Albany Student Press, Volume 71, Number 8, 1984 March 2

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FEBRUARY 28, 1984

Dane wrestler injured in finals;
wins match by disqualification

By Marc Berman ¥
ASIOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

Binghamton

Rule 7 Sectlon 8:''1/ a contestant is injured by any illegal action to the
extent that he is unable to continue following a maximum of two minutes
rest, the match shall be defaulted (o the injured contestant. '*

Dave Averill never heard the
public address announcer proclaim
him the 126-pound NCAA Division
III champion, the first title for an
Albany State wrestler in 17 years,
‘Averill was lying on the mat, flat on
his back, in a semiconscious state,
and surrounded by a flock of
athletic trainers,

Minutes before, Trenton State's
Orlando Caseres, leading 9-4 with
22 seconds remaining in the finals
of the 126-pound division, lifted
Averill off the mat in a fireman's
carry and unintentionally dropped
the Albany State wrestler on his
head, in what can be termed as an
‘illegal slam’,

For minutes, the Danes three-
time All-American, who fought so
bravely in advancing to the finals of
this NCAA Tournament, lay on the
mat, practically motionless, while
the trainers worked on him, Albany
State coach Joe DeMco had already
walked over to Trenton State's
coach Dave Icenhower and told him
that if Averill so much as stood up,
he would wrestle for one second
and forfeit to Caseres,

But Averill did not get up. At
first, there was no feeling in his
right arm except for a tingling in his
fingertips. His head was aching
severely, and there was pain in his
neck and shoulder. The worst was
speculated of what later turned out
to be a mild concussion, Averill was
carried off the mat to an examining
room in the Binghamton gym. Talk
outside the room was about how
Averill had slipped on ice in
eleventh grade and suffered a three-
inch crack in his skull.

‘While he was on the mat, the at

‘The Albany State men's and
jwomen’s basketball teams have
both received bids in the upcom-
ing ECAC upstate New York
basketball tournaments,

‘The men will travel to Bingham.
ton Wednesday night (0 take on
the Colonials. This will be the
third meeting between the two
teams, The earlier two meeting:
were split with Albany winning
the first meeting at Binghamton
‘and the Colonials winning the
rematch at University Gym.

In the earlier mecting at
Binghamton it was make noise
night and the Colonials had th
biggest crowd of the season, There
is an equally large audience ex-
pected tomorrow night as this
Binghamton’s first playoff ap-
pearance ever,

Albany and Binghamton both
took some time off after their last

1984 NCAA Wrestling Rule Book

‘nouncement was made that Averill
was the 126-pound NCAA cham-
pion by disqualification in accor-
dance with Rule 7 Section 8, The
rule essentially states that
wrestler is injured by an ille
move and can’t continue, the
jured wrestler is awarded the
match. In this case, it was the Na-
tional Championship.

“+1 don't want to win this way,”
Averill repeatedly said while he was
being transported to Wilson
Hospital in downtown Bingham-
ton

Meanwhile, Averill's condition
was gradually improving upon entry
to the hospital, His headache was
still very severe, but the fecling in
his right arm was back and he was
able to squeeze close to full
strength,

‘A complete set of x-rays as well a
cat-scan were taken, all coming up
negative,

A collective sigh of relief was
breathed in the Binghamton Gym
when it was announced that
Averill's condition was "‘good"” and
that he was released from the
hospital.

According to Albany State Assis-
tant Trainer Bob Coughlin, Ayerill
had suffered a mild concussion,

‘There was still some controversy
brewing in the gym on whether
Averill should've been awarded the
match. Trenton coach Dave
Iconhower expressed concern for
Averill, but wasn't pleased with the
decision that disqualified his
wrestler,

“There was no control by either
wrestler,"” he claimed, ‘Orlando

‘game, They both resized practic-
ing yesterday when they heard the
news from the ECAC concerning
the tournament.

The winner of Wednesday
night’s game will head out to
Hamilton on Friday to play the
Continentals in the semi-finals

It was the game against
Hamilton last Tuesday that enabl-
ed Albany to get into the ECAC's
‘It's nice to get into the tourna-
ment, " said Albany Head Coach
Dick Savers, “The Hamilton win
was a big win,

“I'm very happy, | thought it
(my carcer) was over,

Senior Co-Captain Wilson
Thomas, “ was hoping we could
B0 to the ECAC,

‘As for the women, the ECACs
will be their first crack at post-
season play. The teams they will
compete _against_are Nazareth,

UPS

Dave Averill became the first wrestler in 17 years to win a NCAA title. Averill won by disqualification
when he was thrown illegally and could not continue.

didn't throw him down, the kid
(Averill) slipped off. It’s the
referee's fault because he should've
blown the whistle when Averill was
in the air like that,””

He continued, ‘1 feel bad for
everyone in this case. | feel bad for
the kid (Averill) because he got
hurt, 1 hope he's okay. 1 also feel
bad for Orlando because he was the
better wrestler and he should be
champion,"

Responded DeMeo: “I think
Orlando is a great wrestler but it’s
in the rules. When you lift someone
off the mat it's the wrestler's
responsibility to return him safely.
If Averill would've been able ta
stand up I would've had him wrestle
for one second and then forfeit.

