October 16, 1981
Bad Luck Booters Search for Some Answers
by Mare Haspel
How do you explain it? A team
Seemingly full of good talent that,
Just can't get.the lucky breaks, A
team set back so many times this
fall by misfortune, A team Whose
Preseason prospects were once so
rosy but now have all but faded,
How do you explain that? Accor-
ding to men's varsity soccer coach
Bill Schiteffelin it’s just been one of
those years,
‘The booters suffered another loss
on Wednesday at University Field
against @ very tough Keene State
College team, The Danes played
them close the entire game and even
the 3-0 score was deceiving. The
first goal came at 11:34 a5 Joe
Bourassa got the credit for the score
On a play originated from his own
corner kick, Bourassa then scored
again at 19:03 as he knocked in a
deflected ball by Dane keeper Billy
Steffen.
The rest of the way in the | st
r
i
Women's vs
Men's varsit
Men's varsity so
{here's varsity volleyball ys, Sien
Great Dane
2)
on finale on field
acs
Saturday,
~
ind Indian
Fredonia
1 Hartwick
Springfield
aville, 1:00
10-17 at Binghamton, 2:00
1a/North Adams
Monday, 10-19 at Siena, 7:00
half the Danes played the 7-1-3
Owls very evenly. But problems
Were evident in the Dane offense.
Albany was able to move the ball up
the middle of the field and well into
Owl territory, but what was missing
‘was that last good shot on goal,
__ We know what we're doing but
the last touch doesn't click,"’ said
Dane veteran Jorge Ferero. ‘We
made a couple of mistakes at the
beginning. We gave up two goals,
but these guys are pretty good,'?
We're not taking the shots on
goal,"’ he added. ‘The open shots
we're not taking,”
Albany opened the second half
with some good set ups as they
threatened a few times early, Ferero
passed the ball to Afrim Nezaj,
whose strong just missed the
net, Nezaj also teamed up with
Junior Paul Aspland but their ef-
forts came up short and the Danes
remained scoreless,
The Owls netted the final goal of
the contest at 13:49 of the second
half as Chris Pangalos booted the
ball in on a play that continued
after Albany defenders felt that a
Keene hand ball should have been
called,
For the Danes, it was their third
Straight defeat, lowering their
Overall season record to 3-6-1, with
ist five games remaining in the
campaign
saturday, Albany traveled up
north to take on the Potsdam
Bears, Schlieffelin described the
Bears as perhaps the ‘worst team‘
the Danes have facedall season. Yet,
these are the unlucky Danes and
they dropped the match 3-1,
"We should igve had eight
goals,”” said Schieffelin, “It was 1-0
at halftime."
But one second-half goal by the
Bears spurred them on and
Potsdam went on to win,
The Wednesday before then
against Union in very rainy condi-
tions the Danes played to their only
tie so far this season at 0-0. Neither
squad could do much as both teams
struggled the elements more than
fone another.
Now that the season is over half
through, the tale has been pretty
much told, Looking for some ex-
planation of this season, Schlief-
felin just commented, ‘we're just
having bad luck.
Ss for a pass in the Albany State soccer team's losing effort
against Keene State. (Pho
Sherry Cohen)
Question Mark Returns as Danes Face Cortland
by Larry Kahn.
When ihe season began the
Albany State football team had one
big question mark—conld an inex-
perlenced quarterback, Tom Pratt,
step in and guide the Dane
Wishbone successfully?
Tn 1980 Pratt saw litaited duty as
Albany's backup quarterback and
Was not impressive, completing on-
ly six of 24 passes. But in 198) the
question mark beuan to fade, In
the starting role Pratt was rapidly,
becoming the best to ever run the
triple-option at Albany, completing.
35.of 65 passes and rushing for 170
yards,
——<—
& SCOUTING REPORT
Bul last Saturday against Buffalo
Pratt was forced out of the lineup
with @ knee injury and he is not
Pected Co return until the end of the.
Season, if at all,
So now, six weeks into the
Season, the Danes have come full
circle. They again face that same.
question mark—can an inexperience:
ed quarterback, Tom Roth, step in.
and guide the wishbone?
Bob Ford hopes the answer is the
sam
“Tom Pratt was developing into
the best quarterback we've had in
the program. We did some things to
exploit his ability," said Ford, the
Albany head coach, “Now we'll do
things Tom (Roth) van do, He's
Hot as good a thrower, but he's
quick, he's agile and he's got a hell
Of.a head on his shoulders."
Tomorrow Roth has the oppor
tunity to erase the question mark
when the Danes take on an improy-
fd Cortland squad on Cortland’s
Davis Field. The Red Drayons sport
43-2 record, including a 24-3 poun:
ding of Brockport. last weekend.
Last year Albany rushed for an
ineredible $22 yards, including 182
by fullhack Chuck Priore, and
Whipped the lowly Dragons 41-7.
The Danes lead the series 4-0, but
this year Cortland is bigger, better
‘and more experienced
I, the Cortland offense
n down, ‘Through the
they threw. an
nd rushed 45
In gene
is hard to
first four games
average of 19 passes
times per game,
“They mix it up pretty well,!”
Dane assistant coach Daye
Lochle, “They show no tenden:
Gles—they'll take what the defense
kives them. They'll pass on first
down, ruin on third down,”?
said
‘The Albany State football team’s defense has limited opposing teams to an averaj
game, Against Buffalo last week they eld the Bulls (o
Quarterback Jay Cieply, a three
year starter, leads the Red Dragons,
Afler four games Cieply had only
38.8.
Passes, bul he is 4 proven leader
“He's a great field general,” said
Lochle.'*He keeps his poise and he:
has vonfidence in himself.
Joining Cieply in the backfield is
@ capable set of run
completed: percent of his
ing. backs.
Mike Bowe returns after entering
the Cortland record books in 1980.
by rushing for over 900 yards in the
season and 244 yai
He way the team's lead
With 11 touchdowns and he was
ranked 17th in Division 111 rushing.
So far this season Rich Falasca is
ihe Dragons? leading rusher,
‘averaging 8S yards per game and $
yards per carry. He was out last
ds in one game
week with a bad ankle, but he is ex
Pecied 10 felurn tomorrow, Dave.
Cook, a $11, 175 pound freshman
Carried for aver 160 yards last week
in only 21 carries;
“He's like a little bowling ball,"
Lochie joked.
Cortland also boasts an excellent
None of the
(standing
Statistics, but the passing attack on
feeelving corps.
Feecivers have o
the whole is very well balanced:
Cieply likes (0 throw to Bowe out of
the backfield and to Tom Lee, Mike
Hilliard and Pete Schwan
downfield,
“They all great catching
Ability. They all possess yood! speed
and good agility,” Loehle noted
Maybe the
have
most outsiandin;
S yards rushing. (Photo; Mark Nadler)
ie Of under six points per
feature of the Dragon offense is
theif front line, "They havea huge
offensive line,’ said Lochle
“They're aggressive—they like (0
hit people
At the tackles Rich Ryan and
Paul Alexander weigh in at 280 anit
250, respectively, and the
are two 240-pound bookends, Gre
Vaire and Bill Pitorino,
Irion, av
John
40 pound, snaps the ball
at center
“They should test our defense,”
said Lochle,
Bul the Dane defense has not fail
Last week
they shutout one of the top rated
cd 100 many tests lately
Offenses in Division 111 in Albany's
32-0 win over Butfalo,
first
Through the
five games the Danes have
given up only 36 poinis, but seven
an in
tereeption return so the defense is
Of those Were the result o|
allowing an average of under six
points per game,
Last week the defensive fine
manhandled Buffalo up front
allowing only -5 yardy on the
ground and sacking the quarterback
13 times
Defensively, Cortland has only
4n average secondary,
terior
but their in
linemen are biy and their
linebackers are solid
“They
linebackers
have a fine
Lovhle
there
aid
“They'ty they
fun well, they*re bi
The Dragons should be psyched
temor
is theit foughest com:
up for the
fow—Alba
Petition 10 date and “they're com:
ing off an emotional high,’ Lochle
Hoted about the Brockport game.
But the Danes should be psyched
Up, too,
answer
They have a question to
State University of New York at Albany
The program is, . not efficlent™
copyright © 1981 by THe Avsany Stupenr Press CorroraTion
Tuesday
SONT October 20, 1981
Volume LXVIII Number 31
Senate Tuition Tax Credit Bill Pending
by Susan Milligan
and Frank Gil
A bill under consideration by the
U.S. Senate might help financing
for those who can already afford
college, but the Reagan administra-
tion’s cuts in education ald make
the proposal irrelevant to lower-
income students, according to
SUNYA Financial Aids Director
Whitlock,
Pending in the Senate Finance
Committee is a bill sponsored by
Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.)
and Bob Packwood (R-Ore,) that
would allow a tax credit to offset
tuition costs of private elementary
and secondary schools as well as of
colleges, Moynihan staffer Jim
Moors said,
The policy would allow for the
deduction of up to $250 per year of
taxes owed although the credit may,
lot exceed one half of tuition costs,
Moors explained,
Moynihan’s office estimates the
cost of the proposal, if fully in-
stituted, to be $2.7 billion the first
year, fiscal 1983, and upwards of $6
billion by 1985,
Paradoxically, the Reagan ad-
ministration — although trying to
reduce federal spending and sub-
sidies — is expected to support the
Proposal. Assistant Treasury
Secretary for tax policy John E,
Chapoton testified before a Senate
Committee that the Reagan ad-
ministration does support tax
credits for tuition, and said its cost
was “probably the most significant
matter"? being considered by Ad-
ministration members concerned
OCA Director Dunlea Questioned
by Judie Eisenberg
Questions concerning the rela-
tionship between Mark Dunlca’s
roles as SA's Off-Campus Associa
tion (OCA) Director and New York
State Citizen's Party Co-Chair, as
well ag his reported use of SA
resources to engage in political ac-
tivities, have been raised as the
result of an article recently printed
in the Schnectady Gazette,
In the October 16 issue, Gazerle
reporter Phil Blanchard reported
that SUNYA administrators were
currently investigating Dunlea’s ac-
tivities to determine whether they
Were in violation of state regula-
tions.
Specifically, the SUNY Board of
Trustees mandate that student ac-
tivity fees may be used in,
“Assistance to recognized student
provided that the
activites of the
organizations,
purpose and.
organization are of
cultural, recreational or
nature," thereby implying
should not be used in support of
political pa
However, Di
fairs Neil Brown
vestigation in resy
educational,
social
fees
font AL
mal in:
issue i
how underway
According 10 Student Activities
Director Jim Dollefeld, “We're
basically in the information gather
ing stage, At this point in time we
haye no tvidence that Dunlea is
engaging in any inappropriate ac-
tivity,"
The Schnectady Gazette article
was based on a Citizen's Party
leaflet: whichogave ‘Dunlea's ‘name
ind the OCA phone number for
further information, according to
SA Vice-President Woody Popper.
Popper noted it is SA's respon:
sibility to determine if action is
necessary.
But he added, “We don't have
reason 10 believe that Mark
(Dunlea) is using OCA funds to
support the Citizen's Party."
“As far as resources are concern
ed!” Popper continued, “he's ad-
mitted to using the plione. 1 don’t
think there's anything particularly
wrong with his receiving calls on a
once in awhile basis,”*
If Dunlea received phone calls to
a degree that hampered his ability
to do his job, il would be wrong
Popper said. But, at this point Pop-
Dunlea said the only relationship
Citizen's
between OCA and the
Party “is me, obviously. It's ob:
Citizen's Party people questioned
the relationship,
by F
dent this week
tion (SA) have resigned over academic and persor
ding to their SA Manager Nadine Spies.
Presently the only SA officer left is President Brenda Lewis, whose
resignation will become effective with the election of a new SA presi-
New Paltz students will vote for new government offic
Resignations Leave
New Paltz SA in Doubt
icia Berger
All the officers of the SUNY College at New Paltz Student Associa
I concerns, accor
5, as Well as,
beause 1 am in the
~
“I'm not too worried,"” Duntea
added, ‘I'm not stupid — 1 don't
spend OCA money for the Citizen's
Party,'?
Dunlea added that the four
community service inferns working
im OCA were instructed not to pro-
mote Citizen Party candidalex and
to otherwise keep the two groups
separate,
As for printing the OCA phone
number on) the Citizen's Party
leaflet, Dunlea said he ‘didn't
think it through. It was a mistake
it won't happen in the future.
However, he sees nothing wrong
in accepting Citizen Party calls in,
the OCA office. "1 work here fron
10 to 4, It's where the press
feach me during the day,”” he said,
adding that he did a lot of his OCA.
work at night.
“They're going to call me here
anyway,’” Dunlea added, *
discourage them but wy
With stich proposals,
A special group of federal of-
ficers from five agencies, including
the Departments of Education’ and
Treasury, has been established to
study the proposal’s ‘feasibility
and specifics,"”
Whitlock is opposed to such pro-
posals,
“The tuition tax credits will help
the wealthy subsidize privat
schools for their children
Whitlock said. ‘Also, the middle
class will seek this as an opportunity
to grab a price of the pie. . . both
at the expense of the poor,'’
Many higher education institu-
tions are concerned that the bill if
passed, would justify in Congress a
proposal by the Reagan adminstra:
tion for an additional 12% Ins
to education aid based on income,
such as Pell Grants
But Moors said there is ‘‘no con-
nection’ whatsoever!” between the
Moynihian-Packwood bill and’ the
current and pending aid cuts,
Moors explained that the bill was
introduced during the Carter ad-
ministration and said ‘the cuts that
have been enacted would have oc-
curred regardless of whether the
fax credit bill was passed,’” He
noted that Moynihan voted against
the education cuts,
Whitlock stated in addition that
the program ‘‘is not ani efficient
way to provide educational
benefits, Students don't receive
money when it's needed at the.
beginning of the semester, but at
Off-Campus Association Director Mark Dunlen_
"T don't spent OCA money for the
SA President Dave Pologe said,
“We don't want him to use the
OCA number as a contact point)"
but if someone calls in it woultl
seem ridiculous not 10 answer the
phone.
Citizen's Party.
As far as SA can (ell, Pologe
said, Duntea did not misuse student
activity fees, Bul Pologe has (old
Dunlea he did not want the OCA
number to appear on further
Citizen Party leaflets,
Police Ponder Pine Hills Assault
by Susan Smith
A recent sexual abuse incident oc
curing in the Pine Hills area has
¢ of the Pine Hills
Albany
reopened the c
Molester, according 10
Police Captain John Dale.
On Monday, October 12, at 4:45
.m,, an assailant broke a window
and entered the Willet St, apart-
sold Albany
woman. Dale said the assailant,
described as a black male between
17 and 20 years of age, ‘went to the
woman's bed . . . and knelt down
‘on one knee at the foot of her bed,
He then put his hand under the
covers and was reaching to touch
her when she screamed.’’ Dale said
the suspect then fled,
‘The suspect. was described as
58”, 140 Ibs, and wearing blue
jeans, a sweat shirt, and sneakers,
‘The woman said she was able to see
the attacker because her apartment
was i
“We just don't know if it is the
same guy," said Dale, referring to
the Pine Hills Molester,
for revisions made on their SA constitution, said Spice
The revisions, written by an ad hoc student assembly, create a stur |
dent senate to represent the needs and concerns of the student body,
This senate is to be separate from the already existing Student Coun- |
‘which is made up of SA’ member organizations and concerns itself
primarily with monetary matters. J
NX
A rash of inciaents involving the
molester took place over a year ago
in the Pine Hills area where many
students live. In those cases the
assailant slipped through untecked
doors or windows into apartments
occupied by young females. The in-
truders fondied the women and fled
when they screamed,
“There are similarities and dif
ferences between this crime und the
approximately 40 reports of the
past molester,” Dale said.
The similiarities include the
physical make-up of the assailant
and the nature of the crime,
However, several differences
have lead Albany police to believe
the Willet_St_attack_may bean
isolated incident, The intruder in
this case was described as ha
light complection and freckles,
‘hile the Pine Hills Molester was
believed 10 havew a darker com:
plection and no freckles.
Further, while the latest assailant
broke a window to enter the apart-
ment, the Molester did not force en~
try.
Another difference is that women.
attacked by the Pine Hills Molester
Were somewhat younger than the
Willet St, victim,
Dale refused to comment on
whether Albany ‘Police would in-
crease patrol cars in the Pine Hills,
area,
Garland Rocks J.B.’s
See Aspe
cts Page 7
World Capsules
New Chair Takes Control
WARSAW, Poland (AP) Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski,
taking over the ruling Communist Party after the ouster
of Stanislaw Kania, warned the Solidarity labor move-
ment that the regime's “possibilities for retreat have
been exhausted."*
‘The 200member Central Commitice that elected
Jaruzelski Sunday demanded the independent trade
union stop strikes, obey the law and help restore the na-
tion’s shattered economy. It also demanded negotiation
of worker rights won during last summer's strikes and
threatened to impose martial law.
Kania, who after 14 chaotic months failed to contain
Solidarity's bold challenge to the regime, resigned dur-
ing a stormy committee session. After being tapped to
succeed him, Jaruzelski said the committee would meet
later this week with the Sejm, Poland's Parliament, to
‘make more policy changes.
The S8-year-old Jaruzelski, who is also defense
‘minister and a Soviet-trained army general, became the
first Polish leader to run the military, the government
and the Communist Party at the same time.
Nobel Prize Awarded
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Two Americans and a
‘Swede won the 1981 Nobel Prize for Physics for their
development of two {ypes of spectroscopes vital in
nuclear studies.
Professor Kai Siegbahn of Uppsala University got one
half of the $180,000 award, the other half was shared by
professors Nicolaas Bloembergen of Harvard and Ar-
thur Schawlow of California's Stanford University.
Bloembergen, the third Harvard professor (0 reecive a
Nobel Prize this year, and Schawlow were cited by the
Swedish Academy of Sciences for their contribution to
the development of laser speciroscony."”
Siegbahn was cited “for his contribution to the
development of high-resolution electron spectroscopy."
The laser spectroscope, developed by Bloembe
and Shawlow, is used to study atoms with laser light
beamps.
Socialists Win Greek Vote
ATHENS, Greece (AP) Andreas Papandrcou and his
left-leaning Panhellenic Socialist Movement swept the
Greek elections on a platform calling for withdrawal
from NATO, the closure of American bases and a
Teferendum on continued membership in the European
‘Common Market. Premier George Rallis conceded the
defeat of his conservative New Democracy Party Sun-
day evening as returns from the day's balloting signaled:
a radical shift in the nation’s pro-Western policy. With’
nearly two-thirds of the vote counted, the charismatic
Papandriou’s Panhellenic Socialist Movement — Pasok
— had 47.7 percent of the popular vole, more than
enough to control the 300 seat unicameral Parliament.
Reagan Concedes Recession
WASHINGTON D.C. (AP) President Reagan, saying
what administration officials have carefully avoided, is
acknowledging for the first time that the nation’s
‘economy is in a recession.
But Reagan says it’s mild, and his chief economic ad-
viser says ‘forces already are in motion’’ {0 reverse il
“TL think there's a slight recession and I hope a short
recession,"” Reagan said Sunday on the White House
lawn before leaving by helicopter to mect with French
President Francois Mitterrand at Williamsburg Va. “1
think everyone agrees on that.
Later Sunday, Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of
Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, said in a state-
ment “there are increasing signs that the economy has
entered what can be called a recession," including a
drop in industrial productivity, rising unemployment
claims and the weak housing market
Mexico Hosts Summit
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) Bangladesh is desperately poor
and needs foreign food aid. The Philippines is growing
rapidly and seeks larger export markets, Saudi Arabia is
rolling in oil money but wants to diversify its economy.
Despite vastly different needs and stages of develop-
ment, these and other Third World countries are bring-
ing a common program to the Cancun summit here this
‘week: They want a new international economic order.
Developing countries, represented as the south in the
so-called north-south dialogue, say the current structuire
of world economic relations is unfair to them and in the
Jong run, not even beneficial to the rich countries of the
north,
President Reagan set the tone for the likely U.S.
