drugs that used to be for
pleasure now have become drugs for lelsure.
Acid Is something in a battery and the pitcher
has been removed from the game
But wail, of what use are these thoughts?
For laugh and joke as we will, the fact re-
mains that Ronald Reagan is President come
"81, America has indeed given Mr. Reagan
the mandate to “put America back to work.”
‘America, Ist time to wake up, or ist Just the
dawn ofa big sleep? That plece of paper that
started all this (ie., the Declaration of In;
dependence) is of no consequence to us, A
theory of government is not the same as a
program for action
Yet we stand neither helpless nor hopeless
before the very real crises which confront us
Our base crises are not of energy, balance of
payments or the national economy. They
are crises of the spirit, The nation is entering
from our
"an era In whieh public aspirations and values
can no longer be as fully satisfied by simple
increases in economic affluence as they may
once have been, People are increasingly
concerned with values that cannot be
counted in dollars
We: must further realize thet our
forebearers did not live out the principles
they professed. Some signers of the Declara-
tion of Independence — which states thet
“all men are created equal” — were slave-
holders. Failure to live up to noble principles
does not thereby invalidate these principles.
It is equally obvious that the principles
past cannot be applied in
mechanical fashion to the problems of our
present, We must then, creatively, adopt the
lofty ideals which our forebearers so often
captured in noble words, These words must
become flesh
_ We must give these words hands and feet
~ as well as giving poinis of reflection and
guides to action so that we might advance
and further our unfinished Revolution!
Little of the enthusiasm of life remains
When we taka it for granted. Little pleasure is
obtained when the masks are in place. The
river is over-flowing but the banks are not yet
full. "Enfants": take the “jole de vivre” to East
23rd and “find” themselves in the midst of a
dream. It is of no importance, for the mail
still comes to the wrong address. Chairman
Mao Is dead and the Gang of Four is on trial
Reagan for President, Bush for Vice
‘America, go to sleep. In ‘84 you'll awake to
find the "Dead, dancingin the streets,” @
Music
Telethon presenta: “The Battle of the
Bands." Featured will be Doctor Doom,
|Glasshammer, Peking Boys, and The Empty
Hais, It'll all be happening at 9 p.m. tonight
in the CC ballroom for a $2 admission,
Huila Ballo 2
November
Friday, 14
Saturday, 15
Wednesday, 19
‘Canned Heat
Fountainhead
The Works
J.B. Scott
November
Friday, 14
Saturday, 15
‘Sunday, 16
Monday. 17
Tuesday, 18
Thursday, 20
Plasmatics
Commander Cody, Badge
SVT
Average White Band
Third World|
38 Special]
Fred the Bird
Rick Blum
UH-OH | HERE COMES Phoresior
"GRADES" PIG WITH MY
LATEST TEST SCORE THEY _
SAY HE EATS STUDENTS For
GEEAKFAST WNCH AND DINNE
CONGRATULATIONS! YOU
PASSED WITH FLYING
COLORS.
@o)
FLYING COLORS ,REALLY
RELAX CHICKEN MAN ,
JIM TALKING *O* MINUS
COUNTRY.
oe
‘AS PROFESSOR PORCINE
PIG STROLS DowN SNOWY
CAMPUS LANE, HE SPIES
rate FAMIUAR CLASERCM
UITTLE BO THEY suspect
1 PCAN ON PASSING ATOTAL
OF 3 OUT OF MY 700
THAT'S THE THANKS |GET
FOR BEING MR. NICE GUY,
ad
‘TEEPERS , IT'S. PROF.
PIG , DOUBTLESS THE.
TOUGHEST MARKER. IN
THE SCHOOL.
=
MIA, CAUGHT. YOU
CUTTING Lecrme AGAIN |
WWM TAKING TEN POINTS:
OFF YOUR FINAL GRADE [LOB eB bee cues
te fl
FOR THIS ONE ee
IT'S A GooD THING I'M NOT
20
Movies
(On Campus
(All begin at 7:30 and 10 p.m.)
Friday
To Sir With Love Le1
The Jerk Lc7,
Saturday
investigation of a Citizen Above
[Suspicion Le1
The Jerk Le7|
Cine 1-6
Ordinary People
The Elephant Man
Gloria
Silent Scream
It's My Turn
Walt Disney's Song of the South
Hellman Theatre
Fantasia
Fox Colo
The Stunt Man
Rockers
Cine 7
Private Benjamin
Madison
Airplane
Listings compiled by Elise Newman
Please
Theatre cannot be provided
Note:
Listings for the Palace
For their
schedule of events please call 465-3334,
J 5 6 u a no
WCDB 91-FM
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comment
throughout the Week.
An all day (each-in (Humanities 354) on
Wednesday, from 12:00-5:00.
The award winning film, Sentenced 10
Success, describing nuclear reprocessing
and’ its relation to nuclear weapons. This
will be shown on Wednesday night at 7:00
p.m, in Brubacher Hall,
‘*]gal’Roodenko, former chairperson of
the War Resisters League, speaking on
pacifism in LC’s at 7:30 p.m. on Friday.
We hope that all will feel free to attend
these Various functions. The topic of war
and peace is such a crucial issuc t0 all of us,
This has become dreadfully apparent to
thousands of young people in the last year
who were expected to register for the draft
And it will become a major issue come
January to millions more who will also be
expected to place their signature on a draft
registration card. The questions of draft
registration, along with the broader topic of
war and peace, are so intensely personal
that it must be the individual who makes
the final decision. It is not the government
who has the right {0 decide, It is you! We
hope that Peace week will aid you in mak
ing what may be the most important deci
sions of your life.
—David Drager
— Dan Reisman
SUNYA Peace Project,
Albany Student Union
‘Right’ or Wrong _
To| the Edito
You're probably not used to getting Iet-
ters criticizing things that have appeared in
other publications, but this is an attempt to
call attention to somethig that appeared in a
recent issue of T/ME magazine (20 Oct
1980, pg. 80).
This something’ proclaimed itself to be
‘a “Christian Bill of Rights,” consisting of
ten “amendments"’ which its sponsor,
television evangelist Jerry Falwell, promis:
ed to deliver to the next President of the
United States immediately after the
November 4th election. Here are some cx.
amples of the contents of this ‘*Bill of
Rights";
Amendment IV:
We believe that no
Lraitorous verbal or written attack upon this
beloved nation advocating overthrow by
force be permitted by any citizen or alien
living within this country."
*‘‘Amendment VIII: We believe in the right
{o influence secular professions, including
the field of politics, business, legal,
medical, in establishing and maintaining
moral principles of Scripture."
mendment X: We believe in the right of
legally-approved religious organizations to
maintain their tax-exempt status, this right
being based upon the historical and scrip-
tural concept of church and state separa
tion,!*
It seems to me that “Amendment 1V” is
n attempt (0 limit and restrict the right to
freedom of speech guaranteed to us by the
United States Constitution, A passage from
the New Testament, Romans 13:1-7, is of
fered as justification for this. Romans
13:1-7 deals with respect for authority and
payment of taxes.
“Amendments VII and X"*
claiming for Christians, the
Tepresentation without taxation! [ don't
understand why Falwell believes that Chris:
tians (or anyone) have this right
According (o Playboy magazine, Falwell
is against network TV, movies, disco, por
Hography, abortion, homosexuality,
ERA. SALT II, Ted Kennedy, Frank
Church, Birch Bayh, and evolution, and
has 14 Washington lobbyists in his political
machine, He “pledged his 1980 budget to
defeating liberal Congressmen this
November.’ At least some of his efforts
have been suc McGovern,
Bayh, and Church all failed in their election
bids, as did several other liberal senators
It’s frightening 16 realize that people and
groups like this are exerting their wills on
the rest of us, through attempis at govern=
ment control. It is never enough for them to
believe as they wish = everyoue must
believe as they do, of they are not satisfied.
seem to be
right to
It both angers and saddens me that these
peple are tryng (0 hard to change the prin-
ciples of freedom, democracy, tolerance,
and brotherhood which have made
Americans the freest people in history —
nd it frightens me that they are succeeding,
—Name Withheld Upon Request
—_ASad Song
An Open Letter:
During the past three and on
the quality of choral music ed
University has improved dra
hall years,
cation al this,
ty Chorale and the University Singers have
expanded their performance schedules to
include concerts at: The Albany Institute of
History and Art, The Institute on Man and
Science, The Glen's Falls Hyde Collection,
Skidmore Colle; and Historic Cherry
Hill, There have also been appearances at
The Cathedral of All Saints and the dedica-
tion of the Ex
certs on campus
This program of growth culminated last
spring with a tour of the East coast that in-
cluded concerts on Long Island, in New
York City, Baltimore, and at the National
Shine in Washington, 19,C
Completion of this tour was a milestone in
To the best of
no musical group of this
a5 Well as our usual con:
The successful ”
the history of our University
our knowledge,
size has ever undertaken, or completed,
such a difficult task. These ac
complishments would not have been possi
ble Were it not for the effonis of one man,
Don Haines Guidotti, the Choral Director
at SUNYA
Following « recommendation made by
the Music Department last semester, Mr
Guidotti's contract was not renewed, In ef
fect, this means that Mr, Guidotti will no
Jonger be employed by this University after
the 1981 spring semester. At any other
university, ‘the ents would
command the highest praise. We are at a
Joss to understand why, at this University,
hhe was, instead, dismissed, We fee! this will
be detrimental to the Music Department, as
Well as the University as a whole.
We therefore serve notice 10 the Music
Department and the University Community.
at large that, in order to preserve the quality
of choral music o which we are accustom:
ed, and which the community deserves, we
accomplish
intend to work unceasingly for the retention.
of Don Haines Guidotti as Director of
Choral Studies at SUNYA
—Dean K, Hamm,
Michael F, Donegan
Committee for the Retention
of Don Haines Guidotti
_Love’s Labor’s Lost
To the Editor:
Last year I entered Albany University
with the optimism of finding fun, friends,
and hopefully, love. 1 soon started on my
countless acquaintences and ultimately my
Most share my same desires,
few friends.
mentally, physically and pleasurably
Tn talking to these many people, why do
you suppose I hear women stating that all
** when I, for one, do,
including:
the men here “suck,
nol? And why are the men here
myself, saying the same about the women?
Is it pure rational
love? Is it that we student
ation for no luck in
are so sure that
there can't be anyone for us here; when 1,
for one of many, am?
