Albany Student Press, Volume 70, Number 11, 1983 March 11

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MARCH 8, 1983

Co-captains Dieckelman and Gatto
Appear in final game as Great Danes

with 26 points to lead all scorers. “It’s a
disappointing way {0 go, but they really

It could have been better,
died Gatto, closing out his long career with
igure performance, 11 points,
but we didn't play a
We didn't deserve to win, and

The Albany State Great Dares dropped
‘ut of the ECAC Tournament Friday even-
ing with @ 90-76 loss to the University of
Rochester Yellowjackets, i
tains John Dieckelman and Mike Gatto, It
was thelr final game, As the pair walked off

“We tried tonight,

Looking to rebound after the previous
weekend's third place di
tournament which knocked
Albany out of NCAA playoff contention,
the Danes entered the ECACS with

ing, an era in Great Dane basketball history
had come to an end

“It was a tough way to finish for my
said Albany State head basketball

ivated by the chance to dethrone host
, the nation’s (hird rank
The Continentals had

rf
ed Division III tea
beaten the Danes earlier in the season,
the Danes never had that opportunity
dicative of their luck all year, the Danes ran
into another hot shooting team in the

spearheaded the Danes!
from the Division Colgate Red Raiders, hie
nediately into Albany's starting
five In 1980-81, His accolades are many in:
cluding all-tourn

honors in. every
ent except one in which he_par-
ticipated during his career I

became the twelfth p)

Ted by the very hot hand of
freshman Joe Augustine.
from the field and topped his team's list of
scorers with 25 points.
Yellowjackets shot

The Yellowjackets cl

layer in Albany history

January 15 of this season while averaging.
18 points per game and was named to the
list of District 11 AllAmericans qualifying,
him for possible nationa

Rochester. took possession of the ball, they
didn’t waste any time getting it up court
and taking shots.

"We felt that we had (olpush the ball up
some three-on-twos

Gatto, a full fourryear veteran of the
Albany program, also enjoyed success in a

As a sophomore, he sank quickly and try to gx

VOLUME LXX

STUDENT March 1

Friday

1, 1983

NUMBER 12

Solomon draft
amendment is
overtumed by
federal judge
Ruling in Minnesota

may set precedent
throughout country

tWo pressure packed froe throws aga
Potsdam Bears (0 give the Danes thelr first
Outright SUNYAC championship, Though
he then suffered from bouts of erratic play,
hie did rise to the occasion more than once,

This season he led the Danes in capturing
the Ithaca Invitational by scoring 25 points
id earning tournament

Rochester head

“When other teams score 90 points,
We're not going to win the game,"® added
Sauers. “That (Rochester) is a good offen-

The Danes enjoyed their only lead of the
game very early on when Dan Croutier, en
sophomore campaign at point
ited Dieckelman to open the
scoring. ‘The Yellowjackets responded with
three consecutive baskets to set the tempo

in the title game a
Most-Valuable Player honors,

Friday evening the Danes did not see
ihr veterans off in an appropriate manner.

11-point lead as for-
‘a 6'2'" sophomore who
was the team's leading scorer this season,
threw In a reverse Jayup with 3:19 left to
play in the half to make the score 39-28,
The Danes staged

Rochester opened a
ward Greg Blue,

Zadoorian, who was ill and could not make
the trip, second-seeded Albany was severely
beaten by the third-seeded Yellowjackets,
The loss ended Albany's season with a 17-9

But Albany remained In striking distance

Dave Adam hit an minor comeback in

throughout the half,
18-footer to knot the scoring at 12 points a
He contributed 14 points to the
Danes! losing cause

Dieckelman scored s
Albany scoring binge

points in an 11-4
‘The Danes trailed at

“1's the last game," said Dieckelman,

who finished his career in sparkling style

SiITIMSts finish seventh in SUNYACS

jard Individual mediey with a time of 4:30.04, Ken-
nedy also finished ninth in the 200-yard Individual medley
with a time of 2:07.00,

wil addition there were thre

The Albany State men’s swim team traveled to Cortland,
New York this. past weekend for the SUNYAC Champlon-
ships, where they finished a
teams competing, according to Albany State head coach Joe

nth overall among the 10

ichool records broken over the
kend. Wright sot a new mark in the 500-yard freestyle with
a final tim of 6:00.61, Tom Handy algo broke a school record
by swimming a 17:68.66 In the 1850-yard freestyle. Handy,

med with Glen Quackenbush in

the 800-yard freestyle relay to smash another school mark
with a time of 4:

Albany had two swimmers qualify for the flanis, which con-
id of the top six finishe!
Michael Wright placed fifth In the 100-yard backstroke with a
time of 1:00.23, and also finished fifth In the 200-yard
backstroke with a time of 2:11.60, Jeff Kennedy finlehed fifth

ch preliminary event,

Wright, and Kennedy algo ti

ALAN CALEM UPS

Dane sophomore guard Dan Croutler, shown here In an earller game, scordd six
points against the University of Rochester Yellowjackets.

Both teams exchanged buckets with $'9'"
guard Terry Fitzgerald hitting for Rochester
‘and Croutier hitting for Albany making the
score 14-14, Two straight outside shots then
by Augustine put the Yellowjackets firmly

halftime by a four-point deficit, 43-39
In the opening seconds of the sccond
half, Tom Lowney set the pace for the
Yellowjackets by sinking an outside jumps
shot that put Albany into a six-point hole,
And ensuing basket by Fitzgerald upped
Rochester's lead to eight points 47-39,

A fast break bucket by Augustine gave
the Yellowjackets a 10-point lead at the
15:35 mark, Four seconds later the Danes
suffered an even greater setback when
Dieckelman was forced to leave the court
With a twisted ankle,

6'8"" reserve center Pete Gosule was in
serted in Dicckelman's place and helped
the Danes stay with Rochester by hit
ting tWo baskets. Dieckelman then returned
to convert a three-point play as Albany
trailed by nine points, 60-51, with nearly 11
minutes left

Yellowjacket 616" center Dan DeGolyer
drove the Jane at the 8:09 mark hitting th
basket by committing the offensive charge
to widen the Yellowjacket’s lead to 13, But
that Jead was shorilived as the Danes relied
again on the three-point play with Gatto at
the line to bring them back with 10 points,

Rochester began to pull away for good in
the final minutes. The Yellowjackets
outscored the Danes {1-7 down the stretch
en route to the ultimate 14-point diffential

With 1:29 remaining, and the game

each, Sauers (00k out

reasonably out of

his two seniors amidst applause for the final

time, In their place, he sent in two freshmen
both up from the junior varsity, J.J. Jones

and Brian Kauppila. Each registered his
first points ina varsity uniform, For the

Albany State Great Danes, the new era had
just begun.

ke
In the other first-round game, the host
Hamilton Continental outslugged the

59-56 in the title game to win the
tournament,

Next time—the 1982-3 Albany State

Great Dane basketball yearin review,  [)

Our
thseeded Oswego Lakers 102-96, Hamilton
then went onto to edge the Yellowjackels
"AC

St, Paul, Minn,

(AP) A federal judge yesterday blocked a law
denying financial ald to college students who
refused to register with the Selective Service
System,

U.S, District Judge Donald D. Alsop

issued a preliminary fnjunetion in a lawsuit
challenging a federal law forcing male
students applying for tuition ald to disclose if
they registered for the draft

The suit challenged the law signed by

President Reagan last Sept. 8. It required
male students applying for (uiton help to
disclose whether they had registered for the
draft, and prohibited them from receiving
any federal assistance unless they had done

“It takes no great stretch of the imagina-

tion to discern how plaintiffs’ identification
of themselves as non-registrants could. in-
criminate them or provide a significant link
in the chain of evidence tending to establish
thelr guilt," Alsop wrote in his 26-page opi
nion,

Alsop’s ruling is binding in Minnesota and

Will set a precedent for other judges around
the courttry, suid Dan Lass, an attorney for
the Minnesota Public Interest Research
Group, which brought the case. The ruling,
i

he said, is the first on the law
The plaintiffs in the case are six

Anonymous students represented by the Min:
nesola Civil Liberties Union and) MPIRG,
Which represents college students around the

state

Lawyers for the students argued that the
{aw punishes non-registered students who do
not face trial and have not been convicted of

a crime.
In Washington, Rep. Gerald B. H.

Top, G. Gordon Liddy; bottom, Dr. Timothy Leary

"We disagree on everything humanly possible.

Solomon, R-N.Y,, author of the requirement
linking student aid to draft registration, said
that if the injunction becomes permanent,
the Selective Service System would appeal it,
and he felt confident the law would be
upheld

“Iv isn’t a question of inerimination,”” he

told a reporter, "No one is being found gull:
ty without a trial, We simply added

qualification for student aid, There are some

27 qualifications,”

James Tierney, president of SASU, said in
Albany "1 think it’s fantastic, It's a victory
for civil liberties and common sense.’ He
said the broad-based opposition to the
measure ‘gave faculty, financial aid officers,
students, administrators and trustees a
chance {0 unite on an issue that’s so un-

constitutional,"”

Tierney was unsure about the range of

ly
binding only in Minnesota, (the Student
Association of the State University) will be

Judge Alsop's ruling, but said, 1 it’s lege

filing court papers very soon.”

Donald Whitlock, director of financial aid
NY Albany, stressed that efforts to
repeal the legislation in Congress would con-
tinue, "The sentiment in Congress is against
the administration on this matier,"" he said,
Tierney concured, saying that student lob-
byists would be working 10 repeal the law on

at

a federal basis,
The
System, its dire
Turnage, and the U.S, Department of Edu
tion und its Secretary, T.H. Bell.

“The
common
good
transcends
the
individual
good.”’

“‘What I’m saying is thumb
your nose at the law!’

ED MARUBSICH UP

Old rivals Liddy and Leary trade

Dutch will be covered by a new
district and thelr own polling place at the
ayminasium following a Guilderland Town
Bowed decision Tuesday

changes in thi
ed a problem of overcrowding at the
Mekownville Fire Department polling place
in District 1, Without the new plan cis half
Of SUNYA fell within the district

tions to everyone Invalved,
p

the Town of Guildurlind is seen by: Perey
as the direct resull of requests by SUNYA
Students for the establishment of polling
places on the campus

Corso huis been atiending the Guilderland
Town Board meetin

Albuny County Bound of Ele
polling place would be set up

C
the Clty of Albany Disiriet 3, Ward 15, sald
Hierney, This assurance came after student
Teaders lost court b

Up On campus during fast year's November
lection, The bourd refused to set up the
boots, protesting thar the request by the
students was (00 close (0 eleetio

students 10 yore
we will now have & stronger student Voice in
the elections," he suid

students ie 10
Humber will inereass
ding “one of our priorities is student voter

registration

New election
district gives

Dutch, Indian
polling places

By Bob Gardinier

EDITORIAL ANSI

Students living on Indian Quad and part of
lection

The decision to establish a new district (22)

exclusively populated by SUNVA students
was necessary, according 10 Guilderland
Town Supervisor Kevin Moss,

hecwuse
area's district boundaries pos:

and Fextend my congratula
said SASU
resident Jim Ticitiey. The new proposal by

“This is gre

(SA President) Mike

said Tierney, “he

nig for this,
of this proposal SUNYA may

Have (wo polling phices bn eimptis for the
fiext clections,

Students were assured, last fall, by the

ions that a
(the Campus
er for the part of the campus that falls in

Hoy 10 Haye booths set

tine,

“Te should! be made dy easy ay possible for
* Corsa stressed. “1 think

Presently there are about 2,000 students:

living in the proposed disirich and 333 of the

tered 10 Vole, But that
maintained Corso ad

According to Moss, the bid's plan for

shots on laws, drugs, Watergate

‘By Mark Hammond

the distriet was not based entirely on student
efforts but was the resull of county lexishitive
fedistricting of the (own's election lines ih
January

Following the reapportionment, the

Aintiffs sued the Selective Service
jor, Maj, Gen, Thomas K,

Ta Tikddy opened the debatey marching uerous

Timothy Leary, the “LSD prophet"

Fenowned psychologist, telling the audienc

that it's only the American way they be free still have morals,"" he said,

to “drink, smoke, sniff, inject, bultsick or Laws, he continu

pul anything else in your body you want (0."" common good, while moral ethics a
On the left side sat a stoic, self-controlled from the conscience of the

G, Gordon Liddy, precisely defining law, are necessary, Liddy said, but since ‘the

morality and his own version of the common good surpasse: and transcends the

American way, and painting the American individual good,” laws are superior.

public as ignorant for being so shocked at

Watergate because “the same thing happens a conspiracy governed by laws, not morals, It

every four y

formed)

individual, Both | residents rejected the plan, sta
Would rather vote at the Fire Department,

the stage before the jam-packed bullroom, | crowded Mckownyille Fite Department poll-

On the right side sat happy-eo-lucky Dr. making the distinction between law and | ing place in District 1,
and morality. “If you were the only person on | 300 voters, explained Moss, It wis then pro-
earth you wouldn't need Jaws bul you would | posed that all of the ar

SUNYA'S gymniisium
are structured for the | alleviate the problem,

gained an additional

voters would yore al
an attempt to

However, Moss explained that Guilderland
ig that they

To appease both parties and eliminate the

crowding, said Moss, District 22 was propos-

The Watergate episode, he explained, was | ed. The district lines follow Perimeter Road,
on campus, from the Western Ayenue

rs.” Was a “alum prohibitum’ — a social | trance to Fuller Road, taking in Indian and

Dubbed the “Power of the State vs. the wrong — and this is unavoidable in govern- || part of Dutch Quad,

last night's debate inent, On the other hand, a “malum en se’

Power of the Individua

pitted the two famous ex-conyicls agains’ — a moral wrong, like child abuse, is 50 | discussions by the
umstances may | wanted to keep their trad
you ever commit {t.'® Liddy swore that he is | McKownville Fire Department," said Moss,

each other, but, as expected, nothing was overtly evil “under no

resolved, As the 2-year old Liddy put it,
think We disagree on everything humanly innocent of “‘malum en se."

This decision was the result of “polite
uilderland residents who
jon of yoling at the

The proposal will be discussed at the Board

possible," “Watergate showed the American people | of Electigns next commissioners meeting

They do share one common experience; how their government is act Liddy
prison, For Liddy, four and a half years for declared, “The same (hing happens every
his mastermind role and tight-lipped silence four years when the presidency of the United
during the Watergate episode, Various drug States is contested, There was nothing unique
possession charges put the 62-year old Leary about Watergate,”
bebind bars in 39 different prisons on four

\

ednesday, March 16, according to Hoard
of Elections spokesperson Rosmarie Con-
Way. ‘I'm not sure if there js any official

deadline by which the board has to make a

jon,’” she expalined, “nor do 1 know
11>

2 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS (} MARCH 11, 1983

STATEWIDE

State cuts delayed

Albany
(AP) Gov, Marlo Cuomo announced Thurs-
diy that 7,587 layoff notices will be sent to
state Workers on Friday.

However, Coumo said that instead of tak-
{ng effect on April 1 as earlier planned, the
firings would be effective ‘at the close of
business"? on April 7,

The extra week on the job was agreed to by
Cuomo after leaders of the state's (wo largest
public employee Unions said some state
Workers would be treated unfairly if the April
1 date were used,

The union leaders pointed out that because
the state pays some of its workers one week
nd some the next, extra vacation credit earn

ciluise Of raises which were to take effect

1 would not be available to many of the
laid off workers who were scheduled 10 be
paid April 7.

Death bill vetoed

Albany
(AP) Goy, Mario Cuomo vetoed # bill Thurs:
day designed (0 restore the death penalty in
New York slate after a two-decade absence,

"1 do not believe that responding to
Violence with violence or death is the
AnsWer,'? Cuomo Wrote in a message accom
panying the veto, his first as governor,

The state Assembly's chief death penalty
advovate, Assemblyman Vincent Graber,
DeErie, hus already admitted that he cannot
muster the 100 votes need in that
1S0-member, Democratic-vontrolled house
to override Cuomo's veto,

NY could lose hydro

Washington, D.C,
(AP) Fears of industrial shutdowns in
Western New York are likely to increase in
the wake of @ ruling that could divert cheap
Niigara Falls hydropower (o buyers in five
Nearby states
The Power Authority of the State of New
York Was taken by surprise late Wednesday,
when the Federal Energy Regulatory Com-
mission disclosed that an administrative
Juidge had ruted in favor of out-of-staters,
Who complained that New York was keeping
more than its share of the power.

PASNY will have (0 sell 188 megawatts of
“firm' Niagara power to wholesalers in
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Massachusetts and Vermont, if FERC
upholds the ruling by Administrative Judge

orge P. Lewnes. PASNY now sells 145
megawatts (0 buyers in Ohio, Pennsylya
and Vermont, giving nothing to
Massachusetts and Connecticut

Fink proposes tax

Albany
(AP) State Assembly Speaker Stanley Fink,
D-Brooklyn, proposed Thursday that
lawyers and: other professionals pay sales
axes on the fees they charge clients,
The Fink proposal would raise, he claim:
ed, at least $250 million annually for the state
nd help restore program cuts and avert state
Worker layoffs called for by Goy. Mario
Cuomo in his proposed $31.52 billion state

the opening of the fifth Annual Ar-
tist Lecture Serles at 6 p.m., In
Meeting Room 6 on the concourse
of the Empire State Plaza.

The Irish Club is holding a meeting
on Tuesday, March 16, at 7 p.m,, In
CC 375,

The Capital District Genealogical
Soolety will hold its

meeting on Saturday, March 12, at 1
pim., In the Main Auditorlum of the
Albany Public Library, 161

Public Art” will be Dunn will speak on ways of using
the subject of a talkon Wednesday, land records to find genealogical in-
March 16, by Dr. Daniel Robbins, at formation.

A physics colloquium entitled “Re- Tues
cent Advances in the theory of Im- 973.
purities and Defects In Semicon.
be presented by A fellowship of $1,000 Is awarded
annually to a graduate student who
holds a bachelor’s degree trom
SUNYA and has been in residence
at SUNYA for at least two years as
Is sponsoring a an undergraduate, Applications {or
the award, entitled the Husted
Followship, can be picked up at
Alumni House, and must be return-

ductors,"" will
Sokrates T, Pantolides, on Friday,
March 11, at 3 p.m. In PH 129,

monthly Fuerza Latina
general Interest meeting for the Na-
Wonal Congress of Puerto Rican
Rights on Saturday, March 12, from
Washington Aye. Albany, Shirley 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. In GO 975,

The sales tax expansion, as planned by
Fink aides, would apply to fees charged by
lawyers, engineers, architects, accountants
‘and some consultants,

Under current thinking, the sales tax
wouldn't apply to doctor's fees or fees charg-
ed by stockbrokers and other financial con-
sultants,

NATIONWIDE

he

“*King’’ aided feds

‘New York

Leroy ‘'Nicky"’ Barnes, the dope king who
nce Iaughed at the law, helped federal
authorities build narcotics and murder cases
Against nine former associates, officials said
Thursday, As a result, sald U.S. Attorney
John S, Martin Jr., authorities had in
custody all six members of “The Council! —

underworld body that allegedly controlled
heroin dealings in Manhattan, the Bronx and
Brooklyn,

“The Council!” allegedly ordered and car-
fled out murders of those who posed a thre:
OF were suspected of Informing. It also
allovated heroin and sales territories, accor~
ding (0 the charges,

Barnes, Martin disclosed, had already
pleaded guilty to the racketeering charge and
had admitted membership on “The

nbers of “The Council"? who
were Thursday included Guy

Thomas Fisher, 35, of Manhattan; Thomas

Forman 36, of Far Rockaway, Queens;
Elmer Mortis, 39, of Tuckahoe; Robert
Wheelings 28, and Kenneth Thomas, 34,
both of the Bronx; and Leon Batts,29, of
Manhattan, and Samuel Jones, 41, of
Bergenfield, N.J. who is also known as Israel
Mohammed. The two previously arrested
Were identified as Frank Alphonse James, of
Bergnefield N.J., and Wallace Rice of Mount
Vernon,

nine are charged with being members

icotics distribution conspiracy which
provided major dealers with a monthly cache
Of between 25 and30 kilograms of high quali-
ty heroin berween 1973 and 1977,

EPA gets new chief

Washington, D.C.

(AP) John W. Hernandez Jr., taking the
helm at the battered Environmental Protec:
tion Agency, is vowing to "get this agency
back 10 work" by restoring publ
and reviving employee morale

Hernandez, a former college professor
who has spent two years in the No. 2 job at
EPA, spent his first day as acting ad-
ministrator Thursday

“1 hope everyone will understand how
strongly I feel about the compelling necessity
to return this ageney to {ts one and only
Job... ensure all Americans of a safe and

"Hernandez said in a
f statement to reporters,

“Lintend to begin immediately the task of
restoring the public's faith in what 1 have
‘Always maintained fs an exceptional agency,"
hie said,

the problem,

cine was given 1963-1967,

fegular hours 8:30 a.m. to

National health authorities have stated that the possibilit

y for large scale
transmission of meastes will exist for the next several weoks as a vosull of
measles outbreaks on the Indiana and other college campuses, The advent of
Spring vacations with large groups of students convening at resorts increases

Measles (rubsola) is a serious disease in the colle
ge age student with
neurological complications more cominion at this age than in younger casos, Dn
not confuse this with german measles i
disease (measles) as documented by an M.D. or if
.D. or If you know for sure you had live
measles vaccine a/ter 1 year of ago, you need not be concerned unless that vac.

(rubella). If you know you have had the

To minimize the threat to SUNYA students, the Student Health Servi
5 Is offer.
Ing {ree measles immunizations, Any student who questions his Immune srarcy
should report to the Student Health Service in person as soon as possible during
10 p.m. Monday through Friday, March 14-18,

budget. hina, possibly at 1! pense of T
PREVIEW OF EVEN i
FR BLE oI

an FS) Toke Ons

Thursday, March 17, at 7:30 p.m,, in
the Humanities lounge. The avening

Night is on

will Include speakers {rom various

areas of communications, such as
public relations, advertising, local
TV, political communications and
telecommunications,

Mtallan Students are meeting on
farch 15, at 7 p.m,, in CO

ed before April 1,

Draper,

available in AD 152,

Night at Le Fat Cat, sponsored by
Telethon, will be held Wednesday,
March 16, at 9 p.m. Admission is $2,

SUNYA's Rockefeller College of
Public Affairs and Policy will hold
an open house Tuesday, March 15,
from 3-8 p.m,, in Draper Hall, 135 ware, P.O. Box 1319, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Western Ave. Information on the
college's programs and: facilities
will be available at the reception at
the Western Ave. entrance to

Poll Grant and TAP 1982-89 applica-
tlons should be filed Immediately,
The filing deadtine for the Pell Grant
{s Tuesday, March 15, 1983. The fil-
ng deadline for TAP Is Thursday,
March 31, 1983. Applications for
both student aid programs are

Social security OK’q

Washington, D.c
(AP) In a move that would affect viriually
every American, the House has passed a
$165.3 billion plan to rescue Socail Security
by imposing higher payroll taxes, curbing
benefits and raising the retirement age from
65.
By a 282-148 vote Wednesday night, th
House sent the measure to the Senate, where
the finance committee was expected to wrap
up Work on its version of the package today
‘The full Senate is expected to vote next week.
Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., R-Tenn., expressed confidence today
that the Senate would quickly pass legislation
similar to that adopted by the House.