Tesponse to Third World demands in a speech last week
to the World Affairs Council in Philadelphia, He sald
critics “flirt with fantasy"” when they suggest the Inter-
national economic system is unfair,
He also reaffirmed his administration's belief that
private investment is the key tool for developing the
underdeveloped world.
The developing nations hope to reach a breakthrough
on global negotiations on trade and money Issues at the
two-day summit opening here Thursday.
U.S. Detects Soviet Test
WASHINGTON D.C. (AP) An apparent underground
nuclear test by the Soviet Union has been detected by the
United States Atomic Detection System, the Depart-
ment of Energy reports. The detonation occurred at
11:57 p.m. Saturday in a test area at Semipalatinsk in
Siberia, the department announced Sunday.
Navy to Aid in Drug Busts
WASHINGTON D.C. (AP) Navy officials and an aide
‘of Attorney General William French Smith will
soon to determine how the Navy can best be used in the
fight against drug smugglers, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen has
announced.
Bentsen rolcased a letter from Smith on Saturday in
which the attorney general agreed with the Texas
Democrat that the Coast Guard needs help in trying to
apprehend drug traffickers.
Bentsen, who had complained last June about “an
alarming increase in drug traffic," asked Smith to ac-
cept the recommendation of the attorney general's
“Task Force on Violent Crime" that the Navy mi ht be
utilized,
Baker Sees Budget Changes
the White House say
gress, Senate Majority
WASHINGTON D.C. (AP) \
ing the next move is up to C
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. is predicting “a lot of jug
ling’ in President Reagan's latest budget plans, A
growing possibility, sources said, is more selective tax in-
reases and fewer budget cuts than Reagan has propos
ed,
Baker met Sunday al the White House with presiden:
tial counselor Edwin Meese III, chief of staff James A.
Baker Ill and budget director Dayid A. Stockman to
Wises mounting opposition to Reagan's package.
Baker refused to reveal details of the session bul was cx
pected 10 have an announcement on how Seaate
Republicans intend to proceed
Reagan Meets Mitterrand
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) President Reagan and
France's President Francois Mitterrand are ushering in a
third century of French-American alliance amid frank
differences over helping the world’s poor but a predic-
tion of ‘concrete steps"? after this week's summit in
Mexico.
The two leaders — one a socialist favoring massive
foreign aid, the other a conservative advocating private
enterprise for the Third World — spent more than five
hours together here Sunday, the eve of the 200th an-
niversary of the French-aided Revolutionary War vic-
tory over the British at nearby Yorktown.
Hinckley’s Lawyers Protest
WASHINGTON D.C\AP) Lawyers for John W. Hin.
ckley Jr, argued in federal court today that documents
written by the accused presidential assailant were taken
from his cell illegally and should not be used in his trial
With Hinckley watching intently, one of his layers,
Gregory B. Craig, questioned a federal official about
seizure of the documents from Hinckley's quarters ai
the federal correctional institution in Butner, N.C., July
24 and July 27.
Judge Barrington D. Parker agreed with the request
of Hinckley's lawyers that the contents of the hand\ri.
ten papers not be revealed.
Oil Cleanup to Begin
MORRISBURG, Ontario (AP) The cleanup of a
30-mile-lon’« oil slick on the St, Lawrence River will take
about two seeks, a Transport Canada official says
The official reported Sunday that the slick of about
1,000 gallons of heavy bunker C oil streiches
downstream from the Ontario locks at Iroquois 10 Mo
risburg, a section of the river between Ogdensburg,
N.Y., and Massena, N,Y. It was discovered Saturda
afternoon and is worse on the Canadian side
river, he said.
U.S. and Canadian coast guards inspected the site a
will take samples from the slick and ships that pass
through the area (0 determine who is responsible
samples match, charges would be laid under the Canada
Shipping Act
The official said the ship which caused the sp
receive a bill for the cleanup, which could cost the Cana
dian coast guard $15,000.
——_———
Campus Briefs
The Chance of a Lifetime
Playboy may have covered the Southern Conference
and the Ivy League schools, but Graham Silliman has
his photographic eye focused on SUNYA.
A SUNYA student, Silliman plans to photograph the
12 best-looking male students and the 12 best-looking
female students for publication in two (his and hers)
1982 calendars.
Interviews will be held during November, Silliman
said, with the 24 SUNYA students chosen for his calen:
dars to receive $50 for a half hour photo session.
Silliman promises his calendar shots will be
“fashionable.” University Bookstore Manager Hank
Gil, who has agrced to sell the calendars early next
semester, has said he will pull the calendars from the
shelves if there is any problem concerning taste
“It’s not that important,"* Gil said of the calendar
idea,
iliman said he “conducted surveys on campus and
the response 10 the idea was positive. Surprisingly,
women were more enthusiastic than men, so 1 plan to
put together the calendar of men first.”
Silliman will advertise the times and dates of future
interviews
Physics for Fun
The Deparime
of short interest lectures for this semester
T.P, Das of the SUNYA Physics Department will
speak on the study of Elementary Particle and Nuclear
Physies on October 23 at 3:30 p.m. For those concerted
with Electron Diffraction, Weil of Technische
Hochschule, will discuss the topic on October 30, also at
3:30 p.m,
+ To start off the new month, CP, Scholes of the
SUNYA Physics Departinent will give insight to the Pro:
bing Ligand Binding Sites in Heme Proteins on
November 6 at 2 p.m. All colloquium are held in the Cy
\_Luther Andrews Seminar Room, Phy, 129,
of Physics hay scheduled a number
~
Sail Away the SEAmester
If you are interested in climbing Haiti's fabled
Citadel, scuba diving in the reefs off San Salvador and
investigating the ecology of the Morton salt works in
Great Inaqua, you're just in time to registe
Southhampton College's next SEAmester
Captain, crew and two faculty members
in an cight-week sea voyage on a fully-rigge:
schooner. Courses are offered in American Maritime
History, Natural History, Literature of the Sea, Coastal
Ecology, Ichthyology and Navigation and Seamanship
while the Tall Ship sails on open oceans and to sheltered
harbors.
The Tall Ship sails from the Florida keys on
and disembarking at a New England port at journey’s
end on June $,
For information on SEAmester, contact Elizabeth
DeBarto Skinner at the Office of Conti
Southhampton College of Long Island University
Southhampton, New York 11968, or call at (516)
283-4000, Extension 117
INFACT’s Latest Impact
The Recreation and Parks Department of White
ant use of Tibbets Park for a
ding Education
Plains agreed today to
Halloween Day
previous statement by
Davidson that no city park would be used for suc
gatherings. The Infant Formula Action Coalition
(INFACT), which called for a boycott of all Nestle pre
ducts in 1977, is sponsoring its first national rally here
becatise of the location of Nestle’s U.S. headquarters in
White Plains
“We wondered if the initial refusal by the city had
nything to do with Nestle,"* said Edward Baer, a
member of INFACT's national Board of Directors
ied its tune but we
-Nestle demonstration, reversin
Parks Commissioner Joseph
¢ pleased that the city chang
deeply regret that we had to bring about the spectre of
Jegal action to force this chan,
The marchets will assemble at Nestle Headquarters at
100 Bloomingdale Road at 11 a.m, on October 31 for ac
tive picketing and will then proceed to Tibbets Park
Where speakers and tive music are scheduled.
October 20, 1981
Albany Student Press
Angry Local CAA Activist Speaks Out
by Lisa Mirabella,
Nearly a month after her arrest
on the morning of the South Africae
Eastern Rugby Union rugby game,
Coalition Against Apartheid (CAA),
activist Vera Michelson is still
angry.
& News Feature
“I consider (the arrest) a frame-
Up Of the Coalition and myself,”
she said in a recent interview.
An allocation from the Plant Department budget has bought
Michelson explained she felt,t
“Anytime people rally in a racial
Struggle the authorities feel
threatened and try to weaken any
sirong organization of the people,"”
She feels the police as well as other
authoritfesand the media, were guil-
ty of violence-baiting the September,
22 Rally Against Apartheid before
it was held. "The CAA was on the
defensive, trying to answer 10,
charges of violence that were un«
founded," Michelson said,
photo) Sam 7
UNYA
{wo new buses, According 10 University Senator Rob Rothman, a
“new buses" bill was passed in the Senate fast year (o secure adequal
well-runn
buses, The new buses — which replace three old green
's — have a seating capacity of 90 passengers instend of the old
In addition, INFACT National Chair Doug Johnson
Will be speaking in LC 19 this Thursday, October 22, at
8 pam, The film Bortle Babies will also be shown, with
fn Introduction by De, Zwana of the African and Afro-
American Department
State University of New York at Albany
cordially invites you fo attend its
ANNUAL GRADUATE SCHOOL
INFORMATION DAY
Wed., October 21, 1981
10 AM-4 PM
Campus Center Ballroom
admission requirements,
financial aid, etc.
Come and talk with representatives
from graduate schools in the
Northeast who will provide
information on degree programs,
Michelson was charged with
Possession of marijuana and
firecrackers, A controversy per-
vades not only the search warrant
that led (0 her arrest bul also the
police handling of the matter,
Michelson has been active in the
Albany community for some 12 10
15 years. Among the issues she has
worked on are welfare rights and
anti-draft, antiwar, and. U.S,
hands off Iran campaigns, She has
also been involved in organizations
such as youth groups, an anti-Klan
£ nelwork and her own labor union
Throughout her career as an ac
jelson said, she has scen.
cism and classism as primary.
coniradictions in the United
Stales."” She fecls that until recently,
n has been a background
is the first time in a
fong time that people of different
Political perspectives have come
fogether to organize against
racism," Michelson said
One of Michelson’s concerns at
this point is the continuance of
Strong force against racism in,
Albany, and around the world, She.
Said she sees the CAA ay "A strong,
multi-racial organization that learn-
cdl 10 work together very quickly in,
4 very positive way, and will con-
tinue to struggle against racism.”
Michelson feels that the fact that
the rugby game was played shows
how important it is for the govers
ment to protect U.S. financial in-
terests in South Africa, She sai
"they would protect the South.
African racist at all costs (fo protect.
financial interests),
Michelson’s attorney Anita
Thayer is now questioning the
validity of the search warrant,
which Michelson called ‘a, total
police department fantasy."” Two.
Of the sources quoted jn the search
Warrant Haye stated that the infor-
mation in the warrant pertaining to
them is false, Other information is
attributed {0 @ confidential infor
mant who, Thayer noted, may not
have had first hand information.
Thayer is also planning to file a
complaint with the Albany police
about the way the arrest was handle
ed, Al the time of the arrest, police
confiscated from Michelson's
apartment (Wo personal phone
hooks, a recent phone bill, com-
munily address lists and a list of
members of the CAA.
Captain John Dale, spokesperson
for the Albany police, said that
Activist Vera Michelson
"T consider the arrest a frame-up”
Some of the items seized by police
Were not included in the sworn in:
Ventory filed with the search war.
rant, He had no further comment
on the search warrant,
Michelson said that she was not
allowed to make a phone call until
after her arraignment, seven hours.
after her arrest. And she said she
Was held without bail for 48°hours
for less than misdemeanor charges.
She feels bottt of these are in viola-
tion of her civil rights,
Michelson's reaction to the way
she feels the police treated her was
in some ways positive, just
makes you stronger, and clari
things for you politically," she
remarked of the incident
However, she said she is very
continued on page five
“Legal Stimulants” Sales Are Up
(CPS) “They sell like crazy,"” say
an editor at High Times magazine,
“They're some of the most
dangerous drugs on the market 1o-
lilinois public health
claims a company
controversial objects in ques-
tion are so-called “legal body
stimulanis,"’ psuedo-drugs which
have reportedly been sweeping col-
CREDITED.
SCHOOLS. LOANS
VIEWS BEGINNING
MENT CALL:
MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGS
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS AVAILABLE IN
FOREIGN MEDICAL SCHOOL. NO FOREIGN
LANGUAGE REQUIRED. FULLY AC-
SOME OPENINGS ALS
AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL AND VERTINAR
FURTHER DETAILS AND/ OR APPOINT-
DR. MANLEY (716) 882-2803
Tege campuses in popularity the
past year or $0, The product, which
by and large are quite legal, usally
take the form eliher of "look alike”?
fapsules and tablets designed. to
resembl
OF cocaine; OF butyl nitrite, an OX=.
Idizing agent marketed. as “liquid
Incense!” that buyers inhale out of a
small bottle,
The capsules and tablets usually
n a combination of caffoine,
Ipropanolmine (an an-
AVAILABLE. INTER:
IMMEDIATELY. FOR
enn ewrowreron
ind ephedrine sulfate
vide users with enough of
to satisty them as being
the ie article, though the
bogus pills cost dealers far less than
do genuine amphetamines. The pills
provide the stimulant equivalent of
1Wo cups of coffee,” nc-
cording to a Food and Drug Ad-
ministration spokesperson,
Inhaling butyl nitrite, or *
Incense,'? triggers a brief
blood pressure and heartbeat,
ing the user to feel giddy
euphoric for about two minutes
before returning to normal,
ly-by-night pharmaceutical
Teportedly haye been
springing up like wildfire during the
past year, flooding the college
market with pills and incense, often
advertising openly in campus
newspapers with promos for large
helpings of stimulants,
Itis questionable for the moment
just how prevalent student use of
the legal stimulants and look-alikes
has become, or how dangerous — if
‘tall — such products actually are,
“1 haven't heard of these drugs
hilting our campus," says student
counselor Kent Poey of the Univer-
continued on page nine
Schuyler
‘dutch quad
suny albany
albany, new york
12222
BIB457 7588,
student.
quired.
Middle Earth is sponsoring a support
‘group for new students, international
and returning students
Group goals will focus on personal
issues related to living and-or student
problems as experienced by the “new”
ongoing participation is re-
Starting Date: Sunday, Oct. 25 - Six sessions
Time: 7pm - 8:30pm
Location: Genesis, 105 Schuyler Hall, Dutch
Quad
For more information and sign-up, contact Mid.
dle Earth at 457-7588.
Fuerza Latina
- Invites you -
To Our Community Day
Celebration
Oct. 24th 1:00 - 5:00 pm
Lecture Centers
Food, Music, &
For info. Yvette 458-9741
Zaida 457-5155
Fun
World Capsules
New Chair Takes Control
WARSAW, Poland (AP) Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski,
taking over the ruling Communist Party after the ouster
of Stanislaw Kania, warned the Solidarity labor move-
ment that the regime's “possibilities for retreat have
been exhausted,’’
‘The 200-member Central Committee that elected
Jaruzelski Sunday demanded the independent trade
union stop strikes, obey the law and help restore the na~
tion's shattered economy. It also demanded negotiation
of worker rights won during last summer's strikes and
threatened to impose martial law,
Kania, who after 14 chaotic months failed to contain
Solidarity's bold challenge to the regime, resigned dur-
ing a storiny committee session. After being tapped to
succeed him, Jaruzelski sald the committee would meet
later this week with the Sejm, Poland's Parliament, to
make more policy changes.
The S8-year-old Jaruzelski, who is also defense
minister and a Soviet-trained army general, became the
first Polish leader to run the military, the government
and the Communist Party at the same time,
Nobel Prize Awarded
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Two Americans and a
Swede won the 198] Nobel Prize for Physics for their
development of two types of spectroscopes vital in
nuclear studies,
Professor Kai Siegbahn of Uppsala University got one
half of the $180,000 award, the other half’ was shared by
professors Nicolaas Bloembergen of Harvard and Ar-
thur Schawlow of California's Stanford University.
Bloembergen, the third Harvard professor to receive a
Nobel Prize this year, and Schawlow were cited by the
‘Swedish Academy of Sci
“ihe development of las
Siegbahn was cited “for his contribution to the
development of high-resolution electron spectroscopy,"
‘The laser spectroscope, developed by Blocmbersen
and Shawlow, is used to study atoms with laser light
bearps.
Socialists Win Greek Vote
ATHENS, Greece (AP) Andreas Papandrcou and his
left-leaning Panhellenic Socialist Movement swept the
Greck clections on a platform calling for withdrawal
from NATO, the closure of American bases and a
referendum on continued membership in the European’
Common Market. Premicr George Rallis conceded the
defeat of his conservative New Democracy Party Sun
day evening as returns from the day's balloting signaled
fa radical shift in the nation's pro-Western policy, With
nearly two-thirds of the yote counted, the charismatic
Papandriou's Panhellenic Socialist Movement — Pasok
— had 47.7 percent of the popular vote, more than
enough to control the 300 seat tinicameral Parliament
Reagan Concedes Recession
WASHINGTON D.C, (AP) President Reagan, saying
what administration officials have carefully avoided, is
acknowledging for the first time that the nation's
economy {s in a recession,
But Reagan says it's mild, and his chief economic ad:
Viser says ‘forces already are in motion’® 10 reverse it,
“T think there's a slight recession and { hope a short
ecession,"* Reagan said Sunday on the White House
lawn before leaving by helicopter to mect with French
President Francois Mitterrand at Williamsburg Va. "1
think everyone agrees on that.’
Later Sunday, Murray Weldenbaum, ch
Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, said
ment ‘there are increasing signs that the economy has
entered what can be called a recession," including a
drop in industrial productivity, rising unemployment
claims and the weak housing market,
Mexico Hosts Summit
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) Bangladesh is desperately poor
and needs foreign food aid, The Philippines is growing
rapidly and seeks larger export markets, Saudi Arabia is
rolling in oil money but wants to diversify ils economy.
Despite vastly different needs and stages of develop-
ment, these and other Third World countries are bring-
ing a common program to the Cancun summit here this
week: They want a new international economic order.
Developing counties, represented as the south in the
so-called north-south dialogue, say the current structure
of world economic relations is unfair to them and in the
long run, not even beneficial to the rich countries of the
north,
President Reagan set the tone for the likely U.S.
Tesponse to Third World demands in a speech last week
to the World Affairs Council in Philadelphia. He said
ceitics ‘flirt with fantasy’” when they suggest the inter-
national economic system is unfair, 3
He also reaffirmed his administration's belief that
private investment is the key tool for developing the
inderdeveloped world,
The anvelenine rnations hope to reach a breakthrough
‘on global negotiations on trade and money Issues at the
two-day summit opening here Thursday,
U.S. Detects Soviet Test
WASHINGTON D.C. (AP) An apparent underground
nuclear test by the Soviet Union has been detected by the
United States Atomic Detection System, the Depart:
ment of Eneray reports. The detonation occurred at
1:57 p.m, Saturday in a test area at Semipalatinsk in
the department announced Sunday.
Navy to Aid in Drug Busts
WASHINGTON D.C. (AP) Navy officials and an aide
of Attorney General William French Smith will meet
soon to determine how the Navy can best be used in the
fight against drug smugglers, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen has
Bentsen roleased a letter from Smith on Saturday in
which the attorney general agreed with the Texas
Democrat that the Coast Guard needs help in trying to
apprehend drug traffickers.
Bentsen, who had complained last June hout “an.
alarming increase in drug traffic," asked Smith to ac-
cept the recommendation ‘of the attorney gencral’s
“Task Force on Violent Crime’ that the Navy might be
utilized.
Baker Sees Budget Changes
WASHINGTON D.C, (AP) With the White House say-
ing the next move is up {0 Congress, Senate Majority
er Howard H. Baker Jr. is predicting *'a lot of iug-
ling’ in President Reagan'y latest budget plans. A
growing possibility, sources said, iy more selective tax in-
Greases and fewer budget cuts than Reagan has propos-
ed,
Baker met Sunday at the White House with presiden-
tial counselor Edwin Meese II1, ehiet of staff James A.
Baker H1 and budget director David A, Stockman to
discuss mounting opposition to Reagan's package:
Baker refused (0. Is of the session hut was ex-
pected {0 have ah announcement on. how Senate
Republicans intend to proveed.
Reagan Meets Mitterrand
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) President Reagan and
France’s President Francois Mitterrand are ushering ina
third century of French-American alliance amid frank
differences over helping the world’s poor but a predic-
tion of “concrete steps!” after this week's summit in
Mexico.