DeMeo continued:"'I'm sure it
‘was an unintentional move, | think
Trenton's coach is one of the
classiest coaches here, 1 don't care
about the national championship
now. { just-want my boy to be
okay."”

‘Whether the decision is changed
after the NCAA officials view the
bout on videotape is uncertain as of
this writing. One thing is certai
however; Averill will not compete
in the Division 1 NCAA Tourni

a
|Albany cagers receive ECAC bids

Alfred and cither Oneonta or
Elmira, according to Dane Head
Coach Mari Warner.

“We are excited about the whole
thing," said Warner, “There is a
possibility we may tiostit."”

The site and time of the
women’s tournament will be
disclosed later this week,

Asked if her team would suffer
ill effects from a five day layoff
Warner said," was worried about
that until I saw the looks on theit
faces."*

HOOP-LA: Both the men's and
the women's SUNYACS were won
by Buffalo State,,.The other two
teams in the men's ECAC tourna.
‘ment are University of Rochester,
and Oneonta,

=By Kelth_ Marder

ment at the Meadowlands Complex
on March 8, even though he
automatically qualified for them
when he was named 126-pound
champion, Albany trainer Coughlin
says the concussion will put him out
for two weeks.

The NCAA tournament, which
got underway Friday with 233
wrestlers hailing from 70 schools,
saw Averill carn his third con-
secutive All-American honors in
methodical fashion on the first day
of the tournament,

Seeded sixth, Averill outpointec
Mike DeFelice of Glassboro befor.
pinning number three seed Wayne
Anderson in the quarterfinals witt
‘only 69 seconds into the match,

The next morning he was slated
to face number two seed Tim Har-
dy, who crushed Averill’s nemisis
Desmond Basnight in the earlier
round,

Averill woke up at 7AM, three
and a half hours before the match
on Saturday morning, with a case
of the nerves, causing him to throw
up. But his nervousness turned into
adrenalin as the Albany State cap-
tain stepped onto the mat to face his
‘opponent from White Water Col-
lege seeded second in the tourna-
‘ment,

And Averill wrestled the match
of his life. Midway through the first
period, Averill had Hardy in deep
trouble, turning him over on his
back with a Greco-Roman move
called the double under, Keeping
that position for thirty seconds,
Averill, with a burst of strength,
turned him completely for the pin
4:13 into the match, and became
only the fourth Albany State
wrestler to ever reach the finals in
the NCAAs.

Averill had too much to over-
come in that final match against
Caseres, He was up against the
number one seed and a 1984 Olym-
pic hopeful. He also had to deal
with a boisterous Trenton State
rooting section, consisting of 150
students who trekked down to
Binghamton to root on their
wrestlers,

Spurred on by the constant
chants of Orlando," Caseres
started quickly by scoring a quick

two point takedown in the opening ,

seconds, Averill was able to escape
20 seconds later to cut the margin to
2-1, Another Caseres takedown and
Averill escape put the score at 4-2
midway through the opening
period. The Trenton State superstar
upped the lead to 7-2 with a three
point turn in the waning moments
of the period.

In the second period Averill batt
ed smartly shutting out his oppo-
nent while picking up one point
himself,

The match remained tight in the
third period with the score 9-4 with
a half a minute to play. Then “it”
happened. Caseres lifted the Averill
off the mat using a fireman's carry
as Averill's foot dangled on his
shoulders. What happened next will
always be debated. Whether
Caseres dropped him or if he slip-
ped off, the result was the same,
Averill landed flush on his head.

He was lying on the mat for 10
minutes while being attended to by
athletic trainers. A stretcher carried
him off to an examining room
before he was transported him to
Wilson hospital where examina-
tions brought the good news

In the meantime, an awards
ceremony was taking place. The 126
pound first place trophy was ac-
cepted by Shawn Sheldon, a te
mate and close friend of Averi
The three-time All-American junior
was in the examining room at the
time, oblivious to the presentation,

‘See page 23 for more Albany
State NCAA Wrestling resulls, ()

rs ‘OREG STACKEL
‘| Juat want my boy to be okay,
‘said Joe DeMeo.