T think it’s about time to pul away some
attitudes and use some of our given
understanding and empathy (0 better and
benifit us all
Richard Carl Figeher
The Senate situation will
be discussed on
Monday at 8:00 in the
Fireside Lounge.
All are urged to attend.
Just A Mad Minority
A new outbreak of conservatism appears to be sweeping the
country and lifting us right off our feet, And it may grow to
become a lot more than just a passing fad.
But this ‘Moral Majority’’ as it is called is actually nothing
very new at all. The existent morals and ways of thought surroun-
ding them were created during the dark period. It is a morality
structured on law, on the perceptions of everything as being good
and bad, It was designed for people who live under the domina-
tion of their own minds,
These followers need laws because they fail to recognize inner
guidance. And since they have trouble seeing that everything has
its place and its use, they are now struggling to ‘‘protect’’ their
selves, their Gods, and their families. They are fighting for laws
which condemn and outlaw things they feel are out of place,
things they may not understand.
The legislation of morality inhibits the freedoms of everyone,
because laws resist change. A law applies 10 all people at all times,
so it kills the spontaneity in living. We must stop the death of
spontaneity and wonder about those who must label situations as
good and evil.
The old morality was right for its time; the dark ages. It was ‘1
deed the best way to cope with the dark world and is still the best
for those who haven't developed personal insight. But that which
was right in the dar! anity in the light.
(How can this ‘Moral Majority” claim to be against abortion
and euthanasia and al the same time actively support expanding
our military and returning to a draft? Can they seriously argue
against the destruction of an unborn infant, but be willing to
waste the life of a teenager? And if they really studied their bible
closely, they would undoubtedly conclude that if Jesus Christ
were alive today —.not only would he/she object to armies, but
Christ would probably be a draft resister, too!)
ae’
a ‘
and its ctealive magazine
Establiahed In 1916
Rich Bahar
Hob E, Grube
mche)
1: Manon Ear
Syl Shurdeny
‘Anew Carl Susan Maga,
Holt Eels,
News tatior
oh elone
Mave Haspa, Lany Kahn
leven A. Groenbe
Michal Grebe
ey, Rebs gon, eh Cannan, Ken Cantor, Metal Carman, Anne Cavanagh
er, Mak Fichent Bruce Fon, Moreen Gene, Fn J it, Ken Godan, Whaney.
1, Marea Hadad, Wendel Hein, Mhel ae, Jame dalle, Any Kato, Lary Kina, Tom Lusk
Levy, James Martin Wit (Bren, Wayne Peereboom, Mark Rosse, el Seidl, Hara Ser, Pl Sehiwant
‘Zodiac & Preview Editors: Mare Garbarin, Sepember Kle
th
ah, Laurel
Debbie Kopf,
084 Moneae
Jane Dry
Bere Bown! Mam Rape,
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isa Beck
Haoh Chick
‘ Dave Th
ashe Ryan, sls Sehne
net, Typbetet Cave thy, Roden
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Chet Phot
isn, Sieve Een, Mite Fell Mark Heh, Mar Henwohel, Ro
if ive
i Tost, WY i
‘Ski Boots, Northstar,
eq.one season, $32. Gal Bob Hic at
8717.
mn ‘SA 0-90 $25 box of 10, Dis:
‘count audio and video components
Call Perry, 462-1447.
700 watt amp. New large Advent
‘speakers,-Garrard tumtable, Akal
Pe lent condition, Must
hhegotiable. Steve, &
Isometric Exerciser, The Bullworker
for sale. Is in almost new.condition.
Price-cheap. Call Hon at 77819,
Battle of the Bands-Tonight
where Gan you get delicious wines:
id che ican ind enjoy live aniet:
falnment? to the Mousetrap
this Moker TOpen Fri. and Sat.
pm:
ey,
lm gonna put you In a body cast.
[Rope you don't mind a Freshman,
haying @ crush ona Junior
Dear Wes! Friend,
Thank you much!
Julian
Good old fashioned Live Rack at
‘Old Fashion
State Quad U-Loungi
November 14, 1980
Pris: $60 git con centigte
our tat Prizes; $25
Four 2nd Prized: $18 @
Send Albany theme Photos to:
Bob Colvin, Colonial Box 688
by,
It Yaimost) November 16, 1980!
Alter this birthday all thoughts of
transferring will be @ thing of the
past, We love you!
Kayrenbee
iy
Memories of our stay at the “I and
A’ will always be remembered.
‘Thanks for an amazing weekend
Spent with the one | love.
All my love, S
(he hit; of the
domi),
Hope You had a great bday. The big
two-ol You're not getting older
you're getting better.
Aand R
Dearest Audie:
Dear Ran
Fogo Tals Girhday ie as wonderful
‘and beautiful as you are.
Love your sultees, Shari, Sheryl
Stacey, Andrea
ease say hi to the kids and hai
ood, weekend. Thanks again, list
for being you:
have mised the boat, but -
'T MISS THE BATTLE.
Join us for Hi
You may
bo
Eric,
Happy Srandey andi papny 2 mon,
we do wines, lines, and
doable logeiner til were ancien
It's not somewhat, It's for sure,
forever.
Love, the Mrs.
To my brother Luke,
Please don’t call so late, Jesse
doesn't like calls after midnight.
Barbara Jean
Rath and Lint
Welcome back! Did
jou bring the
husbands ani
kids?
Carole
Joan,
Dirty Underwear Is no laughing mat:
or!
Les
Darlin’ Deb brings the shears to you
with halrouts to fit:your face and
Suit your style, Call 699-4309,
TYPING: qualified \ypists located
near campus. $t/page, Gall before 9
pm, 4388
Paasporungestn aan $5 foi
2,50 cents each thereafter. Mon
13, .No, appointment necessary,
University Photo. Service. Campus
Genter 305, Bob or Suna, 7-8
Professional Typing ae a
Selectric, Experienced, 273-7218,
After 5, Weekends,
Apartmentmate Wanted:
Maleifemale, non-emoKor, $125 plus
utilities; Main Avenue, 4:
Grad: needs place ASA, Will pa
to se rs 482-4063,
Roomma ted,
A bodraom moble homey excelent
location, low rent, 456-1725,
Gludonte- Share @ house, 102
Western Ava by Lake. Huge rooms,
Lilies Inluded, '$160-185, deposit,
Call 766:32
apaineriay Wanted to rent four
badroom apt. for second semester,
N. Pine. Gall 438.3249,
Wanted
ticke|
Cal
Pat Bonatar
feagonable price,
971-4506,
WANTED anyone who wants (0 par-
ticlpate in. word:identification ex=
perlment and to earn $4 for a 30
Minute session, Gome to LCa-
foom Monday through
69 pm, of call Wang at
480-4335 for an appointment,
OVERSEAS JOBS-Summoriyear,
found, Europe, S, Amer, Australia,
Asia, All {lelds, $500-$1200 month!
Sightseeing, Free Info, Write:
Box , Corona Dal Mar, CA,
LOST: White gold opal ring with
four diamond chips. Reward! Call
Karen, 482.3
Lost nae i blue canvas case
In front of Dutch Quad. Sunday
night, Please call Debbie, 7-760.
Wooden bracelet lost in Lecture
Center last Friday. Sentimental
tall Please call 495-6669,
Gold charm holder. if found
plone call 74016. Reward. “Sen:
imental value.
Cost: Black woo) jacket with gold
trim, lao set of Keys. Please call
Hoey Nowtone,
Aren't you afed we celebra
llonel Hldays even Ino one
1008?! Have a
Tat 1 otk tse hares Ti Be oper
ding my time catching up on my
sleep. | would say more but you
know It all.
The Rolling Head shop order ines
869-0992, We deliver
Dutch Guad Is feading you to the
Point of no Return.
To our resident Jockette,
You are finally legal. It Is okay to
drink, to0. Happy téth Birthday.
With love, your sweeties’
Hosebag
You should go to SRC. | only need
my diaphragm for singing, you
smirking ==
i Love, Oatmeal
ianenay nae
Gome out othe closet and do It in,
the open,
To my lover,
It's your day once again and | hope
to make ita beautiful one. Happy,
happy birthday, MUFF This
weekend will be Incredible, | pro-
miso. | love you
Could ever imagine, !hope this lasts
forever.
With ugs, kisses, and all my love,
of
Please!
Sheryl,
To a Special person for a special
montt
Love, Phil
Colonial Quad Photo Contost,
Theme changed to any pictures of
Albany. Just state If 35 mm_or In:
Stamatic on back. Also... get in SX.
7Olone:shot photos. We noed en-
tries! Bob Colvin, Colonial 686,
Pumpkinhead,
Q, What do you give a dead baby?
‘A, A doad watermelon,
ll my love, Chancey
ti | don't understand Your jokes
either,
Mi sralag a para un fin de semana
facto, Te amo.
Ka
Doar Little White Girl,
Here's to our triple at night, disco,
music, Sutters, Joe Green, exer
cises, ‘haircuts, S.P.'s, and all the
good times to come, Happy 20!
All.our love, T and S
FM,
‘Our love still goes on, and is miiked,
even after the rain, Happy Anniver:
sary!
Love, Al
Bruice Collins, 901 Morris,
You have nice buns.
BB fans
Tdon't think ican deal,
Delancey invites Delancey to a soo.
Hlonloss got together! “Saturday
night at 7:30,
isa,
Tt was getting close, the cops were.
Knocking at my door, Happy birth
day
‘ove always, Jett
Joan, 16th floor Dutch,
You ¢an take off that monster mask,
now. Halloween's over!
Rich
ts,
Now that we're in the same boat (for.
4 change) maybe we can go salling
sometime,
Host it awhile ago
Marilyn —
When there's nothing to say and
nothing to do, drift: away into obli-
Vion and pretend you're on General
Hospital where you can do almost
anything you want and got away
wit
Midterms are over, finals are on the:
way, the Point of No Return Is here,
Hiaikes for everythin
Students,
Guess who's here? Nell Sonemberg
Stop In and see the action,
Sulte 1902
Bg the baby of the eulte Is one ye
‘away {rom belng halfway to fort
Haye a great 19th birthday, roomie.
Love, Crickat
To everyone who made my 20th the
‘weekend ever, thanks! | love
you all,
Steve (Roscoe Js.)
Happy Birthday Laurie,
A toast, to the good times past, and
to'the ones left to come.
