SER ey
PO
2 Eat serene
Trackmen Run
First in Three
School Event
The Albany Siaie mi
and field team opened up their
season last Saturday al Brockport,
finishing first in a three team meet,
The Danes finished with 77
polnis, Brockport placed second
with 74 points, and Buffalo had 34
poinis. We were quite happy with
ur performance, considering it was
Our first meet. There were also very
tough running convlitions. The wind
held a fot of runners up," said
Albany State track coach Bob
Munsey,
Albany did not fure as well as
they expected to In the field events;
however, Mark Mercurio did have a
good day for the Danes. Mercurio
Won the discus throw with a
distance of 41,6 meters, It was this
event that clinched the meet for
Albany, Mercurio was also second
in the hammer throw with a
distance of 30,2 meters.
Albany's javelin thrower, Ron
Gainor, finished second in that
event with a throw of 42,9 meters,
Freshman Mike Baker, who made
his first trip with the team, finished
fourth with a distance of 34.53
APRIL 6, 1982
Women’s Track
Place Second in
Poor Conditions
By MARC SCHWARZ
Tha Albany State women’s varsi-
ty track and field team opened the
outdoor season with a second place
finish at Brockport, Saturday after
noon
Despite bad weather conditions
Albany finished with 64 points.
Brockport won the meet with 90
points and Buffalo State came in
third with 13 points,
Albany coach Ron White was
very pleased with his team's perfor
mance, “The program is really star
ting to roll along, It's come on a lot
faster than 1 expected, We just need
to add some depth," said White.
Albany was led by two triple win:
ners, tri-captain Sue Stern and Ron
nie Dann, Stern captured the
1$00-meter and 800-meter runs, in
times of 5:20.8 and 2:30.7. She also
ran the third feg for the victoriou
mile relay team, Julie Smyth's per
sonal best of 1:03.9 sparked the
relay team which also included Barb
Hill and Kim Bloomer.
Dann, a junior, took first place in
‘Track coaches Robert Munsey and Ron White were both happy with their team performances oyer the
‘weekend, The men placed first at Brockport while the women finished secon
the 5000- and 3000-meter runs, Sie
also anchored Albany's winning
CMGI E Daye ARE?) two-mile relay team, Kim Patch,
Dane Stickmen Triumph Over Skidmore, 16-9
team took the field against Skid-
more on Saturday and came away
with a 16-9 Win, The (cam had a
great day in spite of the inclement
Weather; persistent rains and mud-
Playing in rain and mud, the Albany lacrosse team still managed (0 record
dy playing conditions characterized
the contest
Of the 16 goals scored by the
Danes, leading scorers were David
Faust with two goals and three
assists, Warren Wray with two
goals and one assist, Gary Friedman.
with two goals, and Don
yen |
thelr first victory, (Photo; Sue Mindich)
Cassadonie with three goals, Tom:
Pratt and Bob Yanier scored one
goal and one assist each and the re~
maining goals were scored by Jim
MePartlin, Joe Paliseno, Gary Kel-
ly, John Reilly, and Rich Trizano,
The team played well together
and remained strong through the
fourth quarter — an important
asict 10 a good lacrosse team. One
Albany player, Bob Mandel,
remarked, ‘We are going to be a
good fourth quarter team. Coach
(Mike) Motta is doing a really good
job and, although we have a young
midfield, we have good sticks ou
there and good control, We have
hind iWo months of gocd hard train-
ing with a lot of running and we're
in good condition. 1 think we'll
have a good season and a good shot
at the playotts."”
The team is very young, however,
both players and coach do not feel
this affected the game nor will itaf-
fect the season, Dane Brad
Ribinowitz commented, ‘We're a
Very young team, but we have a lot
of talented freshmen and We're con-
fident,””
“It’s the first time in a long time
we have a really good team, With
little hustling we could be gr
said teammate Joe Paliseno.
Motta felt that the team played
Well together along with some good
exhibited durin
individual effort:
the game, “Overall, offensively and,
defensively we did well; yood ef
forts were displayed offensively by
Faust with two goals and three
assists and Reilly with one goal and
eleven ground balls," Motta said.
Defensively, Cerny had
game and goaltender Allan Corn.
field had # good game with a 72.
rc
Great Dane Sports
This Week
Men's varsity lacrosse ys. RPI
Tuesday, 4/6 on field behind Dutch, 3:00
Men's varsity (rack and field vs, RPI
Tuesday, 4/6 at RPI, 3:00
Women's varsity track and field vs, Springfleld/Bridgewater
Tuesday, 4/6 at Springfield, 3:00
Men's varsity tennis vs, Amherst
Tuesday, 4/6 at Amherst, 4:00
Men's varsity baseball vs. Hartwick (2)
Wednesday, 4/7 on field behind Indian, 1:00
Women’s varsity softball ys, Russell Sage (2)
Wednesday, 4/7 on field behind Dutch, 1:00
Men's varsity lacrosse vs, Union
Thursday, 4/8 on field behind Dutch, 4:00
Men's varsity lacrosse ys. New Hayen
Saturday, 4/10 on field behind Duéch, 1:00
Men's varsity baseball ys, Cortland (2)
Monday, 4/12 at Cortland, 1:00
Women’s varsity softball vs. Union
Monday, 4/12 on field behind Dutch, 3:30
Men's varsity tennis vs, Siena
Monday, 4%2 on courts behind Dutch, 3:30
Men's varsity (rack and field ys, Cortland/Plattsburgh
Tuesday, 4/13 on University Track, 3:00
Men's varsity baseball ys, Union
Tuesday, 4/13 at Union, 3:00
ortland
Tuesday, 4/13 on field behind Dutch, 4:00
s vs, West Po
Wednesday, 4/14 at West Point, 3:00
Women’s varsity softball ys. King’s Colle
Wednesday, 4/14 on fleld behind Dutch,
Women’s varsity track and field ys. Hartwick
Wednesday, 4/14 at Hartwick, 3:30
Men's varsity lacrosse vs.
Women's varsity te
Men's varsity baseball ys, RPI
Thursda}
Men's varsity lacrosse ys, Siena
4/15 on field behind Indian, 3:00
Thursday, 4/15 at Siena,
Men's varsity tennis vs, Vermont
Thursday, 4/15 on courts behind Dutch,
LF. Stone: The Maverick Reports
By MARK HAMMOND
Renegade Washington journalist
I. F. Stone blamed Reagan's
Supply-side economics for
America's ‘disasterous deficit,"
warned of a nuclear holocaust and
called for ‘a brotherhood of man’?
in a speech yesterday afternoon in.
Assembly Hall
“Our inflation imposes
sacrifice," Stone told the audience.
Of about 300. ‘(Reagan’s) ad-
ministration is unique in that it
Places the burden on the low and.
middle class while givirig huge sub-
Sidies to the super rich."
The now- retired Stone forsook
routine Journalism in the 1950's and
single-handedly founded his own
Washington Newsletter, which
reacted a circulation of 70,000,
Through his newspaper, Stone
became legendary for his unrelen.
ting search for truth
Washington's burealicratic maze.
“No one believes in Reagan's
supply side economics anymore, ex-
cept Nancy,’ quipped the bespec-
tacled Stone. He reported a grow-
ing conservative faction against
Reagan's ‘tyrannical budget,”
Stone, known as the “Maverick
of Washington,’ grimaced as he
told the captivated crowd how
Wealthy corporations will profit by
income tax returns while the poor
are Stripped of their possessions.
“Huge fat oil corporations may
be enjoying a negative income tax
Of 17 percent. This is an outrag
Stone said. “Now you can unders-
tand why we face this enormous tax
deficit,!” He reminded the audience
that ‘today is income tax day, as
you all know,"”
Stone griped America’s “insane!*
$1.5 trillion millitary budget, and
blamed it for wasting taxpayers
money. He warned it may grow to
$2.25 trillion if Reagan has his way.
“We've pul our money in
glamour weapons but the fellows in
the field complain they're too com-
plicated and too fancy and they
break down,’
Stone senses a growing disquiet
Within the military over the un-
wieldy budget, “Army Times pro-
tested the size of the budget, saying
it Was unnecessary unless we expect
to fight in every jungle and on every
tundra in the world,"*
He feels that Communistic agres
sion is overemphasized: ‘There is
no need for us {0 cower under the
Renegade reporter 1,F. Stone
Reagan's
shadow of ten foot Russlans;
they're behind us in every way.
‘America is the strongest country in
the world," ¢
The journalist observed a grow-
ing awareness in America towards
the reality of the nuclear war
spawned budget deficit
menage and the conditions in Latin
America,
“Unless we put a stop to the arms.
race both sides will lose control,'’
Stone predicted,
“Nobody's a devil — it's not a
| continued on page 5
State University of New York at Albany
STUDENT
PRESS
copyright © 1982 the Ausany Stupi
Friday
April 16, 1982
Press Corporation
Volume LXIX Number 17
Candidates Questioning Fairness in Campaign
By LIZ REICH
Questions have been raised by
several of the Student Association
(SA) executive candidates concern-
ing the fairness of the election cam-
paign,
Presidential can-
didate Mike Corso
has claimed that
some of his posters
and endorsement
sheets have been removed,
“Late Wednesday night I put 30
posters at different places on the
podium,” said Corso, “At 4:30
Thursday morning, they had been
ripped down. Maintenance doesn't
Work at night and they (the posters)
were all in legal places, so it must be
someone with an interest in the
campaign,’
SA Election Commissioner Steve
Topal said, “Sometimes candidates
think other candidates are ripping
down their posters, when a lot of
times, it’s maintenance,"
News
Analysis
Another. presidential candidate
Mark Grieb has complaints concer-
ning the campaign. ‘I've been
treated like an outsider, because
I'm not in SA,"said Grieb,
He said he submitted a poster to
the SA contact office to be printed
but “it wasn't done the next day,
the original poster was butchered
and the copies were horrible.
Also,"” said Grieb, “the other can-
didates! posters were perfect.'?
SA Vice President Lori Peppe,
who is in charge of the SA Contact.
Office, said Grieb never complain-
ed to her about the problem.
“| wish he had brought it to my.
attention,” she said, “If the copies
weren't well done, we'll redo
them,"
Grleb also feels the ASPhas been
biased in the presidential elections,
“I've heard the ASPwas endors-
ing Mark Weprin, another
Presidential candidate, two weeks
before they interviewed all the ca
didates.””
photo: UPS.
Student working at computer terminal
Computer availability will be reduced beginning next semester
Editor-in-Chief of the ASP,Dean
Betz responded that the ASPhad no
intention of endorsing the can-
didates until after they were inter-
viewed. ‘I have no idea where he
picked up that rumor and I’m sur-
prised that he's still) carrying it
around,"
jeb cited the April 6 issue of
the ASPin which Weprin appeared
on the front page as evidence.
"There are a lot of University
Senators, why advertise for him?’
he questioned
Betz said Weprin's picture ap-
peared on the front page of the
April 6 issue because ‘Mark is the
Senate liason. He was a big backer
of the ROTC replacement amend-
ment and gaye us some very good
quotes.”
Weprin also has had problems
with the ng of the election.
“Some of his (Topal’s) regulations
are strange, For instance, we can't
campaign anywhere on the quads
except the flagrooms,"*
However, in relation to Topal's
rules, the new Election Regulation
fact says only thal ‘candidates or
their representatives will not be
allowed to campaign on the dinner
lines (from the flagroom into.the
cafeteria) ‘or in the dining rooms
during the three nights of
balloting.
Presidential candidate Andy
Weinstock reported that Weprin
has been speaking at dorm meetings
even he believes though candidates
aren't supposed to campaign on the
quads,
I spoke to Stevi
said Weinstock
morally he's ug
no control over it
Vice-presidential candidate Ann
Marie La Porta found it unusual
that candidates can't be seen at
polling areas at the time of the elec:
tions,
Weprin also went on to say that
nthe Council
members have been allowed to get
Topal about
“He said that
(it, but he has:
pasty, Central
tax cards for other people, Now
Steve (Topal) says that isn't fair
because some candidate will get
their friend's tax cards, That's not
true and it has always been done
that way.”
Beall: Wexler, Corsa'd chrpalert
manager, has been ‘accused of
breaking into the SA Com-
plgraphic room over the weekend
of April 3 by Libby Post, director
of SA Compugraphic,
{greatly resent the accusation
Which was totally unfounded in
evidence,” said Wexler.
Post would not comment on the
matter,
SA President Daye Pologe said,
*(Post) thinks Someone broke into
the SA office and! used the com:
pugraphic machine, but the claim
that i was Wexler is totally un-
substantiated,"
Topal has said that ‘my main
goal for the election is to make it
equitable for all candidates:
Computer Center Hours Restored
By LIZ REICH
The computing center's normal
hours were reinstated Monday after
they were cut by 57 percent two
Weeks ago. However, beginning in
September the administration will
limit the amount of time students
can spend on computers according
to the Dean of the College of
Science and Mathematics Daniel
Wail.
Wulff explained the hours were
reinstated because the administra
n't realize the difficulties
in implementing the sysiem’ of
reduced hours,
Associate Director of the com
puting center Ben Chi said students’
computing time must be limited fn
the future because, “Bach year
students seem to spend twice as
much computing time as the
previous year.
“acht CSI sient will be given
an allocation of¢omputer time, (tor
an assignment) Chi said. “Once
that is gone, students will be given.
another allocation, After that,
students will have to compute at
night,
Wulff noted wo problems with
the proposed plan.
The first iy devising some way
computers can shut down when a
student's allocation is exhausted
Chi suggested one solution would
be examine the current balance of
computer time much more fre:
quently, to ascertain when a stu
dent’s allotment has been _ex-
hausted.
The second security related pre
blem Wulfi noted under the present
system, is that sudents choose
aliases. With the proposed system,
Would be unable 10
establish aliases
students
“Ia student looks over another
students shoulder and sees their ac
count number, he could have access
to that student's file for the rest of
the semester," said Wulff,
Ben Chi is currently investigating
solutions to both problems. “He
hopes to have them solved by
September.
Albany’s Murals:
See Aspects Centerfold
“World Capsules:
Reagan Wants Tax Credit
CHICAGO, Iilinois (AP) President Reagan, declaring
that ‘working Americans are overtaxed and underaj
preciated,’” unveiled a program Thursday that would let
most parents claim tax credits to help send their children
to private schools,
‘The only ones left out would be those making more
than $75,000 a year. Taking a step administration of-
ficials acknowledged was intended to boost Reagan's
Standing with lower and middle-income parenis who sent
their children to parochial schools, the president said:
*T have come to propose a tuition tax credit for
parents who bear thedouble burden of public and private
school costs,'*
His timing coincides with the deadline for Americans
to file theit' federal income tax returns,
Mexican Volcano Erupis
PICHUCALCO, Mexico (AP) An army patrol reached
three more villages on the slopes of Chinchonal volcano
and found two women and eight children alive in one of
them,
But a Red Cross worker who accompanied them said
they were unable to determine if any of the other
Villagers were buried in their huts,
“Where there were once houses and trees, it now looks
like a great desert," Jose Claudio Martinez sald Wednes-
day night after returning with the patrol from a two-day
trek to the villages of Guayabal, Guadalupe Victoria and
El Volcan,
Last Wednesday, 200 survivors were found in another
of the villages, San Francisco Leon, Army officials sad as
many as 4,200 peasants may have been trapped in the six
settlements, but they have had no indication how many
might have escaped, So the official toll now stands at 23
killed, more than 500 injured and 60,000 driven from
their homes,
El Chinchonal has erupted seven times in the past 17
days, and is still sending up clouds of ashes and smoke.
But army helicopters are patrolling the slopes, looking
for signs of life,
U.S. Weapons Vulnerable
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger says the Soviet Union now has strateg!
nuclear missiles more accurate than those of the United
States, and argued that to catch up American defense
spending must be inrcased as President Reagan proposed,
Weinberger told a group of reporters Wednesday night
that even with the defense buildup the adminsitraton is
pushing there is likely to be a period of vulnerability
through the rest of this decade, i
He made the statements in pushing the increased
defense budget and arguing against proposals for a freeze
of nuclear Weapons at current levels,
Weinberger also disputed suggestions that the United
States renounce any first use of nuclear weapons, saying
that to do so would invite aggression “given the relative
standings and priorities" of the superpowers,
He said the right way to proceed is to build American
strength and then seck arms reduction ‘to achieve
balance at vastly lower levels than is now the case,"”
Army Helicopter Crashes
OPP, Alabama (AP) Four men, one of them from a Buf.
falo suburb, were killed when a UHI-H training
helicopter from Fort Rucker Army Base crashed shortly
‘after takeoff from Skelly air field, officials said.
Herb Strickland, a public information officer at Fort
Rucker, said the crash occurred about $ pm Wednesday
at the airfield 7 miles east of here,
Three men were pronounced dead at the scene and the
fourth died at 6:30 pm at Lyster Army Hospital on the
base,
The cause of the crash had not been released carly
Thursday.
A witness to the crash said the helicopter was one of
several practicing takeoffs and landings at the air field.
C.L, Rhodes, 83, who lives across the road from the air
field, said the helicopter touched down briefly, then went
straight up and came straight down,
Beirut Fighting Continues
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Lebanon's highest Moslem
leader called for a cease-fire between warring Moslem
militias as the toll in three days of fighting in Beirut and
southern Lebanon climbed to 42 dead and 138 wounded,
‘The battle in Beirut’s Moslem sector subsided shortly
before noon Thursday, but intermittent sniping and
sporadic mortar explosions kept tension high,
Mohammed Ghaddar, he \gad, of Amal the, pho.
Yoga Session Blossoms
‘The spring session of the Kripalu Yogn Center, 1698
Central Avenue, Colonie, begins April 19th.
The session, taught by certified Kripalu Yoga Insturc-
tors, offers a variety of topics: Natural awareness, gentle
exercise and breath, Increased strength, vitality and flex-
ibility is the goal of the 10 week couse, .
The fee for the session is $49 and Scheouling is
Variable,
Registrations must be received by April 19th. For
more information call the center at 869-7990,
T Wish Iwas Outward Bound
When school is-over and you are homeward bound,
why not concider going “Outward Bound?"”
“Outward Bound’? is a program that offers challeng-
ing experiences in wilderness settings in more than a
dozen states,
Backpacking, mountaineering, rock climbing, canoc-
ing, sailing, cycling and rafting are part of the program's
core, Previous outdoor skills are unnecessary.
Academic credit ig often available as is financial aid
based on need,
Money for the Asking
‘One three-year scholarship Will be awarded this spring
by the Nation's Capital Alumni Branch to a second
semester freshman. The scholarship is for $500 a
semester for the freshman who has superior character,
personality and scholarship.
A financial ald form, available in the financial aids of-
fice, and an application must be filed in the Alumni
House, SUNYA by noon april 20th, 1982.
To be eligible students must have completed one full
year at SUNYA.
Iranian Shiite militia, threatened to shell northern Israel
‘and provoke retaliatory Israeli fire if the Palestine
Liberation Organization did not curb the Communist and
pro-Iraqi militias fighting Amal,
Police reported 27 killed and 89 wounded in fighting in
Beirut that continued through the night, It was the worst
year.
A police spokesman said 15 more people were killed
and 49 wounded in militia battles in 16 vilages and
hamlets in southern Lebanon.
Polish Dancers Defect
HAMILTON, Ontario (AP) Eleven performers from a
115-member Polish dance troupe have defected on the
Broup’s current world tour and the latest defectors said
they probably won't be the last,
Witold Sobiera, 24, and two other dancers defected
last Friday after the troupe's closing. performance here.
The reasons, he said Wednesday, were economic and
political
“At home, it's very difficult to get housing and it’s
very difficult economically," Sobiera, a native of War-
saw, said through an interpret iY
None of the three would have left the troupe “if the
ituation wasn’t so bad in Poland," Sobiera said. He
predicted more dancers would leave the troupe before it
telurned home,
Dutch Investigate Deaths
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) The Dutch government
found no proof of a government plot in the slaying of
four Dutch journalists in El Salvador, but will protest the
Satara government's refusal to let a Dutch in-
vestigator question soldiers involved i
Minster Max van der Sil side sme Toveen
He told a parliamentary committee Wednesday th
Foreign Ministry had completed is investigation of the
deaths and refused to exclude the possibility the slayings
were intentional and premeditated
The Salvadoran government admits the four were shot
by government troops March 17, but claims they were
caught accidentally in a crossfire when the guerilla team
JHey met apened fasian-anarmy patrol. 1,
7 aed
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS, APRIL16, 1982.
Campus Briefs
550 Mile Bottle Bill Walk Will End in Albany
Yes Ill Grant You That
A foreign study corporation has received a small
number of grants to give to American or Canadian
students wishing to study in the University of Paris or
Madrid,
Students must be able to follow courses in Spanish or
French and able to afford the cost of tuition. A junior
status or higher is necessary.
The grants will cover the cost of a transatlantic Might
to Paris or Madrid, In Paris the cost of tuition is $2,200
and in Madrid $2,100, The grants will be awarded on a
first-come, first-serve basis, so send a stamped, self ad.
dressed envelope for an application to: Academi
‘Abroad, 17 Jansen Road, New Paltz, N.Y. 12561
Cheater’s Forum on Campus
NEVERMORE.
Most every student on campus has heard of or seer
someone cheat during exams. The university senate has,
also. They will hold a forum on the subject in the cam-
pus center assembly hall on Tuesday, April 20th starting
at 1 P.M.
All students are urged to attend because university
senators and administrators will be there, You have a
‘chance to make your Voice heard to policy makers. May
Thave your paper please, Mr. Smith?
Swinging with Country
ERY.
A)
‘Swing your partner and do-see do! The bands Badge
Shoebender and Interstate will be playing some country
swing at the Rafters on Sunday April 25th from 3-8 p.m.
The performance is to benefit special olympics, which
are to be held at Skidmore College on May 2nd,
‘A donation of $3.00 will be greatly appreciated.
Green Machine Survey
By BONNIE CAMPBELL
The 21 day, 550 mile Bottle Bill
walk sponsored by the New York
Public Interest Group (NYPIRG)
will culminate in Albany on April
22nd.
The relay style walk, divided into
5 mile shifts, started from Niagra
Falls and Montauk on April 1 and
Bottle Bill campaign activist Mark
Jackson estimates approximately
1000 people will have participated,
The purpose of the walk is to
“create public support to let
legislators know the feeling of the
public,"” said Jackson. He belleves
the majority of the public strongly
supports the Bottle Bill,
Environmental Planning lobbyist
Judity Ench sald the bill would
reduce litter and solid waste, but
she explained that the bill has had a
hard time making it to the floor of
the Assembly because legislators are
fearful of creating problems with
the beverage industry. “It is a
classic issue of high-powered finan-
cial interest by industry,"” she
observed,
The Bottle Bill requires a fivecent
minimum deposit on all carbonated
soft drinks, mineral water, soda
water, beer and malt beverage con-
tainers in New York State, The bill
would encourage the return of bot-
tles and cans for refilling and recycl-
ing, Its intent is (0 decrease litter,
reduce solid waste, conserve energy,
Preserve natural resources, save tax
dollars, and create additional jobs.
