Albany Student Press, Volume 70, Number 19, 1983 April 22

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APRIL 19, 1983

Softball team rips Union for fourth straight win

By, Mark Levine
SOCINTE SPORTS EDITOR

When a softball team has just won its
fourit game in-a row and {s just beginning to
find its groove, the last thing {t wants Is to
have a doubleheader rained out. Sich was
the vase for the Albany State women’s soft-
ball (eam on Saturday, as they’ watched the
inelement weather wash out their scheduled
doubleheader against Pace, The Danes were
looking to extend their four game winning
streak as they gear for (his weekend's Albany
Invitational, to be held this Friday and Satur
day on University Field,

Albany's latest win eame at the expense of
Union College last Thursday at the Dut

home field in Schenectady, Tt was a

‘at Dane rout, with Wendy Willi
providing the pitching heroles and Ci
Wallace and Tracy Kirk supplying the of
sive punch,

Williams pitched the entire seven innings,
Surrendering just one run on (wo hits, She
filso recorded five strikeouts, and did not
walk a batter,

Catcher Nancy Halloran led off the game
With a walk and s(ole second, and she scored
on Kirk's RBI groundout, Wallace then
cracked a tWo-out solo homerun, giving the
Danes an early 2-0 lead,

Albany scored twice more in the third,
Halloran again got the Danes going, leading
off with a single and stealing her second base
of the game, After Chris Cannata flied out to
right field and Kirk popped to third, Wallace
ripped an,RBI triple and Stasia Beals follow-
ed with @ run-scoring single, Kirk's RBI
single in the fifth made it $-0, and the Danes
broke the game open in the fifth by scoring
four times,

All the runs. came with two men out,
Singles by Caryl Meyer and Willlams and a
walk (0 Nancy Doyle louded the bases,
Halloran singled for one run, Cannata walk-
ed for another, and Kirk reuched base on an
error for the fourth run of the inning and the
ninth Albany run of the game,

{ED MARUSSICH UPS

First baseman Chris Cannata Is batting .968 for the 4-2 Albany State women's
softball team. Albany faces API in a doubleheader toda

The Danes upped their récord to 4-2 by vir-
tule of the win, Head coach Lee Rhenish is
happy with her team's turnaround after
dropping their first two games, but hopes her
team doesn't let up, as the State Playoffs are
just around the corner.

“We can't get comp! she sald.
‘This weekend is a must weekend for us
because We have to realize that we must be
ready for the States, We've got to get serious

about what we should do, There are no
‘games left on our schedule that we shouldn't
win

Through the first six games there have
been a number of key contributors to
Albany's success. Wallace, the cleanup hit-
ter, is hitting a blistering .476, She also le
the team with eight runs scored and seven
RBIs, Leadoff batter Halloran is hitting .389
and her on-base percentage is a very solid

560. She has scored seven runs and has ig:
hited several big innings, Williams is hitting
417 in her 12 plate appearances, while Can-
nata is presently swinging at a 368 clip. Left
fielder and third place hitter Kirk is batting
333 with six RBIs and four runs scored.

Rhenish expressed some concern about her
team’s lack of depth offensively.

“The first four hitters (Halloran, Cannata,
Kirk and. Wallace) have been carrying the

for us, 1 wish we had some more depth
for the designated hitter. But I think some of
ur lack of hitting is mental, We just have to
have the desire to swing the bat and relax at
the plate,”

Williams’ pitching has also been « major
factor so far, as she has been simply over
powering in most of her starts and has done a
fine job in relief-as well, The freshman sensa
tion has pitched 31 innings, allowing only 15
hits, 12 walks, and 16 runs, with six of them.
being earned. She has 18 strikeouts and
1.35 BRA, ‘She's been absolutely great,
Rhienish noted.

Albany's other freshman pitcher, Andrea
Piccone, has shown marked Improvement in
the later innings of her two starts. In her 11
innings, she has allowed 11 hits, 16 walks,
and six earned runs for a respectable 3,82
ERA. She has helped provide Albany with
some depth at a key position, and her success
in the ensuing games could be an integral part
of Albany's stretch drive.

This afternoon Albany hosts RPI in a
doubleheader beginning at 2:00 in their last
est before this weekend's big matchups.
Albany will open the Invitational on Friday
a 3:30 against Binghamton, They will then
take on Stony Brook at 10:00 on Saturday,
followed by a 1: ing with SUNY Bul
falo. Coach Rhenish summed up Albi
feelings about the Invitational, which is won
by the team with the best overall record in the
three games, with run differential used as a
Hlebreaker

“Last year we lost by one run, and you
better believe we're determined not to let that
happen agal

Netmen hang on for thrilling win at Middlebury

Barry Lavine euffered a three-set deta
8 tt

DAVE RIVERA UPS
against Middlebury on Saturday, but the

m came out on top In a thrilling meet,

By Mare Berman

When four and a half hours of hard fought
and naitbiting tennis tiad been eompleted in
the most lengthy meet for the Danes in 10
Albany State Men's tennis team
once again,

surviving

Years, the
folind themselves on top
defeating Middlebury College; 5-4
the biggest scare of the scason up to date

The meet, played this past Saturday at
Middlebury's indoor facility, extended the
Dane winning record to 6-1

A total of 240 games were played in all,
With six oUt of the nine matches going three
set

'm pleased We won,'* said coach Bob
Lewis, “but I don’t think it should've been
this closer We beat them 7-2 last spring and |
really feel that they (Middlebury) aren't as
strung as last year.”

First singles Barry Levine and fifth singles
Lawrence Bichen continued their slump as
both players dropped their third straight
match

Levine was outclassed by Fain Hackney in
three sets, 6-2, 2-6, 6-1

“There's alot of pressure on Levine,"
Lewis. “The problem is that at first singles,
unless he is at his best all the time, it's tough
for him to win consistently, because the com-
petition is so fierce.”

For Eichen it was a different story. His 4-6,
6-3 1-6 loss {0 Daye Revelle infuriated Lewis,
“He's just not playing intelligently, He's los~
ing to people that he's better than, His play
has got me perplexed."

‘On the other side of the spectrum, number
six singles Dave Lerner continued his winning
ways, After a slow first sol (4-6), Lerner came

roaring back, two by
Scores of 6-1, 6-2,
Dave Ulrich won his match at second

as did captain Fred Gaber

sweeping the next

singles 6-3, 7-6,
(6-0, 6-7, 7-5)

Fourth singles Rob Karen had no trouble
With Middlebury's Andy Chena, 6-4, 6-3

In the doubles slots, the Danes lost two out
Of three. But {¢ was the third doubles com:
bination of Ulrich and freshman Dave
Grossman, making his first start of the spr
ing, who clinched the meet for the Danes,

With the matches at 4-3 in Albany's favor,
Ulrich-Grossman were able to bounce back
from a second set letdown and take the
match 7-6, 3-6, 6-3,

First doubles Levine and Gaber and second
doubles Bichen-Lerner both suffered straight
set defeats.

“Although we're winning, we're not as
sharp as we Were when we played the South
during Easter,’ concluded Lewis. “Up
North we've been very fortunate to win a lot
Of our matches."

When Captain Fred Gaber was told of the
Couches remarks he responded, “1 think th
coach has a good point because I don’t think
We're playing up {0 our capabilities. We
should've beat Middlebury by more than
$4, but you've got (o consider that two-
thirds of the team are seniors and they have a
Jol on their minds such as getting their lives
seltled for next year. Meanwhile, we've been
still Winning while not playing up to our
potential, 1 think that shows alot about the
quality of our club,"

The 6-1 Danes will host their next match
today against Union - pending the court con-
ditions in the aftermath of the weekend snow
storm. oO

Friday

April 22, 1983

NUMBER 20

Junior Varsity teams will
from the intercollegiate athletic program
because of continuing pressures on budget
funds for the sports programs, according to
Vice President for University Affairs, Lewis
Welch,

The four teams are men's J.V. lacrosse,
men's J.V. soccer, men's J.V. baseball and
women’s J.V. tennis,

"The decision was atrived at based upon
the fiscal reality as a driving force," Welch
said, “The precipitating elements in dropp
ing the sports Were cuts in temporary service
funds in those programs, Second, continued
pressures on regular funded positions forced
our hand,"

The temporary serive funds pay for the
coaches and come from the state budget. In
cluded are salaries and facility maintenance
which are provided through the University
All other costs, including equipment,
transportation, meals, lodging and first-aid
are paid by the Student Association, accor
ding 10 S.A. President Mike Corso

A minimum of 85 students are presently on
he roster of the four teams being dropped,
According to the Director of Physical Educa:
tion and Recreation William Moor

Moore added that it has been a growing
trend among schools in the NCAA to drop
junior varsity programs, "In all divisions, 1,
Il and Ill, schools have been forced to cut
back their programs because of monetary
considerations,"" he said

The coaches of the varsity programs in-
yolved expressed conicern over the loss of
their J.V. teams. "The kids are the ones that
are hurt, 1 have 20 kids on my J.V. team this
year,"? lacrosse head coach Mike Motta said.
"Unfortunately these programs are the first
to go, I do not know if it will directly affect
the program immediately. But the program
will be hurt,"

“It was expected, 1 was aware of it in the
fall,” Women's tennis coach Jim Serbalik ex.
"There's definitely a need to save
If your going {0 start someplace, 1

plained:
money

J.V. baseball player Inset: Lewis Welch

DAVE ASHER UPS.

Continued pressures on regular funded positions forced our hand.”

That is not to say

sess this is as good as any
I'm not disappointed over the loss.
A list of criteria was drawn up by the
Athletic Policy and Planning Board for
maintaining junior varsity teams, accordin

to Welch, The APPB consisis of 10 persons,
he sald, seven administrators and. three
students, One of the criteria stated that the
sporls that had J.V, programs should be able
fo generate community and/or student sup:

port, according to Associate Athletic Direc-
tor Bob Ford, The only two varsity teams
that generate gate revenue are football and
baskelball. They will be the only two teams 10
field junior varsity squads next year,

The decision to cut the four teams instead
of spreading the cut backs among the ent
athletic department is consistent with Univer-
sily policy on dealing with loss of funding,
according to Welch,

"We faced the choice there always is in any
kind of enterprise, whether to share the pain
broadly or to cut an entire seyment of a pro:

n. Spreading the cuts is nol our lew on
the best way to deal with that type of situa:
jon,’ he said. “In our opinion that is the
‘oule 1o mediocrity,"

A similar decision was made several yer
wo when the University faced with severe cut
sucks in finding shut down the Nursing
School, according to Welch. Instead of
Weakening the entire system, a part of the
base was eliminated, he explained.

No further cuts in the athletic budget are
foreseen, according to Moore. "We felt we
had reached the breaking point in terms of
funding and providing the essential services
‘and facilities for all the teams," he added,

“When the budget came out, a ratio
had (0 be drawn up according to the amount
af money we had to work with, and what
{eams would be dropped first,"* Co-chalrman
of the Athletic Finance Committee of S.A.
Bob Helbock commented, "S.A, had little tu
do with the decision, Basically ii was the decl-
sion of the athletic commiltee and we went
along with it,"

The S.A, budget for nest year for the
athletic department is balanced and the sa
ings from the loss of the jumior varsity
squads amounts to $6756, according to Ford.
The breakdown is $1558 for baseball, $1819
for lacrosse, $1707 for soccer and $672 for
tennis,

“Without any question the loys of the J.V.
team will hurt the program,'' Head Baseball
Couch Dave Haight said, "We won't be able
to keep as many people on the teant, Where it
will hurt is with freshman who need a year to
Jovelop, especially pitchers.'*

Harvard’s Hoffmann expounds nuclear theory

By Debbie Judge
NEWS EDITOR

If the United States were to eliminate its
own land-based continental missiles, then the
Soviet Union wouldn't have the incentive to
take them out in a nuclear strike,

This was the gist of one stratexy discussed

WARREN STOUT UPS
Stanley Hoffmann
Would eliminate missiles,

2y Stanley Hoffmann, professor of govern:
ment at Harvard and reknowned. political
theorist, at his afternoon talk yesterday in the
Campus Center Assembly Hall, ‘The Soviet
missiles will be utterly wasted,"” Hoffmann
continued, if the U.S. dismantled its land=
based missile system. “They will find they
don't reed their arsenal, Suddenly there are
no targets." Then Hoffm:

wouldn't have to fear a first strike out of the
blue.”

The Chairman of the Center for European
Studies at Harvard, Hoffmann came to the
United States from Austria in 1958: the r
dle aged, balding man still retains the Euro-
Jean accent,

Hoffmann is a member of the Council on
Foriegn Relations as well, and the author of

feral books on American foreign policy
and European politics, including Gulliver's
Troubles (1968), Decline or Renewal?(1974),
and Primacy or World Order(1978). His for-
thcoming book Dead Ends, is a survey of
past and present American foreign policy.

‘One fairly consistent fear of American
policy makers in the nuclear age has been
that of a strategic first strike by the Soviet
Union, Such a strike would cripple present
U,S. nuclear forces before they could get off
the ground. This so called “window of
yulnerability'® was one part of a two- fold
problem in American nuclear policy which
Hoffmann described, The second dealt with
the current issue surrounding deployment of
$72 U.S, Pershing and cruise missiles in
Western Europe,

1s what
political

Having a “firststrike capability’
would give the Soviet Union
leverage, Hoffmann explained, This situ
of missiles targeted al missiles, or counter-
force targetting, is extremely unstable, buill
on an arsenal of “use them or lose th
weapons," It is a situ
pointed out, that gener
dinary itch to strike first

One solution, he said sarcastically, was the
idea of “missiles that circle arou
mysteriously at night

But he explained the United State's efforts
to match Soviet forces was a case “not of

issile envy but of counter-silo envy,”

everal times he drew from the Scowcraft
Committee report released last week, an in-
Yestigation which looked into several options
regarding strategic deployment of the U.S.
nuclear arsenal, and) which subsequently
recommended placing the missiles i
superhardened silos.

In looking at the question of U.S. missile
vulnerability, Hoffmann also passed to the
crowd the "latest fashion’’as he described it,
in nuclear strategy — non-MIRVed U.
missiles,

The mx, which carries 10 nuclear warheads
per missile, is a recent example of a MIRVed
or Multiple Independently targeted Re-entry
Vehicle missile,

Reducing the number of warheads per
missile would create problems for the
Soviets, Hoffmann explained, who then
could no longer wipe out a number of nuclear
devices in one fell swoop, thus lessening the

threat of @ preemptive first strike,

And haying multiple U.S. missiles targeted
‘at Soviet forces puts the Russians in a tough:
position. "*The Soviets have three quarters
(of their nuclear forces) in the form of sitting
ducks,"” he said, describing the Russian's
‘arsenal of land-based missiles,

“11's noi the world's most reassuring post-
tion to be in,’? Hoffmann said.

Recent negotiations, including the strategic
Arms Reduction talks and the recent In-
termediate range nuclear force talks in.

nearly hopeless, sald Hoffmann,

Hoffmann

the U.S, pi

forth a proposal to the Soviets which was
ludicrous,"” and not simply self-serving,

Hoffmann said, because it

dismantle by negotiation all

while it eaves us free to

produce bombers, continental missiles, MX.

and Trident too.

Itis a propo:
requests the Sov

ion, Hoffmann said, which
give up what we fear

Hoffmann was hardly optimisti
the INF negotiations in Europe, eithe
include Reagan's abandoned “zero-option’?
plan which was already proven a failur
In this regard, Hoffmann stressed that
U.S, strategists should not forget that the
Soviets too are “political animals,"
For one, he said ‘They know Mr, Reagan
{is not Mr, Nixon," “And they know not only
don't they (the present administration) like
1a

2 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS © APRIL 22, 1983

oy

WORLDWIDE
a

Panel will check tests

Washingtor
(AP) Rather than immediately accuse the
Soviet Union of violating arms’ control
‘agreements, President Reagan will appoint’a
panel of intelligerice experts to investigate
suspicious missile tests, administration of-
ficials say.

‘he panel will be drawn from the National
Security Council, the Central Intelligence
Agency and the Joint Chiefs of Staff and will
expand on earlier U.S, appraisals of Soi
surface-to-air missile tests and underground
Weapons blasts,

Officials at the Pentagon already had con-
cliided that a test conducied Feb. 8 in the
Plesetsk region was probably in violation of
the StrategicArmsLimitation treaty signed in
1979 but never ratified by the Senate,

Plans were being made (o have Reagan de-
nounce the Soviets in a speech or statement
tentatively set for tonight, But early this week
the president and his key advisers decided to
postpone the public criticism and undertake a
broader inquiry.

However, a secret meeting was held recent-
ly in Geneva, Switzerland, in which U.S. and
Soviet officials swapped accusations of treaty
violations, According to congressional
the session, held under the 1972
treaty, was inconclusive,

Conservatives in Congress have urged
Reagan fo go public with such allegations as a
means of undercutting the nuclear freeze
movement and bolstering his case for higher
defense spending.

Soviet spies nabbed

Washington, D.C,
{AP)Two Soviet intelligence officers
and a Soviet diplomat were caught spying
by the FBI in separate cases this month —
one of them while picking up filmed secret
documents hidden at the base of a tree —
and have been expelled from the United
States, the FBI said Thursday,

FBI Director Willlam Webster said in a
statement, an employee of the Soviet mis-
sion (0 the United Nations tried to secure a
highly classified document on Soviet-U.S,
relations from a legislative aide of Rep
Olympia J, Showe, R-Maine

A lieutenant colonel in the Soviet Army
who served as assistant military attache at
the Soviet embassy in Washington was
picked up by the FBI while retrieving eight
volls of undeveloped 35mm film of

lassified documents from a ‘dead drop’
{n the arse of a tree in a rural area of Mon-
tgomery County, Maryland near
Washington last Saturday, Webster said.

On April 2, an officer in the KGB, the
Soviet intelligence agency, assigned as an
Attache (o the Soviet U.N. mission was de-
tained by FBI agents as he attempted to ob-
tain classified U.S, aerospace and weapons
technology information from a U.S. citizen
who was cooperating with the FBI's in-
vestigation, Webster said, That incident oc-
‘cured in Manhasset on Long Island.

All three Soviets have either left the
country or are believed to be leaving, the
FBI director said, Oo

NATIONWIDE
RY il Ald

Reagan bows on cuts

Washington
(AP) President Reagan, bowing to pressure
from Senate Republicans, is offering Con-
gress a new 1984 budget blueprint that slows
his rapid defense buildup and backs down
slightly on domestic budget cuts,
Three of the president's senior aldes —
Budget Director David Stockman, White
House Chief of Staff James Baker 111, and
presidential counselor Edwin Meese —
presented the new plan to Republi
members of the Senate Budget Committee on
Wednesday,

“Nobody likes {t, but it just might pass
said Sen, Slade Gorton (R-Wash.), a commit-
tee member.