Cheers, with love, Flana
Dear Mary,
Even though the old sulte nas split,
We still have It together. Wishing
you the best birthday! Be happy
ays.
always
Love, El and Mel
Sandy,
The fireworks are hailing over
Albany tonight cause you'ro here
The three musketeers are gonna
have a great weokend.
Love, Lisa and Susan
Michael Ferrera,
Plo In a Fire!
___dohn and Jen,
Dear Deb)
Much jove, health and happiness on
your birthday and foraver!: Happy,
happy birthday!
Love you, Lisa
JON,
Thanks to you I've been getting a lot
of exercise walking back and forth
to Dutch, belng typical, But serious
Ty, thanks, Ill return your notes to
you:
Later
Cortbiteh,
Happy Biihday to @ great friend. |
Wish you the best of luck and hap:
piness always,
Love, Lynda-witch
Allaf
Undoteated, unscored upon, we are:
the champions, That is the bottom:
ine.
Konnoth Mitchell,
Keop up the clean work! Happy Bir.
thday!!
Bilbo
Gail,
Tkp1ow this is just the beginning of a
‘wonderful relationship,
Love, Alan
Huggy bea
Just tike tiny little tea leaves, tiny
Uiie tushes are tastier! Happy An
iversary
"Love you always, FB
Randi,
A girl as sweet as you deserves the
best birthday
Love, The! “Guys Above
Cori,
You turn us upside down and inside
out, Have a great birthday
Love Robin and Elissa
To the rest of Johnsons best and all
my wonderful friends,
Thanx for making this birthday the
Best! | love you all
Barbara
Dutch Quad presents the Point of
No Return, Live rock and roll band,
will be at the party In the Dutch,
UsLounge, Saturday, 9:30 pm-1:00
am
Dear Joey,
Thank you for, my clown, | love him
so much! ” U are ‘the most
generous, and ne Is the ultimate in
clowns,
Love, Kathi
‘8 not too bad.
far,
You're great. | love you and there's
Way I'm @ scuz
Guess who
Hoy Trish,
Plok up the phone and call uptown.
Far away but not forgotten
Mo Waish,
19 down: no longer
20 across: end of transition
15 November: Happy Birthday
jeomers.
Love, 3 adults plus 2
if Thad a package. | would eagerly
ee jou?
The Pi No has come,
Arora ta no voming back.
Dear Debbie,
Have the best birthday ever
luch love, Jamie
Dedicated Bowler,
my precedence to kegling makes
iLaltheuit to get thet teat cin dour,
how ean It improve you average?
etter
Dear Jil,
Thanks for being a terrific sister.
Love, Neil
Honey,
I don't understand, but, so far, so
90
Love, ‘God’
To my sister Susan Hillman,
Hypothetically, wanna ‘go to
Ramapo Diner.
Love you, Bunny Weissman
Pa,
Its such a happy thiny
here, We loves you
that you are
joary much!
Roscoe and Ma
Gome Party with State Quad’ and
SAT,,.9 pm, In the U:Lounge:
aor ‘and Billy,
Happy Birthday, Plainview Derries.
Modern bar and pall this Thanksgly:
ni
Love, Laurle
To, everyone who helped mo
celobrate my.1
want to.thank you all tor showing
me the greatest weekend.
Wouldn't tave: Been hell -as good
without such very special poopie to
share It with, | fove you all, thanx
again.
Carol
Hay Birthday! You're legal now,
the drinks are on us,
Love, Mouth, Shotz, §, Head) Min:
dola, Maryann »
tsa,
Happy Legality! Do something dif-
ferent for your birthday, wake up.
the next morning!
Paul
Come on Leo,
You're legal now, Go For It!
Diana's Devils
Dear Lee Bird,
Happy 18th birthday to a fantastic
foomle! Hope you get lots of eating
and) drinking done (especially
eating)!
PS. EMS.
Orew!,
think’ we finally got our act
together, Thanks for being the great
guy | Jove So much, "Happy Anniver
sary.”
Love, Lestie
Your boautiful-eyed Itallan
Dutch Quad Party on Saturday trom
9:30 pm+t:00 am, The Point of No.
Roturn. Live rock and roll band,
Aura, will be there leading you to,
the point.
Dear Gary.
Thanks from the bottom of my liver
for the personal. am high on life, it
doesn't blow. I'll be here for you
also,
Love all of the time?, Nadine
PS, | hope you've been saving
those personals,
J,
Where's my sweatshirt? Oh, you
want to wear it, Well, maybe
A Joni Mitchell fan
TM Is Just to express my apprecia
Mon and to bay thanks for belng my
personal deelay and to accept yo
witatlon to play racauetbalt (there
is aiill time to retract your offer,
since you've never seen me play)
A (rand: down the hall and in the
county
Monica, Mitch, Laura, Det il
Pattie, My. statf aon ‘everyone: else
who wished ma
Whonke forall tne birthday wishes,
You're all the greatest. aul
a
P,
\ehonestly hope everything works ~
oll! for you, because | like (0 see
you smiling, But remember
whatever happens. you've sill got
your trlends, Take it easy kid,
g try not to be lonely ti
fave good dinner ‘nd a
Good a try to remember
iseut connie
that's no ex:
Case, Oxay, well thane what Te the
excuse?
See you soon, Marie
Cola
Over $200 in preeanss Enter now!
Send entries fo Bob Colvin, Colonial
Wanted: Roommate. Named Mary,
Preferably {rom Yonkers, Must ure
In, glagle late at night, have a fetish
fot can openers, and lighters, must
have a set routine for drying her
half, must know how to be the best
roommate for a girl from Po Town,
Happy 21st birthday toots. Make it
ood, but keep your pride inside,
ja hon, Debbie
Cathy,
Here's to a long awaited first, and
ent ave eh always, Tom
Hey Na,
Rink You made a good decision,
fhe Clash lover,
Thank you for being you, you've
made my life here Infinitely joytul,
My only wish Is to make you as hap:
py as You make me!
The latin hater
SMG,
What else can | say to my carrot
eating roomie except vaggies do I
belter?! Remember, jst give a
shout if the =! (I'd diel) Thanks for
everything
converted veggie
Battle of the Bands Tonight
Dear Cult,
We love your facen!
NER? Guile and Souttio
Mike,
Happy 6th anniversary, sweetheart!
Thanks for making me the happiest,
and lucklest girl on earth, | will ove
you forever!
The {uture Mrs. P.
tsa,
lappy, Happy,
yourvirhday
are,
Happy 18th! Hope
as wonderful as you
All my love, Karen
To all Slugs, Bo's Boys, Dykes, Sex
pots, Sluts, Losers, ‘Zekes, and
other, assorted sports fans,
Thanks very much for all you did to
celebrate my birthday,
Tod
P'S. Sorry if | ‘extinguished’ anyone,
iso's fun,
(sa,
Here's a nice personal for a change.
Have a happy teth birthday,
Love, Scott, Steve, Tommy
Battle of the Bands.
Tonight, CC Ballraom, 8 pm, adm.
Sister Catrina
You may bo crazy sometimes
Perhaps, a littie silly
But that is why this birthday wish
Is ospocially for you
, The Guru
Dear Lisa,
Well you ‘made it, Big 18! Have a
great year!
Love, 1903
Congratulations to Neil Stein and,
Tyrone Montegue-Balloon Launch
Contest Winners. Neil's card return:
6d from Williamstown, Mass., and,
Tyrone’s the day it was released.
$200 of prizes will begiven at Satur.
day's football game, See Tuesdays
ASP for pitcher winners
Kand J
Thanks for making my 21st birthday
Love, J
What other word can describe Allah,
but Amazing, We are the cham:
pions.
Gétts
Caurie,
Ameg-Wahi! Happy Birthday! Glad
we could share both with you,
Love Randi and Sue
Sister Colonna, =
May the Convent throw you a wild
19th birthday party! "ll bring the
matzoh balls,
Rabbi Chus
SIster Colonna,
May the Convent throw you a wild
19th birthday party! I'll bring the
matzoh balls,
RabbiChus
John R,
Having’ a friend like you Is
unbelievable. You're the greatest!
Love, Andrea
Suite 10%
Thanks agaln for breakfast —_d.
You're the greatest! We ou
Russ an. ondra
Okay Rich, aa
Here's that long-awaited personal
looking for. He)
dnesday was fun, You should
7088 up and act like an editor more
jovember 14, 1980
dent Senate Hearing
ontinued from front page
oles.
No, 1 and creating a separate
Jecied body of faculty that might
jonsider academic issues and facul-
hy related issues.
Reducing the percentage of stu-
dent representation.
Eliminating student representa-
ion,
If any of these options were
adopted they would become the
manent policy.
The committee hopes to be able
‘0 narrow {ts options down after
this referendum, and to present the
faculty with a second referendum
before the winter break, Birr said,
eview
Birr added that he hopes to pro-
Pose the revision by early in the spr-
ing semester.
“IT think that there is at least a
Possibility that this committee will
fail,” said Birr, “That fs, it may be
Unable to come up with an a
table revision of the bylaws,"”
Speaking to the committee, Dean.
of Student Affairs Neil Brown
Spok® favorably of student
Tepresentation
Ih considering its decision,
Brown said the committee must
“‘say something about the educa
tional environment we have, and
the educational environment we
want. Since the 50's we have pula
Registration for
jov. 17, 18; Math — Nov. 1
— Dee, 1,2; Soe, Studies
“Up Parl-Way from Slavery: Black People of the Upp
Lecture by Dr
History Department, Howard University, Saturday, Nov. 15,
10 a.m, at the New York State Museum Auditorium, Empire
son, Until World War
Siate Plaza,
“War and Mot
Special Guest Lecturer, Prof
University speaks on
Scale," Tues, Nov
pool
482-3482.
Capital District Council of Stutterers incet every Mon
Campus Center conference room College of Si
Anyone who has a stuitering problem and would like 4
a
Jent teaching for anyone who will be stu
dent teaching during the academic year 1981-82 s
10 Education 115 between 9-4 on the following days according
o your field: Business Education
Sciences
Dec
ily." Lecture by Prof. Honnie Steinbeck,
SUNYA Philosophy Department, Sunday, Nov, 16,
al New York State Museum Auditoriut
Images of War in American and British Literature progr
Michae! Isaacson
‘Analytical Tools at the Molecular
18 al 7:15 p.m, in LC 21 for the course
Silicon Microsiructure Technology & Chemical Science
Ski Sugarbush, Vermont with the Albany State Ski Club, Jan.