Salvador aid asked

Washington, D.C

(AP)Without mentioning the ‘domino
theory" by name, President Ronald Reagan
sald the defeat of El Salvador would lead 1
the fall of other countries in the region

Calling for inerease4d security assistance
funds for the embattled nation, the W
House today sent a package to Congr
questing $110 million in additonal mi
assistance,

an proposed that $60 million
Increased ald be taken from money all
fore worldwide military assistance pre
and be spent on military training fo
Salvadorians, In addition, he said hi
ask Congress to reallocate to EI Salvado
million from a supplemental appropri
bill already pending on Capito! Hill

Meanwhile, a senior administratio
ficial, speaking on condition that he 1
Identified, told reporters at a White H
briefing that “this is the package the y
dent thinks will do the job." But, hold
ul the possibility that Reagan would
more aid later, he said that
escalation on the other side, we'll have a ne
situation,

The official said that the number of L
military advisors sent to El Salvador pr
bably will depend on whether Congress
the administration all the ald it is secking

USSR called ‘‘evil’’

Washington, D.¢
(AP) When it comes to the Soviet Union,
President Reagan sces things in black and
white, “They are the focus of evil in the
modern world," he told a convention of
evangelical Christians in Orlando, Fla
Rea fire-and-brimstone speech Tue
day was something of a rebuttal (0 revent
Criticisms of administration policy by church
officials, notably the Roman Cathol
hierachy. tn denouncing the Kremlin in {ur
damentalist terms, Reagan also was probat
signaling the New Right that he hasn't reall
changed since assuming Barry Goldwate
conservative mantle nearly 20 years ago
Coriservatives had cause for doubt whi
arms control aldes Eugene Rostow and Paul
Nitze were sounding out the Soviets on a p
tial cutback in nuclear weapons in Europe
and while Reagan was strengthening ties with

‘A TAP evaluation program for all
Student owners of Atari-800, Vic20
Timex 1000, or TRS-80, is being of
fered free from Vidteck Software
There Is a $5 shipping charge and a
limit of one cassetie per person
Send your request to: Vidteck Soft

11202.

SUNYA Footworks is an annual
Teview of student choreography to
be presented in the Performing Arts
Center, Friday and Saturday, March
11 and 12, at 8 p.m. Admission |s $3
with a tax card, $3.0 for students,
and $5 for adults,

University Senate will meet on Mon
day, March 14, at 3:90 p.m., in the
‘Campus Genter Assembly Hall

MARCH 11, 1983 () ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 3

UUP plan to reduce faculty cuts draws criticism

Union proposes
tax surcharge
to eliminate
job layoffs

By Jane Anderson

In response to the widespread problems the
SUNY system will be facing if the Legislature
approves Gov, Mario Cuomo's budget, the
UUP has proposed a limited term income tax
surcharge, and has organized a "Tell Mario
phone campaign to express support for this
to the governor, according to Tim Reilly,
SUNYA English professor and UUP Albany
Chapter President.

The state income tax surcharge that UUP
is calling for would involve paying an extra
charge, in addition to the usual state income
taxes, The amount of payment would be bas-
ed on five percent of the taxes that each in-
dividual owes, and the proposal includes a
“sunset provision,” meaning it: will expire
after two years, “which is how long Cuomo
predicts the fiseal need will last,"” explained
Reilly

“With the surcharge the needs could be
met to avold layoffs and state tuition ine
creases,’’ said UUP President Nugla
Drescher, “The plan is simple, progressive,
and easy to implement," she continued, Rei
ly added that "this could prevent all the cut
backs that are planned, throughout the state,
ot just the ones involved with SUNY."

Similar surcharge plans “have been used
iwice in the past decade, most notably when
New York City was on the verge of bankrupt
cy," according o Drescher, UUP disputes
the idea that the governor docs not need 10
raise (axes, maintaining that ‘the surcharge
will not cause any great upheavel’’ in the
state, compared to what will occur if the pre-
sent budget plan goes into effect, Reilly said.

With the state-wide phone campaign, the
UUP can express their support for the plan
directly to the governor. ‘The campaign is
running indefinitely, and the UUP is urging
“everyone who is interested in saving
SUNY" {o phone the governor ‘to exercise
their first amendment right to petition,” ex:
plained Reilly. "We want to let the governor
know just how many people are concerned,"”
said Drescher, ‘and the only way we can do
that is with volume’ in telephone calls to
him.

Drescher added that “students should tell

JEAN PIERRE LOUIS UPS

"The union has to fight for what ls just for ils people, Politics ts a fouglh gama.

Mario personally that we don’t believe in
paying 'more for less'."" She advises students
to leave their name and a statement if Cuomo
Is said to be unavailable, One student who
called several times, did not have an oppor
tunity to speak {0 the governor himself, but
did reach an aide on one occasion, who
“seemed very receptive’ to UUP's sur-
charge plan, she said.

The income tax surcharge Was first propos-
ed as an alternative to the present plan by the
Donovan Task Force, which is made up of
members from each of the (wo branches of
state legislature, Among the groups suppor-
ling the surcharge with the UUP are the
Public Employees’ Federation, N.Y.S.
United Teachers, and SASU, according to
Drescher

Reilly sald the UUP has
sent a ten page “Impact Study"
legislatures, which illustrates what the effect
of the presently planned cuts would be, Ac-

cording to the study, the "first order effects!"
Will cause reductions in industries stich as
food and paper suppliers, secondary effects
Will include the loss of spending in the area,
and all the effects will add up 10 "a {oss of
seven million dollars local business volume in
the first, year alone,"” Reilly added,

“The surcharge is the most intellectual,
fiscally sound way of tackling the problem’?
Drescher pointed out, “The most important
thing for students to do between now and
next Week is t0 do just what we're doing—
lobbying daily and phoning to register our
views, and reminding them of how important
SUNY is to New York," economically as well
as educationally. "We've got (0 be backed tip
oy the students,"" she said stressing that “if
the budget goes through as is, many people
will not be able to afford college, ever-and
that’s criminal,”

Drescher said the governor can be reached
1 474-8390, 1)

Positions could

be retained by
diverting funds
member says

By Amey Adams

STATE MITER

A proposal to divert scheduled salary in.
ereases and use the funds instead to stave off
layoffs projected in the Cuomo budget has
been submitted to United University Profes-
sions by one of ils members,

School of Social Welfare Professor and
UUP member Hedi McKinley forwarded a
proposal on March 2 (0 UUP President
‘Nualla MeGann Drescher, which spelled out
a resolution she wishes (0 see voted on by the
union,

The resolution, according to McKinley
calls” in for the money the unio
Negotiated last fall as a saliry inerease be y=
ed instead 10 retain all facully whose posi
tions would otherwise oe lost, Also, she said

ny Femaining money would be distributed
progressively among SUNY personnel, with
the greatest percentage going to those
presently receiving the least compensation,

In her letter to Drescher, McKinley pointed
Out thal similar resolutions have been voted
by the sicelworkers union, United Auto
Workers, and garment unions, "1 consider
such actions to be in the best traditions of the
labor movement,” she said,

SUNYA's union representative, Professor
Jobin M, Reilly, is opposed to the resolution,
“The money in the budget is only in because
it is for salary increases,"® he said “There is
nO guarantee of any sort that money

mployees gave back would be spent for the
University because we do not negotiate with
the university, We negotiate with OER (Of.
fice of Employee Relations), The budget is
developed by the Division of Budget. While
they might be happy to retrieve some money,
there would be no way (0 require them [0 use
it to save jobs," he said,

Under the new contract agreement, Reilly

mbers will receive a 9

ear, and 8

percent the succceding two years, "The peo-
ple who got raises earned them,'? Reilly
d, “Inflation has been higher than the
gotiating teams haye previously got

ten, Now we have the opportunity t witch
7

Forum considers morality in career selections

By David L.L, Laskin

Career choices often involve serious moral
considerations, with graduates finding
themselves tempted by lucrative offers which
may compromise their untested ideals,

“Career Planning: Are there moral
choices?" a Monday night forum in the
Campus Center Assembly Hall sponsored by
the Chapel House Interfaith Center attemp-
ted {0 provide “stimulating input from a
variety of perspectives," according to Chapel
House representative Christopher Hoyer.
Alter a brief introduction Hoyer turned the
audience of approximately 40 over to Pro-
fessor Merle Longwood, the first of the even-
ing’s three speakers

Longwood, Chairman of the Department
of Religious Studies at Siena College, em-
phasized career choice as a crucial point in
students’ lives. These decisions, he said, are
no Tess important than decisions about mar-
‘and what we're go-
ot such a junctun

riage. “Ifa career choic
ing to do with our lives is
T don't know what is," hi

“The Christian perspective’ of career
planning was the focus of Longwood's
discussion, Atthe core of the Christian vision
lies the twofold notion of "covenant", he
said; the greater covenant of humanity im-
plies ‘bonds of shared values and mutual
commitments,"” and within this, lies “a deep,
fundamental human reality,’ which
transcends our diversity enabling us to work

together for. the good. ofvall. men., Covenant... bottomline, .he.stid,..js

also implies a deeply personal, introspective
process, ‘It is ‘a calling’,"" Longwood e
plained, When answered, it can provide
center of value for one’s ethical framework."*
In responding to the Christian calling, he
said, one discovers the ethic of Christ's

nd vision which serves as a guide

mework from which we can do our
sthical reflection.”

Turning next to a more pragmatic ap-
proach, Longwood outlined a series of qu
tions Which could facilitate a job-secker's
Understanding of a prospective employer,
‘and one’s position and potential within a job,
By examining both internal and external
Structures and relationships, a second type of
“ethical framework," other than the Chris-
tian can be developed, said Longwood. How
policy decisions arc made, the nature of com-
munication within and without the organiza.
tion, the treatment of employees in general,
and women and minorities in particular, the
possibilities for individual development and
participation in policymaking, and the
organization's relations with its clientele, the
government, and the people are among the
critical considerations an applicant must ex-
amine, he said.

The most fundamental questions, accor-
ding to Longwood, are “How do. policy
issues bear on the meaning of life?!” and
“What help can I get from my knowledge of
my own religious faith’ in placing career
and options within this ethical context? The

{ecide?!’ Options range from changing one’s
wn moral position to accomodate the job
offered, to siunding firm upon one’s moral
conviction, and altempling to effect change
within the system,

This pragmatic Christian perspective is

not incompatible!’ with Jewish or
Humanistic positions, explained Longwood,
“Both Christians and Jews have a shared vi-
sion of understanding the good life;’” it is
this shared vision, this “covenant which
bonds our diversity,”” and which ean provide
guidance in making difficult ethical career
decisions.

The second speaker, SUNYA philosophy
professor Bonnie Stcinbock, attempted: to
“give the history of ethies in fift
minutes.” She prefaced this history
reminding the receptive audience that “these
Kind of considerations,.are not the only ones
that matter {0 us," citing salary, location and
Other influential factors. On top of that, ex-
plained Steinbock, “it’s yery difficult to say
What 4 moral issue is." More often than not,
a company's ethical position will not be cut-
and-dry, and the potential employee is
challenged £6 look into both the company's
and his own characters,

Steinbock artictilated “two types of moral
theory—Consequentialism, and its sidekick,
Utilitarianism, By weighing the benefits and
disadvantages of an act and its consequences,
a rational, almost mathematical result is
achieved, This approach, she explained, gives

What. shall. La plausibls.explanation as 4a whyectalnacts.

ED MARUBSICH UPS
Merle Longwood a
Students should follow their calling.

tire “right” or “wrong,” Steinbock cited one
Of the mottos of Utilitarianism: “the greatest
happiness for the greatest number of
people," as an example of this kind of think
ings

‘According to the second school of
thought, an action can also be seen, morally
speaking, on its own merit, The ‘den:
ological approach,’? explained Steinbock,

regards certain acts as inherently “evil
seaneaushcenecs |

MARCH 11, 1983 GQ ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 5

EENIVERSITY EINEMAS

Proudly Presents
Friday and Saturday March 11 and 12

The Movie Event of the Semester!

of the LOST RIK

7:30 and 10:00

By Madd! Kun

STAFF WRITER

Increasing student complaints due to reduced library
hours and the subsequent lack of study space have led (0
the reopening of lecture center 19 for study until 2 a.m,
Weeknights, according to Dean of Student Affairs Neil
Brown,

The decision to keep lecture center 19 open four hours
later than the normal 10p.m, closing time was made by
Brown Thursday in order to have it available for mid-term
time, “I didn’t want (0 spend a week or so deciding," said
Brown, "since mid-terms were upon us. | made a definite
decision based on the input of three students who were stu-
dying in LC 19,"

In the past, all leciure centers were locked regularly at 10
p.m with the exception of 19. The decision to ext
operating hours in LG 19 was the result of an experiment
conducted by the Department of Academic Affairs

During midterm point last semester LC 19 was left open

SEER eerie
LC 19 night study hours extended once again

routs,

Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Martha
Rozett said that last semester “Two work-study students
were hired to monitor LC 19 and keep attendence records
while the LC was open until 2:a.m,""

According to Dean Brown, ‘The feedback was
positive.” Rozett added, “About 20:30 people studied
there nightly.”

Although the extended lecture center hours proved suc-
cessful, lecture center 19 has been locked regularly at 10
p.m, since the beginning of spring semester, even though
Audents are now in the midst of midterms. Rozett explain:

‘we didn't open it at the beginning of the semester
e we weren't convinced there was a need for it.

Recently students have been protesting the lack of study
Space and the need for the lecture centers to remain open
after 10 p.m. Complaints about the locked lecture cent
Were registered with the University Police security depart

ent, Secretary to the departinent Nancy Locux received
several calls referring to the locked centers. "They wanted

Was aware Of the fact that midterms were coming,
Although evidence indicated students were using the space
ficiently, 1 hesitated because we wouldn't have the work-
study students available,” He later decided 10 go ahead
with the plan after talking with students,

Stephanie Ratte, who was studying in LC 19 last night
commented, “The LC's should be open until 12 or 1 a.m
all the time, If you want to stidy later, with the LG's open
there's a place you can go." Another student in LC 19,
Mark Guelph, added, "1 come here arou Pe
ple come here just to study, not 10 so
Hibrary

Other measures have been introduced (0 help reduce the
crowding in the library and accomodate students? studying
needs, According 10 Brown, $60,000 was allocated from the
budgeted residence funds to purchase study carrells and
desks {0 fill unused rooms and study space on Alumni and
State Quads,

Brown will be meeting with SA President Mike Corso to
discuss the long-term plans for LC 19, "We will monitor it

Al Pacino

uthor

LC7
7:30 and 10:00

uthor

$1.50 w/ tax card $2.00 w/out
Next Week: Stripes, Garp & Victory andthe Wall

SA FUNDED

were forced out of the libr

Past the 10 p.m, lock-up (0 accommodate students who

security to cor

y___Dean Brown explaine

Mechanized system will save time

The Office of Residential Life is presently
In the process of devising a new proced
for housing sign-ups and assignments with
the eventual goal being of having one effi-
cient mechanized system, according to Assis
tant Director of Residential Life Dean Knap:
ton,

The process of assigning students will only
change from ‘‘a manual system to a com:
puter assisted system,'” explained Director of
Residential Life John Martone. Incoming
students wil still be assigned housing to meet
their needs but it will be done faster.

The new addition for this semester, said
Knapton, will be a scanner form which will
be given to the student to fill out after he has
paid his room deposit,

The form will be similar to that of the blue
residence license application previously used,
‘and include all necessary information, said
Knapton, such as smoking and_ living
preferences, credit hours, class year, and
previous campus address, An added feature
might be a pre-punched lottery number, This
addition would saye time in signing up for
‘ooms and reduce anxiety and stress for those
students having to pick their rooms by lot
tery

Martone said he is looking forward 10 the
computers handling and reducing problems
of room yacancies and room changes. ‘We
Want students to be able to live with the peo
ple they want to live with, where they want to
lives" he sald, “With the computers, we'll
hopetully be able to, see a printout saying
NeW many rooms are stl available,

Eventually, said Martone, the Office of
Residential Life is looking toward a totally

computerized” system where an incoming
freshman will be informed of his/her room
mate and sultemate's names and addresses
They will also be told their quad, hall, suite,
and room.

Presently, Knapton Is investigating that
proposal due {0 concern over the Buckley
Amendment, a privacy of information act

‘We want to check out all ends,"" explained
Knapton, adding, “We don't want (0 cause
problems by invading privacy

According to Knapton, the new approach
to the housing sign-up will not de
individualize the students’ needs. "Those
preferences," he said, “wil still be taken into
‘ageount."" Martone added, "The new system
Will give us more flexibility to meet students!
needs better."

The changeover from # manually operated
system to a computer assisted system will go
through the UAS (University Auxilary Ser
Vices) computers. The Univac computer
system on campus will not be used. Martone
explained that too many people need these
computers and they are in constant use, “We
re Using the same company and computers
ay VAS {0 develop our software,” he said
*But we are not relying on UAS personnel
We've hited « private programmer to develop
Our programs, who happens to be from the
same company

Martone said,"*The added cost of com:
puler programs and time was not a factor in
the intended rent increase for next year.”
The money that will be spent for the scanner
forms will balance off the money that would
have been spent on the extra staff needed for
hi sign-up. In the long run time will be

ie and unlock the rooms,'? she said,
clay in reopening LC

hiere is a need we'll try 10. me
it Will wo into effect immestiately

Colonial Quad

TAICA SPIEGEL UPS

Computers should reduce problems of room vacancies and room changes,

saved and the entire housing process should
be more aecurate, according 10 Martone
One student, Dave Reich, commented,
Using computers will probably speed things
up. Hopefully it won't be such a madhouse in
the Nagroom trying 10 wet a room this year
Melody White, another student, added, "1
hope this new system works without any
drawbacks. I'd rather not waste a whole day
Signing up for housing.”
The estimated vost of writing the programs
and purchasing the scanner forms is
$4,000 - $6,000, said Martone. “The scanner

forms are expensive We're hoping students

won't make a lot of mistakes,”” he added.
Martone estimated that “over the next
Couple of years We will be totally computeriz
ed.” Presently programs are being written
‘nd run through the computer. Martone add
ed that inthe near future a group of staffand
Students will be running a mock housing sign
Up. Tt will be « walk through “housing sign
up test to prepare for any inantieipated
problems, Room selection is tentatively

scheduled for the first two weeks in April
Middl Kun

Housing sign- ups haunted by ‘ghost’ students

By Karen Pirozzi

No one wants to live in a haunted house,
but when it comes time to choose dorm

rooms for xt year, dozens of students will
sian up to liye with ghosts, according to
Director of Residential Life John Mart
bogus’ housing sign up,
according to Martone, is when a student,
usually an upperclassmen, signs up 10 live on
campus with a group of
other students with no in: News
tention of actually living
there, This is done to raise Feature
the priority of the group,
which increases their chances of getting the
quad or suite they desire
The priority system, Martone explained,
works as follows. Every student is assigned a
amber from one to five according 10 his
s year and whether or not he/she is retur-
ning to the same quad. Each person's assign-
‘ed number is combined with the others and
an ayerage is taken to determine the groups
overall priority. The lowest overall average
‘equals the highest priority, and these students
choose their rooms first. Each group within a
designated priority draws a number {o deter-

mine who has first choice among them, Mar-
tone added, Consequently, if a group of
three freshmen, with an average prior

five, sign up with a junior whose priority is
ong, their priority becomes four, giving them
an advantage over other freshmen,

“The thing that bothers me most is that
these are students that are really shafting
other students," said Martone, “We want
students to live where they want to liye, and
these bogus housing sign ups are causing
more spaces to be shut off."

One Colonial Quad student agreed, saying
#1 feel cheated because it's just not fair, Why
should people who should have lower priori-

According (0 Martone, the Office of
Residential Life does not know exactly how
many people are involved in ghosting,
because students are allowed a. certain
amount of time to withdraw from their hous-
ing contract for legitimate reasons, and no
one knows who really intended to live on
campus and wlio did not. Last year, between
300 and 350 people withdrew from their con:
tracts, any number of whom could haye been
ghosts, he said,

However, Atea Coordinator of Colonial
and State Quads Howard Woodruff pointed

Out, “There are cases when it becomes very
obyious'? that ghosting ts going on, "When
We have sign ups on Friday and a group of
four sign up, then Monday three of four
release themselves, we know."

Martone stressed that situations such as
this are "getting to the point where enough is
enough," and that next year he is “seriously
considering consolidation,"® In cases where
there are only one or two people from an
original group left in a suite, he said, “we
may take the group and move it to the next
available suite, It’s the only way we ean deal
with it, and make more spaces,”” He added
that it may seem unfair that some students
will be penalized while others will not, but
stressed that it is worth it if it deters people
from using “ghosts.!?

Students seem to agree that the practice of
ghosting is unfair, but still continue to do it,
One student, who used a ghost to get the
dorm room she wanted, sald, “I think for a
university this size, the housing system is
totally inefficient, It breeds corruption
because everyone is out to gel the best possi-
ble living situation, I did it ease the room:
mate I wanted was listed a year below.”

The are fier of Datel ard indian
Quads ffith explained, “when up-

per classinen get a senior moving off-campus
to sign up with, they don't think about the
space created, Most likely it will be filled by a
freshman, If they don't want a (reshinan,
well, they should have thought of tht in the
first place, In any case, itoften makes trouble
‘or the freshman,”

The fact that these spaces are usually filled
by freshmen, Martone said, is due to the
policy that freshmen are provided housing no
matter what, along with continuing students
Transfers are placed after everyone else, he

*ghost sign-ups
ecome “very popular in the past five
years." He could not estimate which quad
had the most ghosting, but sald that last year
the largest sign-ups were on Colonial and In-
dian quads, The year before the most
popular quads were Dutch and Indian, and
several years before, State and Dutch, The
popularity of quads seems to shift in cycles,
he added,

Martone is optimistic about the future of
housing at SUNYA, because of the introduc-
tion of computer technology into the system,
“This year,"” he explained, ‘Housing sign-
Up will be computer assisted, changing the
administration, is)

vat

tS The MouselkAp

O
oO te)
5 (@)

Sag

a

Lideasectse isa

Wine and Cheese Place
o" David Staudenmaier

and
Ed Gumbracht
with a program of folk music of the 60’s
Friday & Saturday March (1 & (2
CAMPUS CENTER PATROON ROOM
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
9PM.TO1

UNIVERSITY AUNIUARY SERVICES

Oe yg

a

NS

91 EM

Your last chance to pick up the

1983 edition of the

WCDB T-SHIRT:

Monday, March 14-Friday, March 18
in the Campus Center Lobby.

THE BONGOS ARE COMING:

STAY TUNED TO 91FM FOR DETAILS

7,

Friday, Saturday March 11, 12 8pm

Student Dance Concert
Tickets

SUNYA Tax Card $3.00
$3.50

$5.00

Student Sr. Citizen
General Public

Box Office: 457-8606

6 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS () MARCH 11, 1983

Leary and Liddy argue ideas

Front Page
Did the end justify the means, Liddy was

asked.
“We won the election!" he answered.
Leary interjected, “That means it's alright

for you {o steal exam papers!” :

Leary's (urn on stage comes, and he's
buoyant in his white tennis sneakers, pro-
claiming his mission to protect and promote
the individual, his freedom, fairplay and
justice, tolerance, and progress. “The pur-
pose of the state is to promote the growth of
the individual," Leary declared, directly op:
posing Liddy.

He scoffed at John F. Kennedy's famous
‘one-liner,*Ask not what your country can do
for you, but what you can do for your coun-
try," dismissing it as “horseshit,"” and ‘pure
communism.

“What I'm saying is you should thumb:
your nose at the law.'? This Is his notion of
“red, white and blue, yankee doodle dandy
Ameried was founded by revolutionists,
misfits and rebels.,,ex-crooks and convicts,””
he yelled. Women’s suffrage, abolition, and
civil rights were all against the law in their
time, he pointed out, but are now basic tenets

of society

“The police aren't going to tell me what to
do in my own home with my family,"” Leary
said, “We get high with any type of drug we
* Law and order is “un-American,” he
justice and fair

want."
believes; he favors basic
play,” He ly quick to point out that he

doesn't favor anarchy, but finds that “nine
‘UL OF Len laws are abused by the state (0 take
away the freedom of the individual

Liddy had @ rebuttal for this: “Well, [find
nine of the Ten Commandments fair, Except
for the one about coveting your neighbor's
wife, | like to do that

On LSD and other hallucinogens, “The
il is individual growth," said Leary, an ad
mitted connissuer of psychedelic drugs
“Back in the 1960s, my colle ind |
demonstrated that LSD, mescaline, and pot
can increase your intelligence, raise your con
sciousness, and give you a broader perspec
tive,’ he said (0 great applause

Liddy had nothing (o say on the topic ex:
cept that “if 1 ever caught any of my three
sons with dope I'd have my foot so far up his

‘

Ass it'd take six FBI men to pull it out.”