According 10 a NYPIRG infor-
mation pamphlet the General A
by
§ What do you think about the buses? |
fl We'd like to know, Please fill out this §
H office marked BUS SURVEY.
A) Are you: 1) Student 2) Faculty 3) Staff
B) Do you rely on the SUNY bus for transportation
to/from: (mark as many as apply)
1) Classes? ___ no, of times per week
2) Work? ____ no, of times per week
1 3) Leisure Activities? ___ no. of times per week
C) Do you live: on campus? uptown?
downtown?
off campus? __
Bh For the following questions, please use this scale; and
If circle the one that applies
1 vs 2 3 4 5
strongly agree no . disagree strongly
agree opinion disagree
BD) 1 feel that only rider:
Bide the SUNY buses
1 1 2 3 4
ing off campus should pay
W&) feet that should bus fares be imposed that baying an
optional flat rate per semester is better than paying for
| individual rides
ry 1 2 3 4 5
F) I understand the reasons why SUNYA is considering
HB imposing a bus fare
1 2 3 4 5
§ © 1 feel that the administration has given students am
ple opportunity to voice their opinions on this issue
1 2 4
HH) 1 feel the bus system is adequate,
1 | 1 2 3 4
t
' Please include any additional comments on a separate
sheet, Thanks for your input!
Be cae Gres ee os a nee ee
outbreak of factional violence in the Lebanese capital this Mf survey and toss it in the blue box in the SA @
By DEBBIE PROFETA
Albany State and Tower East
‘Cinemas haye proposed a merger in
order to provide more efficient ser-
vices to students beginning next
semester, according to Diarmuid
Quinn, executive director of Albany
State Cinema
The leaders
organization, to be called Uni
ty Cinema 1 and 2, to turn over a
bigger profit while presenting a
larger spectrum of films.
Presently, each group has its own
executive director, executive staff
‘and committee. When the merger is
‘complete, there will be one director
with two associate directors, cack
presiding over one of the two lec-
ture center theatres, It will be
expect the new
ssi
efficient,
ier _administrati
nd more condensed,” said Quinn,
Elections for the new positions
should be completed in about a
week and a half,
“Although there is no real com-
petition between Albany State and
Tower East, by merging we will
have a stronger account,"” Quinn
continued, “With more money we
will be able to get better deals with
the distributors and a wider sclec-
tion of moyies."?
Peter Engel, executive director of
Tower East for three years, agrees
with Quinn, He said he feels “it
makes more sense to haye only one
theatre,"”
Fay Lustgarten, director of
business operations for Albany
State Cinema and a candidate for
news
‘News Meeting
Mandatory meeting for all
writrrs.
Tuesday, April 7 pm
ASP office, CC 329
counting Office estimated the Bot-
ile Bill would reduce beverage con:
tainer litter by 80-90 percent and the
New York State Energy Office
estimated the beverage industry
could reduce its energy use from )
20-67 percent if they switch 1
refillable bottles. The savings
translate to approximately 11
trillion to 26 trillion British Thermal
U (BTU) or an equivalent of 2
million to 4.3 million barrels of oi!
per year.
According to the pamphlet, other
states which have passed a similar
bottle bill have proven successful in
reducing litter and solid waste, In
Vermont, a survey showed that
total litter on highways dropped 35
percent after the bill was in effect
The main opposition o the bill
comes from the beverage industry.
According to a Boitle Bill cam-
paign activist, Laurie Moses, the in-
dustry has created an alternative bill
called “Total Litter Control?
(TLC).
Moses said TLE would take one
}ereent of the states! corporate
franchise tax to set up a New Yotk
State ‘Litter Control Program,"
An estimated $11 million would be
Used to hire teenagers and welfare
recipients to pick up litter along
state highways and state-owned
Jands during the summer
Beverage industries claim the bot-
tle bill would create a loss of jobs
sald Moses, but she pointed out
Governor Hugh Carey said the bill
Would create gain of about $,000
jobs with mintmal displacement,
The Bottle Bill is scheduled to be
brought up on the State Assembly
floor in May.
ecutive director, strongly favors
the conglomeration. He does not
foresee any drawbacks, "The pro-
posal was brought before Tower
East and Albany State staffs, and
everyone was in favor of the Idea,’*
said Lustgarten. He accredited
Engel and Quinn with the creation
of the merger.
Another reason for the merger is
Tower East has had difficulties with
their sound system. Asa result, they
have been losing money this year.
Said Engel, ‘Because of the
numerous complaints, we're trying
to upgrade the sound system.”
The equipment is over seven
years old, Tower East is bringing &
proposal before Central Council
this Sunday asking for money for
new equipment.
"By PATTI MARTINO
“7 don’t see how we will be able
to maintain the ity of the
department, if resources are
withdrawn," said Chair of the
English Department Robert
Donovan about the proposed
N.Y.S. budget cuts by Governor
Carey.
‘swe are always asked to prepare
for the worst and always are
prepared to trim back if it's essen-
tial’? explained Donovan.
He said the English Department
planned ilg fall #éiedlute! with "He"
x
Project Coordinator of Albany NYPIRG Jane Greenberg
next week's SA elections,
Central Council yoted unanimously Wednesday night to allow the
A proposition which would increase NYPIRG?s allocation of scu-
dent tax money from $2 0 $3 (per individital) will be on the ballot of
the opportunity
proposal on the ballot for the April 21, 22, and 23 elections,
“We're (Central Council) simply allowing the general student body.
to voice their opinions concerning NYPIRG
funding," said Central Council Chair John Suydam,
Presently NYPIRG receives $2.00 per semester from e
Fy student
axpayer’
‘eWPOJect coordinator of Albany NYPIRG Jane Greenberg fecls it's
time for the increase, "'Inflajion has hit us also'”, she sald, We haye
Quality of French Jeopardized
{o pay for of
this $2.00 since 1974, i
According to Greenberg, NYPIRG had intended to ask Central
il last year for the referendum to request an increase. However,
Cou
¢ staff, telephones and supplies, We've been funded at
she said Sue Gold (last year's SA President) requested them to wait un-
{il this year because SASU was asking for a funding
isame time,
Engel explained,"'The money will
be going towards two new projec-
{ors and a sound system." This new
equipment will be used by both
groups once the merger is complete.
“The theaters are attempting to
get a ticket booth at the lecture
centers for next year,’? sald
Lustgarten, The reason for the
ticket booth will be to attempt to
alleviate the long lines before the
show.
According to Engel, “There will
be the same number of movies,
they'll be more timely, and we'll get
them quicker.
Presently, the two theaters
choose their movies for the next
semester on a rotational basi
Quinn, “At the end of the
We make selections based on
probable budget cuts in mind,
Donovan forsees less part time, still
less graduate assistantships, and less
individual student attention if the
budget is approved.
French Department chair Martin
Kane is afraid the quality of the
French department will be affected
by the cuts, We have the best
French program in the SUNY
system and we would like it 10 be
maintained,’” he said.
Kane is most worried about the
future assistantships.
‘The supplies expenses budget
which keeps the department going
Will Be “ffecied" he’
pie iif) 12 die Stadent
nerease at the
— BETH BRINSER
Tower East and ‘Albany State Cinema to Merge
availability, and we alternate
picks.” With the merger and more
‘appropriations, they can make their
selections as soon as the movies are
released,
gel feels the merger will
facilitate coordination, “When we
alternated picks, we booked within
the group and never knew what the
competition Was showing until
schedules came out,”” he explained.
As a result, there were many com-
plications, Many times two dramas
or two comedies were shown on the
same night
‘We will still be showing two
films a night and midnight shows, It
will just be more efficient," said
Quinn, Lecture centers 7 and 18 will
still be used. Presently, Albany
State Cinema is in lecture center 18.
and Tower East in 7,
English Department Fears Cuts
think the general problem for
several departments is the
linguisitics program which is an in-
terdepartmental program, If the
cuts go through, we won be able
to maintain our {participation in the
linguisitics program,
Donovan feels although the
quality of the English department
will be affected by the cuts, the
quality of English degree will not be
affected,
44] don't think anything talked
about yet will undermine the
prestige of the degree, Donovan
said, “The most immediate affect
will be that class sizes will be in~
creased, The decreased amount of
ttention will be a loss to
adi abba bmunstoMt
‘ON CAMPUS HOUSING SIGN-UP,
| wae April 12-16, 19. 23,
uy 'Pre-Sian- -Up, State Quad U: -Lounge-
April 12-16, 49-23
Quad Suite-Room Selection on all Quads -
ect 19-23
WHY: *Coni inuing students can select
the 1982-83 academic year ed
DETAILED INFORMATION WILL
BE POSTED AND MATERIALS WILL
BE AVAILABLE BEGINNING APRIL 6.
APPLY BEFORE THE APRIL 23
DEADLINE,
| ASUBA & UNITY PRESS
PRESENTS
BLACK WEEKEND ‘82
‘A DEMONSTRATION
OF BLACK CULTURE’
ATSTATE UNIVERSITY
AT ALBANY
APRIL 14-19
N
COMPLETE THE PROCESS EARLY...
AMET TTT ATT TAT TTT TT A,
ANNOUNCING A NEW,
INTENSIVE THREE-WEEK
COURSE IN
BEGINNING ITALIAN
SUMMER- PRESESSION:
JUNE 7 - JUNE 25, 1982
REGISTER NOW!
Woeeenrerrrrrrrrrrerrrrerrrrerezegy,
Attention
Pre-Health Professionals:
i There will be a mandatory meeting on
N Monday, April 19th at 7:30. Lecture
Reenter to be posted- check for signs.
Elections for next year will be held.
| Also, CPR course sign-up and info on the
1982 Capital District Health Fair to be
held on Wednesday, April 21st in the
Campus Center Ballroom.
DOMINO’S
PIZZA
Offer for on-campus deliveries only,
fast,
30 minute
delivery
Super Spring Special
From 10pm-1am Sun-Thurs & 10pm-2am Fri& Sat
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/ALBANY STUDENT PRESS, APRIL 1
SABRI 16, T58S it RRR TE
Anarchy Reigns on Dozens of College Campuses
AUSTIN, Texas (CPS) One of the.
Schools that led an anarchic nation:
wide trend toward throwing student.
government off campus has moved.
toward reinstituting its student,
government.
Tn @ recent election, students at
the University of Texas-Austin ap-
Proved a constitution for a new stu
dent government,
Texas’ life without government
wasn’t altogether unusual. Dozens
of colleges across the country have
disbanded their student assemblies
for a variety of reasons, and several
others are considering doing so
now
A number of them have now
Single-Sex Dorms Gain Popularity
(CPS) Even single-sex dorms are
NOW getting stricter.
Last month, the University of
iced it was creating
@ special ‘closed residence’ hall
that will be off limits to members of
the opposite sex 24 liours a day.
While a number of campuses
have reported over the last year that
they were either not offering co-ed
dorms as an option to their students
anymore or converting mixed-
gender dorms to single-sex,
Alabama may be the first major
University {0 lock up a single-sex
dorm. The result will be a hall like
those that were the rule on cam-
pulses until the late 1960s
"We had requests by both
students and parenis,"” explained
Jolin Kagle, Alabama's assistant
housing director," and we felt like
there was a need to offer thg closed
residence option to students,"
The trend to "privacy, quiet, and
an atmosphere more conductive to
academic life’ is in fact now tho
predominant one in campus hous:
ing nationwide
“Choice and options are the wat-
thwords today,"” said Gary North,
president of the Association of Col-
lege and University Housing Of-
ficers and director of housing at the
University of Illinois.
“Students today want options
and alternatives in campus
housing,"* North said, “and schools
are increasingly trying to provide
those options, We've (housing of
ficers) all become much more
ed,"
© now of
fering students such housing alter-
natives as “quiet”? dorms, North
says, which restrict the noise level
and other activity that could
fact students from their
academic pursuits
Michigan State University, which
is credited as being a forerunner in:
the trend, currently has over 3000
students living in ‘quiet houses!”
and ‘quiet halls!” on campus,
“We're in the process now of
finishing up some market surveys
that are designed to (ell us the kinds
Of housing alternatives students are
interested in,"” said MSU housing
director Robert Underwood,
"We're finding that students are
Very interested in privacy and less
noise,”
Izzy Stone Tells Ali
continued from front page
case of demonology. The
human race is simply trapped by
technology. But unless we develop
sense of common destiny we are
doomed.'?
‘AS we reach to the stars we need
41 sense of brotherhood... not bristl-
ing with hate over who's red, black,
or yellow, The fact is that mankind
has not changed in 30,000 {0 40,000
years. We have a deep element of
The nonsense in
primitive macho
the Falkland Istands is brought on
by men who ought to know better."
nerican concern over Latin
American hotspots can be at-
buted to the bitter lesson of Viet
nam and the leadership of Catholic
bishops and priests serving there,
said Stone,
“The Bible has become a revolu
tionary document in Latin
America," he beamed, “It's
maryelous to sce It.”
Stone held an informal "bull ses
sion’ Tuesday evening in the
Patroon Room Lounge after a din
ner in his honor. He avoided a
discussion of politics, and instead
rapped about journalism and
history to the crowd of about 75
A high-school and college
dropout, Stone recently entered col:
lege in Washington to study Greek
He read Greck poetry and il
lustrated the relationship of past to
present, “You want to understand
Angola? Read Thucydides. The
way to human reconciliation is to
study history and understand,"”
The two day affair was sponsored
by Speakers Forum, and the Albany
State Chapter of United University
Professors,
— — — oo we ow ww =
EXPIRES:
] 4/23/82
REGUIAR
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Taco Prorto
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OPEN DAILY-10:30 AM-11:00 PM-~438:: 5946- DRIVE (
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created replacements,
Besides Texas, Dartmouth,
Virginia, Georgia, Southern Illinois
at Edwardsville and Northern Col-
orado, among others, have
Aisbanded all or part of their stue
dent governments since 1978, In ad-
dition, Oklahoma, Eastern Men-
nonite College, Stanford and
Missouri haye recently considered
dissolving their governments, too,
In most cases, the dissolutions
Were prompted by public govern-
ment bungling of campus events,
seemingly-endless government hag-
ling and resultant student apathy
Texas wa
sity in the seventies to actually vote
for anarchy
“The motive at the time of
abolishment was to re-organized the
government by getting rid of it and
starting over," recalled Richard
Heller, UT's assistant dean of
students,
But despite urgings from the ad-
ministration, students regularly re-
jected efforts to rep
elections this March, E
Yoler turnout was low, F
the university hasn't been hurt
much by the lack of a student
eon the
npus committees that
politicians used to, and the more
than’ $00 student Organizations at
Austin had taken up much of the
slack for special interest groups. In
addition, each college within the
‘university maintains its own student
council,
But the disappearance of a cen-
tral government ‘has meant that we
haven't had a central representative
body to comment on campus
{ssues\"" Heller observed.
At Goorgiir, which followed
Texas into anarchy in 1979, “there
UNC's campus activities coor-
dinator,
“But i's turned out to be very
sositive. Students themselves ad-
mitted that what they had) didn't
work, and now we've created
something better, The new system is
heck of a lot more accountable,””
The new system, launched last
year, allows for one student presi-
dent and 11 vice presidents to help
make decisions in various areas of
are a few people who have express-
ed an interest in student govern-
ment, but there's nothing for-
mulated or concrete in the works,'’
reported Assistant Vice President
for Academic Affairs Tom
Cochran,
Yet he expected a centralized
government (0 re-appear within
the next couple of years,’
“There's still a place for a cen-
tralized student voice,"’ he contend-
ed, “and, personally, I'd like to see student concern like student ser-
student government back on cam- vices, university relations, equal op-
pus. It provides that focal p of portunity and academic and faculty
student interest, and assures affairs,
everyone that students have a voice ‘Dartmouth, which abolished its
in what's going on," undergraduate council in 1969, two
Similarly, “it all started out real, years ago also reinstituted a student
real negative when the government assembly, mostly to help focus stu-
Was first abolishes at Northern dent participation in campus
Colorado, said Mary Beth Gibson, fairs:
WCDB presents SA Candidates’ Forum
10:30 pm Sunday
Questions for the candidates may be dropped off in
the News box in WCDB
Surprise Lake Camp
A member agency of the Federation of J wish Philanthropies
Wed., April 2! Campus Cente: Room 357
GENERAL COUNSELORS ANE SPECIALISTS
(waterfront, tennis, arts & crafts, performing «ts, camping and hiking,”
sports)
$450-700 ‘
Can also earn up to 9 college credits while working at camp.
Long Islan
Earn credits this summer
Attend day, evening or weekend courses which leave
you free-for your job and/or summer fun, We're just
minutes from Manhattan and recreational facilities.
Public transportation and parking are nearby.
Two six-week summer sessions:
June 12-July 22 and July 24-Sept. 2
Choose from hundreds of undergraduate
and graduate courses in Business
Administration and the Arts and Sciences
plus many special summer programs,
Insti
Financial aid
For the summer bulletin, phone (212) 834-6020 or mail coupon:
id University/The Brooklyn Center
tutes, workshops and seminars.
is available to eligible students taking 6 or more credits.
a, "SUMMER OFFICE M101 i
I Long Island University |
I The ng. lyn Center
' University Plaza, Brooklyn, N.Y, 11201
Jn Equal Opparunty Amat Acton Inston
1 Please send me the 1982 summer bulletin.
| ave
| ADDRESS
1 ciry,state,zip
Ty avec augaonedsesAAeeawAR!
fad sepa! THaciies vine IA
© Onor Ar
| Sib EE poo xa aaa IIIS RIAA AAA TATA IT AA og
CELEBRATION ’82
&f the following is the ticket policy for Celebration ‘82
1.You must have a ticket to attend, as the entire
event will be fenced in.
ache aie ac Hc:
2.You may only purchase tickets with a tax card
(Limit is two tickets per tax card.)
3.We encourage you to buy tickets in advance.
4.Ticket prices will be $4.00 for the first tax card
ticket and $6.00 for the second. All tickets on the
day of the show (if available) will be $10.00 each
with a tax card. Remember- the only way to attend
the event is by purchasing a ticket with a tax card.
5.Proof of age is required.
Students are encouraged to stay out of the
Campus Center during the day. The rat and the
snack bar will be closed all afternoon.
The entrance to the event will be located
ind Dutch Quad, adjacent to the parking fot.
Thank-you,
University Concert Board
beh
&: -TICKETS FOR UCB’'s CELEBRATION ’82 WILL GO
| ON SALE TUESDAY, APRIL 20 IN THE CAMPUS
CENTER, ROOM 358
- TICKETS INCLUDE ENTERTAINMENT AND
REFRESHMENTS
BEAT THE RUSH - BUY YOUR TICKETS IN AD-
VANCE!
WE LOOK FORWARD TO ANOTHER SUCCESSF
EVENT DUE TO YOUR PAST COOPERATION! ae
GET PSYCHED!
|
|
|
SA FUNDED
&
FEI IA AAA ACAI AACA AAA AAI ACAI IT AIA AAAI AHCI HII II AHCI I AICI INH
|
i
ALBANY. STUDENT PRESS, APRIL 16, 1982 é
Cuts Spur New Creativity in College Financing
(CPS) Studenis may soon get to
choose from a somewhat-exotic ar-
Fay Of programs to help them pay
their way through college.
Among the ideas some colleges
are considering to help them hold
‘Onto the five million students who,
tn the wake of cuts in student aid
for 1982, are going to have to figure
OUL new ways to finance their
educations are:
Individual Education Accounts
that rival Individual Retirement Ac-
counts, special insurance tuition
flinds, state-backed bonds for
private colleges, ambitious campus
employment agencies, broad tax
deduction programs, lotteries for
student loans, and even payoffs in
return for, as one college president
recently put it, “getting into bed
with the Defense Department,"”
The schemes, of course, spring
from Congress’ October 1981 deci-
sion (0 cut federal student ald pro-
grams by as much as 12 percent for
the 1982-83 fiscal year.
Administrators’ rewards for con-
cocting successful schemes are im-
pressive
hools that come up with
substantial alternatives could find
themselves facing mass migrations
of students! at registration next
fall, predicted Dallas Martin of the
ational’ Association of Student
Financial Aid Administrators,
“We're in a whole new ball game
now,"' confirmed Dr. Vance Peter
son of Southern Cal, ‘and it’s our
Job to try and compensate for the
Various losses.!?
USC, for example, now lets
Students beat future (uition hikes by
paying “all four yeurs of a student's
education at the current tuition
rate.!” Peterson sald students do it
by paying in one lump sum, repay-
ing a seven-year USC Joan, or put-
ting up parents’ houses as collateral
for 15-year loans administered by
four local banks.
Indiana University, on the other
hand, is trying to make up the losses
by working ‘very closely with job
placement” ta get_more students
more part-time jobs, said 1U aid
Director Dr. Jimmy Ross,
Malcolm X College in Chicago is
trying the same thing by funnelling
Video Yearbooks
Seen on Campus
TORRANCE, CA (CPS) In a trend
that may soon find its way to col:
lege campuses, six California high
schools are experimenting this year
With video yearbooks to supplement
their usual paper editions.
“We're not trying to replace
paper yearbooks at all,’” said Dan
producer/director of
the com:
Farrom,
Video Yearbooks, Inc.,
which is producing the
videotapes. “This is
students can add to their regular
pany
something
yearbooks as a supplement
“We do highlights of miajor
events, edit them, and blend them
with music,” he explained. ‘There
are also interviews with students
and a section where the kids can
ture.
give their wishes for the fu
schaged inte
4 one-hour videolupe, and
nts for $60 a cassette
As for the college market, Far
rom sitid his production team is
ready to lake on any campus that
interested in chronicling the year's
activities on tape
But, he added,
that most colleges already hav
their own video. departments or
even their own ty studios, so they
“We've found
may choose to do it themselves if
they tnuthe feloarautractive.s’? *
students “into study-related jobs,"”
but aid Director Ramiro Borja finds
a ‘‘problem in competing with more
prestigious schools for those kinds
Of jobs,"
California may’ get a constitu.
tional amendment to allow a state
lottery, which would give its profits
to education and defray tuition at
state schools.
Its chances of getting on the.
November state ballot ‘tare
Unknown," said a spokesman for
Assemblyman Larry Kapiloff.