The two leaders — one a socialist favoring massive
foreign aid, the other a conservative advocating private
enterprise for the Third World — spent more than five
hours together here Sunday, the eve of the 200th an-
niversary of the French-aided Revolutionary War vic.
tory over the British at nearby Yorktown.
Hinckley’s Lawyers Protest
WASHINGTON D.C.(AP) Lawyers for John W. Hin
ckley Jr. argued in federal court today that documents
written by the accused presidential assailant were taken
from his cell illegally and should not be used in his trial,
With Hinckley watching intently, one of his lawyers,
Gregory B. Craig, questioned a federal official about
seizure of the documents from Hinckley’s quarters at
the federal correctional institution in Butner, N.C, July
24 and July 27.
Judge Barrington D, Parker agreed with the request
of Hinckley's lawyers that the contents of the handwrit
ten papers not be revealed.
Oil Cleanup to Begin
MORRISBURG, Ontario (AP) The cl
30-mile-long oil slick on the St, Lawrence River will take
about two weeks, a Transport Canada official says.
The official reported Sunday that the slick of about
1,000 gallons of heavy bunker C oil
downstream from the Ontario locks at Iroquois {0 Mor
risburg, @ section of the river between Ogdensburg
N.Y., and Massena, N.Y. It was discovered Saturday
afternoon and is worse on the Canadian side of the
river, he said,
U.S. and Canadian coast guards inspected the site and
will take samples from the slick and ships that passed
through the area to determine who is responsible, If
samples match, charges would be laid under the Canada
Shipping Act
The official said the ship which caused the spill will
receive a bill for the cleanup, which could cost thie Cana
dian coast guard $15,000.
anup. of a
stretches
a
Campus Briefs
The Chance of a Lifetime
Playboy may have cavered the Southern Conference
and the Ivy League schools, but Graham Silliman has
his photographic eye focused on SUNYA.
A SUNYA student, Silliman plans to photograph the
12 besilooking male students and the 12 best-lookin
female students for publication in two (his and hers)
1982 calendars,
Interviews will be held during November, Silliman
said, with the 24 SUNYA students chosen for his calen-
dars (0 reveive $50 for a half hour photo session.
Silliman promises his calendar shots will
“fashionable,” University Bookstore Manager H:
Gil, who has agreed 10 sell the calendars carly next
said he will pull the calendars from the
shelves if there is any problei
“It's not that important,"
idea
Silliman said he “conducted surveys on campus and
the response to the idea was positive. Surprisini
Women Were more enthusiastic than men, so 1 plan to
Put together the calendar of men first."”
Silliman will advertise the times and dates of future
interviews,
Physics for Fun
concerning taste.
il said of the calendar
The Department of Physics has scheduled
Of short interest lectures for this semester
T.P. Das of the SUNYA Physics Department will
Speak on the study of Elementary Particle and Nuclear
Physics on October 23 at 3:30 p,m, For those concerned
with Electron Diffraction, K.G, Weil of Technische
Hochschule, will discuss the topic on October 30, also at
3:30 p.m.
To start off the new month, C.P, Scholes of the
SUNYA Physics Department will give insight to the Pro-
bing Ligand Binding Sites in Heme Proteins on
November 6 at 2 p.m, All colloquium are held in the C,,
\__Luther Andrews Seminar Room, Phy. 129,
Aumber
=~
Sail Away the SEAmester
If you are interested in climbing Haiti's fabled
Citadel, scuba diving in the reefs off San Salvador and
investigating the ecology of the Morton salt works in
Great Inaqua, you're just in time to register for
Southampton College's next SEAmester:
Captain, crew and two faculty members join students
in an eight-week sea yoyage on a fully-rigged 100 foot
schooner, Courses are offered in American Maritime
History, Natural History, Literature of the Sea, Coastal
Ecology, Ichthyology and Navigation and Seamanship
‘while the Tall Ship sails on open oceans and to sheltered
harbors.
The Tall Ship sails from the Florida keys on April 4
and disembarking at a New England port at journcy's
end on June $.
For information on SEAmester, contact Elizabeth
DeBarto Skinner at the Office of Continuing Education,
Southampton College of Long Island University,
Southhampton, New York 11968, or call at (516)
283.4000, Extension 117.
INFACT’s Latest Impact
The Recreation and Parks Department of White
Plains agreed today to grant use of Tibbets Park for @
Halloween Day anti-Nestle demonstration, reversins &
previous statement by Parks Commissioner Joseph
Dayidson that no city park would be used for such
gatherings. The Infant Formula Action Coalitio!
(INFACT), which called for a boycott of all Nestle pre
1977, is sponsoring its first national rally hete
because of the location of Nestle’s U.S. headquarters it
White Plains,
“We wondered if the initial refusal by the city had
anything to do with Nestle,” said Edward Baer, &
member of INFACT’s national Board of Directors
We're pleased that the city changed its tune but we
deeply regret that we had (0 bring about the spectre of
legal action to force this chang
The marchers will assemble at Nestle Headquarters at
100 Bloomingdale Road at 11 a.m. on October 31 for ac
tive picketing and will then proceed to Tibbets Park
Where speakers and live music are scheduled.
In addition, INFACT National Chair Doug Johnson
Will be speaking in LC 19 this Thursday, Qctober 22,
wit
duets i
October 20, 1981
Albany Student Press
Angry Local CAA Activist Speaks Out
by Lisa Mirabella
Nearly @ month after her arrest
‘on the morning of the South Africa:
Eastern Rugby Union rugby game,
Coalition Against Apartheid (CAA)
activist Vera Michelson is still
angry.
& News Feature
“T consider (the arrest) a frame-
up Of the Coalition and myself,"
She said in a recent interview.
Michelson explained she felt,
“Anytime people rally in a racial
struggle the authorities {eel
threatened and try to weaken any
Strong organization of the people.'?
She feels ihe police as well as other
authoritiesand the media) were guil-
ty of violence-baiting the September
22 Rally Against Apartheid before
it was held, “The CAA was on the
defensive, trying to answer to
charges of violence that were un-
founded," Michelson said,
40 vga
.
ri
J
5
|
phot Sam Teil
An allocation from the Plant Department budget has bought SUNYA
{wo new buses, According (0 University Senator Rob Rothman, a
“new buses" bill was passed in the Senate last year (0 secure adequate,
well-running buses, The new buses
— which replace three old green
machines — haye u seating capacity of 90 passengers instead of the old
buses’ 60,
State Unive
MN
y of New York at Albany
cordially invites you to atiend its
ANNUAL GRADUATE SCHOOL
INFORMATION DAY
Wed., October 21, 1981
10 AM-4 PM
Campus Center Ballroom
admission requirements,
financial aid, etc
Come and talk with representatives
from graduate schools in the
Northeast who will provide
information on degree programs,
Michelson was charged with
possession of marijuana and
firecrackers, A controversy per-
vades not only the search warrant
that led to her arrest but also the
police handling of the matter,
Michielson has been active in the
Albany community for some 12 10
15 years. Among the issues she has
worked on are welfare rights and
anti-draft, anti-war, and US,
hands off Iran campaigns, She has
also been involved in organizations
such as youth groups, an anti-Klan
+4 network and her own labor union,
Throughout her career as an ac-
ist, Michelson said, she has seen
acism and classism as primary
coniradictions in the United
Siates."” She fects that until recenily
racism has been a background
issue. “This fs the first time ina
ong fime that people of different
Political perspectives have come
(o organize against
on said
‘One of Michelson's concerns at
this point is the continuance of a
strong force against racism. in
Albany, and around the world, She
said she sees the CAA ay "a strong,
multi-racial organization that learn:
ed! 10 Work together very quickly in
@ very positive way, and will con-
tinue to strugale against racism,”*
Michelson feels that the fact that
the rugby game was played shows
how important it is for the govern-
ment to protect U.S, financial in=
{erests in South Africa, She said
“they would protect the Sout
African racist at all costs (to protect
financial interests),"
Michelson’s attorney Anita
Thayer is now questioning: the
validity of the search warrant,
Which Michelson called ‘a total
police department fantasy." Two
Of the sources quoted in the search
Warrant Haye stated iat the infor-
mation in the warrant pertaining to
them is false, Other information is
attributed to a confidential infor-
mant who, Thayer noted, may not
have had first hand information.
Thayer Is also planning to file a
complaint with the Albany police
about the way the arrest was handl-
ed. Al the time of the arrest, police.
confiscated from Michelson’s.
apartment two personal phone
books, a recent phone bill, com:
munity address lisis and a list of
members of the CAA,
Captain John Dale, spokesperson
for the Albany police, sald that
Activist Vera Michelson
"T consider the arrest a frame-up™
some of the items seized by police
Were not included in the sworn in:
ventory filed with the search war-
rant, He had no further comment
‘on the search warrant,
Michielson said that she was not
allowed to make a phone call until
after her arraignment, seven hours
afler her arrest, And she said she
‘was held without ball for 48°hours
for less than misdemeanor charges.
She feels both of these are in yiola-
tion of her civil rights,
Michelson's reaction to the way
she feels the police treated her was
in some ways positive, It just
makes you stronger, and clarifies
things for you politically," she
remarked of the incident,
However, she said she is very
continued on page five
“Legal Stimulants” Sales Are Up
(CPS) “They sell like crazy,” say
ditor at High Times magari
hey're some of the most
dangerous drugs on the market to:
day," say an Illinois public health
official,
“We're giving the public foods,
not dru ims) a company’
president,
The controversial objects in ques
so-called “legal body
stimulants," psuedo-drugs which
have reportedly been sweeping col-
an
tion are
CREDITED.
SCHOOLS. LOANS
VIEWS BEGINNING
MENT CALL:
MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGS
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS AVAILABLE IN
FOREIGN MEDICAL SCHOOL. NO FOREIGN
LANGUAGE REQUIRED. FULLY AC-
SOME OPENINGS ALS
AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL AND VERTINAR’
FURTHER DETAILS AND/ OR APPOINT-
DR. MANLEY (718) 882-2803 :
lege campuses in popularity. the
past yeur or so. The product, which
by and large are quite leval, usually
take the form either of “look alike!”
capsules and tablets designed 10
resemble amphiciamines, Quaaludes
or cocaine; oF bulyl nitrile, an ox:
{dieing agent: marketed ay ‘iquid
incense" that buyers inhale out of a
small bottle,
The capsules and tablets usually
contain « combination of caffeine,
phynylpropanolmine (an ane
AVAILABLE. INTER-
IMMEDIATELY. FOR
istamine) and ephedrine sulfate,
They provide users with enough of
a “high’? to satisfy them as being
the genuine article, though the
owus pills cost dealers far less than
do genuine amphetamines, The pills
. provide the stimulant equivalent of
“Pethaps two cups of coffee," ac-
cording (0 a Food and Drug Ad-
ministration spokesperson,
Inhaling butyl nitrite, or ‘Hiquid
incense," triggers @ briet increase in
blood presstire and heartbeat, cause
ing the user to feel giddy and
euphoric for about two minutes
before returning to normal
Fly-b; pharmaceutical
companies bee
Springing up like wildfire duri
past year, fMooding the college
market with pills and incense, often
idvertising openly in campus
hewspapers with promos for large
|, ielpings of stimulants,
Itis questionable for the moment
just how prevalent student use of
the legal stimulants and look-alikes
as become, or how dangerous — if
all — such products actually are,
"1 haven't heard of these drugs
hitting our campus,’ says student
counselor Kent Poey of the Univers
‘continued on page
8 p.m. The film Bortle Babies will also be show
an introduction by Dr. Zwana of the African and Af
American Department.
————— ——_—_—_—_—_—— ree
Uy Middle Earth is sponsoring a support)
4
‘group for new students, international
Te T and returning student
drugedcation || Group goals will focus on personal
counseling issues related to living and-or student
2hhour problems as experienced by the “new”
switchboard || student. ongoing participation is re-
wervices quired.
Schuy le:
“dutch quad Starting Date: Sunday, Oct. 25 - Six sessions
suny albany a 0
Time: 7pm - 8:30pm
aang new | | | ocation: Genesis, 105 Schuyler Hall, Dutch
Quad
‘BIB 457 7585
aN 1 For more information and sign-up, contact Mid
Va [idle Earthvat 457-7588.
Fuerza Latina
- Invites you -
To Our Community Day
Celebration
» Oct. 24th 1:00 - 5:00 pm
Lecture Centers
Food, Music, & Fun
For info. Yvette 458-9741
Zaida 457-5155
rere oer et ;
FEMINIST ALLIANCE
MEETING
Thursday, October 22, 1981
7:30 pm
CC 361
f ‘The bonor society” ie
prong eves fot the
Sento dens
All Women
Welcome!!
Adam A. Veltri, Pres.
Anne Newman, Vice Pres.
4
THE PRE-HEALTH
PROFESSIONALS
will be holding an
interview clinic
on Wednesday, October 21st
at 8:00 in LC 1.
Dr. Cermak (on admission
committee from Albany Med.
Friday Midnight
ROLLERBALL
Saturday 7:30-10:00
GEORGE HARRISON
and friends In
THE
CONCERT FOR
BANGLADESH
Thursday and
SL
$1.00 w/tax ALBANY
$1.50 w/o STATE
Col.) will speak on various
SA Funded CINEMA |
aspects of the interview pro-
| cess. P
The “CLASS OF 1982°° wants you!
°
Friday
7:30-10:00
i)
C7
eo
Senior Week Suggestions
Senior Week Organizers
Senior T-shirts Designers
Senior Year Unforgettable
Meeting TONIGHT at 8:00pm
Campus Center Assembly Hall (adjoins the Fireside Lounge)
thes.
October 20, 1987
College “Competen
Norman, OK (CPS) More college
students soon might have to pass
competency tests before they get
their degrees,
Just as the controversial profi-
elency tests have spread on the high
school level — a movement largely
fueled by parental and college ad-
missions officers! complaints that
high schools grads aren't well
educated — they now appear to be
making inroads on the college level
a well.
Most recently, a Univer ity of
Oklahoma faculty committee
recommended two weeks ago that
undergraduates pass a
“comprehensive” final exam in
their majors before being allowed
to graduate,
Individual departments within
the university — not semi
independent testing companies like
Educational Testing Service
would write and administer the
tests
The Oklahoma committee also
ur ‘strict grading policy" to
combat a feared slip in the universi.
ty's academic standards,
here's been a general feeling
that our
just_not
adequately educated in a liberal arts
Sense," says Faculty Senate Chair-
man Gary Thompson. ‘Many
students are coming (to Oklahoma)
with such low competency levels we
have been forced to simply ease
them through the system. As a
Tesult, our academic standards have
visibly declined,”
There remains some confusion
about how many other schools re-
Quire such tests, The University of
Albany Student Press
Page Five
Colorado last year decided to allow
— but not require — individual
departments to, give them, But Arts
and Sciences Dean Everly Fleischer
notes, ‘41 don't think (the option)
has been exercised at all, It would
take a huge amount of work to for-
mulate and grade such exams,"
Harvard and Yale have required
comprehensive exams of graduating
seniors since the 1920's, although
Yale now allows ‘approved
substitutes!” like senfor theses or
field work. Administrators at both
Schools were unsure if any other
Colleges required competency tests,
however,
The Oklatioma proposal seems to
have raised surprisingly few student
Protests, Student paper reporter.
Gary Smith observes that, ‘a lot of
students seem to favor it because
it'll add more prestige to the univer-
sity. In years to come, you can say
cy Tests” Are on Increase
‘I went to Oklahoma’ and be pro-
ud."
Dr, Robert Calfee of Stanford's
Sghool of Education offers'a dim-
‘mer view, ‘It makes even less sense
than does high school testing,”
Any such exam would either be
“much too little or much too late,"
Calfee asserts. “You'd be imposing
@ standard that's impossible to use
fairy, As a yardstick for competen:
cy, it’s just plain dumb,"
Return to Basic Skills is Emphasized
by Frank Gil
‘An emphasis on basic skills such
ding and writing is the long.
of the College Board's
gram to improve the
of high school
. according to SUNYA
Director of Admissions Rodney
Hart
According to The Chronicle of
Higher Education, the board,
Which sponsors the Scholastic Ap-
titude Test and the College Si
ship Service, ‘hopes th
as
fl generally will
led benefit of increasing
minority-graup students’ access to,
higher education.”
Coined “Project Equality,’ the
Program's goal, the article stated,
“ls to develop a national standard
of achievement for students who.
plan {0 attend college, as well as a
national definition of academic
competency,"
Colleges and universities will be
encouraged to adopt the competen=
cy and academic curriculum stan-
dards as a preference, if not an ab-
Solute standard, High schools will
also be asked to review their pro-
grams in light of the board's com.
Petency standards, :
Areas such as reading, writing,
Speaking, listening, mathematics,
reasoning and studying are all being
considered for improvement,
“There is no doubt students are
Not as prepared as (they were) years.
ago," sald Hart, "Students today
jare much more aware socially and
politically, but their basies are not
JAMES COBURN
Produced by HOWARD JEFFREY Music by BARRY DeVORZON
A MICHAEL CRICHTON FILM
“LOOKER”
Written and Directed by MICHAEL
PG PARENTAL Gumaance suocesTEO
OPENS OCTOBER 30thAT A THEATRE NEAR YOU!
CRICHTON ® ataoo
ALBERT FINNEY
SUSAN DEY
LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG
COMPANY RELEASE
4s sharp, Hopefully getting back to
traditional measures will not take
away from student awareness,"
Hart added,
Hart felt the changes will not
have an effect on the standards for
admission to SUNYA, even though
he thought the program will pro-
bably improve on the skills of the
college bound students,
“The college board is trying to
Fevitalize itself,’’ Hart said,
“Assuring students success in col-
lege is an aim of the program,’
Bell Predicts
More Cuts
to Education
Ala meeting With educators,
Sevrclary of Education Terrel
ed the Reagan © ad-
ministration Would soon ask Con-
Bess 10 shave another $1.5 billion
Off ihe federal education budget for
this year, and to approve a plan that
finding, (wo
are 40 percent
around the
ied of further
1981 to
country, Bell has
cus for the October 1,
Scplember 30, 1982 fiscal year as
part of the administration's efforts
to bullance the federal budget by:
1984
Last year,
fedoral education spending of $15.7
billion. The Reagan adminstration.
earlier asked for cuts that would br
ing the budget down to $13\1
billion, The additional cuts Bell an:
nounced would further cut the
budget 10 $11,53 billion
Bell added that even more drastic
on, He
said he aims to cut another $9
billion from the programs by 1984,
If he suceveds, the 1984 federal
education budget would amount to
Hess than 40 percent of the toial
1981 budget of $14.9 billion.
Bell did not speeity how much of
those cuts would be from college
programs (ay opposed to the
primary and secondary education
programs administered by the
federal government),
Michelson
continued from page three
angry and very upset that "police
ean take whatever they want in a
ch.!? According to Michelson,
“The police clearly acted in an il-
legal faskion and considered
themselves above the law,!”
Michelson is scheduled to. app
in court on October 29 for a Sup:
pression Hearing, where ‘Thayer
sald she will attempt to “quash the
search warrant,
‘The Albany CAA has sct up a
Defense Fund for Michelson,
Congress authorized
Cuis would be requester
Whisper It In
Our Classitieds
© pons
HE eeorst
page 6/October 20, 1981
It Isn’t An
© phony and romanticized he almost makes
uch to my chagrin, “Rich and
Mere falls on almost every
count, lis plot Is full of contradic~
tions and inconsistencies, its chatacters are
vague, and the logic behind It Is offensively
Sexist.