VOLUME LXXI

March 2, 1984

NUMBER 9

Seale recalls radical activism of Black Panthers

Reaganomics is “slick, erude and covert.”

ne prove suciely no matter if th

By Robert Gardiner
STAFF WRITER

A story teller, stand-up comic, and an aged
radical, Bobby Seale entertained a small
gathering at the Campus Center Tuesday
night with'a fiery tale of the Black Panthers
and an update on his views and activities,

He has exchanged a gun for a suitcase and
has left the Black Panthers to history but his
excitable 60s radicalism is still there; echoes
Of the past came through in Seale's energetic,
fast, talking, interspersed with “‘you dig" or
“you know where I'm coming from.

“Most kids today say, ‘Bobby Scale?
What's he a basketball player, a
musician?"*, he quipped to the college crowd
less than half his age.

The black community cannot hold on to
old values, he emphasized, “Black people-
you will not survive if you do not change
your values to this fast paced society,"" he
warned. "The greatest disunity in the black
community is the rift between males and
females,'" he said, and added that the sexes
have 1o behave in a more responsible and ef-
fective manner

“Everyone has to put five to ten percent of
their time into progressive activities to. im-
“re black,
hhe said with

err

white, green or polka dot,
repeated flourishes of his arms

Touching on his present political ideals

ale asked the crowd, “How come we as the
people cannot step in and prevent the fi
tories and jobs from leaving our com:
munities?!” He stressed a need for
“Economic control of the community? by
the people who live in it; But, he emphasized,
he does not consider himself a socialist

As co-founder of the Black Panthers, Seale
was called a ‘thug’ by then-governor of
California Ronald Reagan, and a national
security risk by J, Edgar Hoover. The crowd

ERICA SPIEGEL UPS,

was enthralled as Seal rambled through the
history of his turbulent activism,

‘Amidst laughter of the crowd he recited his
anti-draft poem that tanded him in jail in the
1960s. Mentioning Reagan he said, ‘I dealt
with him eight years before you got ‘him. 1
was incensed with him calling me a hoodlum
and a (hug, 1 was an architect, musician, a
carpenter and a damned good cook and he's
calling me a thug.

Reaganomics, he said, is ‘slick, erude and
covert. Much more covert (han in the 1960s,
I's very easy for people like us to sit on our
butts and let people like Ronald Reagan
make the rich richer,”” he said,

He commented that Reverend Je:
Jackson's campaign is “profoundly signifi
cant” but added that he has little confidence
in the national level of polities and stated that
the legislatures and the community are more
effective areas of political activity.

When asked about Jackson's falling out
with the Jewish community he said, "1 think
the man was very moral about it; he came out
and admitted it. Apologizing is the first step
to being a human being," he said,

Calling the Black Panthers a "social evolu-
tionary accident,"® he admitted that he was
“otally unpolitical’’ when he and) Huey
Newton first entertained ideas of activism
His first experience came when he and
Newton started the Soul Students Advisory
Couneil at Merritt College in California, he

me cauight up in our black
culture and saw the need for it to be express-
ed in America at the time,’ |
The genesis of the
wnd Newton, a law student, questioned the
need for black power, According to Seale,
“We tried to define phenomena and then

make it act ina described manner,"”
am

Cuomo urges $11M in aid for part-time students

By Aileen Brown
STAFF WRITER

Part-time students in New York State could be eligible to
receive tuition grants and loans under a new bill proposed by
Governor Mario Cuomo. An $11 million Tuition Awards for
Part Time Students program was introduced by Cuomo as
part of his 1984-1985 Executive Budget.

The program, which would provide assistance (o financial-
ly disadvantaged part-time students, was devised to aid
students enrolled in an undergraduate program for at least
six but fewer than 12 credit hours, according to Fryer.

“The Governor feels that there are some students that are
agressively pursuing degrees, yet were part-time students due
a

“This is an area which has
traditionally been neglected
by the state.’’

—Donald Whitlock

to jobs or other demands on their time." said Gary Fryer, a
press officer to the Governor. ‘He feels that it is unfair to
exclude such students from financial assistance when they
could certainly otherwise be eligible for these programs," he
added.

“The program is geared to assist part-time students who
are continuing their education, or those who wish to be re-
educated in order to learn new skills and find other employ-
ment’ said Fryer. ‘These are students that are capable of
bettering themselves, but perhaps have not been able to do so
because they lack the resources,"’ Fryer said, adding that the
Program will, for the first time, extend tuition assistance (0

include part-time students.