“Lottery proposals have been
around for years;"* he added. “This
is considered a drastic measure, but
the system has been cut so much
already that something like this is a
necessity." i
Similarly, University of Arizona
student President Richard Garcia
tried to convince state legislators 10
devote to student loans the tax
evenuies the state will start collec-
ting on campus facilities,
But “legislators wouldn't really
even listen {0 me," Garcia reported,
More- typically, colleges _have
sooo
fesorted to tapping previously-
violate stock portfolios and en-
dowments funds for student aid,
Williams College, for one, is
teinvesting $§ million in endown-
ment funds in loans to parents.
Few schools can afford to do that
for long, however. Williams is '*for-
unale to be in the position we're in.
Many other schools don't have our
options,"" pointed out aid Director
Philip Wick,
Consequently many of the new
schemes, cross school and state
lines, A Boston insurance company
1s now marketing an insurance-
tuition plan,
The plan, according to Donald
Coleman of the Richard C, Knight
Insurance Co., arranges with
parents to pay tuition money direct-
ly to a college, Parents then reim-
he company in regular, un
monthly payments — plus
interest — throughout two, three or
four-year plans,
ents, in turn, can earn interest
on any money in the account that
has yet to be paid to the college,
Coleman explained.
The plan's been around for a few
Years, targeted at parcnis earning
“upper-middle Income and above,”
With students at private colle
"We aren't on too many state cam
puses yet, but as the schools search
for alternatives, we expect them to
be more open, Coleman’ sald
Idaho, for one, recently began
referring ald applicants to them.
A Hiram Walker
Guide to Secs.
Ia
Hl
The classic
introduction to Secs.
Just fill a glass with ice
and pour in Hiram Walker
Triple Sec.
ik
ob
sine
of soda to your
‘Triple Se
your w
a)
4 A/ Want your Secs «
a
parkle’
—
[RAM WALKER TRIP.
The best long-range replacement
for lost ald programs, argued
Hunter College President Donna
Shalala fo a recent New York
educators! convention, {s “getting
into bed with the Defense Depart-
ment,!”
Shalala said that, by allying itself
with “the military-industrial com-
plex," higher education can once
again make itself ‘central to what
Washington is all about,’ which
she defined as “foreign policy, the
State Department, defense and tax-
ation,”
Closer {9 campus, Cunnecticut,
North Carolina, Florida, Oregon,
Michigan, New Hampshire, lowa,
Maryland and Ohio are all con-
sidering replacing federal aid with
agencies to sell tax-exempt bonds (0
help finance student tuition bills, He
linois and Massachusetts have
already started their programs,
In Iilinots, explained Regina
Nolan of the state Department of
Public Financing, the bond agency
will sell tax-exempt bonds to the
public, Proceeds of the sales will
yelp guarantee student loans at
private colleges around the state.
While bond-buyers get tax-free in-
terest from the bonds, students and
parents repay the loans over ten
years.
Public colleges nixed the bond
program, Nolan said, because the
colleges themselves must insure the
state against financial loss and ‘fa
uublic college was to default, it
t Mixed-"p Secs.
JZ theres nothing like Secs
in mixed company, Just mix
¥4 02, Hiram Walker Triple Sec,
1% oz.Two Fingers Tequila and
a splash of lime juice, O16!
Triple Sec
Ofall the
different Secs,
only Hiram Walker
‘Triple Sec is made
with succulent
Spanish and Curagao
oranges, One sip
will convince you.
Hiram Walker is the
greatest name
in Triple 8ec.
LE SEC
10 pro, Mara Water # Sa.
Would not necessarily have the
assets with which to make good.
Private colleges generally use their
stock portfolios as collateral for the
bonds,
‘Some public colleges — especially
those with large endowments —
may join the bond program in some
‘tates, sources said.
But bonds can be hard to) sell,
observed Peter Avalone of Merrill
Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith in
New York,
"The marketability is determined
hv the security (of the bond), and
ight now the security provisions.
are up in the air,
Some states are neryous about is-
sulng such bonds for fear the
federal government, mad at losing
the money that ordinarily would
have gone into Washington's tax
coffers, will some day shut them
down,
‘That fear, sald Treasury Depart-
nt spokesman Charles Powers, |s
probably unfounded,
So is the notion that any of the
replacement schemes can compen-
sate for the loss of the federal aid
funds,"' observed William Johnson,
aid director at Kent State. "As far
as 1 know, there will be no new
money to replace any of what is lost
by the budget cuts, None."?
Martin tersely asserted, ‘There is
no short. m alternative to federal
funds,
sn Franses, CAN .
Seer oe
i Wine.and Cheese Place
“Sugar & Spice fa
ene?
“ssi
Staci Block
and
Rena Lehrer
wt
| wero
April 23rd and 24th
CAMPUS CENTER PATRON ROOM Se
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY (6)
AS 9RM.TO 1:30A.M, A
.: Tune Into ;
- Theclb 2
Love To Dance
Albany’s Hottest Hours
Sat. Night 10 til 4
ESAITEKIN IE
TELANEX MAAK Kx!
Pc spechet Wiican wWencen
ISC-Hillel Presents
ASPECIAL SHABBAT WEEKEND
gee orinKosher Kitchen, 457-7508 or 459-8000
olleqe Musicfest
“gor
Rock & Roll Weekend
at the
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~ \cow™ ‘Campus enter
The Agents |
Fetday PLUS
riday and Saturda
April 23rd and 24th,
6pm - 1:30am
Ariel
METHOLAND
University \viltary Services Sponsvred
KS i ary Services Syonsured
g
%
(pete OME EME LEELA AMAL POO PPPPPOPALISABAL A
\
\ ee ee ee
’ .
|
} SHABBAT DINNER !
a
j on Friday April23_ 7pmin the Kosher Kitchen } 1 Presents Its Annual
Guest speakers will discuss 1 i
‘Religious Life on Campus: } I SPRING FEAST |
Is There a Need for Some Changes?’ ! 1 . -
! |
On Saturday following services, there will bea special Lia Ia esta di Primavera |
} luncheon at Chapel House with discussion groupsto ¢ April 22 8:00PM-1:00AM HU354 Ue ) |
follow. } 1 ; &
Reservations can be made at the JSC-Hillel 1 Balers god pe Wine! } |
I Live Band! Dancing!
SPADE SWAT AMAT CAAA CMR Comoe oMn CMA Nos ee ee me ee ee
“,
DOOM LL LI DI LIM DLL MI TIT
Italian American
1 Ae
Ie Student Alliance
SA Funded
7, POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
Volunteer Phone
Counselor
The position offers an excellent
Opportunity for a person
Interested in short term crisis
intervention, in development of
counseling skills, and in
employment in a dynamic and
creative human service
organization
ar
Schuyler
dutch quad
Suny albany
albany, new york,
12222
Qualifications:
1. Current enrollment in SUNYA as
a freshman, sophmore, or junior.
2. Willing involvement in the
in-service training program
Duties of a Volunteer:
518-457-7800
Qa
ma
a
1. Attendance at the initial trainin,
weekend at
the beginning of the semester. :
2 Wereing on a 3 hour telephone shift weekly.
. Working on 3-4 (12 hour) weekeng shifts a
semester (including overnight).
4. Attendance at
eaneitar 2 three hour training groups each
5. Attendance
Middle Earth a
6. Commitmen:
Services,
at occasional, workshops run by
nd other agencies,
it to Providing quality counseling
Interested persons should contact Middle Earth
for.an application. A,
jan - Applications will be accepted
untii ednesday, November 25, 12:00 noon.
SFPPE* Oe te wee eee aT!
IAI ALIA III I II ee
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS, APRIL 16, 1982
—
Preview|
SUNY Stony Brook will sponsor
"Schoo! Spirit," its first annual
varsity show, on April 22-24, 29, 30
‘and May 1 at 8 pm and on April 25
at 1 pm in the Stony Brook Union
Auditorium. tickets are $1 each.
The show will spoo! the
University's attempt to instill spirit
at Stony Brook, For mora info call
the Union ticket office at (516)
246-6816,
Russell Sage College Department
of Visual and Performing presents
"Chicago" the roaring '20's
musical, Richard Jones will direct.
Admission Is $5 general public,
$3.50 for students with IDs end
Senior citizens, Dates are April
18:17, 22-24, 28, 30 and May 1; per-
formance at 8 pm
Feminist Alliance and NYPIRG are
Co-sponsoring the movie Willmar 8
on Tuesday, April 20 at 8 pm in LC
2
SUNYA Department of
Mathematics and Statistics
Prevents a statistics colloquium
with AP. David of University Col
lege London, U.K. will speak on
"The Reduction Principle" on Mon:
day, May 3 at 3:90 pm in Earth
Sciece room 140, Coffee at 3:00
bm, Earth Science, room 152,
Julian Besag from the University
of Durham, U.K,, will present
series of lectures on "Modeling
and Statistical Analysis of Spatial
and Spatial Temporal Processes,"
The lectures will be on April 21, 23,
26 and 28 in ES 140 at 3:30-5:00,
preceded by refreshments at 3:00
In ES 1524
Class of 1983 Is sponsoring a trip.
to see the Yankees vs Angels
game on April 29, There will be a
Meeting on Sunday, April 18 at
4:00 pm In the CO Gaieteria,
Ballet Club with Rachel Pivnic
meets Sundays, 2:30-4 pm at the
dance studio,
Jazz Club with Kim Kleinman
meets Thursday nights, 7:15-8:45
pm in the dance studio, The club
will meet with Liz Mallon on
Fridays, 1:30-3 pm In the dance
studio,
SUNYA Department of Physics
presents a colloquium on "Laser
Stimulated Surface Processes”
with Dr, Avinah C. Berl, Depart:
ment of Chemistry, University of
Rochester, on Friday, April 16 at
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Wondering where you fit in
Worried about your relationships
Concerned about birth control
VD. homosexuality
4
GENESIS
AIA AAAI EAA AK
Sexuality Resource Center
105 Schuyler Hall 457-8015
New Hours for Spring
Tues, 7:00-10:00
Wed. 2-5, 7-10
Thurs. 7:00-10:00
There's a place you can go for help
y Sludent Affairs and
ident Association
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3:00 pm In the C.L“Andrews FS ee ee ee eee
Seminar Room, PH 129, Coffee at: jj PMase MW Out ene form for wech jem or event, andl print eer. H
2:90 pm.
Ringel institute of Gerontology
School of Social Welfare will spon
CIRCLE ONE CATEGORY
sor John Oliver, Associate Dean o| brent} Biri sist Mgt
School of Social Welfare, SUNYA, Pah He ates
who will speak on "Housing Needs Lectures, Seminars Puble Notlees
of the Elderly" on April 22, ] ‘Attention Majors Miscellany
12:00-1:00 pm in Draper Hall, Room Fins omer: Taverne
03, east campus. Free admission:
For more info call 455-6107,
Mayberry for Congress ’82 will
have a campaign kick-off rallyon ff
Saturday, April 24 at 8 pm In the H
Sponsoring
Organization:.
Name of
Event:
Description of Event:
Starlight Room of Best Western
Inn Towne, 300 Broadway.
Speakers will be Patricla Mayberry,
Diane Wane, Okell Winfield and
Vera Michelson, $2 donation re-
quested, For more Info, a ride, or
child care call 374-1494; 463-8873;
370-5653,
y, April
22 {rom 12 to 1 pm In HU Lounge.
The speakers will be Barbara
Blatner, Cynde.Gregory and
Sharon Ann Jaeger, For further in-
fo contact Sharon Ann Jaeger,
449-5106,
SUNYA Gay and Lesbian Alliance
will sponsor Vito
The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuall:
ty In the Movies, on April 18, 4 pm.
In CC Ballroom, Tickets available
at door, $1 for students with tax
cards, $1.50 for those without, $2
general admission,
Location of Event:
Info, Phone:.
bi ao
The Black Sheep of
Canadian Liquors.
A one hundred proof potency that simmers
just below the surface. Yet, its so smooth and
favor isunlke any Canacan liquor you
have ever tasted. Straight, mixed, or on the
rocks, Yukon Jack is truly a black
=|) sheep. A spintt unto itself,
@ Yukon Jack.
100 Proof. Strong and Smooth.
' (op
VERY IMPORTANT
CHEM CLUB MEETING
Mon. 4/19 6:30 PM OCH 164
LAST MEETING
BEFORE
ACS SYPOSIUM !!
oo
Presents
1
SUNDAY PUBLIC AFFAIRS
4PM ‘STUDENT VOICERADIO’
Presents aforumon
NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT
SA Presidentialand |
Vice- Presidential
; Candidates Forum |
I : % these dates are for senior card holders
We are rounding up this year with some helpful ace
tivities to get YOU through the ROUGH TIMES}1}1)
THE QUICKIE, 50 Min.
TUNE-UP: RELAXATION
1, Wed. April 21 - 8pm
(TAKE THE BREAK)
2, Tues. April 27 - 8pm
(You can afford the time ou)
. FAT: 0;
A WOMAN'S ISSUE
RELAXATION: TAKING THE
TIME YOU NEED...
Wed. April 28 - 7:00-9:00pm
For more information and sign-up...
contact Middle Earth at...457-7800
“WE'RE CONFIDENTIAL”
Sunday, April 18th - 4:00pm-10:00pm CC 375
Monday, April 19th - 7:30pm-10:30pm CC 373
} Tuesday, April 20th - 7:00pm-10:00pm CC 346
Wednesday, April 21st - 7:00pm-10:00pm CC 346
Thursday, April 22nd 7:00pm-!
only
TICKET SALES HOURS
PLPMW9 CORR Oe
This is yourLAST CHANCE
Nominate your favorite
Teacher/Advisor
for
Student Association
Teaching and Advising
Award
Deadline is April 20th
Pick up nomination formsin the
SA Contact Office
THE CLASS OF 1983)
is proud to present
KENTUCKY
FRIED
pm
A will be negotiated
—ee meee eM ee ee ee ee erie a one
ALBANY STUDENT’PRESS; APRIL” 16; 1982~ === ==> ==> ~~
aft
hotel shelter
There may be growing concern
about the threat of nuclear war, but
there's no reason to let it ruin your
vacation, A Japanese hotel has been
fortified, acording to a spokesman,
to withstand the blast of a nuclear
explosion and accomodate 3,000
guests for Up to wo weeks after the
bomb drops. Kyoto’s Century
Hotel inclues a fully stocked bomb.
shelter, along with airtight doors
and filters to seal out radiation, The
spokesman says the fortifications
were ordered by the hotel's owner,
who thinks nuclear war is in-
evitable, but also believes ‘!in pro-
viding our guests with the best
facilities.”
hit the books
High school students will have to
Start hitting the books again, if they
Want to make it to college: a new
study-shows academic achievement
is three times as important as per-
sonal qualities in college admis-
sions, The study also puts (o rest the
myth that outstanding extracur-
ricular activites are weighed heavily
in the decision-making process,
although they may look good com-
bined with high grades. Jointly
sponsored by the College Board and
Educational Testing Service, the
study reports that students’ class
rank and test scores are the two
main academic factors considered
in admissions.
nun vs bishop
Ina first for the Roman Catholic
Church in the United States, four
uns are trying to take their bishop
to court. The sister, accused of
"Jack of cooperation with the
parish staff,’” claim they were
ateber teen ‘
AL SMITH )
Sporting Goods
47 Green St
Albany N.Y.
behind Trailways bus
e
{ station) {
465-6337
5 | Discounts to
Students
Lettered T Shirts
Unifoirms 4
v7 Sh,
eo Equipment
a "be,
CNN ED
Go tosea
and earn credit
this Fall
Sail the Caribbean and Atlantic on a 100
{oot brigantine as part o! Southampton
College's 1982 SEAmester™ program.
and Seamanship,
the Sea, American Marin
History, Natural History
Sept. 19, 1982 10
Nov. 14, 1982
For more information, contact
‘SEAmesier'™
ilice of Continuing Education
Southampton Coll
Southampton. Now York 11968.
call 816-283-4000, ext 117
ZODIAC NEWS
Wrongly dismissed from their
teaching Jobs at a church school in
Hampton, New Hampshire, Their
attorney — John McEachern —
argues the dismissals were a breach
Of their employment contracts with
the diocese, and thus a oreach of
civil law. But the bishop's attorney
is urging a local judge to stay out of
the matter and let the pope make
the final decision,
proposed increase:
Tax-cutting measures may be
driving up new. home prices. At
Teast it's happening in California,
Where proposition 13 started the
trend toward properly tax reduc-
tions. California cities — pinched
for money as a result of proposition
13 — are forcing housing
developers to finance new schools
and parks, and the developers are
passing that cost -along to home
buyers, As a result, according to a
University of California study, the
median price of a new home in the
Golden State is $36,000 above the
national average, while only a
decade ago, California home prices
Were in line with the rest of the na-
tion,
extinct species
Neahderthal man may be alive
and living in Outer Mongolia,
The respected British Archaeology
Journal Antiquity is out with a
report about neanderthal-like
creatures who've been sighted in
areas of southern Russia and
Mongolia, The journal says the
upright, mostly hairless humanoids
have body and skull structures
strikingly similar fo the neander-
thals — a race thought (o have been
extinct for 30 thousand years, The
author of the Antiquity article, ar-
chaeologist Myra Schackley, claims
“reputable”” scientists and dozens
of herdsmen have seen the’ strange
looking creatures. And, Shackley
adds, huge footprints and crude
stone-age style tools have been
found in areas the
where
Monday Cure
Domestic Bottles
Imported Bottles
humanoids — known locally as
“Almasti’’ — have been spotted,
city smells
A dab of Detroit and a sniff of
Chicago are now available in bot-
tles, Jan Baxter of ‘Makes Scents”
¢reates urban colognes — including
“essence of’? Chicago, New York
City, Michigan's upper peninsula
and Detroit, Baxter says she tries to
sniff out the best of a city, “Every
city has awful smells," she says,
“but 1 try {0 capture the positive
smell — and thats always a nice
fone, @ romantic, sensuous one,
Baxter's bottled "New York City!
is spley, her ‘Rochester, New
York!’ smells like lilacs, and her
“Niagara Falls, Canadian side’ is
woodsy. The colognes sell for about
five dollars per half-ounce.
madless future
MAD magazine has fallen on hard
times, After 30 years of publishing
irreverent parodies of adver
tisements, movies and pollticlans,
MAD's circulation has fallen (0
about a million, less than half the
number sold during the magazine's
heyday a decade ago. “1 don't
know if MAD has much of a
future’? says publisher William
Gaines, ‘Kids just aren't as
rebellious as they use to be." Media
expert John Reidy agrees: “It’s just
harder to make fun of things,! he
says. “Nowadays kids already
Know everyone lies."”
shy di jewelry
A jeweled necklace and matching
earrings are being offered for sale at
MADISON AVE «
ONTARIO STS.
ALBANY.
as2:g979T7
89 cents
$1.09
Kamikaze or Houseshots
79 cents
F 2¢ case of Rolling Rock to high scorer on Pac Man
Tuesday Cure
Pitcher Miller - $2.00
House Drinks
Sours - .99 cents
White Russians - $1.29
Iced Teas - $1.29
Thur:
89 cents
Pitcher Genny Ale - $1.75
Fri, & Sat., April 16 & 17
Sunday.,
The Morons & Guest
April 18
Wed., April 21
Downtime
April 22
The Hot Lobster
$20,000 above their market value
. all because they were worn just
once by Princess Diana, West Ger-
man jeweler Genio Hakimi admits
his asking price of $130,000, is
higher than normal, But he says he
has documentary proof the
diamond-studded jewels once
adorned what has since become the
royal neck, At last report, the
Jewels were still in Hakimi's shop in
Dusseldorf, awaiting a buyer.
no integrity
An Italian doctor is facing a
Prison term, charged with perform:
Ing Vasectomies on 200 men at their
Tequest, Dr, Giorgio Conciani is
believed to be the first physician
anywhere in the world to be
criminally charged for conducting
Voluntary male sterilization opera-
tions, The surgical procedures are
banned under a $0-year-old
law that specifically for
against the integrity and health of
the race," Conclani, who previous:
ly was brought to trial after perfor-
ming voluntary abortions on female
patients faces a six-to-twelve-year
pris..a sentence if convicted
professor fails
A computer that analyzes student
essays says Colorado State Univer
sity President Ralph Christofferson
would haye trouble passing a
freshman English course, English
instructors used the computer to
evaluate Christofferson’s inaugural
address, delivered last fall, The
computer's verdict: The president's
sentences are 100 long — one ran $7
words — and he uses too many
phrases like “institutional intertia’
and intellectual myopia.'”
stockman the dog
This probably isn't the sort of
{ribute David Stockman had in
mind, but the owner of The A(/art-
tle magazine has named| his
labrador puppy after the Reagan
budget director, Mort Zuckerman
says his dog — ‘'Stockman'? — was
named {n appreciation of last year's
controversial interview with the
budget director, which boosted The
Atlantic's advertising and circula-
tion rates. "Stockman," Zucker-
man says, apparently referring. 10
his dog, ‘represents a tricke-down
theory that really works,"
acid rain
Acid rain is taking its toll on the
eastern United States, A study
prepared for the Office of
Technology Assessment concludes
that about one-fifth of all eastern
lakes and streams have been damag-
ed by acid rain, The study says if
the sulfuric and altrie acid deposits
continue, about 80 percent of the
Waterways in the northeast and up-
per midwest will be in danger. The
Environmental Protection Agency
reports that it has increased the
budget for acid rain research to a
total of about 22 million dollars for
1983,
“COUNSELORS
FOR
JEWISH
CAMPS
Contact: Assn. of Jewish Sponsored Camps
East 59th Street, New York, N.Y. 10022
(212) 751-0478:
Tower East
Cinema
presents
Marsha Mason «
Kristy McNickol
ONLY WHEN
1 LAUGH
Friday and Saturday April 16 and 17
$1.00 w/tax
$1.50 w/out tax
7:30 and 10:00 PM
LC7
The Falkland:
ilvinas Islands
Rebel Without A Cause
A.A, Alexander
By what right does great Britain claim the
disputed islands of the South Avlantic? Ii
Insists Upon contro! of, and sovercigniy
Over, @ group of islands more than 7,000
miles from the British Isles, and asserls at
the same time that {tis not pursuing @ cole
onialist policy,
Itis not a question of self-determination
for the Islanders, These descendants of
British colonizers are not demanding the
fight to determine their own future — nol
at all, On the contrary, they are demanding
that the British government continue to
control the islands, as it has done since
1833, All sides agree that the islands should
be placed under the administration of some
outside power, but which one?