Mark Rossier
The story follows two women from their
days as roommates at Smith through their
careers as successful though vasily different
writers. Jacqueline Bisset plays Liz
-
Jackie 1s dandy
Hamilton, an independent. intellectual
Erilically acclaimed writer of essays
ipl 10 be serivnus art.” Can,
anid
ye vels that “atte
live Bergen Is cast against type os Merry
Nel Blake, a Southerner who drops out of
shoo in hier last semester ta get married and
wuds up writing Jacqueline Susan ike pot
We fillaw the ricky road of |
(iendship fa iis eventual cunelusin. All very
asic ang! pat, until yaui healt think about
i
Even If they were rosimmates, une double
thot Lia anid Merry would be best frlencls
They are sy conypletely opposite. thelr In
lerests so different, their views of life so op
tliat appears 10 represent
everyiling the other dislikes (ihiis, of cours
providing one cary accep! thal sameone lik
Merry would! want ta go ta Smith
less get in), However, 1am as willing as
Hyon {4 suspend my disbelief fur dramatic
purpeses
crept thal against all the odds these (we
serame Irlenids
Unfottunately
es thal push even the most suspend
shale te ls
oo Mor N
posed. one
there are valor plat en
ils. From jhe fist tine we
S husband we know that hols
w with Lig, Then why does he
worn) M4? We're never lol. What wea
Old vat they had “a few" blind alates in
college: Well. tie ts se in fave wilh her and
her fe
there must be mare of a relationship thei
wrlter Gerald Ayres is felting vty
One alse doubis that alter years nf writing
trashy bestsellers Merry suddenly gots in
pired enough to wre a novel that could get
fy minated for a National Book Award-type:
honor Finally, the young Rolin
played by Hart Bochner
ts for hiny are more than friendly
reporter
for the sake of the movie Lean w.
the last hour of theilm laughable.
From a ditector of George Cukor's ex:
perience, this movie Is incredibly badly pac-
ed, The first hour barrels along at @
breakneck pace covering sixteen years in
three segments. The second hour Is far tor
slow, It should not take the entire second
fall of the film to tell the relatively banal
stories of Bisset's affair with the previously
mentioned reporter and Bergen’s dom:
trouble with the daughter. Had Cukor paced
things a little more evenly and concentrated
‘an developing character and plot in the first
flashes this might have been @ more ev
joyable effort
Much of the blame for this musi alse go to
Ayres whose screenplay, aside from being
full of holes and baldy timed, 's vague and
sexist as hell, Liz and Merry Noel (her name
| explained by saying she was a “holiday
surprise") are stereniypes, but they are well
developed, That seems like a contradiction,
but ifs just that Ayres has taken a umber of
‘and rolled them ints Wwe
Therefore they have
cl He alse ques
that
stereniypes
Haracters. Jor mon
depth than one might exp
ul of his tw give them brains »
they appear credible as writers
No, the problem is not with Liz and Mery
Nel, but with everyone around them, The
Supporting eliaracters are nothing more than
They barely even {unc
0
ardbvard: culuuls.
‘and Candy plays a hack.
int} as sinyple plol devices because the plot is
s0 thin to start with. It's as If Ayres were able
4 come up with two relatively strong
meh, bul lacked the Imagination) tu think
Hf a. World they fit Inia or people they cai
react to
This lack of iniagination leads Ayres lite
buttlig his heroes inie-a series of offensive
Iv sexist situations. Neier Lig ior Mery is
parlicularly happy with hier life and the
ease quile sinyply. is that they dant have a
man. hy the second segment Mery is the
perfect litle wife, yet as soon as shie han
first success hier husband hises his ol. bea
drinking vs her. Shu
Hlems with her rebellious daughter a
and divi 18 ps
ihe
the price’ for hier suck
a» been her family
Alter the divorce Meny became
pletely sexless, Just the opposite is us of
Lig, naturally. She is rather fond of picking
meni and b
Virtually anywhere fiom
street 10 aitplane
seem especially thrilled with the sexual
liberation the screenwriter has given her.
While she never says she wishes she had a
husband, she makes it known that she Is
much happier during a more permanent
relationship, This would be afine, almost ad-
mirable portrait of the conflicts facing @
modern woman if that Were as far as it went
bul Ayres has to Introduce the distasteful
idea that Liz, wha suffers wrlter’s block at
various points in the film, can only write
when she is “with a man." Apparently, to
‘Ayres way of thinking there has fo be aman
behind the woman’ for elther of thelr suc~
cesses 10 be entirely satis{ying
What helps to save the film from itself are
the excellent performances from Bisset and
Bergen, Bergen lias the less demanding role
Mery. is wt especially complicated, bul
ae ‘success believable She alse
dri
jayment of he
dIt Won’t Be
provides this suprisingly humorless film wih
the charm and laghs It desperately needs
Bisset gives one of her very best perf.
mances. For once she is able to transcend
her stunning looks and present a woman
who Is as real as the script allows her jo be
Usually in movies we can tell which choracier
is the writer because he or she drinks a fj
and quotes poetry, Well, Bisset does both of
these; but she also exposes the anguish and
struggle that a serious artist goes thr
Js an Impressive piece of work
Going in | expected Rich: and Fon
be either good, bitchy fun or a fa
look at the problems facing career
Unfortunately, what 1 got wa
draggy, unenjoyable movie wit
performances from women wh
telligen {(
angi indepedence
serves to fi
point out the
Fe Breach Of Faith
rue Confessions has more loose
ends than a plate of spaghelt! To
go into them in detail would spoil
what little suspense and surprise this project
already has; let me say though that by the
end of the movie you'll know less about.the
solution of the mystery than you will at the
beginning.
Screenwriters John Gregory Dunne and
Joan Didion rigorously detail the corrupt
professional lives of two brothers —
Thomas, a cop, and Desmond, a priest
Aside from the obvious, the brothers are
connected in one major way: apparently
everyone in the Los Angeles archdiocese,
Where Desmond is:a Monsignor, has been
screwing a gitl whose murder Tom Is in-
vestigating. Every scene reveals more and
more people who knew her or met her or
had sex with her; virtually the entire cast has
had some contact with this gil. This is fine,
even interesting, as fer as i goes, However
the problem with True Confessions |s thal
this {s where It stops
Afier drawing these increasingly strained
connections. Dunne and Didion never
bother to resolve them, We're never told
Who the killer is or how any of the endless list
of people who knew her are involved. A
theory Is hall-heartedly thrown out, but since
{only takes into account a miniscule number
of the facts it Is essentially useless
There are those who will claim that the
storyline of a film should be secondary to the
emotional, intellectual, or sociological
revelations the filmmaker is able to make. In
theory at least 1 would agree; plot is not
everything. Murder mysteries, however, are
‘8 different story. This is one of the most plot
bound genres and to shirk the conventions at
the very end is as iritating as itis pointless, It
must also be stated that True Confessions
makes no emotional,
sociological revelations to
deliberately vague structur
justify its
Every scene builds to what
sto what we expect will
be a powerful climax, This is done
Underplaying all of them. The sce
partly by
surprisi
assume all the rep)
tions will come out
forceful ending forces us to re
‘of what has gone bef
mistook for subtle
shown to be bad acting.
repressi
Bad is really too strong a wor
better, Robert Duvall, and especially Rober
DeNiro, just walk through their partsas hs
Was something they were doing betw
jobs, DeNiro has never been one
favorite actors, but I'll admit that in
‘overacting that characterized Taxi Drver and
New York, New York he al least seemed
terested, Here he looks like he
anywhere else, We get no sense
exhaustion, both of which the
should feel — in fact we don't get the ne
that there's any character at all
seems {o have come in, said the
paycheck, and left
Duvall feres slightly b ul
because he gels to make jokes. His
more outgoing of the brothers so he ges
vary his range a bit more. But even be
doesn't seem too Involved nor d
the sense of guilt or regret that the ¢
(which, like the beginning, inexplicably kes
place twenty years after the rest
implies
Burgess Meredith and Cyr
More to illustrate the confi
morality and the business of the
thelr few scenes than DeNiro d
whole movie. And Rose Gregor
ing hooker is the only one
compell our attention when she’s
Owen
Steven Grinies’ s
Roizman's cinem
Visually this is a
Nonetheless, seeing True (
na dark m
ly your low beams, Y
to see safely 1
great
never enough
—Murk Rossier
Yugo Your Way
Saturday, Oct. 24, is ¢
University Day from 12-5 pm. The
University invites Capital District residents t
smmunity
fan open house on the uptown campus. This
lyear the theme will revolve around Eastern
Europe, Admission is free
Pieces of Eighth
The Eighth Step Coffeehouse is having an
8th Step Festival Week. Beginning on Oct
20 and running though Oct. 25 there will be
six evenings of varied entertainment. To
lwind up the week, al 8:45 on Saturday, the
[Albany Theatre Project will be presenting an
levening of theatre called Pieces of Pinter.
Tw Will alst) bo an all da
ny. Oct
Tickvts are "
$4.00 for Bi
beginning at
ep Member
Q: Are We Not Strange? :
Ih honor of the 50th Anniversary
WB. Scott's is
two acclaimed rock bands
damned: it's Devo on Friday. Oct 23 ap
8:00, and The Tubes with Blotto on Sui
day, Oct 25. Tickets for both shows are
$10.50. Appearing at J.B. Scott's tonivnsuw
night is a promising new band called Nov
ambo, *
Palace Theatre promoting
the balcony by
Taylor Made
The Paul Taylor Dance Company wili give
two performances at The Egg on Oct. 23
Mintemps (The Rehe
Stravinsky. Both shows start at p.
H
tand
whior citiaen discounts. Tickets are aval
at the Egg box affice and all Community
Office locations ge
Opus 51
The opening concerts uf the Alk
certs of the Albany Sym
Phony Orehestra’s S1st season will take
plas n Friday, Oct 23. 8:30 p.m, at the
toy Savings Bank Music Hall and Saturd
all and Saturday,
Oct. 24. 8:30 p.m.. at the Palace Th
Single tickets are available
Theatre
8 at the Palace
and Community Box Office |
Chock Full O'Musica
The New ¥
Cohen, pianist. Sey
Timothy Eddy. «
anid director Robert
The remaining artist
later
The
Philimusica plays this fal at N
Lincoln’ Center. offers Faure’> Q
minor, opus 15 and Mc
No. 16 ji B-flat, K, 287
Further information is avallab
the University’s Performing Aris Ce
457-8606
Program. ident
ait’s Diver
October 20, 1981/poge 7
Jeffreys Plots His Latest Escape
arland Jeffreys has been knocking‘
around the rock ‘n’ roll scene since”
the early seventies when he releas- |
ed two critically praised but unsuccessful
albums. Jeffreys never quit though, and now:
IS a star in Europe with a good chance for a
hit record in America
Ray Caligiure
Jeffreys, @ 37 year-old Black singer:
songwriter born and raised in Sheepshead
Bay, New York, has always had a promising
career since his first release in 1973. Jeffreys
had his first big breakthrough with the release
of his 1979 LP, American Boy and Girl
Which entered the American charts and
quickly disappeared, Success was to be
found, however. "Matador," a 45 from the
album, became a huge hit in
throughout Europe, leading to @ tour in
which Jeffreys played! to millions of Euro
peans, live and on television.
On’ the strenath of this success, Jeffreys
relurned to the States and assembled an all-
star band for his next album, Escape Artist,
featuring The Rumour, one of the best sup:
port bands in England, led by guitarists
Brinsley Schwarz and Martin Belmont, The
Rumour had recently parted company with
Graham Parker, whom they played with for
four years, and joined Jeffreys on a U.S.
tour earlier this year.
cities
The
and Jeffreys set out to prove
The new tour Is being promoted as
Mature Tour,”
Garland Jeffreys R-O:C:K's:
ii
The Escope Arist’s Success
Is more than a rumour,
this at J.B, Scott's Saturday night. The club
Was overflowing with people who had paid
$9.50 al the door to witness Jeffreys’ first
Albany appearance in two years
Jeffreys was not out to disappoint them
He played a mixture of rock ‘n’ roll and
Jamaican influenced reggae, delighting the
audience more with each song, Backed by
half The Rumour, (Brinsley Schwarz and
drummer Stephen Goulding) with a bass
and an organ/guitar player, Jeffreys ignited
the crowd with his soulful singing siyle pat
terned after his idol, Frankie Lymon, The
band produced a simple beat, superbly timed
and executed, Jeffreys sang many crowd
favorites such as “Wild in the Streets,” his
most famous song, “R.O.C.K. "sung along
with by many in the audience, and an in-
spired cover, "96 Tears," ulizing the Farfisa
organ.
Jeffreys displayed an unusual amount of
emoticn on “Pool Down Boy,’ a ten-minute
song that starts out fast and rocking, only to
be slowed down almost to a complete stop
— “I'm gonna fell you the whole story now,"
he sald, "Cool Down Boy!" is a compelling
tale concerning the painful memorles of Jef-
freys! youth, and while enunciating how his
step-father used fo hit him, he hit himself, —
luntil he knocked himself down on the stage,
The crowd cheered,
Stopping at nothing fo excite the crowd,
Jefireys jumped off the stage and walked
through the middle of the crowd asa path in-
stanily cleared, all the while singing the song,
“When I'm onstage, | like to make as much
contact with the audience as possible,” he
said about performing live.
The music was basic, stripped of any
prelentions, giving off a clean, enjoyable
sound; not loud and overpowering, and
always danceable, And Jeffreys couldn't
have hoped for a better response from an
ecstatic J.B, Scot's crowd.
Jeffreys’ appealing live sound has caught
the attention of the executives at Epic
Records. Epic Is banking on the success of
Jeffreys! concert sound and has released an
eight song live LP recorded in New York and
France, called Rock & Roll Adult, If the
record recelves enough airplay from the ma:
Jor FM stations, it could catch on fast, and
Gorland Jeffreys will have the star-status he
deserves But, If Garland makes t big, will he
still come back {0 Albany? He has a loyal
following In any case o
Marley’s Legacy: Black Uhuru In N.Y. ...
hen music and life become so inter
connected that they are one and
the same, the chance of commer:
cial recognition greaily decreases, especially
here in the United States, The punk seane
Craig Marks “|
"77 was just that — Kids who lived for their
dressed for their music, and violently
Punk did not become
fs success{ul business venture in the U.S. un
music
acted out thelr music
til I was homogenized into new wave, and
the elements of danger and social unaccep
tabilily were eliminated
Reggae {s a similar {ype of music that In
terms of its purity, stands unequaled, The
Inte Bob Marley was alone in the fact that he
magically crossed over seemingly un
crossable boundaries, and while staying true
to his rastamen roots, was able to write songs
that communicated with all of humanity.
Since Marley died of cancer less than a year
‘ago, one band has stood out, both arlistically
..And Blacksheep
In Albany
he message of Rastafari comes to S.U.N.Y.! Blacksheep, a fine young reggae
| band played in the boxslike Campus Center Ballroom on Friday night to a small
yet very apprecial
community.
mances by all six members of Blacksheep com!
positive vibration on the dance floor
Whereas reggae
come out to hear th
Association
many 1
eager ears, Two fi
aitended by many Ik
the drummer
a lord JAH to per
ing f the band ple
wn tune but the Blacksheep magi
redefine that terminology
ally awful Ballroom with beautiful sounds,
Olanivan. keyt i
dancer and Alt
Jing “JAH truths” across the globe. He is from Panama:
preading
and Winst
Moata are continuin
and Robbie Shakespeare, the
1 residence
{with a new record «
BNA nd right as the message
Reggae
audience of students and others from the Albany
The thyhm and sway of the West Indies (via Philadelphia) ond fine perfor
+ music is not overly popular on campus, there are always folks who will
sounds that they love, With the zealous efforts of the Pan Carribean
served 1o spread the rhy
ent performances alv
‘al reggae faris who were searching.
spokesman, bel
ya specific duty: to spread the word of Rastafari and
nd watching the people move are proof that their
hours and never were sh
9 few cover songs, Cover sung usua
id by the band
ardisi, vocalist
experienice with Blacksheep. he |
immer as far as Nigeria. A highly religious man, Ayinde
1 Alexander, the percussion
{ songwriter, is fram Barbados and together with}
Blacksheep. The bass
mes Band. Blacksheep wa:
‘al the Creative Music Studio in Woodstock, N.Y.
bined to create a happy, hearly and spirited
ms and harmonies of reggae 10]
by Blacksheep at J.B. Scott's were
y the “real” reggae sounds
‘es thal Blacksheep has been hand
rihanded for material, which)
iy implies a shoddy|
“All Along the Watchtower" and
n Gathering” and “Every Dread" filled)
and writer, is a very tall man with Tong
as toured with different dance]
Jelani, the
and vocalist, are both
ums are crucial to.a fine reg
fa tradition of thythm sections that is
Rhythm Twins” of reggae. Isa
lays keyboards. sings, and applies his creative
jladelphia he played with such notables as
‘born’ in February in|
the way, everything that they do
of Rastafari, transmitted through Roots, Rock;|
— Steven Popper
and commercially, as the leader of the next
wave of reggae.
Black Uhuru has everything going for
them: an uplifting and penetrating vocalist
and songwrller tn Michael Rose, contrasting
bul yet! visually? enthralling. frontpeople,
Puma and Duckle Simpson, and a rhythm
section that lays down the best groove In all
‘of music, The Taxi All-Stars. Their show last
Tuesday night at the Ritz in NYC was a true
expression of hope, and |t exemplified just
what makes reggae music such a powerful
medium
Performing material from all three of their
‘albums, Black Uhuru constantly entranced
the capacity crowd, both visually and aural:
ly. "Sponji Reggae," from their most recent
album Red and “Happiness,” off of the
Sinsemilia LP, are the band's most well
known songs, and accordingly brought out
the greatest reaction from the crowd, Older
material, such as “Abortion” and the sing-a-
Jong, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, Nal:
ty Dreadiock,"’ were also received with great
fervor, and It was nearly impossible not {o be
swept away by the emotionality and
spirituality of this group and their music.
Rhythm ts intrinsic to all reggae music,
‘and rhythm {s what sets Black Uhuru apart
from all other bands, The bass-drum com:
bination of Sly Dunbar and Robbie
Shakespeare are world-renowned, and the
incomparable "Riyihm {wins,” who usually
do not tour with the groups they produce,
fave chosen to do e select few shows with
Black Uhuru, Thelr dance’ pulsations are
Undenleble; Robbie's bass. line sneaks
around Sly's drum pattern, first taking lead
then letting Sly fake over with a double or tr-
ple time rhyihm, The rhythmic Variations
these two produce turn each song Info an.
adventure, and at times I's hard to believe
how just two Instruments can make you want
to move your feet so much
Hopefully Black Uhuru will our a bit more
extensively in the future so everyone can get
a chance to see them,-The.only possible pro-
blem forsceable for this group 's foo much
populfrity and critical acclaim being placed
on theln; it could be a tremendous burden,
especially when comparisons fo Bob Marley
‘and the Wailers are inevitable, It seems,
though, that Michael Rose has the typeof
personality necessary to handle all the
praise, and there is no real reason why Black
Uhuru should not only be at the top of the
reggae world for many years to come, but
should also be able {o transcend those seem:
ingly uncrossable boundaries: ia]
10/15/81
att! ogett -
FUERZA LATINA
General Assembly Meeting
Tues. Oct. 20
8:00 prompt
Room
to be
announced
Tuesday
Discovery - Album of the week @@
Thursday
epi ana - The Police
Something Special Everynight
At 8:00
WEDD 117
U2 October
Rosalind Newman
And Dancers
“Dancing so stunning
that you can’t believe
what you’re seeing”
Deborah Jowitt
Village Voice
Friday, October 23
October 24
Performing Arts Center, Main Theatre
State University of New York at Albany
Oct. 20 - 22
Tickets Masterclasses
$6.00 General Public Beg. Int. Modern
$4.00 Students and
Senior Citizens Composition/Improvisation}
$3,00 SUNYA Tax Cards | Lecture Demonstration
Ticket Information: 457-8606
Schedule Information: 457-4532
Presented by Dance Council
SA Funded |
[
JB SCOTT PRODUCTIONS AND 9104 PRESENT
50th Anniversary Celebration at the Palace
Friday, October 23
8 P.M.
‘An Evening
With DEVO
(For This Performance Only,
No Opening Act)
» %
oy
ALL RESERVED
SEATING
$10.50
Special Guest—BLOTTO
ALL RESERVED SEATINGC—$10.50
METROLAND ANNIVERSARY PARTY
at JB Scott's following the Devo show.
featuring two sets by the UNITS
BRING YOUR DEVO TICKET STUB AND:
* Get S0¢ OFF admission
* Pay ONLY 50C¢ for your first
domestic beer, wine or
house mixed drink
TICKETS: Alb.—Palace and JB Scott's Box Offices, Just A Song, Drome Sound: schen
—Strawberries, Drome sound
October 20, 1981
monticello jam
When Thomas Jefferson wrote
the First Amendment to protect free
speech, he was also striking a blow
for outdoor rock concerts, So says
an Ohio judge, denying a move to
cancel an REO Speedwagon ap-
pearance al the Toledo Speedway,
Prosecutor Anthony Pizza claims
concerts are “a criminal nuisance,"
becalise of the amount of illegal
drugs usually available. But Judge
Reno Riley says constitutional
guarantees of free specch also”
guarantee rock fans the right ‘to
hear such speech."*
hey, sucker
One of the newest advances in
science sounds as if it was taken
from a medieval medical text: dov-
tors are treating their patients with
Thy techni
que is used on people who've hail
leeches,
fingertips surgically reattached —
Albany Student Press
IAC NEWS
Prices, Xerox has offered the buy-
outs before, but never had) many,
takers — in the words of a company,
official ‘fa good performer looks at
the offer and throws it in the.