The program will determine eligibility of students under
the current Pell Grant criteria, said Fryer. The Higher
Education Services Corporation will administer the new
loans.

Donald Whitlock, Director of Financial Aid at SUNYA,
commented that he thought the idea was a good one,**This i
an area that has been traditionally neglected by the state, and
we can't argue with the merits of the program. It is a good
idea to subsidize part time students, especially if there is a
needs test applied.” He added that the program will allow a
great_ many employed part-time students to get enough
education in order to get a better job.

Whitlock added that it was a concern of the financial aid
community that a program such as the one proposed to
benefit part-time students does not diminish the funding
enrichment of traditional TAP programs. ‘There is a ques-
tion of the best deployment of funds’ said Whitlock. The
monies must be deployed in the most equitable fashion,
There are limited state resources, and it is our hope that a
program such as this will not diminish the state's capacity to
provide the TAP enrichment necessary, he added.

Whitlock also stated that a program which benefits only
pari-time students will generally not benefit institutions su
as SUNYA. It will instead generally enrich the city univer-
sities which include a higher percentage of night and part-
time students enrolled, “Traditional institutions such as
SUNYA will not experience major benefits as some other ins
stitutions may" he said.

Jim Tierney, president of the Student Association of the
State University commented that SASU was supporting any
type of program providing financial assistance to part-time
students, “We think this is a very good program" said
Tierney, ‘*At least it is a start." According to Tierney, thet
are currently no programs that provide financial assistance 10
part-time students, “Even though we don't feel $11 million is
an adequate amount to assist approximately one million
students, it is at least the first step,”” said Tierney,

Tierney also indicated that SASU was concerned that there
is no constituency pressure for part-time students, ‘Part
time students, up to now, have not really had anyone really
supporting them. This is something we are all just waking up

to, We have to put a part time TAP program as a priority,
because unless we do something this money may be cut an
utlized for other programs,"? said Tierney.
Tierney indicated that SASU would ideally like to see the
money from the program distributed to the individual cam-
ms, (0 be distributed individually by the
. “We would like to see the money
distributed by the individual campuses." said Tierney. “That
way, there will be enough flexibility on the part of the finan-
cial aid officers (o be able to disburse this money to a very
needy and very qualified student,"” he added.
Tierney stressed thai any part time students in need of
financial aid should express their need to their legislators
cither through a leiter or in person, a

SUE MINDICH UPS.
Donald Whitlock

“We can’t argue with the merits of the program,

ay

"NEWS ‘BRIEFS —

. 2: ALBANY STUDENT. ERESS O FRIDAY, MARCH. 2 1984

Worldwide

es oo

Ottawa, Canada
(AP)Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau,
who rode to power 16 years ago on a wave of
“Trudeaumania" and dominated Canadian
politics even as his popularity waned, is step:
ping down,

Trudeau, 64, said Wednesday he will resign
as soon as his Liberal Party can choose a new
leader, probably in June, The new party
leader will become prime minister
automatically but will have to call nationwide
elections by next February,

Trudeau's resignation had been expected
for weeks — mostly because his standing in
the polls is so low that political analysist
believe he could not win another election,
Still, the suddenness of the announcement
‘came as a surprise,

Trudeau, a lawyer, essayist and world
traveler, won election to Parliament in 1965,
He became justice minister in 1967, and was
noted for eccentric habits such as wearing
sandals and an Ascot tie into the House of
Commons,

He was picked as Liberal Party leader in
April 1968, taking over as prime minister
from Lester B, Pearson, He immediately call-
ed an election and won on a surge of
“Trudeaumania’ assisted by a charismatic
campaign style — tossing off witty remarks
and kissing dozens of women at cach stop,

GDR defectors return

Bonn, West Germany
(AP) The niece of East German Premier Will
Stoph and her family Thursday left the West
German Embassy in Czechoslovakia, wher
they had sought permission to emigrate
West, and returned to East Germany, a West
German spokesman said.

“They left sometime this morning, I don
know the exact time,’ Juergen Sudhot,
spokesman for the Bonn government, told
The Associated Pre

He refused to give further details, But
government sources in Bonn said the West
Germans hope that the group will be allowed
to emigrate 1o West Germany, as they had re:
quested when they eniered the embassy in

ue last Friday,

The West German government last week
identified the family as Mrs, Berg; her hus-
band, Hans-Dicier Berg, 35; their son, Jens,

daughter, Simone, 3; and Bera's mother,
Olga Berg, No ages were available for the
women

Stoph is second, in the Sermany
leadership after President and Communist

ty Chief Erich Honecker,

Gemayel meets Assad

Beirut, Lebanon,
(AP)Lebanese President Amin Gemayel re
mained in Damascus Thursday to confer
gain with Syrian President Hafez Assad, but
Lebanon's state radio said the two leaders
already had agreed on a process to cancel the
troop withdrawal pact between Lebanon and
Israel.