18:23, $155,00 includes lifts, lodging and meals. Trans
For information call Sieve at
Nov. 13, 143 English
Nov. 20; Languages
Hud:
Thomas J. Davis,
30 p.
Empire State Plaza
Cornell
by car
463-1750 or Skip al
at Bin
Rose. For
comeit thru a theraputic approach, SUNYA students welconie
Michael’s
Hair Salon
STUDENT SPECIAL
Wet Haircut
All Perms
1311 Central Ave.
(1 | Block East of Fuller)
Unisex
with this coupon
$5.00
$25.00
Daily Mon.-Sat
Thursday Evenings
459-1010 for Appts.
ee ll
We have the Van on Saturday.
leave 8:30 from the circle
Call Gary 482-7286 for info
Albany Student Press
Page Thirteen
certain value on student opinion,” +*
Brown added that it is important
for students to feel that they
belong. “Second class citizenship
does not account for that,’” said
Brown,
“We have finally won the right to
vote in ollr college community, A
District Court Judge decided we are
Tesponsible members of our com:
munity," said NYPIRG's Leslie
Haber. “If we are responsible
members of our college community
we sure as hell are responsible
members of the SUNYA commur
ty"!
Birr said that if the interest is
there, he is willing to work with Sue
Gold to try to arrange a debate se:
sion on the pros and cons of student
Tepresentation of the University
Senate,
Greyhound
continued from front pawe
destinations of the buses to be sent
SUN) A ie will under negotiation.
Gaioni suit that "SA has been
chartering buses for the past three
iama
Pi runs charter buses for students
for the Thanksgiving break and
other holidays, SA places the orders
with Greyhound, procures the
necessary forms, and Delta Sigma
Pi is responsible for the monetary
details,
As of now, the Credit Union is
occupying the space intended for
the sale of Greyhound bus tickets
However, according to Credit
Union yice-president Tom Schill
ng, they are anticipating moving
into the space next to UAS check
cashing next semester,
Physical Plant Director Dennis
Stevens said Greyhound will hi
request permission from the univer=
sily for the buses 10 make stops on
Campus
years."” For example, Delt
In addition, he sald ‘it is
ludicrous for SA to have to make
agreements {0 sell tickets for
Greyhound when Trailways is of
fering the shuttle service for free."
He ‘also pointed out that
Greyhound has not made plans for
a stop at Alumni Quad,
Silkwood
continued from page three
rounding the suspicious death of
Karen Silkwood,.
Silkwood, the mother of three
children, thought niclear energy
‘was a good thing and that it was im-
portant, In 1972, she went {0 Work
atthe Kerr-McGee plutonium
plant, 20 miles outside Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma,
Wiiliin three months, she was out
on the picket-line at Kerr-McGee
and by the summer of 1974, she
beeame actively involved with
union negotiations at the plant. Her
n, Hager recalled, was
id safely of her fellow
employees
Later, Silkwood expresseck major
alarm with plutonium quality con+
(rol, “ihe most dangerous of toxic
sublstances,'* according to Hager
Pressure on Ketr-MeGee Was ap:
plied that autumn, for public safety
and the settlement of union pros
blems, "*KerrMcGee was vague on
the hazards of phitonium. As
publicity, they used an article fron
the late 1950's,"" Hager com
mented,
Beginning in Seplember, 1974,
Silkwood agreed 10 compile
documented evidence of q
tionable practices taking place at
Kert-MeGee, Ay Silkwood moved
Into union labor negotiations, she
was contaminated on or around
November $, Articles in her home
Were found to contain plutonium
contamination for the next three.
consecutive days, Officials con:
fiscated belongings trom her house,
‘and she was later told to leave her
place of residence.
On the evening of November 13,
1974, Karen Silkwood drove her car
seven miles toa mecting with a
Ih expert for the Oil, Chemical,
and Atomie Workers International
Union (OCAW) and New York
nicluding
Seniors:
fow is the time to act!
We've gotta make decisions
about this years activities
Senior Week”
graduation speaker
Attend the next Class
Meeting
Monday, November 17
CC 370- 9:00pm
7.
‘and
of '81
Times reporter David Burnham,
She had with her documents she
had taken concerning the plant at
which she worked, For six weeks,
she had been on special assignment
for the OCAW, investigating ac-
cusations that the plant was
violating Atomic Energy Commis.
sion {AEC) regulation and jeopat
dizing the health of its employees.
But Silkwood never reached her
destination, Her car crashed and
she was instantly killed,
“I's suspicious that Silkwood's
car went off at the left side of the
road," offered Hager, as he ended
the controversial story of Karen
Silkwood,
Although it was ruled by the
Oklahoma highway patrol that
Silkwood had fallen asleep at the
Wheel of her car, Hager presented
substantial evidence that this was
no accident,
He noted that dents were found
by private investigators, hired by
the OCAW, in the back bumper
and fender of the car which
Silkwood drove, This, Hager ex-
plained, indicated that her car had:
been forced off the road by another
Vehicle, The next day, Hager added,
the documents which Silkwood had
carried with her in the car were
missing,
Silkwood's family brought sult
inst Kerr-MeGee for her con-
tamination, A jury asserted that the
contamination was intentional and
4 10th Circuit Court of Appeals
awarded $10.5 ml in punitive
damages to her fi
Soon after, Kerr McGee was shut
down by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, as they were responsi-
ble for more than $00 violations,
Hager said
He added that a second case,
which deals with the cause of
Silkwood's accident six years ago
yesterday, is still in appeal,
“We're trying 10 preserve the
memory of Karen Silkwood,'*
Hager stressed, "'She was ordinary,
moral and right — and she died for
it," he said, “but she was not the
only one who pul their life down to
perpeluale a system which kills
them,"*
Gay Poll
continued frov page se'
and Jesuiany fave on eampus.!”
He, added that he feels thai
“stronger preventative measures:
should be taken throughout the
campus 10 eliminate existing
diserimination’® and that‘
Stronger committment is needed on
the part o/ the University to prevent
Harassment,"
MePartlin feels that a positive
Fesull Of the poll is that ‘a lot of
Students will re-examine their own.
attitudes concerning homosexualie
sa funded
Tired of the
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same old
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Wy
%
Class of 1983
Class Council
Meeving
Weekly Meering will be
held on Sunday Nov. 16
At 7:47 p.m.
Ir will be on rhe 6xh”
floor lounge of she
Colonial Tower
Rent Yeo
dorm
November 14, 1980
(AP) It’s a dream a lot of fans
have been harboring for a long time
— the prospect of regional rivalries
in the National Football League.
Oakland vs. San Francisco twice
a year, or Baltimore ys
Washington, or Dallas ys.
Houston, or Philadelphia vs. Pitt-
sburgh, or Miami vs, Tampa Bay or
New York vs... sett. ..ahh.
New Jersey.
Those are natural rivalries, easily
48 hol as the current ones built on a
decade or more of divisional play,
like Pittsburgh+Houston And
Dallas-Washington, ot the
Jets And Giants In Same
Division—Highly Unlikely
historical ones built on hostility,
like Pittsburgh-Oakland,
Some day, almost cértainly after
the 1981.season and the now collec-
tive bargaining agreement — if
there is one — takes effect, the 28
Club owners of one of the world's
most exclusive clubs are going to get
around to talking seriously about
opening up the membership roll toa
couple of more people or groups
Willing 10 spend about $30 million
apiece for a franchise.
“We don't have a timetable,””
said NFL Commissioner Pete
Rozelle. "The time for expansion is
BATTLE OF THE BANDS
starring
Doctor Doon Glasshammer
Peking Boys Empty hats
TONIGHT
CC Ballroom- 9pm
Judged by WPYX- 106FM, 92FLY, WCDB-91FM
Beer and Refreshments Available
Admission $2.00 Benefit for Telethon ‘81
Please have ID
Guewza Latina
is sponsoring a bus to Union College for
“The Black & Latin Association” Party.
Bus will leave the circle at
10:00 pm & 11:00 pm.
For more information:
Contact our office 457-8651
See You There!
ANY STATE CINEMA
AND
TOWER EAST CINEM
PRESENT
He was a poor black
sharecropper's son who
never dreamed he
was adopted.
STEVE
MARTIN.
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
Friday & Sazurday
November 14 & 19
7:30 and 10:00
Lecrure Cenzer 7
1.00 w/rax on TEC 1.70 w/our
Panrzially SA Funded
This Weekend
at the
The Pub.
Welcomes Back The Best
of Rock
Another One of
the Arca’s Finest
A COMPLETE LINE
OF YOUR FAVORITE
MIXED ORINKS:
ALL YOUR POPULAR DHANDS OF ELI AND ALE
AP PLUS A FULL LINE
oy IMPORTED ROTTLED BEERS
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HOT BUTTER FLAVORED
Pore
All This Weekend at The Pub
Thursday November 13th
G6p.m.—12:30a.m.
SHriday & Saturday November 14th & 15th
6p.m.—1:30a.m.
University Auxiliary Services Sponsored
rN
( Allah Downtown Champs |
by Steve Greenberg
The sixth annual Alumni Quad Flag Football League concluded this
past Saturday with Allah winning their first championship, The only
team to finish the regular season undefeated, Allah had no problems
winning the Arduino Conference. In the Greene Conference, the
Werewolves managed to beat some strong competition 10 finish in
- first, Two wildcard teams, Bo's Boozers and the Saddleboys,
out the playoff field.
The opening game of tht playoffs pited the Werewolves and the
Suddleboys in a hard hitting defensive battle
The Saddleboys scored carly in the
The Werewolves {ook the lead again 12-6 midway in that half
Witliess than {wo minutes left, the Saddleboys tied it up again, and
took the lead when they
rounded:
cond period of the contest
extra point. The
Werewolve’s last minute drive was snuffed out by an interception. The
Saddleboys had their victory, and a ticket to the finals.
Allah faced no such difficulties when they bear Bo's Boozer in the
other semifinal game, Midway in the first half, Allaly broke the ice
and took the lead, 6-0, Minutes later they added to their lead and led
13-0 at halftime, Allah scored once more in the second half and won,
20.0, The difference in the game was clearly the big plays — Allah's
ability 10 make them and Bo's Boozers failure 10 produce
(© the finals, the Saddleboys faced a strong challenge a
fen easily by Allaly ywice in the regular season. Allal
, what has become their trademark, the carly lead, when
quarterback Steve Larrabee ran a long bootleg into the endzone, Th
failed on the conversion and the physical first half ended at 6-0.