The British demand conirol from Lon-
don, After all, the inhabitants of the islands
placed the colonizers there against Argen-
tina's will, and Britain was able to do so by
dint of its military and economic might,
Had jt been up to Argentina, there never
Would have been British colonization of the
islands, and Argentina would have
populated them with its own people in:
stead, But the young and weak Argentinian
republic could scarcely argue with the
British navy, For Argentina, the pro-British
islanders are and have always been an unin-
vited population, in supposed defense of
which Britain now threatens war against the
Argentinian nation and people,
The disputed islands form an obvious
geographic unit with the Argentinian
mainland — and hardly with the British
isles — and the opinion of 27 million
mainlanders must be considered along with
“British rule of the Islands renders them
an enclave. . .
”
ed in the bar,” I looked at him in disbelief
and he then proceeded to say, ‘'stop singing
of you will have to leave the bar.””
‘Any other person would brush off this
imbecile remark and remain in the bar. tam
not one of these people as such, and 1 do
not forget such an assinine action as this
bouncer chose to execute, The situation
would be different if 1 were inciting a fight
and would be reasonable grounds for evic-
lon, but people of Albany State, I was only
singing. 1 was threatened with being kicked
out if | did not stop. This may sound very
stupid but this actually did occur:
All L wish to say is the Long Branch lost a
handful of ‘patrons that Tuesday night. If
the management had half a brain, they
would hire bouncers who do not have
bloated egos as this one bouncer did. I find
nothing impressive or macho about being a
bouncer in an Albany bar who feels he can
kick someone out of that bar for the mere
fact of singing and having a good time with
good friends, God forbid there be a fight.
‘That probably would not be grounds in this
particular bouncer's eyes for kicking a per-
son out,
I still cannot believe this actually occur-
red, I hope future patrons of the Long
Branch just remember that singing is not
allowed in the bar.'”
— James Koury
are all of British ethnicity, and rule from
London is the clear preference of the
islanders themselves, But surely the Argen
linians also have a reasonable case, ay a
quick glance at the map demonstrates, The
Islands He less than 300 miles from Aryen
tina — bul well over 7,000 miles. from
England, In faet, the islands tie eloser 10
Argentina than (0 any other country in che
World = especially Britain
As for the argument regarding the
British-deseended population, is it indeed a
Valid? justification for continued rule trom
London? For how did that tiny population
Of volonizery successfully arrive at the
islands and establish themselves there in the
first plave? Certainly not with the consent
of the’ voncurrence of Argentina, Britain
that of 2,000 islanders. British rule over the
islands renders them a colonial enclave, for
which Argentina never asked and about
which it was never consulted, Argentina's
recent actions have been those of a wound-
id
ed Third World nation, with long
unpleasant memories of colonial domini
tion, struggling to regain its just and
legitimate territory.
None of this is to suggest that
Argentina's, governthent is anything other
than a brutal and facist regime — it is such,
without question, But the Argentinian state
— no matter what government conducts its
affairs — has the right té preserve its ter-
integrity,
ain's moverhents are a threat to
peace, for an unjust cause.
For Heaven's. Sake
To the Editor:
Sanetimony {s one thing 1 can ne
stomach (indeed, with the resurgence of
majority types, it is now as common
air pollution), However, veiled
discrimination coupled with a fanatical,
boving-eyed determination to foist one’
beliefs ((hat's right Jimmy my boy, beliefs),
pon every other mammalian biped is
feprehensible and an abomination against
the very God Mr. Olsen putports to serve,
Parroting biblical aphorisms does not a
Christian make. Jim, {t's time to turn in
your Dr, Seuss Christiart primer and realize
that others hold beliefs as viable as those
ly
Singing The Blues
On Tuesday night, the sixth of April, a
few wood pals and 1 went to the Long
Branch Tavern in a jovial mood due to the
cancellation of classes and the upcoming
Easter holiday yacation. We had planned
for an evening of yood honest fun, Those
plans Were rudely and unnecessarily inte
fupted by a bouncer who Was either ina bad
mood oF he felt important because he was a
power figure in an Albany bar (Ha, Ha),
The'event that led to the conflict with this
bouncer was not a fist fight, a verbal or
physical attack, but singing, My friends and
1 were participating in a litle tribute to the
late Bing Crosby, We were not hurting
anyone around us, or at least it did not ap-
pear so. This impertinent bouncer threaten
ed {0 evict me and my friends if we did not
stop singing, He said, “singing is not allow-
You So fervently (blindly?) espouse, If you
Want to play at being so self-righteous do so
in front of yout mirror or with others of
your ilk, 1 will be damned (note the biblical
allusion) if 1 will allow someone paying lip
service (o Christianity, while being little
more than a sad caricature of that ideal,
dictate to me his or her interpretation of
Fight and wrong. Believe me, if heaven is
filled with people like you, 1 want no part
of it
— Craig H. Kinsley
Biopsychology Dept.
BRITAIN
Blame EOP Not Me
To the Editor:
Although Lam studying in France for the
semester Clifford Thorton's letter to the
editor, "The Wrong Approach’? printed in
the ASP (Feruary 2) recently came to my at-
{ention. In this letter Mr. Thorton implies
that the ASP and I were wrong by respec-
tively printing and writing the letter about
Mrs. Nix’s unethical proposition. He states
that he believes that 1 used improper chan-
nels for my complaint,
I believe that the ASP’s editorial section
is an open forum to discuss critical universi-
ty issues and therefore 1 find no wrong do
ing on my part in writing to the newspaper.
Mrs. Nix offered me money to do
another student's work and I believe that
the ethics of that offer deserved the scrutiny
they have received, If Mr. Thorton believes
the results are damaging to EOP it is to
Mrs. Nix that he should address his c
plaint, It was she who committed the wrong
doing that precipitated this issue, There was
nothing unethical in my refusal of the offer
nor in my effort to bring it to the attention
of the university community, It is BOP, not
the ASP nor myself that should be more
careful in the future, When Mrs, Nix
underestimated my honesty she brought
these troubles upon herself. Neither my
silence nor the ASP's refusal to print the
letter would have changed what she did
Therefore 1 feel the only “wrong
approach’” in this unfortunate incident was
Mrs. Nix's when she approached me.
Sally Li
man
Tipping The Scales
To the Editor:
On Monday, April 5, the University
Senate decided that discrimination on the
basis of sexual or affectional preferences is
all right, regardless of what official univer
sity policy states
AS students, We are obliged (0 follow
university policy on this campus, whether
We agree with it or not. Yet, our own policy
makers haye just decided that it is okay for
others to ignore university rules, Why is it
$0 aceeplable for the army to discriminate
on this campus while we would be appalled
by the same behavior from anyone el
Suppose the physics department decided to
give. schol
hips only 10 heterosexual
physics students?
If no one else has dared challenge this
poliey y
years ago, the Supreme Court allowed
i, then we must be the first, Forty
discriminatio
policy has bee
on the basis of race, That
reversed, Isn't it time we
recognized all of our citizens as equal, or is
it as George Orwell said, “All animals a
equal, but some are more equal than
jothers."?
— Madelyn Kelstein
Fuel For Thought
This i5 a letter (0 introduce to the uni
sity faculty, staffand off-can
hew service soon to be offered in
Capital District, This service, the Fuel
Buyers Group, can save residential heatin
npus stucl
Gil consumers hundreds of dollars in on
The Fuel Buyers Group, a proj
New York Public Interest Group/C
COLUMNS
If you're writing incisive
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page 2a/April 16, 1962
ee
abce’s
(Editor's note: ABC's, normally brought to
‘you in this space, will not be presented due
to technical difficulties, | am at Accounts
Maintenence, 1am number 17. and lam not
leaving until ]am served. [tis very dark here
It's four hours ‘i 9:00, and they promise nie
yesterday's last number,
that theyll start with
Tean wait.)
centerfold
Ea
ail. The st
and the Aspects came:
of them in,
6a
John Ch comes up with a
slim fable of old age. The result?
Paradise lost. The Good Doctor (aka
Noah Drake, aka Rick Springfield)
shows that, indeed, success hasn't
spoiled him yet. Also in S & V, an in-
terview with musician Meg Chris-
tian,
8 of Education, or,
Sucking Up to Professor X. Lenny
the
iy
Purloined Lighter,
CHOPPED
BEEF STEAK |
2 wags. home
{rivs, toast
and A coffee
$3.25
area dette LLL LLL LLL LLL
ae
Restaurant and Caterers
Open 24 Hours 7 Days
809 Madison Aye., Albany
' Real N.Y.C.
ports on grad school. Also in
Pizza
of the
Pop’
ERRY’S
Phone 465-1229
1ipm-7am only
3 EGG
CHEESE
OMELETTE
served with
BAGEL !
1
w/lox
double portion
onan gab tin
cheese J ztusag Hemet
wast ond A Beverage
ake fuast ond A Beveragi
ten $2.95 w/coupon
SLL OLEACEAE
| Mall ior Adelphi Unive
Garden City, New York 159.
Please send me your sismmer’62 Bulletin.
Name.
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8a de
In Diversions: the usual. Spec-
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7a
“Don't call us, we'll call you.” A
funny thing happened on the way to
A Funny Thing Happened On The
Way To The Forum. Debbie Judge
reports.
Cover photo (Northern, Boulevard and
Washington Avenue) by Mare Henschel
in you nc
hotels
Nada.
If you're a senior and have the promise of a $10,000 careeroriented job, do you know
what's stopping you from getting the American Express Card?
You guessed it,
Nothing
Because American Express believesin yourfuture. But more than that, We believe
And we've proving it
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April 16, 1982/page 3a
— ————
Grad
Illusion
Lenny Scott
So. you've finally become a “grad
student, up one grade level. but a totally
new status! You could be here (or a
number of reasons: your undergraduate
degree won't get you anywhere in the job
market, there’s pressure from your family.
you're not realy for the real world yet, it's
What-all your friends are doing, ete. etc
Let's say. th
you'd lik
your field of interest in order to somehow
tlie betterment of humanity
a noble endeavor!
igh, that you're here because
to acquire skill and knowledge in
contribute
Being the naive Idealist that you are. you |
enter the graduate program. unaware of
the game you'll have to play in order to
attain your goal
|
|
First, you meet and are bedazaled by the |
baillance and genius of your professors
Who Initially seem like a wonderful bunch
of people, Luckily, you've gotten yourself a
graduate assistantship which allows you
and your fellow g.a.’s to develop Into a
relatl
ly fun and hardworking group,
Thus, the stage is set for a new and
exciting semester; you are well on your
way to learn, share, and grow.
As you get to know your professors.
however. you begin to see that they aren't
all as friendly with each other as you
asumed, And, as a matter of fact. some
aren't as brilliant as you first perceived
them to be. {In some cases, they're not as
brillant as they themselves believe they
are!) You also begin t0 see , our fellow
classmates joining little “camps” around
those professors whom they regard as
being geniuses, hot, where it's at, etc.
For example, there's the "Dr, Smith’”
group. Dr. Smith is a brilliant man with a
brilliant theory and a winning personality
Those students turned on by Dr, Smith
and his theory align themselves with him
and “join the camp.”
You consider joining yourself, which
would be fine except for a couple of
things. One is that by aligning yourself with |
Dr. Smith, you run the tisk of alienating:
yourself from others in the department, like,
Dr. Jones., for instance, who has his own’
litle group of grads, too. You may be
totally awed by Dr. Smith and his great
talent, intelligence, and skill, and therefore
not mind the alienation. On the other
hand, you may value and admire Smith
What do you do?
nis that you find yourself |
and Jones equal
Another probl
Wanting {o spend time with Smith because
of h You may
even a be one |
character and personallty
jough it’s an hic
{ the “chosen” among the ¢
how do you know if you were “chosen’
because you are personally valuable, or if
»u've been manipulated into joining the
ip in order to give Smith power
through the number of grad student willing
to do his work? The “Smith” theory, note.
is not your theory, therefore any work you
do with the Smith theory, whether your
name is on it or not, will be regarded as
Smith's work |
So, you're beoming confused. You
safe” (unaligned)
professors for help, but you get different
advice from different professors, Besides,
how do you know if any of them genuinely
care about you andyour professional
career, or if they each want you to. come
to his or her own way of thinking?You
start to feel like, (pardon the cliches), a
mere pawn in the game — a seal that
needs to be trained — a human “object”
ho will with blind devotion, work toward
confide in some
| achieve them? And, finally. can you play
=
not the betterment of humanity. but toward shooting weren't so messy
the promotion and success of people like Taskforce One gets the call at 1800
Smith and Jones, Soon afterward I'm assigned to “check out
The questions boll down to the
following; What are your goals upon
entering a graduate program and will the
program help you get there? Is it possible
to achleve your goals without going to
camp? Is the attainment of yourgosls |
Worth the game you must play in order to
the game well enough to get what you |
wantin the end? |
The scenario rerely scratctivs the
Surface of the many problems:
complications, and decisions a graduate
student must face. Some of the issues are
those that you would deal withno matter |
What you decided to do with your Iife
However, | believe an academic selting is
‘one of the only places in the world where
free thinkers are able to discuss many,
diverse opinions and thoughts in the
pursuit of knowledge, with the hope of
bettering the condition and quality of life
how a “naive
Yet, one may easily see
Idealist” could possibly turn into a
disillusioned cynic
World Report
Say Hello,
Wave
Goodbye
Hubert-Kenneth Dickey
We
ere strangers meeting for the first time |
OK?
Just smile and say hello
Say hello then wave goodbye |
Mare Almond
One day it began to dawn upon me that |
certain rules don’t always apply. Take for |
instance any number of things that are
forbidden (or no-no’s) like love, friendship, |
or respect, for that metter
Etom time to time, everyone has reason
to believe that either they or someone ee |
has committed some crime against
ndthe |
humanity, Often if we look bey
rigid confines of morality, the grever
aspects of any issue usually steal the
thunder from the overly legalistic
{A suppossed crime takes place at Pop's
Pizza, Whats the exact nature of the
crime? I's the typical array of forces, One
friend feels overly slighted by the other
friend. Warm words lead to damaged
feelings and obstacles to continued
compatibility
‘A most human (or is that humane?)
crime. Ifa friend Is on the outs with you,
do you kick him or help him? Maybe
shooting Is the best answer — if only the
the call and report back.” Before | can
leave however the bureau chief calls me in
for litle chitehat
Good 10 sue you Agent X; how's the
wife and kids?” The bureaucratic smile and
f)
off to something “fishy.” The smell of fish
dowsn't wax for long, Soon it's siting right
in my lap
it down Agent X. I've been myaning
xtended hand for greeting me tips me
{o hayera chat with you for quite. a while
Now seems the perfect upportunity to do
Just that.” The laughter in his eyes
Produces more than ils fair share of
anxlety
Sir, | don't mean to be rude but there's
this case I have to get etacking on. |
wonder..." My words may leave it open
but my mind just wants out of this offiew
"Speak up, What Is on your mind that
4? You wouldn't be
keeping secrets from mu would you?” The
ralsed eyebrow at the end of his statement
bothers me.
fias you a wonder
“No sucrets sir, it's just thie new ease I've
been assigned =" Before | can finish his
voice fills the room with laugliter
"1, . [never would have thouglit you
to be such a go-uetter. Just yous (0 slow
you can't always judgu book by ils cover
{guess I'l have to talk to you some vilier
okay with you, that is, Go.
Whoever ‘them is
time = if tha
get them, Agent X
Laughter roars out of his moulli, He
laughs so hard that lw starts 10 choke
Then | start to laugli (of course it's out of
his eye sight and ear shot)
Hell, the whole problem wih success is
failure, Failure, In this case anyway, to
adequately prepare oneself for the
acceptance of Kindnwss from strang
Wonder where Ms, Dubois lives noi
thoughts ard brought 10 focus on the figu
directly in front of me. It's the mitror | see
ot myself. Reflections on stil silver ponds
gather light waves so thot they (the light
Waves) may set my mind awash will
mages that aren't really tere
Well that may not be the entire picture:
but that's all the information I've gathered
(so far)
Bythe time [reach Pop's it has elosed for
the evening (although | confess it looks
more like night 10 me.) 1 then proceed to
cheek out the addivsses I've been given
Nobody at home, at least nobody is
answering either knocks on the door or
telephone calls
Teall HQ with this wonderful insight and
they tell me to go home and sleep i off
You can always count on HQ to be full of
suggestions to vase the burden on its field
agents, I'm not without hope, however, |
seer to recall the address of one Marie
Dubois. If | can't solve the ease | can at
least solve my problem
"Hella, Is this 555-1234
for a Ms. Marie Dubois.”
This js Marie Dubois speaking, To
whom do I have the pleasure of speaking?”
“This is Joe, Remwinber me? I'm the one
you met at that party last week,’
*Oh Joe. So nice «{ you to call, To
what do 1 own this hinor?”
Nothing much, | was Inghe.
heighborhood. I just )iwtiy
I'm looking
ht would call
* and say hello.” If I get any more nervous
than I already am I'm guiny to sink my
‘own ship — if you catch iny drift;
“Jos I'm glad you called, | liad wanted
fo get in contact with you but I didn't know
Where you live or your plivin: number,”
Care to stop by for a nigh?" | can't
believe I'm hearing this,
"Sure, Be glad to stop by See you In
five to te minutes." My heart (s about to
jump our of my chest as I'm talking
Joe. wouldn't it be nice If people could
accep! kindness from people who weren't
strangers?” *
"You've got a point there Marie, Why,
don't we talk about it when | get there?”
The crime may be the same but the
names always change, Looks like HO was
right — | better go sleep this one off.)
Keeping Up
Torch
Song
Bethany Goldstein :
| Why sit that Inever can keep a
disposable lighter for, more than a week? {ll
| toll you why! I live in a world of
pyromaniacal Kleptomaniacs, Unscrupulous
people who ask to borrow my lighter for 8
minute and then disappear, never to be
seen again, People who get me drunk,
then walt for me to put downsmy lighter so
they can pocket it, leaving me matchless
and nicotine-ftted, 1'go up to someone
with a elgarette and ask for a light and i's
taken to be a line, The embarrassment and
| degradation | am put through by these low:
} moraled thieves!
1 used to try {0 color-coordinate — had
a black lighter for days when I! wanted to,
look slimmer; a blue lighter 10 match a
rugged denim look; 6 reddish brown one
to play up my Immitation Docksiders (all
right, so I'm not perfect): also, a bonus
pack — three Cricket lighters in a package
that only cost $1.09, That's more than
three thousand lights, but I'm lucky if 1 got
thisly, All these lighters are now missing
and l'm not a person to lose things
Oh. now you say. "Come on; Beth, i's
suc a litle thing. Just buy another
lighter.” You buy your own lighter! I'm sick
of being used, {can deal with someone
playing with my lighter, like adjusting the
flame to torch level so I, unsuspecting, light
my hair, That's okay. i's only my hale
burning. It'll grow back, But | had a party
and (lost three (count ‘em, three!) lighters
Is that any way to treat a good hostess? My
hear is broken
| Thave tried setting traps, I would put my
} lighter in a mousetrap and wait behind a
plastic plant. ! would wait until | heard
shap and run out of hiding, All | would
find was the sprung mousetrap with a
and a note that sald. “Ha, ha
pencil in i
sucker. I'm too swift for you!
[hired a private investigator, He thought
1 was crazy when | explained my problem
“Two hundred dollars a day,
You know what he came
Then he said.
plus expenses
up with after three days?’ An ashtray (ull of
| Parliament butts and complaints of
| acquiting » hacking cough from trying to
solve the case. | let hinv off, paying with a
carton of Camels anda bex of Kitchen.
| maiches, He was only too grateful to
| accept, |, however, stil had the problem.
And | still do Have the problem. It's cost
mea fortune, | figure in the last two.
months, I've bought 20 lighters — equal in
cost to two cartons of cigarettes, Is that nit-
picking? No! I's nit-picking to steal
something that small.
| address you unfeeling, butanie Bonnie
and Clydes: Don't take my new lighter or
Pll break your thumbs Its chainad:to.my
sbelrloop ribw:E} ss “
April 16, 1982/page 5a
=
a e
page 4a/April 16, 1982
Ontario and Myrtle
certainly in John Mceneny’s. Mce ioner of Albany's Department
part for most of the wall
‘of Human Resources, an agency
murals throughout the city, of w are reproduced here
Mceneny toured Mexico with 1 Caffs over a decade ago, where he
became enamoured with the sup fed by Diego Rivera and others
n 1971, he channel!
Soren there Is that love i in Robert Frost's country then
Taking over the reins of the Hua p
ed state and federal monies into 1 bi and summer programs in par
ticular, hiring artist-teachers to is ond direct their painting. The
first mural was “Bus Stop." at | and Washington, designed by
Owen Rhodes. Many more have cts either directed
by Human Resources or execut ney ny says there are at
least 20 more walls, inside and offing for a paint job.
Not just any wall is eligi y, “The wall must look bet-
ter. If we're offered a perfec it stay that way." After he
finds an appropriately grung .eks community support, If a
neighborhood doesn't want
But there is some sad new:
other federal slashes have put
and Albany's Office of the Arts. Th
Cuts in CETA programs and
operations of Mceneny's office
to boast an arts program in
Scope only second to that of San I jentage-wise), or almost 10 per-
cent of the tax dollar going towar jc, culture, and tourism. Now |
Mceneny only hopes enough mone 4d so that Human Resources can’
“get back into murals.” }
A worthwhile goal, it seems, if one dares dipgree with Robert Frost q
| 3
Lark and Washington | South Pearl i
photos by Mare Henschel
|
Madison.and North Main
Western and Partridge Madison and Lark
oS
page 6a/April 16, 1982
‘VISION
Trouble With Paradise
novel, is a thin little book, At exactly 100 pages it
fs physically thin and, with its assortment of ex:
franeous characters and eccentric subplots, itis emotionally
O ‘h What a Paradise it Seems, John Cheever's new
‘and intellectually thin as Well.
Mark Rossier
Cheever has apparanily fallen under the :
superstar writer. In {t most extreme manifestation we get
the Nell Simon syndrome in which a writer continually
chums out mediocre trash in order to pull in a rather’
substantial paycheck. Cheever has certainly not progressed
this far, nor do [think he ever will: he is far too serious an
artist for that, In Cheever’s case the problem most likely lies
When a writer (s as acclaimed as
Cheever, it's doubtful how much scrutiny his manuscript is
given. At any rate, itis highly untikely that anyone would
with his. publisher
spell of the
tell him that he should do a total rewrite, which is unfor fe
lungte because that is exactly what Paradise needs,
The book's major problem Is that itis far too dense for
both iis subject and its length, This is supposed to be the
story of Lemuel Sears, a man on the edge of seventy who is.
looking for a sense of fove and permanence in his final
years. The love he finds in an affair with
mysterious divorcee and the permanence he finds in
Beasley's Pond, a place that reminds him of the innocence
ually become
threatened and Sears’ reactions become the focus of the
novel. However, since both relationships are sketchy and
and simplicity of the past, Both things eve
unconvincing to begin with, their threatened loss doesn’t
really hold our interest
It seems as if Cheever senses this insubstantiality, but in
stead of correcting it, he chooses to pad the novel with an
Springfield
jek Springfield is sumeone whi {se
But | just dlan’t find mysell up tit
though he makes it easy. Tho easy
Steve Gosset |
As ao reviewer with a modicum of self
respeet. | should be staked out, ready to
trast this latest teen scream. After all, what is
the essential musical worth of one who after
spuitering around for years. yous platinum
all because fie lands a part playing doctor
‘and looking pretty a couple of days a week
‘on General Hospital?