Back in 1965, during the boom of the dru,
culture, Leary recommended to the federal
government that they regulate, but not il-
legalize, drugs. He predicted an underworld
drug business which “would maké the pro.

hibition days look like a tea party.”

Still today, he favors licensing people to
ing a car license to a ‘mari.
and an airplane license to an
“SD ficense,"" He suggested written tesis
testing knowledge of the drug's effects, and

lest 10 gauge

buy arugs, equa

an “under the influence’?

folerance.

It was Leary’s flaunted drug usage that led
to the meeting of the two rivals back in 1964
Leary’s 42-room “mansion'’ in Millbrook,
New York, was notorious for ‘not only
E-X,"" as then Dutchess County
Assistant DA Liddy put it, So the DA's of

LSD, but S

fice obtained search warrants and stagec
raid on the Leary clan,

But they couldn't even agree on the
cumstances of Leary's arrest, Leary, in
version, claimed that an “intrepid”? 1
and 12 heavily-booted stormtrooper
into his bedroom while he and his wile »
ed *peat-moss” and cat
pokey."

asleep, confisea
him off to the

Liddy {ells it differently
but 24 helm

“Hirst of
was not 12, ted and
booted deputy sheriffs,
Leary he was standing on
stairs, dressed only in a Hathaw:

Leary did have one good thing
Liddy: “*He contributed to the f
Nixon ion and
always be grateful

administra

Liddy defended the defense spendir
tices of the nation, citing an ancient R
"If you want peace

A cold war buildup, Liddy m

effective way to keep

rule be prepa
war
ed, Is the mos
Soviets at bay
“The Great Liddy-Leary Debate" «
promotion company, Brian Winthrop tN
national, billed it, is a two-year runnit
The (wo *
‘across the country and usually receive al
$8,000 to be split between them. Speak
Forum brought them to Albany for $
$4,200 for Liddy and $3,300 for Leary

ivil adversaries" have

And when | met M

March

TELETHON
983

Wises)

Limited number of
tickets on sale for

television hour in
CC Lobby.

Get
your

tickets
early?

MARCH 11, 1983 ti ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 7.

SA’s budget committee coordinates cash flow

By Heidi Gralla

STAFF WRITER.

How do six SUNYA. students
deal with half a million dollars?

SA's budget committee, compris-
ed of six members appointed by SA.
President Mike Corso, is currently
appropriating over $500,000 — the
projected 1983-84 student activity
revenue — to finance more than 80
SA funded groups, according to SA.
Controller Dave Schneyman,

The large sum of money does not
seem to phase committce members.
“I don't think i's the size Or dollar
amount of money; | think it's the
fact that it's the students! money
that makes it so. awesome," ex-
plained committee member
Hamilton South,

Committee Chair Johanna S:
racco added “Right now we're
looking at it (the budget) per group.
When we're done, then I think the
amount is going to hit us.""

Earlier this semester, explained
Sarraceo, groups were given a three
Week period to submit a funding re
quest {0 the budget committee, To
date, approximately 80 groups have
applied for funding

All applications are reviewed by
the budget Committce, said Sarrac

Plan for UUP

<3
up a bit,” he said.

Reilly questioned MeKinley’s
mention of other inions, pointing
Out that these were all unions in,
private industry, In private in:

dustry, he explained,the employees,

often have “escalator clauses,"
which allow for salary increases to
keep up with inflation, “We don't
have that (.sealator clause),”* Reilly
sid, “We have now gained some

ground, If would defeat the purpose

of collective bargaining (0 give it
buck," he said

Mckinley, for her part, stressed.
hat her proposal was not necessart
ly a solution, but one possibility
and added she was sure that others:
in the union had thought of it

Reilly said that McKinley's idea
had been tried before at other
universities with little success. He
cited Wayne State University in
Detroit as one example, the result
being not only a cut in wages, but
also an increase in layofts,

According (0 Reilly, UUP has its
Own proposal to save university
jobs and raise revenue, The union
has proposed a temporary sur
charge on personal income tay,

similar (6 the one used (0 bail New
York City out of its financial trou:
ble a few years ago. The surcharge,
Reilly said, would only amount to @
couple of dollars a week

I'll pay a couple bucks a week
to keep this university strong,’ he
“The union has to fight for

said.
what is just for its people. Politics is
a tough game, and you play it hard,
The easy way is layorts. We're try
Ww Cuomo that he'N ruin a

ing tosh
marvelous university if it's Wone
that way,"” he said.

Reilly said concessions to the

State have already been made, On
Feb. 23, he said, the union a

to hold two weeks pay which would
not go to employees until they in:

dividually. left. state employment
The union also agreed to cost con
tainment in health insurance. New
employees acrue their sick and

at_a slower rate than
six years or more,
‘In previous. con:
times with deferred
We earned it
use

vacation leave
employees of
Reilly added
tracts we had
raises for {Wo years.
but didn’t take it, The state
of the money,
MeKinley a\
may not be feasible, but it was one
wished the urion

he asserted.
mitted that her

idea

possibility she

membership {0 consider

co, Often, a member of the com-
mittee will mect with a represen-
lative from the group to discuss the
group's budget proposal, Addi:
tionally, committee members: com:
piire price estimates supplied by the
group with outside estimates,

The committee members, assisted
by Schneyman, then make any
necessary revisions and the budget
is voted on by the committee, Sar-
raceo noted that the commitice has
made mostly minor revisions in the
22 budgets they have reviewed so
far,

When the committee
reviewing all budgets, which Sarrac-
€0 hopes to have done by March 25,
the entire budget is passed on to the
SA President,

finishes

The president can make any
changes he feels ace necessary.
However, Corso said he would not

make changes without contacting
the members of any group whose
budget he changes, Adding that he
does anticipate making some
changes in budget committce's pro-
posal, Corso explained, ‘1 don't
Want to interrupt the budget com
mittee, Hopefully with my guidance
to them, and then thelr guidance to
me, we can come up with a good
budget.”

Corso then proposes his version
of the budget to Central Council,
Council spends several nights
reviewing the budget, and during
this time groups can appeal to
Council if they are dissatisfied with
their budget,

Afier the entire budget has been
reviewed, Council votes on it as a
Whole, Then the budget goes back
to the SA President to be signed,

According 10 Council Chair Jeff
Fromm, the president’s and coun-
cils term of office cannot end until
after the budget has been passed.
and signed

Corso contends that right now
coiineil members do not fully
understand the budgetary process,
State Quad representative Jeff
Schneider agreed with this, adding
that “more than half (of council)
doesn't know how the budget pro:
cess works,"

State Quad representative Suey
Auletia, Who serves on Council’s

finance committee and budget com:
mittee said it took her "a long
time'’ to understand SA's finances
and she doesn't think most of

Council understands
budget committee does.
However, both Schneider

everything

and

»

Auletia were optimistic that by the
time the budget comes to Council,
members will be more informed,

Sarracco said she plans to put
together a packet for Council
members, explaining the budgetary
Process, In addition, she pointed
Out that minutes from all budget
committee mectings are posted in
the SA office and that a rationale
for cach budget is included in the
minutes,

According to Schneyman, the
$6.50 increase per student per
semester, which students voted to

impose, will provide the budget
commitice with approximately
$80,000 more than last year, (0 ap:

propriate SA groups.

Corso. said that this increase
would pay for some additfonal pro.
grams, bul mostly “the increased
funds will be going to keep existing
programs alive, A lot of the money
is needed just to keep things at the
status quo," he sald,

Surracco noted that VCB,
WCDB, and Speakers Forum, are
among the groups receiving the
highest appropriations

WCDB General Manager Rich
Francolini said WDB had. re
quested an appropriation of
$43,800, explaining that most of

a living language.

Circa Neck NY 1982

their expenses came from engincer-
ing and equipment. He added that
hhe had spoken to Sarraceo and went
through the budget “line by line'”
with her, Budget committee will
review WCDB's budget on Satur-
day.

Corso said the qualities he looked
for when choosing budget commit-
{ee members were mostly time and
interest, although an accounting of
financial background was also
helpful.

Schneyman said he and Corso in:
terviewed 15-20 applicants before
choosing nine to serve on the com>
mitiee, Since then two members
have resigned because they couldn't
make the time commitme

Surracco § tk Grieb, the
third person 10 resign, did so
because he disagreed with rest o}
the committee on the purposes ol
budget committee.

Grieb contends he was “kicke
Off the committee, "1 was askin
too many questions about policy
There's no policy about who yet
funded

The six students currently serving
on the committee are Johanna Sar
racco, chair, David Pratsikas, vice-
chair, Steve Ahearn, Susy Auletta,
Ira Frome, and Hamilton South.

i
|
i
t
)
|
J
t
1
}
!
j
\
|
1
\
!

to work. We have a structure in this country

that protects citizens from their government,
The Bill of Rights was intended to and does exactly
that — protects citizens from unwarranted intrustion
by the government, That doesn't stop bills that
violate these ideals from being proposed and even
signed into law.

T here are certain ways that laws are supposed

One of these bills was stuck down in federal court
yesterday. The-Solomon Amendment is the popular
hame of a rider attached to the defense appropri
tions bill passed over the summer. For those of you
Not yet aware, this measure required every student {0
sin a statement that they either are not required to
register for the draft of have already done so, The
law (orbid them from receiving federal ald if they did
not submit this statement, The bill also required that
people involved in federal job training programs sign
similar statements,

Opponents of the law felt that the requirement
would amount to self-incrimination. The Minnesota
judge agreed, saying that non-registrant’s identifica
tion of themselves as not participating in the draft
program could incriminate,

Judge Donald Alsop does not have a reputation as
a knee-jerk liberal, He's a conservative judge — a
Nixon appointee, The

but Alsop's ruling is very likely to stand, Why would
a conservative judge declare a law that supported
such traditionally rightist ideas like military service
and “national duty”?

Because the Solomon Amendment Is simply a very
bad law, It would have swamped already overworked
financial ald offices with undesirable work like trying

to certify if people registered or not. The vast major
ty of financial aid officers and university ag
ministratiors felt uncomfortable being used to police
an already unpopular law. It would have greatly
complicated the start of a desperately needed jobs
training program.

The most frightening part of the law was the way
attempted to punish people for a crime they have not
been convicted of. For any crime, an individual must
be indicted, tried and convicted before sentence can
be passed. Anyone who could not prove
registered for the draft would be denied financia
under the amendment — whether they registered or
not,

The images this conjures up are not pleasant, The
police state mentality this kind of legislation coines
Out of runs against the grain of our democratic trad
tions, The government realized that the showcase
trials have not intimidated young men into re
ing, and dropped to unconstitutionar measur
as this

The federal government still hasn't recognized tha
draft resistance is still very pervasive, Over 4 million
men have refused to register for the dra
millions more are actively Working against conscrip
tion with these resisters. [t will take many more cases
like this one before the government reaches that

O L U M

clusion,

Glass houses and stones

The February 28, 1983 issue of the New York Times car-
tled a rather medium-sized article on tan Smith's de
of the new Zimbabwe government,

A western diplomat was quoted as saying, ‘Smith is say-
ng some of the right things, but he is the wrong man to say
them."* Nothing could be further from the truth, A closer
examination of who Smith was and still is will lead (0 the
conclusion that he is the least qualified individual fo howl
about his treatment by the Zimbabwe officials,

Dr. Japhet M. Zwana

In December the government had cause (0 detain, search’
‘and confiscate Smith's passport because there was eviden
that he was stocking Weaponry to be used at a propitious
time to overthrow the stare, While overseas (US) on a visit,
he advised the US government against extending financial
aid to the Mugabe Administration, Since April 18, 1980,
Smith has not accepted the conversion of the country from
Rhodesia to Zimbabwe, Publicly and secretly he still owes
allegiance to Rhodesia.

MeeSmithi has chosen to ignore the racial scars that were

flicted by him during the Black-White War that is suppos-
ed fo have lasted for seven years, Actually, the liberation.
struggle in Zimbabwe began In the 1950"

Whatever inequities there are within the government,
they are such that as applied to him and his white ac-
complices, Smith should not gripe about, Some of them are
the stuff of which his barbaric regime was made,

He is said to be vehemently opposed to Robert Mugabe’
rather premature call for @ one-party state, How can
anyone forget that when whites ruled, only white parties
Were allowed (0 exist? Under fan Smith, the Rhodesia Party
virtually monopolized the regime, All potential African
parties were proscribed before they were formed and the
leaders detained, arrested, exiled or even killed

There are vigorous complaints that there is widespread
press censorship within Zimbabwe. During his er
ship was clamped down on all newspapers including the two

tional papers the Herald and the Chronicle. Africans
Were forbidden to operate any papers and several foreign
correspondents were cither arrested/deported or barred

Correction

In the March 8 Albany Student Press, the editorial
“The threats stoop low"? stated that the NYPIRG fee is
refundable. In fact, this fee is refundable only at CUNY
and private schools, not at SUNY schools, In 1974,
NYPIRG went to court in an effort to make the fee refun-
dable, But the courts sided with SUNY's claim that this
would cause too much bureaucracy,

We regret the error.

from the country,

Smith has offered a daring motion demanding the
resignation of the government that was elected by about 80
percent of the population, His regime held sway on account
of being empowered by 10 percent of the population. He
cannot pretend to forget that he presided over an illegal
government which had won official recognition only from
the illegal regime of South Africa, His regime's legislative
design was a guarantee for continued white supremacy
backed up by perpetual martial law

Concerning the emerging powers that his regime had ar
Fogated (0 itself, Smith explains, "we were at war.'’ There
may be no conventional or guerilla shooting between
Blacks and Whites but the emotional, social and economic
War goes on, The effects of white colonialism and slave
labor have hardly vanished in three years. One of the putrid
anachronisms that are reminiscent of the dark past is the
fact that Smith boasts the leadership of the Republican
Front which holds ten of twenty seats reserved in Parlia:
ment for Whites only,

According (0 Smith, ‘the terms of peace agreed upon in

1979 were the worst thing that could have happened
white people in this country.'” These

crocodile’s tears, The only parties that were satisfic
the Lancaster awards were the Zimbabwe-Rhode
under Smith and Muzorewa and the British gove
The liberation leaders signed them under inte
dutess. The reasons were that, according 1o the
whites still held the key to economics, industry
employment and polities, He complains that ‘1
more encroachments haye been made on human ri
freedoms.” The application of double standard
Vious. These rights and freedoms are valid only
plied to whites,

Mr. Smith, who once confidently forecast that mu
rule would never occur in (Rhodesia), “not in a th
years" might as well resign himself to the realistic {a
African rule, no matter how shaky right now, has c
ay—the question of how many years will take
itself,

Ih a language understood by most Smiths—T
live in glass houses should not throw sto

tS

March 11, 1983

TT sr FFP

Part One Of A
Two Part Series

’ THIRD ANNUAL ROTARY CLUB

CAREER DAY ALL THIS WEEKEN D—

The Albany Rotary Club has offered to sponsor the Third Annual at the

Albany Rotary Club Career Day," This is a worthwhile opportunity
for SUNY-A students (0 participate in a one day on-the-job Kell,

experience. Here are just a few of the responses CUE received in iy ee
reaction to last year's event! \

“an excellent learning experience!’ bs q

SI Wasi real ‘Hands on’ experience rather than ‘show and (ell'."*

Campus enter

“Fantastic

‘The kind of knowledge we got you won't get in a book or from c ” ES
Weyuntad sive yore DJ .CRAIG >)
Mittelowtarmers tare tensieaiuseleconiseatar nertiela

SPINNING 4 DECADES OF
+i meVet faaemedano mld in Justa tew hours)" * p
| Duce Music|

“Hats uff to Career Day!!*

Ins year approximately 33 area professionals and members of the a
Albany Rotary Club have agreed to donate the morning of April | DR Go Ge DO Sra se

2st to the career development of Albany students, This half-day
venture will take students off the campus and into the community,
Students will spent (he morning with thelr assigned professional
contact at his place of busines, A wide range of occupations will be
represented Including:

ROCK N ROLL * NEW WAVE # MOTOWN
+#TOP FORTY * OLDIES aud ROCKABILLY

sls Fiideg wircu iN": 9 PM - 1AM

star Had Rou UR OT RET Siatulheday wiscr 12:9. 9m- 14M

Albany Thruway House - courtesy of the Albany Rotary Club. WITH

The Center for Undergraduate Education (GUE) Is co:
HoT POPCORN BUS6BLING
2s* 6, 46% Pizzh PIE
+160

sponsoring this event with the Rotary Club, CUE will
His Weekini

coordinate the selection of students. Individuals Interisted in
participating may pick up an application at CUE, fill it out

Hniveralty Auxiliary Bervices Sponsored
na unamrva ane,

Business Management

Introspective 3a

and return it to CUE no later than March 25. At least 58 ae
*,!

Students (possibly more) will be selected. Selections will be

campus center 343 (ticket window)
monday-friday march 14-18 9Qam.-2 p.m.

monday-wednesday march 21-23
PUPPOSE You must have a ‘senior card’

to purchase ‘senior tickets’ this i
senio April !
eligibili€y those seniors who

have paid class dues for the past 4
semesters. The payment of past
Class dues is possible at this time.

(Each se ¢ s
which should be paid a geen oni)

Cover Photograph

Debbie Millman by Will Yurman.

S>< Hn Omsa>

4a-5a:

sound & vision:
Peereboom finds Alvin Lee
out of time; those fine cable
folks drop a bombshell on
Chris and Bob; The Divinyls
attack as the Australian inva’
sion continues; Greenfield
finds feet with taste, variety
and creativity.

GoM St

6a-7a:

centerfold:

Humanities and business, an
unlikely pair, come together
in the first of a two part
series. Carroll wrestles with
that age-old question - “Are
there really jobs for
humanities majors?” Mean
while, business Just keeps on
booming

8a-10a:
perspectives:

Edel sees God while Teri
takes a sauna; not about to
leave business schools in the
centerfold, Schmitz looks
from a different perspective;
spring causes Lisanne to
forget about movies and
remember an old aquain-
tance

12a

zendgame:

Zhe Pudz zeek zhat ever
elusive equalibrium

| Nuclear Study

The University Committee on Nuclear
Studies and Aspects are planning to devote
the entire April 29th issue to the subject of
Nuclear Armament. We are therefore call-
ing upon all members of the University
Community to contribute essays, fiction,
poetry, bearing on the crisis. The deadline
for submissions is April 8th. Send contribu-
tions to H.C, Staley, Humanities 346.
Please remember to include your name and

community address.

nee

Word On A Wing

But such is the irresistable nature
of truth, that all it asks, and all it
wants is the liberty of appearing.

-Thomas Paine

. . the wise man looks into space,

ai ‘. does not regard the small as

too little, nor the great as too big;

for he knows that there is no limit
to dimensions.

-Lao-Tse
We don’t need no education,

We don’t need no thought
control...

-Pink Floyd

da

my archives, Alvin Lee and) Ten
Years After, Rock and Roll Music to
the World, The album brought back some
old memories of beer parties down in a little
room we had fixed up in the cellar at
home. Everybody got into the album - pro-
bably the reason why it was covered with
scratches and obviously played to death.
It wasn't pure nostalgia, however'that led
me_ to give the album a listen, The name:
Alvin Lee had popped up again - just as a
Warm-up to Johnny Winter at the Palace.
Bul, something had happened (0 that gig
and now Alvin was going to be doing it
alone at the Hulla Baloo in the fine city of
Renssalear

I Pulled the crusty old album out of

o> >= o49mvo>

Gaon

Wayne Peereboom

While they were never big international
stars Ten Years Afier was a well known
band after they broke out of the English
blues circuit in the mid:60's. Yes, this part
of the British invasion held together until
the mid-70's, They probably reached their
apex with the classic nine minute per
mance of “I'm Going Home
Woodstock. Some of their other more
recognizable tunes included "I'd Love to
Change the World,” and “Choo:Choo
Momma,"

Alter Lee was finished with Ten Years
After, he called his new band, logically,
Ten Years Later. Most recently, he has
been recording as simply Alvin’ Lee

Nil admit 1 had doubis as to whether 1
should make that trip to Renssalaer, had a
great fear of seeing someone hash through
old tunes, while riding on an Image that
had been created years ago. On the other
hand, I knew Lee was a very good guitar
player, who's been heavily influenced by
the blues «two facts that 've found very ap:
pealing as of late, Furthermore, I recall
wondering whether he's doing something
new or different. [felt t might be interesting
fo see what ol! Alvin is up to these days. |
made the trip across the river

For some reason, driving in Renssalear
has always been a traumatic experience to
me. All had were some directions hurried
ly given in a Price Chopper parking lot
Somehow we ended up on some wooded
back road - a perfect drinking spot for local
youth
After a couple more wrong turns, we

Dear Capito! Cablevision Subscriber.

Due to recent rulings by the “Copyrigh
Royalty Tribunal." we may be forced te
drop some popular channels on MARCH
15 or ask to pass on higher rates to you

his shocking news was received
by us in the mail one seemingly
Innocent afternoon last week, We

felt was our responsibility as cone id
Americans to inform our fellow TV viewer:
Of this outrage and urge you to voice you
opinions

Chris Considine

RobRafal

In order to confirm the contents of this
letter we put in several calls to Capitol
Cablevision. However, we were put on
hold for an unbelievably long time (ten
minutes) while being treated to such lovely
Muzak standards as "The Winner Takes {t
All” and “Delta Dawn," until our dimes ran
out

Unable to communicate directly with

pitol Cablevision, we were forced to rely
on our equally confused sources and a
vague and misleading questionnaire that
was attached to the bombshell reprinted
above for our information, What we've in:
ferred js that due to a hike in royalties, our
local distributor has chosen to either drop
"some popular channels" or raise the price
for subscription. The channels involved are

Ten Years Lat

photograph by Leslie Fratkin

{inally arrived at the Hulla Baloo, | was not
surprised to find the place rather crowded
‘Alvin was Just taking the stage. He had a
basic three plece band = guitar, bass and
drums, (Ten Years Alter had included
Keyboards.) Lee wasted no time cranking
Into some old favorites, The band was
lean, tight and bluesy, Alvin's guitar was as
crisp and clean as it was quick. He seemed
in top form. It looked like a good show

At this point, the question remained as
to which direction Lee would take. There
seemed to be three possibilities; He could

The View From The Couch

Beware The Ide

WNEW (Channel 20 on the box), WOR
(Channel 22 on the box), WPIX (Channel
24 on the box), WSMW-WLVI (Channel
21 on the box) and, thanklully, WKTV.2
(Channel 30 on the box)

The question js, are these stations worth
the extra 35 cents a month each that they'l
ost, oF should we allow them to fede
‘way, leaving a vold where there was once
pleasait programming? We'll supply the
evidence, you make the decsion

WNEW,WOR and WPIX were staples of
our youth, shaping and molding us into the
‘complete persons thal we are now. Today,
they stil play an important role in our
everyday life. If we were to lose WNEW:
we'd be denied such classics as WKRP in
Cincinnati, with Loni Anderson; America’s
Top Ten; MASH (twice daily); Three's
Company; Sports Extra; and Bugs Bunny
Can we afford such a loss?

Can we live without WOR? Tie Tac
Dough: Soap; Benny Hilly Madame's
Place, with Judy Landers as Sarah Joy; the
Knicks, Nets, Rangers, Islanders and Mets
what more can be said?