Wastebasket.’” But this time things
may be differeni: the company says,
‘oné Way or another the work force
drop, and if employees don'i
the suing
A California woman is suing
“The Shining” author Stephen
King, claiming he based his hit hor-
Tor novel on her life, June Pritchard
says she was treated by a UCLA
therapist for problems similar to
the leeches improve blood flow and
cl as a sort of temporary’ \cin, But
Dr. Jane Petro, ai New York's
Albert, Einstein Medical
says the animals could theorciivally
be used to treat any part of the body
afflicted by clogged veins
over and out
Most companies don't like to
lose workers, but Xerox is so anx-
ious to get rid of some employees,
it's offering them up to a year's
salary 10 quit, It's part of a cost.
cutting plan; Xerox says it's caught
inv an inflation squeeze — costs are
living, bul beeause of competition
from Japan i's afraid 10. raise
Serving.
Lark St. at Madison
Welcomes Back
THE 81 SUNYA CLASS
Lunch - 11:30 to 5
Dinner: 5 to 11;
SUNYA Special
40¢ Draft Friday, Saturday, & Sunday
Late night menu till closing
Rodney Dangerfield
*Get your claws off my
Pilot pen, See... | don't
get no respect!”
People have
aur
iy Pilot Fi
ey fe olwWoys
of 0 fine point pe
les through carbons. And
Tchotges only 79¢ fo
People gel theirnonds on it ond
Tie notes
the point from going,
Jove i For only B9s they.
should buy Inalt own pen:
‘ond show some re
ny
PILOT!
fine point marker pens
People foke to 0 Pilot ike i's thelr own.
pl the extra money they could
be fired,
those in ‘The Shining!’ — the story
of a family tormented by super-
frozen babies
Australian scientists have frozen
a dozen human embryos which they,
believe can be thawed) and. im-
planted in infertile women to pro-
duce healthy children,
Carl Wood, leader or the selen-
tific team at the Queen Victoria
Medical Center, liowever, says the
technique raises a host of
“frightening’* eval and ethical
questions that would have to be
resolved before its use could
become widespread,
The scientists say two frozen em:
bryos we're thawed and resumed
growing oulside the womb, ‘They
Were Implanted in their mothers’
wombs, bul failed 10 result in
Pregnancy, the ists said
However, mean the
technique is a failurc, they report,
because the success rate for implan:
tation of embryos that haye nol |
been frozen is only about $ percent,
i
CO} the only Genuine French
URES 5. ALBANY.
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UEAN PAUL
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Vand the problems students
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‘ellance In Hale Siving they are
ied to In N.Y.C, Our 3
| winery trained and our serv
‘Nas best possible
DEWIT CUNTON
4142 STATE STREET, ALBANY, NY. 12207
(618) 463-641
15 per cent discount with student 1D til
New Year's Eve excep! with Jean C. Paul
‘or Marsha BI
ADELPHI UNIVERSITY'S
SA
PREPARATION COURSE
40 hr. course —live lectures
in-class practice exams
audio tape library
e GUARANTEE: If you don’t score
600, take the WN course FREE
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CLASSES START NOVEMBER 3
at The Best Western-Thruway House
Free Question & Answer session concerning the LSAT
and the law school admission process to be held at
the Best Western: Thruway House, 1375 Washington
‘Ave , Albany at 6:30 PM, on October 22
For further Information, to attend a Q & A session
or to enroll in the next course,
Call COLLECT: (212) 679-2773
‘or write: LSAT Preparation Course, Adelphi Urban
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‘In cooperation with The National Center for Educational Testing, Inc
natural spirits, She claims her doc-
tor gave the material to King, and
she’s asking for 75 million dollars
from the author, his publisher and
Warner Brothers, which last year
turned the story into a motion pic-
ture,
‘a house by any other name
++ the nation’s sage:
ny ‘nuusiry. He's put his
+ Tersoy home: on the
am asling price of
inal! mill? dollars, Por
ac ficall 1 silver: Fete
eenliouse, naskethal
shinped! winning
W1is%5 Kirshner sellin | 1h
yal My wif only warated a
continued from page three
sily of Massachusset(s, ‘We
haven't really seen anything around
ere,"" says. William ©, White,
jor of psychological services at
Cornell. ‘It couldn't be very, big
ludents,"?
“I've heard no mention of it,"
agrees University of Michigan staff
psychologist Evie Gauthier,
{hough maybe it’s just thal we're
nol, asking about il, Maybe kids
Who are into it arenti coming 10
us!"
On the other hand, Bill Olson of
the University of Colorado counsel:
ase in usage
during the past year. ‘They were
pretty popular last spring,’ he
notes, although we haven't had
anyone come In experiencing pro-
blems, strung out on the stuff."”
“There have been al least five
deaths nationwide as a resull of caf=
feine drugs,"? contends Dr, John
Spikes, chief toxicologist at the Il-
Jinios public health department,
whose state recently initiated legal
action {0 prohibit sales of look-
alikes, “And there are others that
probably haven't been reported,
simply because people didn’t realize
confirmed," agrees Chris
|the Food and Drug admini
Malthough some of those may haye
been deliberate suicides,”
You'd haye to be cautious of
ated usage of (butyl nitrite),””
warns Dr, Charles Sharp of the Na:
tional Institute on Drug Abuse,
citing evidence of a number of
deaths among homosexuals who, he
says, are the most frequen
indulgers. By and large, though, he
concedes, ‘Most people can pro
ably get b- without problems,’
‘Our product is among the most
benign substances you could find,
as benign as tap water,’ exults W.
Jay Freezer, San Francisco-based
manufacturer of Rush, the most
popular butyl nitrite inhalant, “The
continued on page twelve
pero ieee oes
Column
Letters, Viewpol
at, Comment
Editedal
Third World Development)
American Stance Viewed
Hubert-Kenneth Dickey
‘The issues which are so dear to us are
such that they must, would, and indeed do:
transcend both the candidates for office
‘and the partisan party lines put before us
now, There is no sense in being a party to
the installation of the next slave master of
the world, If the draft comes, 1 want them
{o draft the rich, old white men who send.
young, poor, black and white men to die, A
major obstacle to freedom today is the
‘willful ignorance of both the people and the
Jeadership class of America.
‘We must develop, prosper and be free.
We must firmly believe there should and
can be an end to the deprivation of human
dignity and fundamental rights of all people
on planet Earth, In addition, the last
Vestiges of -colonialism, imperialism,
racism, and sexism must give way to
freedom and independence as based upon
the creative and willful insight of the neo-
ple, The eriss of the modern world Is Inter-
national in scope and this crisis involves the
poor, the dispossessed and the exploited
people of this world,
‘Americans have betrayed the revolt:
tionary title, The terms and the articles of
faith have long since been made the
tatechism of faithless and heartless
materialism, The dignity of the individual
has grown cancerous, swollen to ils present
state of, morbidity, a malignant figure
grasping for power. Hope has been
betrayed and forgotten. The seed of revolu-
tion, however, remains and grows, Within
this seed, is the influence, the force, the
force of the revolution, We have been
‘wrong arrd fainthearted in our thinking and
‘we shall be blamed by those who come after
us. They shall blame us because of the
hegative and defensive attitude of mind to
which the Republic has been ‘committed.
‘We have deprived the world of a positive,
believable alternative to the grim choice the
authoritarians now hold before us.
America was to actualize human
freedom, provide a republican model for a
Universal aspiration,
The turning away from the sense of the
American mission has been one of the great
spiritual occlusions of modern times,
The process of change entails certain
risks. Change, however, is inevitable as the
falling rain, Just as the man who is not lord
of his soul has become his own enemy, 50
ten can fear of change overwhelm us all. It
is not a question of being able to withstand
change or even of directing it, It is a ques:
pater
tion of understanding change and
cooperating with it.
The change of our time, the basle
dynamic of our time is the quest to be hap-
py with vision and wisdom, and to master
‘our own inner life. Poverty of the spirit is
an obstacle to the realization of human
rights in a world gone “insane!” with the
“madness of mega-bucks?!!
“Talk of ending inflation and balancing,
budgets is pointless dribble, Its impossible
to speak of a world order as long as political
intrigue manipulates the world économy.
“Paper’’ inflation generated by interna-
tlonal financial forces is what must be
brought to heel.
‘The olleprice spiralis a political as well as
an economic phenomenon, The United
States still maintains the pretense that the
discussion of monetary stability and
development facilities are unrelated, And
yet one third of ‘American exports go to the
‘Third World, over one million jobs depend
‘on stich exports, and very, third acre In
America today produces: food for export.
‘What Is needed then is a redeclaration of
the individual in terms which have realistic
meaning in this time.
‘That a people cannot think itself through
problems such as these: that (o ask an entire
nation by an act of choice, and act of will,
to make freedom a reality. under the condi-
tions of contemporary life is to talk in
rhetoric, not reason,
If one defines revolution as a series of
events that trigger abrupt social, political
‘and economic change, then Americans are
jn the midst of a revolution, Revolutions
aare des{ruetive to societies that are not flexi-
ble, lack imagination and have little
discipline,
The dial
jie of history demands that we
conduct ot ms with compassion, ra-
{ionalization and dedication — so that we
are nol merely swept along or trampled
underfoot by events, The Ayatollah and the
Sovicls have awakened us from our nar-
cissisistic stupor, where we were bemused
by the illusion that there were such things as
purely domestic issues on which we could
focus our attention and our politics. Such
matters as energy, inflation, taxes and
pollution are not contained neatly within
‘ur national borders. We are part of the
World and the world increasingly is part of
us. This is one fact of modern life, that We
‘seem to have a hard time grasping, even at
this late date.
L___—__—
—AWACs Reviewed
To the Editor: ;
‘The recent letter by Larry Friedman op
posing the AWACS sale illustrates what I
believe to be the major problem with our
newly attained voting rights in the Albany
area,
“Though I disagree with Mr, Friedman's
opinion of the AWACS situation, and
found his reasoning to be slightly simp
‘and faulty, my main point of contention
his suggestion that students use their voting
power to oust Sam Stratton should he
fnaintain his current stand on the AWACs
sale.
This type of single-issue voting Is very
narrow-minded and ignores the fact that
Mr, Stratton has served this area for quite
some time and seems to receive a great deal
of support from his constituents. Though
there is no question that writing to Mr.
Stratton and expressing one’s opinion is
totally acceptable, it seems that the native
voters of this district would be short-
changed by a single-issue oriented student
voting bloc, regardless of the strength of
the student turnout,
Personally, | found myself obligated to
refuse the opportunity to yotein Albany for
several reasons. Each year thousands of
students invade this community, but how
many of us actually know the names, faces
and policies of the local politicians? How
can any student who has not made a
thorough survey of the local issues and pro-
posals cast an educated and fair vote? Most
of us are only here for four or five years; yet
the way we vote in local elections may have
effects that extend far beyond our limited
period of concern,
T honestly believe that students have no
trie right to vote in this community,
However, since that right has now been ex-
tended to us, we must also take on the
parallel responsibility of knowing the issues
‘and voting as members of the Albany com-
munity andnot as a single, separate voting
bloc.
— Louis Trotia
eae
Top ren Tested
To the Edltor:
‘Now I'm all for everyone haying an opi-
nion and all that crap, but sometimes peo-
ple can go too far, What I'm talking about
is the, quote unquote, AS/’ Top Ten
Granted, the ASP Is a relatively credible
hunk of newsprint with some almost valid
journalistic worth, but when four
boneheads living in a tower or a run down
student apartment somewhere think they
‘can tell me who the top teams in the nation
are, I just want to double over.
Now listen. The guys that make up the
real rankings — they are experts — are just
a more knowledgeable than some
Italian, two ‘editors’ and a guy named
‘pif! Come to think about it, how can a
fellow who would willingly be called “BiCt””
ever think he would be listened to?
Anyway, I'd wager that all these so-called
ASP “experts! probably just look at the
real rankings and switch numbers eight and
nine. Maybe someone slips a weird (cam
like Clemson way up high just to make it in-
teresting, But basically I think the top ten is
just a vehicle for these guys to tell
themselves that their word means
ing. 1 hope they like it. 1 think it’s
— Name Withheld by Request
Solidarity Day Reply
‘To the'Editor:
Solidarity Day in Washington D.C. on
Sept. 19 was also a big day for Socialist
Labor Party members as we gave away over
10,000 free copies of the Labor Day issue of
Telethon Plans For 1982
‘To the Editor:
Dance Marathon, SA Used Book Ex-
change, a trip to Boston, Afternoon at the
Bars, parties, and Run for the Gold. These
‘and many other events are run by one of the
most active student organizations on cam:
Th the straightened and abject conditions
that this world now faces, it is very unlikely
that freedom will endure among an affluent
10% oF less of the world’s population,
We need to commit ourselves to the
serious effort of restructuring the world's
‘economy, It is time to face that, we need the
Third world. We cannot live without it. We
need its peoples as allies, we need its raw
materials and we need its cooperation in
tackling those global problems which
threaten, rich and poor alike,
pus —Telethon,
‘And as Spring approaches, most students
are ready for the 24-hour talent show that is
held in the Campus Center Ballroom an:
nually.
However, before Telethon '82 T-shirts
are out, students shoud be aware of what
Telethon is, and who we serve.
Telethon raises money to benefit local
children's organizations, We sponsor
events year round to raise money . We also
try to develop close relationships with the
children we serve through visits to the
organizations, parties and outings.
The highlight of Telethon is the 24-hour
talent show that will be held in the
Ballroom on April 2 and 3. The first hour
Of Telethon is covered on all three major
local television networks.
Telethon '82's recipients are the Charlee
Family Care Program (Children Have All
Rights, Legal, Educational, Emotional)
and Project Equinox
* Charlee, which will receive the major
portion of Telethon’s funds is a not-for
profit organization licensed by New York
to care for abused, neglected, pre-deliquent
and deliquent children ages 6 through 17.
The children are housed in group homes
under the care of surrogate parents, social
workers and other staff where they can
Work out their problems in a stable, struc
tured environment.
Project Equinox is a temporary shelter
for runaway children ages 13 10 18, The
shelter is located in downtown Albany near
the bus terminals.
These children need all the care and sup:
port that we can give them, Telethon is
fun and rewarding way to meet friends and
help the community in which we live. We
Would love to have everybody joins
For futher information contact Grex
“THIS SHOULD dUST ABOUT CLOSE THAT ANINDON OF VULNRABILITY.?
(457-3318) or Beth (434-0940)
—Greg Katz
—Beth Sexer
the SLP paper The People and close to
10,000. new leaflets with the title
“Reaganomics and the American
Worker.’
There was such a terrific demand for the
Reaganomics leaflets, 1 had my hands full
trying to keep up with the people taking
more to pass on,
I met people from Woodstock and
‘Kingston who know me as an active
‘member of the Socialist Labor party. I was
also interviewed by Cable TV New York.
Driving home, I gave a lift to a truck
driver who like so many workers, was not
aware of the SLP and that it’s the third
oldest party in this country.
After briefly explaining what the SLP
program is to him, he gladly took copies of
The People and leaflets to distribute to col-
ege student friends and others.
He gave me his name and address to keep
him informed of SLP activities in this area.
‘The time and effort spent in Washington
was well worth it and made my day! Thank
you,
— Nathan Pressman
Hudson Valley SLP
Alumni Response
To the Editor:
Janice Kimmich’s reply to Chris Wilson's
letier about Alumni, the forgotten quad,
seemed to convey the impression that the
only alternative for those of us who live on
Alumni and feel we are being neglected is to
move uptown, Her implication is that
Alumni students make the choice to live
downtown, and should therefore bear the
resulting inconveniences quictly, without
complaining.
Let me point out that Alumni houses
many freshmen, most of whom do not ask
to live downtown, and who are rather upset
when they, find out where they have been
placed, But they soon realize that Alumni
offers a unique living experience, and
relurn overwhelmingly the next year.
Yes, there are inconyeniences to
downtown life, But the advantages to living.
in a situation such as the one that Alumni
offers outweigh the minor hassles that exist.
Because we are separated from the uptown.
campus, we are forced (0 create our own
activities, A sens¢ of community is fostered,
fone that cannot be found on any uptown
quad,
Too often uptowners tend {0 forget that
there is a world outside our campus, But the
noise of the children in the Pierce Hall Day
Care Center or the sound of horns honking
on Western Avenue reminds us that we are
people, not only students. Most of the
students on Alumni love it, and would not
move uptown for anything, While those
‘who have lived both uptown and downtown.
say that there is no comparison—it. is
downtown all the way. So instead of telling
lis o move uptown, how about recognizing
vs for what we are—a valuable and integral
part of SUNYA.
—Lisa Thomas, President
Alumni Quad Board
Why Not Us:
To the Editor:
They have one at Penn; they have one at
Union, and Cornell, and Maryland:
‘Why is it, on this campus of fifteen thou
sand students, can there not be a legitimate
pizza parlor? I'm not talking about those
$1,80 a shot round jobs the Rat sells this
year, nor the wedges of cardboard they sold
last year, 1 mean good All-American pies,
served up in nice big white boxes by so:
meone who knows what he or she is doing:
Ts it (00 much to ask that UAS hire @
licensed pie maker (if there is such a thing)
and a professional oven? Let's sec them
toss some of that tax dough around for a
change.
We've tried all the rest — now we want
the best.
—IJay Lustgarten:
Giant Fan Talks
To'the Editor:
T have to say that all those years in the
closet haven't been easy, I estimate that 1
have spent nearly 400 hours watching the
Giants over the last 13 years, I've even writ-
{en letters to the local TV stations when the
games weren't televised. What has all this
gotten me?...the frustration of watching
the Giants blow another one, This frusira-
tion has led me to kick my dog, yell at my
mother and seriously damage three televi-
sion sets,
Although I may be suffering from delu-
sions (I hear it happens to Giant fans over
the years), 1 think 1 heard Roger Staubach
se the term “playoff contender’ when
referring (0 the Giants during last Sunday's
game, However, I remember one season
when the Giant's record was 9-4 and they
only needed to win their last game (0 make
it to the playoffs, Unfortunately that game
was against the Los Angeles Rams who
quickly terminated any glimmer of hope.
No, I'm still not ready to come out of the
closet,
—Name Withheld by Request
areer Complaint
To the Editor:
After having completed nearly 4 years of
college education — being so close to
graduation that I can smell the onion skin,
why should it be that the University still
serves to dazzle and confuse me?
I attended an orientation yesterday for
career placement and the woman in charge
nearly blew me away, For a solid hour she
spoke about carcer development, career
planning, career searching and carcer
counseling. At such a vulnerable and sen-
sitive time, why should they throw
euphemistic jargon around when all I wnat
is a goddamned job!
Someone please ‘ell this wonderful
university service (o get the knack,
—Name Witheld by Request
Ideas For UAS
To the Editor:
‘An idea for UAS whose time has come:
the commuter $2.00 special. I have the cam-
pus center option on my meal plan, but find
T'm rarely able to eat enough and still stay
below the $2.00 limit. Even the specials
(sandwich, soup, Coke) nearly always ex:
eed the $2.00 mark (unless it's baloney, in
which case who really cares?)