Credentials aside, | find jn Springfield a
confirmation that bubblegum rock never
died, it was just waiting for a new chanyplon
Before [ get thiny lashus with a wet Partridge
Family album let me explain
Indeed Springfield has filed somewhat of
fa tack vold, The charts are populated with
such glitter boys as Styx, Journey, Rush
and REO Speedwagon. who try to pawn off
their vapid bilge as if it were a musical Se:
cond Coming, Stripped of heir excess gloss.
4 younger.
tHwy are unly mete pop practitioners, much
Hike Springfield. only difference being he
foregoes svtlousness. favoring instead a
refreshing i{ tame abandon that refleets in his
That allows us to have a good, albeit
while
music
light and airy time listening to hin
those faceless Supergroups wallow in their
self-importance
Springfield's new album is Suceess Hasn't
Spoiled me Yet, While jt lacks some of the
bounce of last ywar's Working Class Dog. it
succeeds, to a point, In realizing a basic pop
sensibility: keep it short. keep it simple. and
make surv there js a girl on the other end of
the song
And on Success, there are plenty of girls
No women, just a lot of girls, Elusive one
and all, as on "Calling All Girls" and on the
album's hottest track, "How Do You Talk To
Girl's?” Even “Jessie's Girl,” who headlined
one of |9H!'s great car songs, makes a return
engagement as she and ol’ Jess think about
tying the knot and sticking it to Rick one
more time. Sob.
It's all stuff that pre-adolescent crises are
made of. Amid the rejection and heartbreak
On Beasley's Pond: John Cheever's new novella
seems 100 pages too long
excess of characters and subplots:
Beasley's Pond becomes threatened when a gangster:
type who owns It decides to turn it into a land fill. Cheever's
mistake is that he not only Introduces us to the gangster.
but his family as well, We also meet the family's next door
eighbors and their family, And if that isn't enough, when
one of the neighbors’ children is accidently abandoned on a
highway we also meet the man who sa\
meet, | don’t just. mean they appear, they are all discussed
in’enough detail to be considered full-fledged characters.)
With the exception of the child saver, who happens to be
his lawyer, none of this veritable army of characters has
’s Rx For Success
negut,
shim (WhenIsay in too little
tHyre'’s that fleeting stab at sexual fulfillment
representyd on Success by “Just One Kiss
Could Springfield indeed by the voice of the
undersexed youtlis of America wanting to be
understood?
Whoa! I think we're getting a bit too pre
found for everyone's good here. Success
reeks of minimalism, right down to Spr-
ingfield’s Gretsch strumming. which really
isn’t that bad. That his possiblities are limited
is evidenced by a laughable cover of “Black
Is Black."
Will Sprinufield’s bubble-gum following
burst, if he no longer wants to be dashing Dr
Noah Drake and decides to practice his
guitar instead of medicine? Or will he con-
tinue to milk superstardom and run the risk
‘of becoming another pop dud? Success is
often fun, but one or two more misses than
hits and he is on the way to Pablum City
Advice to Rick: if you can’t get Anne
Logan to go to bed with you. call it a day in
Port Charles and stick to the music. You
might even get a few more girls that way
The abandonment of the
threatened destruction of a town with palsoned steak
sauce, a homosexual affair, a fight in a supermarket and
the shooting of a dog (yes, I did say the book is only 100
pages) are all such flamboyant events that they tend to
fovershodow Sears’ fer gentler, but certainly more realistic
and moving concerns. The story Cheever wants to tell
should be treated with subtlety end dignity. two qualities
that he has always had an abundance of, | can't imagine
why he didn't employ them here
The point of view is as vague as the rest of the book,
Paradise is told in the first person, but we are never givena
clue as to who the person Is or why he might be telling us
the story. This is a good outline for a great book which |
hope Cheever will someday write
Oh What a Paradise it Seems sulfers from the opposite
problem that
Playhouse teleplay, The Shady Hill Kidnapping, Instead of
having too few details in too much time, he has too many
Taken together these two works prove disturb:
ing for fans of both Chee
of the great masters has written his two worst works back 10
back. We can only hope
recover from
anything to do with Sears except in the most forced and
unconvincing way.
Cheever's strength has always been his ablity to choose
‘one or two incidents with which to illustrate his story. Here.
however, he piles detall upon detail for no real purpose. If
Cheever would just tell Sears’ story instead of trying to
spice it up, he could (and should) have written a beautiful
book: a moving, nostalgic elegy to the past. As it stands
this seems like Cheever's attempt to write like Kurt Von-
baby on’ the highway, the
plagued Cheever's recent American
rr and literature in general, One
this is a decline he will soon
Noah's Stark: Rick's Springfield's
latest makes it with a pared down pro-
duction and an honest approach.
The Woman’s Experience In Song
a Joy to experience”: Songuriter Meg
tris | sty Chiistlan,
t's like sitting in a circle as each per-
I son reaches out to take the hand of
the next, drawing more and more in:
to the warmth and support of the group.
Women’s Music is like that, Meg Christian
foremost figure in Women’s Music today.
‘and who will be appearing at Page Hall this
Sunday evening at 7 PM, articulates that
warmth and support in music and lyrics
which capture the experiences of all wome
Lynn Goldberg |
Whiat we label “Women's Musi
even ten years old, Meg, in a telephone In:
terview, described the founding of Olivia
Records, the first women’s record company.
in 1973, “In Washington D.C., | and other
women were performing concerts for
women, These were affirming and celebra-
tional. But we wanted to go further — what
could we do to benefit the women's move-
ment?”
What they did was found Olivia Records
— a company that could create jobs for
women, generate money for the women's
movement, provide training. ands 8s Még
said, “produce high quality music that was
respectful of Women and told the truth about
our lives.” The goals of Olivia Records are
the same today. although they have become
more realistic about their financial limita:
tions, according to Meg,
A musician since age five, a “real little
ham.” she said, Meg realized that the music
she had been writing and-playing was not
talking about her life. "I knew something was
out of kilter out there. Women had limited
‘opportunities. they were being oppressed
and | wanted to talk about it. Feminism pro-
vided the tools for articulating feelings and
‘experiences that belonged to many women.
In the past ten years, women's music has
grown, as has Meg's singing and
songwriting
“I'm writing the best songs of ray life," she
said. “At first women were starved for
anything that talked about their lives, but
once they got over that, they needed quality
music that was a joy to experience
Meg is widely acclaimed as a gifted
guitarist, a sensitive songwriter, and a cap-
livating performer. Anyone concerned with
excellent music 'should'be fhleréstdéd in Mou!
Yay che wos THs
and many are, Billboard said “(Her music)
with its insights and
sensitivity.” Her albums to date have sold
touches us all
over 901,000 copies in the folk and women’s
communities around the country.
Her next project will be an album of her
upcoming performance with singer
songwriter Cris Williamson, another pioneer
New York City’s
Hall on November 26. This perfor
of women’s music
Carnegi
mance wi
fate the tenth birthday of
Olivia Records, and ten years: of the
flourishing of women’s culture in this coun
try,
On tour. celebrating the release of her
third album “Turning it Over." Meg will ap:
pear at SUNYA's Page Hall on Sunday,
April 18 at 7 PM.
Tickets for the show are $6 in advance
and $7 at the door, They can be purchased
at Boulevard Books, Northern Boulevard,
Albany: SUNYA Contact Office, SUNYA
Campus Center; and Earthly Delights, Jay
Street, Schenectady. Ticket reservation and
childcare are available. by calling
438-4815,
doin GI
2 oleae sie
April 16, 1982/page 7a*
—
VISION
Send In The Clowns
hey posted the final cast list for the
University production of A Funny
Thing Happened on the Way to
the Forum the Tuesday after the auditions
Running down the list proved what quotes |
cked, and How many brave souls whose
[scrawled down missed out
| Debbie Judge |
So, if April 21 Belongs to the listed.
February 3. 4 and 5 was for everyone: the
85 who tried out for the 18 parts, the “Ac
tors». Singers. Dancers
Acrobats: Mimes, Male Hi Beautiful
Women. Young Lovers and Characters All
who anwsered that ad for the Roman farce
where Heroes fall in love. ciafty Slaves
and Tint
Vpudevillians.
scheme for freedom, ‘las do
dances
bell
Jim Dutcher is perched on the back of a
chair in the PACs auditorium, a hitle early
on a Wednesday night. “This is star
comedy," he says, He's decked in the
fashion of these nights — sweats, a t-shirt
he’s studying the history of comedy. “It came
from Italy, the Commedia dello-ant
describing what's about to be seen, "Com
dy that depends on charac
Sifting through these characters is w
Jirector Bill Leone calls three quorters of fis
work, With the show's choreographer. Con:
stance Valis. and Peter Haley. iis mu
director, he watches. listens, dictates — fron
the middle of the empty auditorium, Charles
Sactis is the liason at the plano. and
plempo number mettin
suggests. “you can sparkle with
“Nan
Somewhere Up There
Naney Arena is {he
rests occasionally on a
at ther
a point of saying hell
into the line of fire on the stage “IE!
sing or dance I'd be neuro 1 says
though she was per
became a “techy.” But
one place too long
the stairwell where the
collecting the casting ce
nto Leone and v
with the
rushing through the wi
synonymous player ther
§ to beckon
tors on stage
Leone hears the namie. tiunts for the cai
I'm looking for an ability to sing. and an
ability to sell a song,” he explains with lar
motions to deseribe noise but enthusiast
which demonstrates it better “N
ly to have a beautiful voice. Singing lyrics is
Hot the most natural thing” He shrugged. “it
don't buy it. it becomes silly
m Monty Pyi
‘'m doing a song fr
Dutcher announced
clasped Behind his back. “No music. just
Emmanuel Kant was a real pissant who
Heideays
who could think j
Was very truly stable/ Heidegger
was a boory begua
under the table
d at the
“He's afraid to
Constance Valis gigc toneless
singsong shot out rapid-fire
sing,” she whispered
Dutcher admitted it. “Singing is a frighten
ing thing.” But he pointed out the merit of
his choice. “if they're laughing, they won't
hear if it's bad
Hobbes was fond of his drams/And
Rene Descartes was a drunken fart, ‘I drink
therefore, | am
“That's the end of the song,’ Dutcher said
"What key was that in?” Peter Haley had
to ask
Haley, on Leone's right, wo
Four Season's Dinner The
the Commissary and agonizes over the state
of student's voices with genuine concern. He
seni auditions up and down cracking scales.
but with a real stageside manner. He
Prescribes scales likg a doctor. testing pitch
While they opened their mouths and say ah
ah... AHI
‘Give her an arpeagio E flat
with the
presides at
. and the
jugglers,
acrobats,
singers,
dancers,
1 strip your gears,
Hildy Linn of her turn. Don't be scared
that high note. Siton ft," he said, as if offer
4.0 chair
The hardest part. | think, is the end. The
ong is over. “Thank you,” Leone says
Silence. "Will you wait, please?” (sigh)
In between singers, Leone tries out speak
ny candidates go fom
pert ike records,
Gi voice. Any phrase
you want
Yes Sir!” the boy obeyed. “Yes sit! Yes
Try the “Star-Spangled Banner! Leone
suggests
Some of the kids never use their upper
vices.” Haley laments. “And they're sitting
waiting to be used
sky didnt use it, He donned
at reached twelve inches above his
and a long sportscoat. gold but
tons: he tuned up the collar, and crooned
That's Impossible” into a block of wood, Of
se wood doesn't project as well as a
casseite player in the wings “Do you
breathe?” Haley asked. “Do you speak?’
He did later, on the phone. in fact. He is
faking a course in mime. he said, but basical
ly Jay Lutsky did the audition for the ex
perience. Though he did not say for what
{ though he was going to flash us first
Nancy quipped. when Jay left the stage
Constance Valis was munching her air
popped, no-grease, diet popcorn. She
agreed. “We have seen some bizarre things
in this theatre tonight
Experience.” Leone said, “is the best
teacher of the craft, An audience lets you
r rather than a
know whether it works b
teacher saying. ‘yes. . that’s good
Laughing. crying. applauding. they're
judges.
Peter Haley would rather not know who's
jouls are easier when you don't
" he sald. “When | know
‘on stage
know anyone
who's up there, I usually sweat blood. | hate
it”
“It's not as scary as usually." Mary Liber
ar spld .Rerausnoka's hadslasies
“You know tham and
yesh 8
with Leone and Valis
hoping for a
shot at
stardom in “A
Funny Thing”
photos by Will Yurman
they know you They've seen: practically
everything you've dune, though —they
Know your limitations, and you have to sur
prise them
So slie stepped ont_on stage. took a
seductive stance, and dropped her coat
Hello, Im Roselyn. she murmured
“Take me, all of me
Nancy Arena was surprised Libertucel is
quiet and serious and wears her hair up and
snot Roselyn Storms Mary laughed. later
She takes what she does seriously "My
frends and [knew | would never make itas
Mary Libertueci.” she explains
Peter Haley was flipping cards. "She wo
the tall one.” he commented
No." Valis conected: “She was the one
with the st
She had o lot of chest Vole” Ho
noted
She looks like she has a good body
undemeath that shirt,” Valls mused: She
siniled frankly. “don't want to be ditty, but
we need big breasts, We're looking for
Courtesans Whores
later. 12 of the girls lined up for
Volis and Leone conferred
we do for a gymnasium. «Tin
Panacea
Hf you don't want her fora reading,” Valis
asked, “can I have her for a Courtesan?
You're very aware of your body," she
continued. “Mery had her hands like
this" —Hildy clasped fiers in front —and
Him thinking, they think I'm: doing this
because she's doing this,” “The thing is.
Valis said in the course of a song, “most of
the ones he wants, | want, He usually wins
Now she clapped out a rhythm on a block
of wood. Three candidates for Proteans
the bumbling, three-stoogie
stamp in plac:
Then they move forward. out, turn. for
ward, stamp, line up, knock each other over
in human debris, and then collapse with a
thud
Bill Leone looked at his waich. “The
foughest part for me comes after this. | have
to hear them read.”
comic
characters of the drama
Thursday night Nancy leans over and an:
nounces thai there had been 59 tryouts so
far. “And you remember all of them?” she
BITES Loe .counlon obivorg
1 teams gon.
Right.” Leone agrees, and rolls his eves
More songs, More dance steps Haley
murmurs with glee (“A soprano witht bot
tom!") Someone looks like he is reading the
lines off his hands. More Proteans, The final
collapse. which appeared fake at first, gets
more and mbre genuine
‘Could I sve that again?” Leone requests,
ace bandage up there?”
comes back from the stage
For the most part theyte theatre students
mentation.” Leone
*Do you have an
Who ate used to the re
explained, Along with the casting cards was
‘bligations
a ditto « rehvarsal six days a
week. no spring beak, don't count on
Raster “Il consumes your existence for a
couple of months.” Leone said
Charles Wagner was supposed to go see
il
n
His gilfiend. but he was supposed to b
ed, back, too
Room Eriday night 1 hadn't expected the
so he was in the Gr
Green Room — the theatrical waiting so0m
fo be yellow, either Bul Mary had not
been Roselyn so even Wagner's pur on
Ringlisth accent wasn't easily swallowud He
opolgised after being found out. saying it
was a tendeney when meeting new people
I's a handy screen because when people
lane you can see what they're
wally tke.” Which is probably the whole pur
puse in guing tu the Green Room, Naney
said H Was the place “if you Want to se¢
Sensed perhaps, but concealed. ina situa
ion somewhat like thot of the character
Hystenjum’s (name says enough) sang. “Pn.
Calm ‘
Loves Markbreiter, a frsliman ih eléenic
blue stripe, leaned over the piang and didiy't
feel nervous, se said “IC they're seared
They playing it
iad been
Ww said of the others.
A That's callbacks Some:
Somw had been called to the
eli
Somvone was playing the piano Others
waiting awhile
stagy six times A few ti
nwstled in groups:
Mark Stevenson was pulling @ cigarelte in
the dork labyrinth outside the Green Roo
I's a lousy business.” fv said of auditions.
and would have gladly said more. if he
hadn't been requested at a reading
So Adam Sanderson was thers and le
continued. that this audition was his “most
painless Pun, enjoyable:
Everyone seemed to enjoy the guls! at
tumpts at belly dancing The otmosphen
hod relaxed: they sat in) the auditorium
Fach of the girs Had been taught the
Valis told me, although the
uniforinity of grass skint
{V's an Interpretation thing.” Steve Lals
Was saying in the Green Room. "It's nol that
iley didn't like me. they didn't lke my inter
pretation
AL five to eleven Adan Sanderson co
back fo the Green Ruom. just a litle ss con,
fident. "Change all that.” hy
Tal
same step.
dances Had th
aid of my notes
‘on his optimism
Then,” Steve Las continued, “You get
called back, and you see the parts you might
yo for going to other people” Julie Ellis
ayreed "When you sve somvone: doing
sumelhing. you think, why didn't Ido that?"
Mark Stevenson: ‘again
Wagner bades him
farewell, and saunters back, mock-Groucho.
is called out
fearfully exaggerated
| wouldn't send a dog up in a crate like
that.”
‘One has to be kind of dumb not to see a
They want to
ven people It's
Weeding process,” Lals said
the interaction bet
logical. very mathematical
On Wednesday Bill Leone had been en:
thused, when he explained his modus
operandi: “You have to have the right
chemisiry. just the right equation, the right
balance.” Now it was Friday, late, and he'd
moved down to the footlights to view the
readings. with cards spread out on the stage
as if it were a massive table. And got hit with
the same punchlines over and over and over
again
i's always been funny," Jim Dutcher
during an impromptu lesson on the bins
of slapstick and what the ancients used 1:
to get people to laugh, “Oh, they, di
same things all the time, you know, lik.
pie in the face
pies began in Ron
Capital
(462-4531)
Feathers (World Pre
Siena College St
the Elephant Man
RPI- Fifteenth St
Pippin - Fri and So
GB. Scotty 14,
f Todd in
Sut
Gemini Juss Cafe
Fals Jeff
la}
area Cae
theater
Repertory Company
emier), April 17-Moy 7
8PM
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Lounge
Richard Zabel and James Géaduin Rice lar in Copal Repertory Company's
World premiere production, Feathers, by first-time playwright Jeanne Darnell.
The play is set in the author's home state-of Texas, and Is billed as a study of the
trlumph of romanticism over conventionallsm:-Feathers will be performed at 8 pm
Tuesdays through Saturdays, and 2:30 pm Sundays, April 17 ~May.2. For more
044) info, call 462-4534,
Pauly's Hotel (463.
Wally Sink
the Rliytlim Boys + Su
{ Eighth $1, offeehouse ((!34 17()!)
| Richard a Wilkie folk duo = fri. Hob The Shelf (436-770)
{ Warren Doe Scanlon « Fri and
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Fri and Sat
0082)
Doe Seanlon and.
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Alec Star
Hulla-Baloo (436-164())
Fri and Sat
Knickerbocker Junior High
7) Albany Symphony Orchestra
1 Sat
Recital Hall
10-7004)
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Talking Heads is fu
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@livird Julius collegiate CWIDs
Sun at
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Fri at 8PM, Free
exped'
36 Labi
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40 Robbins’ "a —— 10 Kenneth Robe
for Danny F{sher Greek letters
ay te quiet! Dutch eneese
#2 sortie for diet
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Bartlett,
RPI - Houston Field House
The Veloros -
movies
Tower East Cinema, LC7
Only When 1 Laugh, 7:30, 10:00 — Sat and
Sun
Albany State Cinema, LCI8
Blow Out, 7:30, 10:00 — Sat and Sun
International Film Group
Monty Python and! the Holy Grail
10,00 — Sat and Sun
7:30.
CC Ballroom
The Celluloid Closet, 4:00 —
Srd Street Theatre
Man of Iron, 7:00, 9:40 — Fri and Sot
4:00, 6:45, 9:30 — Sun
Hellman (459-5322)
On'Golden Pond, 2:00, 4:00, 7:15
* 2,00)74:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 — Sat
= Fri
Hellman Colonie (459-2170)
Death Trap, 7:15, 9:30 — Fri: 2:15,
7:15, 9:30 — Sat and Sun
Victor Victoria. 7:10, 9:40 — Fri: 2:00
4:30, 7:10, 9:40 — Sat and Sun
4PM
Madison
Reds, 8:00 — fri and
Whartor, School
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5 Electric chair
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You — Everrore,
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Efsenhower Center
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Bega acta
solution
to last week’s
crossnumber
you 'zexy vad *
Alliance (NYPIRG/CA), is a type of oil
buying cooperative for those who use home
heating oil: By pooling the needs of hun-
dreds, even thousands of heating oil users,
the consumer can receive retail service at
wholesale prices,
Membership in the group is $15 annually,
and members will receive the options of
automatic, demand and emergency service,
a budget plan, 30 day credit and a service
contract, In addition, the Fuel Buyers
Group provides an ombudsman service, to
insure that all service guidelines are follow-
ed,
The Group, already effective in New
York City and Long Island, has saved as
much as 28¢ per gallon for its members,
This has added up to savings of over $300
for some members during last winter alone.
The supplier for the group will be the
Jocal company that submits the most accep-
table . We will only accept the contract
that provides all the options mentioned
above, and can guarantee that the price of
oil will be lower than if purchased outside
the group,
For more information on joining the Fuel
Buyers Group, contact me at: Citizens
Alliance, 184 Washington Ave., Albany,
N.Y. 12210, or telephone 436-0870,
— Shawn J, Ford
Project Refusenik
To the Editor:
The JSC-Hillel has recently formed a new
program that I'd like to tell you about, It’s
called Project Refusenik and its purpose
to inform the campus community about the
violation of human rights by the Soviet
government against those who are trying to
emigrate from the country
Project Refusenik has adopted
Soviet Jewish families who for 10 years
have been refused exit visas, The Soviet
government has been trying to make an ex
Or
ample of them in order to stem the rising
tide of people who, finding Soviet society
antagonistic to their desire for religious ex-
Pression, try to leave for a friendlier coun-
try, In preventing the emigration of our
families, the Soviet grovernment breaks not
‘only international, but even their own laws.