As if this isn't enough, imagine life
without WPIX, A day that starts with Flip.
per at 9:30 (for those of you who arise
before the afternoon) and reaches its zenith
with The Odd Couple (twice daily) can't be
all that bad: On top of this, the happy
viewer can delight himself with Star Trek
The Magic Garden, Barney Miller, Litile
House on the Prarie, The 700 Club, and
Happy Days, not to mention the many
great movies that are regularly shown on
this channel. Can we endure such a
sacrifice?

go deeper into his blues roots; he could ex
plore some “new” musical direction or, at
worst, he could become mired in what he
had been doing for many years before
hate to judge things on appearance, but
Ihave to say It was appearance that gave
me the first clue of Alvin's direction, He
looked the same as he did on many of his
‘album covers I had seen in the past, and his
guitar still bore the same peace sign, while
@ guy In the back hocked black white and
orange Alvin Lee jerseys, complete with
thunderbolt

1 think the turning point of the show

came during a particularly drawn out song
There were long bass and drum solos. The
musicians didn’t handle them very well}
The end result was something you might
expect if you pulled out an old copy of
Grand Funk Live

From that point on, the band seemed to
Jose the intensity it had held up for the firs
five or six songs. While an occasional song
rekindled that early sparkle, for the most
part the band seemed content to just
through the songs. Lee nearly salvng.
show with some slick guitar licks and st
antics which included belting out leads
the use of a drumstick

Nevertheless, the question persis
Why was Alvin on the “tour
place? As the show went on it served
parent that he needed to make
money, There just wasn't the ene
musicians who are anxious to make a

tribution to music
Its hard for he
back. While not meeting mass st
Steppenwolf has managed to put
an Interesting stage show. Bac
hungry, talented young musiciar
penwoll leader John Kay has kept h
for the times, Other bands like the (
Dead and the Jefferson Airplane/s
have never really left the scene. If A\

60's bands t

deed wants to mal
he needs to explore a different direct
On his present course, he runs the 1

becoming a sort of modern day Guy |
bardo who plays “I'm Coming Home
the eve of the annual Woodstock a1
sary

There is, of course.
Alvin's getting a bit old for that. Beside
really doesn't fit his style. It seems if A\
wants a long standing career in the 1
business, he needs to break away from t
sound that was trendy in the 60's a
mid-70's, His obvious talent is in the t
and it seems that its that part of his act
he should concentrate on and deve
Perhaps start with the blues and expand
to blues-rock rather than starting
blues-rock and
psychedelia

Idon't know. Maybe I'm taking o!
too seriously. He may have just hit
for nostalgia, bucks or both. At any rat
the people at the show didn’t seem 1
complaining = they packed the stage area
and called him back for two encores

technopop.

slipping into 6

s Of March

Your Voice Can Count!

© WKIV2 Button 30 Utica

‘As far as losing WKTV-2, better known
a5 C-SPAN, all these writers can say is
praise the Lord! By the way, in case you
Were wondering about the virtues. of
WSMW-WLVI, an. independent ae
from Worcester, Massachusetts, we're
writing this article instead of watching
Humphrey Bogart in The Mallese Falcon
{and believe us, it was a tough decision).
Hare ce the alternatives: allow these
and possibly more stations to be dropped
by Cepilol Cablevision or pay 38 era
monthly for each station (with the possibil

y of such new stations as WTBS: the

Super Station run by a super guy), is 35

| cents a month a lot to ask for

tickets to Rangers road games? to a livin
toom seat in 1049 Park Avenue?
All we can say is, thank God WXXA
WSBK are not being threatened (or arc
they?) Fill out this questionnaire and sen
It 0: Capitol Cablevision, P.O. Box 6298.
Albany, N.Y. 12206
FUTUREVISION: In the weeks to come
We will be discussing such topics as TV Et
Quette; Should Talking Be Tolerated?.
Repeated Viewing: When Is It Too Much?
When Does It Become Harmful?, and
Geme shows from Carol Merrill 1o Wink
Martindale, J

——=

nh the last couple of years,
I Australia has taken a giant step

forward in promoting its culture
to the rest of the world, A band like Men At
Work seems to be the best example of the
Australian explosion. However, there are
many other acts that have been vying for
attention, This year marks the arrival of a
New group, Divinyls. Like Men at Work,
they hail from Down Under. Like Men At
Work, they have a great deal of talent and
potential, Like Men At Work, they have a
catchy debut album, in this
caseDesparate,The similarity ends here.
however, for the two groups sound as dif.
ferent as night and day,

Robert Schneider

Although the individual band m
have been playing for years, Divin
their first notable association. The group
came together two and a half years ago in
Sydney. They soon began playing Ic
bars of questionable reputation. Divinyls’
reputation grew rapidly, and they soon
came to the attention of film director Ken

Cameron, who was looking for a band to
star In a movie about Australian nightlife
Divinyls {it the bill perfectly. They also fit
the bill for WEA, who signed them to a

recording contract, A single, "Boy's In
Town", was released and soon became an.
enormous hit in Divinyls’ home land

Adulation for them grew both because of
the single and also because of the group's
fantastic live shows
Problems began to arise between the
group ond WEA, A contractual dispute led
to Divinyls jumping over to Chrysalis. Ap-
parently, other record companies con
sidered them to be a hot item,as the band
was swamped with other offers. Desparate
was recorded in New York City in a rapid
four weeks. Later in the year, Divingls was
| set to begin a major US. tour

What seems to stand out most about

Divining

Divinyls is their lead vocalist, Christina Am:

oot-what? No, Footworks, I's the
F annual production, choreograph:

ed and performed by SUNYA's
very own dancers, Whether your
preference |s ballet, modern dance, @ mix
ture of the two or none of the above, Foot-
works has it all. The pieces are diverse,
emotional and above all

Michael Greenfield
“Since September, these highly
motivated, dedicated and of course
talented students have been devoting long
hours to formulting their ideas and emo-
tions into movement, ullimately to perfect
this movement Into dance.
Dance is.an art. It is a means to express a
mood, a feeling or tell a story. All dance
has a purpose — that Is to affect its au-
dience, to create a bond between that au-
dience and the performer so that a nonver-
bal message can be understood or simply
communicated.

In a rehearsal performance, Tuesday
night, Footworks was successful. The
dance |s alive, entertaining and engaging
There are thirteen pieces in all. Each has its
‘own personality ..; . ight and alry like
“Icarus”, full of whirling confusion like
“Just A Lark" or romantic obscurity as in
“but Anyway Goodnight”

Classical as well as Jazz and C
porary music lovers are properly cared for
Guest musical appearances include Stevie
Wonder, The Pat Metheny Group, Rolling
Stones and the Who. The traditional ballet
enthusiasts will be more than delighted with
“Le Waltz”, a ballroom scene of fourteen
dancers, Il is one of only two. pieces
choreographed by a faculty member, all

rs are studenis, For

he other choreograp
the animal in you, “Jungle Jaza" should be
enough to wet your appetite, and finally for

the jocks “Halfiime” will make you feel

’

phlett, Visually, she looks like a cross bet
ween Pia Zadora and Debbie Harry. Vocal

ly, she sounds like dozens of possibilities

from Marlanne Faithfull to Dale Bozzio of
Missing Persons, This (s especially true on
"Siren." Amphlett mimics Bozzio's style of
ending each verse with a girlish squeak

The song itself is a frenetically paced tune
that features a nice interaction betwee

Amphlett and guitarist-keyboardist Bjarne
Ohlin. It holds up the pace until a
cataclysmic, very effective dropoff at the
end, Many of the songs on Desparate are
bouncy, semi heavy metal songs, but there
are few solos, An exception to this is "Only

Come Dancing

will lose Interest: heavy gripping pieces are
followed, in contrast, by bouncy, cheerful
ones, The pace, style and musical accom:
paniment change enough to keep even the
more restless, like myself, content, The
costuming is, for the most part flattering,
colorful and appropriate, Admirably, the
dancers display the sincerity of profes
sionals, but perhaps more Importantly
haven't lost the excitement that is so typical
of young performers, Enthusiastic energy
radiates from the faces — this is the high
point of their year

About forty-five students actually dance
in Footworks, at least another thirty are in-
volved In some sort of "behind the scenes”
work. This production is made possible
with Dance Council's sponsorship and the
help of two faculty members: Darlene
Myers and Ann Morris, Everybody
(dancers, choreogtaphers, etc.) work as a
team, On stage the performers dance as
one

Footworks 1s more than just entertain:
ment. Its value is far more reaching. What
makes it so {mportant Is that it is the only
chance the dance students in this university
have to display thelr art. They can ex:
perience performing and others can ap:
preciate their talent, I's an incentive for the
dancers, something to strive for and
achieve

Sometimes it's very hard to do justice
when previewing and describing art — for
the reason that art js inherently a subjective
topic. There were some that sald Picasso
couldn't paint It all bolls down to a
matter of taste

Footworks has taste. Better yet, it has
variety, With taste, variety and creativity, t
is a very satisfying experience, The fee is
nominal and you can enjoy two hours of
Albany's finest dance in the comfort of the
Performing Aris Center Main. Theatre,

Down Under

U" Lead guitarist Richard Harvey Is
located an alltoo-brie! solo, but he
manages to do his best with the limited time
he's got

Like many bands today, Divinyls utilizes
some tricks on some songs, “Ring Me Up,”
for example has a cute litle section at the
beginning where it sounds like some
cavemen were brought In to grunt and
groan, as Amphlett sings along in tart, stac
catto chirps, Surprisingly, none of the gim:
micks ever seem to wear thin. Not all the
songs on the record rely on either tricks or
heavy metal thunder, however, In fact
directly following "Ring Me Up." we ore

tonight and tomorrow evening, Relax and

right at home.
The pieces are arranged so that no one

let somebody else's feet dothe work, (1)

|treated to 2 sweet litle ballad called “Vic-
Horla."" What's nice about this ballad is the
guisy bass and drum backdrop to some
very soft, mellow singing by Amphlett, —

Most of the songs on the record deal
With the incredibly redundant subject of in-
{erpersonal relationships of the non
platonic kind, Fortunately, Divinyls' writers
‘Amphlett and guitarist Mark McEntee delve
Into another subject on "Elsie," It's a slow,
haunting song that again features @
marvelous. deep anchor provided by
bassist Richard Grossman and drummer
Richard Harvey. The lyrics fit the tempo of
the {une perfectly, They tell a tale of
Joneliness and resignation in the title
character's life; “She just sleeps all day/In
her squalid lie slum /And takes litle
white pills/To make her body feel all
numb.” Sadly, on this song, Christina At
phiett feels that she must moan, scream,
and just generally overdo things. Perhops
she felt that this would evoke tears from a
actually, it tends to evoke
laughter, combined with anger. To be falr,
criticisms like these are few and far between
on this fine album, For the most part, the
songs are well written and superbly per
id. Mark Opitz, the producer, has
done 4g fin in not over-emphasizing
any: individual elements, This is quite an
achievement when you consider what a
strong vocalist Christina Amphlett is, A less:
Intelligent producer would allow her to step
all over the rest of the band. This is not the
case here

Although this debut record |s terrific, it
seems doubtful that it can match the suc
cess of Men At Work's opener, Business As
Usual. First, there are very, very few
albums that could do that, Secondly, and
more importantly, Desperate is not that ac
cessable when it comes to widespread FM
airplay. The strength and gutsiness of both
the music and the vocals may scare off
many programmers, That would be a

shame, for Desperate |s a fresh, entertain
ing work, definitely worth looking into.

Jeound & vleion 5a

Aspect Cen fd
Business Is Booming...

The demand for business majors multiplies

emo Me DE

bviously the future Is a preoceu
pying thought for all college
students, What a responsibil!

Knowing we are all in the same situation
does not help alleviate the fear and the am:
bivolence we all feel toward our own In:
dividual futures, The “world of business" is
4 sea that we are all eventually going to
plunge into, {ts endless opportunities can
be threatening as we try to choose a situa

tion, especially in today’s neither here-nor

thore economy,

Lynne Siegel

Is there a major which Is practical and
will enable me to get a job? Is there a
market for the MBA? Are there jobs to be
had! Out of desperation, we all seek Infor
mation from our advisors, professors and
closest friends

Aspects went to Professor Frank Kolmin,
2 specialist in Taxation here at SUNYA, for
‘an insiders look at the world of business
and the future of business education, He
has generously offered his opinions and
advice on today's economy, job market,
opportunities available for college
graduates entering the world of business 0
SUNYA's Business School and the effects
‘of national budget cuts on the business
world,

Professor Kolmin holds Doctorate fron
the University of Vienna in Accounting
Finance, an MBA in Accounting and
Finance from New York University and
PHD In sonomics from the Maxwell
Graduate School at Syracuse University. A
reflugee {rom Austria, Kolmin came to the
United States with “all the strikes against
him." However, in New York he was
allowed to make his way and feels gratitude
without limitation," This semester, Kolmin
Is teaching Accounting 442 and Accoun:
ting 641, which Is a graduate seminar in
advanced Taxation emphasizing corporate
toples

Although Kolmin specifically refers 1c
Business and Accounting majors, he feels
that In today's economy, the student must
be versatile, For example, the ability to
operate or at least a general knowledge of
‘computers Is useful in today's competitive
job market, He also feels that general skills
{n programming are Impressive

Kolmin addressed the question of the
MBA. In his opinion, the MBA can open
doors in business because it provides a per
son with more knowledge in his field, a
“period of maturity” and various applica-
tions which cannot be taught in
undergraduate education because of time
limitations. The MBA can offer valuable,
practical experience. A person with an
MBA can slart off In a Job ata higher level
‘and receive a higher salary, Increasing job
potentials considerably, In reference to Ac-
counting, Kolmin admits that there "has

been a sloughing off of jobs” In the market,
However, competent students can stil find
Jobs, if not with the "big eight firms" then
with smaller firms which still provide
valuable job experlence

We asked what he felt looked impressive
to an employer on a resume, Kolmin
replied, "An employer looks for a well
educated, well-rounded person who Is a
good communicator and can speak well. In
Business, we are always in the public eye,"”
Kolmin believes that communication and
Writing skills are very Important in any job
in today’s market, He replied, "There Is
something lacking in the general edueation
today... . it goes way back fo the junior
‘and high schools.” Establishing these skills
In college can provide & necessary tool In
the job market

Kolmin discussed

Albany's Business

Photographs of Accounting Professor, Dr. Frank Kolmin, by Will Yurman, (UPS)

schools. How does such a title benefit a
college or university? “It improves the
school’s reputation.”

Kolmin’s comments on the selection pro
ess oF What Is more commonly refered to
as “weeding out” were extensive. To
dispute the notion that this process Is in
flicted on the students of SUNYA, Kolmin
sald that “it is something that is imposed
upon us. We have to do it for self
oreservation.” Albany is a competitive
Jchool and there are a limited number of
spaces and only so many students can be
accepted, “There are only so many
students we can handle. If we overload
the quality of the school will go down,” He,
however, feels this process is unfair
because the well-motivated, conscientious
student, who could probably succeed in

the business world, may not get a fair

Kolmin: An employer looks for a
well-educated, well-rounded per-
son who is a good communicator
and can speak well. In business,
we are always in the public eye.

School and was quite optimistic about its
fepulation and lis students, When asked
why he felt Albany's Business Schoo! was
different from other business schools, he
listed three reasons; “First, Albany has a
large enough Business School to allow
ourselves «the luxury of employing
specialists in the faculy. Second, the
budget cr h ts not so bad that we cannot,
offer reasonable salaries so we can employ
good faculty. Thitd, the caliber of our
siuclents is very high," He believes that the
preliminary two-year liberal arts prepara:
tion for application to the Business School
provides students with the well rounded
education so essential to success in the
Business program, The core courses
themselves serve to educate the student
because “labor relations rely on political,
sociological, and economic developments
which contributed to the framework of our
history," In addition he says that the liberal
arts preparation allows the university to be
selective. Albany's Business School is ac-
credited, whereas business schools at other
universities, such as SUNY Binghamton,
are not, To be accredited by the AACSB is
contingent upon the percentage of PD's
‘among the school’s staff, SUNYA's
business school faculty and student body is
fairly large compared to other business

chance to compete if his average Is only
slightly below par. The choice process in
cludes those sacrifices, “but the results are
good." Kolmin added, “We have only the
best in our classrooms. The ability to learn
Js very high, The better the student, the
better the Instructor can teach,"

Are the requirements for transfer
students equal fo those needed by Albany's
students to. be admitted to SUNYA?
Kolmin's reply is that the transfer student
must have a higher cum, Certain basic
courses are the same in both a four-year
and a two-year school but the University
recognizes that the standards of a two-year
college might be significantly lower and
therefore the transfer students cum should
acceed the norm, “There js validity In being
fairly strict," The exact cum needed to be
accepted to the business school Is not con:
sistent from year to year, as cum Is depen
dent upon the number of applicants
"Below a 3.0 |s questionable,” he: sald,

‘but not Impossible,”

The professor says that Accounting
seems to be the most popular major
selected among the business students.
“Ninety-elght percent of my students are
Accounting majors,” he says. Accounting
firms come to the University hoping to find
the top students for employment, The firms

, , o,°¢ 4
ut What About Humanities? |

Wherein Shakespeare and

review students’ resumes which are on file
and they ask faculty for Information which |
will help them to decide who to interview. |
“Some firms will hire students for part-time |
work, unfortunately, Albany does not have
8 proper Internship program, The national
offices in Albany are too small to a
comodate all of the business students.” He
added, "There are mostly brokerage {ir
In Albany." Limiting the opportunities for
outside experience

The infamous budget cuts which

threaten many of the departments have
seriously hurt the Business School. Or
consequence has been larger cla:
as Accounting 211 with 500 or so student:

The personal contact is not all that close
A teacher tends to speak at studen
classes intimidate students to speak to their
professors.” The department has

st three
accounting teachers and is trying to {ill h
vacant positions. According to Kolmin. |
some of the teachers were not given exte
sions to thelr contracts or
leave, He added,
‘always had a high stud

When asked why there wer
business courses for non:majors.
replied that the

nure and had
Albany
faculty rat

However

‘not separate
Kolin
are not enough pr
fessors {0 have these courses and that even
if there Were, business majors and busine
minors should be equally treated. “The
should be required to do the same we
Frank Kolmin concluded by saying, "Y
‘are no Harvard, but we may be belter in
some ways, Harvard does not have at
Undergraduate business program.” On the }
Whole, he feels that Albany’s fine reputo- |
tion is well deserved

Several other members of the business
faculty have commented on the same
Issues, John Levato, assistant to the Dean,
|, | believe very strongly that there is nc
substiiute for an extremely good education
The Business firms will always try to hire
the best students, You have to work very
hard. A student should take courses which
five years from now will have an impact
Harry Cannon, Professor of Accounting
211, said in regard to the Accounting pro
fession that “the profession normally reacts
to fluctuations in the economy late in a
tecessionary period. The demand will hit |
Us in '85, ifit's true we've turned the corner
In the economy.”

In reference to the Importance of com:
puter skills, Sal Belardo, a professor ol
Computer Science, commented “I think
they're essential, regardless if the individual
Wants to go into science or not. The area of
computers is moving in such a direction
that the power is golng to be available to
more and more people, The goal is

make this technology less intimidating and

more useful so that humanity will be bett
served by It.” a

ooo

‘a business course, for the theatre
major who doesn't understand his motiva
tion in not becoming an accountant, and
{or those English majors who've ever wish:
ed they'd taken another language, like
Pascal, there's finally some good news
which may convince thelr parents that
they're not nearly as dumb as they think.

‘or every sociology major who
F aver kicked himself for not taking

Andrew Carroll

The glad tidings come from places like
the Career Planning and Placement Office
and the Humanities and Fine Arts Advise:
ment Center, and a man named Beck, and
thie agreement js that liberal arts majors are
a lot more marketable in the real world
than they've ever thought, and maybe
more than ever before.

That's not to say that i's all good news
those same offices will still remind you that
students who have majored in engineering,
accounting, sales-marketing, business ad:
ministration, or computer sclence are more
ikely to receive job offers and higher salary
offers than liberal arts students. However
thanks to Robert E. Beck and the research
he's done at the Bell System, it's becoming
apparent that while liberal arts students
often have greater difficulty obtaining initial
‘employment In business, once employed
they can compete successfully with people
who have majo ed in other fields.

The Bell System employs about 6,000
college graduates each year (of whom
more than one thid are liberal arts
graduates), and seemed a likely place to In
itiate a study of hiring trends over the past
20 years. The Bell research team Isolated a
n to go hand

rariety of qualities which se eh

inshand with advancement int
upper management, including od
ministrative skills, interpersonal skills, In
tellectual ability (both verbal and quan:
titative), and motivation for adv
Bell followed
graduates for over two decades, charting

non-technical” and “technical
did in each of these
‘assessment centers.”

Some. of the findings were expected,
others Weren't. As you might suspect. the
(which include

the careers of college

non-technical
business as well as humanities and social
sciences) wpre superior to math, selence.
and engineering majors when it came
down to leadership skills, oral communica
lions, and “forcefulness of personal
impact" (which sounds like a scouting
great college lineman)
nical.

majors

report on a
Likewise, the {
high scorers in quantitative skills
The surprise came when the

took an overall rating of potential for mid
dle management. At a speech given on
March 4, 1981, before the Association of
‘American Colleges, Beck revealed that of
those employees considered to have
potential for middle management, 46 per

6 percent

varchers

cent were humanities majors, 2
were engineers, and 31 percent were
business majors! And moving from
theoretical job levels one through seven
after 20 years, where three is entry into
middle management, 43. percent of
humanities and social science majors had
achieved at least the fourth level, com:

ared to only 23 percent of the engineers
land only 32 percent of the business ma
Clip this out and’ send it to Dad, Or bet
ter yet, thank the phone company, and call
him before 11

vohn Alexander talks in essays — neat
compositions which he has honed during

Milton prove there’s more
tolifethan ACC 211

ing on this campus, Alexander is a white
halted grandfather with grey plastic glasses.
and he balances the often discouraging
news in the job market and the disappol
{ing participation in his programs with an
unflagging appeal towards the potentials of
both

Today's essay begins with an anecdote:
the story of a women who returned to
SUNYA In March of 1978 after spending a
semester in Athens, A major in Latin and
Greek, she came to Career Planning to talk
computing, It might
on the Aegaen

about a new lov
have been somewher
where she first discovered that computers
offered her the same fascinations that had
drawn her to the classical languages, and
she decided to come home and continue
her search for Alexander in ULB 69
She was a bright, resourcelul

directed woman, and she came home to
discover, In one of Alexander's fav

phrases, “just what her paths were

IBM she found a woman who had come
from a similar liberal arts background, and
who agreed that her classics studies would

Inno way handicap her in the world of
computers. She was right, and our scholar
found a job as a computer trainee with a
pany in Manhattan — having
1 a computer course before

small cor
never tak
That job proved a dead end (banking on
hip skills, the company had
made her a supervisor and vittually took
her off the machines), but she was able to
xperience for a job at IBM
today and

trade in the w
where she
classically, happily ever after

The story Is important to Alexander
because It illustrates most of the messages.

he’s been trying to get actoss 10 the
students and alumni who attend the Place
ment Office's programs and seminars os
approach the job swarch. ‘The
old-fashioned parallels
‘oldsfashioned” notion of

they
what a university means
school {t's a university, And mojors aren't

major
This isn't a trade
Work categories, they're study categories

‘An English major isn't a highering
calegory, When a student comes down

Aspects Centerfold

marty 7a

Na Sa

GETS
ea

Sihy

Lf,
ewAa2

and “conceptions” of a resume, The w
job i mentioned in the schedule until the

fourth seminar

“There's a little showmanship, Alex:
See ites
copture their ination. Show then that
the simplistic trade school view doesn’t ex
Le ee
what they learned in their majors directly.
but they are few. We have to. look for more
sea a veg) ee

sublly re
fn means discovering just what a

that of
student has learned in his four years of
study importantly, what he is
capable of doing — and getting it down on
‘Most gain more than they

nal, mc

Savitt: You'll get very different
answers about the job market
from people in their twenties and
people in their thirties. Employers
do have a bias against the liberal
arts, but studies like Beck’s show

that may be changing. |

Unfortunately, there's something lonely
about John Alexander's appeal, Atten:

nce at the seminars, and at freshman
orientation programs, is dismal. Ata typical
summer orientation, 12 of 250 freshman
here and says 'I need a job,’ 1 won't talk to
him in those terms.