Early in the second half, Allah increased their lead as Larrabee
nected with Bob Richter on a twenty yard pass play, Adam Hurwit
ran the ball for the extra point and Allah led 13-0, They clinched th
game and the championship with three minutes lef, when Mat
Powers ran the ball seven yards for hidown, Hurwotz ran for
ihe conversion again and the game ended 20-0.
Allah, in winning the championship, compiled an amaciti
Scoritig 269 points during the season, while not yieldiny « point. Ati
xpressed the sentiment i
drunk! J
[GOREN]
Tia
1 Coppucino
of Liquor'e
Choi
Graced with
your
FREE with this er 20, 1980)
Lavs at Madison. Albany. N.Y
(518) 463-52
Purveyor of fine {
Hours: Lunch 11:30:5:00 Tuesday Saturda
Dinner §:00-11,00 Tuesday: Saturday
Munchies Menu 11:00pm:closing Tuesday: Saturday
Sunday Brunch 12n00n9 00pm
Albany Student Press
Page Fifteen
@ stale of mind, where enough of
the owners feel, ‘this is. the right
tim
If expansion is a state of mind,
realignment is a state of siege, In
1969, as part of the merger, it took
three marathon sessions to achieve
the present format, with Baltimore,
Cleveland and Pittsburgh, three of
the old NFL clubs, finally agreeing
to join the American Football Con-
ference, the 10 teams which had
been the American Football
League. Rozelle almost had to lock
ihe owners in a room and keep it
locked until they came up with the
The expansion field is limited to
pethaps a half-dozen cities,-with
Birmingham, Jacksonville, Mem-
phis and Pheonix as the most likely,
Indianapolis and Honolulu as out-
siders, Los Angeles also is a
possibility, depending on the
resolution of litigation between the
NFL and the Oakland Raiders
who'd love to be the LA Raiders,
Just for the record, here’s one
man’s prospective lineup for a new,
improved, regionalized, six-
division, one-conference NFL:
Northeast Division: Baltimore,
New
Jets and Washington,
sion; Buffalo, Cincinnal
Cleveland, Philadelphia and Piu-
sburgh.
Central Division: Chicago,
Denver, Detroit, Green’ Bay and
Minnesota,
South Division; Atanta, Miami,
New Orleans, Tampa Bay and Bir-
mingham or Jacksonville or Mem-
phis,
Southwest Division; Dallas,
Houston, Kansis City, St, Louis
and Phoenix.
West Di ; Los Angeles,
Oakland, San Diego, San Francisco
and Seattle,
Sound reasonable?
Well, forget it. Realignment to
Tegional divisions is about as dead
as New Orleans’ chances of winning
‘the Super Bow! this year,
Draft Causes Different Battle
New York (AP) With
drawn and checkbooks al the ready,
the New York Meis and New York
Yankees prep
over (ree agent
pens
d for a showdown,
Dave Winfield and
and Don Sutton following Thurs:
day's reentry drat
Both New York baseball teams
made Winfield and Sutton their
first {Wo choices of the draft, set
ting up an intracity confron
for wo of the top names available
tion
Winfield and Sutton were
selected by 10 teams each — three
fewer than the maximum 13.1Bany
limit. The two who were closest
both were surprises, catcher
infielder Dave Roberts with 12
{eams bidding and journeyman out
ficlder Jim Dwyer, picked by 11
Hubs.
Roberts was the first player pick
ed, selected by the Chicago Cubs,
who made no other choices in the
drafl. He iy represented by agent
Jerry Kapstein, who said by phone
from his offie in San Diego. that
negotiations already have begun for
Rol who batted 238 in 101
panes Lor Tevas last season.
We're not suprised that Dave
way picked No. 1, not at all,” said:
Kanstein, "We have held indepth,
talks with a number of teams and
there hay been strong interest. in
executive said, “This guy
of Jolin Haylivek
may nol be able to play
‘kethall ike Hvtigck,. butte
[ ENTERTAINMENT CAREER CONSULTANTS
4 baseball handyman, who played
a least one game at each of the
cight starting positions for Texas
last season.
Dwyer, a veletan who has played
for five teams, batted .285 In 95
games with Boston last season, Like
Roberts, he is likely to command
the kind of numbers that the
Yankees and Mets will toss around
when the bidding begins for Win
field and Sutton,
Still, 111s important 10 remember
that Kapstein was the agent for pit
cher John Curtiy fast year, Cutris
wals carning about the same salary
as Roberts before the draft and he
signed a $1.8 million, five-year
agreement will San Diego.
Roborts might decide fo shop in
the same price neighborhood.
low compared (0 Win
nounved predratt
$15 million for 10
demands 0
year
Winticld
nt sure
ni real satistied:
the dialt
said
everything Will Work out
The sluguer hac set up, head
quarters in New York for about a
Week before the dealt and met with
both the Mets and Yankees is well
as the Atlanta Braves, OF the other
even clubs lected him
fou can be ruled dul = Pitisbureh
Baliimore and
Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Winfield had written (0,
more than a dozen teams including
these four advising them that he
* ENTERTAINMENT CAREER
CONSULTANTS
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P.O. BOX 335
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n interyi
To arrangs
the office listed below
Nov. 18, 1980
Pepperdine University
School ¢
wishes to announce that an admission officer will be on campus
to speak with anyone interested in pursuing a legal education
or to attend a group session, contact
Date Contact: CAR
AND PLACE
> Law
PLANNING
NT OFFICE
nol interested in playing in thelr
cities:
That means the participants
should be the* Mets, Yankees,
Braves, Housto Si, Louis and
California, All picked hiny on the
first round excep! the Angels, who.
waited until round five 10 name
hin
Wintield waited out resulis of the
diafi-acrosy town, His agent, Al
, and his attorney, Dick
1 hand
The Melty and Yankees seemed
‘anxious to begin the hatte for Win
field and both teams had appoint
inients (0 talk with the slugger and
hily fepresentatives in the next wo
i
{e's outstanding, fot only ay
aun atfilete but as a person," said
George Steinbrenner, owner of the
Yankees and annually one of the
Tiow ayent dralt's bigwest spenders.
“1 think he sould fH in well with
Our lineup, with hitters like Rengie
Juckson, Bob Watson.”
Steinbrenner, of course, captured
Jackson and Watyon in previous
free quent auction
Hank Cashen, seeutive view
President dnd yee! manager of
thy Me! shed it the chit hiv
any coiling an the bidding for Win
field
“Noi a his,tiine,"* Castien said.
That is 0 olear reversal of paliey
for the Mets, who always have ap:
prowche agent
murkeiplice with wieir bankroll
locked in the yaull and undisturbed
“A uy like Winfield could really
turn a team around," said Manager
Joe Torre of the Mets We’
the guys on the team who can et
hase ini front of him. Now we have
to pet the guy who ean knock them
in? :
The battle lines were drawn for
Winfield and Sutton, who was
selected by California, Cleveland,
Montreal, Milwaukee, Texas,
Atlanta, Pittsburgh and Houston ay,
‘well as th
ve Hol
‘could expect bids from
Baltimore, California, Chicago
Cubs, Chicago
Houslon, Los Ang
tle New York Yankees,
Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seat
fas, well as his old
Which retained
He and Toronto,
team, Texas,
negotiating rights
Meanwhile, two big names, fleet
outfielder Ron LeFlore and World
Series pitching hero Tux McGraw,
were on the outside looking in as
the auction began, Both were all but
ignored in the draft, LeFlore pi
only in the 11th round by the White
the draft rules, both
jared total free
te with all
all, Under
players were dé
agents, eligible (on
26 major league clubs
Buddabinga!
Entertainment Sunday and Monday evenings
ee =
ovember 14, 1980
Albany Student Press ~ Page Seventeen
y | Danes Hope To Stay Over .500
continued,
wed from back page n our option, we're going to have most is split end John. Vella, whose
Where he's going to be,"" continued to dump something over them, and 26 catches for 355 yards und four
Colonial Cleaners ||
J.C. and Paul worked for 8
ct Nee route ee i AE Collins, ‘so that puts him into a get some points on the board,” touchdowns make him Springfield's
ih | 5 land the. problems student A Poston to have a good day." And, after the intensity and ball leading receiver. The (wo also were
Professional Dry cleaners cellence in Hair Styling they are Bouquet of fresh Weues $3. 98 - T nt doesn't end there in control exhibited against UCR, the a combo in high school, so they've
i : steed AOiin' NVC Ou ait is FID Tickler $8.50 - Ae lel secondary. Frank Danes might be able to do just that, got their system down, “He's their
percent Discount rs superbly trained and our service 482.8696 i Monello, at 5-10, 190 pounds, is best receiver," Motta said of Vella, +
the best possible. o- f ns . Probably their best defender, accor- the confidence in their ability to “When it comes to passing situa-
q
Widlegguident 1.D,
Ging to Dane coach Erv Chambliss, move the football,” sald Albany tions, we'll probably concen
—— =
Devi. CUNTON, LEANN, 0 10207 | y ‘ 2 seal Be Sprinter in the 40 defensive coordinator Mike Motta, him,"
1} (ie ase Lie BL eh are uth Monello makes his ‘which after the two previous But the Chiefs are mostly a runn=
Brine: dee Sree NEXT TO WELLINGTON — tovesticit! wh der 1D 1 Hew Yo pieeity Known once the ball is in little questionable, i Motta said, keeping the
| Bhan, ‘ 16 PRE PAREEOR the air. “He's picked off a couple ‘ely for Springfield, the ground about 75 percent
46: They especially like to
a mbliss said. “And when he gets word is variety, Th
MCAT-LSAT-GMAT 8 a + ‘ Oe bal, he's dangerous,” different sets, and ex. i quick trap type
SAT-DAT-GRE és -¥ = i NG there is another. Free safety cep the full wishbone,’ ording plays that ¢ the lineman going
a Dennis Parent, starting in his first fo Collins, in the wrong direction, Their main
y Varsity game last week, had 14 The Chiefs are led by southpaw man is fullback Scott Byrd. “We'll
tackles, forced a fumble, and quarterback Jim Collins, a junior ware of their inside
} bed a who was AIl-ECAC as a
W sophomore, Last week, he ran for
downs and tht
4 | TRAILWAYS To:_
Fors | NORTH-SOUTH-EAST-WEST,
UTICA
Stopping the run
be the responsibility of tackles
ng attack will
"They did a pretty good job
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|
Now yu ea ideo Brad New Bus al he wy ls, aan SG
across New York State..:As for East as Boston
tnd as for Wes! a8 Cleveland where you carn est ai ,
{ en 2 :
NG \
Ibany senior defensive end Jeff Carone tackles an Ithuca ballcarrier in the
4980 season opener. (Photo; Steve Essen)
BUFFALO ROCHESTER
ALBANY
®X ONEONTA
“SYRACUSE \
defending against the option," said Collins. said, Shoen (a prospective All-American.