Our families only real hope for freedom
lies in outside support for them, and this is
precisely what Project Refusentk will try to
provide,
If you are interested in writing Helens} ar
ticles, organizing support, or just want to
find out more about the problems fi cing
Soviet Jewry, please get in touch with me,
Mark Friedland, at 457-7712, or the JSC
Hillel at 457-7508, Or, just drop by the JSC
Office, on the third floor of the Campus
Center, sandwiched between WCDB and
the ASP offices.
— Mark Friedland
Project Refusenik
Project Coordinator
A New Meal Plan
To the Editor:
UAS Food Service is planning to invest in
some form of improvement for SUNYA’
students in the near future, We, students of
@ group communication class, would like to
make the student body aware that they can
help decide exactly where and how UAS
Will invest this money
After handing out a pre-survey, we have
compiled a list of the most asked for im:
provements on the SUNYA campus. We
will be handing out this new survey shortly
and would appreciate your help in filling it
Out, so that the proper authorities can be
aware of exactly what the students want —
before the money is invested. This will en-
sure that the student’s best interests are
met, We would appreciate your help and
ideas. The stirvey will be handed out star
ting the week of April 19, 1982
— Stephanie Werner
April Snows Bring Student Woes
Albany Rockies
To the Editor:
As a commuter student,
take this opportunity to thank you for let
ting me experience life in the Rockies. Since
the State Quad parking lot had at least six
inches of snow (o trudge through, | feel that
I can now better relate to those (ough and
T would like to
rugged mountain people.
I feel saddened that 1 will be graduating
this May, Never again will 1 be able (0 risk
life and limb driving to school, only to be
greeted by an unplowed parking fot and
very icy roads and pathways, It will be dif
ficult knowing that the university will close
in mid-afternoon after most of the com:
muters have arrived for cancelled cl
and [ won't be part of it, 1 can’t bear the
jought Of missing yet one more car stuck
ina snowbank or in the middle of the road,
all because the lot was never plowed or
sanded, Now that’s how to have a good
time, 1 knew that transferring 10 SUNYA
would be rewarding
Once again, thank you for your efforts 10
expand my horizons. | will be proud to be a
graduate of the caring and sensitive institu
tion known as SUNY-Albany. (A copy of
ent {0 President O'Leary)
Name Withheld by Request
this letter
Beyond Our Control
To the Editor:
T have read with some astonishment the
letter from a student to President O'Leary
and the ASP about the condition of the
State Quad parking lot. As you know this
was the worst April snowstorm in record
keeping history and there was little advance
earning about.the size of the storm
Because of inadequate funding, our
maintenance staff has been reduced by
about twelve percent in ten years, while the
population of students has increased ten
percent, Each year we have asked them to
do more with less and they have responded
positively because they care about this
place.
It takes many hours to clear all the park
ing lots and roads, and the staff did its best
under terrible conditions, Last week the lots
could not be cleared becuuse they were jam:
med with cars (some without snow tires)
and because the winds and heayy snowfall
quickly covered even the plowed arcas
Even so, { believe the roadways and lots at
the university were in better condition thi
those in the city of Albany
We reluctantly cancelled afternoon
classes not because of the impossibility of
setting to class (we knew that most student
were already on campus), but because of
ould be
ation everyone
sity around 4:00
facing in leaving the uniy
p.m. of $:00 p.m. or Worse yet after dark
This was not a decision that was made ligh
ly, We consulted closely with the staff in th
Atmospheric Sciences Research Center and.
were advised about the rising dangers of
heavy snow and increasing winds which
would be worsening as the afternoon wor
Tassure you there is no lack of “sensitiv
A lack ¢
4 lack of resources — ye
ty and caring
weather — yes;
(when was the last time students supported
4 tuition increase to impraye the quality of
this place?),
1 trust that your educational experiences
at the university haye been more positive
than your encounters with the parking lot.
—J. Fredericks Volkwein
Assistant (0 the President
457 62/3922300
an peer x = =
all
a
itoria
Election Control
SA tes aywell earned Feputation for running poor elections, The election
three years ago led to a cover-up of a ballot-box stuffing incident, Last year's
election was marred by confusion over tax cards and by a general lack of in-
terest. This year, the election campaign is being tightly controlled by an all-
powerful election commissioner, By over-regulating the campaign, SA is setting
itself up for another rotten election,
The thick packet of election regulations {s being arbitrarily enforced by an
election commissioner Who seems to answer to no one, The regulations are being
poorly interpreted, and the students may end up as the real losers in this elec-
tion,
Candidates have already fount! plenty to complain about. Some campaign
posters have been pulled down down from ‘legal’ places, while others are seen
in “illegal’’ places for days, Prohibitions against professional campaign
materials have been inequitably enforced.
Boren tie Asp has been hassled by bizarre interpretations of election regula-
ions. We were warned several days ago by the election commissioner that we
couldn't distribute our paper in the Campus Center lobby next Tuesday. If we
did, he threatened to throw away the paper. He thought our endorsement to be
“campaign materials." The commissioner reconsidered, and later graciously
granted us permission to distribute our newspaper as we wished, Even if the
election regulations regulated the ASP (which they can’t, of course) the election
commissioner was out of line. This incident is an excellent example of the faults
with SA's election commission, The commissioner has such broad powers of in-
terpretation he can rule a newspaper editorial “electioncering,’’ and try to con-
trol it.
The goal the SA's election campaign regulation was admirable, The purpose
Was fo putall the candidates on an equal footing, and make the campaign as fair
as possible, Unfortunatly, the election regulators are making the campaign un-
fair and inequal by poor interpretation of confusing regulations
SA should put more thought into its election process, Commissioners should
be well isolated from the political battles inside SA. They shouldn't become part
of them.
ASS
and tts ctealive magazine
ASPECTS
Extablisned in 1916
Dean Betz, Ector in Chie?
Wayne Peereboom, David Thanhauser, Managing Editors
Btn Brinser
Mars Hammond, Ter Kaplowit
News Editor
‘Astociale News Editors
ASPecit dior
‘Aatoclate ASPacts Editor
Sound and Vision Editor
Sports Editor
‘Astoclale Sports Editors
Editorial Pages Edo
Copy Editor
Contributing Editor
Editorial Assistant: Mike Rall, Stall wi
David Brooks
Mae Roasiet
Larry Kann
Carman, Mane Gesnet
im Dino Rob E
i Borger, Ray
Hoy Br
Biling Accountants det, yay 8 Bante K
Payroll Supervisor
Oltlee Co-ordinator
Classlieg Manage!
Compotition Manager
{Advertising Sales: John Troi
Managers an, Dianne Gin
Jace
ed ny Tuna an Fay suring th ool ya by
policy is subject 10 review by the Editorial Board. Ady
Mailing assess
Aibany Student Press, CC 329
100 Washington Ave
Aibany, NY 12222
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS, APRIL 16, 1982
(Class
ified
ional Typing Service. IBM
lactic Corr
parlancad, Gall 273-7:
{Overseas Jobs—summarlyear
Found. Europe, S. Amar, Australla,
‘Asia: All fields, $500-$1200 monthly,
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Box, 52NY1 Corona Del Mar, CA
Calebration "82 paid workers. for
food) boar, tlckatilines, stage crv
Interest maptinge mandatory) &pm
Sunday 4/18 In CO Assembly Hall or
8pm Wednesday 4/21 In CC Palroon
Lounge.
Summer Job. Openings: Camp
Becket-in-tha-Barkshires has
Several openings for male
counsalors and — program
Spacialists, Also musio, graphics,
woodworking, office, Situated. In
{ha mountains of Western.
Massachusalts, tha camp offers an
extensive camping program am:
hasizing. personal davalopmant:
‘of applications, write. promptly:
State YMCA, 6.Si. Jamas Avanun,
1 val
Boston, MA 02116, (617-426-8802),
dirnctor/plano, accompanist,
dancelmovement/show
chofagaraphy, drama, watertront
pool (WSI), swimming Instructors
(Wsl)) Opanings. also. for unit
Teadars and bunk counselors: Good
Salaries and: {rlendly atmosphere.
Contacts Ruth Burg, 100, Kingsley
Road, Burnt Hills; N.Y. 12027,
18999-9192. anylima_ or 372.0209
batwoon 10am & 8 pm,
( For Sale )
6 apt. at
), 465-1647,
Female to share
‘Ghestnut_and) Dove
Chris or Dab.
Wanted 1-2 subletters for summar
months, Starting Juna 1 ti Sept. 2
Rent $100.mo, fully furnished. Call
Judy 489-6380.
Wanted: One female to complate a.
$. brdroom apt. 1 block from
busiing, Fully furnished, $150 mo.
includes heat/not water, Call Judy
489-6380,
Dat
l've got a heartful for you, silly and
spacial person, Let's blossom with
the flowers.
Love to love you, Me
Janis,
Wishing you all the love and hap-
piness on your 20th birthday! Live it
Gary,
Haphy anniversary! (I didn't forget)
Thanks to you, these past 2 months
have bean s0 special for ma. You're
Such a sweet guy and | think you're
reat (no matter how old and
drerapht you are).
Love ya, Nancy
(ooking fora sarlous, mellow
fionsmoking male to live on Indian
of Dutch, Call Floyd 7-8985 alter 7
pm:
Maria, ;
I'm ‘really glad wa've become
{rlends. Keep your head up.
Love, Sue
the time for you to
Subletters wanted starting June 1
Great location. Close to campus.
Fuller Road across from com:
missary, Call 7-6062,
Roommate mala to share a
Bedroom. Washington, Ontario,
June—May '83, 449-8655 of
439-6205.
from wholesaler. Any brand, [ree
& Installation, Gall 7.5039,
Aptomate wanted) 3 bedroom apt.
9 N, Allen. $100 month. Call Stave
is Janps $60, cars $69, (ruck
Similar_bargains available.
Gall for your directory on: howto
urchase, 602.998.0575 ext, 6284.
Available In 24 colors, Price $97.00.
Call David 7-3084,
Furniture For sa
or Amy 449:1159,
197 Postal Janp 26,000 ml, Auto,
Good condition, $2300, Will talk
Waikman_typa FM, Stereos $26,
Gasselte $41, Doug 74700,
New'& Used art suppilesy Stretcher
8, Winsor Newton Gouacha,
Luma dyes, & more.
4979 Yamaha 650 Special il, Black,
55 mpg; $1300, Jim 455-6566,
aD
(Lost/Found)
Lost Gold fighter with initial »
Groat sentimental valun, Reward. Ii
found or know Info, call Sua,
455.6544
Found) A classified that really
get rasulls! Get yours in the
ASP office, CO 392, for $2,
Passport/Application Photos, $5 for
2, $1 lor ach 2 tharaaltar.
Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m, No appointmant
hacassaty, University Photo Sar.
Vice, CG 305; Any questions? Call,
Will'or Laura, 78867,
Typing, Call Laura, 465.0562 altor 5.
“No Frills” Student Taachar Flights
Global Travel, §21 Filth Avenue, NY,
NY 10017, 212:379-3532,
1 apartmentmats (famale) neoded
June:December or JunaMa
available to sublet. Call 462:5696.
Roommate wanla
plus utilities, Local
pus. Cail Greg oF
Wanted-—female grad, student to
drm, apt, Near busling:
prot. Available June
Fomaln sublotters wanted, Fully fur
nlshed 5 bedroom apl,, corner of
ton and Quail, 758984, Price
jet 9 furn. badrooms, avail, N.
n 1 bIK.{rom buslina, 2
backyard, $110 pa, Call 463-7734
Spacious 3 bedroom apartment
Hoat Included. 92
on Washington Park
——
|
Female subletters wanted. 4
bedroom house, Quail St, $70 each.
Call Valerie, Diane, Judy at 7.7873,
Or Suzy 438-8029,
For tent) @ bedroom apt. al
Washington and. Ontario. Can ba,
fented as 6 badroom house,
439-6295,
For rent 1-2 bedroom house,
Madison at Main, Furnished. June
1, 439.6295,
Viewpoint '82.'83
all Dave, 75010,
Help wanted,
bi
Wanted: Female to model and pose
for photography, Some samlnudity,
No experience necessary, Writa;
LG. PO Box 102, Albany, NY 12201
Female roommata(s) needed Mon-
real Senior Trip. Also need female
travel companions for summer.
Travol Buf 7-760,
Wanted: to buy refrigerator at end
‘of semester, Call Lor!, 455-6488,
You,
{im really looking forward to this
weekend. | won't forget the h:t box,
anytime bul 7:30.a,m. You know that
I'm lovin! you and all the time we
‘spend together, So, |'m exiremely
glad we're
‘on the road again, Me
Noad credit? Information on racely
Ing Visa, Mastereard, withino cradit
check, Other cards available. Free
brochure, Call Public Cradit Sarvice;
(602) 949-0276, oxt, 910,
Su0,
Are'a few words worth ruining a
{rlandship? That's all wa hava lett,
lot's fot blow that too,
A friend
Sally Grammatical,
Somotimes the stars just can't help
‘but fall In Nebraska.
RAH. RAH. F
Surprisel Now that | don't work on
the ASP, | finally gave you a per:
sonal. Hay, can Wa See a movie this
Weakand?l? Remember, I'll always:
Tove you.
sh S.LK.
Dear Linda,
Happy 21st Birthday! Sorry | won't
ba there for the weekend celabra-
tion, Have’a drink for me, Live itup
‘& ramamber, always ba happy.
Love, Susan
The Mousetrap presents Cath
‘Anne Thibault accompanied by Jaf
Lavy on plano, with @ program of
mellow and folk rock. April 18 & 17.
fall rooks—be. there,
day, April 17th.
Glue no. 1: Invordar to find your
prize, you must opan wide your
yas, Look up the next clue In the
Noxt paper in order to halp you find,
the prize later,
From, the Lovey!
To the guys in 2003—
You are great, | jove ya & will miss,
next year,
i Mh The Little One
‘A poem my dear,
For your birthday this year,
With love slightly quieter
From a terrible “dieter."
Thou sometimes hava been rough,
A million calls aren't enough”
And whatever heights wa reach,
I'll always be, Your Laach
Thinking about a carer in selling,
marketing of sales management
Your professional adge is PSE.
its "AIT Night” at The
Mousetrap this weekend. 2nd floor,
Gampus center, Open 9 pm until
1:30 am both Friday and Saturday
nights,
ving Hall rocks—be there, Satur.
day, April 17th,
Golebration ‘82 pald workers. for
food, baer, ticket lines, stage craw,
{pterpat mantings (mandatory) 8pm
Sunday 4/18 in GC Assombly Hall or
8 pm Wednasday 4/21 In CC Patroon
Lounge :
To all our friends In Cayuga and
Adirondack
You prople are amazing! Thanks for
making Telethon especially fun for
Us,
Charlie, Liz, Rob, Mitch (Spayre
Chayngo)
Bruce,
Savon wooks Isn't a long time com-
pared to a life time.
Lova you, Bunky
IVE ONE....
TO GET ONE!
NOW BEING ACCEPTED IN
THE ASP OFFICE CC332
Tommy and Davers,
PISigma Epsilon PSE Is the Proles:
Cathy Anne Thibault and Jeff Lavy
Will play at The Mousetrap tonight
Jomorrow night: Open’ pm un:
#90 am.
To Deadlies and Lisa,
luv va
Tha men of Alumni Quad
TK,
Happy Birihday. Watch out Monty
Python!
To Cathy and Blondi
Gongratulalions and best of luck!
JTSP,
One month down, forever to go, |
Jove you the mostest!!!
Come Joln In the fun at five
Indian Quad's
rly Night is Back, On
90 p.m.
isthl Glad you came to
Al 8.
We love you, Lauren, Mae and Nan
walling for is hare.
Moating. Sunday night, Watch for
Happy, 20th birthday! Let's share
lots. of birthdays: together
always ba spacial to ma and ll
| hope your birthda
‘weekend is groat and |'m really
that for the 8th consncutive year |
(minus the cupcake), Smile and be.
There's dalinitely something to b
Said for anniversary parties, Happy
Wanted: 2 gitis to complote a four
Parson suite for next yaar
‘nial lowrlse, Gall Barb or Martha at
7.8909,
Hore It comes..Dorm Part
Sa
Without you, | would’ naver
discovered my sacral hatrad
Love,
PS. Are you hung!
Viliham, Jean Smithers, Rasterma
CX!
9,
Blackbelt Ema, “Spacy
P
Wharo's.Katlo's kg, haye anothor
Republican-Democrat,
fo8o8, alcoholism, Thanks for think
Ing of ma and thanks for the good
D
Music & lyrics by STEPHEN SONDHEIM
Book by BURT SHEVELOVE & LARRY GELBART
Directed by WILLIAM A. LEONE
Musical numbers staged & choreographed by CONSTANCE VALIS- HILL Additional choreography by WILLIAM QUIRK:
Conducted by NATHAN GOTTSCHALK + Musical direction by PETER HALEY + Set design by ROBERT DONNELLY -
Costume design by AMY KOPLOW: Lighting design by JEROME HANLEY
UNIVERSITY THEATER PRESENTS
In cooperation with the Department of Music
THE MAIN THEATER
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER + THE UNIVERSITY AT ALBANY
APRIL 21-24 - 8PM
APRIL 24 - 2PM
APRIL 29 - MAY 1. 8PM
$3. Aen
beccpaeee rca sums alumni with current ID - $4- Studonts/Senior citizens - $6 - General admission
—
606 SA funded
we AP ene AA CO IRANGS,
Middle Earth Counsel Phone:
457-5279
How to use Counsel Phone:
OF assistance,
“Select the tape you Want to drug education
hear from the list below. cee
r
Call the above number and Pal bent
. 88K for tape by name or number. ‘services
“The tape will be played over Schuyler
dutch quad
the phone(6-8 minutes), any ARAEY
*A phone counselor will be albany, new york,
available at the end of the tape ‘ineee
If you wish further information Teena
Available Tapes
Sexuality:
101Female Homosexuality
102Male Homosexuallty
103Male Role Identification 303Being In Love
404Women's Sexual Satisfaction apaintimacy
106Communication In Love and
Sex
107Birth Control Methods
108Am | Pregnant?
108 Transexualism
Self-Help:
201How to Meet People
202Time Management
203Loneliness
204Accepting Yourself
205How to Handle Stress
06a Test Anxiety
406b Study Skills
207Relaxation
208Tips on Losing Weight
209Coping with a Broken
Relationship
210Dealing with Anxiety
211What is Depression?
212How to Deal with Depressior
219Recognizing Feelings of Loss
214Death and Dying
Relationships
Crises:
A403Rape
Substance Abuse:
Problems
Drinking
505Helping
Interpersonal Skills:
301Asserting Yourself
302How to Say ‘No’
105Male Sexual Timing Problems S06Helping Others with Problems
307Constrt, Ave Conflict
Resolution fechniques
908Resolving Conflicts in
401Recognizing Suicidal Potential
402Dealing with Suicidal Crises
01Marljuana:Pros and Cons
502Drugs:Recognizing Addiction,
Dependence, and Tolerance
§03Recognizing Drinking
604Decision-Making about
Someone Close
to you who Drinks Too Mi
CLIP AND SAVE
The AMIA/WIRA in
conjunction) with U.S. Tobacco
presents:
E SKOAL
SHOOTOUT
ONEonONE
basketball
tournament
APRIL 19,20, 21
Sign up is first come, first serve
AMIA/WIRA office located in
B-69 of the P.E. Building
(457-5203).
Valid S.U.N.Y.A. I.D.
required to enter
1st place $50 pift certificate
2nd place $25 gift certificate
in each division mens and womens
SA-AV
presents
OD
Tickets
FREE
w/ SUNYA ID
51.00 w/out
Pick up tickets in advance starting on
Tuesday, April 20 in CC 358
SRTEREICK SISSIES RSS NIE IEIR SNINER INS SIENA
Ses6s6903 KATES
in conjunction with University Concert Board
at Page Hall Saturday, April 24 at 8pm
SA Funded
SELLKKNG EEANSEEKNAAN SEREKIIIEES:
SSS
has been around forever,
makes [fall of Famers,
Some 400 hits shy of the 3,000-h
plateau, Staub has been relegated 1
the role of a player-coach an
pinch-hitter for the New Yor
Mets. Acquired in December, 198
: Rusty Staub:
(AP) If it seems lke Rusty Staub as a free agent when the Mets really
is
because he played his first full ma-
Jor league season at age 19. Now 38,
Staub has been in the majors for 19
years, and he’s all but given up on
fone of those magic numbers that
Needed him, Staub had the mistor-
(une to be around after they didn't,
“Three thousand hits is a long
Ways away if this is how I'm going
to be used," Staub says. “Four
hundred hits pinch hitting is a long
TOW {0 Hoe,"*
it Stauby a left-handed hitter, came
}o_ into the season with 2,98 hits. He
id Appeared in 70 games for the Mets
k during the strike-shortened year of
101981 -, primarily as a first baseman
Biff Fischer—Rangers will beat
five, Bruins over Rangers in six,
‘Simple as that.
maintain the enthusiasm that ha:
1y, Against the Rangers, they c
the playoffs. Whoever wins the
Mare Haspel—Sorry Long Islan
that the Rangershad to meet the
climinated Philadelphia, the Ran
Keep up with Herb Brook's “sy
the Stanley Cup.
Mike Carmen—The Ne
third straight time as the Stanley
challen
Larry
channel nine.
| team om
[ASP Sportsmen Give
Stanley Cup Picks
Bob Bellaflore—Despite playing in the roughest bracket, the tslanders
will be the first American team to win three cups in a row— If they can
cah"t afford the let down that almost
gave Pittsburgh the opening series; the Rangers are just 100 good in
home ice really means very little—wins the Cup,
Isles. Oh Biffr you've done it again,
the winner of this series will eventually celebrate a Stanley Cup cham.
pionship in May, If they continue to receive the hat goaltending that
Islanders may be 100 worn down, after just getting by Plusburah, 10
Long Island's brief hockey dynasty in six games and then go on to win
York Islanders will undoubtedly’ hail for the
4y, experience, and coaching edge. No team will be able 10 match-up
against the Islanders and only Herb Brook's Rangers can present a
Sor the defending champions of North America,
hn—Folks, it’s baseball season,
hockey—never did, probably never will, So my: prediction is more
wishful thinking than educated guess, 1 hope whoever wins the Cup
does it fast, I want sweeps in every series, I don't want to listen to all
this crap any longer than I have to and 1 want the Mets (0 be the only
Islanders in six. Bruins over Quebec in
Bruins over St. Louis in finals in five.
s made them the NHL's newest dynas-
New York - New York series—where
and that will be the
id, the fun is over, It is really a shame
Islanders in the quarter finals because
gers will be that victorious team, The
stem". Look for the Rangers to end
Cup champions, They have the abili-
1 don't like watching
My prediction...Who cares.