What 1 propose is a daily $2,00 (no tax)
special that would allow the commuter to,
hand over his meal card without digging in:
to his pocket for change, Granted, UAS
might take a beating’ on some of the
more expensive meals, but would be able to
compensate with cheaper dishes on alter-
nate days.
The renovation of the commuter
cafeteria was admirable; let's apply the
same thinking to the food itself,
—Larry 0, Jersey
Hees NE ie oes nines
Future For Quad
To the Editor:
Commenting on the recent controversy
over Alumni Quad, I would like to say that
being a resident there for two years I found
the downtown campus a very instrumental
part of SUNYA, I see no reason for it (0 be
anything but that in the near futur
—Andrew P. Horn
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campus issues? Or do you have a
atipe about any concern? Write al
opinion be heard. Your voice does count,
letter (o the editor and let your)
Robin Hood Is Dead
Check it out. The new tax credit proposal is here. Believe it
when we say we're not just looking for something to pick on, but
when something good comes along we can’t resist.
This tax credit, introduced by Senators Moynihan (D-NY) and
Packwood (R-OR) will provide a maximum $250 tax credit to
families whose children are enrolled in private elementary and
secondary schools, or public and private post-secondary schools.
What's strange here is the balance of the cost involved. Presi-
dent Reagan. has vowed to balance the federal budget. At the
same time he has come out in favor of this tax credit.
By the year 1984, this program may cost up to $6 billion,
Where. will this money come from? Financial aid programs? It’s
certainly a possibility.
The most predictable thing about this proposal is that it is
useless to the poor and benefits the rich. In order to be eligible for
the program, families have to be in or above a lower-middle class
tax bracket.
Ifall goes through the way we think it will, Robin Hood will be
turning over in his grave.
The Warriors
The Middle East has recently experienced the traumatic deaths
of two great leaders. Anwar cl-Sadat was felled by assassins’
bullets on October 6 and Moshe Dayan died from a heart attack
last Friday. Both men, whether right or wrong, worked for what
they believed in, with each secking the betterment ‘of the world
situation, They were very different but, in many ways, very
similar. Their losses are important not only in a political way but
in a spiritual way as well, The world will miss them.
amf il cwative magazine
Robert E. Grubman, Edlfor in Chief
Steven A, Greenberg, Dean Bats, Managing Edlfors
Rob Edelstein, Senior Editor
Susan Miligan.
‘Wie Elaonberg, Wayne Pesteboom
‘Andiow Carroll, Joanne Welner
Michio! Brandes
Pay Caliglure
he jews
ASPacis Editors
‘Associale ASPecis Edi:
Sound Editor
Vision Editor
Mare Haspel, Mi
Frank J: Gil Jt
fice, Liebor
Copy Eat
tat wrlera: Bob Bellator, Ken Cantor, Hubert Kenneth Dickey Michael Dinowitx Jim aon, Maik Flachall
Mark Gesner, Debbie Judge, Kathy Kissane, Eric Koll, Jl Lang sa Mi “ohn Moran,
arbating
sasre Sonindler, Gath Sonor, Suean Smith, Jensicn Treadway, Zodiac and Preview
Bonnie
Janet OF
‘Advertsing Manager
indy Broder, Judy B. Santo, Karon Sardott
Ale
Diling Accountant
P lowltz
i Superieor
Klein
pte
‘avid Book
‘bonnie Stoyens, Janet Oroiluas, Dayid Nell Yapko Advertising Production Mi
it advertising Production; Michelle Horowitz, Mara Mendelsohn, Mollssa We
rion Epalein, Anne Fried, Jessica Trachier
carol Bury
8 Bock
‘Dubble Barnet Janice Kimmich, Edun Levine, Elzabeth Valentino, Typla Lynde
aaa ary une, Kennelh 8. Dornbaum, Mare GarDatno, September Kein, Saralyy Levine, Cale Ryan
2ait Stahl Chaulleur Martha Halner
Ning Techalclan
raphy, Supplied principally by University Photo Service
hatogtaphen: Mare Henschel
st 1 at aiem, Gari Chan, Sherry Cohen, Mike Ful, Bill Krauss, Dave Maanson, Lote Mal
Hibeni Sue Mindich, Mark Nadler, Mark Nalaon, Suna Steinxuinp, Will Yurman
Albany Student
ot In Chiat with
39 pale dows ok
‘Tho Albany Student Press Is published every Tuesday and Friday sucing the school year by
pert ration, an iadepandent not forprotit corporation, bit as are wilton by th
altorial Boatd, polley is subject 10 review by the Exiforlal Board: Advert
ioral policy:
Mailing across
‘Aibany Student Press, CC 329
1400 Washington Ave.
Aibany, NY 12222
ap7.n0973322/980
’
Page Twelve
? October 20, 1981
ober 20; 1981)
Albany Student Press
(Classified)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Deadline
Tuesdays at 3:90 p.m. for Fri-
day issues;
Fridays at 3:30 p.m. for Tues-
day issues,
Rat
10 cents per regular word;
20 cents per bold word.
Minimum charge $1.00
Class ads are avepted at the
Contact Office, (CC Lobby
Under the stairs) from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m, weekdays,
No. ads will be printed without
name, address or phone number
‘on the Advertising Form. Credit
may be extended but NO
refunds will be given, Editorial
pollay will not permit ads to be
printed which contain blatant
profanity.
Ifyou have any questions or pro-
Pasgnort/Appllcation Photos, $6 for
da ointment
aT NO
sal
flee, 60 408, An B Any questions? Call
Mite or Fert 7
Hatroute by Darlin’ Deb now at
inn Shop; By appointment.
we
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‘or form te
Journey; Besion, Staranipn Bowie
etc, | have ability, presence and
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Bome a Ulpnent
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Cotte: for Experie
tarpenter ll custom mare lela for
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ey ra ee Fcummenvear
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Kalacalttelee Secs fat0 m9
i
Sighisosing, Free Info. Write ay
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Personals
The Rose Man now delivers. Cam:
pus Center, MF.
Happy Birthday!
ues YI stanley
Visit the Mousetrap for a mellow at-
mosphere and great entertainment,
2nd floor, Campus Center. (Closed
this weekend.)
Freshman for a strong clase govern-
ment, elect the team, sisi fal
janco, Arlene Katsafouros, Jeff
setae, Vilma Suapengco ai
Pary Friedman for tresnmen class
counoll
Gonoratulat know what!
ngratulations on you wi
2 With Love, Your Sisters
Hey quyal How about some roses
that special someane. this
weer Campus Center, M-F.
Th Feaile going tobe reat and 80
I the years after, Happy Birth-
day Welt aweyetbe a teu:
Love ya, Trigger
( Wanted »)
Freelance photographer seeking
female to pose, No. experience
pecoseay, Wirito L.c, PO Box 102,
Albany, N.Y, 12201,
Drummer wanted
band. Play dorm parties, etc. We're
for rock/blues
Happy Blithgay tothe bra that tlew
the Cuckoo's nest! We miss ya
xcept Dr, Beanhead). Hope you
ve a happy legal.
Eve, Pony, Pig and Bull
TLL SAY GOODBYE TO LOVE!
Are there any real men on this cam:
pus? We're aiill walling to hear from
you. Send resumes (list of ex:
tate Quad, Box 1399,
Hey Punkin,
Hoppy 2 years!
Y, Loretta
out some roses
Mepacial eomeone. thie
Campus Cent
Narawencee
Fey Gi
for. that.
weekend
Widge
rest Lynn,
tue Birthday to the sweetest or
any. Thanks for making me so
e
Widgets
18 to. share m
treat iipee witty yeu cute:
Love, Steve
PS, Please feed the dog,
allen,
can't: tell you how much I long for.
the day when quarter courses end,
Guess Who
Stereo Equipment—Whole:
Prices. Cail for prica on any compo-
nent; Gampus delivered, 7-754,
Freshmen:
Elect an effective, active classmate
to the Freshmen Councll: Larry
Friedman.
Jellybean,
Steve Z)
Here's.
sonall
ur goddamn fucking per.
e Ik easy.
S&M
Andi
Aappy. airthday to the best room:
Mate everll Stay wild and peppy
and enjoy your day!
Love, Caryn
Foal Whose murderers In Blescker:
ath is Imminent, 80 get out there
nd kl Kw
Hey Guys! How about some roses
for that special someone this
weekend! Campus Center, M-F.
Treiyou ts the wine and
mpus. Open Fr:
dayand eatureye, nlghit
THE IPST, ANNUAL, INTERNA:
TIONAL, FIGHTING GATOR CAN.
DID WIGROPHONE CONTESTIT Al
are ellglble. Hide your tape recorder
‘On your person, in your locker,
Behind the coue!s, under the pillow
at work, anywhere. Then secrelly
fecord, for eternity a
Sond us that tape and ent
ItIn our contestil All entrants will
facelvea Tahir, and cash prizes of
Up to $100 will be awarded to the
best tape In these categories; girl
talk, guy. talk, smoothest line, fun:
nlesty meanest, most educa.
Honallingpicational, goodbye, trash,
ind misc, Selected tapes from the
US, "Australla, Canada, "New
Zealand and Europe will be produc:
ed Into a tape entitied, "The
Greatest, Secretly Recorded
Moments of the 80's, Volume | For
turther Infor to submit a tape, of to
order "Greatest Momants” ($6.50)
write Canaid: Mike PO Box (ies)
Elections will be held for 1 State
Board Representative for the New
York Public Interest Research Group,
Inc, (NYPIRG)
2:00 - 5:00
Tuesday October 20th
Campus Center Roon) 382
458-8678,
EAGLE ST. P
42 Eagle St
Thursday, October 22
V. GRAY
Rack and Roll Star at lerge
| REE DRINK WI1 1 THIS ADD
Grad 10/7224 than 10724
cals, Come to the
Of this message) call 455-6974,
Class of 1982 — 5
Campus Center Assembly Hall
—— Albany Stlittent’ Press’.
: _ Page Thirteen” |
Preview
Outing Club —There will be an interest meeting on
Wednesday at 8:00 p.m.in LC $. For info,
Association for Computing Machinery — Computing
club meeting tonight (Oct.20) in LC 22 at 8:00 p.m.
French Conversation Club — Mesdames et Messieurs,
Nuus avons leplaisir de vuus proposer une soiree entre
gens de la communaute qui sinieressent a parler fran-
Downtown Campus, Sayles Ballroom
Tuesday Oct 20, 7:30-10:00, For Info (or a translation
Meeting — Get involved in
Senior Weck planning, Tues. Oct, 20, at 8:00 p.m, in
Chapel House — The services are open (0 the public,
The mass schedule is as follows:
call
Gay and Lesbian Alliance — Come to our weekly
‘meeting in campus center 333 on Tuesday, October 20,
at 8:30. All are welcome,
Boclety of Physics Students — presents a slide show and
lecture by Charles Stevens from the Fusion Energy
Foundation at 8:00 p.m, Thurs, Oct, 22, Location (0 be
announced, Contact Kathy Wesser at 438-4083,
Women’s Studies Program / University Seminars Pro-
gram — Research on Women Colloquium, Dr. Linda
Nicholson presents “The Private and the Publi
Women and the Emergence of Class Society’
ies Lounge (HU3S4) Wednesday, Oct, 21
30, For more info: Judith Hudson 457-7595,
‘Answer Me That Club — more info on this newly form=
ed club coming soon,
Anthropology Club — An Interest meeting will be held
‘on Wed, Oct, 21 in SS 388 at 4:00p.m. to discuss future
club events. All invited, For Info call Alicia Rudin at
482.0473,
Sat,, 6:30pm — Chapel House, Sun, 12:30pm —
Chapel House, Dally 11:15am — CC 361, Sun,
Lutheran Campus Ministry proiestant communily —
Holy Communion — Chapel House.
Students who want to VOLUNTEER at
ALBANY MEDICAL
CENTER HOSPITAL
Have a Gripe?
Pissed Off?
Is Something
Being Done in
the Right
blems concerning classified jn \\ for music, not money. Rob, Perlences) to: jappy 6 months! | love you.
mcveritsingn please contact ee oe ee. MMeie the evidence is conoiuelle. pom FSD HS IEE ED Direction?
Ke ‘at 73922 or 8 Models, photographic, PR, ortfolo, Passport Photos, BAW or Color sence es Blericasee A Ls
eptember at (ese ar stop by Metoentarioid: Hourly roles ! cents off with this ad. Act One — This is gelling sor Have you been at SUNYA for community service f
the ASP Office In 2, an cult, contact. Cole. Produc: __S#Pt: Studio, 434-3089 for appointment. Voice your
ions, PO Box 199, Rensselaor, N.Y. Sharon, Chilai Nery Gus eee for 4 yrs?
= 12144-0199, Include name’ and Happy 20th birthday you screwball Youi"e tha greatoat! | can't tell you JD MUST CALL 445-3491 to make an opinion
SS) _ hone number. You, More's to granamerackere and Youre the greatest! | can't tall you ugs ; : ; pinion,
(Lost/Found)) vane Grape foly! (How was that?) Fee Deana tene cee Do you have a 3.0? appointment for an interview during the week Wits alctent
Negi bi eth crohhys atyling, men and women, Les above ‘always, Sueen Love, Kathy o"nued from page nine di Sr.? of October 19th rite a letter to
Glaoauk Lid, 1868 Contral Ave, Pal, TOK MACOS metal lapes, box of’ chemical vely nowhere near the Are you a dr. or Sr. herent
Lost Peace necklace, Sentimental Albany, N.Y; 456-412: Happy 18th. | hope It's the best ten. $45, John, 462-033 brain. the editor.
AUSSIE oa CIMT aM SD h ig Bester waciedJaropeTt 1 ever ied: ONS | ABI Fweny stared! have con: Need Extra Money?
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who claims his product i nov logal ‘ow to be a SC 1 i
aaa Andrea and Caryn, every state except so Apply rie @)| and earn ctedit
ect notnbook and Happy Birth Niemen Hey, thanks for getting me out of =
n Soxuallty textbook in LC 23 the house last night. The wine was nid Georg :
(gure, pleano cal 7.6000 or Electronic Earring and Pin—Hol, sulfates and Pam /108,the steak was great, but the Freeze proclaims Peer Advisor presents: ial this Spring nic on a 100
0 Colonia! Tower 1504, fed Love Lite comes complete with Amy and Fam bench was prelty uncomfortable Re eae er RUA tRaRhiGn
aMintbatiery,Guaranteedto teyp Hey I'm getting too old for this fe the third lew hedontie 5 a Hoo senor ae BR eA
pie fend $6 for one oF ve. abou Eomputor Club meeting, tonite, product in America, clone with fudy Ino coasline, bariee and
or twa to; Trading, Box 1007, SUNYA women'a.mesting? _-Fjuaday. October 20,-LU-21, 8-00 lubacew nd alchohul sit i t 457-8087 Fea) | coral veets, plus marine lio, Visi major
ls i PR ory Bilal IS Mawomiaciond” "us (Mf Call Lisa Orgera a ROLLER SKATING [3] 202) 00205.
7 py 19th Birthday to my favorite ‘computing center services. All are area Gernalcln yy wn A ft fel] Accredited courses in: Costal
Npleat voan{aat rl bowls, Elflo, welcome, Refreshments will be Associatcs manufacture stimulants or Appt. 0 ivialon
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or Widgets aro com- Katrina, fakes almost a Guiti's auiiude Thursday, October 22, Bus leaves circle ai 6:30 dt
sioj Guat Perabe a aus toward his products, “Zoom was Return at 10:30 (will stop at Alumni Quad) ta | Sooo io
c rT ify ; : cial C ~ i
Hey Fa test ‘amaana iM Hs exacted fom exo plans by Sponsored by JSC-Hillel Social Committee Anil 1982
Writers! interested In sports or _Weeken Jammpve Contersi:Es: 5 ROS eC eat Le tane ne Information. contact
publicity an: athletic toam will To the 1, Fo sarithate yourEaat vltims, while "R U is a syn: By ester Motes
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tact Coach DeMeo at 374-4717 even: ‘Sarah Toni 78987 t pt
evenings: Weetcends: ings, sl = as Grink at WiT.'s forme, Good luck diciary preparations taken by JSC member 3.00 sae aai Southamplon, New York 11908
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ee REN ER = s difficull 10 prove a new 1
DJE We hope you didn't mean what you «rug is dangerous," admits FDA's Se a ere
ST Is TE QUAD Te = sald rae lends should forgive Chris Smith, “hut there are other $
iN Happy Birthday! ididn't forget. and forge! Hedy and vennifer measures we can take,'* Generally 1 ff
Love; Clalra bs, please don't whiten us out! tinable 1 make a case on druy 2
) abuse ground, the agency is now
TUCKEIN SERVICE pursuing a different angle —
counterfeiting 2; WITH THIS COUPON OW A
‘The phony dees are designed 5.00 Of MoRE PUI
$1.50 A TUCK sap5 Silly Whose gery see he
Products of nine different ww
stimulant manufacturers in a sur- SO
prise raid September 30th, Most oF WATCH POOTRALt ONO: Roser T.V. SCRE
the companies were located the New - MIDNIGhi
York and Pennsylvania. with the DRINK STIS ae MIDNIGN
town of Milroy, Pa, fingered ay STTCUPR OF GENK 23 Pees
Mile ene) Tor na few SIN/ANE) VODKA\DHINKS 838 JERRY'S
stimulant activity? by Smith jestauran!
SME ese ESTE TUESDAY WEDNESDAY. R t
lurning to around 1975, seltine “ORDON GRAS ( PBEAT JAZZ WIT and. Caterers
alniost exclusively: to truck drivers. DOWNTIME 909 MADISON AVE. ALBANY
“Tt wasn't until the past year or so SATURDAY. speerenn Svsil 8 2ietel
Includes milk ki hese things caught on around col THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
& cookies esate nent Greco Me manel
general dict pill craze among college
Mi a i row ow sirent SUNY ID on Thursdays: open 24 hrs, daily
ean Latimer, associate editur of AY j
NAG) K High Times magazine, is skepiival 7 PHONE 496-1220
FOR A GOOD TUCK GALL: AAU EDS ea “Hi: MORONS AND THE EXTRAS! eneaxrA = LINC = Oe
: about the stimulants? value, “These NIGHTOWL
Michael Schwartz 457-4744 LES CISEAUX 456-4121 Ue SIU Rss saab aks nna Rein inesnennls OurScrewdriver’s a ‘Expires|10/31/8:
sc — your dict, and you'd build up a Lois 4 Ay ith a whole new
Larry Adolf 457-8691 Models For Fashion:Hairstyling total tolerance Nithin two weeks,” 4:10 duily; oat seas) to get mixed sear hesiecen ten
1568 Central Ave., Albany, N, ¥. he seoffs. "1 used 10 be a speed WEDNESDAYS, FRIDAYS up with ‘cause the liquor’s myer omen |
freaks and taking this new stuff is “Clams $1.9%'ducen t already in it ffl pabiedsupeephendabyii
A ‘ lke taking two or thice cups of c le
All proceeds to Telethon ’82 Turkish coffee. It doesa't do much MADISON AVE « ONTARIO STS. ALBANY: g 7m a th
of anyihing.’” 4g2:979T V Le.
aie)
a ikves,
Page Fourteen
has just come
down?
Save $20 or more on SILADIUM
College Rings ...now only $94.95 .
College Ring table will give you
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collection of rings for the fall.
But hurry on over. .. this sale
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SILADIUM rings produce the
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Men’s and women’s Siladium
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Aeeaerestreasnuave as i
A visit to the ArtCarved
— ARI@IRYED
DATE October 21st,22nd,23rd.