But," says Alexander, “I will help them
find connections between what they're stu
dying and what they one day will hope to
be doing.”

The ten-hour Job Search Seminar Series
offered by the Placement office Is a way of
spreading this method of making connec
fons, Subjects Include self-clanfication,

his five years as Director of Career Plann:

self-assessment, Individual achievement

out of this school — relevant.
rable things, We find main com:
cies, not skills. Intellectual abilities are
more desireable than any job label.” And
ilke his heroine's love of language, "utterly
transferable" in the job market
will attend an Introductory session. The
Introduction to Job Search." conducted
weekly, will attract 491, or 15 percent, out
of an estimated 3500 seniors, By the first
seminar, the number drops to 8 percent
while those finishing the program. will
number between 100 and 10 people, 35
percent of whom are alumni
‘Alexander begins and ends his essay on
that note, wondering why so few students

Y

m

yy
ay,
Om

FN

“ever come near us." Considering what the
Career Planning and Placement can do for
the confused humanities major, it's all
K to him
{

I conclusion, let's start at the beginning

‘of your college years and of your career,
Both are vital toples for Joan Savitt, As
director of Humanities and Fine Arts Ad
Visement, she's professionally Involved
\with a liberal arts student's first years in the
University, and personally concerned with
{is {list years out
Nobody's first job out of college Is very.
good, Expect 10 go through a lot of dif
ferent jobs: Because once you have a work:
record, you can begin to show someone
that you can hold a job."

Savitt speaks (rom experience. having
oily access to surveys on fecent SUNYA
yads and a nonetoofond memory of
Jays selling underwear She gels anxious
sbout the bad publicity the humanities have
yoiten, ond feels the record should be set
Straight

‘You'll get very different answers about
the job market from people in theit twenties
and people in their thirties. Employees do
have a bias against the liberal! otts, but
studies Ike Beck's show that may be
changing” Savilt even presents a case
‘against acquiting a trade in college, While
there are definite skils you should pick up.
in college, she says, learning a trade is only,
preparing you for job obsolescence. Col
Jege is a place to pursue your own Interests,
while picking up. “marketable” skills
witing, self-expression, statistics, computer
literacy — on the side, And her advising
tasks offen include reminding students jus
how big that “side” fs, "When you only
wed BO credits to complete a major, that
feaves olmost three-quarters of your
coursework.”

if you know yourself well, you'll
job you'll like, and a carver you'll be
satisfied with, There are so many jobs that
people have no idea of,

“On-campus recruiters? They represent
‘an unrealistic picture of the job market
They want specific skills for a specific job
Humanities gives you a broad range of
skills, and a still broader preparation for
what's available out there." ia}

ise Regained

od Works At Jerry’s

nice upon atime, God created the
heavens and the earth, In good
he made lots of other
things, with two of the more Important
‘ones being Man and Time: In Time, God
created a way by which Man measures his
fe continues. Inhis
universe for 24 hours per day, seven days
per week and 52odd weeks per yeat
without ever stopping, By coincidence,
these were’ also the hours of business kept
by a restaurant on Madison Avene called
derry’s during the two years | spent living in
section of Albany
Throughout this short age of man, Jerry's
‘maintained a track record equalled only by
Fe itself: it never closed.

Rob Edelstein

‘TbelleveChuck Darwin sald it best when
and | quote,Hey!
changes, You know what I mean?”

he heat on the bus is unbearable, It
beats down on the metal roof and
fiters into the cabin, producing a hot,

leaving the passengers

-~ d= G4Om o>

Turn and give Caren a frown, care
5 the beads of sweat from my upper lip where
fey oceasionally side down the contours of my
fe iothe comers (of my lips, so lean taste the

enon

Caren got me into this. All through Europe
‘managed {0 travel by ourselves, stumbling
on all those Important sights which peopl

pu haven't been to Europe unless you've se
was hardly the sclentilic appr

tt was a way of proving to ourselves (sort «

iat we could survive in co

Hes where we couldn't speak the langua

all of a sudden, in Salzburg. Aus!
nen decides she wants to take a litle tour
found of Music Tour

no. You get to see all the places where
rhe Sound of Music was filmed, and find out
he inside scoop on the Von Trapp Family,
Caren obviously thought that the inside sco
nthe Von Trapp family was going to be as in:
presting as Dynasty. | sill have re

smehow Caren finagles me to take the tour It

Faraned [Weer Somat engl’ seu

drinking-pre-sleeping
fact | wasn't completely excited about
Linile did | know that on this
fateful night, an event was soon to occur;
an event so mind:scrambling that It would
shake, raitle and roll me down to my very

int in @ hostel in the
iJelweissed mountains
Caren now has her eyes closed.

for inspiration and Lumberjacks, A dozen
times at a dozen different hours. He never

Til give you that

ged ourselves on our respective dishes -
each fit for a king who's had a hard day's
1 took occasional glances from the
corner of my eye at the man whose eyes |
had just met. He did not look up at me
‘again. | memorized his features,

He was tall and wore gold wire-framed
E His straight brown-blond hair,
Tengthy moustache and almost gawky
presence made look like an Aryan who
could pass for a regular on Hee-Haw

s possible. Her halt Is tied in a high ponytal
a bandana tings her fo
Her light blue shirt ad

he declared, mock:

ming for such an
J,T's- statement

1 will admit that the
event was right
meant fo bring me out of my inevitable
6, | was lamenting, as usual, about
the fact that, whether you like it or not,
nothing stays the same, My tenure at
Albany was coming to a close. This same
fate had just hit Chile Franks, whose "clos:
ed" sign had recently been glued to the
window, Even "On Golden Pond” had left

es! looks lke it ripples

he light, the word ‘bloon
hrough her derriere. She Is wearing Pro:Keds
The vinyl seat of the bus is contacted to my
highs, and as I shift in my seat, my skin feels ike
The sun's rays are inten:

fied by the window and it feels like a lazer Is
ting through my arm. I pray for it to be cooler
ss we drive Into the mountains

The tour guide's name is Pepe, but he looks
ie his name should be Kious. He is Austrian
uit he can be mistaken for a Californian,
tounds sincere, but reminds me of the
Jauy who cheats on his gitfriend, He is 32 but
could easily pass for 25

Throughout the stay Pepe tells the group he
jogards us os travellers, not tourists, and wants
iso experience as much of Austrian culture as

The man behind the counter.
Me? I graduated, eventually found a job

and daydreamed of Albany. Then came
the day JT, called.

'Who?" asked J.T.
‘he man behind the counter

got thrown by an English style horse while he

Sweden the men didn’t look
women slipped into their bathing suits right on
They treated women with respect
ot as objects. But American men associated

was trying to ride i Western’
vid 1s from Oregon anid keeps s
versations with me, just 90 h

Where are-you from aga

"New management,”
longer called Jerry's, It's now called ‘The
Egg and You,’ Same place, same food,"
Tgulped and asked, “Is He there

dissected sausages as J.T. shook his head
“You mean | played along with that just
for this? Fuuuuuuutick you

shielded by a grill and’a counter. | could

only see a shirt and an apron, which were
y breasts didn't sag. It was

rue, Only 19 and already they had a tendency
© point south, If had litle perky on
this Is hard to explain, In fact, i'seim
possible (0 explain, Move over
Something inside of me snaps, catopuliny me
onto a new plane, into a different dimension
My upper chest contracts and becor
impulses shoot up from my spine.
through my head and into the alr. My «
pressure pushing them out of thelr sockets
Ina flash | change my mind.
hing is going to keep me from tak
ing a sauna My inhibitions disinte
heap of powdery ash
aren, She is humming “The Sound

Wow!” he says. pining. "Ijust love New York

‘Things seemed to change s0 drastically
and quickly, It was as if miracles: were oc- HaMae
curing. But miracles are supposed to make bia abbas atch!
you believe, not disbelieve

“Even this place has changed,”
aloud with a slight alcohol slur as | noticed
the redecoration Job and the new waitress
“there's just got to be
something to believe in.
can't believe in Superman.
stores, The President? How can | bellave In
@ person who's autobiography Is called,
Where's the rest of me?
My friends complained and shut me up.
1 was too tired, too discouraged to beat

@, “This place is open 24 hours and
for 24 hours every day that man Is here.
if Jerry's con be considered a
microcosm of the universe.
“A what?" said J.T, in utter disbelief
“Look, if tt sa microcosm, then He's the

But these all seemed secondary when
compared to what I saw in the eyes behind
those glasses. Even when | could not see
them head on, they appeared strong, yet

“Look, | haven't seen hin
kid, God's been laid off. He's got better
things to do than cook your breakfast.
“Do you really think He's gone? |
wonder what He's doing now," I said
"He's probably working on the Mid-East
ctisis or something,”
But | couldn't really take J.1.'s word for
It so I headed up to Albany for the
weekend, On Saturday afternoon,
and | headed into the same restaurant we'd
always gone to. Only this time there was no
sign saying Jerry’s and no huge yellow
menu with the chef illustration on it. And

Susan comes from Vancouver, and insists I's

hair and a pock marked face
ult Four gitls and four guys. It
fd Knewing thal afew minutes we'd al

Now for an Austrian who looks like he should
pe hanging ten at Malibu,
Jomething very profound. You see, tourists are

‘almost toodistinct,

“In other words, he's ‘Jerry’,
J.T. with a sarcastic gaze toward heaven
“No, shithead, He's God,"
4J.1’s friend Mare stared at me with wide
‘eyes from across the table, | turned to the
Counter and stared at the man. He was

Vtried to put the eyes out of my mind
‘and concentrate instead on this man’s face. Dave looks at his watch
I soon realized that it was a face I'd seen
before, Many times before, Suddenly, like
the feeling of a major
breakthrough welled inside of me as a cun-
ning smile crossed my lips. My eyes met

people who clamor through Europe with their

Helmut and Tama give each other a

‘and can't remember wh

The group. peals. wih nervous

But travellers are differe

pene themselves in the cultures they are ex

“Blasphemer," | yelled, "Look at you,
All of you. How dare you doubt the word
of the Lord. Would you doubt the waffles
of the Lord? What's the matter with you?
Do you think He likes handling bacon? No!
All I'm saying |s that in this universe, He's
everywhere, You can see and feel His
presence surrounding you. It's His food,
His handiwork. He hast preparest a table
before us, Face the facts, guys, God works

We sat in silence until the waltress
“The Egg and You" menus
and soon after asked us,
hon'?” She poured my coffee, I said
*when,” and yet a bit of coffee still found its
way into my saucer

MI don't know,” began J.T.,
graduate in another smemster. It's the last
thing I want to do,”

*Iguess the only thing you can believe in

“Even this place has changed,
aloud with a slight alcoholic slur as I notic-
ed the redecoration job and the new
“God,” I said, “there’s just got to
something to believe in. I
can’t believe in Superman. He’s sold in
stores. The President? How can I believe
in a person who’s autobiography is called,
Where’s the rest of me?

ar the end of the day as
ps toward our hostel
off, The air that is lade
oisture thins out and be

They gesture and move
wait to rip my clothes olf.
Pope appears and sa

the bus and begins to speak in his cute li
‘ill Austrian sauna virgins. | know it's

be something.

Listen all you travellers: vee see many
ach you how to yodel and vee

Silence prevailed. With stares upon me
I began to eal again and continued througt
the murmurs and Marc's statement of,
"Oh, you need some profuckingfessional
help, man, That you do.”

We ate and ate and finally got up, left
our tips and paid. 1 looked again at an as-
yet-unacknowledging God and braved
4J.T.'s doubting queries on the way home.

No, | don't believe He's God,’ I began
“Well, not really anyway. But then again,
how would you know? Would you know
Him if you saw Him? But forget that, the
point fs that {'m fed up with the realization
that I'm living my final months in an Albany
that 1 don't want to leave
without Chile Franks, mind you « when I'l
only end up at a home I Jeft years ago. No,
Ws something that
doesn't change. In this world, that's quite a
In my religion you believe in the
Words of testament and generations. But
this guy is as real as you or I. He's as un-
changing as those words. And if He helps
me believe in both God and heroes, than |

the bar, with the re

We said litle but ate much in the next
, The food was very good -
heavenly, but very good. With a hefty sigh,
tip and grabbed the check. Then
+ and I don't know what it was - something
made me glance back to the door leading

sweating in their socks and st

n saunal Ze Austian sauna is, Tight Hreach my har
_ We wander into a rogm with pilesof careless:

in she bus now bunched

Tshiet I'd seen on a gil

‘9 bar, near a lake: {debate chug
q down a few beers to relax myself
¢ would consider me a traveler iI

swear like toga? Was
a weparated with their partners, but are strewn

up hovering on a tight-rope m

and rayon threads) On one
;numpunal mother holding piles
of clothes, reminding us that

‘My friends, 1 don’t say you haf experienced
usta until you haf taken ze sauna

‘And it wos like in a dream. Out from the
kitchen He moved with a knowing smile
and a rhythmic stroll. In my mind | asked
forgiveness for ever doubting in Him, and
4J.T.'s eyes almost flew from the sockets
My golden calf of doubts was reduced to a
eg of lamb cooked medium rare and seru-
ed from His hands.

Yes, like a dream jt seemed but reality it
was. And to Him I declareth here anu now
my undying trust, He'll never feel my doubt
again, Because in this, the veritable heaven
of the deli-restaurants,
match. So forever Il enter the hallowed
pastel green-flourescent
"809" and take seat inside His temple. And
Til smile through the meals knowing that
each time I get coffee, my cup will runneth

them back, When the food finally arrived,
the sight and smell of my Lumberjack
Special renewed my spirit

scious in case the ait in the sauna gets too,
‘And who is in my sauna g
and Helmut, of course

ind cracked my voice yodeling

‘suspiciously before Inspecting his shirt to
yee if 1 was humored by some sloppiness

idged through my share of medieval castles,
hd now this crummy girlsiend che

Je ve got to take a nude sauna or else I'm only
next tourist waiting in line to see
bere Mozart | dis last mov

declared,""There! Now that's something
‘one can beleive Seta ba baled a a gold medal with
Special, It's always the best, Nothing like i
in all of Albany. I's as if this food comes to
us through a divine decree!”

The guys laughed and with a bright smile
Tcocked my head toward the gull for a se
there was a sight as

emblazoned upon it
Caren and 1 each grab the bottom of our

“I've got a theory," I said simply.
“Nobody theorizes at 3a.m,,”
“Look at the cook behind the counter,’

The Lumberjack

air and a wholesome camper of-the:

The rest of the qroup quickly

that is practically bonded
‘ama’s waist. Part of what makes
I guess, are thelr maiching sailor

caps and the foct that they s!
ait of orange basketball shorts

{don't know? | can't even undress in | looking, with at atm

y sister wihout hiding my ¢
‘ertaln way’ those models do.
Well maybe if t was only women, I'd splurge
¢, It might even be theropeuti
| certainly wasn't going to parade naked in
pot of some drooling sex-crazed Am
v8 who were probably all siting in th
‘now with hard-ons, American guys were too
mature to handle the situation, 1 didn
be material for some guy's weirdo antasies
Well maybe if the guys were Swedish. In

Iifted his head for a second and
turned back to me with a "So?"

“Every time I've been in this place--and
\'ye been to this place Jots of times at all
that man has always been here.

He's always there

anybody below the head. Our eyes rotate on
which prohibit us from
Everyone has 9 head

cond. And there
fateful as any I'll ever see. Ever eoken ball

He was staring straight at me. For that joking. down, Ev
split second, only those eyes were visible to
me. At first | figured it was only a coin
cidence. But | was wrong. He had been

listening. He was now reading my face. He

ny, dorky-looking guy with
‘and a weird tan line demarcating his
Teck, $0 It looks like his hea

lapped on after being someplace else
leve halls from Oklahoma, but his mouth
lives In Marlboro country. Earlier in the day he

We march into the regulation pre-sauna
showers, and the girls quickly hovyr around one
nozale, while the guys hang around another, lke
8 fourth grade party.

This is silly. I grab the nozzle off the wall and

4,7. turned away and took a longer look
"Yeah, he does look familiar
the only things worth
believing in are | those things which refuse to

JT. snored, J pushed him and cursed

fire cold water at the guys. The water breaks the
Ice, so {0 speak. and they retaliate by turning
thelr hot water on so high thal the gil! shoots
out icicles
We shriek so loudly that Pepe appears end
sees the opposing set-up, He shuls one shower
off so we are forced to share the shower
together, We are all showering heads. We bob
we laugh, we talk. but we are only heads

Soon Pepe directs us info the sauna, He
opens the door for us, and we saunter in

The hot, taut alr blasts me into the room
singeing my nostils [feel the air hugging me
dlanketing me as thousands of tiny. Invisible
velour towels quickly absorb the beads of water
on my body. The alr moves in waves of heal
anil T ripple toward a bench

The sauna is a nine by twelve font
arangey-red. wooden panels and tw ters of

4 neta box

top of i

vm willy

bench and th

ather on the
tion resumes exactly where we left ofl. when
had our clottws on. Something about Dave's
g to schoo} with John Wayne Talks

 Iaugher ciculates in

father go
Hight and easy, and wa
side our bodies the

y the warn ait nthe

At fest | stan the bench wit un ley propp
up in front of me. pulled close to hide iny chest

Tit up straight s0 my breasts don't sag and Linry
rot to laugh too hard so they do

then I swe that Susaty i

Iiile, 90 Hoel somewhat beiler The leg rages
and falls

Gradually the hot sauna air thaws (aut frozen
ball bearing eyes, and they rotate with ease
iow casually focusing on parts of the body
below the chin

Hook at atms and thighs and stomachs and

penises. | hink | see an uncircumsized penis,
ble

The atinosphere feels packed with charged
particles and my adrenalin, feels flammable
though to spontaneously explode Our naked
‘wuphoria makes us foe! tipsy and light headed
Friendships that take years fel ke they
fre forming instantly, Our nakedness draws us
close toyether’ the alt covers us in une blanket
We feel secure. While we casually talk and joke
our bodies loudly declare their happiness and
freedony, I's asf our bodies had been crying out
{or this ages ago. anid knew what was better for
Us than we did racks, ag advances, 10
rections, just a tightening bond of tiendsip
and 9 new exhilarating freedom
pe bangs on the sauna door and motions:
for us to come out, He flashes his Calfausirian
sinile at the door's window and his teeth oppeat

No wis

orange through the tinted g
1 we open the door
In the face. anid almost pushes us ba

vol alr slaps us.
K into the

‘Now you must cloze ze pores.” says Pepe.

simultaneously turning on a cold shower
Vshudder but decide to grit and bear It (no
puri Intended). The group noturally gravitales
wer, andl take turns passing the
helping vach other out. The

isso cold it burns
After our pores were unpryabl chised, we
porade onto the veranda. We pass the elevator
door where we had firsl seen those nude bodies
parading in front of us. It sovmns years. ages
planes, dimensions ago since wa atived her
since we Had out eluthes on) 1 turn away from,
the heavy, blick doors, and hehd towatd the
‘randa The sinell of Mowers beckons me int
the tah

ietle upan sihoutte upott siiouette of
nude bodies upon mayest Upon suating
Alps stratify he sky creating a huge dlaranya. My
body feels joined with the fresh airs warmth, 1
float in the delicaw breeee, bivathing mn the
heavy aroma of flowers which dievies and

vel want the whole wold
id to sev tie

ahs mé down

ake
haked, (want the whole world to feel my
frvedony: | want to sing!

Caren looks at mie. Lam singing he Sound}
Music

She joins in. and preity soon we've yot vight

jound of Music
ig back

naked Americans howling The
from the veranda, The Alps sing our
{0 us wilh 2 mayniicien, echo evuiberating
throughout the valley

Pepe walks onto the veranda, scowling. yell
ing al uso be quiet. We ignore him He
created Super Travslers~faster than an lalian
1, mote powerful than Mexican chil, and
able (o sauna with ony Austrian

e sauna ls closing In fileen minutes. Please

get your zings,” Pepe says, walking away

It is time to get dressed. The only thing
awkward about gelting dressed is that we realize
We are undressed. | want to stay naked. am
afraid | will sulfocate my new feelings with my
Jothes, | turn to see Helmut struggling into the
nge shorts, They must be Tama’s, decide. {
ies quickly

Helmut: "Now whal are your names again?
Laughter. Applause. We didn't know each
other's names, We'd forgotten each other's
hhames! They seemed $0 trivial, s0 coarse

The only thing [did know was that | was going
to ride back on that damn bus. tomorrow
take o

And; again, 11! know that, as long as He
mans the grills, Ishall not want.

him till we laughed and we walked home
Before graduating | went back to Jerry's

| tured back toward the laughter of my
lind was elsewhere. As we

“Right, well, this is leading somewhere, |

10a perspectives

A

s

Pp

E

C

a

s ecentJy, Business Schools nation:
Wwide have been admonished for

M the shoddy quality of graduates

A being manufactured by the business educa-
R tion assembly line. Improper inputs and
sub-par raw materials have created a pro
liferation of pseudo-professionals often in-
capable of assimilation into a dynamic
workplace, Today more than ever, crities
are challenging the uillly of a bac:
9 calaureate or masters degree in. business
8 relative to the equivalent accomplishment
3-in one of the hberol aris, While business
nical expertise

graduates may possess
Often insular in nature, the po
afforded students of the Arts has
dramatically showeased the {undamenta
dichotomy splitting the two disciplines
Why? Have the furidamental precepts long
hurtured (nv our business schools lost thelr
applicability or even worse, thelr ap:
propriateness, Hopefully = NO. but what
Js occuring Is symptomatic of a deeper
besetting Business Schools, not solely
endemic to Albany, but instead generic of
all business education

oramic view

Tony Schmitz

ally. certainly Hot absolutely, the
quality of language use accorded
business undergrads js appalling and per
waded with obvious obfuscation. Here in
lies the dilemma afflicting business educa
tion. Somewhat unfortunately, the uni
nal indoctrination inflicted upon
s students allows little leeway for
any pronouncement of creativity, Instead
4 conformist homogenity, resembling a col
lective cloak of unwavering uniformity Is
stressed — NO, Imperative — for the

hen the weather jurns warmer

when spring comes in on the

wagging tails of dogs in the park
and kites in the sky, then I think of Eddy
Eddy’ was @ short, squat kid of seventeen
when I first met him, with a shock of
blonde, cheruble hair ahd a face like a
cauliflower with a smile in the middle of i
He was working an acting Internship up in
the Catskills with a litle summer troupe of
artistic purists from New York City. Their
theatre was a ramshackle cowbarn that sill
had its original cock'erow weathervane on
the rool

Lisanne Sokolowski

Eddy spent more time with nails In his
mouth and a hammer in one hand doing
janice work belween performances
n stage doing bit parts. But you
from these players, They
golistic aspects of being
‘an “actor in NYC" for the sake of strong,
original, pure performances, Thursday
through Sunday they opened perfor:
mances for the public. By sundown the
pasture around the barn would be filled
with the pick up trucks and family sedans of
the simple country people who had never
gotten the opportunity to see a profess-
sional performance. The rest of the week,
the conservatory held “provos" readings,
‘opening up the new talent, testing, ex-
perimenting, feeling out ideas without the
spectre of sellabilty

Eddy loved that place, hidden in the
mountains, with a fresh stream running
past the fire hazard boarding house where
professionals and amateurs shared living
space. His room was the size of a king-sized
stage trunk. Plaster trembled from the col-
ourless walls every time a band of roaches
stomped by. His matiress's stuffing was
more out than in, and the only door was a
scrap piece of sheet left behind in the ant!
quated linen closet, But | never saw him
happier than when he'd be sitting on the

ge of the mattress, a pile of scripts at his
feet, sewing the bright red and green pat-
ches back onto a harlequin's outfit before

e next show
‘ome on Lis, stay and help bring out
" he asked one afternoon, and held

Business As Usual?

to little more than a reproduction, in a
{quasi-plagaristic sense, of that which is the
accepted doctrine. Failure to broaden
one’s horizons could be eventually
fatalistic, Business students need be cogni
zant of that world beyond the rigidly
predefined parameters of the business
building, Environmental, societal and

minutest entertainment of the notion label-
ed “Professionalism.” Knowledge for
knowledges sake has become knowledge
for “not what | know, but what can | make”
sake, When institutions, such as Albany,
Were comerstoned as seais of higher
education, I'm not entirely certain the
folinders envisioned the reality yet to
come. Perhaps, the universities without | political issues are shaping tomorrow and
Business Schools realize the significance of | to sever all tes with this Jarger word may
erecting a solid intellectual foundation in- | prove detrimental indeed.

ally and not merely the mass production Ironically enough. those who imitate
of singularly functional units well are assured a position among the elite
Pausing, | wonder if this unquestioni
preservation of the status-quo will cause
nce of lifes identical mistakes
Equally contradictory, Is the

Success 1s no jonger a measure of ones
breadth of knowledge, actually it's quite the
converse, While educators promulgate and

prepond
ad Infinitu

School is simply a microcosm of
the reigning business world ethos.
Obviously, the competition is
justifiable, in that we compete with
ourselves. But how do we explain
those who cheat, in its diversified
rainbow of implementations?

accepted philosophy that results speak for

students internalize the muniputable, nar
themselves, while the means remains a

Tow set of eriteria critical to upward mobil
ly, a crisis is burgeoning. Should textbook | vehicle, deftly hidden in one’s past, Im
mastery and superior performance on | agine. if you will that Albany's Business
multiple-choice tests be the cardinal deters | School is simply a microcosim of the reign
minants of so called intelligence and subse- | ing business world ethos. Obviously, the
quenily career perpetuation. Basically not | compelition is justifiable, in that we com:
but meanwhile learning has been reduced | pete with ourselves. But, how do we ex:

Another Hamlet

out a plump hand to lead me to the kit
chen, The supplies were in a dank root
cellar, modernized thanks to the efffelency
of Eddy by one light bulb, All | saw were
pols, pots, pols, and more metal pots filled
with hard bolled eggs and navel oranges.
This was dinner?
“Yeah, and breakfast too. We try to work
through lunch to make it last longer." Ed
dy laughed and popped an egg past his
jowls. Through the yolk he garbled
something about the Intensity of Strindberg
‘and what a damm headache the set for
Tiny Alice was becoming. | just smiled and
picked up some oranges, As we headed up
the stairs, a step gave way and Eddy fell
through, saved only by his belly from lan:
ding back in the cellar

"Don't tell anyone about the step - they'll
‘only worry, I'l fix it during dinner, there's
‘nough time before makeup starts.”