Collins, who also saw the Chiefs anything, but when people candidate) and Jim Halloran, along,
team, “Buritthey keep cheating up The person he likes o hil the ‘Tom Fogarty. If they can hold up
and do a good job,” Motta said,
“we'll be in pretty good shape.’
Another thing the Chiefs do ef
“TASTE THE BEER THAT OUTSELL s ciiewe
ave 10 watch for that, but they will
fe! help this time from the defensive
ends,
Bul even though they are basieal
_ LABATTS. " expects 10
z 2 a thrown the ball quite a bit
against us.” he sald,
We're a run-orienied defense, They
pul some pressure on you defensive:
play Norwich, another wishbone are open, he'll hit them." With linebackers Matt Brancato and
oly Is go off tackle with the
“In the past,
’
Good news)
Jabatte, Canadas No. Iselling rheer, is now. Pere tothe 11S,
So, now its easier to compare the taste of our Labatt: vith thé
rect anywhere in the U.S.A
brew of our friendly competitor, , Mraeniss avs aiRER Gp
See what you think Collins continued, “The 4
We, like most other Canadiens, prefer a bottle of | abact! be back, fullback, and tailback carry
‘over a Golden: about equal
If we didn’t, we'd likely be drinking Molson® instead—and we So a, will be the. key?
“We'll
certainly wouldn't be running this ad.
THINK OR CANADA. | kun
THINK OF LABATT'S:, | ekinesa
position,
“We ha
e can get you pood field
360 BROADWAY
ALBANY, N.Y. 12207
to do well with our
Kicking said. Danie
coucl Gary Reynolds, “They've got
‘1 preity nood one, $0 we've gol 10
ry 10 win thal,"
Indeed, it was the special teams
that gave the Danes the chance to
come bik last week, Darlo Arango
Wwas flawless will the extra points
(while UCH*s kicker missed one that
cost a tle), and the punt and punt
return teams hid & control over
Who got the ball where. And a long
Hickotf return by Jack Burger
gtaurant ve;
qatking abour,
oN
a
oe aH 1N
HEARS UTH
JB Scotts oS
321Central Ave. «seeing '§
436-9138 | Believing
muscle us\"* F
better football team th
now. Can we beat th
We are
Can the
© Later mporen, Inc. Ambent N'Y. reo
HOMEMADE LASAGNA e Giants beat Dallas? We're going in:
SPAGHETTI* MANICOTTI* SEAFOOD Ch aykin’s CPA 10th ie hing wean i
STEAK+PIZZA =a
|Review at Hofstra
Is pleased to announce the
beginning of their
JANUARY SESSION
In preparation for the
May 1981 C.P.A. exam
Free Antipasto Buffet with Dinners
FREE DINNER
Good for one FREE DINNER ENTREE or PIZZA
with the purchase of another Dinner Entree or Pizza
of equal or greater value. This coupon good at the
Vineyard Restaurant Sunday thru Thursday only. For further Information, eal
Must present coupon, Good thru Jan. 31, 1981. Dr, Ralph 8. Poliment, (516) 560-3241 of 560-3313
ook em fo a sd ad a Sd
-You-Can-Eat z Dy Boxing Ne
ITALIAN) FEAST ‘ . : 3) Weeken
; HOFSTRA 1 Muthu Ages Call Hug
<< sano tS 22 avcraesoay UNIVERSITY , het hands
COLONIE CENTER me 7-8914 ©
fhe ara WESTERN AVE. ‘
Holmies?. Duran?
Sugar Ray?
Later Pa
Colonial Qind
I
I
aoe)
Page Eighteen
Albany Student Press
November 14, 1980
Sunny Thoughts From A Great Dane Weekend
“by Bob Bellafiore
Under any other circumstances,
there is no way that you'd find me
on a freezing SUNY bus at four in
the morning, st¥mawhere on the
New York State Thruway between
New York and Albany. But these
Were not ‘any other cir-
cumstances."”
1 can still feel the 89 degree sun
beating down on Walt Disney
World, and on my back at the same
time,
1 also can't remember the last
time I got thrown into a swimming
pool in the second week of
November and didn't really mind,
Never did I think that a bunch of
18 to 25-year olds would be so
amazed at watching the lights on
the streets of Queens, N.Y, from
20,000 fect, ‘Fasten Your Seat
Belt’” signs became optional as far
as they were concerned, because the
view from the Eastern airplane was
just {00 much to pass up. And a lit-
tle flight regulation wasn't about to
stop anybody,
I didn't think I'd ever see a
220-pound football player get such
a kick out of taking a snapshot of
Winnie the Pooh, ~
guess it'll take me a fong time to
forget the ~crew of incredibly
ecstatic and overjoyed football
players that were only a small por-
tion of the crowd at Rosie
O'Grady's Good Time Emporium
e
in Orlando.
And the Tangerine Bowl — well,
what had happened there earlier
that same night had made it all
possible. Because, at about 11:00
the Danes had won their most thrill-
ing game of the season, coming
from behind in the fourth quarter
to beat thelr most gracious hosts,
the University’ of Central Florida,
28-27,
The game was the most impor-
tant reason for the trip, as Albany
head coach Bob Ford emphasized
the entire week before at practice,
and throughout the game up until
the final gun went off. But there
were so many other things besides a
football game,
How many guys thought, when
they decided to play football for
Albany, that they would play in a
48,000 seat stadium that was the
home of a major college bow!
game?
And how many guys thought that
they would play in Florida?
And when they did play, it was
easily their most inspired and most
intense performance of a very up-
and-down season, The trip was the
biggest up" possible.
The firework displays before the
game, during halftime, and after
every UGF score didn't rattle them,
Nor did the elaborate halftime
show, with the marching band and
everyihing else, have any adverse
effect_on the Danes. The at-
mospfiere, if anything, only made
them more ready,
Co-captain senior Jack Burger
said earlier Inst week thal one of the
big things about the trip was that it
would be a chance to play “big
time,"* Chuck Priore thought that
the Danes would rise to the occa
sion, All these things happened —
Danes came back. George Brodeur
said that the trip would be special.
It certainly was.
But perhaps one other player put
it. best_when he compared the
“| didn’t think
I’d ever see a
220-pound football player
get such a kick out of taking a
snapshot of Winnie the Pooh.’’
time, and
to the occa-
Albany played like b
they certainly did ri
sior
Someone close to the team said
that he hadn't seen togetherness,
unity, and (rue (eam spirit all year
like he has this last week since the
Weekend t0 a night with Bo Derck,
‘At any rate, riding back to
Albany in what seemed like sub:
zero conditions wasn't exactly a fit
ting ending to how the two previous
days were spent, but who cared? 11
was still a great day to be alive
Jack Burger — co-captain
Dario Arango
Mike Arcuri
Don Bowen
George Brodeur
Jeff Carone
Bruce Dey
John Durant
[tim Esposito
( Albany Seniors Playing
In Their Last
Great Dane Football Game
Steve Shoen — co-captain
Mike Fiorito
Jim Halloran
Sam Haliston
Levi Louis
Tim Votraw
Burton Kaplan, Music Director
S.U,N.Y. Performing Arts Center
Main Theatre
PROGRAM:
Handel — Overture In D (ar. Elgar)
INTERMISSION
Dvorik — Symphony no. 7
ADMISSION:
Ins first Manhaltan concert
the orchestra impressed
Aaltention and support! The pride and g3
Infections.”
Sunday, November 16, 7:30 p.m.
Mussorgsky — Night on Bald Mountain
§.U.N.Y. = $3.00 Adults $1.50 S.U.N.Y. LD.
Tickets available at both community box offices:
Colonie Center and Empire State Plaza,
Tlekets aleo avallable at the door,
Sunday nighl al Alice Tully Hall
4 spirited, dedicated group worthy of
of their work proved
Joseph Horowitz, N.Y. Times
anything!
*& All entries will be returned
+ Dig up those old pictures
HE — November 20 rh
COLONIAL
QUAD PHOTO
CONTEST
All prizes will be awarded
THEME CHANGE: Albany rhe Place zo Be!
Pictures of anything about Albany;
Irs people, she ciry, Sourh Mall she Universizy,
will be
Sif
November
Display
Flagroom
17- 2
Over $200 in prizes
Nauember 20 from 5:30 —
6:30. Judair
that night
es StH
‘Avvany, New York 12206
awarded!
in Colonial
Thursday
ng completed
€&} FROM OUR GENEROUS SPONSORS
2 Photo Supply Corp
tate |
ital District's Mi Oto
Photogra
Ne Cant
CONTEST
Theme: ‘Albany:The Place to Be’
BIG PRIZE
Entries Due November 20th
Mail on Curmpus to:Bob Colvin
(Delancey 301) Colonial Box No.686
Really into Photography?
Check into the Colonial Quad
Darkroom
OMS MERA
Sehatcrany Cr
Torn tom Gracy yn
| November 14, 1980
(AP)You might call it “The Making
of a Champion — American Style,
circa 1980.""
The scene was a small hamburger
emporium in the center of teeming
Manhattan, a short throw from
Madison Square Garden. The bill
of fare: Double-deck cheeseburgers
on a sesame seed-bun, domestic
champagne and the towering Long
Island slugger being groomed to
solidify the fractured and disar-
rayed heavyweight boxing division,
Gerry Cooney, the guest of
honor, showed up 45 minutes late,
wearing an open shirt, leather
jacket and cowboy boots, You
would have suspected he just
motoreycled in from his home in
Albany
by Mare Haspel
Pride has not come so easily for
the 1980 Albany State men’s cross
codniry team, I's 3-9 dual meet
record this season is a sad indic
tion of a team that has struggled the
entire season with very little solace
But the Danes will be able to claim
some pride tomorrow as the season
winds down to a close, when they
will host the third annual NCAA
§ Division 111 Regional Meet
Kansas City, Mo. (AP) It was early
May and George Brett was off to a
terrible start, barely hitting .240.