For weeks, the Republican-led committee
has been openly defying Reagan, halving his
proposed 10 percent defense buildup to 5 pe
cent, adding billions of dollars to social pro-
grams Reagan wants to cut, and considering
larger tax ii vases than the president wants
to accept,

Wednesday's meeting marked the first
lime since January that the president had
signaled a serious Willingness to compromise
‘with members of the GOP-controlled Senate,

The biggest opposition reportedly came
from four hardline conservatives led by Sen.
William Armstrong (R-Colo,) who are op:

posed to the lax portion of the propos

PREVIEW_OF

The SUNYA Chapter of AID
(Remove Intoxicated Drivers) will
meet Tuesday, April 26, at 7:30 p.m.,
In CC 356,

Fuerza Latina’s 10th Anniversary
Dance, featuring Tipica '73 and La
Sensual '83 Is Saturday, April 23, at
9 p.m, in the Campus Center
Ballroom. Admission Is $8 In ad-
vance or $10 at the door. For more
Information call 467-8651.

ASUBA Fest 1983, starring Aurra,
Soul Sonic Force, and Kurtis Blow,
will be hold Saturday, April 23, at 8
p.m,, In the gym, Tickets are $7 with
fa tax card and $8 without and can
be purchased in
Genter. For more Information con.
tact the ASUBA office at 457-3360.

‘The Pan-Caribbs
feet Monda:
HU 27

EVENT

Bill faces uphill fight

Washington
(AP) The Senate Energy Committee on
‘Thursday kept alive President Reagan's pro-
mise to deregulate natural gas, narrowly
defeating a Democratic call to continue price
controls on about half the nation’s supply.

The administration, however, acknowleds-
ed that it still has an uphill fight in getting a
reluctant Congress to remove the price ceil-
ings on “old"” gas, even though it promises
that consumer bills would fall next winter.

“1 do not in the slightest believe that it is
the fast battle,"’ said Energy Secretary
chief architect of the
jut we're much further
toward a decontrol bill than anyone ever
thought we would be two months ago,"*

By a 10-8 margin, the Republican-
conirolled committee defeated a resolution
by Sen, Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) to
eliminate decontrol of old gas from the
panel's deliberations. Consumer rates have
spiralled despite a glut in supplies and falling
prices at the wellhead,

‘The administration claims the price distor-
tions are primarily the result of the 1978
Natural Gas Policy Act, which kept price
ceilings on gas discovered before April 1977
and set up the mechanisim for gradually
decontrolling by 1987 controls on any new
gas,

Repeal close to OK

Washington
(AP) Repeal of President Reagan's embattled
plan for withholding taxes from interest and
dividends is edging toward approval in the
Senate, but just how and when the job will be
done is an unsolved problem.

“1 wouldn't break out the champagne
yet,"’ Sen, Robert J, Dole (R-Kan.), who
backs withholding, warned repeal backers
who are ready to declare a Senate victor

The withholding plan remains Jaw,
scheduled to go into effect July 1. And, by
the time both chambers of Congress finish
work onthe effort the deadline might have
ome,

Republicans, who hold a majority in the
Senate, thought thelr patchwork repeal
measure endorsed by the banking Industry
would win quick approval Wednesday, It
would allow no withholding before July 1,
1987, and only then if both houses of Con:
gress Voted for it at that time.

Although nothing in the agreement assures
Withholding would ever take effect, that was
fot good enough for many Democratic

ators. They demanded a chance to vote
for outright repeal with no ifs, ands or buts,

STATEWIDE

Abrams to defend tax

Albany
(AP) State Attorney General Robert Abrams
says his office will ‘‘vigorously defend!® New
York's new gross receipts tax on oil com
panies from a court challenge by four
Petroleum giants,

A suit filed in state Supreme Court in
Manhattan by Mobil, Exxon, Amoco and
Gulf secks to have the new 2 percent tax on
the gross receipts declared discriminatory"
against the huge oil firms.

‘The levy was imposed starting on April 1 as
art of $1 billion package of taxes designed
{o erase a $1.8 billion state budget deficit in
the 1983-84 fiscal year,

The gross receipts tax was supposed to

panies say they will not pay the levy pending
the outcome of the court challenge,

One of the litigants, Exxon, has said it wil
pay the tax while the oil giants fight it out
with the state in court,

Companies are allowed to pass the tax
along to their customers, but the way the law
is written, only the 18 largest oil firms
operating in the state are liable for the tax,
The four companies which brought suit this
week argue that it is “unreasonable
line-drawing'? and ‘discrimination’ under
the 14th amendment of the U.:

tion.

Smith found guilty

Poughkeepsie
(AP) A State Supreme Court jury Thursday
found Lemuel Warren Smith guilty of fir
degree murder in the strangulation of Green
Haven state prison guard Donna Payani,

Smith, 41, of Amsterdam, N.Y.
death in the state's electric chatr as
convicted of killing an on-duty prison guard
That part of New York's 1974 death penalty
Jaw has yet to be tested in the courts

Justice Albert M, Rosenblatt set sentence
ing for May 16. Defense lawyer William
Kunstler said he would ask that the verdict be
set aside because the case against Smith wa:
not proven,

“I feel good, 1 have God's peace. | didn’t
do anything,” Smith said as he was led from
the courtroom,
it would be inappropriate to make any
comment until all of the appeals have been
completed,"’ Gov. Mario Cuomo said in
response 10 a question whether he would er
mit Smith to die in the electric chair

Kunstler said Smith was “taking the ver
dict better’ than either Kunstler of his other
lawyer, Kunstler associate Mark Gombiner
‘hat's because he understands the syste

Constitu.

better—the whole system of American
racism.""
Suit extension OK’d

(AP) The Assembly approved a measure ex
tending the legal limit to file courtsuits for
people who think they have been haimied

becatise their mothers took DES di
pregnancy.

The drug, diethylstilbestrol, was used dur
ing the 19405 and 1950s to prevent mivcar
riages and premature births, In 1

years,however, DES-linked health proble
have been detected among some peop
whose mothers used the drug, particulath
among female “DES children,”
attempt to have babies of their own

The state's statute of limita
expired for most people wishing 10 file claims
for possible DES-created health problem

Under the measure approved Wevliexay
however, all those people would get one yea
to file suits and all future claims could
ed within three years of health problem
ning up.

The State Health Depa
estimated that up to 260,000 New York
Were exposed to the drug.

The DES legislation — similar to a spesil
provision the state Legislature has ma
Vietnam servicemen exposed to the htt
Agent Orange — does not have a
the GOP-controlled Senate,

eta
|

A |
Correction |
Will Yurman's name was inadvertently

omitted from the ASP's p:
April 19, Yurman photographed the ¢
Dane shot and also put effort into

raise $200 million a year, but several oil com-

She Stoops to Conquer, a comedy,
directed by Peter Bennet, will be
performed Tuesday through Satur.
day, April 26-30, In the Main Theater
Of the Performing Arts Center, at 8

adressed envelope to: The
ship Bank, 10100 Santa

p.m. Tickets are $3 with a tax card,

$3.50 for

public,

the Campus

for

are ni
i Association will Students

j April 25, at 7 p.m. In,

students and senior
citizens and $5 for the genera

Applications for summer jobs in a
Wide variety of professional fields,
are being accepted now by the
Scholarship Bank. Many deadiines

Interested In recelving
more information about these In-
ternships and schol

‘A Mathematics Colloquium
"Non-Compact Complete

Manifolds” will be presented by
Professor Ngaiming Mok of

Princeton University, on

these programs,
day, April 25,

30 p.m. I

ships should Hillel and World Jewry.

Send a business size stamped sell-

Bivd., Suite 750, Los Angeles, CA.
90067,

April 22, at 4 p.m, in ES 140.

The Plight of the Soviet Jew will be
discussed by Danny Gordis on Mon-
it

‘The speech Is sponsored by JSC-

issue's concept.

Excellence In teaching and advising}
awards dinner will be held on Mon
day, May 2 in the Patroon foom.
Tickets are being sold for $2 in the
BA office starting Monday, April 25

Scholar-
Monica

AMIA Tennis Tournament sion?)
deadline Is Saturday, April 23, at 12
p.m, at the AMIA office. The tourna
ment will take place {rom Sunday
April 24 to Sunday, May 1. Formore}
Information see the AMIA bulletin
board In the Campus Center

entities
Kahler

Friday,

Deaf related issues Is the subiect
@ panel discussion to be held
Monday, April 25, at 8 p.m
128,

ot
on
in HU.

In LC 2.

APRIL 22, 1983 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 3

—

UCB preparing for this

By Chris Falk

Trudging to class through slush and snow
in a winter coat; it is hard to believe that in
two weeks the field between Dutch and In
dian Quads will be teeming with people —
hopefully in shorts and bathing suits soaking
up the sun at Celebration 83 (formerly
Mayfest).

According to University Concert Board,
the event has been scheduled for Saturday,
May 7, The first band takes the stage at noon
and the music stops at 5. The entertainment
will include U2, whose latest album “War"’ is
currently in the top 20, David Johansen, who
performed at Mayfest in 80, and Robert
Hazard, according to Jeff Hoffman, UCB's
vice-ch ;

Tickets for Celebration 83 will go on sale
Tuesday, April 26 at 10 a.m. in Campus
Center room 343, according to Jack Simon,
head of the UCB ticket committee, Tax card
holders can purchase one ticket for $5.00 and
‘a second at $7,00

All ticket purchasers must have a tax card,
except alumni, who can mail in a self-
addressed stamped envelope and get a max-
imum of two tickets for $7 each,

Tickets may not be available the day of the
show, said Jeff Hoffman, depending on
whether pre-show sales reach the university-
imposed sales limit of 12,000 tickets. If
tickets are available on May 7, they will be
sold behind Dutch Quad for $12 each,

This is not the first year there has been a
limit put on the number of ticket sales, but it
is the first time the event's sponsors have had
to deal with a drinking age of 19, Because of
the new law, which went into effect last
December, a portion of the student populi:
tion cannot legally be served beer. According
to Hoffman, double proof will be required to
be presented at the show and different col-
red wristbands will be used to designate who
is to be served.

Simon said in addition to the music, beer,
and food, there will also be a fireworks
1m, over the football field,

's some good new for Alumni Quad

Students In attendance for I
In order to continue the e

and off-campus residents, According to Hof-
‘man in a letter to the ASP, extra buses will
be in operation the day of Celebration 83 (0
accommodate the large numbers of people
flowing to and from the uptown campus,
According to Steven Lichtenstein, head of
UCB's three-man publicity team, in August

of Ml .
ent, It Had to be scaled down,

SUE MINDICH UPS.

1980 the university administration cancelled
Mayfest. ‘That year the event ended late,!?
hie sald, "There was not enough tight (o clean
up and the next day it rained," This, coupled
with an attendance of 18,000 and a expected
{urnout of 24,000 for Mayfest 81 explained
Lichtenstein, "frightened the administration

r’s ‘‘Celebration’’

into discontinuing the event,"”

“We didn't know if we were going (o get
Mayfest back until March of 81," sald
Lichtenstein, He added that the university's
first move was to cancel Mayfest, bul after
much debate and effort on the part of UCB,
the event was reinstated as '‘Celebration 81,

In order to continue the event it had to be
scaled down, according to Lichtenstein, This
Included a restricted attendance through a
limit of ticket sales, an increase in security
personnel, and the fencing in of the field to
make sure only ticket holders attend, making
it less crowded, more controllable and more
enjoyable for all. He added that many other
schools, including Oneonta, have lost their
Mayfests,

In an efforl to keep crowd size down, said
Lichtenstein, Celebration 83 will nat be
advertised on WCDB or any other radio sta-
tion, ft will be publicized through posters on
campus and advertising in the) ASPonly,

UCB members started planning the enter-
fainment about two months ago, According
to Lichtenstein, the board obtains a list of
available talent from ‘middle agent’?
Monarch Talent and takes into consideration
which groups would be enjoyable to the
largest range of students. last year's bands
were A Flock of SeaGulls, Squeeze, and
Toots and the Maytails, a reggae band, He
Wa Jot of debate and thought goes into the
selection of the entertainmen

Concert Board promotes Celebration 83,
“Last year," said Lichtenstein, "the group
Squveze video taped the whole event and in
the credits for promotions are listed the
§ of many Of lust years Concert Board
members, The film was to come out in 84)
but now the group is broken up so it will pro»
bably be out later.””

Celebration 83 is SA funded, UCB and
University Auxillary Services are lis co»
sponsors, UAS provides the food and beer as
well as workers to set up and serve,

According to Simon, Celebration 83 has
no rain date, “If it rains the bands will play

ip to a point," he sald, "10S all or
nothing, a

Political funding is disputed in new SA budget

By Heidi Gralla

STAPF WRITER,

While passing 2 $569,998 1983-84 SA
groups budget Wednesday night, Central
Council overrode the SA Budget Committee
by earmarking funds for a Puerto Rican In-
dependence advocacy group, PRISA.

The Budget Committee had yoted
Unanimously not to fund the the newly form
ed controversial group. ‘This is without «
doubt the most political group (SA has) ever
funded,’ said Budget Committee member
Hamilton South, South said he felt SA
should not fund PRISA, because itis solely a

prehending the man will be ‘01
pus Center that night.
Upset at the time of the report

Henighan explained that an “extensive
report.

don't want to,

SUNYA Co-ed allegedly raped
on the podium Friday night

By Deb Profeta

NEWS EDITOR

ASUNYA woman was allegedly raped at knifepoint near the Fi
10:15 and 10:30 p.m. last Friday, according to Director of Public Safety John Henighan.

The 29 year old, part-time student claimed she was attacked by an unknown assailant
who, Henighan said, ‘threatened her life with a displayed weapon”

Investigator John Hayner explained that the woman had been studying in the library
srior to the attack. As she exited the building to return to her car parked in the lot near
Fine Aris, Hayner said her assailant allegedly grabbed her

The incident was reported by the victim's husband
tack, according (o Sheila Coger, the only female police officer at University Pol

She explained that the woman was only able to provide a ‘'vague description
assailant, Because the woman was unable to supply police with a sufficient description, ap-
shot in a million,"” Coger said, adding that it will be dif-
ficult to pinpoint whether he was a student, visitor, or a member of the party at the Cam-

Although the woman was offered medical treatment following the report, Coger said
“she didn't accept treatment until the next day,” noting that the victim was confused and

investigation’’ will be conducted following the

political group.""

In addition to PRISA, approximately 80
groups were budgeted during this year's pro=
cess, according to SA President Mike Corso,

He added that less than 20 of them appeal
ed their budgets at any time during the pro-
cess, ‘This year’s budget Is balanced,
equitable, and realistic," said Corso,

The total budget including SA groups,
Dippikill, SASU, NYPIRG, and Athletic Ad-
visory board comes (0 $894,193.89, accor-
ding to SA Controllor David Schneyman,

University Concert board received one of
the largest budgets of any SA funded group,
at 134,940,

Their total appropriation came

ie Arts building between

le of hours’? following the at-

ac

of her

If anyone is confronted with a similar situation, Coger advises women to feel free to sce
her at the UPD office, She stressed that they don't have 1o speak with a male offer if they

lo $54,940, WCDB also had one of the

largest budgets, They were budgeted a total
Df $46,600, with an appropriation of
$43,400,

There were many problems with last y
SA budget sald Schneyman, He contends
that income lines were unrealistically inflated
and interest was budgeted at a higher percen-
lage than SA received.

Budget Committee Chair Joanna
co, whi served as secretary (0 the Committee
year said this year's group budgets were
nuich more realistic."” In many cases, ex
plained Sarrocco, groups were given lower
requiring them to earn less money

mended the Budget Com-
mittee on an “excellent job,"” had been con:
sistenily reminding Councit for several weeks
that he would not sign a budget that was
unrealistic or unbalanced

‘The budget was balanced after some final
cuits Were made in Various areas Of SA, Corso
said he belived this to be a very realistic
budget, adding that no interest was
budgeted, payroll takes were accounted for
and the whole budget was done with
titude of expanding some programmin,

In addition to approximately 5 new groups
Which received funding this year, Council
voted to add a Minorities Affairs Coordina-
tion at a stipend of $1320,

The job, according to Central Council
Chair Jeff Fromm, is to “represent minority
interests to both the administration and SA,
The second phase is to assist the director of
Programming in coordinating and com:
municating with all of the minority groups on
this campus,”

Fromm sees this as a very significant deci-
jon in SA. “WI
ye do have problems with minoriti

With regard to PRISA, South said, "I feel
hat since we are dealing with the students’
We Were Lo support this group we
na sense saying that the students.
support Puerto Rican Independence, when
the fact is that we don't know what the

students support,”” he explained

According to Corso, who favored funding
PRISA, the SUNY guidelines prohibit: the
funding of political groups, but this does not
resolve thie issue, “The term political \s the
question, what should or should not be
political?" he queried,

SA President-Elect and current Chair of
Central Council's student action Committ
Rich Schaffer added that a few years ago fun-
ding PRISA wouldn't have been an issue at
all, “The auitude of the students is changing,
especially in terms of the definition of what's
,"" he noted,

PRISA is not actually receiving an ap-
propriation. They were budgeted for $4279
but their budget also requires them to earn
$4279 in income,

Corso had originally proposed to Council a

13>

{ALAN CALEM UPS

Audgat.Chalr Johanna Sarrocco

Budgets “more realistic”

APRIL 22, 1983 0. ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 5

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Sakharov’s life and views on USSR described

y Steve Foxx
STAFF WRITER

The step-daughter of dissident Soviet
nuclear physicist Andrei Sakharov, Tatiana
Yankelevich, asserted that her internally exil-
ed father believes the West must “apply
pressure to make the Soviets pay attention 10
International agreements,”” during a forum
Thursday night in LC 5,

Speaking with her husband Efrem
Yankelevich, Tatiana called Sakharoy an

avid human rights advocate,

Efrem Yankelevich, speaking in Russian
and being translated by his wife, said that
repression and persecution is practiced in
almost every facet of Soviet society,
Dissidents, such as Sakharov, said Efrem,
“are punished and declared mentally insane
for saying sane stalements."’ ‘Dissidents
don't have the support they deserve within
the Soviet Union because it is too dangerous
fo express support,’’ Efrem declared. He ad-
ded that a peace and disarmament group

within the Soviet Union {s being cruelly
persecuted for its beliefs,

Sakharov, known as the father of the
thermo-nuclear bomb, is now exiled within
Russia because ‘he knows too much about
Soviet atomic weaponry," Efrem said,
Sakharov is also a member of the Soviet
Union's Academy of Sciences and was a 1975
Nobel Peace Prize winner.