Cubby, idealistic, theatre nut Eddy,
Without him | may never have seen how
rough, how primitive the conditions were
for the people that made a whole other
World come alive on stage. For every
elaborate costume there were a repatched
pair of overalls back in the room, For every
sumptuous dinner the characters ale, there
Were eggs and fruit for the actors. But Eddy
didn't care. He'd only laugh, and waddle
off to the barn with a hammer and a seript

When spring comes, when | know the
stream by the empty barn is thawing, |
remember sweet, homely Eddy. The con
servatory became a repertory, a status-
attracting, snob appeal company whose
original members went back to New York
after all. Instead of eggs and oranges, they
held cast parties at French restaraunts, 1
Went to see them once, to recapture the
simple, beautiful "Theatre" { used to know,
It wasn't the same anymore. They got a
standing ovation, from the tailored sults
and strings of pearls sitting in the audience,
but not from me. In the air of the new stage
Was stench of commerciality, not old hay
and barn owls

Eddy left one summer, to study acting at
SUNY Purchase. | hope he never comes
back to see what happens when ideals
become compromised, because art and life
need more people like Eddy

NY
ANS
A

ia} d Ras

plain those who cheat, in its diversified
rainbow of implementations? Are they ot
cheating themselves and more importantly
those whose individual toil is seemingly
futile? We all lose! Those who circum
navigate moral ethics and cheat today will
all probability do, quess what tomorrow?
5 the bottom line therefore everything? If
10, grades and profits may as well be inter
hangeable synonyms, literally standing for
dentical twins.

Coupled with the aforementioned, is a
shenomena which could prove to be even
more encompassing. Inquisitive minds
wonder, what has all this mimicry cost us?
Since role model emulation is the s
quisite for a slice of “The Good Lif
we blindly accept this? Is one truly intellec
lacking the autonomy and
erred via personal expres
sion? Are thoughtful originality, innovation
and leadership therefore, near extinction?
Provoc questions all, curiously offer
ing no definitive answers

Allin all, this critique is not an indictment
of Business Schools, especially SUNYA’s
Nonetheless, administrators, «
and. students objective inspe

do

subsequent repair may halt a top
worsening situation. Already documen
Is the recent undergradu
ing a minimum credit e
range of liberal art curricula, Likewise
publications distributed by the Business
School stress unequivocally the impor
tance of a well versed business grad and
not the proverbial “tunnel-visioned” clone
Ifnothing else, perhaps this essay will serve
‘85 an impetus to change. To remain non
adaptive and stagnant however, {s foolhar
dy

yy

ef

oa.

indering where you

fit in... The

GENESIS

Sexuality Resource
Center
105 Schuyler Hall
457-8015

Albany, NY. 12222
518-495-0301

PUBLIC AFFAIRS AND POLICY
SOCIAL WELFARE

You Are Cordially Invited To

:00-10:00p.m.
2:00-4:00p.m.

service provided by

ROCKEFELLER COLLEGE OPEN HOUSE

Worried about your
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125 Western Avenue PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

a A
Student Affairs and Student Association

ALUMNI QUAD PRODUCTIONS -

Pippin’

March 10,11 12 - 8:00 pm
Page Hall

Tuesday, March 18th, 3.6 PM

SUNY Albany Downtown Campus

Please Join Us For

Wine and Cheese (Draper Hall, Western Avenue Entrance)
Individual Advisement Concerning Academic Programs
Information Regarding Career Opportunities
Tours of College Libraries and Research Facilities

* Discussion with Current Graduate Students and Alumni
Dispays and Special Exhibitions.

TICKETS

$2.00 - STUDENT WITH TAX CARD
$2.50 - STUDENT & SENIOR CITIZEN
$3.00 - GENERAL PUBLIC

ON SALE ON ALL DINNER LINES

Public Affairs and Policy Studies
offers opportunities for obtaining joint degrees and combined degren:
Permit students to accelerate thelr protos:
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The Nelson A, Rockefeller College offers graduate programs at the masters!

and doctoral levels in Criminal Justice, Political Science, Public Administration
and Social Welfare, in addition, the College

8, which

8 in public.

AND AT DOOR

Student Association Election Nominations

Open: Monday, March 14

Pick Up Applications in S.A. Office

University-Elected
President
Vice-President

Class of 1984
President
Vice President
15 Class Council Seats

University Senate
3 seats from each quad
7 from off-campus

Class of 1985
13 Class Council Seats

Central Council
3 seats from each quad
9 from off-campus

Class of 1986
15 Class Council Seats

2

AF

LZ

Alumni Board
5 seats for seniors

Nominations Close: 5 p.m., Friday, March 25th.

120 endgam

M
A

Spectrum

Gemini Jazz Cafe (462-0044)
Thurs-Sat_ — Fats Jefferson, Walter
Young; Sunday & Monday — Martha
Gallagher, fan Hunter

Hulla Baloo (436-1640)

March 11812 — Penny Knight; March 18
— 805

Yesterday's (489-8066)

March 11812 — High Straight
Skinflints (436-8301)

March 11812 — The Jets

Lark Tavern (463:9779)

March 11812 — Colby

Eighth Step Co

(434-1703)

Every Tues, nite — OPEN STAGE — 15
minutes for anyone, beginning at 8:45 pm
March 11 — Whitewater; March 12 —
Mike Agranoff. guitarist and  banjolst
March 16 — Cathie Kateberg & Steve

1 (465-9086)
= The Checkers, Fear of
Strangers; Sat. March 12 — Outpatients,
Fear of Strangers; March 19 — The
Bongo's
BJ Clancy's (462-9623)
March 11 = The Stuc
Donney Brook Fair
288 Lark (462-9148)
Don a id
September's (459/440)
March 11:14 — Skyway
Bogart’s (482-9797)
Downtime on Weds, nites; March 11812
The Works
in MeNell’s (4116-7008)
tre (165-4333)
= Jerry Lee Lewis; March 21
Joe Jackson; March 27 ~ Doug & The
Slugs
Glens Falls Civic Center
March 18 — Hall & Oates
ESIPA (474-1199)
March 11 — Bobby Short
EBA Chapter House
March 12,6 pm — Sadistic Gerbils, The
Plague, Stranger in the Mirror, Strang
Anatomy, $3,00 admission
Albany Symphony Orchestra
(465-4755)
March 25,26 featuring Pola Baytelman,
planist and works of Argento, Liszt, and
Schumann

Marehy 12

Troy Music Hall (273-0038)
March 11 — Boys of the Lough at 8 pm
SUNYA PAC M

March 13 — Empire State Youth Or
chestra, 3 pm; March 15, University Com
munity Orchestra, Nathan Gottschalk,
conductor 8pm, free; March 17 — Findlay
Cochrell, noon, free;

Proctor’s Schenectady (382-1083)
March 17 — The Chieftains 8 pm

movies

International Film Group (457-8390)
March 11 — His Girl Fridays March 12
Road to Rio; LC 1, 7:30, 10:00
University Film Group (457-8390)
1.— March 11812 Author, Author LC 7,
7:30, 10:00; 2.— March 11812 Raiders
of the Lost Arc LC 18, 7:30, 10:00

side Theatre (457-8390)

16 — To be announced (at 8 p.m.

re (436-4428)
March 11-13 Le Beau Marriage 7:00,
9:15, Sunday 4:30, 7:00; March 15-17
The Woman of'the Dunes 7:00 & 9:35)
Madison The
Hermanus
(463:4478)
March 16, 23, 30, April 6, 13 — Flash
Gordon Serials, noon; March 17, The
Wieard of Oz (Silent Film Version) 6 pm
Fox Colonie (459-1020)
1, The Verdict — Fri, Mon-Thurs 7:00
9:30, Sat & Sun 200, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30,
2 Eating Raoul — Fri, Mon-Thurs 7:00,
8.45, 10:20, Sat & Sun 2,00, 3:45, 6:15,
7,00, 8:45, 10:20
Cinema 1-6 (459-8300)
1, 48 Hours, 1:50, 4:30, 7:35, 10:00,
11:55; 2, Tootsie, 1:40, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45,
12:00; 8.Trench Coat, 1:30, 3:45, 6:30,
8:30, 10:30; 4. Year of Living Dangerous
ly 1:25, 3:55, 6:45, 9:15, 11:25; 5, Lords
of Discipline, 205, 4:25, 7:05, 9130,
11:40; 6, ET, 1:20, 3:60, 6:40, 9:10,
11:20; Lote Shows only Friday & Saturday
UA Hellman (459-5322)
Gandhi, Friday 8:00 pm, Sat & Sun 12
noon, 4pm 8pm Mon-Thurs 7:30 pm
Hellman's Colonie Centre Theatre
(459-2170)
1, Missing, 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 9:45; 2
Sophie's Choice, 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:20

Sun, 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 Matinees only
‘on weekends

art

Schenectady Museum (382-7890)
Amazing World of Video & Electronics
(until April 17), High Rock Photos until
March 13

Rockefeller Empire Plaza Collec:
tion (473-7521)

Rothko, Kline, Frankenthaler, Oldenburg,
Calder

New York State Museum (474-5842)
Martin Luther Kine (until Apr 3); Images of
Experience, untutored oler artists — March
27; N.Y. Metropolis, Adirondack
Wilderness, Iroquois Culture

Cathy's Waffle Store (465-0119)
Photos by John R, Wineland

New Gallery (270-2248)

Russell Sage College — works on paper by
Marjorie Semerad Kathleen
Panagapoulos, and Willie Marlow
Rathbone Gallery at JCA (445-1778)
Drawings by Jack Roth, until March 25
University Art G

Thom O'Connor —
CDPC Gallery 75
Avenue (445-6640)
Marjorie Williams, sculpture;
Coughtry — paintings and drawings

ry
rawings and Prints
New Scotland

David

theater

The Homesteaders (462.4534)
Capital Rep. Comp, Market Theatre 8:00
p.m Sunday at 2:40

Thruway House (458-7530)

The Comic Book — March 10, 24, 31
98:12 p.m

The Opera House 826
Schenectady (393-5732)

I Love My Wife, March 10:13
SUNYA PAC
March 15:19
call 457-8606
March 11 & 12 — SUNYA Footworks
PAC Main Theatre, 8 p.m,

Proctor’s Schenectady (382-1083)
March 19 = Hal Holbrook in Mark Twain
Tonight

March 17 ~ The Chieftains and St, Par-
tick's Day Party

ESIPA (473-3750)

March 11,13,14,16-19 ~ You Can't Take
It With You

State Si

Miss Julie, For more Info

WCDB Top Twenty

War
Nuts

1) U2
2) Richard Barone & James Mastro
and Bolts
3) Polecats
4) Bow Wow Wow
Tough

5) AD's “More Than Once"
6) Nick Lowe The Abominable Showman
7) Chesterlield Kings Here are the
Chesterfield Kings
8) Wham

9) Marianne Falthfull
10) Prince

11) English Beat

12) Fun Boy 3

13) Michael Jackson
14) Heaven 17

15) Garland Jeffreys
16) Tin Tin

17) The 3 O'Clock
18) Spandau Ballet
19) OMD

20) Nitecaps

“Make a Circuit With M
When the Going

"Young Guns Go For It”
A Child's Adventure
1999

Special Beat Service
“Tunnel of Love”
Thriller

Heaven 17

Guts for Love

"Kiss Me"

Baroque Hoedown
“Communication”
“Genetic Engineering”
Goto the Line

Annual Aspects
Yatzhee Championship
RCO KG_DsM
Oe yee
mig las] aa}
49 6/9. \ ab a5
{ = 30
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eal

The last Pudz of the semester...

miscellaneous

Martin Luther King: From Mon-
tgomery to Memphis: exhibit on
display on display through April 3 at the
New York State Museum

The Jewish Experience in
Literature

Red Carpet Lounge, Main Library. Featur-
ing works by Sarah Cohen; through
March

Tibetan — Buddhist Film: “Radiating
The Fruit of Truth — March 14 at 7:30
p.m. In LC 3, $2,00 donation

Sign Language Workshop

Monday, March 14, 8 p.m, in HU 128
Alumni Quad Production of Pippin
March 11,12 at Page Hall, 8 p.m. Tickets
$2.00 w/tax card, $2.50 w/o

Jewish Identity as Gays and Li
blans

Co-sponsored by JSC-Hillel and GALA
with speakers from Gay synagogue in
Boston. March 20 at 1:00 p.m. in CC 375,
Refreshments served.

GALA Coffeehouse

Sponsored by GALA, March 15, in CC
375 at 8 p.m, Looking for talented people.
writers, musicians, etc. For information call
GALA 457-4078

Women in American Theatre Con-
ference

March 18-20 at Draper and Page Halls,
For info contact Prof Judith Barlow at
457-8433

JSC-Hillel Sponsors Debbie Fried-
man in Concert

March 12 at 8:30 p.m. in CC
For infor call 457-4066
Albany Public Library (149-3380)
Thurs, March 17 Film, Monsieur Ver
doux at 7:30 p.m. Free

Albany Gay Community Center
Open Hous:

Sunday, March 27 at 7 p.m. For more tn
formation call 462-6138 after 7 p.m.
Center located at 332 Hudson Avenue.
“The Tell ‘em You're Here Cof-
feehouse” presents Cathie Katzberg and
Steve Snyder. Wed, March 16 at 8:15
p.m. at the 8th Step Coffee House. Tkis
$3.00 ($3.50 at door) and available at
Blvd Books and Social Action Center
The KKK & Women — Albany
Feminist Forum
March 24, 7:30 p.m.

Ballroom’

Channing Hall

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Acommon goal

To the Editor:

Thanks to an article in the ASP about the speech at
SUNYA of Professor Mohammed Yadigary (ASP, March.
4, 1983, pg.3), students on this campus should now have a
much greater understanding of the aspirations of the
Islamic world. Specifically, it is the common goal of Arab
and other Moslem countries to eliminate Israel, the Jewish
state,

Professor Yadigary’s call for Moslems to “liberate
Israel’” echoes the thoughts and words of Moslem and Arab
leaders of the last thirty-five years. More importantly, it
highlights the fact that the demand of these leaders for
another ‘Palestinian’ Arab country (the first one is Jor-
dan) has been and continues to be nothing more than a ploy
to further the cause of Israel's destruction, What bothers
these Arab leaders is not the conditions of their “Palesti-
nian’® Arab brothers, because if that was the case, they
would stop keeping them in squalid refugee camps in their
own country, and stop sending them off to die in hopeless
wars against Israel, What really bothers the Arab leaders is.
the same thing that bothered Nazi leaders; the Jews in their
midst, This attitude is exemplified by the statement on
Radio Amman (Jordan) in 1970 that “Israel's existence in
the heart of the Arab people is an absurdity and ought to be
got rid of by any means whatsoever.” This religious’
Jew-hatred was repeated more recently by King Hussein of
Jordan, at the Islamic Conference in 1980. He said **The
Islamic nation and just believers will not accept the situa-
tion of the land of the Prophet's flight to heaven,..being
captive of Zionist occupation,"

If American college students are going to discuss the
Arab-Israeli conflict, and hopefully thus join in the world
Wide effort to promote peace in the Middle Bast, i is vital
that they at feast understand the basic motives and inten:
tions of the parties involved. Without knowing what the
problems are, discussions of their solutions are futile, It is
my sincere hope that students on this campus, and people
everywhere will take a little time to learn at least some of
the truth about this crucial issue,

Glenn Mones
Executive Secretary, Revisionist Zionist Alternative

Best intentions

To the Editor:

Asa student of Albany State for the past four years,
as a intern in the New York State Senate this semester, 1
have been able to gathgy w perspective from both sides of
the political fence, This leads me to comment on the SUN;
Lobby Day at the State Capitol, Monday, February 28th

Each year, SUNY students gallantly gather together (0
fight the proposed State budget, This is one of the few
times that us students of the 80's can find our fellow
students concerned with something besides grades, UAS,
and scoring the big buck, Though the students protesting
are filled with the best intentions, the effect they produced
only helped make them their ownworst enemy, Students
marched through the Capitol Buildings sloppily dressed,
loud, rude, pushy, and worst of all, mis- or ill-informed, 1
saW many students go into the legislators’ offices, not
knowing what district the person was from, his/her com
mittees, experience, or political affiliation

The ASP reported that students found the le
“not accessible,"* What is not understood, though, is that
Mondiys are a very busy day at the Capitol; legislators have
just arrived in town, they have meetings, appointments,
cic., and their staff is equally occupied, If people would
have liked to have met with a certain legislator, they should
have the consideration to call in advance and arrange an ap:
poiniment.Another focal point is that students should
know more about the issue they are dealing with; how can a

Establianed in 1010

News Editor
Astoclale He

ASPecia Editon

Astoclale ASPecis Editors
Sound Editor

Vi

Debbie Judge. Deb Profeta
‘Megan. Taylor, Gall Merrell
Mare Senware
Naney Olederiks, David LL Laskin
Mark Hammond

oben Manolo,
Bob O'Brian, Rob O'Connor, Carl Patka, Karen Pirozzi, Phil Pivnich, Linda
vin LiMn, Mark Rosle, andy Rot, Elen Santeloro, Lynne Si
Alan Boman, Main Ui, ark Whgurs Adam vik; pectm and Even
eters Ron! Ginaerg, Ren Dornbas

legislator give a direct answer when she/he fs being asked @
Vague question? A large gathering of people on any par-
ticular political issue does help and students should con-
tinue to rally together. Perhaps in the future, only certain
well-versed. representatives with pre-scheduled appoint
menis should do the lobbying and the others could rally.
Outside, This would give the legislators a better opinion of
students (i.c, regard them as organized lobbyists and not
just as a bunch of kids on a jaunt from school) and would
Still provide the students with an equal amount of media
coverage,

Tam nol trying to defend State vs, students, but instead,
Would like to sce students able to lobby more effectively. In
Politics, might does make right and as budget time grows
even nearer, all us SUNY students should keep that in

mind, —Margaret C, Tabak

Appropriate actions
To the Editor;

T would like to take this opportunity to address the stu-
dent population of SUNYA concerning the ASP editorial
‘on the actions of the Revisionist Zionist Alternative (RZA).

Firstly, you rightly expressed the notion that the week's
events concern a “celebration of cultural diversity,’’ but
you failed to explain how a Star of David, a Jewish
editorial continued to state that “the whole idea behind
World Week (is) accentuating the positive nature of the
university's diversity.” Indeed, this "positive diversity” is
‘one should not misconstrue this to include the right of any
One group {o blatantly attack the religious culture of
another group.

Secondly, to use the words of the ASP: “ignorance of
other people's traditions leads to misunderstanding of
other people's intentions,"” The ignorance in this instance
lies not with RZA but with the author of the editorial who:
ignores the traditions of Arab Blood Feuds, (witness
Lebanon's Civil War,) and Arab intentions concerning the
Jewish State, (see p.4, ASP, March 4, Professor Calls on
Moslems to Liberate Israel.)

Thirdly, the ASP claims that a group of students from.
the RZA “just aren't ready for diversity" because they tore
down “a cultural display by some Arab students during
World Week Ethnic Block Party,’’ What the RZA is not
ready for is Anti-Jewish propaganda to be hung on this
campus without adequate response, and besides, the central
question still remains: how is a picture of Menachem Begin

Fourthly, the ASP claims that the poster can in some way
be interpreted as something other than Anti-Jewish, This Is
reminiscent of claims by other ‘so-called impartial
Observers" of swastikas hung in Germany during the
1930's,

Fifthly, the editorial ignores the fact that World Week
hibited.

Sixthly, the ASP claims that “they (RZA) disregarded
display a blatantly anti-Jewish poster with the sole purpose
guaranteed by the First Amendment. In this case the ASA,
with both the intentions and spirit World Culture W
miscalculations. Just as Justice Holmes asserted that First

iling Accountants
Payroll Supervisor
Oltiee Co-ordin

“ennitgr sioch
Mickey Frank

alng Pro ne Hirsch, Mindy Horowil
Production, Randeo Gehan Michelle Horowite, Julie Mal
Melissa Wassorman, Rhonda Wolt Ollie Stall; Gay Perees,

Ing, Production Manager
ishociate Production Manager

ChietTyposatier

Vertical Camera

Yaate-upi Kelly Burke, Holy Prestl, Sue Sommotela 7
bia, Erica D'AMATO, Mickey Frank, Joanne

fayman, Ginny Huber, Mary Alice Lipka, Mark Waller

Gathio Aya
Bil Boni

‘David Rivera, Ui
Steinkamp, Warren Slout, sim Valentino, Marty Waleoe, Will Yurman,
Entre contents copyright © 1983 Albany Student Press Corporation, all
a

‘The Albany Student Press is published Tuesdays and Fridays belwoon
August and June by the Albany Stdden| Press Corporation, an independant
ator pratt corporation

Editon a
Board; polley

3 n.Chie! with members ofthe Editorial

(10) aS7-Bag2032203300

‘Amendment protection does not extend to Falsely yelling
fire ina theatery'” Here too, the Arabs acting in a malicious,
and may {add stupid, manner are not protected,

Lastly, the ASP said the RZA action was “inap-
propriate!” and equated the group with ‘vigilantes.!* This
indefensible point hardly deserves comment, However, as
the ASP feels it must slander the RZA, I'feel compelled to
comment. RZA acted in the only appropriate manner open-

to il, There was a request made to have the poster taken
down, and it was ignored, The University authorities clear
ly displayed their indifference to the circumstances by
allowing the poster to be hung in the first place. When a
particular University official was approached to have {¢
removed, hie sald fe would not remove it and would also
allow swastikas to be displayed as culture, The RZA at no
time resorted to violence, as vigilantes are known to do,
And when responsible University officials finally arrived,
the RZA gave its full cooperation i alleviating the situa
ion.