TIME 10:00 am to 3:00 pm
PLACE BARNES AND NOBLE BOOKSTORE
Deposit required. MusterChunte or Vina ueeep ted ©1081 AnCurved Class Rings
in the gym on Saturday
to be followed by. a pizza and Jazz Band party
(sponsored by the Dean of Student Affairs )
Parent
October 25th
Tickets on sale in Contact Office (3.00 each)
Patroon Room 9:00am
9:45am
10:30am
Breakfast Times:
CC Cafeteria
Also ca CC Ballroom
Barba
s Weekend Breakfas
Albany Student Press
ports
October 20, 1981
Lions Down
Bears 47-17
PONTIAG, Mich. (AP) Second-
year quarterback Eric Hipple, mak-
ing his first National Football
League start, passed for 336 yards
and four touchdowns and ran for
iwo other scores, leading the
Detroit Lions to a 48-17 victory
over the Chicago Bears Monday
night.
Hipple, a fou draft
choice out of Utah State who
Started the season as Detroit's
number three quarterback, got the
call after second-siringer Jeff
Komlo faltered for two. straight
Weeks in fellef of injured regular
Gary Danielson
Hipple had touchdown rung of |
and 4 yards, and tossed a 2-yard
touchdown pass to Rick Kane as
Detroit stormed to a 27-14 halftime
lead
Hipple, who completed 14 of 25
passes; hit David Hill with a 10-yard
touchdown pass in the third quarter
and connected with Freddie Scott
on a 44-yard TD pass play in the
fourth quarter. Latein the g
hit Leonard Thompson on a
94-yard play, the third:longes! seor
Ing pass In club history
Eddie Murr
of 49 and 53
who Improved their record to 3-4
me, hie
ards for the Lions,
Chicago wide receiver Marcus
Anderson scored an 85-yard
(ouchidown alter taking a short pass
from quarterback Vince Evans,
Walter Payton dove J yard) for
anottier score anid John Roovelo
Kicked 9 22-yard fjeld yoal ay the
Bears’ record fell 10 1-6,
Hipple threw only four passes tn
the second half, bul completed all
four and'corinetiyd fr touchddwns
on his Tast tree
Is were the most fora
in a rewular-season
\ Lions beat San Fran
cisco 48-7 in 1954.
Thc Lions wan the toss and Hip:
ple set the tone for the entire ball
game on the very first play as he
lofted a perfect pass 10 Scott for a
48-yard gain
Betsy
AT ALBANY. ACADEMY
Sunday, 25 Oct ’81 at 3pm
SUNYA STUDENT SPECIAL
lover Harpsichord
Mary Lou Saetta, Violin
Irvin Gilman, Flute
Helen Annas. Cella
CENTURY TWO MALL
POOCENTRAL AVE aLBaNy MS STATE ST
INSIDE THE MALL SCHENECTADY ba
4
Sf
(Eats Ont ¥6)
Phone 959-3871 Phone 377-3471
MUST SEE*
TO BELIEVE
ALL
SHOES
Hel
2 Tickets. $3.00 per ticket, / 35°... v, a
for the nrice of one! } | NEVER
7 , wo UNDERSOLD}
Leather Boots From $27.90
1 THE. DOOR
: ” ALBANY OPEN DAILY AND SATURDAY 10-9, SUNDAY 12.5
Albeny Academy Auditorium STORE THREE GOORS DOWN FROM GRANDUNION
‘Across irom Westgate Shopping Center
Acaderiy Toad: off New Scotland
} OPEN DAILY 10-5:30, Thurs. TIL ®
LOAM ODID/
“Weeds strength
wuz areal comfort
to us the night the
blizzard hit!”
Pappy McCoy, Railroad Surveyor, Chicago & Ouray Railroad.
Uhtil you needed it,
Jeremiah’s strength wasn't
that obvious. But his spirit
and might were always
there, ready to help diga
friend out of whatever trou-
ble he was in. Just woe
betide the body who took
him lightly. ——
Jeremiah Weed is more
than a legacy. [t's a tribute
toa 100 proof maverick.
1OO Proof ‘jeremiah Weed
Jeremiah Weed® Bourbon Liqueur, ©1981 Heublein, Inc. Hartford, Conn
October 20, 1981
Monday’s Blast
continued from page seventeen
pitches outside the strike zone, Par
otis fouled offithe next pitch. Then
Parrish walked on a high pitch,
Lasorda bouriced out of. the
dugout and called on Welch, Welch
came in and got White to bounce
ut to end the game,
‘The Expos jumped on Valenzucla
in the first inning,
Tim Raines fought off a 0-2
sount and doubled to right center
of a 3-2 pitch, Raines advanced to
third when Valenzuela fielded
Rodney Scott's bunt and threw too
fate to third to get Raines, Scott was
safe at first on the fielder's chotce
sacrifice,
Raines then scored when Andre
Dawson grounded into a double
play, Carter flied to center, ending.
the inning,
The Dodgers had threatened
‘against Burris in the first when Bill
Russell tripled into the right feld
corner, but the Expos right-hander
retired Dusty Baker and Garyey to
Work out of trouble, In the fourth,
the Dodgers again got a runner to
third, but couldn't get him home,
Russell then singled to left the
Dodgers! second hit of the game,
He took second when Baker tapped
in front of the plate and was thrown
Out, Garyey's long fly to left ad
vanced Russell to third, but Cey
then fouled out to first baseman
Warren Cromartic,
Los Angeles tied ft 1-1) in the
fifth, with their first run in 14 inn=
ings off Burris, who shut them out
in the second game of the series,
Monday opened the inning with a
single and raced to third ona single
by Pedro Guerrero, The Expos’
bullpen stirred, as Stan Bahnsen.
began loosening up.
Burris, however, retired) Mike
Scloscia on a line drive to Scott at
second for the first out, But Valen-
zucla, one of baseball's betier hit-
ting pitchers, grounded to the right
side scoring Monday.
Now Rogers, the Expos’ ace,
joined’ Bahinsen. throwing in the
bullpen, Davey Lopes got a life and
Guerrero moved to third when
shortstop Chris Speier threw high to
first for an error. Burris, however,
worked out of the jam, by retiring
Russell on an infield out,
Meanwhile, after Scott's fielder's
choice sacrifice in the first, only
three Expos reached base against
Valenzuela through the seventh,
Carter singled with two out in the
hi doubled with two
th, and Cromartic
received an intentional walk after a
2-2 count, also in the seventh
At the start of the Dodgers? sixth,
Jeff Reardon began warming up
His relief work through the
September stretch and in the intra
division series victory over
Philadelphia helped win the league
championship series, He was joined
by left-hander Woodie Fryman, But
Burris retired the Dodgers in order,
and the Montreal bullpen relaxed,
Valenzuela, who had retired 19 of
ers through the first (wo
outs in the seventh, then
ran into trouble
Parrish doubled to left on a 3.2
count, and White was then pur
posely walked. But Valenzuela got
‘ut of the jam by retiring Cromartie
‘on a foul to the catcher.
Montreal Manager Jim Fanning
sent outfielder Tim Wallach to bat
for Burris in the eighth, but he was
just the second out as Valenzuela
struck out one and walked one in
eight innings.
by Sharon Cole
Peggy Mann moved one step
closer Saturday to her twentieth
consecutive winning season, as the
‘Albany State women’s tennis team
defeated Union, 5-2,
‘The win Was played at Union and
boosted the Danes! record to 4-3,
Mann said, “the weather was
beautiful; the best we've ever had.’
Nancy Light started the day off
right for the Danes by winning her
match 6-2, 6-4. Cari Solomon
quickly followed suit by winning in
strong style, 6-0, 6-1, as did Pam
63,
# only two losses on the
day were by Lauren Isaacs, 2-6, 4-6,
and Ellen Yun, 6-2, 5-7, 0-6, the
team's only freshman,
In doubles action Sandra Borelle
and Karen O'Connor won 6-2, 6-1,
and Nancy Levine and Cathy Com:
crford teamed up to win 6-2, 6-1,
-
~)
Albany Student Press SPOFtS October 20, 1981
Netters Volley Mann To 20th
Mann is confident that wins will
be scored Monday at Oneonta and
Wednesday at Amberst, If the
Danes are successful this will mark
20 years of winning seasons, Mann
has not yet had a losing season in.
her 19 years as tennis coach at
Albany,
Mann will be taking her two top
singles players and doubles teams to
Rochester this weekend for the
State Championships, Making the
trip will be singles players Cari
‘Page Seventeen
OFF
Winning Season
Great Dane
Sports This Week
Women's varsity soccer vs, Hartwick
Tuesday, 10-20 on field behind Dutch, 3:30
Women's varsity (ennis ys, Amherst
Wednesday, 10-21 at Amherst, 3:30
Men's junior varsity soccer vs. Vassar
Wednesday, 10-21 on field behind Dutch, 3:30
Women’s varsity volleyball ys. Oneonta
Thursday, 10-22 in University Gym, 7:00
Women's varsity soccer ys, Plattsburgh
Friday, 10-23 on fleld behind Dutch, 3:00
Men's junior varsity football ys. Nassau Community College
‘ ’ i Friday, 10-23 on University Field, 3:30
HOMECOMING 31
Solomon and Duchin, and doubles
teams Light and Joan Phillips, and
Borelle and O'Connor,
Phillips didn't play in the Union
match because of a hurt knee, but
Ménn is hoping she will be com:
pletey recovered for the Rochester
trip,
Top colleges from Divisions I and.
11 will jojx division 111 Albany in
the st Mann is sending the
Danes to the higher level contest
because she “likes the competition
these schools offer.'?
Mann knows the competition will
be tough but said, “1 think we're
going ta do well,’
A ‘5-2 win over Union puts Coach Peggy Mann well on the way {0 her (wen-
tieth winning season as conch, (Photo: Mike Fuller)
Monday’s Blast
Sends Dodgers
To World Series
MONTREAL (AP) Ouifielder Rick
Monday slammed a (Wo-out home
the ninth Inning and rookie
ndo Valenzuela allowed only
three hits in 8 2/3 innings as the Los
Angeles Dodgers beat the Montreal
Expos 2+] Monday for the National
CAlittle night music and
Trish Mocha Mint...
« FRIDAY chee
j INDIAN QUAD LAKE fourth OTanHAteo
Pep Rally 7:30pm
* * * FIREWORKS x x x inane
H) Meet the Danes, a a aura
) : \ ed because of rain aftel more
iW Pep Band, Kickline, Cheerleaders ke, festa sia) a
i BEER, HOT CHOCOLATE. "OOD * FREE* x
Yankees in the World Series begin
ing Tuesday night at New York
Los Angeles won the NL. series
4-2, splitting the first (Wo games at
hiome,. falling behind by losing the
third game here, then rallying to
Monday.
Tt was the first home run of the
\ 4% PRIZES FOR CTH a ear vin cone
\ during the regular season, homered
t off Mon! ace Steve Rogers, who
made his first relief appearance
a “I SPOT U” Contest ‘| ere Set Tene shou 400 Tot avy.
3 . Valenzuela then retired the first two
} Bi a | Pa Expos in the ninth, then walked cat-
| * SATURDAY pi PS ces
if =
ie | © : ;
l ; ENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES ¢ yea wn intr
f FOOTBALL GAME 1:30PM MAKE GOOD COMPANY. VERSES ae
zucla got two quick strikes on Par-
VICTORY PARTY TO BE ANNOUNCED
ECs )
eal
FLAVOR OF IRISH MOCHA MINT,
5 for Monday, who was put in-
to the li in the third game for
BEST BANNER £ = Fea gt at since July 3, 1978.
MOST SPIRITED GROUP fe “o § nan Cy inte nn sore Woe
That brought Los Angeles
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jrish, but then fell behind with three
__fontinued on page fifteen
ATs
natal
baroolor
Gow
ain
‘Athlete of Week
Nominations Du
Monday 1 PM
in CC329
Suisse Mocha
FUNDED BY STUDENT ASSOCIATION, OFFICE OF DEAN
OF STUDENT AFFAIRS AND U.A.S.
‘Saturday Might Fever
YOUR TIME, THAT'S WHAT IT TAKES TO,
HELP THE DEVELOPING WORLD
THROUGH PEACE CORPS. TO PUT YOUR
EDUCATION TO WORK IN MEANINGFUL
WAYS, TO DEMONSTRATE IMPROVED
FARMING METHODS, TO TEACH, TO
UPGRADE HEALTH SERVICES, TO HELP
MEET DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS, IT'S
TWO YEARS THAT CAN MAKE A WORLD |
Page Eighteen
Albany Studeut Press,
Sports
October 20, 1581
Run Out of Time
continued from page twenty
Swept outside, but he only gained
one and Cortland took over.
After being set back by a delay of
game penalty, the Dragons moved
downfield from their own 20 yard
line to the Albany 23, including a
38-yard gain by Cook. On fourth-
and-nine, Armstrong’s field goal at-
tempt of 41 yards was no good, giv-
ing the Danes another chance,
But Albany could do little as on
thitd-and-nine at tleir own 24,
Give Me a Break
by Michael. ‘Carmen
‘There are many topics to discuss in a column, but the conversation
always returns to apathy, to lack of school spirit, I'm not going to
harp on this issue telling you how great the Albany teams are and write
that I just can’t understand why the student body is like they are. No!
I'm sure you read the newspaper and realize the Danes are doing
well. I know we all have a lot of work to do on Saturday afternoons,
Or maybe you're just too strung out from Friday night to walk over to
the football field,
Of course, the students at the University of Michigan have the same
problems and 105,000 fans turn out at Michigan Stadium to watch the
Wolverines,
Okay, it’s cool. But this weekend is Homecoming Weekend — a
Albany Student Press SPPOFES October 20, 1981
SVLLVE EPELVEDO| Women Booters Kicked Back 4-1
by Mark Gesner
The women's varsity soccer team
ended its streak of nine victories
afier suffering a 5-0 defeat this past
Saturday against the University of
Rochester, The highly ranked oppo-
nent displayed pinpoint accuracy as
“they made no mistakes — and
capitalized on all of ours," explain-
‘ed Dane Coach Amy Kidder.
Difficulties began for Albany
during the first period when
Rochester converted on a penalty
kick, and then went on to score
Sais
Fast Nineteen
with a strong second half — giving
up only one goal, However, as was
the problem the entire contest, the
Dane offense was completely shut
down,
In spite of the fact that five balls
found their way to the net,
goalkeeper Laurie Briggs put forth
an outstanding effort, Totaling an
impressive 15 saves for the day, the
senior was “able to save the first
shots, but not the second or the
thitd,"” according to Kidder.
Now, with only four games re-
“ment taking place at the end of the
thonth, The major factor in the
minds of the players now Is as to
what placement the team will
receive in the States,
Tit higher Albany is ranked, the
better chance the women will have
in drawing a lesser opponent in the
first round of the playoffs.
A big obstacle the squad faces at
this point is in today’s game against
Hartwick. Co-Captain Briggs com-
ments that ‘it could be the best ,
game of the season as far as a mat-
special event at SUNYA. It’s ‘a y tf
OF DIFFERENCE, IT'S TIME WELL SPENT | Brien threw a spi-end option pass oa penta SUNYA: al EAC AWeseod andmanyofyour} three more times before the maining, the booters look forward ching up of skills goes.” The game
oi atreverne fromRoih tal wasn’ “3 Beat pus, How about this for an idea: since you're halftime break, Albany came out to participating inthe State Tourna- will be played home at 3:00.
‘ d -FOR YOU. bine aibcay a6 Gy At not going to be doing any work and will be wide awake, why not try a
an fetesnle te the an ony t= Danes vs. Norwich football game.
SUGDS Bea CBs Lie Geren, T'll guarantee that you will not be bored by th
i i L MEE + Oriuber 26, atl] secondary, lee that y be bored by the great Albany defense
, The Doonesbury Special INFORMATIONAL MEETING: Orjober 26, a1] sonday. and the running explolts of Chuck Priore, If you are put to sleep by
f 4 dpm, in the Cainpus Canter, Ragin 375 See a film i aati en Pian this great rivalry. then send your letters to me.
i alk (a a formes volunteer i However, there is something that has stumped me, Intramurals are
i Bluetec sg HEA UIE WS Gh lis AT ae Ona chy | amamcammniry He Pets ok ee et eects
{i FREE Planiiig & Phirenwat, Alii Bldg Rucm 123. a Priore handoff gained only one eager or Heit Un Me ash ete Bas Ds St
‘ ‘ gS h EB SP'S coverage of the in cone, We're
{ 7:15 and 10:00 pm NOW, fi) an appeintn Pach Rash cane a SSI doing our best to improve the situation, One ofthe new innovations is
{ Wednesday October 21 ilnetbe Basse very near mined the ASP Intramural Athlete of the Week, We thought we advertised Its
i ednesday Oc! APPLY EARLY Ne aE eee oa aaTAIBARG Bevel UA TEERER Budweiser jacket worth 23 bucks
=a prey fair des
\ before the Danes could go any fur- SE RATA IR hes
di d 33) 7 = Mere Reine cuelihvews mniconen Interestingly, 1 walk in here to the office Monday and expect to
SA Funde PEACE CORPS-MAKING A DIFFERENCE | is. Roth oveitiey. an ope find 20, maybe 20, nominations from intramural coaches. I found
Hee Weare niavedl (he ball Ral i two! Give me a break. Let’s go 0 the videotape, 1 told Larry Kahn,
T ak caper meres we i in ae the Sports Editor, that the contest just began and people need time to
varie On tha ee ee tch on, Please — prove me right. I can't possibly understand why
Onrtherday CRoIN Was 10 for 19 there would be no interest in this feature
Tora det heed iand ein: hee final To conclude, 1 am simply trying to say participate in the Homecom-
maUentae Bs Sore Heat teecutd ing Weekend festivities, take in the football game, and show some in-
hsaalitRevertenee ution’ this cay terest in the ASP Athlete of the Week contest
time ran out too soon.
q As co-captain Priore said after- z= —_
f wards, ‘It's funny, we played one
: quarter of football and they played -
three and we almost-beat them,’" r) ‘The Albany State women's soccer team suffered thelr first loss on Saturday when they ran into a very
Butfor“Albany thefloss has to | PREPARE FOR tough University of Rochester squad, The boolers play Hartwick today at home, (Photo: Will Yurman)
have mioce immedintectfect on their MCAT-LSAT-GMAT
playoff chances. ‘'I’d have to say
Men Booters
that our playoff-chances have been
disasterously crusted after this
SAT-DAT-GRE
mane Cen ony te make ow we
odtmertantee 7% te
Continue Slump
one,’? said Ford, ¢
= led full Vehicles home ty materials ‘. .
i Berauraets . aa “A Dal oT ¢ Losing Again 4-1
hn qui neo rn Cy es sd
\ Cortland ech ote oppo (eyo ‘ever, considered having by Madeline Pascucel
ry OPPORTUNITY 1S Curt! Frustration is the ey nora
atures tan arearene OTHER COUKSES AVAILABLE iy right now," said Coach Bill Schief-
ecto 3p oC (Amon GRE PSY GRE BIO» MAT «PEAT « OUAT + VAT SRLOATON Ot Sire cota CE ¢ felin, commenting on his Albany
vn : 8 VE» EOFs FLEX = NOB «NLL Sijecrahe Wal er expires ei Call now for your private, Q Siate men’s soccer team's 41 loss 10
Abierto Hh ino) t ‘ professional appointment, Binghamton Saturday.
1 : HH. atsny Center Compliments of ... Schieffeln sid he thought it was
bared Conon 163 Delaware Ave, Delma a ‘well played game'’, but the team
First downs 16 iy y
yard 40 439-8196 CI t yA \) had problems ‘not being able to get
rs Ww {ot nlomation sotet Ca urtes eC 10, the ball in the net’? as well as play:
ay 4 TOLL pret: 800-223-1782, 9 4940 ing with an inexperienced defense,
t sn 125 WOLF ROAD 45! Binghamton scored the first goal
cad RECOGNIZED BY THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION of the game at 4:20 off a direct free
Individual Leder kick, Binghamton's Nate Georgio
a made the second goal 20 minutes in-
PSE i ccciueL coast oe a to the first half, Albany's only goa!
ie ee aeerteesyes ere (eo) was made about 30 minutes into the
: ern THE ROSE MAN re ea
Yes, Only four more hours is all that stands between.you and. MAI eae ee Sixteen minutes into the second
Yyollr most exciting career opportunity. Thats the amount oft 7, Eno 933, Newting 443, ELIVERS half'a shot by Georgio slipped out
BE eR Dten) te Contiad, ‘of gbaltender Bill Steffen’s hands
takes to complete the NSA Professional Qualification Test (PQT)
‘comes along only once a
Opportunity
for Binghamton's third goal, A
defense change could not stop
But now's the time to act.