Efrem said that because of the nature of
the Soviet system and distrust of the Soviet

and devotion to
By Mike Taubleb =

Declaring that “each German has a
responsibility to remember the Holocaust,"”
Nazi hunter Beate Klarsfeld, who was in-
strumental in the extradition of Klaus Bar-
bie to France, spoke on her years of strug:
gle at an hour-long talk Tuesday night
Klarsfeld, a non-Jewish German, who
has been bringing Nazi's to justice for the
past sixteen years declared that, ‘This
esponsibility includes supporting Israel
and fighting the persecution of Jews. Only
when We recover our moral reputation, will
We (Germany) take our place among the
world’s leading nations,’’ she adde

Klarsfeld said she works alone in most
cases and has pursued Nazi's in Germany
ind South America. Most recently, she was
involved in bringing to justice the man who
lwas responsible for the deportation of
thousands of Jewish children to the concen
tration camp at Auschwitz, Klaus Barbie,
|. She said that she decided to take action in
the Barbie case after finding that evidence

te Klarsfeld __
is Nazis (0 Justice,

Tatiana and Efrem Yankelevich oxpress facets of Soviet society.
“Dissidents don’t have the support they deserve.

because is (oo dangerous,

Nazi hunter relates her struggle

seeking justice

Of his living In La Paz, Bolivia was known
to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in
France, but that no effort was made to ex
tradite him and bring him to trial, She add-
ed that her attempts since then to get Barbie
extradited were futile until, “last year when
the ‘Communist’Mitterand came {0 power
in France, then 1 was finally able {0 per
suade the French government to extradite
Barbie,"” Barble is now on trial charged
with signing a telegram that condemned 41
French children to deportation to concen:
tration camp during World War 11, she
sald
The Naz| hunter said she began her work
1 1966 when she made severat verbal and
shysical attacks on the then German
Chancellor, Kurt Kiesinger, an avowed
Nazi sympathizer. ‘1 mobilized youth
groups in Germany against Kiesinger, and
eventually contributed (0 his replacement
by the anti-fascist Willi Brandt,” she add-
ed, Since then Klarsfeld said she has been
jailed several times, and has been the target
of terrorist attacks because of her
sometimes vehement attacks upon govern-
ments who harbor Nazi criminals,
am pushed by the importance of my
id there is no one to continue my
Klarsfeld explained, She added
‘while the Nazi's have been subdued,
the PLO is the number one proponent of
anti-Jewish terrorism. ‘Because of the
prevailing, worldwide anti-semitism, Jews
lant against It, put pressure
L Jews

must remain v
own Leaders to protect Jews and prev
from abandoning Israel and their Jewish
dentity,”” she said

With her husband Serge, a French Jew
and holocaust victim, Klarsfeld said she
uns the Klarsfeld Foundation, Inclided in
the Foundation’s work is documenting and
publishing information to dispute so-called
Revisionist. Historians who claim the
Holocaust never took place,

Klarsfeld said that she and her husband,
who live in France, are also active in forcing
localities to forbid meetings of Neo-Nazi
groups:

The address was held in the Campus
Center ballroom and was co-sponsored by
the Jewish Students Coalition-Hillel and
the Revisionist Zionist Alternative, i

LISA SIMMONS UP

By Chris Thomas
STAME WRITER,

The Depariment of Anthropology at
ISUNYA has been ranked number one in
“scholarly, productivity!” in the most recent
National Academy of Science survey of
graduate programs

The survey, a nationwide study of over
3000 graduate programs which is based on 15
ctiteria Including scholarly activity, faculty
size, and facully quality, placed Albany's
department above such traditionally
recognized programs at Harvard, Columbia,
UCLA, UC at Berkely, and Penn, for
percentage of faculty publications,

According to anthropology professor
Dean Snow, the department's output level
received the high rating, “because we've
hired a bunch of workaholics who are doing
what they love to do, There are no signs of
slowing up,'" he added,

According to department chairman Gary
Wright, the department is presently focusing
Its attention on Meso and Central America as
well as the Northeastern United States, Meso
cultures include the Mayan and other Latin
Indian groups. Professor Robert Carmack,
for example, sald Wright, is now conducting
field work in Chiapas, Mexico in conjunction.
With that area's Mayan Indian population,
Five graduates and five undergraduate
students are taking five courses and fearning
fthnology firsthand in order to retain full
time student status while in Mexico, All are
taught by Carmack, Wright said,

Th the Meso American department the
University claims nine experts, said Wright,
some of them also Northeastern experts, thus
making it the largest such staff in the nation,
They specialize in ethnology, archacology
‘and linguistics

Wright praised his d
noting the ‘first class'? linguistics work of
professor Lyle Campbell, Marianne Mithum
‘and Wallace Chafe, the Intter two held joint-
ly with UC Berkely. Wright explained he
would like to obtain an expert in the field of
American Indian culture or linguistics,
however, he conceded that this would be

unlikely considering projected budget
limitations.!*

‘The NAS survey will ald the department on
equiring the grants needed to fund its fleld
Work, said Wright, Carmack's Chlapos pro-

artment’s members,

ject has been granted $70,000 by the National

press, “‘it is hard for people within the Soviet
Union to draw any conclusions on the
nuclear peace movement, or the dissident
movement," The ideology of the governemnt
today, Efrem said, is a variation of Marxist
ideology, ‘It is a more nationalistic ideology
in which priority is given to preservation of
the stalus quo, and keeping power in the
hands of the governors,"” he added,

The combination of the people wanting a
strong leadership to fight corruption, and the
slate wanting fo have a monopoly over all ac-
tivities, Efrem said, ‘makes it doubtful for
peace movements to be successful within the
Soviet Union," He adiled that because of the
mentality of the Soviet leaders, they
belleve''they are surrounded by enemles and
must defend themselves.'” There is a very
“fragile hope! for an end to the nuclear
‘arms race, he contended,

Efrem added that he does not think that
the current leader Yur Andropov will last
Jong because “the bureacracy does not Hike
strong leaders," T ion of
leaders within Russian polities sald Efrem,

‘will be more dangerous, more cruel and
mereiless, because (hey have no IMuslon

When asked if he thought Sakliaroy would
leave the Soviet Union, if he was able (0
tomorrow, Efrem sald that he would, "He
would leave so that he could lead a normal

s fife and hls work are without
hie added

“Soviet dissidents will continue to fight for
Human tights everywhere,"” Efrem stresyed,
The foruny wis sponsored by the Political
Science department in conjunction with the
Graduate School for Public Affairs, and was
moderated by Politival Science Professor
Jane Zacek, {

Anthropology ranked first

Endowment for the Humanities, which will
fund the project through December of 1984
Recent gains in the department have been
made, sald Snow, most notably the develop-
Of a greater spatial base for graduate
laboratories on the downtown campus which
has also provided students needed space for
storage and experimentation,

Kim Hargan of Anchorage, Alaska, one of
65 graduate students in the anthropology
department, noted its excellent quantitative
computer classes us opposed to other
schools’ programs, which he said often incor-
Porate such courses into statistics programs,
Hargan added that he felt the de
was not weakened despite its heavy re
orientation,

Graduates of the department have been
placed in business, federal and state govern:
ment, and on the faculties of universities
Suich as Bailor and Harvard, Snow attributed
successful placement to the fact that “people
Who graduate from here are damn good!"

First place ranking by such a prestigious
organization, said Snow will help the depart-
ment of anthropology, established separate-
ly from Social Sciences in 1970, gain greater
Credibility in academic circles as well as with
underwriters of academic endeavors,

Chalr Gary Wright

§ 0 APRIL 22, 1983”

SOVIET JEWS
are your concern also...

Come hear Danny Gordis speak on his mission to
the Soviet Union.
Come to LC 22 at 7:30pm, Monday Night, April 25th

and hear him speak on the plight of the Soviet Jews.
For More Info Call JSC-Hillel 7-7508

PRICE: JSC-Hillel Members 75¢
Tax Card Holders $1,00
All Others $1.50

Sponsored by JSC-Hillel'’s World Jewry Committee
SA Funded

—— —

WOMEN’S CAREER
SEMINAR

A Program Designed for Graduating Women Seniors

FEATURING: First Job Skills, Insights, and Survival

Tips

BE BETTER PREPARED FOR LIFE AFTER SUNYA

Tuesday, May 3rd 7:00pm
Campus Center Assembly Hall

Sponsored by the Women’s Concerns Committee of
the University Commission for Affirmative Action

© The MouselrAp “
: )

Wine and Cheese Place
ind
ot ~~ Sihris Sommer
accompanted by Charles Sachs

)) ‘eat rspresen yur ove 8 nr you que ent oe
ils worth of Nee York Sale Laley eels!

April 22 & 23 ;
CAMPUS CENTER PATROON ROOM K »)
~ FRIDAY AND SATURDAY O

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APRIL 22, 1983 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 7

Proposals would consolidate aid

By Aileen Brown

Albany students as well as students nationwide can
appreciate the fact that changes in the federal student
financial assistance programs can have a significant ef-
fect on their financial aid resources. The proposed
changes by the Reagan administration in the 1984 stu-
dent aid programs would consolidate six financial ald
programs into one loan program, one work study pro-
gram and one grant program,

In a campus newsletter released by the Federal
Department of Education, Assistant Secretary for
Post-Secondary Education Edward M, Elmendorf in-
dicated the proposed changes in the federal ald pro-
grams. To facilitate consolidation of all the student ald
programs, the federal government Is discontinuing ap.
propriations for three of the six programs,

The first program to be affected is the State Student
Incentive Grant (SSIG) Program, This program was
established in 1972 10 provide states with an incentive
to establish their own grants and scholarships. As
Elmendorf states, “these slate programs awarded
over one billion dollars last year. Thus, after eleven
years the incentive provided by the SSIG program has

A greater burden will be placed on the student,

successfully generated more dollars than the federai
government could possibly have hoped."’ This pro-
gram is being entirely phased out in the proposed 1984
budget, decreasing by 120 million dollars the amount

vailable to students from this program alone,

The second program targeted for elimination in 1984
is the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant
(SEOG) Program. This program was designed (0 sup:
plement the Pell Grant program, The federal govern
“the problem with
SEOG is that it is not targeted to help those students
who really need federal assistance." Fundamentally,
however, the program will reduce by $800 the amount
of money the neediest student could borrow. Charles
Treadwell, a Program Research Specialist for the New
York Siate Department of Education illustrated this
fact, Previously, with the combination of the Pell
Grant, with a maximum grant of $2000, and SEOG,
with a maximum grant of $1800, the neediest student
could receive up to $3800, With the Pell Grant Self
Help Program replacing SEOG, the maximum amount
Grant is raised to $3000, but this still
s the neediest studentys will get $800 less that they
previously could obtain. This puls a greater burden
n the student to cither take out a loan or drop out of

school.’”

However, Duncan Helmreich, a Public Information
Officer for the Federal Department of Education com-
mented that although the consolidation of the Pell
Grant and SEOG will result in a net loss for the needy
students, an increase in the allocations for the College
Work Study program will enable them to get more
money through Work Study programs." However,
Donald Whitlock, director of the SUNYA financial
ald office commented that his office was “‘opposed to
the proposed 1984 Self-Help program which call for
the elimination of SEOG and the NDSL programs,
This eliminated the financial aid office's ability to
target money for students with extreme need,"

The final program proposed to be discontinued by
the federal government in 1984 is the National Direct:
Student Loan (NDSL) Program. In the 25 years since
it was established, the NDSL program has received ap-
proximately 12 billion dollars in revolving funds for
schools to give out as student loans. It will be replace
fundamentally by the Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)
Program, however, that program has also. been

|, Last year, a needs test was instituted by the
jon so that all families with incomes over

$30,000 must prove genuine need before they are given

loan, In New York state alone last year,
stated, this “led to a 13 percent loss in NY
state due to the disqualification of students and also
due to confusion about the law which led to some
students not applying for ald." For 1984, the govern-
ment is proposing that the needs test be extended to
families of all incomes. This, says Treadwell, means
that “they are going after the families with incomes
under $30,000. This can only lead to the disqualifica-
tion of more students and a greater loss of funds for
NY state." This proposal, said Treadwell will mean an
estimated loss of $15 million dollars to NY, affecting
approximately 70,000 students,

Whitlock commented that the eliminatio
NDSL program was a re
tion of the NDSL program will seriously jeopardize
middle class students, They will be caught in a web of
being just over the limit for the GSL program, and yet
will still have significant need, They will be forced (0
obtain either loans at exorbiant interest rates, W

also adamandily opposed to the idea that the
to a full spectrum needs test.” ia)

Feds stop buck at student paper

ed the SUNY:
‘student radio
ampus paper
jedan article

A U.S. Secret Service agent visi
Oswego campus following the alrin,
program which questioned whether the
ted a federal law, The issue conce
fh used paper money as a background,
the April 7 edition of The Oswegonian, a coll
and ten dollar bills served

of one dollar, five dollar s

the background for a report on the new SUNY budget
and tuition increases.

John Stempen a member of WOCR AM's public af
fairs program, “Midday alled the Secret
Service inquiring if the graphic violated counterfeiting
jaws, He taped the conversation and later played it on

sir. The graphic did not yiolate any laws, but a
fret Service agent from Syracuse dropped by the
newspaper and left a copy of the official guidelines for
reproducing currency

The Wire Services we
of the radio program,

also called by staff members
and the incident made front

page news in the local papers, according to The
Oswegonian Editor-in-Chief Melanie Janowsky

“It was all taken very lightly,”” Janowsky said, “But
the lack of integrity of these guys makes journalism
ook bad." She said the program producers Tim
Horan and Rob Fain frequently sensationalized the
news.

WOCR General Manager J. Mychal Britto has
ancelled the program, which won three UPI
‘ wards including first place in documentary

reporting

The forty-yei

year, said, “The biggest factor (in his d

cancel the show) was money: It was very expensive (o

produce, The staff of “Midday Magazine” ran up &

phone bill one month of $00, he sad, adding that thy
Ss s1700 The calls to th

the straw thal broke the camel's back,

“They are extremely talented people,"” he added.
“But 1 haye to protect the image ot the station—we
need a cooling off period." o

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Part of the problem

Albany winter wash away into the sewet and sink back in-

to the dank earth, The end of the semester now looms
conspicuously over the horizon; a blinding, blistering Inferno of
‘mounting academic pressure forms an aura towards which one is
Inexorably drawn, Jutting menacingly through the glare, dark and
ominous, marching ever closer with unquestfonable certainty and
casting a shadow so dark over the entire landscape that it throws
all that stands before it Into an Impenetrable abyss
stands, .... FINALS WEEK!

‘As we begin to bear down once again for the final showdown, it
Seems a most propitious occassion to step back one last time and
look beyond narrow confines of calculating that magical number
Which will arise out of the tumult of the mid-May madness. The at-
titudes which tend to overtake students, especially during these last
Tew weeks, reveal the misconceptions we may hold concerning our
educatlon, our futures, and our place in the world which we are
preparing with such ardor and zeal (0 become a part of,

Now that the recent Student Assoelation, Central Council, and
Various class elections are over and done with, many students
believe that they can return to their lives in peace, and that the
school will function for them with litle disturbance, providing the

A the sun radiates above us, the last vestiges of another

wices and activities they desire at the appropriate moments
Fees nen we eve SUNYA behind wl be ou grade, nt
SA ot Central Council, which will follow us from city to city and
determine the course of our lives, right? i

“There is no denying that an altitude is cultivated at this un
ty which focuses almost obsessively on choosing a career and
secuting a place for oneself In this dog-eat-dog world, This process
Of limiting ourselves so severely, however, isa two-way street, and
its long term affects can be detrimental

Leading a successful and fulfilling life as a student involves
more than preparing oneself exclusively for the job market. To
shut out the wealth and variety of opportunities for self explora
tion and expression Which lle before us now amounts to nothing
short of selfebetrayal, As one Albany professor reminds his
siudents each year, “Don't let school interfere with your educa
tion," There are many other qualities and skills which are at least
4s Important as choosing the right major, or pulling good grades
Limiting your scope and awareness of the world outside your
‘courses and career means that you are not doing justice to fulfil
ing your potential as a human being. Attending a university pro:
Vides us a unique opportunity to explore, and experiment with our
Invellects, politics, and ideals, Most importantly, we are able

iversi-

through this process 10 develop our self-awareness, inner st
‘and understanding of ourselves and the world in which
‘And in the long run, itis this other education which often
mines the course of our lives,

So in between casting your vote and burying yourself in the
books, reflect for a moment on the meaning and importance of
both, Your only concern here should not be your grades, There isa
great deal more within the confines of Perimeter Road than
classrooms and a library. Only if you avoid that grades/carer
oriented tunnel vision, and instead develop your rich and diverse
potential as a student, will you truly receive an education

Just as there is more (0 being a student than geiting good grades,
there is more to becoming a successful human being than making
good living. As the world becomes mote fast-paced,
impersonal, it takes @ greater effort on the part ‘
maintain and assert one's humanity and iridividuality, 1 is nea
impossible both (o function in this world and divorce oneself fom
its concerns. In other words, you can't just go about your b
anymore and expect the world to
become aware, concerned and commited, or you become ju
another cog in a growing economic machine — “If you're not
of the solution, you're part of the problem,"*

ive

$5 over you. So either

Cc

oO L U OM

N

Self serving Democrats

‘Though supposedly the party which represents the work-
ing class and minorities, the recent Chicago mayoral elec-
tion only proved that the Democratic party represents little
but its own self-serving interests.

Ina city heavily populated with voting Democrats and
controlled by the Democratic machine at all levels of
fon to the Republican candidate was
ficant. Many a Democratic city alderman
transcended conventional party lines and swung their sup-
port away from black Democratic candidate Harold
Washington toward the opposition party candidate,
Republican Bernard Epton.

Robert Martiniano

Ostensibly, local aldermen claimed this switch in support
was made to preserve Chicago's Democratic machine, the
controlling factor in Chicago politics for decades,
Washington publicly stated he would dismantle Chicago's
machine if elected, That obviously threatened the political
desires of many @ person,

Bul for whatever reason given, the election fragmented
the Chicago Democratic party and stratified its voting
populace, While Epton was courting Chicago's scared
White Democrats, Washington and company were or-
chestrating a mass Voter registration which would ultimate
|y propel Washington into the mayoral seat,

If Chicago aldermen were nalve and self-serving, the r
maining Democrats in the nation were cunning and self-
serving, In hopes of combining a hot political Issue — race,

See

SS
aa
y

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a municipal election in a heavily Democratic city, and
presidential politics, 1984 presidential hopefuls marched
hand-in-hand with Washington declaring and
demonstrating undying support for Washington, a fellow
Democrat, and minorities throughout this great nation.