It will be a sud day in the history of this University when.

A the name of “culture’” one group will be able to defame
she religious and national heritage of another people,

Steven Hilsenrath

President of RZA

Out of context

arch 4 issue of ASP, Nancy Crawfoot reported

on my (alk given at SUNY during World Week. While the

main text of the article was correct and aptly reflected my.

\ Professor calls on Moslems to Liberate

ind the lead quote, ‘Israel is the agent of im

min Palestine, Tis the duty of all aware Moslems to

liberate that land,"? were emphasized making it appear that
my talk concerned the issue of Israel vs, Moslems,

In fact my talk had nothing to do with Israel or Mostem
Conflict with Israel, The word Israel was neither mentioned
hor implied tn the eitite forty minute talk, The particular
quote emphasized was sald in reply to a question from the
audience at the end of the talk

The first paragrapn contains material arranged out of
Order 10 emphasize the same point, Again the quote,
“Israel is the agent of imperialism and itis the duty of all
aware Moslems to liberate land taken’ away by Europ
Jows,"” was not said during the talk but in reply to the
aforementioned question,

I did make the statements mentioned in the article and
have no objection to them being attributed to me
However 1 feel that these quotes were deliberately em:
phasized 10 sensationalize the report,

Dr. Mohainmad Yadegart
Adjunct Professor, Islamic History and
Middle East Studies, Union Collee

Die (0 an editing error the quote and headline were our
af context with Dr, Yadegari’s lecture, We rexret the error,

Tvondoniiieiiees =

To the Editor:
In response to last week's letter concerning the Yahtzee
tournament: 1 js too bad that you don’t appreciate the
cliumpionship, We could understand if you were condemn
the out-dated liberal drivel, the feminist propaganda, the
Wimped-out poetry, Millman's pseudo-stream of con:
sciousitess, Megan's book reports, Peerchoom’s drug
induced trips or even Hubert's incomprehsitle,
plilosophical memoirs. But to put down Yahtzee, the bitck
bone of American leisure-time and spirit, to destroy one of
the few pure, unadulterated sport forms left in this society
5 completely abisuird and uncalled for. If you don't like tt

Why nol read Spectrum and find something else to do.
Cray Marks

Cultural expression

To the Editor:

Concerning last Thursday's confrontation between RZA
and ASA members at an Arab “cultural!” display, let us
define culture in the sense it is commonly used, Avcording
to the Random House College Dictionary, definition no,3,
culture is “the sum total of ways of living built by a group,
of human beings and transmitted from one generation to
anothers!” If, for the sake of argument, you will accept this
definition, then yes, the picture of the vietims of last
September's massacre is an expression of Arab cultures
Violence among Arabs is a common, accepted Way of set-
ilin grievances, and has been for years, However, I'm not
sure that this shameful aspect of Arab culture is exactly
Whal the ASA wanted to display 10 the university communi
y

Rather, by superimposing a picture of Menachem Begin
and a bloody Jewish star on the unfortunate victims of the
massacre, the Arabs spread a myth among a uninformed
Public that the Jewish people in general, and Menachem
Begin, in particular, are solely responsible for the massacre,
Or, have Begin and Jewish stars suddenly become expres~
sions of Arab culture?

As a former leader of Jewish activity on this campus, 1
urge Jewish students to get involved, and to continue to
stand up against anti-Semitic incidents, whenever and
wherever they occur.

—Arthur Weiner

MARCH 1, 1983 () ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 44

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Models—females 18
Amateurs welcome.

Art Portfolio. Hourly rat
number to P.O. Box 99,
NY 12144,

to 40,
PR and
lame and
jensselaer,

er. nseued for quad pro-
duction, Must Be able fo sight read.
Involves 8-10 rehearsals and 3 show
nights in late April. Contact: Stu
Mareus—457-07:

ide

Piano pl

"No Fils” Student agent
Flights, Global Travel, 125
Fload, Albany, New York 12205, i
482-2333,

Guise Ship Jobsl $14826,000, Car.
tibean, Hawall, World. Call for
Guide, Directory, Newsletter.
4916-722-1111 ext, SUNVAbAAYs

Passportlanplication, pholas- GC
305 12:00: 4:90-6:50.
No. ap} ppainiment necessary. $5.00
for first two prints, $1,00 every addl-
tlonal wohereatter. Any questions
call 457-886)
pi term
dieser ain, etc, Call
before 9:
Professional Typing, fare 1aM
Selectric Correcting Typewriter. Ex
perlonced, Call 273-7218,

T
Rater {iv

"cal {or datas,

Counaglors: Co-ed children’s &
Banta, elzzdeaies,, Swim
Wi, tens, gymnastics, watersk!
team sporls, photography
dance, dramatics, guitar, Resident
Assistant needed for “eupenly

positions. Group,
Cai Allevard St, Lido
11561 Campus
ris

caicasiare ED Of in
dependent Camps seeks qualified
counselors for 75 member
ehildren's camps in Northeast July
ontact: Association
SUA), 187
fork, New

York, 10019, (212) 882-3540,

JIS

WD

3 Summer Management positions
ar ill avaltable with, College Pra
Painters in Nw York State, For all
iilermation you must attend
reorulting presentation Wadnoscay
March 16 2:30 p.m, BA 210,

arn $600 or mora each ¢chool year
Floxible hours, Monthly payment
for placing posters on campus.
Bonus based on results, Prizes
awarded as woll, 800:526-0883,

Oversons Jobs—Summar/yoar
found, Europe, S. Amer, Australia
fsla, All (olds $800-51260 monthly
Sightseeing, Free Info. Wale Ivi
Box 52:NY:1, Gorona Del Mar,
92625.

Housemate neaded to complete 4

bedroom apt. $105/mo. lease ef{ac:
tive June 1

Call Jonny 466-0459

or Matt

Wanted:
Bartor,
time; space, favors, ele
ment

anything

barter may be taxab

Pe
‘agro:

No, obligations,
fo, Write to, P.O.

etnrarsaied in
Bartor is trading goods,
by

ree info, No need to. buy
Some

Box 333, Watervilet, NY 12189 for

dotalls, $,A.S.E, Please.

Women wanted to begin ulimate

Anyone interosted

bee. team.
499:4539 or Jackie

gall, Laure

438-243

lan

at 299 Central Ave.
is having a

PRICE SALE

Side One Records & Tapes

Buy any record or pre-recorded tape at
our regular low price and you can get any
other record or tape at % off the
manufacturers list price.

This sale ends tomorrow (Saturday 3-12)
at 6:00 p.m.

@g.- Buy Micheal Jackson's Thriller for $5.99
Then choose such albums as
Culture Club's Kissing or Journey's Frontiers
for only $4.49

™* Remember- you choose ANY category of music
by ANY artist.

SIDE ONE RECORD AND TAPES
299 Central Avenue
(1 Block west of Strawberries)

463-7388

Plenty of free parking alongside store

d

7

Travel rom Albay (9 Ft. Lauterdale
and back In a luxury sedan. Only
$110 roundtrip. Leaving March 23 or
24 and returning April 1 or 2

Call Doron, 488-8169 or

3ster on April
iB for, “Grater Dead concert, Call
Eleanor tae tae ‘of John 463-0963,

Alde needed to Li. or N.Y.C,
Wednesday, “March 17, Gall Brigid

Is t/fount

Lost; Maroon Leather wallet Mon
day evening: $20,00 reward If found
agugations asked

4900,

Rar
$25 SRST Eurotour "82
Dulton, Losi 14 at lk: St, party

ep sentimental value
Marye—468:4009. Ploasel

ersonal
Se

You can earn $4-5,000 this summer
as an Outlet Manager for College
Pro Painters. For all. Information

you must attend recruting presenta:
Mion Wednesday, March 10 2:20 p.m
BA 2

a Whineites are coming!
The Whinettes are coming!

Auditions:
Tho Bost of Broadway
Sunday, March 13.
7:30 p.m, —O&O basement
Brooklyn),
for what's
Touch of

Dearest nora (alia
This ts lust a. proview
‘ming “in the ext
Dutch ne

Loy
Brooklyn, Brookie, ate., etc
Hi
to the bone
‘a gallon of wine

To the bone
What we nood |
and a fot of silling
Love ya
P.S, What sources now?
Stop thelt—engrave your property
today.

pent, you shall al

Weprin—
Fame, glory, power, and gooc
looks... Meat him yoursolt!

Martha,
Congratulations! Telethon them:
Song, concerto concer, England’
Casey Kasem's Top 40? Roya
Albert Hall?

Rich,

To the coca
tugby

Rock and Duke don't eat quiche anc
neither do we, Light up! Remember
Jo \t for the team!

Todd, Jon, Jelf, Dave
8 of the women's

Love
ary, Julie, and Jil
PS. They make ity best pizza in
Toky
S.A. Vice President
A Slate Quad Tradition!

Telethon Staff
Just one (step-kick-step-kick) more
week. Have fun and enjoy! You're
great!
The upstater and
the Downstater
jhonda,
fhanks for the happiest 6 months
've ever had,
Love, Bob
Kris,
Happy
"shanker

{8th to you and your

Love,
Shia, Amy, Jane, & Ben
Work the night of Telethon!

signup nee Lobby

{ucky Charms,
Being in bed with both of you lasi
weekend was even better that play:
Ing poker, We must do it again
somatime,

JT.

Telethon Is coming!
Telethon is coming!
Telethon Is coming!

Audtions:
The Best of Broadway
Sunday, March 13.
7:30 pm. O8O basement

iditions:

00—two
Call for details,
457-3389

Thank you for belng there when |
needed ¥

Hove you,

Wan

Dear Sharon (HL),
Happy
Birthday!
You're a groal sis!
Love, Mal
Thapks Tor the retum oF my ring

Cooney,
Happy 22nditt
You know the rest
Love and happiness,
The Girl with the Whip

Freedom comes from Gods right

Hey

hand,
And needs a godly train,
‘And righteous men must make ou!

land
A nation once again,
Arising of the moon

ittie Bro,
It's bgen worth the walt
You're terrific!
Love,
Your Big Brc
PS. Nice brown sult

MK,
Hi hon. You're a gem,
Have a good weokend.

arky

PS, Good luck with the apartinont

Pally, Sandy, and all of my

Daddy,
concerned:

Gary
To the girls at 264, Eunice, & Ed,

388 day "amazing" On, by tho
ital are wo going 10 do wilh
Baby bottles?
Hove yout
Aine
Wajch out forthe storm!
The Weathergiris are coming!

Auditions:
The Bost of Broadway
Sunday, March 13
7:00 p.m.=O8O basement

Dorean,
Well kiddo, we finally made it! At
feast this year we're nol on a bu
Happy birthday—nappine:
ays.
Love,
Sus

Jacklo,
Ricky's days are numbered!
Rich: the-ripper

9 T BlgT Bip T
Wanna know howmuch fun you can
have for a quarter? Golonial Quad's.
gol Il, now you can too! Big Tl
472 Penthouse and luxury apart
ment two, Mohawk 304, 789
Washington, §16 Hamilton, SueCee,
Nanoy, David Rich, Jack, Mark’
many thanks for ‘the birthday
wishes and. surprises! Seriously
know that each of you holds a dear
Special place in my heart. | only
hope | can return some of that hap:
pines. But tonight we'll have bum:
py Siberian slelghrides at
Longbranch! Be there!
Unlimited hugs and kisses,
Jackie (JMGPI)

Madame Pres—
Comes the dawn, who wins the
@-award this week? It’s close com:
jelition,

ai Mel, Kay and Sue, Kim, Adrea,
dackle and Mary Beth, Wendy, and
the rat gang (respectively): Penny.
for your thoughts? Extra. point.
i's good! Another unicorn? How's:
the weather down there? Hi and
thanks for the cheer!

=—
Meoneoio a \s for lovers, 30 why am!

The answer to 7:
Who else but yoursel!?
Sincerely, Chris P.
Tam woman
Hear me roar

y Mouse,
Did you know that when you turn 20
something happens to you? You get
hogniert
Anyway, | hope that this birthday
{s extra-special, | know that I'm go:
Ing to do my beat tormako it thal
way for you
Happy 20th.
Love always,
Your horny litte
Jewish girl

contracts.
Tove

"Kioses aren't
presents aren't. promises, .
doaan't mean leaning... company
mean iy... Accept

ina for what they are and be hap:
Love always,
o

Campus polling place

Front Page
Corso was not as optimistic
{bout the plan being easily approv-
“i by the Albany County Board of
lions. “There is a possibility
| that it will not pass the board —
there are a couple of Democrats
| from the party machine on the
board,"* said Corso,
| SUNYA students have had the
right to vote in Albany area elec.
tions since the Federal District
Court ordered the election commit-
tee of Albany to allow students to
register (0 vote in October, 1980.
This Order was the result of a legal
suit filed in U.S, District Court by
11 SUNYA students in May, 1980,

place at the

from
Guilderland

This does not mean that the
board must now sel up a voting
place on campus for the students in
Ward 15, explained Corso,
court ruled only that the lines must
be redrawn, he said,

According (0 Corso,
student goverment are still meeting
with city officials in a
fort to establish a Ward 15 polling
‘Campus Cente

Corso said that he is pleased and
confident of only positive results
decision
Town Board adding
that “it will increase student. ins
volvement in political affairs,

the

VY Price W/

“The

leaders of

continuing ef

by the

oO-«

Rich,
‘Oscar, Oscar, Oscar!

Oscar
Win a trip to the Bahamas! Telethon
door prize tickets on sale now!
Jott 8.
1 wa
feleaso:
kidding?’
|

ou to preview my latest
‘Who do they think they te

Supporters
CP,
Happy 20th, Patoh! Hope evary little
ting goes well! Stay Smiley. We love
TPTPW victimes
Auditions:
The Best of Bi

7:30 p.m.—O80,

i Silly
ya Whonove

there
great

Jott Schneider,
(can taste'the champagne!
U

Dear Suo (Sweetlana),
Nol in Albany, how
always filled with

Suzy andthe | YoU
4 Happy 1ath birthday

you need. m
aver your shoulders, ho
Happy. Birthday

rountan J
eye] f:

ove,
Suzy

ver, my mind is
he thoughts of

SUNY I'D:

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Call for appt.
shampoo, cut, blow dry reg $12.00

allen’s
allen’s
allen’s

or walk-in

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869-7817 _

Just look

ASPECT's First
Annual Yahtzee
Tournament

tie Tatest odds:
ROO.

KG

DSM

JOS

STEN’S COLLEGE RINGS

AVAILABLE DAILY AT YOUR BOOKSTORE

TRADE-IN DAYS!

Your Gold High School Ring Is Worth
$36. Off Ladies Rings/ $914.
Off Mens Rings. ONE \WIEIEKK ONLY!

Date; March 14,15 - Monday, Tuesday
Place: Bookstore
Time: 10:30 am to 3:00 pm

$25, Deposit

1'm really into living well, Wall:to-wall
posh, Woofers & tweeters every:
where, a houseboy, solar pool,
RUMPLE MINZE,
two-star chef, &
other niceties.

Rumple Minze?.
Keep talking,

Runple
INinge

Imported by WY. Elliott Co. Sole U.S’ Agent,
‘New Britain, CT, USA. 100 Proof Peppermint Schnapps.
Enjoy in Moderation,

sneer
Ws" SUNY. Student salt
Precision Cut and Blow Dry
12.00 7 .
aay eaters Medical School Openings

Manicure

Special $50 Perm*
Pedicure

$35 *Long Hair Extra Immediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical School.

Fully Accredited,
ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL & VETERINARY SCHOOL
* LOANS AVAILABLE » INTERVIEWS BEGINNING IMMEDIATELY
For further details and/or appointment call:

Dr. Manley (716)832-0763

y'
438-6668 374-3589

STUYVESANT LIQUORS

“SUNYA'S PARTY

HEADQUARTERS”

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Let Tony or Bob help with your next Auaavecie bc

t
Bally NEEDED: ( sthol

Cathola priests ar

Many Wines Always On Sale

3 Reverend ohn Garvey
Glanmary Home Musloners Room 29
Bow 46404

20% Discount on cases of wine
Cineinnatl, Ohio 45246

Mix or match types
(Does not include sale items)
Open Mon-Sat 10AM to 9PM

Name

‘Address

chy

VY\ tHeatres
$00 EA owe
CENTER 142
pean
SOPHIE'S CHOICE

VICTOR, VICTORIA
MY FAVORITE YEAR

PLAZA 1&2

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HOMEWORK

HELLMAN

WASHINGTON AVE. ALBANY 45845322]
TTACADLMY AWARD NOMINATIONS

PIDNIGHT’ MADNESS
CENTER 142

SEPARATE ADISSION.

2p

The
Transcendental

[ GETTING INTO THE
LAW SCHOOL OF
YOUR CHOICE

Meditation
Program

The progress of society is founded upon the growth of consciousness
of each individual

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi your chances in

Free Introductory Lectures
Wednesday, March 16th
Campus Center
1:30 Rm 356
8:00 Rm 361
Info: 458-2053

scenic Madan’ w nce mark of WPEC™-US. 4 onpai ducaona orsnsaion

Time: 2:30PM

the
admissions game.

Lisa Goldwasser, Attorney at Law will
be here to discuss how to optimize
law school

Date: Friday March 11th

Place: Campus Center Room 375

MARCH 11, 1983 () ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 13

Career choices

<3,
“immoral,"" regardless of their
positive consequences, Immanuel
Kant, the philospher who ar-
ticulated this theory’ wrote that
there are “certain actions which
cannot be consistently willed by a
rational agent.” In making an
ethical decision a “rational agent’’
sees an act as a universal, by asking
“What if everyone were to do
this?"" and “What if this were done
to me?" a principle very similar to
the golden rule, ‘Love they
neighbor as thyself."”

If one renounces a job for moral
reasons, what keeps somebody else
from taking the job? Steinbock
questioned, Will taking a moral
stance by refusing the job change

Two seasons

<Back Page
Sauers of Dieekelman, “1 don't
know of any player that’s ever
graduated who we're going to miss
more,"

1 wish 1 could have some games
back in my senior year,’’ said
Dieckelman referring to the first
tournament of th
games played while h
hatl a lot of fun here and I know 1
made the right decision to transfer
three years ago."

It was a year which included high
and low moments, The Dane
played spectacularly at times and
awfully at others, Overall, it wa
{wo seasons in one

anything? or would it be better (o
take the job and try to change
things from within the system?
Steinbock concluded that pcople
cannot alienate themselves from
their jobs: “One can't say it doesn't
make any difference." These ques-
tions are unavoidable; they form
our perceptions, Steinbock explain:
ed, ‘fof ‘who I am’ and the notion
of the person I want to be,"’

Rabbi Baruch Friedman-Kohl of
Congregation Ohay Shalom, the
third and final speaker of the even-
ing, gave a provocative prese
tion, He challenged the audience

from the start, asking, “what

makes an issue moral?”” and ex
plained that the conflict between
financial and moral responsibility in
business is not simply black-and-
white, “How large is your moral
sphiere going to be?" he questioned,
After this opening volley, the
rabbi turned (0 examine the issues
from within Jewish tradition:
“From a religious perspective, 4
Jewish perspective, the only ab
solute is God," he
context, he explaine
automatically say, ‘this is mora
which implies

ystem. According

n-Kohl, “to be

unrealistic is to be immoral.”* Con

cerns for survival and day-to-day

existence are no fess important than
abstract idea," he said.

Kohl explained that

students must look within their

World and themselves, not to the

Cornell Law School
Undergraduate Prelaw Program
June 6 to July 19, 1983

A demanding six-week program
for college students who want
to learn what law school is like

For further information write to Jane G. Death,
Cornell Law School, 634 Myron Taylor Hall, Box 11

L Ithaca, NY 14853

TIMBER
Co-Ed Sum
general
roller hi
Indoor

Contact TLC’s Albany representative
Lorri

f CAMP COUNSLERS WANTED

visual, arts and cralts, computers, A.M
radio, ham radio, television production.

518-449-8560

AUDITIONS

OFF CAMPUS PRODUCTIONS
COMES TO
INDIAN QUAD

“The Best of Broadway”
Sun. March 13 7:30pm
O & O Basement

For More Info Contact
Stu Marcus - 484-0722

heavens, for an ethical
methodology,"'You can cause pi
ple a tremendous amount of ps
with a bureaucratic decision,"” he
went on, comparing the power of a
memo to that of a gunshot. He
warned that in a bureaucracy, ‘you
are morally distant from a
problem," and that, ‘* you can
avoid all that responsibility with
moral distancing.” For these
Teasons, people working within the
system must maintain a certain
sense of idealism, and a strong
moral committment

In summing up, he stated that the
bottom line, ethically speaking, is
pulting our ideals (0 the test of
everyday experience, ‘The bigge
problem we haye,"" said Friedman
Koh, ‘tis to mesh our ideal with our
real," Concluding his lecture with
a bit of religious Mair, he said, ** the
key is not t Messiah all at
once, bul step by step.!”

The Chapel House "Perspec
tives!? series is a presentation of
social, political and philosophical
issues, [tS aim is Wworold; to vover
issues whieh are not frequently rais
ed in the classroom, and 10 present
them from a different
perspective

OFFERS FOR YO
DINING PLEASURE

FREETRANSPORTATION (1 om
SUNY to Jade Fountain & ;eturn

Friday GPM-9PM Tele. No. 869-9585

Saturday 6PM-9PM
Please call ahead.

Ourspecialty: Szechuen, Hi
and Cantonese. Polynesian drink}

available. Just 1 mile west of

Stuyvesant Plaza.

10 percent SUNY discount with current LD
Take outnot included.

EXPERIENCE
TOMMY LEE’S

whi
FHUNTAIN

1652 WESTERN AVE.
669-9595

869-9586

To write a great novel, you have to live a great novel.
Too bad Mickey writes murder mysteries.

MARGOT KIDDER

ROBERT HAYS

Geectleat

TRENCHCOAT A JERRY LEIDER PRODUCTION
DAVID SUCHET - GILA VON WEITERSHAUSEN
RONALD LACEY music by CHARLES FOX
Written by JEFFREY PRICE & PETER SEAMAN
Produced by JERRY LEIDER pireoted ty MICHABL TUCHNER

TECHNICOLOR® fis

(Ci(eouarsrenec |" [PG lrmenra cucu siesta

Naty
MOHAWK MALL
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STARTS

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FRIDAY,MARGH 11TH]

CALL THEATRES FOR SHOW TIME,

THERE’S SO MUCH
YOU CAN DO!

SIGN - UP SHEETS
AVAILABLE IN CC LOBBY

BE APART
OF TELETHON
AND HELP THE

(7 >

WORK THE NIGHT OF

44 Sports 4/84Ny STUDENT PRESS © MARCH II, 1983

including a best-of-five series in the finals.

By Barry Geffner
STATE WRITER

JEAN PAUL COIFFURES
J “LE SALON FRANCAIS”

With this ad and Student I.D. receive a 15%
discount on all retail products and $5.00 off
on all salon services. *

"Except with stylist: Jean C, Paul & Marsha

BIENVENUE
MARSHA, DONNA, PAUL, KATHY, DIANE, MICHAEL, SHERI,
CHRIS, DAVID, AND JEAN CLAUDE

FREE PARKING IN THE WELLINGTON GARAGE
ON Howard Street-even when “Tull” sign is up.