ALBANY STUDENT Press SPOrts APRIL 16, 1982
Still Pitching In
and pinch hitter - and he had 51 hits
in 161 at-bats for a .317 average,
BUt With the acquisition of men
like Ellis Valentine, Dave Kingman,
Have-A Sporting Weekend )
Support the Great Dane Teams
Dave Rajsich and George Foster
Over the course of the past 12 mon:
ths, the services of the six-time Alle
Star became less in demand, Play.
ing In the National League, without
the designated hitter, Staub's futtire
‘UA GENTER 1-2 if
RE OR OF MACY'S, COLONIE 459-2170 }OBT YOUR LD, CARD AT ANY U.A. THEATRE
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOWS
TONIGHT &
SATURDAY ONLY]
/$2005PECIAL STUDENT |”
RAT!
ery talented |
ub said d
Ing the Mets first home stand of the
1982 season, "and it’s obvious ['m |
HOt going to start |
“I stay in-as good a shape as 1
can, so if 1 get the chance, 1 van
show I can still hack sald.
Ih hiy couching capacity, Staub
Worked with the Mets" young hitters
during spring training. Hitting is a ‘
Subject hie knows thoroughly
Staub 3.5 seasons, bexinn
ing in 1976, ay the Detroit Tigers
designated hitter. During that time,
he drove in 3S8 runs, averaging 106
Per year in the three full seasons he:
pent there, including 121 RBI in
1978,
Stab started with the Houston
Astros, where he played for six
years, He moved to Montreal for
three seasons beginning in 1969,
and played the next four seasons in
his first stint with the Mets, After
his 3.5 years with Detroit, he went
a different
set of jaws.
Showing at Center 1 «
200009000000000000000000000000000000006'
“Dawn
of the Dead”
buck (0 Montreal, played one year
in Texas in 1980, and returned to
the Mets in 1981
He is acknowledged as one of the
best hitters in baseball, even now
However, time and age have taken
their (oll on Staub’s legs, and he no
longer is effective in the outfield,
He is fine defensively at first base,
bul the Mets are locked into a situa
tion Where they must play Kin
th
howing at Center 2
11! play ay much as T can play,"
Staub said,
continued from page 21
and Phillips fell to Sergent and Pet-
1, 62, 644. “Nancy and Joan are a
teat doubles? team, but they just
didn't have it
Mann,
In the other completed doubles
together," said
natch Karen O'Connor and Naney
Levine lost 6-3, 6-4
Isaacs and Borelle started their
match against Ruftings and Smith,
but all four lost to darkness.
Friday 6PM-9PM
Saturday 6PM-9PM
Please call ahead.
Women’s Tennis Loses, 6-2
OFFERS FOR YOUR
DINING PLEASURE
FREE TRANSPORTATION
from SUNY to Jade Fountain & return
Our Specialty: Szechuen, Hunan and
Cantonese, Polynesian drink available.
Just 1 Mile West of Stuyvesant Plaza
10 percent SUNY discount with cune
Take out not included
mateh Was halied with each tea,
liking one set apiece, “Lauren and
Sandra could have won," way
Mann's evaluation of the final
match of the day
After playing
expected by their couch, the women,
much better than
will face Pace at home 11 a.m
The Danes
played Pace and not much is known
Saturday haye never
about the talent on the opposing.
EXPERIENCE
TOMMY LEE’S
rbmidi
#HUNTAIN
1652 WESTERN AVE.
$6>-9555
Tel. No, - 869-9585
or
869-9586
To help you
invest in yourself...
The CW Post
\\\, Sanne! se
en? |
= Loe
C.W, Post offers summer programs you can value! a full range of
courses, outstanding resident and quest faculty, flexible schedules,
excellent facilities on Long Island's most beautiful campus, only
minutes from New York City and fine recreation areas.
More than 1300 undergraduate and graduate courses,
intensive Institutes and workshops, Festival of the Arts
Day and evening sessions begin May 17, June 21, July 26
Weekend College classes begin June 19, 20, 26, 27, 28
Summer courses are
able al.
TO GET YOUR COPY, phone (516) 299:2431 or mail coupon today,
| Summer Sessions Office
LONG ISLAND _ UNIVERSITY
Cw. post center ©
GREENVALE, NEW YOR< 11546
‘Action inshiuion
also avi
Suffolk Branch Campus,
Brentwood, Lit
(616) 273-5112
‘An Equal Oppartuniy/attimat
Rockland Campus:
(at Dominican College)
(914) 359-7200
Please sendme the Summer 1982 Bulletin,
\
i]
I
1
i]
i]
i]
I
I
I
i]
I
I
H (workshops, master classes, performances),
i]
1
I
I
I
i
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1
I
t
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Namo
Address
| iy, stato, zip
ee |
os =
lntih strove cba
panes RECA
nrvevronvreenaravemer ress
‘{ Sample Ballot .
Student Association
S.A. President
Mark ‘'Mad Dog"’ Greib
Mark Weprin
Mike Corso
Andrew Wienstock
S.A. Vice President
Ann Marie LaPorta
Lori Peppe
University Council
Mike Corso
Mark Weprin
Andrew Weinstock
SASU Delegate (2)
Scott Wexler
Alan Weiner
Dan Robb
Jim Tierney
Central Council
Alumni (3)
Peter Stein
David Daniels
Rob Fishkin
Eric Sauter
Eric Niler
Rich Shaffer
Floyd Bookbinder
Lauren J, Walter
john Grady
leff Fromm
job Helbock
Indian (3)
Mark Nelson
Matt A. Neco
Brian Delf
April Gray
Colonial (3)
Bernie Bryant
Laura Neldner
ave
Philip D, Chonigman
+ “Cathy M, LaSusa
State (3)
Steve Kramer
Jonathan Hudis
Ilan S. Nissan
Lisa Kerr
Jeffrey Schneider
Off-Campus (9)
Mark Seigelstein
David Siskind
Robert Folchetti
Dennis Ward
Tom Culin
Cary Wolfson
Ken Montal
Lee Eisner
Bill Nevits
Brian Clarke
Ellen Steinfeld
Wayne Klieger
Neil Seigel
Robert Bugbee
Jeff Block
Mitchell Flick
Brian Stephonson
Dan Robb
University
Senate
State (3)
Beth Brinser
Richard Golubow
Alumni (3)
Vincent Rubino
Bob Chaves
Robert T. Farl
Eric Sauter
Eric Koll
ley
David Daniels
Michael Hagerty
Dutch (3)
Michael Edmonds
Thomas Voll
Ricky S. Feldman
Jayne Rothman
Indian (3)
Alan Weiner
April A. Gray
Johanna Sarrac
lichelle Schwa
co
tz
Gail Goldstein
Colonial (3)
Jeane Buckley
Cathy M. LaSusa
Philip D. Chonig
Off-Campus
man
(7)
Joel Hammer
Robin Pakula
Neil Seige!
Lori Polland
Steven Kastell
Phil Gentile
Joe Rani
Gerry Brenna
Referendum 1
"Do you support raising the studen
n
it activity fee by $1.00
per student, per semester, to increase the funding of the
New York Public Interest Research Group, Inc, (NYPIRG)
from $2.00 to $3.00 per student, per
Referendum 2
“In order to enhance our security
semester?”
, the students of the
State University of New York at Albany do hereby urge the
New York Congressional Delegation
to call Upon the Ex
ecutive Branch of the U.S. Government to negotiate
the Soviet Union an immediate, mutual U.S./Soviet halt t
the nuclear arms race, We furtk
to negotiate a permanent U.‘
weapons as a necessary first step t
nuclear arsenals of both nations,’
arge the Admil
ring 1982 Election
as 4/6/82
Class of
1983
President
Gina Cuneo
Jennifer Butler
Mitchell Flick
Larry Weismann
Vice-President
Ed Rose
Phil Gentile
Treasurer
Lynn Krasner
Secretary
Mala Kessler
Council (1!)
Gina Cuneo
Robin Pakula
Larry Weismann
Phil Gentile
Mala Kessler
Jennifer Butler
Lynn Krasner
Gail Goldstein
Berry Brennan
Mitchel Flick
Brian Stephenson
Mark Seigelstein
Class of
1984
Council (7)
Ellen Murray
Andrew Weinstock
Johanna Sarracco
Dan Robb
Class of
1985
Council (13)
Sharon Okun
Stuart Hack
Ricky S. Feldman
Jeffrey Schneider
Richard Golubow
Lisa Kerr
Lisa M. Cohen
Cathy M, LaSusa
Jonathon Hudis
Michelle Schwartz
Barbara Hurwitz
Dean Angeleckos
Tracey Lindenbaum
Nancy Szigethy
Michael Greenfield
Alumni Board (5)
Jeff Shore
Amy K. Adelman
Scott Wechsler
Kevin Yeager
Peter Weinstock
Carol
Tom Serpe
Corey Bandes
Neil Gelf
To All Student Association Spring 1982 -
Candidates :
* * *
There will be a
“ * Mandatory Meeting of All Candidates
*
SUNDAY APRIL 18,1982
9 PM
i? = LC5 *
ALL MUST ATTEND
Notice to all Students
Elections for next year’s:
S.A. President
S.A. Vice-President
University Council
Central Council
SASU Delagate
University Senate
Alumni Board
Class of 1983 Officers & Council
Class of 1984 Council
Class of 1985 Council
Will Take Place
April 20,21,22
On All Uptown Quads 4pm-7pm
On All Alumni Quad 5pm-7pm
Campus Center 9am-4pm
Student I.D. or Meal Card and Tax Card are required to
vote
Student I.D. only is required for University Senate and
University Council Elections
“Strongly urged to vote for the representitives of
the Quad you will be living on next year.
Second Semester Seniors should vote for the represen:
titives where you presently live.
You are
‘International
Film Group
proudly presents
It’s a better movie than ‘Blazing Saddles’
or “Young, Frankenstein’, -roiine so
ms
Friday April 16 &
Saturday April 17
Show Times: 7:30, 10:00 &
12:15
Featuring: Bob Gibson
Pre-law advisor at CUE
Mr. Gibson will provide
VALUABLE INFO
concerning the LSAT and
applying to Law School
Anyone considering registering
forthe LSAT
should attend!
April 19 LC22
8:00 emu
irene teenyeess
none pk ise ls BAMMINE neice muse
Come along with the
“JUNIOR CLASS”
and see the
“YANKEES vs ANGELS
(REGGIEJACKSON)”
Thurs April 29
$15 members
INCLUDES ‘GREAT’ SEATS &
TRANSPORTATION
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IN CC 4/19-23
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SUMMER JOBS
CAMP DIPPIKILL
5 Positions
Student Laborer-(4 Positions)
Building and grounds maintenance
construciion assistant. The main
{enance jobs consist of firewood
hauling: land elearing involving
tree and bush removal, and minor
buallding repalrs and teall improve
‘ments, The construction work wil
involve the ongoing construction of
the 30% 70" log recreation center
its large log wood shed, and founda
Position)
This job will involve lighter but more
routine chores.M
ities will involve we
and clenaing;
ance; grass culting
tion
tion work on the new shower: washroom Or assisting with roofing installation,
facilly
Job Location:Camp Dippikil, 70 miles north of SUNYA, In the southern
‘Adirondack Mountains near Warrensburg New York.A descriptive brochure on the
camp Is available In the Student Association Office-CC116.
Period of Employment:12 weeks-May 24 through August 13, 1982
Salary:$1,680 per job period or $3.50 per hour based on a standard 40 hour
work we
RoomiProvided at no additional charg
Food:Employees are to provide their own food except for suppers on Monday
through Thursday.A large kiichen is available for food preparation, Full course
suppers on Monday through Thursday wil be provided for a nominal fee of $2,00
per meal ($8.00 per wk,) [t's expected that all employees participate in the
supper plan unless dietary or religious exemptions are Indicated before the job
commences,
Who May Apply:Only SUNYA undergraduates having paid student tax this
semester
Special Qualifica
bbe willing to work hard out-of-doors all
of the building trades; 1
maintenance will be pre
stores and social i
ul be in good physical condition and
licants with prior experience in any
of In grounds and building
od in a rather Isolated location with
Shain saw and
"
d.The cainp Is
pApplcalions may be picked up in the SA office
(CC 116) and must be relied to that office before 4:00pm Tuesday, April 27,
Interviews:Requiced for top applicants, will be held between April 28-30.
‘Acceptance Notice:Given on or before Tuesday,May 3 List of alternates and
those not qualified will be posted In the SA Office on Wednesday May 4
$18 nonmembers
Jennifer Butler 457-5030
Student Maintenance Assistant{1
new responsibil
ly cabin check-up
site and trall mainten:
id grounds mainten
ance, and some painting and preserva
Work. Any construction work wilt be of
a light nature such as caulking log walls
N
|
Singles
Doubles
2, Vermont won by default
3, Strong-MeNeil(¥) d,
The Albany women’s softball
Team made it two wins without a
loss last We fay, crushing
King's College 15-6,
Cathy Briggs and Lori Briggs
each contributed two hits and two
RBls to the attack. Nancy Doyle
Chipped in three RBIs as well as
Scoring three runs, Lynn Truss went
the distance on the mound sur
tendering three earned runs,
“We're pleased with the
Victory,"” said Coach Lee Rhenish:
Rhenish and her crew have their
SILENT
MOVIE’
AND
‘UP IN
SMOKE’
APRIL,
29th & 30th
WATCH
FOR
THEM!
1, Bob McCredie(V) d, Barry Li
? Al Stimpson(Y) d, Dave Ulri
3. Fred Gaber(A) d, Mike Bonfigli, 6-0, 6
4. Daye Lerner(A) d, Kent Friedman, 7-5, 6-2
5, Rob Karen(A) d. Lelf Strong, 6-4, 6-1
6, Russ Kasow(A) d. Bob Lawrence, 6-2, 7-5
Karen-Kasow, 6:
Acs
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS SPPOMTS (Apa 10, 1982
1, 6-7, 5-3
1, Levine-Gaber(A) d. McCredie-Bonfigll, 6-3, 6-1
* that might have caused he
Cadets Conquer Women Netter
By MICHAEL CARMEN
‘The women's tennis team, despite
what coach Peggy Mann termed “a
good outing,’" lost to the hands of
West Point, 6-2, Wednesday after-
noon,
"We gave them a good match,
Five of the matches were extended
to three sets, making the match
closer than the score looks," stated
Mann,
The Danes started! off on the
fight foot as the number one seed,
ney Light, deteated West Point's
Tia Sergent 7-5, 3-6, 6-1. {1 took
Light a while (o get settled; but
alter settling in she hiad an easy time
With her opponent,
“Nancy played very tentatively at
first,” evaluated the coach
Albany's number (wo seed, Joun
Phillips, did not play as welllas an-
ticipated and way ousted by’ Gail
Petty in Wo sets, 7-5, 6-3
Anne Newman, the Danes
‘Humber three player, fell to Debra
Williams, 0-6, 64, 6-2,
not like the coaching bre
nd of the set sie won
nd 1 think:
concentration,” suited Mann,
Mann noted that Williams, the
West Point ehlty, su four year yitre
sity letler petson and an excellent
tennis player
Sandra Borrelle ined the
Dane's losing trend around ay she
defeated Kathy Spaulding, originale
ly of London, 7-6, 6-0, The first
liebreaker proved to be very ex
citing, while Borrelle obviously
figured her opponent out and easily
Tinished out the set,
"1 was very proud of Sandra
although she did have too many
‘double faults" added Mann
Bortelle's match would be the
last time this day that Albany would
win a match, In the fifth singles
miaich, Lauren Isaacs began the lose
defending Siate Champion Lehman
College comes 10 the Dutch Quad.
field for a
noon,
Despite
twinbill on Saturday at 12
the obstacle Leh
presents the players are very op
timistie
“This is the best team
We've had since Uve been here,”
ing streak falling to Jamie Ruffings,
6-2, 0.6, 7-5.
DeDe Falaino the other co-captain
believes this is the biggest game of
"IE we take
claims
the season thus fir
them, we should take it all,"*
the Albany
Rhenish addy,
Where We stand after Saturday, we
Isaacs
Seen by the score, easily
Won the second set and coasted toa
3-0 advantage in the decisive set.
But Ruffing, who along with the
‘other West Point Cadets, is in ex.
cellent physical condition, surged
‘on and outlasted a tired Isaacs,
The final singles! match on the
day saw Helen Tischler in her debut
as a Dane lose 10 Melody Smith,
6-4, 0-6, 6-2. "Helen was uptight at
first and was also recovering from
the flu. She has beautiful strokes,
but needs a little more hustle to
defeat Smith," said Mann.
The women racketeers found
themselves down 4-2 at this junc-
lure in the day and would have to
win all three doubles’ matches to
Tecord victory, It was not to bé
because in the first duo match Light
continued on pagel?
Albany lost (o West Point, (Photo; UPS)
sv *~
gneMners
<a
TAP ROOM
1 Qt
ONTARIO ST.
ALBANY, N.Y.
expect (0 win both games.
SUNDAY 38pm:
Bloodymarys $1.00
MONDAY
Pitchers Pabst,Genny %2,00
Michelob $2.50
TUESDAY
Vodka and Gin mixed drinks
across the street from alumni
HAPPY HOURS
75 cents
quad
Open Dally
pm-4am
Announcing:
will assist with:
“personalising” SUNYA
applications
Stud. Aff. - Adma 128
‘Mum, Aft. ~
deadline: April 23
major University events
id Alumni advancement
VL.P. hospitality
regional Alumni
mestings
Alumal House
x as BBSXIEI BSED II SOY! ERBEV LEIS? ODLNLID LILY
on ee
ALBANY STUDENT Press SPPOFTS apnit 16, 1982 193
Chaykin's CPA ~ 5
Review at Hofstra
is pleased to announce the start df
its review course in preparation for
the November 1982 C.P.A. exam.
+ {n past years this course has presented
lectures to the N.Y. State Association for
C.P.A. Candidates and to seven of the
largest C.P.A. firms for In-house training.
* Instruction by highly qualified college
professors, No tapes used.
Corner of Morris Street.
(ear of Ontario Street Market)
Round and Large Square
(Sicilian ) Pies
Meatball and Sausage Torpedos
Beer, soda and cigarettes available on premises
32-0306 E DELIVER 9.97 53
“ONTARIO STREET PIZZA
15’’ ROUND CHEESE PIZZA
$3.50
For further Information, call (516) 560-3241 or write:
Dr. Ralph 8. Polimeni
103 Heger Hall, Hofstra University
Hempstead, N.Y. 11550
| sHofs
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY Homosioad. NY It
Expires 4/30/82
INDIAN QUAD’S
Dorm Party Night Is Back ~
With 6 Great Parties For A Single
Admission Price
KAKKKKKK KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK kk kk
John Belushi Memorial Party With Prize B&e,
For Joliet Jake Look Alike And Best Toga
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Celebrate New Years Eve With A New
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CHEESE
<) MUNCHKINS
Advance Ticket Sales April 14th, 15th,and16th
On Indian Quad Dinner Lines
$1,50 with tax card or in advance
$2.00 without
R
|S |
of of Age Required,
A Gounded
Stickmen Bow To Powerhouse Cortland, 14-6
Albany State lacrosse team was
Teached the final:
matched against traditional Iie Pas Leo years
‘pened the scoring early in the first
quarter on @ goal by All-American
Bobby Russo. Albany quickly mat-
ched that score on a goal from mid:
fielder John Reilly, which was
Around the Rim
powerhouse Cortland, ranked
fourth in Division 111, and fell at
their hands, 14-6,
The Red Dragons, who have
Conference Calls
The recently concluded NCAA basketball season did nothing to
stop the debate as to which conference plays the best collegiate basket-
ball. 1981-82 was the most competitive season in a long time, as no
league won more than 70 percent of their games against other divsion |
conference teams, What we have done here is to look over the past
three seasons, and figure out each conference's record against the
other eighteen major conferences, Then we cut down the list of nine-
teen to a final eight, which you sec here,
8, MISSOURI VALLEY — The MYC has had the last two NIT
champs, as well as a penalized power in Wichita State. They have won
$5 percent of their non-league games, but only 43 percent against the
top seven converences, The league which gave us Larry Bird will get a
whole lot more respect if Willis Reed can land 7-foot Benoit Benjamin,
4a Louisiana high school sensation for his Creighton Blue Jays. The
biggest strike against this league is its geography, as the MVC has
teams in places like Canyon, Texas; Carbonale, Illinois; and Las
Cruces, New Mexico,
7. BIG 8 — The nation’s best football conference isn't quite as for-
tunate in the winter. The top three, Missouri, Kansas, and Kansas
assisted by Warren Wray. The rest
of the first quarter belonged to Cor-
Wand, controlling the ball
throughout the period and adding
three more goals for a 4-1 advan+
tage,
The Dragons fast breaked
Albany in the second quarter for
three quick goals; all point blank
shots against freshman goaltender
Alan Cornfield, However, Albany
rallied with goals from Dave Faust,
Don Casadonite and finally the se-
cond from Reilly with 13 seconds
left in the half to close the score to
844 at half,
The Danes came out fired up to
Start the second half and played
Cortland to a standoff for most of
the quarter. When Tom Pratt
Scored on an exira man situation,
Albany seemed to gain momentum.
That momentum was quickly
Squelched by penalties to the Danes,
with the Dragons taking advantage
Of those man up opportunities,
“The officialssvould not allow us
‘o gain any momentum," replied
Asst, Coach Gary Neese, “We.
Spent most of the fourth quarter a
man or two men down, It’s awful
tough to control the ball in those
situations,"”
‘The Dragons scored five fourth
State, are perennial contenders for the national title, but the other five
have been invisible, That may be changing, however, as new coaches
such as Tom Apke at Colorado and Billy Tubbs at Oklahoma have
their programs on the right track, Big 8 teams have won 11 of 13
against PAC 10 opposition over the past 3 seasons, but have lost 9
of 10 to. SEC teams, Overall, the Big 8 has a 43-47 record against the
other sevond Top eight converences, the fourth best record in this
group,
6, BIG EAST — The nation's newest powerhouse made a big splash
last month by landing three of the eight in the NCAA's, This is the big
money conference, with a team every major northeastern TV
market, Despite all of this, the Big East has won only 37 percent of
thei games against the others in this group. They have lost 10 of 14 to
the ACC, S$ of 6 to the SEC, $ of 7 to the Metro, and 4 of $ to the
MYC, Georgetown and Villanova are certainly national powers for
/years to come, but after them, especially with Dr. Tom Dayis leaving
Boston College, you have to wonder if there is that much power left.