In actuality, Mondale, Glenn, and company took their
campaigns to Chicago to save what is left of the Democratic
Party's image, to attract media attention, and to attract the
k yole 10, first, their campaign, and secondly, the

Democratic Party

At face value, these candidates did accomplish their
goals. With the result of Washington eking out a victory
over Epton, a minority member of the Democratic Party
won an election, another Republican bit the dust, more
people became registered Democrats, and the Democratic
presidential candidates drew attention to their candidacies,

On a gut level, however, the campaign in Chicago and
the accompanying mud slinging and racial slurs severely
hamstrung the Democratic Party's image as an all:
encompassing party and one which truly champions the
cause(s) of the Working person, Though the opposition
alluded to race ay an election issue, the defection of the old
party line Democrats accentuated the problem to the ex-
treme,

A political party cannot consider itself a (rue represen-
lative of the people when a faction of that party defects to
the opposition over an issue which supposedly binds it, One
issue which is binding, supposedly, in the Democratic party
is ils commitment to the working class, irregardless (sic) of
face, or religion, or gender, or econemical status.

That commitment cannot be paraded before the elec-

{orate just during an election year and then close
remaining off-election years, Furthermore, any
class Issue cannot be relevant just during election
inconsequential for the remaining weeks prior (0 and
quent to the election. The party then becomes one of op
portunity rather than one of substance,

John Stuart Mill wrote that there exists {wo (ypes 0
political animals — one cautious in actions and one bold
actions. Consequently, political parties followed that div
sion, the former corresonding to the Republican Party, the
latter corresponding to the Democratic Party, Kail Man
thought only one political party should exist — one party
committed to any and all working class issues. No other
party need exist since the working class is the only classi
existence in the Marxist state,

Under which definition does the Democratic Party {i
Though in reality coming closer {0 the former detinill
especially considering America’s predominantly "
system, the Democratic Party has always hoped
the latter, Realistically, however, neither defini
the true essence of the Democratic Party

For those of us who have taken organ
theory(ies), or at least debated the subject at WT
Democratic Party has become an organizational

one goal — to preserve a bureaucratic leadership i
identity entrenched by time, The Democratic Par
desire — to ensure Its continued existence.
Believing the Democratic Party serves the
blinds the electorate from the true party, The party
have become an opiate for the registered Democra
than a stepping stone for social change and equality

INSTITUTION |
THAT FELT,
YOUR LIBRARY |
WAS
CONSISTENT
WITH ITS

SIEIN’® |
Poet

An Aspects
Look at Your
Cosmopolitan

Pick Your

Bachelor

of the

Month
ii
How to
Choose
Music to
Make

CTS

April 22, 1983

)

A Man
and His

Life in
Clothes +

How you

Can Now Lose
Thirteen Pounds
in Only

Thirteen Days

a

Confessions
of a
Reformed
JAP

Plus! Plus!
A Man's

‘Outrageous
Opinion of
Women

in -Bars

Step Into
My Parlor

(Hi guys, hope you had a g/orious weekend! I know I did, but
well, that’s just me, Went to a divine party Friday night. . Cloud
made an absolutely scrumptious punch, and the music was
wonderful, . , we all did the latest dance craze, thank God, our
darling Mr, Rafal taught it to us before the rest of the world
learns it, the ‘‘Rob’? as it is affectionately called, Well anyway,
all the gang was there, and, well, I don’t know about you, but if
you did happen to miss it, you missed one sparkling event. By the
way, the infamous ‘Password’? Odd Couple was on Friday night
which we caught before the party and needless to say, it was a
classic event, Girls, I think we can all agree that good ole Fel and
Osc never looked cuter than when they're on the stage with Alan
Luden, What heroes? Anyway Saturday morning wasn’t really
seen since our escapade the evening before didn’t end until the
wee hours (boy can Chris dance. . .for those of you that would
like to check that solid man out, turn to our annual event, yes
that one and only Bachelor-Of-The-Month Contest, featured in
this very issue.) Though it snowed Saturday night, it didn’t stop
us, party animals that we are. . .Ms. Rogers had her Beach Party
that appropriate night, and was it wonderful. We saw all kinds of
extremely neat fashions that night, Kenny looked absolutely dar|-
ing in his Ferrari sunglasses, and well, Jordan looked exceptional
in his sweats which didn’t stay dry for very long, if you know
what I mean, You don’t? Well too bad, Only those who went to
that great party can understand, To continue, Sunday morning

Will Yurman UPS

Boas er s
was rather nice, Girls, one word of advice: You really should de-
mand that your man make you breakfast Sunday morning, after
all, you are special, Us over at 182 Ontario were royally treated
when Oaky wined and dined us that cozy morning. It was truly
adorable of him to cook Pete and Joe and Lee and me breaky-
breaky, Absolutely delish, if you know what I mean. To con-
clude this phenomenal (Sorry, but I adore superlatives) weekend
was the all-nighter I pulled with Craig (another Bachelor beauty,
please check him out) and Rick, Yes, we did study our German
Expressionist plays (and who says we're not artsy) a/l night.
Thank God for Pizza-To-Go, although the company was once
again, divine. We're all very big on expressionism, you know.
Last but not least, I hope that you all went to Rock Night last
night, if you didn’t you missed the last of our Bachelor Beauties,
Joe, the infamous Program Director at WCDB. Shame on you if
you missed it, I want to especially thank Boomer for his faithful
help and much needed support and Mr, Andy Carroll for all his
warm inspiration, ingenious ideas and’ patience. Hope you all
have a glorious day, and by all means have a nonblah weekend.

Forever,
AK

Cover Girl

Our cover girl this issue is the lovely Alena Alexis, recently
discovered last year in France, while Roman Polanski was filming
his latest flick Frightened. Alie (as she prefers to be called) lives in
Manhattan now and has graced the covers of many fashion
magazines, Alie loves all types of music, especially hard core
punk rock, Eno, and Indian Chant Music, She avidly reads and
writes poetry, Frequently she will quote Dostoevsky; as Alice puts
it, ‘*We always see reality as we, in a preconceived notion, want
to interpret it to ourselyes.’? Good Luck, Alie.

Cover and inside photos of Alle by Me, Will Yurman UPS

~ Worn sweatshirt; his mother will see that Bloomingdales label,
‘As for your "Medical Man," leave him at home and take care of him later.

Lucinda Norbert’s

AGONY COLUMN

Q, The product of a wealthy Westport, Conn. family, Marcus was a rebel.
We fell in love shortly after we met one tine spring day on the Yale campus
doctor, Mar-

Q, Dad left home when | was very young. Well actually, | think Mom threw him
out. | was only six years old at the time,

After that, | never saw my father. All remember mom saying about him was
that he was “no good” and that | should forget about him. She even threw
away all the pictures of him. | managed to salvage one that | kept hidden in my
dresser draw under my panties — mom always made me wash my own.

That photo became my father. Often I'd lay on my bed staring at that photo
and tried to imagine what ly be I

where we were both juniol is parents wanted him to b
cus Wanted to be a writ th, requiring few world. Inthe meantime | discovered | had talent in acting. | also discovered | had an
jed In rags and ate just enough to keep himself from attraction for older men, which can give a teenage girl a mighty bad reputation

ly possessions, He dre
starving. The friends he surrounded himself with were all from the ar-
de

In her home town.

Anyway, that town was getting to be a real drag. As soon as | graduated
from high school | moved out to L.A. where | worked as a clerk in a department
store while landing a couple minor parts with a local acting company. While |
escaped my home town, | never escaped my need for older men.

‘One night after a Successful debut at the Circle 9, we went to
McMilian's for a little celebration, | met the nicest man, He was thoughtful,
and had 8 great body besides, We ended up at my place where we
It was gi

xp lings for me In a lovely, poetic way that Just swept me

off my feet. Against both our parents wishes, we started living together. | drop-

ped out of Yale and took a job as a waltress to support him. He was working

foverishly on were tough but the moments when he'd tak

break and we'd laugh and make love wore what made It all worth while.

1 was 80 engrossed [n our love that | never noticed his rapidly deteriorating
a

health, Marcus got very sick and | took him to the hospital. Two weeks la .
iside as he passed from this world. Two days later, { ran on to the picture of my father. The strangest feeling

pp
‘My first question Is, what should | wear to his funeral?! have a beautiful wi came over me: That man was my father! — maybe a little grayer, but it was

drobe — Sachs, Bloomingdales, Lord and Taylor, etc... which would please his him.
But on the other hand, all his artist friends will be there decked out in Now, most women would be disgusted and abhored but to tell you the truth,

parent
Joa id sweatshirts, Help me, which way do | turn — blue jeans or Bloom- _{'d like to see him again, What should | do? And If we do get together, should |
Ingdales? tell him that I'm his daughter?
‘Secondly, do you think | should bring along the pre-med student I've started
‘A. Honey, while Sigmund Freud wrote about the Electra Complex, he never

seeing? .
A. Between two extremes you will always find a middle ground, Here you can

find that center line with your parents’ checkbook and a quick trip to Bloom-
{ngdales. The Norma Kamal! sweatshirt line gives you that “artey’' look for a
big pricetag — you get the rags and you've got the tag. His friends will see a

sald anything was wrong with It! Start frequenting MeMillan’s a little more
often and go for your “ultimate older man''!

As for the detalls about your “special relationship,” keep It as your own lit-
tle secret.

Music To Make

Love By

by Douglas Whitney

You've done it! You've managed to attract, bait, and ultimately pick up that
gorgeous member of the opposite sex. You, and-or he-she have just paid the tab, and
you're on the way out the door, Who's place are you going to? if the answer is yours,
then this article is for you,

You're at your place now. Try to divert their attention from the dirty socks and
Unmentionables that litter the floor, Steer them away from the eat's litter box, filled to
the rim with something other than Brim. Things start going well, The wine is chilled but
You're not, In fact, you're absolutely boiling (and they are too, hopefully), All eyes turn
towards the bedroom, or a chair, ot the floor, or the tub; depending on how adven-
{urous you are. You put on some tunes, all seems fine, and then suddenly everything
comes {0 a screeching halt, Things go limp and dry up. You both turn to ice. At best
what follows is mediocre; at worst, damn embarrassing. What happen? ft just may turn
‘out that the musical vibes quashed your sex drives,

Music plays an enormous, although vastly underestimated role in our lives, Think
about It-- scarcely a minute goes by where we don't hear some sort of music, It deter-
mines our moods, feelings, emotions, etc, Yet some people treat music as an unimpor-
tant acessory when it comes to sex. This is wrong! Music is just as if riot more important
than leather goods, gels, belis, and all the other goodies that make sex the most
popular indoor sport next to Yahtzee, The purpose of this article is (0: each you
all, male or female, on how to enlist music as a powerful ally in the Battle of the
Bedroom, Follow my instruction, and you'll score more than Pele playing against an
open net.

t, the best music means nothing if your stereo just can't cut the mustard, Guys,
stop wasting your money on season tickets-- spend it on a good tape deck, And Ladies--
stop polluting the air with all that crappy perfume, Invest in a good cartridge. A good
system can mean the difference between a kiss goodnight and a kiss good morning

.K, You've got a good stereo, and no one but you and your partner(s) can hear it.
What now? What is the best type of music to make love to (with?) The answer to that
question is dependent on your style. Do you like it fast, furious and powerful? The new
generation of European Syniho-Pop has a driving beat, one that challenges even the
most physically fit. Love and Dancing, by the League Unlimited Orchestra, has been
known to bust the aortas of decathalon runners, so it my annhiliate you weekend jocks,
The risk of heart attack is usually much higher in males, for obvious reiisons, so if you
ladies are really selfish and-or daring, demand that your man plunk some disco down on
the turntable, You may have a hearty laugh watching his face turn various shades of
purple. On the other hand, if the man has exceptional stamina, it may be the female
who throws in the towel first, All in all, beat-heavy music makes for some interesting
possibilities, don't you think? If you both like to sing, perhaps Berlin's "'Sex"” would fit
the bill, 1 would definitely not reccommend GrandMaster Flash and the Furious Five's
“The Message'’, This tale of inner-city tragedy could turn the horniest people into
weeping socialists,

‘What if you and your partner are into a slower, more bucolic pace? There's plenty of
music (0 satisfy you, 00, The Bolero might be a perfect fit, My god, if it worked for
Dudley and Bo, it'll work for you. Stay away from Pink Floyd, both early and recent.
The carly stuff is just (oo damn weird, and the more recent offering are too dark and
nihilistic to promote anything other than mutual suicide, Jazz can be just what the doc-
tor ordered when it comes to finding something slow but not comatose, There's so
much jazz out there that literally years of good sex music await you

Where should you get this music from? For god's sake, stay away from AM radio,
Unless you and your partner get off on car commercials, FM radio isn't much better, un=
fortunately. Commercials are everywhere these days although the FM brand may be a
little more mellow, College radio offers an FM alternative, and it’s quite good, in fact,
Don't expect to hear any jazz, however. Tapes offer the best choice when it comes to
music-- you don't have to get up every 20 minutes (0 (urn it over, ill never skip, and
there are no commercials, So stop being cheap, and go out and buy a deck and some 9)
ute tapes, You'll find it well worth your while
The rules I've described are aimed at the average" type of consumer. If you occupy
the fringes of our society, then some other postulates may apply, For example, if you're
ot (00 sure of the gender of your partner, Culture Club may be the best thing you can

2

find, Haye any of you figured out exactly what Boy George that matter, David
ategories before the masses found out about

Bowie could occupy about four different

him,
I'll now deal with the largest category of you, those who would identify with Charles:

Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart, Don't be depressed, all you solo pilots. Take comfort in
the fact that you don't have to spend any money to cross the ocean, if you get my drift,
Musically, there are an infinite number of possibilities, so relax and enjoy yourself, Just
make sure that the door is locked,

If there’s anyone left, then Spects is definitely not the mag for you, We can’t deal
with anything less conservative than G-strings and G-spois. A walk through skid row,
treet, may aid you in your search for whatever you're searching for. 11

or alonk 42nd
sec you there!

‘Outrageous
Opinion —__

by Mark Stevenson

Will Yurman UPS

(We're all sitting ina low-key, sub-seduction, sub-human bar, and by my side sits
Veronica, her exceptionally large breasts resting just lightly on the table like prize
melons out of some demented 4-H dream from my rural past. I feel like a Yokel, too, as
T can't believe what's going on here. My every word, my shoddiest jokes haye become
pearls of wit to her. She laughs, fawns, strokes, poses, and with every movement she is
convincing me that Iam seducing her. 1 know I'm not being that funny. 1 know 1
wouldn't want to seduce her as surely as 1 know that her devoted boyfriend, my friend,
is sitting just one chair away watching us with jealous hawk eyes.

My Life
In Clothes

by Andy (arroll

Regrets, . .yeah, I've had a few. Like every outfit I've ever bought for myself, every
pair of shoes I ever carried out of a store thinking they were beautiful, every gnarly
eyeglass frame which looked great in the TSS Opticte Shoppe but turned to instant Roy
Orbison as soon as I hit daylight, 1 could go on (and 1 have), bul the point is clear: If
clothes make the man, then I spent the '70s as a discount rack at Alexander's,

More About My Thighs und Feet Than You Ever Wanted To Know

Two vital statistics: 26 inches and {0 and @ half BEE, Do you know what it means (o
buy Levi's when each of your thighs has a circumference only six inches narrower than
your waist? It means that you have (o buy pants with a walst size some two to three in-
ches larger than you need in order to account for the dreaded “Danskin effect" which
Would normally occur in the vicinily of the inner thigh, and the equally abhorent ‘star-
burst” pattern which emerges in a pentagon circting about your crotch. The (rade-oft
for the Danskin and starburst effecis js the phenomenon known as gapping,” which
occlirs after the belt has been drawn tight, Look up the word “‘crenelation’” and you'll
have a good idea what I mean, or rush to your nearest feed store and check out an open-
ed sack of rice,

Now to my feet, those seductive little bastards, First the Creator blessed me with what
is really a respectable shoe size: 10 and a half, Not petite, mind you, but small enough to
make tragic the fact that my instep is nearly as wide as my foot is long, It wasn't until 1
started! going to the beach that 1 learned that the human foot is not round, ‘The
shoestore should have tipped me off, admit, especially when my mother would ask for
something in a “husky” size while barely concealing a wink,

‘Two Things My Father Says Whenever 1 Buy My Own Clothes
‘ou like those better than pants?!”

2) "What's the matter, Thom McAnn wouldn't sell you the box?!’
‘The Worst Sartorial Mistake I Ever Made
Letting my father choose the socks I should wear to my brother's wedding, Never a
ididate for a GO cover, my father tells me that one’s socks should match one's tle,
The result is a wedding album filled with pictures of the brother-in-law with burgundy
socks pecking beneath gray slacks,
The Second Worst Sartorial Mistake I Ever Made

Leiting my father choose the suit 1 would wear to my brother's wedding, At Sear's
The result is a wedding album filled with pictures of the brother-in-law in a fam
retardant, charcoal colored creation, with reversible yest and an extra pair of slacks,

Do You Know What Happens at Sear’s (o Pants Which Don't Sell?
They become an extra pair of slacks in their charcoal-colored sult with reversible vest,
Why I Hate My Brother's Niece
For asking, “Who's the guy in the red socks’
More About My Feet

Maybe you don't understand the agony that ls EEE in a D-width world. ‘Try thist the
neal time you walk to school, do so not on the sidewalk, but on the curb, Next, go into
the shoe store and ask for thelr special curb-walking sneakers, They'll do one of three
things:

1) Laugh:

2) Laugh and try 10 sell you the next biggest size,

3) Laugh and tell you to ask Thom McAnn to sell you the box.
‘The Worst Shoes I Ever Bought

Remember platform shoes? All right, Keep i¢ down, Do you also remember Kelso
Barth Shoes? 7 sald that's enough! Now let's talk about my bar mitzvah,

‘There's a prayer we Jews intone cach Passover, and it includes the refrain dayenu.
Roughly translated, it means ‘It would have been enough,’ Let me show you how it
works in relation to my bar mitzvah

If God had sent me to the El Matador Barbershop on the boss's day off, dayen,

1f God had sent me to the E] Matador Barbershop on the boss's day off, and not on
the day that his Spanish-speaking cousin was taking over, dayenu,

If He had sent me on the day that the boss's Spanishsspeaking cousin was taking over,
‘and not at the moment when Pepe decided to ‘expe yuist a leetle,’® dayenu,

If He had sent me to the temple with Leonard Nimoy's haircut, and without the Roy
Orbison eye glasses, dayent,

If He had sent me to the temple with the Roy Orbison frames, without allowing the
lullor (o scorch my new suit the day before, dayenu.