“Idon't think I'm a .240 hitter,"
said the
Pdaseman, whose life time average
Bstood at 310, “I still don't think
there's any reason 1 hit close
10 .329 like last year
AS it turned out, Brett finished 61
Petventage points away from 329
He Wound up at .390, the highest
(otal in the major leagues in 39
years. He also led the American
League in slugging percentage .461
In the meantime, he rected off a
30-game hitting streak, averaged an
RAI per game, and captured the in-
|
|
‘ansas City Royals third
The Albany State cross country team will host th
Division HI Regional Meet tomorrow. (Pho!
Huntington on Long Island,
You could hear the ladies sigh
from all the way across the room,
Cooney, although 6-feci-6 and
225 pounds, is not exacily the pro-
totype of a ring hero which we have
come to accept from a 20-year
association with bombastic
Muhammad Ali and slighily less
with the celluloid’s Sylvester
Stallone.
The kid from Long Island is a
king sized version of the teen age
heart throb, John Travolta — dark
B00d looks, flashing brown eyes
and dimples in both checks when he
smiles, which is often,
When he talks, the words come
UL 0 soft and low they are barely
audible, even when he is speaking
Albany Student Press
Page Nineteen
into a microphone. As a 24-year-old
professional, he already has whip-
Ped 24 opponents, 21 by knockout,
while hardly getting a scratch or
bump on his Hollywood profile.
In four years, most of them in
virtual obscurity, he has battled his
Way to no. 1 contender in the
heavyweight division, the logical
next foe for either Larry: Holmes,
the World Boxing Council
titleholder, or the World Boxing
‘Association cham Mike
Weaver,
Bul, to most of the country, he
Femains a virtual nonentily,
This time, young Cooney didn't
shove and push his way through
New York's perilous transit system
Wednesday noon on a mission of
fistic violence, He came to be
honored because he is nice to kids,
While guests washed down their
hamburgers and french-fries with
New York bubbly, Cooney was
presented a symbolic spatula on a
Plaque memorializing him as the
“Big Mac Biggie.
It's an award given by the
McDonald's hamburger chain not
for disposing of ring opponents but
for community service, In Cooney's
case, it was tribute for contribu.
tions to youth development in his
hometown and other charitable
works,
A correspondent from Ring
Magazine enlivened the proceedings
by reminding Cooney that Holmes:
had termed him the “White Hoax'*
LI’s Gerry Cooney: “The Great White Hoax?”
instead of the White Hope’ and
there were going to be a lot of
white dopes’’ if anybody thought
the kid could take Holmes’ crown.
#1 don't like Holmes,’ Cooney
sald acidly. “1 met him four years
‘ago. 1 was still an amateur, just a
kid, He treated me like dirt, He's
gol a big mouth, He's got no
class,"*
IVs different with Weaver,
“He's a nice guy," Cooney
“Doesn't talk too much"?
“Which had you rather fight?”
someone asked,
“Makes no difference, whichever
comes first," the young contender
said, “But not Ali, He was great for
boxing — he ought to quit."?
id,
To Host Annual NCAA Regional Meet
“I feel very happy about hosting
the meet. We have forty people
working {0 run this mect. It has 10
be run well and run right," said
Albany men's cross country coach
Bob Munsey
The stakes of this meet are high
— a chance for the NCAA National
Championships, which will be held
next week. According 10 NCAA
format, the first four teams (out of
the thirteen entered) to place in the
third annual NCAA
: Mark Halek)
terest of baseball fans around the
world with his quest to hit .400.
{n no surprise, Breit was an over-
Wielming choice of a nationwide
panel of sportscasters and broad:
Associated Press
Player of the
casters as The
American League
Year
Brett's storybook
marred only by sporadic. injuries
that kept him out of more than 40
games and a hemorthoid condition
that threatened to sideline him in
the World Serie:
The way the 27-year-old All-Star
handled the reaction to his hemor
thoid ailment was vintage Brett. His
problem became known after the
season was
meet will qualify to participate in
the national meet, and the first five
individual finishers from non:
placing teams also carn the right to
Lo
Realistically, Mupsey does not
expect his young, inexperienced
team to qualify for the national
meet. The Danes do have a viable
candidate to make the nationals,
though, in top runner Scott James,
Throughout the entire season,
mes has led the Danes in pracy
tically every race, “The
lol of pressure on Sco
been a
to perform
this season,!” commented Munsey
This time, in a meei where the
Danes stand little chance as a team,
James will be able (0 run his own’
face without the feam burden on his
shoulders, “Scot has a very pod:
shot of making the qualifiers," said
inner Todd Silva,
Silva is another Dane who may
Achieve the righ! 10 go to the n
fionals. But by his own admittance,
it will take @ very good run. "I'd
10 run very Well to qualify, I'd
© 10 take 30 seconds off my
time, maybe do a 26;20,"" said
Silva,
A final Dane with a decent
chance of making the nationals is
sophomore Tim Bradley, “Bradley
has a shot also," said Munsey
Albany's home course, and 1
‘one which will be used on Salurdi
is 5.05 miles long, The course will
lead the runners over most of the
Western Avenue side of campus, It
includes different types of footings
such as grass and pavement that will
favor different types of runners.
“You have to change footing all
the
change
speeds and
Philadelphia Phillies beat the
Royals in Game | in Philadelphia
The next night, he reached base
three times in three plate ap
pearances, but took himself out of
the game in extreme pain,
Comedians made jokes, Players
made jokes, Everybody was
laughing, it seemed, but the hor
ribly embarrassed Brett
Bul minor surgery on the off-day
relieved the pain and pressure. He
came back with a smile on his face
salvage some pride
Silva, “11's very fair to all kinds of
funners."”
If any obstacle does exist on
Saturday, ji will be the weathe
particularly the winds that have
been whipping through Albany late:
ly
‘The wind may have a bad affect
— it does slow the race down, But
everyone has 10 face it equally,"
said Munsey.
All my problems are behind
he anniounced to the army of
writers and sportscasters. “If 1
don't play third base, I'm going to
Preparation DH. Everybody else 1s
having fun with this, so 1 decided 1
should, too, OF course, 1 don't en:
Joy being the butt of the joke."
* He returned to action and hit
safely in the final four games before
the Phillies finally beat the Royals
for the world championship,
By mid-season, Brett was hitting
337, although an ankle injury kept
him out of the All-Star game, He
hit an astonishing .420 the second
half of the season and on Aug. 17, «
Sunday game in Kansas City against
¢ harriers have struggled this season (3:
morrow,
9 record), but they will try to
oto: Murk Halek)
Albany's squad ean finish
seventh or eighth out of the thirteen
teams entered, according to
Munsey. He eited the four probable
qualifiers to be Fredonia, Universi-
ty of Rochester, Cortland and
Rochester Institute of Technology,
He also gave Binghamton and Si,
Lawrence shots.at possible upsets
The race begins at noon on Satur
day, ‘
| George Brett: Not Just The Butt Of The Jokes
Toronto, he slammed a three-run
double that pushed his average for
the first time over .400,
Three times he dipped below the
magic number only to creep back:
above it, He was hitting 400 as late
‘as Sept, 19, He finished with 118
RBI in 117 games
Brett amassed 458-1/2 votes for
AL player of the year honors, com
pared to 11-1/2 for Reggie Jackson
of the New York Yankees and 11
for Cecil Cooper of Milwaukee,
Willie Wilson, Brett's Male,
was fourth with nine votes, follows
ed by Baltimore pitcher Steve Stone
with three and Kansas City relief
ace Dan Quisenberry, with
i
)
)
)
(Sunshine Thoughts
page 18
November 14, 1980
_Spikers Seeded Fourth In State Tournament
Rip RPI In Final Game Of Season
by Larry Kahn
They were ranked fourth in New
York State and hadn't lost in over a
month, They boasted a 22-5 record,
were riding a 14 game winning
streak, and had glready been
selected (0 compete in the State
championship tournament, The
Albany State yolleyball team had
been successful all year, but they
needed a unique way to end their
tremendous seasorr
In their final game of the regular
season the Dane spikers gave RPI a
thrashing they will never forget,
outscoring the Engineers 45-1 in
The volleyball team finished the year with # 2
5 record und takes
15-game win streak (0 States, (Photo: Mark Nalek)
three games in University Gym on
Wednesday night
"We played well,”" understated
Albany volleyball coach Pat Dwyer.
“11 looks like we were ready play —
it was the best we ever did against
anybody.""
Albany gave RPI an inkling of
What was to come when they came
ut firing in the first game and won
after only seven services, 15-0, The
second contest was just a blur.
Freshman Rosa Prieto opened the
game by serving 12 straight points
and Reba Miller served the next
three to totally demaralize the stun
ned RPI squad.
RPI seored first in the final bout
for their only tally of the day, but
the Danes reeled off 15 unanswered
points 10 pul the Engineers out of
their misery
Albany will be looking to put the
finishing touch on a masterpiece of
fa season this weekend when they go
after the State championship at
Stony Brook. The Danes are seeded
fourth behind Brooklyn, Fredonia,
‘and Nazareth.
Sixteen teams have been selected
for the tournament and they will
compete in four round-robin pools
The spikers will be heading (o Stony Brook this weekend (0 compete in the
State championship tourney. (Photo: UPS)
match was on October 11 against
Division 1 West Point and since
then have won 15 straight.