$. PAC 10 — One of two in this group that does not play post-season
conference tournament, This league, with the exception of UCLA,
does not fare well in the post-season arena, Oregon St. got blasted
‘once they played a non-western team in the NCAA's while USC and
Washington made quick departures from their tournaments. One of
only three conferences that have been above .500 for all three seasons
in non-conference play, however. Maybe that is because they play so
many Big Sky teams instead of venturing into WAC more often,
4, METRO — For the first time, this season this league has more than
Villanova, This league has little depth, as indicated by its nonwinning.
record against every Top Eight conference except the Big East.
3. SEC — With Kentucky, LSU, Tennessee, Alabama and Mississip-
pi, the SEC boasts the most outstanding teams of any conference,
They also possess some lame ducks in Mississippi St. and Florida,
which drag down the league's record, Despite this, the SEC boasts
winning records against all the top eight leagues except for the ACC.
Their 12-9 mark-against Big 10 teams puts them on a level yery close to
the top two conferences, but their lack of one truly outstanding club
that wins national title prevents them from gaining the top spot.
2. BIG 10 — In 1979.80 and 1980-81, the Big 10 was the nation’s Best
conference, and there really wasn't much question about it. This year,
\however, the Big 10 struggled from the start, finally finishing 30-38 in
non-league play, They even lost their season series with the Mid-
American Conference, ranked 16th out of 19 leagues. Teams like
| Michigan, Wisconsin, Northwestern and Michigan St. made the Big 10
1, ACC — After being ranked second the previous two seasons, the
|ACC took over the top spot this season, With the top two teams in the
Quarter goals for a 14-6 final
“A number of people who are
familiar with lacrosse remarked on
What a fine game our guys played,
They played tough, Cortland is
definitely the toughest team we'll
face this year, and if we play the
fest of our schedule the way we did
Tuesday, we'll have one hell of a.
year,’ remarked Neese.
John Reilly and Don Casadonte
(AP) Some bests and worsts from
the 1981-82 National Basketball
Association season:
> Best player — Moses Malone.
What he lacks in all-around skills
and finesse, he makes up for in in-
| tensity. Larry Bird, who doesn't
even start anymore, has more all-
} around talents, but the feeling here
is that Houston would be a worse
team and Boston might be better if
Teague in previous years, but you
would be hard-pressed to find a
deeper crop of first-year players
than this season's. An inordinate
number of teams even had two
rookies who played key roles, Isiah
Thomas and Kelly Tripucka at
Detroit, Buck Williams and Albert
King at New Jersey, Jay Vincent
and Mark Aguirre at Dallas and
)JéFfRuland and Frank Johnson at
Washington all helped their teams
go from terrible to at least respec-
table, Buck Williams didn't score as
Well as some of the others, but he
gets the nod for being the No.
> Best team — Boston Celtics, The
record and their 18-game winning
nation during the regular season in North Carolina and Virginia, the
JACC won over two-thirds of their non-league games, despite the
Presence of Georgia Tech, a league member for football reasons
only,For only the third time, an ACC team won the NCAA title, when
North Carolina won their second title, matching Clemson's NCAA
football title, which was captured New Year's Night
The ACC is a very consistent conference, which is why it must be
considered the nation’s best, The top conference of each particular
| Season varies from year to year but the ACC is always right there near
the top, 1f Ralph Sampson and James Worthy decide to stay in school
for Senior year, there is no reason why the ACC won't be right there
i streak speak for themselves. Make
them the favorites to become the
first team to successfully defend an
NBA title since another group of
Celtics in 1968-69. The Lakers,
Bucks or 76ers are within 10 games
of the Celtics and could challenge
them in a short series,
Worst team — Cleveland. The
temptation is to let the Cavaliers
“share the distinction with San
The lacrosse team found highly ranked Cortland too much to handle, as
the Dane Stickmen lost 14-6, (Photo: Sue Mindich)
€ach registered two goals for
Albany, while Daye Faust added a
goal and (Wo assists to lead the scar-
ing, Alan Cornfield put in another
Femarkable performance with 31
saves,
“Defensively, we played strong,
decimated by injuries. And at least
San Dicgo was smart cnough to
fang onto its first-round draft
choice,
P Best team that was supposed to
be among the worst — Washington.
Nearly everyone believed the Bullets.
would have a miserable season after
cosing kingpins Elvin Hayes, Wes
Unseld, Mitch Kupchak and Bobby
Dandridge, Detroit, which owns the
next season. Instead, the Pistons
will probably, miss the playoffs
while Washington is in. Coach
Gene Shue is the magician who
molded ‘problem players!’ Spencer
Haywood and John Lucas, veterans
Greg Ballard andgxevin Grevey and
youngsters like Ruland and
Johnson into a cohesive unit that
plays defense with the best,
Worst team that wus supposed to
be the best — It's hard to choose
between New York and Chicago in
this category, Both teams made the
playoffs in 1981 and were believed
to be on the way up, The Knicks
Best player who wasn't supposed
fo be a superstar — Sidney Mon-
crief, He led the Milwaukee Bucks,
‘one of the top four teams in the
Teague, in points, rebounds and
assists» from the guard position,
Jack Sikma fits in here, too, along
with Seattle teammate Gus
Williams, who made an impressive
‘comeback after sitting out a year in
a contract dispute, ,
Worst player who was supposed
to be @ superstar — Marquet
a Dig mca atautc thee OUppare c WHO CFM THOME BEd SPIE BAC
with the exception of the early tran-
sition goals we gave up. Cornfield
got aver some early game jitters and
played another tremendous game,
It was a fun game to watch though,
Very, very physical on both ends of
the field,'*
The NBA From Top To Bottom
small forward in the league last
year, he missed the first 18 games of
the season In a contract holdout,
Johnson's still good, averaging 16
points per game, but he didn’t find
the level of past years, when his
norm has been as high as 25, Even
Coach Don Nelson admits
Jolinson’s development has taken
several steps backward, Runnerup
— David Thompson, Has had in-
jury problems, but that docsn't ful-
ss JLouisville to brag about, The Memphis Tigers, led by Keith Lec
Wel me Back B ball Par ty ‘enna -&1 I! Malone and Bird switched teams, Bullets! first-round draft pick, was
oom aS aseue ltroned Loulite Cor the fist tne Cs season and airman stuck ]f| miiest rookie — There have been licking ils chops in anticipation of ly explain his toss of status in
Tera lear AA ara Nar ER Cai? i better players to come into the getting another superb rookie for Denver and 10-point scoring
average decline,
The Celtics have the best record in
the NBA this season, but only two
teams in the past 10 years have won
the championship after having the
best record, Los Angeles did it in
1972 and Boston last year.,
The Celtics will get a) total of
$50,000 in bonus money for having.
the best regular-season record, plus
another $50,000 for haying the best
mark in their conference, Should
they go on to win the NBA title,
they would get $422,500, If the
$37,500, quarterfinal winners get
another $42,500, semifinal winners
another $50,000 and the champion-
ship series winner another $230,000,
full coverage |
of sports
Join us for this Gala Event on Saturday April 7, Je matliocre league, Even league leaders Minnesoia ane lowa Were J, bounder in the entire league, a almost reversed their $0-32 record team divides the money into 12 full
9:30- 2 aad ater Sis post ceaton | Blaysilost0s lOnTen ae ee ha en Ue remarkable achievement for a of the previous season and the Bulls shares, that’s mote than $35,000
2 ate respectively, inthe NCAAs. rookie were even worse, apiece, Each team winning in the
first round of the playoffs gels +
By LARRY KAHN
The Albany Great Dane baseball
team scored four runs in the bottom
of the seventh inning to defeat
visiting RPI in the season opener.
yesterday afternoon 7-3, Ralph
Volk picked up the win, allowing
only two hits in four innings of
shutout relief for starter Mike Gart-
man,
Albany loaded the bases in the
Seventh on three consecutive singles
by Hugh Davis, Tony Moschella.
and Bruce Rowlands, and then Rich
Wander walked on four pitches (0,
drive in the winning run, Two more
runs crossed the plate on sacrifice
flies by Bob Rhodes and Tom
Verde, and the fourth run scored on.
an error.
RPI opened the game with a run
inthe first, but the Danes countered
Dre cies an
‘The women’s track team was victorious this past Wed
Late Rally For Danes
Hands RPI Defeat
With one in their halfof the inning,
The Engineers added an unearned
run in both the third and fourth in-
nings to gain a 3-1 advantage.
Frank Rivera grounded out to
open the bottom of the fourth, but
Verde and Bob Conklin both walk-
ed/and moved up on a pared ball,
Jerry Rosen scored bov runners
With a clean single through the hole:
to knot the ballgame, 3-3,
‘Then both pitchers seemed to se
tfe down and find their rhythn
Gartman retired the Engineers in
‘order in the fifth, and Porter, the
RPI starter, did the same to
Albany. Volk came in to start the
sixth and never faced a serfous
threat in his four inning stint,
“Mike Gartman did a real good
Job starting, then Volk came in and
got in a good groove," said Albany
baseball coach Mark Collins.
inesday as they defeated Hartwick, 76-54. Squad
“Gariman got in a little bit of trou
ble, but he didn't give up atall, He
Just kept hammering away."
Tomorrow the Danes face Le-
Moyne in a double header at 1:00
depth and spirit provided the winning edge for Albany. (Photo: Dave Asher)
Rangers Edge Out Islanders, 5-4
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Rookie
defenseman Reijo Ruotsalainen's
50-foot slap shot with 1:58 remain-
ing boosted the Rangers to a 5-4
National Hockey League quarter-
final playoff victory over the
Islanders Thursday night in Game 1
‘of the ‘*Battle of New York".
Ruoisalainen fired a shot through
a sereen and past Islanders goalie
Billy Smith just 2:18 after the
Islanders had tied the” score on a
goal by John Tonelli,
Game 2 of the series between the
two-time defending Stanley Cup
Islanders and the
rs, who finished 26 points
behind their focal rivals in the
regular season, will be played Fi
day night,
Superb relief goaltending by
Steve Weeks and Robbie Ftorck's
tiebreaking goal at 14:56 of the se-
cond period had the Rangers in
front 4-3, But Tonelli - whose over-
time goal against Pittsburgh Tues-
day night advanced the Islanders to
this round - tied it by knocking
home a pass from Bob Nystrom
with 4:16 left.
After Ruotsalainen had put the
Rangers in front, the game ended
with a wild play in front of the
Ranger net. Weeks was out of posi-
tion, but as all six attacking
Islanders tried to push the puck into
the unguarded cage, the final
buzzer sounded.
The game be; with a six-goal,
penalty-free first period, The
Rangers’ Ron Duguay converted
Mike Allison's perfect pass at 3:19,
but Dave Langevin's slap shot from
center ice cluded Rangers goalie Ed
Mio 45 seconds later to tie it,
Connor of the Rangers tipped a
shot by Barry Beck past Smith at
7:13, only 10 Islanders
storm in front 3-2 on goals by Mike
Bossy anil Nystrom
Just 37 seconds after Nystrom’s
short tap-in, Rob McClanahan stole
the puck from center Brent Sutter
and put home a wrist shot to make
it 3-3 at 17:28.
Weeks replaced Mio, who injured
his buck, for the start of the second
period. He made a spectacular save
on a Bossy wrist shot just prior t0
Ftorek's goa
After Weeks got his leg pad on
Bossy’s attempt, defenseman Dave
ave the
‘The men's varsity baseball team won its season opener over RPI, 7-3, A four run Dane rally in the bottom
of the seventh was the deciding factor, (Photo: UPS)
on the field behind Indian Quad
Collins said he was pleased with
what he saw in yesterday's game,
especially in the last three or four
innings, But the biggest relief of all
Was just getting the season under-
Women’s Track Surpass
Hartwick In Dual Meet
~ By MADELINE PASCUCCI
Albany women's track coach
Ron White credits his team's 76-54
victory over Hartwick on Wedne
day to a display of team depth and
spirit, as well as several excellent in-
dividual performances
‘Once again Albany ran several
outstanding relays. Barb Hill, Julie
_ Smyth, Sue Stern and Kim Bloomer
won the 1,600-meter relay In 4:23.4
and Hill, Smyth, Bloomer and Kim
Lozier captured first in the
400-meter in 53.8. These were the
names to waich in the rest of the
meet.
Stern jumped a season best 4.89
meters in the long jump to win that
event, as well as winning the
1,500-meter and the 800 meter runs.
“The amazing thing about Su
performance,” said White, ‘wa
that she was really in her sick-bed
yesterday.
Another team member to make @
comeback in this meet was Smyth,
Who was injured. Along with runn-
ing in'the relays, Smyth came in se:
cond in the 200-meier low hurdles
way after several delays.
“We're just glad to get the first
one,"? Collins said, “1 think it’s im:
portant that you win the first gave
of the year."”
and clocked 17,6 seconds in the
100-meter high hurdles, although
only running in an exhibition lane.
Other outstanding performances
included Bloomer's win in. the
400-meter run and third place show:
ing in 400-meter low hurdles, Lozier
threw 9.72 meter to win the shot put
and also captured second in the
discus, Hill did well in the 100- and
200-metér’dashes,
Ronnie Dann finished second in
the 5,000-meter run in 1923.9, 0
personal best, Dann placed second
again, and Erma George finished
third, in the 3,000-meters, Sarah
Cawley and Eve Horner both plac-
ed in a number of events,
The team’s 2-1 record, Wednes-
day's win and the spirit and
togetherness the team is showing
make White optimistic for the
Albany Invitational this Saturday
Ithaca is the favorite in the seven
team ficld which includes
Rochester, Plattsburgh, Hartwick,
Union, Siena and Albany, T
coach expects the Danes to finish in
the top three, with Rochester the
other strong competitor.
Sports: This Weekend
Women's varsity (rack and field — Albany Invitational
Saturday,.4/17 on University Track, 9:00
Women's varsity softball vs. Lehman College (2)
Saturday, 4/17 on field behind Dutch, 12:00
Women’s varsity tennis ys, Pace
Saturday, 4/17 on courts behind Dutch, 1:00
Men's varsity baseball vs. LeMoyne (2)
Safurday, 4/17,0N field behind Indian, 1:00
Men's varsity tennis ys, Middlebury
4/17 on courts behind Indian, 1
Men's varsity lacrosse ys. Geneseo
Saturda,
Men's varsity track and field ys, Rochester
00
Saturday, 4/17at Geneseo, 2:00
Saturday, 4/17 at Rochester, 2:30
Maloney captured the puck and.
passed off the side boards to
Ftorek, He headed up ice on a
2-on-I break with Eddie Johnstone
and faked Smith to the ice before
depositing a backhander into the
open net at 14:56.
A fight erupted between Weeks
and Duane Sutter 9:18 into the third,
period and referee Ron Wicks:
assessed 102 minutes in penalties.
Nine other skaters were given
10-minute misconducts for joining
the fray.
Poin Varman/U PS
Gilberto Gereno-Valentin
Tnagi ‘has governor
8) BETH BRINSER
Gubernatorial candidate Mayor
Ed Koch was lambasted las! night
by Solitt Bronx Cily Councilman.
Gilberto Gerena-Valentin at a
foriim sponsored by Fucrza-Latina
Valentin called Koch the most
n New York City
nd asked the group if they
Could “imagine him as governor,"
According to Valentin, Koch has
hurt both Hispanic and Black com
munities. “He has polarized both
communities,’ said Valentin.
“Most of his administration is
White and from Manhattan. More
than 50 percent of the population is
Black, Hispanic, Native American
and so forth,
“Koch is for the
history
lectrie chair,”
hie added, “and all of those on
deathrow across the country are
citer black or hispanic
Valentin is the chair of the New
Alliance Pariy (NAP) whose ‘im
mediate purpose is 0 dump Koch."
He believes,
Koch can be
defeated; he hurt himself in the
Playboy intensiew
“When tathiny of the polities in
New York,’ you're talking of 1h
polities in America,’ said
“America is moving to
the right, Look, they elveted.
Reagan Who's taking away all the
Tights people fought for
mentioned the
Puerto” Rican
stitchood. He fell statehood
“would be venomous
tural ‘
Valentin.
Valentin also
Possibility of
ight now
He Feels itis dangerous for any state:
under the Reapan administration,
right now
He did noi forsee statehood for
Pucrta Rica because “iwo-thirds of
ihe states must agree 10 change the
Constitution,"
Valentin called the Senate a
“private white club with no blacks
Or browns. It threw out the one
black Senator it hal
Avoss. the campus
Said he hay notiged
students, He
Valentin
lasity in
feels students dont
Want {0 vel involved because “all
they're interested in is a depree
But he (knows) the student niove
Ment will bewin 10 brewh he isoli
Honism someway, somehon
Valentin is “not worried when
you're pol
NYZ. We all dance ditferent ways.
But we'll wet there.’ He is conti
dent
10 vomne 10 me 10. do.
heemuse he feels sinew
“everyone's going to be victims of
"a common: cause
Will unite the peop!
+ Valentin was a key force in bring:
bout the unprecedented
cancellation of 1981 New York City
Council elections, He protested that
he Council fines Were preventing
Blacks and Hispanicy from. being.
fepteyenied on City Couneil
He alo Tidy ehsilenved the cone
vepl af “ar tarye’? gouneil
members, “AL a Peder! court it
Nay proved unonsitutional because
ii Molited the one man, one vote
tule
Ih closing, Valentin said the
“svorst thing that hats happond to
the left wing iy the mati move
Ment, When you besin y yeform,
then you eonfonny
ASS
State University of New York at Albany,
ALBANY.
STUDENT
PRESS:
Tuesday
April 20, 1982
copyright © 1982 the Aumany Stupest Press Conroratios
Volume LXIX Number 18
‘Mysterious White Mist’ Pollutes Indian Pond
By MIKE RALFF
Pollution forms spotted on In-
dian Pond, including discarded
roofing material, sludge floating on
the water and a **mysterious'” whit
mist seen hovering over the pond is
under serutiny by Professor of
Aquatic Biology Raymond Stross,
Stross said the pond has been
polluted for years, but
could not pinpoint a cause, He in:
tends to extract a sediment sample
within the next two weeks for fur
ther investigation
“The possibility of some sort of
such as
nto
toxic substances
Phosphorous or sulfur coming
the pond from the playing fields or
the storm sewers is a good ono,"”
Stross said, **A layer of algac is also
a prime suspect in thi
pollution of
the pon
Whien Stross and his Fall 198)
Aguiatic Biology class went to take
samples of the sediments in the
pond, they were greeted by a cloudy
white material hovering over the
Whole upper end of the pond.
Stross suspected the most to be
Another form of pollution, but is
unsure of its origin and composi
tion.
The roofing material came from
@ project that was undertaken last
year 10 repair the roofs on the
Social
buildin,
buildings
Science and Humanities
According to
Maynes, the material was used in an,
roofer John
Unsuccessful landfill attempt and
Was never cleaned up. A New
England company was responsible
for the carting away of the re
mainder of the roofing, Maynes
Professors Question Tenure
and Promotion Procedures
By LISA PAZ
The widely unpopular decision by
the Council on Promotions and
Continuing Appointment advising
President O'Le:
Political Science Professors Judith
Baer and Bruce Miroff has raised
degree of
tenure to.
questions as to the
fairness in the decision-making pro:
cess of granting
tenure, News
A professor in the 4
Political Science Analysis
department not
wishing to be named accused the
Council of granting tenure 10
‘education professors more easily by
allowing them to publish less ar-
ticles. Another source claimed the
Council is more lenient toward pro-
fessors who bring money via
research grants into the university.
Vice President of Academic Af-
fairs, Stephen DeLong points out
that favorable evaluations outside
academies are important considera:
tions.
ing @ grant is better fayored for
because of the
Therefore, a professor receiv
tenure outside:
fecognition and not for the grant
iiself
But Council Chairman
Ohnmacht emphasized that
decision
tenure is carefully
sidered according to University re-
quirements,
SASU Tierney
believed Baer and Miroff were not
granted
“tefi wingers
A. professor
tenure at the the end of [is sixth
year, though he may request prior
Consideration. He is evaluated on
his teaching quality, community
service and scholarship. Once
denied after the sixth year, the pro:
fessor is allowed a grace period of
one year before leaving the faculty.
While tenure is is not necessarily
equated with promotion, it does
delegate Jim
tenure because they are
is considered for
Stross does not believe that the
Foofing is a major part oP the pro
blem, however, "While on the root,
the toxins that are in the asphalt
and tar are baked and washed out
By the time it’s taken off and
replaced, all the harmful chemie
should be inert, (But) Eve
4 source of chemfeal poll
material is a source of visual pollit
The samples Stross's class 100k
led hi to believe that the life that
Was in the sediment had been,
smothered by something, This
discovery, along with the white mist
over the lake has convinved his that
an unusual pollution exists in the
lake
AS the cause of the pollusion is a,
Yel unknown, Doctor Stross will ex
tract another sediment sample
Within Wo Weeks.
Professor Bruce Miroff
Labelled a “Teft-winge
assure the professor of a continuing
appoiniment and eventual promo-
tion,
“People jump {0 the conclusion
that a left wing professor is denied
tenure because of politics, but it
just isn't true,"” commented the on-
ly regularly voting student on the
Council, Carol Yolk.
continued on page 3
Discarded roofing af Indian Pond
"The material is a source of visual pollution. *
Tie Line Services May be
Cut Due to Rate Increase
By BARBARA RISALYATO
A possible rate hike from
$175,000 10 $350,0X) for monthly
Use Of the tic-line telephones may
foree the administration 10 discon
according 0
tinue the
Director of Financial Management
Planning Gene Gilchrist
Presently,
istration are allowed unlimited
students and ad
Of the 250 tie-line phones on
campus, The Office of General Ser-
vices of New York (GGS) wants to
climinate the $175,000 flat monthly,
© and change the billing system
to a by-the-minute system, which
Gilchrist estimated coud double the
expenditure.
University Controller Leo Neveu
believes that itemized bills Would be
necessary 10 know who is using the
phones and for how lon;
However, OGS maintains they do
Not have the technology to itemize
tie-line bills but'said they might diss
to take
Supply
Luydam
would change the tie-line system by,
having itemized SA bills and then.
allocat
Would not be hurt, but if SA were
charged for long dist
forced to allocate money from our
budget we would not be able to af-
ford them."*
count the service by 20-40 percent if
SUNYA,
minute charae
apres 10 the by-the:
New York Telephone has offered
‘and. Will
al an’ extra
Over the service,
itemized bills
The adininistration is now in-
\estivating the financial alternatives
available
instituted, the allouments must be:
made to every department for long-
IV flemized calls are to be
distance cally,
Couneil Chair John
Central
aid IP the University
that money to us, SA
nee calls and
Tie lines for the use of students
organizations are located in the SA
office, fi