I He had sent me to the the temple in the ill-fitting replacement suit without those
shoes, dayenu,

If He had let me make th
those platform earth shoes, DA YENU!
‘One Last Thought on My Life in Clothes

Did you ever notice how really disgusting it ts when guys bend over to reveal not only
the waistband of thelr underwear, but a quarter-inch of their behinds as well? That only
had to happen to me once (and we're talking fifth grade) for me never to have let it hap-
pen again, Some men do this every day of their lives? And you wonder why there's
J.C, Penney's,

mistake of wanting platform shoes, without letting me buy
YUL

My mind continues to stray over Veronica in various positions, and I realize how
erazy she's making me, Making some trite excuse [ relinquish my seat and flee (his siren,
When Iireturn her borfriend mercifully has co-opted my seat. He has obviously been
bothered by this little pantomime, so why did hie take it? And why is this woman flir-
ting with me, di sensitive, devoted man crazy?

I'm conyinc ‘Lan isolated incident, Why do women do these things? tsthere|
& ertiel streak in them? Revenge? Instability? The front wave of the Feminist Revolu:
tion? And why was I being used to compromise a male friend?

As 1 sat next to Jim, Veronica's boyfriend, I determined that we men should band
together against feminine exploitation of men. A sort of gentlemen's agreement — 1
won't flirt with your girl, you don't flirt with mine, But with Veronica's breasts hanging
in front of my eyes like hallucinatory basketballs, my good Intentions weakened,

If We agree that none of us males ean trust each other, then how do we prevent m=
batrrassing scenes like this one? Perhaps if Jim wasn’t such a sweet, affectionate puppy-
dog, Veronica wouldn't enjoy torturing him so? But where does t je those of us
Wiio have spent the last few years trying (0 be sensitive and open (0 the desires of our
women? The final and most effective threat is I'm Jeaving - 1 don't have to take this,"*
Obyiously, Jim had given up that threat long ago,

The best relationships, U've found, are like Laura and Steve's, Most of Steve's male
friends are gay and most of Laura's female friends are also gay. No temptation or inno»
cent flirtation ever arises to either one of them in any of these embarrasing situations, |

tions,

ASHION:

tlectic. We've searched the dictionary and found out that if there is a

Word to describe this year's campus fashions, then certainly that is it. For

what else captures the excitement of youthful fashion, an attitude that

Sands right up and says “This is me!" before someone in the back yells “Down In

front!” What other word Indeed, Not ecliptic, for Instance, nor eclogue.

Economical? Barely. Ecru? What does it mean? Ectomy? Ecumenical? Eczema?
You see our point, Eclectic it must be then, for our boys and girls of spring.

‘And the fabrics! Whew! Rough cottons, sturdy denims, sleek satins, crisp linens.

fe can trust our Webster's (fab-ric, n.,

Iting, etc, as cloth), Yes, the

lines, nearly making us forget

ake a look at what's

Fashion Editor:
A, Carroll

Fashion Coordinator
D, Millman

photographed bY
will Yurman

Hair and Makeup »y
University BarbershoP

clint
qua)

4 date a corsage and she pinned it to her
mfer time than now to modernize your war ‘
d

Harva,
oth oun
i

The latest look comes from trend-maker cy
compliments Matt's dark good looks and [ums ed.

generally nasty dem bs zippe her jacket, black leather

painter's pants, and j etter to slam you with, my

dear). Lisanne {org violent push:me-up bras, ankle

{ Wor, and matches her cow!-neck sweater

with a white leather in'The People Who Advertise in the Back

of the Village Voice UEC anie ot angele

while a divorce was

(Lisanne and Mark

wrenching spiked hee

eather of a single cow,
fer who donated those chic
pound at the deli counter.)

for 8?
nau

os tanuese (6
non pl
fash nth

ihity 4
overt alt eo
{nwo

xy-s0 i}
ye Kenny: Ne

Stallmyen p98

Oat fron
d
med:

" 1e coeds, snapped In action
52" ask these irasclbl 5, soe

meaty, Asip of beer and.
certain univers 211 to Halrcut 100,
Ht iabea moans 88 n Accounting in eon gat Is this thing called style? Spend enough time on campus
9 OU ee jar, please!) and youl never find out, Atleast that's what we thought un-
een til we met our Spects Guy and Gal, Steve and Wend!
rf Ae f ft ys ee v el er exotic beauty with a cable-kni
Rut eeaeniern Undergrads with a zest for life, both understand that acquiring good Then there's Wendy, who sts of her at baal with aca
100 perc ed his ‘Smith Army fashion sense Is like anything else: you're born with a little talent, but it sweater, pleated cordur v8 ens 2 ¢ ne mee k ;
is i ha prices at the OWT Te come takes hard work to bring it out, Take Steve, for instance, who matches woman, but int orld iat the ie gl Ins shy rate acca)
a ca 11 ighth grade, X i posevelt F id, a so pe ‘sweater from Lacoste with an old pair of jeans and a Me hy Me vole ipa nk pe a nen seh De
pants Smayie 8 years later. ls Levi's Jac Tar of thé Cart web belt, He knows the secret that well-dressed men have always afraid to share: to re a na
back In style 8 000" from Man at the Fountain i) known: your favorite clothes should be your most comfortable, and ara brush, and allow to set for one hour. Then just pop It in with th
while his sweats a you should probably wash them more offen. Especially if you're a rest of the wash, I's that easy!

eagle ‘ haevy ateaisr ‘Ah, yes, fashion, Maybe David Bowie sald It best Fashion — turn
to the left, Fashion — turn to the right. We are the goon sq id and

we're coming to town, Beep:beep, beep-beep.”

SPECTS Perspective

Confessions Of
A Reformed JAP

by Terl Kaplowitz

(I stare at the closet to peruse my wardrobe with a
cocked-up hip and a hand holding my chin.

“+1 have nothing to wear,’ I sigh, Even so, the pole in the
closet sags with the weight of cotton, rayon, and velour,
creaking tremulously whenever 1 pull out a hanger.

Finally 1 select a racy black and red sweater from Macy's
along with black cigarette-legked corduroy pants which 1
tuck into my citified cowboy boots, Now to pst on my face,

To camouflage my blemishes, 1 dab on some cover-up.
Foundation smoothes out the red blotches and fills in my
Jarge pores, creating a filmy, pliable mask, A liberal
amount of blush and Yoila- cheekbones, I coat my
eyelashes with mascara and my lips with high-powered
gloss, Donning a leather jacket, Icatch a glimpse of myself;
In the mirror and smile, 1 am ready.

I pick up my books and head toward the library,

The library is the center of my social life, To these
freshman eyes the Imposing columns and looming arches in
the high-cellinged majestic Red Carpet Lounge resemble a
Roman forum where young scholars roam about and
discuss the current theorists,

‘As I walk up the slaits to the second floor lounge, the
marble statue of Minerva Is there to greet and beckon me
toward higher planes of knowledge. She stands there,
Greekly, on her pedestal directly across the room, garbed in
a rippling stone toga. Her face, delicate as porcelin, seems
enlightened but melancholy, Her left foot is chipped,

‘This {s a place where science majors discuss Einstein,
Edison, and Galileo while history majors speculate upon
Lincoln, Caesar, and Marx, Art majors hete compare
Renoir, Monet, and Picasso, while English majors speak of
Fitzgerald, Faulkner, Flaubert, and alliteration.

*{ fove your sweater, Teri." { turn around, It's Cindy.

“1s made by Calvin Klein, Your pants are gorgeous," |
answer, almost unconsciously.

“Thanks, They're Gloria Vanderbilt's,"

Together we walk over to a group of girls sitting at a
table in the lounge, Most of their books are opened to the
beginning of a chapter, 1 see one girl using a yellow comb as
‘a bookmark, I strategically place my chair so that I've got a
clear view of anyone coming up the main steps.

Girls dressed in vivid colors glutter around the library's
second floor like butterflies, stopping at carels to pollinate
their friends’ ears with gossip while they glean each other
for even more tasty news. They strut down the aisle like
beauty pageant contenders, holding thelr books like a bou-
quet of flowers while students peek out of their carels as the
contestants file by,

The male students are dressed in sweatpants, ripped
sweatshirts and windbreakers, Their books are concealed in
Adidas, Puma, and Nike athletic bags to give them that
Just-got-off-the-court look, which suggests that they are
nol carrying any books at all, They congregate around
friends’ carels and speak in loud, hoarse whispers, more an-
noying than the sound of regular talking,

Now for some studying, I stand up and walk down the
aisles where the carels are lined tip in a long row against a
wall, People do weird things when they study; some pull
their hair, others play with thetr eyelashes, a few fiddle with
pimples on their back, and a couple are sleeping, 1 take

Dieter’s
Notebook

by Lisanne Sokolowski

some mental notes and report back to the group.

“You'll never believe who I saw studying in the same
carel,"" I declare, baiting the group,

“Who? "they ask,

“Marsha and Eddie," I reply, lifting an eyebrow. The
girls are fascinated, and we ponder over this for fifteen
minutes.

“What could he see in her?!” asked Stacy,

“Yeah, she's really skeevy,” said Jill,

“Did you see her pants? They're gross,"”

Meanwhile one of the girls volunteers for a Tab run, She
collects our money, grabs an empty Sportsac, and returns
shortly with our orders.

Topen my book, and get through a page, when Jean flut-
ters over to me with some more information,

“Lisa and David got into a humongous fight,"" she says
playing with her gum, The girls spend about an hour
speculating upon this fact.

“They always fight," one observed,

“1 give them another week at the most,”

“Yeah, she's really skeevy," says Jill,

I look at my watch, It's nearing 11 p.m. 1 want to be
home when my parents call, so 1 stuff my books into my
knapsack and walk home with Jill, I enter the suite Just as
the phone rings,

“Hi honey. Studying hard?"”

“Oh God, mommy. I was in the library alt night!”

ooo

1 wake to “Senses Working Overtime"? by XTC, It is 8
‘a.m, Saturday, With my eyes half closed { stumble toward
my dresser and slip on a pair of Jeans. 1 grope for a sweat-
shirt, throw it on inside-out, and decide to leave it, { pu on
my sneakers, zipper my ski jacket, grab my backpack, and
tm out the door. { forget my make-up. { forget (0 look in
the mirror, hurrying toward the library, and scurrying up
the stairway to the third floor,

As a sophomore, the library is my second home. Its third
floor is coffin quiet, and free of distraction, Here, science
majors work on mammoth term papers and really use index
cards, Business majors carry calculators strapped onto their
belts like a gun in a holster while computer majors sift
through programs as thick as telephone books,

T spend 40 hours per week here, trying to beat the ac

1B curve, I need a 44 out of $0 to get an A, but I

Teed a three point cushion on this test because on
the second one the teacher tries to weed out the less in-
telligent students which would automatically raise the
curve, thereby decreasing my chances for an A, subsequent-
ly making it impossible for me to get a 4,0, and ruining my
chances for a job with one of the *Big Bight" accounting
firms, causing me to fall back on my education minor and
forging me to become a business ed teacher for some
minority kids in an underprivileged school district, not be-
ing able to meet a successful businessman husband and con-
sequently ending up dying an old maid,

"sHow'd you do on the test?!” I turn around and see Myr-
na, and notice the blotches and large pores on her face,

"{ got an A," I answer. “What did you get?" I ask

“The same,"? she says, walking away quickly.

My carel fs waiting for me, Its brown imitation wood for-
mica on the sides hides dirt and butresses me three ways.
‘The desk top is made of your tan formica for easy-on-the-
eye reading, Sometimes I draw litle pictures on the desk
(don't tell) just to see how many times the janitors come
around to clean this place. I'd say about every three days,

I should really decorate it. After all, 1 do live here.
Maybe a little mirror, some wallpaper or contact, and a
cishy carpet under my feet.

‘Come finals time, though, it’s a different story. All carel
possession is relinquished, and seats are then acquired on a
first-come, first-serve basis. The library becomes a bat-
tleground as students who infrequently frequent the library
Settle into the seats for some “serious studying, "totally ig-
norant of the ‘tacit understanding.”” For this reason, dur-
ing finals, 1 keep a pair of old ratty sneakers, a used
notebook, and a scrungy sweatshirt in my carel at all times,
which guarantees my home will not be stolen while 1 am
away, The cleaning ladies are compassionate; they unders-
tand carel attachment, and rarely is my care! touched over-
night.

The girls here are dressed in sweatpants and wear their
hair in clips or ponytalls. Their faces are pale. Some look
like zombies or Moonies after a deprogramming. Others
are wired and nervous with coffee running through their
veins,

The guys are dressed in doctor's pants or in high tide
Jeans, They carry nylon backpacks, serious faces, and wear
hiking boots. They have a “library sweatshirt"? which they
wear all the time, Some sit hunched in their carels drawing.
sine curves with a trembling hand, while others work on a
chemistry problems with uncanny mechanical diligence.

1 settle down in my carel and do accounting problems,
taking an hourly stretch, and running for coffee every
three, Someone taps me on my shoulder and I jump, It’s
Cindy from the Second Floor,

“'C'L borrow your notes? I wasn't in class all week."

I frown and glare, and say rather shortly, ‘I need them."”

She is disappointed, but knows my breed, and walks
away down the aisle

T look at my watch. It’s nearing 11 p.m, Why does the
library have to close so early?

oe

As I walk toward the library, 1 shudder. Its concrete
whiteness is cold and unyielding. Looking up at the second
floor window, I see bored faces staring down at me through
rows of skinny windows. They look like prisoners behind
bars, strapped to their carels like chain gang members are
strapped to their ball.

Inside, the pillars embedded at the top with flourescent
lights look like concrete palm trees, The buzzing of the
lights make it sound as if gargantuan bees were flying
overhead, Books are crowded together, row after row, per-
mitting only a narrow walkway, These rows remind me of a
dense jungle, 1 want to thrash my way through them to get
Out of this suffocating place.

As a junior, 1 spend as little time as possible in the
library. It's full of JAPS and nerds

DIET THREE: THE HIGHLOW PROTEIN LOWHIGH CARBOHYDRATE
POTASSIUM ACIDIC COMBO DIET:

For losing up to five pounds in a weekend, simply choose from these four foods;
bananas no less than 2.and no more than 7 days ripe; strawberries handpicked exclusive-
ly by illegal labourers; bagels (garlic or onion only); lox, cream cheese, or non-creamy

herring, The only beverages

allowed are goat's milk and Tab. If you don't lose the

pounds first you'll at least lose all your friends from bad breath and flatulence. Conse
quently, fall into a lonely depression and refuse (o eat, Voila! you'll have a smashin,
bod if the depression doesn't kill you.

(Well girls, it’s that time of year again to pull that dusty maillot out of the closet. Or
better yet, chic girl, spoil yourself (o a new one! Those extra few winter pounds that
snuck on When you weren't watching will be gone for good after trying one of these sure

¢ diets, We've selected the top five diet tips for Summer '83, and here the;
get Off those chubby thighs and chase ten pounds out the window in three we

DIET ONE; THE PHARMECUTICAL AMPHETAMINE AND VANILLA
MILKSHAKE DIET;

Guaranteed to not only wipe off 15 pounds in 48 hours but also increase your work effi
lency at the office. Just pop one capsule into your blender with your favourite malt
flavour (we suggest vanilla but you can do anything from strawberry to avocado) and
you'll be a svelte siren in no time

DIET TWO: IMPROVED STAPLING:

fe, and effective, you all remember when they first came out with stomach stapling,
and then mouth wiring? Well, now you can have your cake and lose Weight too. In a
simple medical procedure that takes fifteen minutes under local anesthesia, your doctor
can staple your favourite foods to the inside of your mouth in silicone packels, The
flavour Is timed-release so you get complete gratification without the calories.

DIET FOUR: THE EAT ALL YOU WANT MARATHONER'S DIET

Go ahead and gorge on late night pizza with the girls, or an ultra romantic dinner a deux
with him (including the mousse). Just sweetly ask him afterwards to take 6 feet of rope,
tie it around that trim little tummy and the other end to the back of his Porsche, Now
with the help of a pair of running shoes. and him driving at least 4Omph, you can run
along behind the ear and work off the calories fast. Oaly drawback to this diet plan'is be
careful not (0 (rip, Blacktop is simply awful for the complexion,

DIET FIVE: THE CORRELATIONAL INDEX FINGER AND BACK OF TON-
SILS PLAN

This is the diet trick that Helen of Troy herself used (and we all know what the history
books say about ‘hat body!) Just stuff yourself at each meal as if you were the queen of
the banquet. Disereetly excuse yourself to the washroom, jab a finger down the back of
your throat, and in a coupleof minutes you'll be ready to start all over again, Just be
Sure to wie your chin before going back to the table.

Well, there you have it! Our five faves for the summer look. Now go out there and
knock yourself dead! iS

omen, Choose your man!

Age_2! _Height_5'9"_ Weight_172.

Chris

Turn Ons: ith sixes, 1 Dreom of Sosmie, Bosco

Turn Offs: _{Sihcers ty, foreign beer, drug addictio

Favorite Book: Mets Yearhoo k

Favorite Song:_Fish_ Heads

Favorite Place to Make Love_Still waiting

for the.

right woman -to Come along.

it can't

Favorite Saying:. No problem is so big that
be ovoided- Snoopy “Thank Ged - WAnone

Joe

e_oded Height. 6"

Weight_/32

Turn Ons;_ 20k aaleo, will susted Chess, Existentialism

Will Yurman UPS

Turn Offs: Lacorcect, Pronourxialions of Sartre’, Zane open Sore

Favorite Book: Cany thing dealing with Feminism)’ Si erheodis cre

Favorite Song: ihe _Pep. gente Ih @ Hore’ T
Favorite Place to Make foe Lintoln) Conter, *
cendings, Qowlina Alley Che

Favorite Swine

shabever <L_happen fo be.

Searing aX Sve Morent

Will Yurman UPS

Age_al Height 6/10" Weight_ISQ__

Turn Ons: Pe, [hur ; 18 Movi
Turn Offs: The ©0's i

T forgot ho worste it,

Favorite Book: if L tad Duck Feet=
i \

Favorite Song:

Under the Moonlignh

Favorite Place to Make Love

the Serious floonlight

Favorite Saying: Lowe Me Now | cause Dra much

Kos you +o dia — Ras Price

Yurman UPS

Spectrum

Gemini Jazz Cafe(462:0044)
ThursSat — Fats Jefferson, Walter
Young; Sunday & Monday — Martha
Gallagher, lan Hunter

Hutla Baloo (436-1640)

April 22823 — Selvinhead
Yesterday's (489-8066)

Apri) 22823 — Finder

Skinflints (436-8301)

Every Fr, — The Copital Stars; April
22823 — The Tweezers; April 29830
—Downtime; May 6&7 — The
Stomplistics

Lark Tavern (463-9779)

April 22&23 — Baskin & Murphy
Eighth Step Coffee House
(434-1703)

Every Tues, nile — OPEN STAGE — 15
minutes for anyone, beginning at 8:45 pm;
April 22 — Contradance w/ Joe Baker &
Mountain Laurel; April 23 — Fred Gee.
admission $3.50.