"1 think we're going to do well,”
Dwyer predicted, “We should be in
I think the
Albany heads a pool consisting of
Rochester (Sth), University of But-
falo (12th), and Oneonta (13th)
“We have the toughest one,’
Dwyer noted
But Albany has been red hot, The
Just time the spikers lost in a regular
the winner's bracket.
players are ready.”
hy Bob Bellafiore
After last Saturday's come-from:
behind win against Central Florida,
Albany head football coach Bob
Ford said that he just wanted (o
savor the win for awhile before he
started worrying about his team's
ext game, Well, tle time to savor
is over, because the Danes will run
info some tough opposition tomor=
Fow when they take University Field
against Division 11 Springfield, at
iiefs are 6-2, and can boast
& SCOUTING REPORT
Division 11 power American Inter
1 College, and most recently
lover previously undefeated Wagner
College (one of the top teams in
Division 111), 27-10
“They (Springfield) have a good
there's no question,”* said
Albany coach Mark Collins, who
scouted the Chiefs last week, Their
only defeats have come at the hands
lof Davidson (a Division 1AA team)
land defending Division 111 champs
Ithaca. But Springfield has beaten
Norwich and Southern Connee:
ticut, both of whom
Albany
Balance is the key to Springfield's
game, But if one aspect of their
team is dominant, it would be the
defense. Their 5-2 alignment is
blessed with two vital necessities
size and speed. Springfield's five in:
side men (the two tackles, two
linebackers and middle guard) are,
according to a former Albany
ration
defeated
defensive couch, the best group in
this
that area that he’s ever seen
Nevel of college football, OF
Wins over thenenavionally ranked
Danes Hope To Stay Over .500 Against Chiefs |
Face 6-2 Springfield In Finale «
five players, none is shorter tha
6-2, and all tip the scales at about
220 pounds, The biggest character
{in that cast 1s 6-4, 260 pound Iackle
Tony Green, who also doubles as
ihe punter, but the best is probably
linebacker Doug MeKenney, His 21
laekles (10 solo) against Wagner got
him ECAC player of the week
honors, His partner at inside
\2
linebacker will be 6-2, 220 pound
John Richardson. He was player of
the week against AIC just three
games ago, so Albany will have to
contend with some talent on the in
side.
“They keep their linebackers
four or five yards off the ball,”
Collins sald, and that enables them
to read the offense better
Dane defensive line will haye to hold their ground against the misdirection, run-oriented multiple at-
tack of Springfleld tomorrow at University Field, starting at 1:00, (Phot
The Dane wishbone philosophy
Says that you try to get to the out
and then run the ball inside
the defense is conscious of the
The Danes fully remember the corner. This year, though, it’s been
way they were oulsized by UCF last the running of fullback Chuck
Priore in between the guards that
has kept the attack moving, and
Whether ‘or not he can be sprung
tomorrow against the tough front
Of the Chiefs may be
tor in the ballgame. Ford said that
this confrontation should be in
teresting. ‘They've been in some
good wars this year,"" Ford said of
the Albany offensive line
Even still, if Priore ca
yards tomorrow like he has been
doing all season (he's the Danes?
leading rusher with 816 yards),
Albany can gain an edge, ‘They
have to honor our fullback," Col:
They know he's a
‘one
week and still managed to win, and
that has to work in a positive way
for them, “It's important for us to
come off a big victory like that,
because it lets our players know that
they can play with people like
that,"’ Collins sald with Albany's
offensive line in mind.
deciding fac
et some
lins continued.
Ford agrees that the effectiveness
of the Interior
“When we've gotten the ball often
into the hands of Chuck Priore
have won,” Ford said. "We're go:
to try to get him the ball 10 or 15
times in the
them to respect it on
The Chiefs play
secondary, with one of the other
cornerbacks shifting
side, depending upon the forma
= tion. “The Chief,"" as Springfield
people call hint, will be number 30,
6-0, 198 pound
He'll probably g
side,"* Colli That will
give them one more man to that side
to defend against the option."” Fer-
Faro might confuse the Danes of
fensive plan, “You never kno
game is a key
game, and try 10 get
Paul
to our split end
projected,
w
‘Mark Nadler) continued on page mete)
“Moral” Vs. “Common Sense’’
by Amy Kantor
There was more that divided the
“Moral Majority"” and a protest
group of approximately 200 than
North Pearl Street last Friday even-
ing.
The Palace Theater in downtown
Moral Majority leader Falwell.
jack 10 basics,
\ a. oy, ee |
Albany and the “Moral Majority’”
of New York State presented the
group's national. leader Jerry.
Falwell while at the Federal
Building across the street, Capital
District civic and community
Organization representatives
gathered to protest this movement,
which they associate with the on-
coming conservative Reagan ad-
Se
& News Fearure
group, the Community For Com-
mon Sense (CCC) include represen
tatives from religious, ethnic, civil,
and sfudent rights groups,
Equipped with signs bearing
equal rights slogans, the
demonstrators directed their cries
of “Equality For All — We're
Moral Too" and “2, 4, 6, 8 —
Separate Church and State'’
towards those entering the theater
Moral Majority"? leader
alwell speak
are not a minority, but a
majority," addressed SUNYA stu-
dent CCC organizer. Mike
MePartlin, as he began the flow of
e ood
speeches and allegations against the
entourage across the street and the
man who would take to the stage in
approximately one hour. McPartlin
continued, ‘The one thing we all
be e in is tolerance, understan-
ding and communication...The
“Moral Majority’ is trying to use
ignorance to rally the people. We
are using education.’*
“They have the nerve to claim
they are the majority and moral
when they are noi," proclaimed
SUNYA History Professor
Lawrence Wittner. ‘*How moral is
it to link with the right wing?” he
asked, "They oppose aid to the
poor, housing, medical care and
food,’ .
He spoke of the need for a real
moral movement to aid the weak,
not a movement 0 fortify repres-
sion, “It is our job to build such a
movement," he concludes
Father James Murphy, pastor of
4 Schenectady church, said that the
religious convictions of the ‘Moral
Majority’ lead to the justification
of hatred, '*We won't tolerate the
drafting of
patriot, He was not on the side of
the perpetration of war,’ Father
jod....as a gre
November 18, 1980)
+ the minister said, “He
SUNYA student Sharon Ward sald
that “We are here to reaffirm and
protest the *new right’ who found
their leadership in folks like Jerry
Murphy commented to the au-
dience
Albany Unitarian Church
Minister John Corrado offered a falwell,’*
Tess critical views of Falwell, “He Inside the Palace Theatre,
believes in the gospel of division,"’ Falwell was greeted by a standing
in have his n from the crowd. He told a
sloaccept substantial crowd thal, Tonight,
we have come to share what we
Planned Parenthood spokesper- believe is a grassroots movement —
son Ruth Kleeper explained to the back to basics and back to tradi-
crowd that one of the main thrusts tion,
beliefs, Just don’t for
them."
of “Moral Majority” is an end to *We are Americans who agree on
legal abortions and sex educationin the moral principles of America,-on
schools, “Organizations like ours the dignity of haman life and the
ed
n danger,"” she rema
rotesting Falwell's opposii
abortion, gay rights, women's
rights, "free speech, and civil libe
former SASU President and
saneilty of the monogamous fami=
ly," he said,
Falwell, the father of three
children and pastor of a 17,000
continued on page seven
le University of New York at Albany
Waterbury Hall has been the scene
nany robberies.
Quad head Lis Radko.
“Students have become too trusting,”
by Andrew Carroll
Lori Mellwaine was down the
hall talking with a friend and her
roommate was doing the Jaundry
They were gone for only 10 oF 15
minutes, But in that time, someone
entered their unlocked room and
walked away with Lori's camera,
wallet, and checkbook
Lori's is just one ina series of at
least 14 burglaries or burglary at
tempts that haye occurred on Alum:
ni Quad in just over two-and-one-
half weeks. Five reports have come
from Waterbury Hall, the same
number from Alden, and {wo each
OCA Holds Corning Call-in Day
Push for Security Ordinance
by Wayne Peereboom
Albany Mayor Erastus Corning
received between forty and fifty
phone calls yesterday as the result
of a “call-in'? staged to voice stu
dent dissatisfaction with progress,
being made on a security ordinance,
cording to Off-Campus Associ
tion (OCA) Director Mark Dunk
According (0 Dunlea, the Mayor
told callers he does not support the
proposed ordinance, which would
establish minimum standards for
safety protection in rental housing.
He added that "this is the first time
he's come out strongly against it."”
Dunlea remarked that the Mayor's
Support of such an ordinance has
gradually declined since last July
when Corning first said he would
have an ordinance passed.
The Mayor has suggested that
tenants who have security problen
should call him,
with landlords
Dunlea said
The Mayor and City Housing
Authority Chair Joseph Buechs,
have done little on a security or-
dinance since the open meeting that
Was held early in October, Dunlea
said, but added that the Mayor has
agreed to check into the delay.
The current proposal, Dunlea ex-
plained, was written with “police
recommendations of what is
minim * He said the
group is “willing 10 compromise’
as long as police standards are met
nd Brubacher Halls, the suburbs of Pine Hills on three
(errible pro- sides and Albany High on the
fourth,
While police are
ving
blem,’? sald Quad Coordinator Liz
Radko, who terms the number of
foctising on
burglaries a “‘rash."” “Students what Public Safety Director
leave their rooms unlocked, run Williams calls “generally a one-man
across the hall for § minutes, and crime wave,'’ Radko believes
Albany High is a source of the pro-
blem
Security has begs to extend
patrols. in the area, responding to
both the burglaries and the recent
assaulis at Draper Hall, Now, says
Williams, "we're sending people
down to coincide with the start and:
finish of Albany High,
However, Williams said, the ex
tra people the department can send
is subject to the resources of the
come back (0 find things missing.
Students haye reported losses of
stereos, calculators, tape players,
wallets, chargecards, checkbooks,
cameras, amd money, One student,
who returned {o her room to find.
the metal door lock bent out of
shape, lost $500 worth of jewelry
“We're a trusting community,”
Radko said, But she thinks students
have become too trusting. Many of
the crimes occurred during the da:
when few students were in the department
dorms. Furthermore, the quad is Radko said the patrols do have a
located in a residential district, with continued on page seven
Mayor Erastus Corning.
ity ordinance.
(Long Island Lawyer Sues |
SA for Services Rendered
by Susan Milligan
SA is to be sued in a Mineola court Friday for breach of contract,
*a result of an incident regarding the hiring of an additonal SA lawyer
three years ago, according to SA Vice-President Br
In September of 1978, SA decided to expand its |
clude an additional part-time lawyer, An SA search committee nar-
rowed the choice to Lou Oliver and Alan Manning Miller, (!.2 plain-
, tiff, Miller was brought before Central Council for approval, but was
rejected because he wanted to alter the contract, Levy said
He emphasized that Miller had never signed ny contract 10 SA,
Miller is now demanding payment for services rendered while he was
under consideration for the position, Miller said in pre-trial examina-
tion that he had travelled to Albany from Long Island "about five
times" and “had interviews with several students regarding various
charges.”
Oliver, who wil be defending SA on Friday, was not available for
ment By,