Because the POT wil be pen on campuses throughout te
pation on November 14th,
5 ‘competing on this test qualifies yor for consider
Binghamton from scoring again
with 15 minutes left in the game.
Binghamton out shot Albany
Fresh Cut Flowers
Every Day Si
I ation by the Ni Security Ages ters is currently seeking top +13-8, but the Colonial goalie had
o I ‘graduating students to meet the challenges of its important communi- 1 for 1.25 ‘only four saves to Steffen's seven.
or L. Schieffelin felt that injuries as
cations security and foregn intelligence production missions.
aq f : Ho geal on he PT You il be conned ing an
t i i Jnjerview with an NSA representative. He or she will discuss the specific
aa : sole you capa win such els x dt syiems, languages,
Well as a need to rebuild the team
more than he thought he would
contributed to this loss and the un-
successful season.
“Normally at this time of year we
are in contention for the NCAAs,'"
aid the disappointed coach, addi
that at this point in the season he is
3 for 2.50
6 for 4.50
FRIDAY DELIVERIES
yrmation sclence, communications, and management.
Eo reecon SET ball a nur college placement office. Fill
‘registration form iby ocoter i, in order to take
ies a eer Tee res fee.
4 I ‘Graduiates with Bachelors or Masters Degree in Electronic
tf i eae et sc ‘or a Slavic, Near Eastern or Far Eastern. concentrating in trying to build
} it ee aie art i ON CAMPUS: | OFF CAMPUS: scrcininen ioe omen
Dozen for 12.00 Dozen for 13.50
¥Y Dozen for 6.00 | % Dozen for 7.00
CAMPUS CENTER MON-FRI
Participate in
Homecoming
Week Events
Our Pina Colada is j
pineapple sweet and very |
tty. It's easy to ge
FRIAR een liquor’s already in it
Top Ten compited by Bob}
PBellafiore, Mike Carmen, Biff
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bidge Ma _ 28 ro
repre by Fevers sens Products. ne, Ca
Women Netters
page 17
Win
October 20, 1981
‘Danes Run Out of Time; Cortland Wins, 20-14
by Mare Haspel
CORTLAND — Usually 60
minutes of football is more than
ample time for a team to answer
‘any lingering pre-game questions.
Normally those questions left
unanswered by game time get
answered by game's end, But the
Question facing the Albany, State.
Great Danes prior to Saturday's
ime with the Cortland Red
Dragons at Carl “‘Chugger’* Davis
Field wasn’t just a normal question.
Rather, considering the time of
the season, it was quite an extraor-
dinary one: whether or not an inex~
perienced sophomore quarterback,
‘Tom Roth, could lead the wishbone
offense in place of the injured Tom
Pratt? For a good part of the game,
it appeared maybe not right away,
. It looked as if Roth needed more
time tb adjust, Then as the game
wore on, the answer began to look
increasingly yes, However, time ran
out on Albany before it could sce
Rob Nearing displayed his versatility out of the backfield,
eatching four
passes in Saturday's loss. (Photo: Mark Nadler)
cessfully qualify that positive ver-
dict as the Danes fell to Cortland
th) not as good a
thrower as Pratt,’ assessed Albany.
State head coach Bob Ford, ‘But
he moved the ball as well as we
could have expected.
But in the first half ball move-
ment was almost non-existent as the
Dane offense just couldn't seem to
“get it going, With the relatively
untested arm of Roth, Ford was
reluctant to put the ball in the air
during the opening half, Albany
felied heavily on its ground game to
compensate for the loss of Pratt's
throwing ability, As a result,
Albany had) possession six times
‘over the opening thirty minutes of
play, but got no further than the
Cortland 36 yard line the one time
they penetrated Dragon territory,
‘On the other side of the coin, all
the offensive fireworks were turned
in by Dragon quarterback Jay Clep-
ly (five for 10 for 113 yards passing)
and his two strong backs, Mike
Bowe who rushed for 73 yards and
Daye Cook, a 175 pound fullback,
Who netted 111 yards on the day,
"The backs ran with a tremen-
ous amount of ability," said Ford
of the Dragon backfield,
But the big difference in the first
half as Cortland took a 13-0 lead
was the play of the Dragons’ huge
offensive line. Weighing in at an
Average of over 250 pounds,
linemen Paul Alexander,
Vairo, center John Irion,
torino and Rich Ryan pro
Ciéply with plenty of time to work
While opening up many holes for
the Dragon power backs.
"They were big up front,’ said
Ford, ‘We thought they were not
capable of manhandling us but they
did, When they had to, they popped
4 couple of long ones,””
And those long ones started early
for the Red Dragons. Cortland’s
‘Tom Lee returned Tom Lincoln's
opening kick off 40 yards to the
Albany 48. Again uncertain of
Roth's aim at quarterback, the
Danes had hoped’ to pin the
Dragon's back with their kicking
game. So, Lee's return was a blow
to the Albany game plan right off
Harriers Third in SUNYAC Meet
by Ken Cantor
The Albany State men's cross
country team placed third in the
SUNYACS at Fredonia on Satur-
day, while the women’s team finish-
ed eighth in the ten team Hartwick
llege Invitational tournament,
The men's squad came in third
behind Fredonia and Binghamton,
Fredonia had 27 points, while
Binghamton finished with 76
points. Albany finished with 88
points, and Cortland followed with
115 points,
“Fredonia had a very tough
team. We really didn't expect to
beat them,'? sald Albany State
men's coach Bob Munsey,
Scott James and Bruce Shapiro
excelled for Albany on Fredonia's
8000-meter course, James came in
second for the Danes with/a time of
25:41, Shapiro came in ninth with a
time of 26;16, Jim Roth came in
19th, Chris Lant finished 24th, and
first year runner Jim Erwin came in
40th place in the field of 90 runners, |
“The competition was tough, but
I think that our team did a good
job,’ said Shapiro,
The Danes are off until next
Saturday when they compete in the
Capital District meet at Central
Park in Schenectady, Munsey com-
mented on his team’s chances after
Saturday's meet, “We're hopeful
that we'll do well next weekend. 1
was very happy with our perfor-
mance in Trenton last week, and in
Fredonia this week," he sald, “The
Capital District meet is very impor-
tant,'"
“T think that our team will be
ready,” Munsey continued. ‘Our
experienced runners are starting to
come into their top form, In addi-
tion, our rookies are starting to ex-
cel, Winston Johnson and Jim Er-
win ran yery well on Saturday, 1
think that we should fare well on
Saturday, :
After Saturday's meet the Danes
face Siena on the 26th, and then
host the Albany Invitationals on the
3st
The women's cross country team
did not fare that well at Hartwick,
The harriers finished with 250
points, which left them in eighth
place in the ten team meet, Cor-
tland came in first with 33 points,
and Syracuse finished second with
58 points,
Albany's Sara Cawley finished
39th with a time of 23:43, Erma
George clocked in with a time of
24:16, and Kim Bloomer came in
Sand with a time of 24:34,
Albany State women's cross
country coach Ron White com-
mented on his team's performance:
“We did not fare that well on the
overall completition, However, Er-
ma George and Sara Cawley had
fine individual performances for
our team,"*
The harriers compete in the
Capital Districts this Saturday in
‘Schenectady.
thé bat,
“With a new quarterback in, we
had to get field position out of our
kicking game and immediately they
got the long kick off return
Ford,
The Dragons took full advantage
of the golden opportunity by pro-
mptly ‘marching down the field in
ten plays and capitalizing on
Cook's 3-yard run into the end zone
at 11:03,
(On the ensuing extra point at-
tempt, Dragon placekicker Steve
Armstrong missed but the Danes
were called off-side, On the second
chance Dragon head coach Ed
Decker, elected to try for the two
point conversion, but Cleply's pass
intended for Frank Burm was in-
complete and Cortland led 6-0,
Both teams traded a pair of
punts, and on the Danes! third
possession of the first quarter, they
took over at their own 4 yard line,
Roth gave the ball to fullback
‘Chuck Priore and Rob Nearing for
short gains, but on third-and-six
Jay Ennis fumbled and the ball was
recovered by Cortland’s Brian
Moran very deep in Dane territory,
On Cortland’s first play Bowe
Tegged into the end zone on an eight
yard run, Armstrong's extra point
Was good and Cortland opened a
13-0 lead.
In the second quarter, neither
team was able to put points on the
board, Cortland threatened but
Armstrong's 46-yard field goal at-
tempt was not good,
‘On their final possession of the
half, Albany at last started to move,
A drive that originated from the
Danes! 29 yard! line penetrated the
Dragon end for the first time in the
game and was highlighted by a
prising 22 yard pass completion to
back Rob Nearing, but the Danes
were stifled at the Cortland 36,
Cortland increased their lead to
20-0 on a 56 yard pass to wide
receiver Pete Schwan with 4:00 re-
maining in the third quarter.
Schwan was wide open down the
fight sideline as Dane cornerback
Bruce Collins tripped while coming
over to cover him. Collins went
down and had to be taken off the
field with a stretcher.
At this point, nothing scemed to
be going right for Albany. But on
their next possession things started
changing and Roth looked. very
poised as the Danes drove 84 yards,
scoring on a 3-yard pass from Roth
to receiver Bob Brien. Brien was
isolated on the right side and then
ran a crossing pattern in the end
zone with 10:39 left in the game,
Lincoln's kick was good and
Albany cut the lead to 20-7
On the following kick off, the
Danes successfully retained posses-
sion by pulling off a beautiful on-
side kick,
“The onside kick was a beautiful
execution," commented Ford,
Now with excellent field position
on the Cortland 43, the Danes went
to work again. A 28-yard Priore run
brought Albany to the 15, then
after three short runs by Ennis,
Priore and Nearing, Roth bootlege-
ed it in from six yards out with just
8:35 {0 go in the fourth quarter.
Again Lincoln was good on the con-
version and Albany trailed only
20-14,
Cortland’s tight end Mike
Hilliard fumbled on the Dragons?
Text possession after he was crunch-
ed by Dane John DiBari, Albany
recovered on the 45 yard line with a
great opportunity to even the score,
On the'first play from scrimmage,
Nearing ran for 10 yards and
another first down. Priore went up
the middle for another four yards to
put Albany on the Dragon 31.
Roth's next pass attempt intended
for Ennis fell incomplete and on
thitd-and-six Priore added three
more yards. But then on fourth.
and-two, Roth kept the ball as he
continued on page eighteen
‘The Albany State men’s cross country (eam placed third in the competitive
SUNYAC meet at Fredonia, (Photo: UPS)
State University of New York at Albany
E StUGENT
copyright © 1981 by the ALBany Stupent Press ConPorATion
Friday
October 23,
1981
Volume LXVIII Number 32:
State Official Charged in Assault of Dusenbury
Incident Occured in State Office
by Wayne Peereboom
A state public information of:
ficer has been arrested and charged
With assaulting Albany Citizens
Parly mayoral candidate Fred
Dusenbury,
Francis Rivett, a public infor-
mation officer with the state Public
Service Commission, was arraigned
in Albany Police Court last Tues-
day and charged with third degree
assault.
The arrest stemmed from an incl-
dent at Riveit's office at the Emping,
State Mall on October 14.
Shortly after 9a.m. that mornit
Dusenbury said, he went to Rivett’s
office and requested some informa-
tion concerning the recenily signed
Home Energy Fair Practices Act
Dusenbury said Rivett told him the
information “may be ready.!
Dusenbury said the documents were
covered under the Freedom of In-
formation Act and threatened to go
to the press,
At this point Dusenbury said
Rivett “pointed his finger at me and
said, ‘You can shove the media up
your —!" Dusenbury said a few
Words followed and Rivett ‘‘slugged
me hard with his fist three times in
my head,”
Dusenbury said the Capital
Police were called and Rivett was
taken to police headquarters where
Dusenbury said he wanted to press
charges, He said that state Public
Service Commissioner Paul Gioia
“came to the police station and
pleaded with me to drop the
charges."
Finally, after Gioia promised a
written apology and a reprimand of
Rivelt, @ copy of which was to be
sent to Dusenbury, the mayoral
candidate agreed to drop the
charges,
Mayoral Candidates Clash
On Local Issues In Debate
by Charlie Perrillo
and Darrow Gershowitz
Incumbent Mayor Brastus Corn-
ing II stressed his past record and
experience while opponents Charles
Touhey and Fred Dusenbury at-
tacked Corning for creating a
40-Year Tragedy’ in Albany dur
ing a mayoral debate held last night
in the Albany Public Library
The candidates spoke on topics
concerning Albany's budgetary
process, tax assesments. the propos-
ed security ordinance and student
voting rights in the 90-minute
debate sponsored by the League of
Women Voters.
Dusenbury,
Citizen's Party
public hearings should be held
before the budget is made, and
stressed input by ouiside agenci
and groups in budgetary, as well as
other, matters. Corning said he also.
welcomes outside ideas and input,
but Touhey negated this assertion,
saying Albany's budget process
should be brought up to date,
“This is 1981, not 1941," said
Touhey
A, registered Democrat running
with Independent and Republican
endorsements, Touhey denounced
the political favoritism he felt was
involved in the assessment of pro:
perties, calling the present system
‘a_game.”” Corning any
political favoritism, although he ad
mitted there are ‘some inequil
in the system, Corning also felt
some of the blame fell on the state
government for ‘fiddling
around."?
Touhey felt that
posed security ordinance should be
running as a
candidate, felt
denied
Albany’s pro
enacted and enfoced in light of the
ccel of sexual’ ablise on
willet Corning, however,
felt Albany's habltability laws,
Whichstatethat everyone has a right
‘fo @ well-secured home, were pro-
tection enough, adding that he
hadn't heard one complaint about it
these past four months. Additional=
ly, he blamed individuals for lack of
safety precautions.
continued on page thirteen
However, when he had not
received the apology or the repri-
mand by last Tuesday, Dusenbury
held’a new conference at the state
Legilative Office Building and an-
nounced he had reinstituted pro-
ceedings to have Rivett arrested,
Reached for comment, Rivet
sald, ‘My version differs from his
(Dusenbury’s) but I'm not going in-
to detail because it’s in court,
Rivett ‘pointed his finger at me and
ed the reprimand from Gioia and
the apology had been mailed out on
Friday, Wednesday night Dusen-
bury said he had yet to receive the
apology although he had received a
copy of the reprimand at that time,
However, Dusenbury says, an
apology is not now sufficient."” He
said Rivett told a local reporter, ‘It
was like a baseball fight.’ There
‘was an incorrect impression that
there was a fight, I can't have that
I'm a mayoral candidate. My
credibility as a candidate {5
destroyed if it looks like 1 get
heated arguments and fistfights, 1
don't do either,
1 didn't touch him at any point,
There was no fight. The charges will
not be dropped. Now I have to have
him correct what he sald to the
press."
However, Dusenbury said if three
conditions are met, he will negotiate
with Gioia, First, Rivett would have
to call a news conference and say
that a fight did not take place, Se-
cond, Gioia must take away the im=
plication in Rivett’s reprimand that
there was a heated argument
before the alleged assault, The third
demand, Dusenbury said, {s in reac-
tion to statements of other office
workers who witnessed the event,
that “if the police come, we'll {cll
then that we didn't see anything,
Dusenbury said Gioia must issue a
memorandum stating that this
behavior is not acceptable,
In reaction to the latest demand,
Rivett said, “He asked for an
Albany mayoral candidates Corning, Dusenbury and Touhey.
apology which he got. Now he says
something else,””
Gioia could not be reached fr
comment,
Further, Dusenbury said he is
discussing the possibility of a civil
damage suit against the state Public.
Service Commission, and at-
torneys are advising him to sue the
Times-Union,
He said the possibilily of the
Times-Union suit arose from a Sun-
day article which referred to the in-
cident asa fight. Dusenbury called
the statement "libelous,"?
Times-UnionExecutive City
Editor Joe Sharkey said, ‘We tried
to get hold of Fred Dusenbury for
three days but he doesn't have a
home phone." Sharkey sald Dusen-
bury did not get hold of the Times-
Union. “Fred! Dusenbury did not
choose to give his side of it,"
Sharkey said.
Rivett is scheduled to reappear in
Police Court on October 27.
Covered budget, security ordinance and student voting issues
Freedom of Information Challenged
week proposed new restrictions on
the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) on the premise that ‘the
Act was being used in ways Con-
gress never intended,"” according to
U.S. Justice Department spokesper-
son Mark Sheehan.
Testifying before a Congressional
committee, assistant Attorney
General for legal policy Jonathan
Rose pushed for six major revisions
of the 1974 amendment which is in-
tended to make governmental
records public.
Rose said the act needs a
“clarification of cer
tain... exemptions and pro-
ceditres."” Shechan explained this
unwarranted inva
lay
effective
would prevent
sion of personal privacy
enforcement . . . and the
collection of intelligence,”
Sheehan said the administration
was concerned about the availabili-
information in
ty of certain
Flip ’e
de’em, Swap ’em.
Bus Driver Trading Cards Are
Here
See Aspects
“foreign terrorists and organized
crime.
Rose also prepared to ‘preclude
the FOIA as @ means to circumvent
the discovery rules by parties in
litigation,”” Legally, Shechan said,
lawyers cannot present "surprises"
in court; they must demand relevant
information from the adversary
party before trial. Sheehan said the
FOIA is often used to skirt that
rule,
Further, the Assistant Attorney
General asked for ‘a more
reasonable time limit"? for agencies
to respond to FO! requests. The
current deadline for initial response
is ten days,
In addition, the proposal would
establish a procedure by which par-
ties submitting classified material
may object (0 the release of that
material, If the revisions are ap-
proved, a person or agency who
submitted sensitive material would
be notified beforehand each time
that material is requested, thus
allowing the submitter to argue the
case in court.
The Reagan administration pro-
posal would also permit the govern-
ment to charge requisition fees that
‘more closely resemble the cost 10
research and find a document,"
the
for
for
Currently,
charge
but not
said,
may
costs,
Shee
government
photocopy
research,
Lastly, the proposal would pro-
vide for two new exemptions from
the act: records generated in legal
settlements and records containing
“highly technical information the
export of which is controlled by
law,"” Rose testified,
Shechan said the Reagan ad-
ministration is worried that a
foreign government might set up an
agency in the United States for the
purpose of obtaining national
security information through the
FOIA.
Sheehan said the outright exclu-
sion of the CIA from the act was
not directly proposed, but the ex-
clusion of “informant records!” was
provided for in the new revisions,
Shechan said, however, he expects
the administration will eventually
propose a bill completely excluding.
the CIA from FOIA compliance.
‘The most vehement opposition to
the proposal has come from jour
hillists; Reporter's Committee for
Freedom of the Press President
Jack Landau described the action as
a frontal assault."
‘A: spokesperson for FEN, an
association of writers,
‘organization ‘‘is definitely against.
the new guidelines,
“They close resources for jour-
nalists .. . close the FBI and the
CIA... and set a precedent for
other agencies,” she said. ‘We
have protested (such attempts) con-
stantly throughout the years."”
Bob Freeman, who directs FOIA
requests in'New York State, said he
‘tends to think that many reacting
to the federal FOIA have lost sight
of the original intention of the
‘ict «« . (andl its) very simple: make
all government records available
Unless it would hurt the «gency.
“] prefer to see exemptions made
that are potentially harmful than
exemptions that remove rights of
ccess,"* he said, ‘for the CIA or
‘any other agency."
John Rosenberg, a spokesperson
for the Nation Institute, said the
FOIA “is an effective tool for fin-
ding out what's going on in govern-
ment."’ He added, "I find it ironic
that an administration presumably
sommitted 0 getting government
off our backs doesn't want to tell us
what it’s di
‘The proposal is pending in com-
mittee,