Cagney’s (463-9402)

April 22 — The Verge and The Plague

; 21 — The Shaking Pyramids, Genle
mith; 2 ~ Fly to France;
Neats Band, The Verge; 2

Fleshtones, The Weekenders; 29&30 —

Sick Facks;May 4 The Bangles; 5

Circle Jerks; 6 — Blotto; 12 — Sex Execs,
13 = Fear of Strangers

288 Lark (462-9148)

DJ on weekends

September's (459.8440)

Bogart's (4829797)

Downtime on Weds, nites; April 22823

Ellen Mcllwaine & Body Feature; 24

Nick Brignola; 28 — Atlas Linen Com:

pany; 29830 — The Sharks; May 1

Nick Brignola.

Palace Theatre (465.3333)

April 30 — Albany Symphony Orchestra;

May 10 — Waylon Jennings: May 13 —
Roger Whitaker

Troy Muste Hall (273.0038)

April 22 — The Gregg Smith Singers; 29
= Albany Symphony Orchestra; 30 —
Alexandre Legoya, Guitarist

Pauley’s Hotel (465-8203)

April 22 — Rob the Piano Man; 24 — Doc
Scanlon & the Rhythm Boys; 28&30 —
Dave LePlant & Pounds; May 5&6 — Rob
the Piano Man; 19&20 ~— Le Plant &
Pounds

ASUBA FEST

Sat,, April 23 at 8pm at the SUNYA gyrr
featuring Aurra, Soul Sonic Force, Kurtis
Blow, Tkts $7 w/tax card, $8 w/out for
more info call 457-3360

April 23 — All Star Jazz with Nick Brignola
and Friends, 8 p.m., This $5 w/tax card,
$8 w/o tax card,

BI CI (462-9623)

3 Peggy Green:
— Students; May 6&7 The

29830)
Sharks
RPI McNeil Room

Ferron on April 23 at 8 p.m. Student this
$3, general $4, For info call 270-6505
Glens Falls Civic Centre
May 14 Triumph and
Celebration 83
Sat. May 7, 1983

Foghat

U2, Robert Hazard

and David Johansen
movies

International Film Group (457-8390)

April 22 — Satyricon 7:30, 10:00 LC 1

April 23 — Anchors Aweigh 7:30, 10:00
in LC 1, 75¢ w/ toxcard, $1.50 w/out
University Cinema (457-4390)

1. April 22&23 — Reds 7:30 only in LC
18; 2, April 22&23 — My Favorite Ye
7:30, $1.50 w/taxcard,
w/out

tre (457-8390)
April 27 — Summertime 8 p.m. in CC
Assembly Hall - Free

‘Third Street Theatre (436-4428)

April 22-24 & 26-28 — Coup de Tour-
chon (Clean Slate, 7 & 9:35; April 25 —
Lenny 7:00, 9:25, Admission $3 and to
benefit Albany League of Arts.

Madison Theatre (489-5451)

Sophie's Choice 7:00 & 9:45

UA Hellman (459-5322)

Gandhi: Friday 8:00 p.m., Sat & Sun —
1, 4:40, 8:15, Mon - Thur, = 7:30
Hellman's Colonie Center Theatre
(459-2170)

1Ten to Midnight — 9:40 2. Monty
Python's The Meaning of Life — 2, 4, 6,8
10

Cinema 1-6 (459-8300)

1. Flashdance — 1:30, 3:20, 5:10, 7:15.

9:50; 11:50; 2. The Sword and the

Stone;Winnie the Pooh and a Day with

Eeyore — 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00,

(1:00; 3,Tootsle — 1:40, 4:15, 7, 9:45;

148 Hrs, — 1:50, 4:30, 7:35, 10: 5.

Savannah Smiles — 1:15, 3:30, 6:30,

8:45; 6. ET, — 1:20, 3:50, 6:40, 9:10;

Late show Fre. and Sat. only
theatre

SUNYA PAC (457-8606)

Apri 26:30: She Stoops To Conquer. For

more info call 457-8606

ESIPA (473-3750)

Aptil 22. — Long Day's Journey Into the

Night. 8 p.m.; April 29 — Don Wagoner &

Dane
Siena College (783-2527)
Foy Campus Center Theater, Orpheus
Descending
Schenectady Community College
(346.6211)
April 22 ~ Toys in the Haunted Castle, 10
‘a.m, dress rehearsal, performance 1:00 &
4:00
Washington Park Theatre Com-
pany's
Sting Tour, four one acts, Fri April 29.
Dock Brief by John Mortimer; Dying
Embers by Charles Wagner; Sat April 30
A Phoenix Too Frequent by
Christopher Fry; A Slight Ache by Harold
Pinter at Capital District Psychiatric Center
8 pm. May 6 & 7 — Dying Embers by
Charles Wagner; A Phoenix Too Frequent
by Christopher Fry; A Slight Ache by
Harold Pinter; at Hudson Valley Com:
munity College, 8 p.m. Ticket Prices $5
General Public, $3.50 Student/Senior

_Miscellaneous

Contradance and Country Dance:
with cal Peter Dufault and the Kitchen
Kaylie Band, April 29, 7:30-11 p.m, at St.
Patricks Parish Hall, 283 Central avenue.
Admission $3 ($1 for unemployed)
University Seminar: Human Sex-
uality

“The Use of Guided Imagery in Sex” April
22, at 2 p.m. in LC 19,
‘Conference on Latin America:

The Carricean Crisis and revolt, April
22823, For more info call Vivian at
457-8725.

Montreal Yiddish Theatre:

April 30 at Albany Jewish Comm. Center
Call 438-6651

Last Tango:

Sayles International Hall's annual semi
formal. Friday, April 22, in Sayles
Ballroom from 9 p.m, til 2 a.m. Tickets $4
W/ Sayles card, $5 w/out. There will be a
buffet, and wine, punch, beer, soda and
dancing to DJ Craig. For info call
455-6974, Thts sold at door

The Bob McGrath Family Concert
April 24, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Egg
Tickets are $7 for info call 474-1199
Arabic Night

with Arab cuisine, folk dancing and music
Friday. April 22 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Westminster Church, 262 State St. Tkts $4
for students. For more info call Zaki at
465-1624

Capito! Hill Choral Society

concert, April 22 at 8 p.m. at Schuyler
Elementary School, North Lake Avenue
Tkts available at door

School of Business Dinner

Sat, April 23 at Americana Inn. This $13
and available in BA 3rd floor lounge. All
Invited

Indian Quad Dorm Party Night

6 simutaneous parties, Fri April 22 at 9
pun, $1.50 w/taxcard, $2 w/out
All-SUNYA Women's Party

Thurs, April 28 3:30-5:30 p.m. in CC
Patron Room. refreshments will be served.
Lesbian Images in Photography
with JEB

April 28 7:30 p.m. sharp - Channing Hall,
across from Draper $2.50, more f you
can, less if you can't

14>
a oe

may

91FM
proudly present
An All-Star Evening of

JAZZ

Featuring Four Giants of the Jazz World:

NICK BRIGNOLA - SAX

DEWEY REDMAN - SAX
DAVE HOLLAND - BASS
JACK DEJOHNETTE - DRUMS

at Page Hall (Albany) +++ Saturday, April 25rd at 8PM
TICKETS: $5. students, $8. public

UNIVERSITY CONCERT BOARD and

Tickets are available in the CC Lobby from 10am-4pm, at
Strawberries in Colonie and Albany, at Side One Records, and AT
THE DOOR.

Call 457-8390 for more information.

SA Funded

T T E

R Ss

Student aid hearing

To the Editor:
The 1983 budget battle proved to be a success for SUNY
udents with 39 million dollars and over 2,000 position cuts
estored to the State University System, The quality of our
ducation has been saved, but a $300 tuition increase re-
ins a stark reality as a roadblock to accessible higher
ducation, In the wake of escalating college costs, shifting
priorities in education and the dismantling of equity laws,
duction in federal financial aid is an important concern
which needs to be addressed,
The majority of college students depend upon financial
fasistance through grants, loans and work-study, More
than six-millfon students, 60 percent of the college popula-
tion, rely on financial aid programs, Between fiscal year
1980 and 1983, student aid programs have been reduced by
1.5 billion dollars despite soaring inflation and record
unemployment,

The drastic cutbacks of the eighties call for consumer
contribution on the nature of financial aid. On May 2,
SASU will be sponsoring federal aid financial aid hearings
‘on the SUNY at Albany campus, It is an opportunity for
‘students to sound off" about the aid system in addition to
providing recommendations for improvements. In human
terms, it Is also a chance to relay real-life struggles ex
perienced by students and thelr families in meeting high co}
lege costs,

The results of the financial aid hearing will be compiled
with a national report which will be distributed to officials
atthe Department of Education, members of Congress ancl
higher education policy makers, Hopefully, this report will
be used to shape financial aid policies in a reauthorization
process scheduled to begin this summer.

Siudents, administrators and financial ald personnel can
help change the course of student financial ald, SASU
wants to hear about your problems concerning financial
limitations and your future at SUNY. Sign up to testify for
the hearing at SASU, Call 465-2406 for additional informa-
tion,

— Cindy Katz

Mayfest is here

To the Editor:
Recently, street talk about Celebration ‘83 (*Mayfest!")
seryaded the entire SUNYA community. On the bus or
podium, in class or the campus center, { hear students
discussing the annual concert/party presented by UCB and
UAS, But not all the talk is accurate, so let me fill you in
First, the bands, As you may know, the bands chosen 10
play derive from a list of groups wishing to tour the nor
theast carly in May. Although the biggest talent (David
Bowie, Michael Jackson, and Pink Floyd) have booked
their shows far from Albany, UCB has skimmed the
premier bands available to our market off the top of the
Uist
OF the three bands performing at Celebration '83, both
U2 and Robert Hazard are becoming staples on Albany
specially 91 FM and Q104, When listening to the
New

radio,
radio, notice the increasing popularity of songs like
Year's Day"? and “Sunday Bloody Sunday"* by U-2, and
“Escalator of Life’’ and ‘Change Reaction” by Robert
Hazard, Their upward movement within the Billboard Top
200 albums (U-2's latest album War is currently in the top
20 after only four weeks!) assures increasing airplay of
these songs and bands. Soon U-2 and Robert Hazard will
be Well known to a

The middle band contains David Johanssen as its leader

News Editors
Associate News Editor
ASPecta Ector

Associate ASPecls Edi

Edilorial Pages aier

lsiness Manager
Mi

Seniors who saw David's act at Mayfest ‘80 recall en-
thusiastically his dynamic, rocking set to an audience danc-
ing fion-stop.

Second, the beer, Because the legal drinking age in NY
state excludes some of our younger audience members from
obtaining beer, double proof of age must be presented at
the show. Different color wristbands will be distributed to
distinguish the drinkers from non-dtinkers, Of course, soda
and food will be served to all, and for free, by UAS.

Third, the buses. The day of the event, May 7, extra
buses will run the Alumni and Wellington routes to deliver
our off-campus and Alumn! Quad friends (o and from the
Uptown campus. If you expect to drink, accept our offer
and please ride the buses. Don't ruin a fantastic afternoon
by driving drunk!

Fourth, the fireworks, Last year, UCB and SA sponsored
the first Post-Celebration Fireworks Extravaganza, This
Year's fireworks display promises to be bigger and better! It
begins at 8:00 p.m. over the football {ield,

Last, the tickets and fences, Tickets will be sold (o tax
card holders only, beginning*Tuesday April 26 in the Cam-
Prices are $5 for the first ticket and $7 for the
ickels may or may not be available the day of the
show. This is due to @ University-imposed sales limit (0 en:
Sure future Celebrations. If tickets are sold on May 7, they
Will cost $12, 1 hope this encourages you to buy carly, This
Year be wise and avoid the long lines expected May 4,8, and

This being my last Celebration, allow me to wish you an.
afternoon of great music enjoyed to your fullest potenti
Watching is smiling, dancing, and forever rocking to the
music, 1 will retain one more fantastic memory of my four
years at SUNYA,

— Jeff Hoffman
Vice-Chairman, UCB

Priceless support

To the Editor:
Before Telethon '84 gets started, we would like to say a
few last words, We've spent the past year Working on one
of the most rewarding projects of our lives and we'd like to
thank all of you for making this special project, Telethon
*B3, such a success, The support that you have given to us
and to the organizations has been priceless, We would like
to thank each of you individually but obviously this is not
possible, So let this be our final thanks to all of you,
ethon 184 has begun! We would like to wish co:
chairpersons Cindy Katz. and Amy Zimmerman the best of
luck and much success, We know you'll do a great Job,
— Belsy Kwasman
— Kileen Kozin
Co-chairpersons, Telethon ‘83

Practical suggestion

To the Edi
Experience tells me the suggestions contained in this let
er Will probably be ignored — but here goes nothing
You'd think by now the ASP would be ready 10 adinit
that maybe there is something wrong with lis? SA endorse:
ment policy. Bul then again, maybe the ASP enjoys the
power and the attention of being the center of controversy
If however, the ASP is ready for a reasonable com:
tion. True, many newspapers of
These however are plaved
being that they

promise, here’s one su
for candidate endorsements
upon the editorial pave, where they belon,
‘are opinions. of the editorial board, The candidate section
should simply give /ucts on the candidates (experience,
Thus, students can judge for themselves,

Biling Accountants Karon Sar

Payroll Super

Melissa Wastorman,
vcard, Mine Keoimer, Gtegg Nall, Neil Sussman,

is Me
Sommeretd Melisa Wa dn Wol Olle

Randou Bhar,

sch D
Patiicla Milcbel, Associate Produc

rschieg, Production Manager
Manager

Cathie Ryan

Chie Typesetier
Vereat Gamera ail oni
oly Presi Dave Wolte

Piva: Notey Burhe, Donna Corwin, Holy Pres, Da

Beeney’ dim Capoctoia, rica D'AdAMO, Joan

eva, Ginny Huber, Mary Alco Lipka, Mark Waller

photogiephy pineipaly supplied by Univesity Photo Seve, « slident
hie! Photographer; Dave Asher, UPS Stall: Chuck Bernstein, Laura slick
sett eieme’ Ay Gober, Sherr) Cohen, Rachel Liwin, Ed Maruseet, Lola
aoa ea A Elaine Minden, Jean Ptr Lous, David fiver, Lisa Sm

1989 Albany Gtudent Press Corporation,

we Eaton Chiet

Boatd; policy is

by members of th ly represent
R icy dovb nol necessary rollect ealonal

fditoial policy. A Polley

poliey

Malling adress:
Avwany Student Press, CO 329
{400 Washington Ave
‘Albany, NY 12222
518) 457-8092/9322/3380

without bias, who the best candidates are, For those who
hold the opinion of the ASP in high regard, the ASP's opi-
nion will be ever present on the editorial page,
This suggestion seems practical enough to several people
I've spoken to, I awalt the ASP's opinion.
— Bruce J. Levy
Due to the fact that students are generally unfamihar
with the candidates we felt the need for more room than the
Editorial page would allow. All subjective judgements
made in the election supplement were clearly labeled elther
endorsement or assessment, Ed

People and food

To the Editor:

The weekend of March 11-12 marked the date of
SUNYA's sixth annual CROP food fast. This fast is
organized by the SA sponsored group, People and Food, [
would like to express my disappointment with the Asp for
ing no coverage of this event which involved approx-
imately 400 students and raised over $2,400, This money is
to be distributed locally, nationally, and world-wide to help
the hungry help themselves. An activity that involves so
many students and that is for such @ worthy cause should
merit coverage in the Asp. | was told that the ASP reporters
had previously assigned stories that they hud to cover and
therefore could not do a story on the fast, The Times-
Union, Knickerbocker News, and the South End News all
found the fast important enough to wrile articles about It,
so why shouldn't the ASP?

As one of the organizers of the fast 1 would like to thank
all those who participated wiih special thanks to Sr,
Danielle Bonetti for all her guidance and support, Thank
you.