142 State Street
Albany, New York
463-6691
By Appointment

UL _)

lar season comes to
ning shortly, this
counter a new

As the AMIA floor hi
close and with the pl
year's post-season qualifiers will
playoff format

In the past, the playoffs were single elimination.
This gave weaker teams a chance to upset stronger
teams In a one game playoff, This year’s format in-
cludes a best of three series for the semi-finals and a
best of five series for the finals, **The idea is so that the
best teams prevail and the good teams don’t get upset
by a team that just gets lucky that day," explained
head hockey official Gary K'

League J, the more competitive division, consists of
11 teams, with the te» five teams making the playoffs,
In the opening round the fourth place team plays the
fifth place team for the wild card spot. The second
place teams plays the third place team. The first place
team plays the wild card team,

Undefeated-defending champion Buzz-Brothers
(8-0) is the only team in League 1 that has clinched
playoff spot so far, The Bu:
defensemen Andy Martin and Je
0 all the way again this yes
In both goals scored (67) a Fy
Five of the top six scores in the league are on the Buzz-
Brothers,

Although the Buzz-Brothers are the favorites,
Defectors (5-2+1) could give them a challenge for the
tle, Sudden Death (5-1-1) are an outside shot. The dark
horses of the league are, Slippery When Wet (4
and Mother Puckers (5-2-1), The Mother Puckers, the
biggest surprise this year are a freshman team. They
‘should be the team to beat in the future,

Th League 2, which consists of five division, with
each division consisting of 10 teams, ‘The ton four
teams in each division make the playoffs, The tirst
place teams in each division are ranked one to five, the

Ts presents
H

HALL & OATES

at

Le Fat Cat
$.75 Bar Drinks
$.75 Bottle Beers
This Sunday, March 12th

second place teams are ranked six to 10. The third

4 tickets to Hall & Oates Concert
at Glen Falls Civic Center

plus chauffered Limo
FREE!!!

One Ticket Per Person
DRAWING AT MIDNIGHT MARCH 13.

Name:

«Brothers, led by |
Fredericks should

LAURA BosrTicK Ups

The AMIA floor hockey playoffs which will be beginning soon, will be under a new format this season

Intramural hockey races heat up

place teams are ranked 11-15 and the fourth place

-20 play the opening round to
determine four wild card spots. This reduces the field
to 16 teams. The teams then play single elimination
games until they reach the semi-finals. The number
fone ranked team plays the number 16 ranked team,
fhumber (wo ranked (eam plays the number 15 ranked
team, number three ranked team plays the number 14

The following tcams have clinched playoff spots: in
division 2b — Grateful Head (7-1); in division 2p
Marci Haters (8-0-1), Puck Offs (S-1-1), Rat Patrol 2
(5-1-1) and Berman's Bullies (4-1-3); in division 2r
The Clapshots (6-1-1); in division 2g — Waste Product
Hockey (6-1) and Milk (6-0); and in division 2h — The
Brew’s Brothers (7-1), The Force (6-2-1), Tuff Darts 4

ind Silencers (6-2).

II, the Marci Haters of division 2p are the
favorites to win the title, based on their experience.
The Marci Haters are second overall in goals scored
(47) and least goals given up (6). The Brew's Brothers
of division 2h should give the Marci Haters a serious
challenge, The Brew's Brothers lead the league in goals
scored (49), Waste Product Hockey of division 2g with
Mike Hof and Chris Puhevitz, two of the three
leading scorers in the league should keep them com:
Petitive throughout the playoffs, Tuff Darts 4 of divi«
sion 2h and the Clapshots of division 2r could be the
Surprise teams, The dark horse team is Milk of division
2g. Other teams that have a shot at the title, but have
not made the playoffs yet are Kaos (5-0-2) of division
2r and the Gladiators (4-2) of division 2g,

AMIA/Molson Challenge Cup series begins April 8,
An All-star team consisting of players chosen from
League 1 and 2 will make up two teams that will repre-
sent Albany, In last years finals, the Albany A team
defeated’ Mbany B team. This year Cortland,
Binghamton, Maritime, Siena and Oneonta will be
‘among the schools competing in the tournament,

Moore

<15
one also has a diverse student
population, and the students are
very concerned with academies
That makes it even harder to get the
sttidents involved, But the students
that do come to the ga
trememly loyal and
credit. Any student that finds time
for other events, as well as keeping
academics as his first priority,
eserves a great deal of credit."”
Although Moore is constantly
trying to enhance fan support, he is
fairly satisfied with student interest
hiere, “I've found the interest here

Address:

is better than a lot of Division Il
schools, Naturally I'l like to make it
better. But it's important for key

Telephone:

student leaders to get behind the
teams, because the interest comes
Out of student participation.”

Fill out and bring Sunday Night (H&A)

Hopelully, Moore can achieve his
general goal of an atmosphere filled
With student enthusiasm to go along
With an athletic department that
plays a major part in the lives of the
students and thecommunity. —[)

MARCH 11, 1983

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Sports 15

William Moore: A new outlook for SUNYA sports

good part of his early life in Places
Aa as Cleveland, Tennessee, Such
Sechaba He he cake wl WI 001
ieing the dlesior of the ahleile who is mreseaiy ihe he go
department at a large university in Physical Education and Recteaton
Albany, New York does not seem a (P.E.A.R,), as well as serving as the
likely spot for aman who spent a Athletic Director here at_ Alban

By Mark Levine

ORIAL ASSISTANT

ALAN CALEM UP

Seras competes at NCAAs

Andy Seras will compete in the Division | NCAA national
championships this weekend In Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, He
will ba looking to earn All-American honors,

Soras, a three:time Division Ili All-American, will be making
his first appearance at the Division | championships, He
qualified for this weekend's tournament by virtue of his third
place finish at the Division Ill championships two weeks ago.
Ho was selected by the coaches at the tournament to be one of
{eu wild cards to travel to Oklahoma along with the 10 cham:
plons.

Seras had qualified for the Division | championships in his
freshman year but did not compete due to Illness, He will be at-
tempting to be Albany's first Division | All-American since War-
ron Crow accomplished that feat in 1966 and 1967, He placed
fourth and fifth, Crow was also a two:time College Division na:

tional champion, The College Division preceded Divisions 11
| and tl, —Mare Schwarz

la TN

This Summer

At Cornell University you can enjoy a
remarkable variety of courses and
learning opportunities. In a setting of
beautiful lakes, parks, ravines, and
Waterfalls, you can fulfill requirements,
accelerate your degree program, or
simply take the courses that you've
always put off, Ithaca, a small
cosmopolitan city, is located in a
magnificent, varied countryside that
offers you water sports and ball games,
climbing and camping, theater and
Olitdoor concerts, soaring and biking,
birding and hiking... Call or write to see
for yourself why Cornell is the place you
should be this summer

Cornell University Summer §
B12 Ives Hall—Box 11
Ithaca, New York 14853
607/256-4987

The Washington Tavern
at 250 Western Ave.

sponsors
A Pre-St.Patrick’s Day
Celebration

on March 16th, 1983
From 10:00pm til 2:00am

Featuring Martha Gallagher playing Irish and
Traditional folk music

Captain Morgan Spiced Rum $1.00 shots

State.

Moore teplaced Bob Ford as
Athletic Director earlier this year
after spending the previous 30 years
at Central Connecticut State Col-
lege, where he had been the Direc~
tor of Athletics since 1962, While at
Central Connecticut, Moore was
also the head basketball coach for
seven years and head football coach
for eight years,

Working at a large university is
nothing new to Moore, since he
received his Ph.D at Michigan Un-
iersity in 1954, He was also the
Athletic Director at Shepherd State
College in West Virginia, which
an enrollment of approxi
$00, so Moore has seen both the
large and the small of college cam:
puses, He feels at case in either
situation

“I've felt comfortable at schools
Of both sizes, and 1 try and make

eltle into the mode of the
H he said.

Ceniral Connecticut is a Division
HW school, so it appears al first
glance that Moore is stepping down
A noleh as far as quality af athletics

Dear Puzzled,

People enjoy my light, refre:
Bianco, and Rosato so much, its
instead of chilling it in the refrigerator, I'd drink it over
ice and always keep it someplace no ones likely to
look. In an all-male dorm thats likely to be:

1) Laundry hamper

2) Wherever they keep the clean linen.

3) Broom closets.
4) In the study (behind the Websters

is concerned, given Albany's status
as Division II, He says this is not

ion Il school such as
s really not much different,
athletically, than a typical Division

Besides being involved with areas
such as scheduling and (ransporta-
tion for teams, Moore is also in-
volved with the staffing of coaches
and other team personnel, Dealing
With the staffing of teams goes

Joe DeMeo, Moore must try 10 4
comodate these people and make
their jobs easier

“We have a large use of part-time
personnel,”* he sald, “These people
must carry on a full-time commit
ment {0 Us, but are only working on
a parttime basis, It ly a real
challenge 10 keep good people in
partstime slots,"

Dan Cllo—

| live in an all-male dorm with twenty other guys
and here’s my problem. Every time | put a bottle of Cella
Lambrusco, Bianco, or Rosato in the dorm refrigerator
to chill, it mysteriously disappears. What would you do?
Puzzled,

Tucson, Ariz

Unabridged),

5) In the washer or the dryer
Chill-a-Cella!

If you have a question, send it to me, care oft
Dear Aldo, Post Office Box 639, New York, N.Y. 10018.
e @ /fluse itin my column, I'll send you a Cella Tshirt.

Cella.

The light, refreshing wine with Sass.

€lmpowted by TheJos. Garneau Co HY. JWY. 9B.

shing Cella Lambrusco,
not surprising. So

Another concern Moore en-
counters is that of fan support. Ina
School of roughly 15,000 students,
athletics will undoubtedly play a
role in the students? lives, Being ina

ropolitan area such as the

al District also Increases the

nber of people involved in the

University as a Whole, so sports here

touches the lives of many people,

both in the university and the com:

munity, Moore uses this outlook as

the foundation for his perspective

on getting people other than the
athletes involved in sports,

“Fan interest starts in either the

ersity. or the community,’” he
says, “Here in a city like Albany
Where the community is s0 disere,
1 feel that there Is a better chance
for success by starting with the
University itself, ‘Things like the
cheerleaders and the pep barid are a
big help, and so are alumni groups
The men's basketball team has a
strong lumnl group, and we want
something like that to beconie more
active,

“However, a school such as thiy

14m

Sports

MARCH 11, 1983

1982-83 Danes: Two seasons in one

By Mare Haspel

SPORTS EDITOR

Although the NCAA Division 11 basketball playoffs continue for
two more weekends, this year’s Albany State Great Dane season Is
long but a memory, It ended abruptly with last week's loss 10
Rochester in the ECAGS, The Danes finished with a 17-10 record, For

{eain which Initially charged out (oan 8-1 mark and then went on to
40 9:9 the rest of the way, 1982-83 was (ruly two seasons in one,

This season of contrast began back In November, the Danes played
‘Sparkling ball fn the beginning of the year and then struggled near the
end, Even though head coach Dick Sauers extended his consecutive
season non-losing streak (0 28, while his Danes appeared in post-
son tournament play for the
Seventh straight year, th

«7 don’t know of
any player that’s
ever graduated who
we’re going to miss
more.”
—Dick Sauers on
John Dieckelman

Hall, Potsdam, At the time the Danes were leading the East division
With a perfect 4-0 record, The grand prize awaiting the winner of the
division was the right to host the SUNYAC playoffs at the end of the
season, The Potsdam Bears, eventual SUNYAC champions and win-
ners of the NCAA East Regional, turned back the Danes 73-65

‘Albany visited RPI in their next game, The Danes eked out a second
Viclory over their foes from across the river and prepared for the se-
cond semester's action,

But the Danes started the semester off in the worst possible way
With a 4-1 record in the conference the Danes were guaraniced at least
i first place tie if only they would win the remainder of SUNYAC-East
games, Albany (rayeled to Binghamton to face the perienniel basement
dwelling Colonials, The Colonials took the Danes into overtime and

won the game 78-76. Albany's
chances for hosting the SUNYACs

Have been more of a d
ment than a success, After all, the
iain never did achieve its primary
oul to return to the NCAA Divi
sion IIL playolt,

The Danes had wood re
thit goal, Albany was @ confident
Squad possessing a wealth of ex
ence at all positions expecially In
the front vourt. Led by & pair of
three-year velerans In senior ¢o-
wiptainy John Dleckelman and
Mike Gatto, the Danes appeared
ready 0 grapple with one of the
toughest Division {1 sehedules In
the nations, It would take the Danes
On 4 (our of some of the country's
best Division IH teams,

“1 think it was probably the most
ull selicdule that welve ever
said Savers, “1 thought that
this way 4 wood year 10 play a tough
schedule because we did have son
esperienee back."

The Danes opened thelr season’
With @ yplit_performance inthe
Capital District Tip OF Touna-
ment, With Dieekelman struugling,
the Janes sneaked by the RPI
neers in the lest round Albany
1 Jost {0 the Union College Dut
chmen, an NCAA East Regional
(qualifying team, ih the tile game,
Divekulmun’s (roubles continued as
js. battled the Dutchmen
through three overtime periods
eventually losing 79-74,

Alter the early season toss, the
Danes went ona tear, The Danes
Won seven gums in a row rash
them as high ay 15 in the national
polls, The Kings College Monarchs.
Were the first to fall ay Sauers.
gouwhied career victory number 450,
The Danes then erushed the Platt
surgi Cardinals by 20 points in
their SUNYAG-East opening game:
The Danes traveled (0 Ithaca to pare
ticipate in the Ithaca Invitation
and after blowing the Middlebury
Panthers off the court in the first
und, defeated the fthaca Bombers
in the championship game, Mike
to led the team with 25 points in
that title game as the Danes won
thelr first road tournament in near
ly two years. Conference
‘Oneonta and Potsdam paid respe
tive visits (o University Gym and
both were turned away by wide

hhad suddenly diminished.

“The game we lost to Bingham
ton is the game we shouldn't have
Tost," Sauers said,

Albany took thelr now slumping
act 10 Cortland, The Red Dragons,
serving a year probation prohibiting
them from participating in the
SUNYAC tournament, began (0
terrorize their conference rivals.
Their first victims were the Danes.
On Corey Gymnasium Dedication
Night in Cortland, the Red Dragons
outran the Danes up and down the
court, Cortland won 79-75 putting
Albany virtually out of contention.
for the right (0 host the SUNYACS
and placing their playoff bid in
Jeopardy

A home stand couldn't have
come at a better time for Albany
The Danes played host to Bingham
ton, Stony Brook, Staten Island
and Plattsburgh, Albany won all
four games, each in a different way
Albany slaughtered Binghamton
Teasing at halftime 41-9. The Danes
then narrowly held on (0 beat Stony
Brook after the Patriots made a late
game rally, Defending CUNY
champs, the Staten Island Dolphins.
came in and the Danes halted their
High powered offense, Finally, Dan
Croutier hit an off-balance shot as
the buzzer to defeat the Plattsburgh
Cardinals and clinch SUNYAC
playoff spot

As the Danes entered the final
Week Of the regular season, an at
large bid to the NCAAs still seemed
possible if Albany could win the
rest of their games, A big win in
Oneonta got the Danes off in the
right direction, but a loss fo Union
College two days later reduced
those hopes for an at large bid, The
Danes ended the regular season
With a victory at home against
Ithaca College.

It was now off to the SUNYACs
in Potsdam, where a tournament
victory would give the Danes an
automatic bid to the NCAAs, But
that dream evaporated in the first
round as the Danes lost to the Buf-
falo State Bengals, 78-67. A con
solation round victory against the
University of Buffalo and that first
round loss {0 the Rochester Yellow-

ickels in the ECACs would be all
that was left for the 1982-83 Great

margins,

‘Alter @ 17-day holiday break, t
Danes returned to action in thi
annual showcase, the Great Dane
Classic, Indeed, this year’s tournament was (ruly,a classic,
The other participants included the Scranton Royals, the
tion's number one Division 111 team, the Hamilton Con:
tinentals, the nation's number three Division HI team and
the St, Lawrence Saints, In the first round Albany defeated
St. Lawrence by eight points, 71-63. Now at 8-1, it appeared
that the Danes might very well be making that return trip to
the NCAAs at the end of the seaso)

End of first season

The next night the Danes took the court against the
Royals. Albany played like a different team—the offense
looked sluggish and the shots just weren't falling. Albany
ost the title game to the Royals 73-63. The slump had only
begun as the Danes now competing against some of the best
teams in the nation lost games to Hamilton and Hartwick

Senior John Dieckelman drives to the hoop earlier this season. He and Mike Gatto standing beneath
the rim are graduating this yea

“AC the time of the Great Dane Classic, Dieckelman got
sick. He had strep throat which later developed into bron:
chitis, He had a fever all the time. He was run down and he
didn't play well for six or seven games and those six or seven.
games happened (o be a lot of road games against probably
Some of our toughest opponents. That made it difficult for
Us to sustain any great effort without his scoring effort; he
averaged about 10 points per game down that streich,

We lost some games badly and that hurt our morale @
bits?

Albany returned to the friendly confines of University
Gym where they had played 10-1 ball during the season and
defeated the surprising Cortland Red Dragons 94-74,

The Danes were back on the road again the following
Weekend making their annual regular season trip to Maxcy.

ALAN CALEMUPS. Danes,
1982-83 was the last season for
senior center Dieckelman., A
transfer from Division 1 Colgate, Dieckelman played in
Sauers' starting five for three straight seasons. Except for
this year's Capital District Tip Off Tournament, he was nam-
ed to every All-Tournament team in which he participated
4 Great Dane, He had a banner season as a senior despite be
ing ill between semesters. Dicckelman averaged 17.1 points
per game, became the twelfth player in Albany history to sur-
pass the 1000 point plateau and was named to the list of
District 11 All-Americans,

“Offensively, he was as good as any player that ever
played for me and as a leader, he was as much a leader as any
player I've ever had. Defensively, he was not as aggressive
player like { want but that was not his nature. If it was his
hature, he probably would have fouled out a lot," said

13>

AX

VOLUME LXxX

PUBLISHED AT THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY BY THE ALBANY STUDENT PRESS CORPORATION

Tuesday

March 15, 1983

NUMBER 13

Students to stomach UAS board rate increases

By Amey Adams

STAPE WRITER

A $43 annual increase on the three-meal board plan was approved by
‘ording to UAS
General Manager Norbert Zahm, The rate change will take effect next fall
1] two dollars on top of the 4.5 percent in-
hm, He had anticipated a 61 percent in-
Now expects this increase (o
Amount to 79 percent, The additional two dollars will go tow:

University Auxillary Services Board of Directors Friday, a

The sum includes an additio
Crease originally proposed by 2
crease in utility costs for next year, he said, bi

estimated difference.

According to Zahm, the original 4.5 percent increase would leave UAS
With a deficit of $17,000 towards a total utility bill of $371,856,

larger

“One's never in support of a bo:
However, she said, SA was ‘ecstatic’
Whi

48) commercial papers, tr
However Zali

asury bills, and certified deposits.

difference? he asked,

If board contracts were to make up the loss, Zahm estimated an addi
tional three dollars per contract would have to be added £0 the proposed
4.5 percent, The added three dollits, he said, would bring the corporation

to the break-even point
UAS Boa

break even. Rani opposed the three-dollar addition, saying, “1 think the
4,5 percent increase is reasonable, The extra three dollars is not necessary
to tack on,"” He said the corporation's expenses could be covered without
implementing an added increase, adding, “1 think 4.5 percent is
yeugrous,"

The (wo-dollar increase way proposed by Dean of Student Affairs Neil

Brown, “Looking at il from 4 financial aid point of view
Mich more acceptable to vo Up a little each year than to face a sudden
ulated amount of past sears. We'd be better off raising it by general
ents rather than running deficit and then having 10 play catch-up

ball,” hie said

Brown maintained that a Wwod

| SUNYA works to lure enrollment of minorities

By Judie Eisenberg

First in-a two-part series
| SUNYA administrators say they are strongly commit
| {ed to increasing minority enrollment and retention on

campus, and have implemented new programs and ser
| vices to draw minorities to the university

Within the past year, the university has allocated fun:

ding for more extensive minority recruitment in high

Office of Minorily Student Services, and
News

postl for special admissions on the baste

Of scholarshipvand ethnicity

of 11,178 students; 744 pereent are minorities, This fs up
from the Fall 1980 statistics, which showed that of 11,255
Despite the fuel That most administrators admit the in
a sep 1h the HRhY dee

schools, developed a follow-up procedure to give per-
formalized an\ admissions office pro:
Feature
, oF an undergraduate body
undergraduates, 7.1 percent were minorities.
tof eight persent since 1976,

| creaseiin minority enrollr
| tion, som
is not moving fast enough

According 10 Associate to the Dean for Student Affairs
Carl Martin, who directs the newly created Office of
Minority Sty dent Services, * put
more gains need to be made,

“There has to be a consistent, concerted effort if the
iiuation for minority students will be improved,"” said
Martin, “It can't be a one shot deal, There are those who
are making an effort, but there has not been an adequate
job done by the university in the past."

Admissions Director Rodney Hart admitted that on the
Subject of minority enrollment, “Wwe still haven't reached

1¢ set for ourselves, We've got a long way 10

“gains have been made

the goals we
But, Hart added, “There is a total university thrust and

Judie Eisenberg is a former news editor of the Albany

Student Press,

|A Vice President Ann Marie LaPorta explained that the incr
tigeded to balanice the books af UAS, and was surprised the hike was not

id increase," LaPorta maintained,
the increase was only 4,5 percent
itis an increase, LaPorta stressed, it is only a slight increase.
Zalim said the $17,000 could possibly be made up by the corporation's
Other investments, He maintained that these are ‘simple investments (such

ded, “is i fair 10 have the board (plan) pick up more
than its share? Or should other areas beside board contracts make up the

rd of Directors President Joe Ranni explained that because the
corporation was non-profit, the best the corporation could hope for was 10

hie explained

Hat increase Would be preferable to the

62-83....4
83-84...)

ds the

se Was

Tne.
) | Lem

commitment 10 fhereasing minority enrollment, not
divoreed from our oiler efforts to bring in non
traditional students.

"One of our priorities is gelting & more diverse student
body," Hart continued, adding that, as a public univer
sity We should have a student body that mirrors the
public,"*

SUNYA President Vincent O'Leary appointed the Task
Force on Minority Recruliment and Retention in January
1982 10, according to Chairperson Dr, Shirley Brown,
“consolidate, strengthen and make more visible programs

already in effect
The task force worked to formalize the university's
commitment to increasing minority enrollment, said

Minority
enrollment

7.4%

7.1%

FALL ’80 SPRING '83

Brown

Assistant to the President Pred Volkwein said President
implemented, over the summer and fall, just
* made by the task

O'Leary
about all of the recommendations
force last spring,

The Special Adinisslony program, effective this past
fall, makes Use Of subjective materials such as recommen
dations and essuys in addition to straight academic infor
mation such as grades, Hart said this program helps break
the competition among applicants 10 a limited entering
lass and insures the eampus diversity academic records.

along don't guarantee

Hart explained that the Special Admissions program is
similar 10 the Talented Student Admissions. program,
which hay had beneficial effects on the campus populas
athletic, artistic,
ion to their

tion by admitting stuctents On the basis o
musical and Writing creativity in add

‘academic achievement
According 10 Edugational Opportunity Program (EOP)
Director Vernon Buch most of the minority. students
enrolled on campus have come in through EOP, a pro
gram for economically and academically disadvantaged
Students af all racial backgrounds, But, he feels, “There
isa sufficient number of minorities out there who would
qualify under regular admissions, 1 don't think the
effort it could to get them.

University is making th
Lf private schools can vet minority students, why can't
Wel?” Buck asked

Hart said one of the biggest problems the admissions
office had had is getting minofity students to enroll at
SUNYA once they have been accepted.

“Minority students who van get in through traditional
means receive a lol of offers of admission, and in many
ciises, financial aid,’” said Hart. We offer financial aid
on the basis of financial need, but no. scholarships:
specifically for minority students,

Buck sald the issue of private scholarships only
“detracis from reality. The amount of the scholarship
nothing, You have to look at what the family has to pay,

Buck explained that sometimes the family pays more to

15>

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