— Paut Hensley
— Ellen Tower

Open communication

To the Editor:

Following the Saturday lectures (March 19, 1983) the
members of Revisionist Zionist Alternative (RZA) seer (0.
be bothered by what has been presented by Dr, Mohammed
and Dr, Hatem Hussaini, They seem to be annoyed
Aol because of the activities, sponsored by the Arab Stu:
dent Association (ASA), but the way the presentation went
On. Also, the speakers were met by a sort of proiest not

‘because of what they Were going to talk about but because
of thelr identity as Patestinians who are aware of the whole
conflict and its nature and dimensions,

The speeches obviously attracted many people and
Students, simply because of the knowledgeable speakers
and the content as well ay the type of presentations. When
Dr, Hallaj was iving the historical account of the eonitict
ng wharever is Palestinian, my
winning of the 1960s as Lhave
¢ and op

ing in,
n of

nd the process of liquid
iemory went back to the be
experienced myself the different formy of tort
pression, The activities that Israel has tong been en
(such as “psychological genocide," “destruct
Palestine’ and the “dismantting of the Palestinian
society") as Halla) strongly stressed, don’t only reflect the
Zionist aims of annihilating and uprooting the Palestinian,
identity, but also display the racial nature of Zionism,
Which many Jews are innocent of, The above sentences
reflect the sad reality in the Middle East, on one hand, and
challenge what the Zionist Information centers in
Jorusatlem as well ay New York City, claim to be of nothing
iis Palestinian culture, identity except their social existence,
Israel, with fis western Jews who were a subject of the
Holocaust, is now a practitioner of the Holocaust
philosophy though in a different way’ and less degree, They
fare murdering a civilization, a people and a history

Let us all stand up against those crimes and massacres in
the Palestinian refugee camps, which have been committed
in the name of Israelis Interest, Israeli defense and Israeli
might. Let us promote through open communication and
academic discussions, at feast in this campus; the ideas of
peace, And all togettier discourage the ideas as well as
strategies of war. 1 would like the ASA to be equally
respected and encouraged by the university's officials; as
well us Jewish intellectuals; as far as giving to it (ASA) the
opportunity of “informing the public about Arab view
points,"” "free information," and presenting the Palesti-
nian problem as the ASA members demand, 1 strongly
believe in the possibitity of peaceful and social co-existence
between Arabs and Jews. So, an open communication bet-
ween Arab and Jewish students, at present, is desirabe and
requestable (0 Work out their differences. And illegal ac:
tions or an equal treatment are acceptable as fur as what
this institution stands for. SUNYA as an academic institus
tion stands for high and noble objectives, We as its students:
must not only respect its noble objectives but also reflect
and adhere to these objectives, as students we should nol
call somebody we disagree with “a prostitute, a terrorist,"
and so on and so forth

—Mabrouk Ghodbane

Letters

Letters to the editor should be typed, include
name, phone number and be no more than 400
/ words. Name will be held upon request on cer-
tain occasions,

} fl
ubletters wanted July and| |jOVERSEAS JOBS — Summeriyear
igust. Near busling, furnished, alla,
jotlable. Call Colleen or

Wy SASL

APRIL 22, 1983 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 11

nt

mor Dear Winky,
Free Info, Write i

Here's yours, where's mine?

ag: female Toomine fe t0 com caer niaeeey DN THEATRES
oor. Fur
fished, clean, near everything, on ff Gooklepunch, $400 EARLY BIRD
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=H ppler in three years Elen Mcli CENTER 182
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Deadlines 9 pM for Fridey ‘Seniors Sell Out! Bice = Immediate Insurance jwockend. 1010 MIDNIGHT —"
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Carpets, desk, bookcase, bed, omall uy [10,10 MIDNIGHT 7}
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Rates: Cs) ing Service Foes q Sunday, April 24 rome ene wera know.
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200 Bold word | cece Moerez evenings | man “Near rubachor Mall ta! = Young, {nsurance Agency Fireside Lounge :
; 3 70 | Braper Hall. Only live with females, erat Fi, Alb. barhalca _ ie
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| b L “ nig is toremind you that your birth: | Lot's paint Lise and Ki ‘
Members Only Jackets, 24 colors. Subletters Wanted: with cards, coins, and common) day Is tomorrow andyourfamily will. r ind, Kimberly's
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oo nerge for baling $Bingerely negotlable ice and need a place tollvefor | professional Typing Service. IBM| ! Mike | rotiappy 2 Bday!

Pali zac Tor, this one's for you. Hope

K),
46 the 20th Issue of the | yout day's as special as you ale,

i
ne rroriion | next. veer Please call Pete st | Selectric Correcting Typewriter. ey Adoption: Young happliy married
Gultariata:Toapez 9on1¢ cine | 2208. Serlonced: Call 2787216, Beebe unable to: have child wants

printed without @

hi
ASP! | guess time flies when you're fou're the best
18 or phone num 3.0. Great ind 7 mon- | Female apartment mate wanted for =x to adopt white Infant to offer good ¢} y 18{ and | love you a lot!!
Tae Er cmsait may|| ine O18 3 a ext yeas to complete bedroom ia Whe, "Biogas Woo 130850, A Sea Uh Pei and ve heard sbout your Morac: | PS. Be Drinkylt) oo” ie eaten ‘
i be wee apt, on Washington all, 8 f i ase i 1 = y
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Hebe Tae tickets for sale, Call Diane 463-4987, | Female wanted to Complete 5B call 457-886) pose som! nude Facial shots not Love, | 9¢.8:00 In the Fireside Lounge. CURTAINS |
ton Hudson between On. necessary. Amateurs welcome, Shortatuf{ | Interest meeting {
ioral deemed un- | King size Toft, Includes mattress) epartment ii BO. 10: ting for those who
suitable for publication, SiePrpeig 890, Garye-a80-60] | IMR 8 OUR Pacer avoir 1) Riser, aaa Beers Bairy Babo- Solebration 63. Apri’, 8 pum. In Ca
ilyou have any questions or pro: | {a7@ Kayagakl KZ 400, Good cond] | wanted {er “above. apartment.) a —— One Yoat! I's boon rough, but worth | Gampus Genter Butiroom, 7”
biente concerning Classified Adver- |tlon, Asking $400.00, Call|| Detalls call Cindi 7:7829, Carolyn t.Hlove yous hon! Pepe
tising, please feel free to call or |— 457. i rs t Love always, Telethon '84 is coming!
9, Doug—457-3011 7-1857. 19! DH

Staff applications In CO 130,

a
P.S, Does this make up for the earr
ings, babe? Lyoa,

Darling, Sweetheart,

stop by the Business Offic —_ me Typing—Professional, accurate
Sublotters Wanted pings Profenalenaly falling
Gh

10 with two stools. Great 1
Bar for sale with two stools, Greal {umnisned house on Hamilton. | Wil!) jeecuae ‘459-805:

EF BE fo aveamgual, Good soelion evarihing. euiiee=eeaeea2
fy sal 482-5588, 455-8770 Mark Typing done In my home. Term F

— Class of '84 Council Meeting, Sun:

ZSubletiors Wanted: Paper®, wors processing, atc. Call | Gay'apri 24th, Sanat nthe Preside

{t will all work out!

YATRECITY Drive-In

Happy Birthday, (Welcome back dat SHO ANOADWWAY Mongndy 272 2001
Blank Tapes. days between 7:30 and 4: ont BES for. he house, Or) \ WOW QFEN f a ASON *
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178 Honda Hawk Motorcycle. 400co, ee near! | fina power by ore + 7 — advertising will UTIVE FRODUGRS PTE GER ANDO PUTERS» SHEN BY TOM ELEY AND JO ERAS CURTAINS
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2 5 | appointment, Kirby Autoword,| | Duich Quad ireslce. Lunda words with 1 é oe = —
= — Professional Resume Ser-l)| Thank you for your support In the Doar T, with 10¢ added for
———— |
\ many fe Paeey you know what—yau an: [98ah word in bold, Altar HELD OVER 2ND WEEK! PIDNIGHT MADNESS
: — LaSuss niversary’ , each word Is 10¢ and
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‘obi want to work (and get paid!) on _____ Pumpin | feverything else Is still the
i Colebration '83, April 25, 9 p.m. In To all my friends on Central Coun: | Jsame.
\ RB. ‘Gampus Center Ballroom. cil, h Thank y
a 1 love you. ‘Ou is
at the A ‘Summerly Je ee to.a long, long friendehi cathy War CHECK DIRECTORY ADS FOR SHOWTIMES.
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Cathy

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The Rest of The Semester

Cine I Cine Il
April 28 BEING THERE THE LONGEST YARD

29,50 AN OFFICER AND A THE SWORD AND THE
GENTLEMAN SORCEROR

Work at Celebration '83. Paid post!
tlons checking 1D, clean-up, eto. In-
terest meeting April 25 9 p.m, In
Campus Center Ballroom.

io. Fille” Student Teacher
Flights. Gloal Travel, 125, Wolf
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Happy 5 month Anniversary.
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Sponsored by |SC-Hillel-SA Funded

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Tickets on sale at JSC-Hillel Office CC3520
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APRIL 22, 1983 (1 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 413

Hoffman

<Front Page
{ the Soviet Union but they also
believe it to be an empire of evil."

American politics. may seem
strangely unpredictable to the
Soviets, he joked, but “they do
know we do have elections every
four years."? So the professor con:
cluded, ‘It's my guess the Russians
are not going to sign anything
before 1984,

Regarding the deployment of
U.S. missiles in Europe, Hoffmann
{Injected another point.''1 don't
think the Soviets want to legitimate
American (proposals) by giving
their signature” on a plan
would allow ev luced number
of Ameri in E
The effe agre
Hoffmann continued, would
collapse of the currently momen
{ous peace movement in Europe.

Hoffmann maintained that the
ence of U.S, nuclear forces on
the continent is greatly desired by
Western European leaders
“Europe clings to it,"* he said, ex
plaining that the threat of U.S
nuclear retaliation could be the only
deterrent £0 a conventional invasion
of Europe by the Soviets. "In
Western Europe it is the only
strategy that makes sense,"” he con
cluded,

Hoffmann noted that the pro:

{blem confronted in Europe is “one
Of perception rather than of strict
military needs, The certainty that
the U.S. would retaliate seems
greater if we have weapons in
Europe," he explained,
Of a direct at-

characterized the Soviet
but not that cocky, They
but not too big ones,"”

If the Soviets did strike, he said,
“the poor president would be left
with perhaps 75 percent" of his
nuclear arsenal, and “meanwhile,
100 million Americans would have
died,” conditions under which the
president can chose “catastrophe or
a strike back.” In this way counter-
force targeting, Hoffmann. il-
lustrated, is not conducive to crisis
stability

“Only counter-eity (largeting) is
crisis stabilizing,"
the 1960s. str
assured destructic

¢ said, revalling

of mutually
or MAD, Ac
cording to this doctrine, a strike by
either side would assuredly result in
massive retaliation by the other; a
kind of international murder
suicide

Although MAD. involves the
largeting of civilian’ population
centers as well as military installa
tions, the doctrine was commended
al times for the stability it produc
ed. "Iam convinced," Hoffmann
said, ‘that for some reason nuclear
weapons still deter."

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Group funding questioned in SA budget

<3

‘budget which gave PRISA a small
appropriation, said Internal Affairs
Committee Chair Lisa Kerr, who WE
amended Corso’s proposal on the

approved,
‘amendment {ook out some expenses
from PRISA’s budget but that she
hind not removed any of the events
from which PRISA anticipated
generating thelr inc

South, howe
was “merely another example of
the wishy-washy political crap that
goes on in that orga
other new group on

the people who were un
this was an easy way to avoid the

Gain some insight into what itis to
jpe a minority in Albany,” he sald,

Fromm noted that problems
Council had in dealing with PRISA
Were only one example of a lack of
communication with minorities. He
sited problems with the Chinese
Student Association's budget as
fnnother example.

issue, Theoretically we budgeted
them, but for all practical purposes
idn't give them a dime,
Sarracco commented that Coun-
sil fiad acted irresponsibly in giving
PRISA a zero appropriation.

In his defense of PRISA’s fun-
ding, Corso maintained that the
programs PRISA has planned are
“absolutely educational," citing
‘ap sessions, information sessions,
ind newsletters as some of the
things PRISA has planned for this
year.

PRISA member Jose Rossy told
the all-white Council during the
he could not
insensibility.””
radio. and
sannot pick
about our
nell) will

giving PRISA the zero ap-
ion Council
¢ explained that her

later

‘The members of Central Coun-
sil don't have a full understanding:

charged that this

because of that less-than
nding they often don’

‘other groups," Fromm stated, ad-
ding that this is only a trend, not a
constant situation |

lup @ newspaper and re
hhews, Hopefully you (Ce

Pi

ASPECTS
GOES
COSMO...

see foday's section

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The light, refreshing wine with Sass,

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14 Sports ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 0 APRIL 22, 1983

AMIA/WIRA season in jeopardy

Getfner
BY BA aie

oe

For the second year in a row an unexpected spring
snowstorm has taken its toll on the AMIA/WIRA
softball season, The inclement weather has caused the
postponement or cancellation of almost every outdoor

Lois MATTABONI UPS.
‘The AMIAIWIRA softball season Is In danger of
being cancelled.

By Adam Kaye

The Albany State ultimate frisbee
torious at the upper New York State Sectional cham
pionships held in Lake Seneca park in Geneva N.Y. on
April 16-17. For the first time in their history, the
n, dubbed The Flock, grabbed the top spot in this
-annual tournament, Playing in adverse conditions
ranging from blustery winds to a slow muddy field,
The Flock combined defensive strategy with
deliberate offense on their way to an impressive $-1
record for the tourney, lifting their season record to
10-1.

‘Oswego was Albany's first opponent on

morning, Oswego, a large and very physical te
‘overpowered by Albany, who was victorious by a score
of 15-5.
Next, Albany faced Cornell, a team whom The
ck was very wary of, considering Albany's loss to
them in the Area Championships last fall, Albany,
‘with an explosive offense led by Jon Gewirtz and Fred
Mitron, exploded with the first 3 points. This, combin-
ed with a fine defensive effort by such players as Chris
Braun and Dave Schwartz, led Albany to a 13-9 vic~
tory.

‘The last game of the day pitted Albany against
SUNY Buffalo, who was ranked number three in the
section last fall, Despite Buffalo's efforts, they went
down to The Flock, whose right zone defense, led by
Captain Tom Prato, clamped down on the usually ex-
plosive Buffalo offense, giving The Flock a 15-9 vi

n emerged vic-

jaturday
was

Panel
discrimination

SUNYA CC Assembly Hall, (382-7890)
Christo: 10 works in progr

Spectrum continued from page 8A

discussion on art
‘Tues, April 26 at 2:00 p.m. In Schenectady

‘Amazing World of Video & Elec- Coughtry, paintings and drawings

sport.

Pro; AMIA/WIRA, the snow and rain has caused
the cancellation of over 230 games, or roughly 70 per-
cent of the games scheduled to date, With 220 games
temaining in the schedule, 230 games to make up and
only 350 time spots for fields left open, this causes a
Nery serious problem, This problem has led to talk
about cancellation of the whole season.

Late last night the AMIA council met to decide
possible ways in solving the softball crisis. Three posst-
ble solutions were suggested. The first was to simply
ancel the season. The second was to just continue the
Season from where the schedule left off, or cancel the
season and have a softball tournament for any teams
that want to enter. The tournament would most likely
be a single elimination tournament, ‘We budgeted for
45 percent rainouts, but when you have 70 percent, our
hands are tied, there is nothing we can do,'? a disap-
pointed AMIA President Mike Brusco said.

If the season is continued, games would be schedul
‘ed up to the reading day May 10, excluding Saturday
May 7th for Celebration '83 and most of Sunday for
cleanup, The key for the softball season lies in this
Weekend's games. If the games get cancelled, the pro-
spect of a complete season looks very dim

TL think it would not be fair (0 cancel the season, a
tournament would be the best for everyone,’’ said
Kevin Black, captain of Inside Sylvia Again, ''The best
thing would be a single elimination tournament, it's
better to have something than to have nothing,'" com:
mented Jim Robertson, pitcher, Inside Sylvia Again.
Downtown softball player Ed Klobus said,
Spowntown shortened their season, so why can't they
do that uptown? If they can't, I like the idea of a single
elimination tournament

‘Although most players were upset about the fact

that the season might be cancelled, the feeling was they
would rather play a single elimination tournament
han play nothing.

‘One note on the lighter side was given by Ruban

Blight’s Don Baricevac, He said, '*Snow is nice, but it
makes fielding and base running very difficult.”

Flock captures State Sectionals

irst game on Sunday saw Albany facing the on.
ly. remaining 3-0 team, Syracuse, the team which
Albany considered their greatest threat, due to their
Skill and speed. Yet Albany proved to be more than a

ich for Syracuse, as they downed their opponents in
‘close, exciting game, by a score of 10-8, Albany now
stood alone at 4-0.

‘Albany had to win thelr next game to insure their
number one spot. They faced R.1.T., a new team,
Whose record up to that point stood at 3-1, with only a
heart breaking double overtime loss to Syracuse the
day before, Despite their little known ability, R-1.T
played an exceptional game, and handed Albany their
only loss of the sectionals b ¢ of 15:10,

Albany knew that the last game was crucial if they
were to stay high in the rankings. The Flock faced the
host team, Hobart, who also sported a 4-1 record.

Led by a spectacular defensive effort by Mark
Paperno, the team’s spiritual guru, the Flock handily
beat Hobart by a score of 16-10.

Other exceptional performances were given by Scott
Lindenauer, Andy Eras and Mike Watsky, to name a

few.

Because of Albany's fine performance, they advance

to the Regional Championships in Purchase on April
23-24, with teams represented from all the New
England States and New York, The Flock will haye to
place in the top eight in that tourney in order to qualify
for the Eastern Collegiate Championships which take
place the following weekend {

Museum Center Galleries (445-6640)
Marjorie Willams, sculpture; Davic

KATHY, DIANE,
DAVID, AND JEAN

THE
RAGE on Howard
Street- even when “Full” sign is up

This ad expies May, 1983

documentary about the artist, and
100 watts - film about light bulb at
the Empire State Plaza, Convention
Centre, Meeting Rm. 6, Tues April
26 at noon. For info call 473-7521
Jawbone Reading Series:
Judith Sherwin and Jondi Keane
Wed. April 27 at noon in Hum
Lounge:

Don Wagoner and Dancers

lat ESIPA, Fri. April 29 at 8:00 p.m.
Tkts $7 adult, $5 students, Master
classes with Mr, Wegner, Thurs.
April 28 at 4 p.m. Call 473-375 for
more info and reservations.

tronics (until Apri 17)
New York State Mus:
(474-5842)

Until May 6

(674-3044)

1m Colonie Town Library

Brooklyn Before The Bridge, April9 Visionary Landscapes and

~ July 10; Chinese Laundry Workers Seascapes by
in NYC, April 30 - Oct. 2; Ooom Schulman
-Pah- Pah, until May 29 at Empire Clement Frat
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Arline Peartree

nd Art Shops

Rathbone Gallery at JCA Antique Engravings of Albany

(445-1778) Wash. & Lark St
UCA Art-Faculty show April 11-29, Mezzotint Mi
SUNYA Art Gallery
Master of fine arts Thesis Exhibition, sq.), April 25 -

(434-4280)

Posters Plus Galleries (Robinson

May 11, Opening

April 19 - May 22, Opening Recep- reception April 23, 7-9 p.m.

tion April 25. 5-7 p.m.

APRIL 22, 1983 O ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Sports 415

Men’s volleyball club triumphs over problems

By Adam Wilk

ISTAPE WRITER

“We are a club, not a team, eve,
though we're the only athletic
organization here at SUNYA play-
ing against Division 1 opponents,'*
Volleyball club member Keith
Rudich said,

“We lost our varsity standing
three years ago and because of this
we only receive $2,000 from the
athletic department, as compared to
the football and basketball teams,
which receive $40,000 each a year,"”
he added, "We are last in line for
practice time and we have (o pay for
4 lot of things — transportation,
meals, and uniforms — out of our
‘own pockets} things which are all
provided for the football and
basketball team members,""

In addition, the team has lost its
NCAA status and cannot compete
for the national championship due
to their club standing.

Captain Bryan Satterlee uttered
similiar sentiments, “We're being
field back by the University's
refusal to acknowledge us as a varsi-
ty team. If they, the athletic depart
ment, are really interested in pro
moting school athletics they should
take a look at our program,"*

“If we got the proper funding we
could be more competitive, but in
stead they refuse to acknowledge us
at all. In their minds we do not ex-
Ist, and this has caused bad feclings
between us and the athletic depart-
ment,” he concluded,

‘Head football coach and former
Director of Athletics Bob Ford
sees the situation in a different
light, “The reason why the team
lost its varsity status was that the
sport, volleyball, became popular at
the same time that Title IX was in
troduced, whose purpose was to
give Women an opportunity to com-
pete in college athletics, At that
time we had only seven. female
teams as compared to 28 male
teams, so something hiad {0 go. Not
only did we have to drop men's
volleyball but men’s cross country.
They still get to use the gym,
however, both for practices and for
games,"” he concluded,

When the team was first dropped
in status from a team to a club,
several of the team members at-
tempted (0 try out for the women's
volleyball cam, Ford, however,
Who at the time was the Athletic
Director, refused to let them try out
prompting one player, Tom Leahy,
{o file a complaint with the Office

of Civil Rights, Department of
Education in which he claimed that
the school had used Title 1X
discrimination against him, An in-
Vestigation followed but in the end
it was the school, not Leahy, who
won out,

“The case was decided in out
favor due to the fact that there had
ever been a history of deprevation
of men’s athletics at our school,””
Ford remarked. “If there had been
then the men could have tried out
for the women's teai

The club finished this year in the
Top 10 in the East for the second
year in a row while playing against
‘uch powerhouses as Yale, Har-
vard, Pittsburgh and Princeton,
“We are a very successful eam, one
of the most successful here at
SUNYA,'’ Satterlee remarked,
“but we could be even more suic-
cessful.”

Rudich agreed, stating that
“With all our problems on (in-
juries) and off (funding) the field
we did very well,"”

The club has hope that som
in the near future they will be
back their varsity standing and the
benefits that go with it, “1 cannot
see that happening in the near
future, but who knows,"” Ford sald

time

WINNERS ON WHEELS =the University Action for Disabled students

defeated a team of student group leaders 6-5 in a wheelchair hockey game last Friday

in University Gym,

MEDICAL SCHOOL
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In the meantime the ‘club! goes
‘on, but for How long it will continue
to exist without sufficient funding i
unknown, As the club stands now,
they have just lost their second
coach in as many years, Pele
Stark fe was a dedicated in-

A's Cla
FM 98.

WCBS-TV In New York.

Pivnick new voice of A’s

The former voice of the Great Danes Is now the volce of the
Albany-Colonie A's. Phil Pivnick has been hired by the Oakland
AA affiliate to broadcast their games on WTRY radio

Pivnick has been the play-by-play man for the Dani
his freshman year. The senior will announce all road games
and weekend home games for the A's,

He has worked as an assistant to the sports producers at

dividual who coached us without
any monetary reward whatsoever,

Satterkee sald of Starkey, The team
is also the victim of a large
graduating class, leaving the team
with many openings. ‘We need new
players,”” Rudich stated. (el

ALAN CALEM UPS

since

—Miure Schwarz

Rock '

and jaz2r

n roll really sti
and disco-

getty

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AMERICAN WHISKEY
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Jadds SuNreezens

APRIL 22, 1983

Softball team prepares for Albany Invitational

By Mark Levine

‘ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

One thing is for sure: this weekend's Albany Invitational
softball tournament will not begin today, as was originally
scheduled. Other than that fact nothing else Is certain,

‘The tournament was supposed to get underway at 3:
this afternoon, with Albany hosting Binghamton in the
Danes’ opening game. However, the inclement weather has

ED MARUSBICH UPS
Loft flelder Tracy Kirk will play a key role in the
bid to capture the Albany Invitation:

peep; Mare Schwarz

SPORTS ADITOR

playable, Several reasons combine to cause
the problem with the field, The location of

forced that situation to be abandoned. According to head
coach Lee Rhenish, a number of other possibilities do still
exist:

» One alternative would be to postpone the games until
tomorrow, with the hope that the weather holds out and the
field stays in good enough condition to withstand an entire
day's play. This could become a problem for the players as
‘well, as each team fs scheduled to play three games. By hay-
ing three games in one day there could be a problem with
fatigue on the part of the players, as they are more ac-
customed to playing a maximum of two games in one day.
Coach Rhenish discounted the possibility of making the
fournament run from Saturday to Sunday, as the weather
forecast for Sunday ‘looks very bad."

» The second alternative involves cancelling the tourna-
ment and just playing either one game or a doublehend
‘against Binghamton tomorrow afternoon, With
Brook and SUNY Buffalo being the other two iy
be foo much of a risk for their squads to make the long trip
from their respective schools without knowing for sure that
the games will not be called off, "With the long trip from
Stony Brook and Buffalo there are a fot of complications,
The the hotel reservations, the transportation, and the
money for food, We don't want them to come all the way
Up here unless we're sure the field is all right,’’ Rhenish
said,

» The final alternative would be to cancel the whole
weekend altogether, which Rhenish is trying to avoid at all
costs, “We're irying to keep all the possibilities open," she
said. “Unfortunately, we may not have a choice. This
Would be one of the most important events for our team
this season, ancl it may all just go to waste,"?

With the softball field in unplayable condition for a good
part of the past week, Rhenish has been forced to bring her
Practices indoors onto the hard wood floors of University
Gym, This area is more suited for John Dieckelman to be
Practicing his jump shot than it is for Rhenish to have her
Squad practice pitching and hitting, Obviously, some ad:
Justments had to be made.

“We've been downstairs in the hitting cage every day
we've been Rhenish sald. "I'm trying to get the
gitls to keep their eye an the ball and practice making good

| eon ar a a
Rain and snow putting damper on Danes’ year

crew for th

hletics department has been
cut back over the past few years because of

contact, The main thing is just to stay loose and try to
relax,”

‘One of the biggest disappointments suffered as a result of
the snow was the postponement of four games.The team
was beginning to weather up a storm of its own, as they had
won their last four in a row and seemed to be peaking with
the state playoffs only three weeks away.

After dropping their opening (wo games the defending
state champions got back on track by winning in dramatic
fashion against LeMoyne in the second game of a
doubleheader on April 9, Albany scored three runs in their
last at-bat to win 7-6, as freshman Diane Fernandes provid
ed the heroics with a two-out game-winning triple,

The comeback win seemed to ignite the team, as they
proceeded to sweep a doubleheader from the Oneonta Red.
Dragons three days later. Freshman Wendy Williams was
the star of the first game, pitching a two-hit complete game
as the Danes won 3-1, Albany completed the sweep by tak
ing the nighteap 6-1, as center fielder Carol Wallace had a
single and a triple and three runs batted in, Freshman An
rea Piecone pitched five innings to register her first win in
an Albany uniform, giving up one run on five hits before
geiting rellef help from Williams in the final wo innings:

The Danes continued their hot play with a 9-1 thrashing
of Union fast Thursday. Williams pitched another two:hit
complete game and left fielder Tracy Kirk had three RBIs,
while Wallace belted «homerun and a triple and raised her
batting average to a team-leading .476, 1t was at that point
that Mottier Nature took over

Weather permitting, Albany will have a very busy
schedule next week, Tuesday afternoon they play a
doubleheader at New Paltz, and Thursday they will travel
{o Russell Sage for another doubleheader.

Rhenish’s main worry at this point is her team’s ability to
withstand the inconvenience of playing indoors and) not
competing in a game for eight days,

“My main concern right now is the motivation of my
players, 1 don't want them to lose their competitive edge,"”
she said

If Albany can forget about the recent misfortunes and
get back to playing the way they did before the storms hit,
Rhenish will have nothing to worry about

{(, but it was just a sea of mud," he added.
“The weather this spring has just been
abominable,’

Tuesday

April 26, 1983

NUMBER 21

By Amey Adams
STAFF WAITER

In a direct response fo the rape on campus
April 15, about $0 people, mostly women,
joined in a chanting protest that circled the
podium yesterday afternoon,

‘One of the organizers of the rally, Feminist
Alliance member Adrian Schrek,was impress:
ed with the turnout at the rally, she said, con-
sidering that it was organized very quickly by
the Feminist Alliance over the weekend. She
noted that this rally was a forum for women
to express their anger over rape,

There were several speakers at the rally,
along with the protesters, One speaker
Feminist Alliance member Alexandra Carter,
stated, “We are nol safe on campus, on the
streets or in our homes, Women should be
aware of the dangers that face us,"

Carter emphasized that women be aware
of the rape problem saying, ‘It is Important
to remember that these things go on all the
time, We don't always haye rallies to remind

s."" She stressed that women be Nware at all
times.

Schrek and other ralliers expressed a need
for better security on campus, “This was not
the only incident, Some things are never

4

0

|

. |
4 ‘ fe
@:t : we
NA

Weibel al

followed up," said Stacey Young. "We de
mand accountability and measures for pro
tection,"* she added,

Schrek pressed for a more effective securi
ty system, and questioned the availability of
the patrol system, “Where are the patrols?
Where are those blue light phones?" Schrek Safety Der

at the begin

sald,

There are blue light emergency phones
located in nine or {en different locations,
several are in perimeter parking lots, one is
near the commissary, and one is near the
Western Avenue entrance, according 10
Assistant Director of Public Safely John
Henighan, Henighan encouraged women to
walk with friends, adding that, ‘There is a
student patrol on call every night (0 escort Hi
women if they can’t walk with their friends,
but it is rarely used,"

woman said

Women protest against rape in a march around the podium
"We have fo let people know we are not happy with things as they are.

ing Of the year to join training.
groups to defend themselves.
tment works in cooperation ¢
with the Women's Safety Task Force, which they
offers {raining courses in problem avoidance,
Henighan noted
Schirek sald t
ed because women don’t trust the escorts
“There is no screening process, Men who
work for the escort service are nol screened
or trained to deal with emergencies,” one

id of the Student Patrol, John Hayner,
said that members of the student patrol come
from the work-study program

Viewer makes

“troublemak Hayner

The Public

Hayner
Hayner stated that the id

the escort service is not us:
in numbers’
idea is that an at

Student Patrol on it."

more concerned

Applicants

ure the applicant iy not a

nol be tured down othierwise beca ise
are part of Work:study, according to done.

dent patrol esvorting women is the
concept, No particular training
is given to the patrollers, Hayner said, "The
ker will think twice before
attacking a person with a yellow jacket with ook

"1 would like (0 see the administration get
id respond," Schrek said.
Student Association President-elect Richard
Schaffer was at the rally and agreed with

The Albany State Gre eball
team’s record is now 3-11, Three games
played and 11 washed away because of the
Weather

Forget the fact that the Danes are 0-3,
Forget that they are only averaging an error
fa game this season after booting $3 balls in
19 games last year. Forget that senior cat~
cher Jerry Rosen has five RBIs in three
games,

(ry to remember the last time

layed at University Field,
Understandable, it was Tuesday

May $, 1982, a 16:6 loss to Union,

Following Wednesday's spring
snowstorm, the Danes are scheduled to
finally open their home season against
Capital District rival R.P.1., Tuesday,
However that game and others slated for
next week are in jeopardy,

“'L don't anticipate being able 1o get on
the fields for at least a week, sclor of
Physical Plant Dennis Stevens said. “We
need at least a week of sunshine and no rain
before the field is playable."”

Even before Wednesday's snowfall,
tomorrow's scheduled doubleheader with
Colgate was in danger of being postponed,
Both the infield and outfield were soaked
and as late as Tuesday afternoon, there
‘were large puddles located on the dirt part
of the infield, Walking on the field was
treacherous and the basepaths were suitable
for mudbaths.

“think if the weather gets better, we will
‘get some home games in," Albany head
baseball coach Daye Haight commented,
“Ic all depends on the weather, that’s the
difficult part, It gets very frustrating,””

Poor field conditions are not a new pro-
blem (o University Field, Over the years
many games haye been postponed or
Sancelled because the’ field was not

University Field is.the prime consp!
Ggainst the Danes playing their alloted
home games, The site of the diamond is one
Of the lowest points of the campus and is
adjacent to the lake. Water from other
parts Of the campus runs onto the area
around the field, Combine that with the
poor drainage ability, and presto, bad field
conditions arise,

Add to that the fact that the grounds

budget crunches and serious problems
begin to mount for the baseball (cam.
“There are two men devoted to the Phys.
Ed department for grounds crew work,
They are augmented by four others during
times of heavy activity,"* Stevens said.
“We made every effort during the in
lersession to get the fields ready. But we
could not get heavy equipment on the field.
We tried to hand rake the field and aerate

ED MARUSSICH UPS,

The unplayable conditions at University Field have the Danes still looking to play
01

thelr first home game this

“4{ guess there isn't enough manpower 10
dequately prepare all the fields," Haight
sad. “Maintaining a baseball field requires
a lot of work. 1's a big job, The guys
themselves are doing what they can, But it
just doesn't seem to be getting any better."*
Another problem with the varsity field is
that there is an improper mixture of soil in
the infield, according to Director of
Physical Education and Recreation William
Moore. Moore added that a summer pro-
ject to improve the baseball fields is in the
works.
‘IL is our intention to redo the varsity in

infield. This means we will take the existing
infield out and replace it with new layers of
soil and clay at the proper mixtures,"”

Another project to improve the playing
conditions is the reseeding of the outfield
grass, It was done last year and will be
Fepeated this year, according to Stevens.
The money for these projects has come
from the Repair and Rehabilitation Fund
Used for maintaining the campus.

Stevens feels a major contributor to the
demise of the baseball field has been the
leagues that make extensive use of the
SUNYA athletic fields during the summer
“They show little responsibility when the
use the fields,"” he said. “They play when
they are still puddles in the infield and they
Ouifield is soaked, Theit spikes chew up the
field into a sea of mud and there is no time
for us to repair it, This makes it exceedingly
difficult for us to maintain the field for our
team's use,"”

Stevens added that the leagues will not be
using the varsity fleld this summer while the
improvements are being put in place.

Meanwhile, this year's edition of the
Danes Is hoping this year will not be
remembered as the season that wasn't, C)

1 that he encourages students

are interviewed for the job, and the inter

The United States is returning to policies and mistakes
of the past in trying to impose its will
on Central America, according (o the First Secretary of
the Nicaraguan Embassy in Washington, Francisco
Cambell. He said other Latin American experts were
featured at this weekend's conference, titled Central
America and the Caribbean: Crisis and Revolt, held in the
Campus Center

The main objective of the conference was to “provide a
better understanding of the conflict in the area,”” said
Acosta-Belen, co-chairman of SUNYA's Department of
Puerto Rican, Latin American and Caribbean Studies
(PRLACS)

“There is a tendency to see it as an East/West conflict
between the U.S. and the Soviet Union," she said. "We
Wanted to demonstrate that there are historical and social
reasons that have nothing to do with the East/West con-
flict. These problems existed prior 10 the Russian Revolu-
tion of 1917,” ned Acosta-Belen

The conference also focused on the diversity of the area
and the diversity of the area and its unique problems
Harvard University professor Orlando Patterson explain-
ed that in recent years, it made sense to view the Carib-
bean area as a single entity because of crucial economic,
political and cultural problems,

cording to Patterson, countries in the Caribbean
“face similar dilemmas and face them in similar ways
They fail in similar ways and face failure in similar ways,
The basic idea of the Caribbean is an emerging one." He
added that “at one time it (viewing area as one entity)
made no sense, but it is becoming increasingly me
ingful, particularly now.’

Barry Levine of the Florida Internation:
however, disagreed. ‘The Caribbean is an

University,
a of abun-

Conference offers insight on a troubled region

dant variety, There is diversity in economic styles,
political institutions, religious preferences, language and
eitinie (raditions, racial and immigeant origins, and
cultural and artistic manifestations,”

“Itjs also an area of conflict and change,'* said Levine,
“with border conflicts among neighboring states, confiic-
ting interpretations of the law of the sea, and much
domestic civil strife including coups, civil wars, and

revolutions."*
These two views on the Caribbean are only part of the
dichotomy with which outsiders view the area, according

a
“Reagan is seen as the
hatchet-man., . .he has no
real hope of defeating

the revolution,’*
— Susanne Jonas
Labor and Economic Crisis Institute

to Edmundo Desnoes, a native of Cuba and author of
Memories of Underdevelopment, who cited the two vi-
sions outsiders have of the Caribbean Basin.

“The Caribbean is seen as the place where Europe
spends the winter,’’ explained Desnoes, atives and
women are part of the landscape. White men Wear planta:
tion uniforms, Dressed all in white, he has the world of
passion at his call,’’ Desnoes claimed, ‘*He is reason, and
the Caribbean is passion and instinct

While the advertisers depict the Caribbean as a tropical
paradise, the news depicts the turmoil of the area,

TOMARUSSTON UPS

Schrek, saying, "1 think we should take the
services we have and improve on then, The:
hus been a fot of talk, but nothing has bee
He noted that, “the women have
The administration should have

said, Applicants:

marched
come out and spoken with them,

Dean of Student Affairs, Neil Brown, way
Unaware of the rally, but said that he was tak>
ing steps 10 look at security on campus.
"Tonight (Monday) Iim going on campus to
a the lighting and see if anything else:
can be done," he added,

Carter emphasized that “the most positive
thing is 10 make noise. Let people know we
Gre not Happy with things as they are, We
have to make il known,"

behind the stu
“Strength

Desnoes said. To illustrate his point, he displayed an issue
of Newsweek magazine on the cover of which Was a
photograph of @ man in an Salvadoran uniform with cap
and dark glasses holding a rifle, The inside cover had an
airline ad with a Woman in “native!” dress, and
photographs of sunny beaches and palm trees

This dichotomy, said Desnoes, has existed since Colum:
bus discovered the area and called it the West Indies,
Natives of the Caribbean have been alternately viewed as
“noble savages!” and cannibals,

Bach speaker focused his discussion on one area each of
the Central American/Caribbean area, including Puerto
Rico, Jamaica, Guatamala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua
Though none of the speakers chose to focus on El
Salayador, it was referred to in several of the talks

Another topic of discussion was U.S, intervention in
the area, Neftall Garica, an advisor on Environments.
Studies for Puerto Rico, discussed the Commonwealth's
Iie to the U,S. economy, Garcia contended, “the Puerto
Rican model is based on the importation of capital,
lechnology, raw materials, and selence, All of this is
wrapped with the ideology that all good comes from out-
side, nothing good from inside,"

The emphasis, Garcia suid, is on industry rather than
agriculture, as opposed to fifty years ago when it was the
backbone of the economy. Agriculture is now subsidized

voiding unemployment, he said,

s in Puerto Rico has grown
ut of the economic stagnation in the U.S., according to
Garcia, Real salaries, hie said, decreased in the 1970's to
one-half what they had been in 1967, Unemployment,
said Garcia, jumped from 12 percent (considered critical
by US, standards) £0 22 percent in 1976, Puerto Rico, he

\om

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Date Uploaded:
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