[Assad Wo “haa) sipported “Druse end!
Moslem rebels in their fight against Gemayel,
led a red-carpet welcome for the Lebanese
president Wednesday at Damascus airport.
The men met twice during the afternoon but
neither side issued a statement on the talks,
which could determine the future of
Lebanon's goverment.

Nationwide Gag

Baseball chief picked

New York City
(AP)Baseball’s 15-month search for a new
conimissioner apparently will end Saturday
when Peter B. Ucberroth, head of the Los
Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, will
be named to succeed Bowie Kuhn,

According to published reports, later con-
firmed. by two sources close to baseball,
Ueberroth was selected by a search commit-
(ee 10 replace Kuhn, whose 15-year term ex-
pired today,

Another source told The Associated Press
that all 26 club owners have been called
secretly to meet on Saturday in Tampa, Fla.,
at which time the committee, headed by
Milwaukee Brewers owner Bud Selig, will
“name their man.”

The New York Times said owners agreed
last summer to accept the decision of Selig’s
committee, so the election of Ueberroth was
viewed as a formality. And, the Philadelphia
Inquirer reported that baseball's Executive
Council approved Ucberroth’s selection last
Thursday at a secret meeting in New York,

SUNYA at night

PREVIEW OF EVENTS

Free listings

‘ABus Trip to New York City is being Hall at

International Concert '84 will take
place Saturday, March 3 al Page

Off-Campus Association will hold a
general interest meeting on Sun-
7:30 p.m. Tickets are $2.75 day, March 4 at 4 p.m. in the SA of.

O’Nelll looks to future

Boston, MA
(AP)House Speaker Thomas P, O'Neill Jr.
says he intends to seek a final two-year term,
but would consider resigning from Congres,
carly to be ambassador to Ireland or &
cabinet secretary in a Democratic administra-
tion
“He's always had the dream of someday
ending his career as ambassador to Ireland,
perhaps,'’ O'Neill's press secretary,
Christopher Matthews, said » Wednesday
night, ‘The key element is that he intends to
serve one more term,””

Statewide
School prayer halted

Hicksville
(AP)The Hicksville school board voted early
Thursday to throw out the mandatory mo-
ment of silence that has been observed each
morning for 22 years in elementary and
Junior high schools here.

The 4-t0-3 vote followed a three-hour,
heated debate about prayer in the schools, at-
tended by over 200 district residents at the
Hicksville High School,

Bus crash injures six

Carle Place
(APIA school bus overturned Thursday at a

een through the eye of a camera.

An international Tea will be held on
Sunday, March 4 at 3 p.m. in BIO
248. Alice Lin, director, of the N.Y.

‘Long Island intersection in an accident that
also involved three cars, and six people were
injured, including four children, police said,

Nassau County police spokesman Antliony
Sibigia said the injuries were “moderate”
and ‘not critical or life threatening."

A witness said the injured were four te n-
age girls, the bus driver and a driver of a car

The bus turned over at th lersection of
Glen Cove Road and Westbury Avenue in
Carle Place. The witness, who was not iden.
tified, said the bus came to rest 6 (0 8 fee
from a gas pump, but there was no fire

Court denies dismissal

Albany
(AP)The state’s highest court, without cou
ment, has denied a prosecution motion 1
dismiss Lemuel Smith's appeal of his April
1983 conviction and automatic death
sentence for the 1981 strangulation murder of
state prison guard Donna Payant,

‘The 42-year-old Amsterdam native was
serving three life terms for other murders
when Mrs, Payant was killed at Green Haven
state prison. The state Court of Appeals is to
hear his appeal, based on the constitutional
ty of the mandatory death sentence, on April
2.

Correction

Due to a typographical error in an article in
Tuesday's ASP Governor Cuomo's proposed
tuition increase was printed as being $250
when the actual amount is $200,

Last year’s tuition increase was reported as
being $350, that figure should have been
$450,

A Victory Party celebrating the end
‘of the Nestle boycott will be held
Saturday March 3 at 8 p.m. at the St.

‘sponsored by Phi Alpha Theta on
Saturday, March 31. Buses will
leave the circle at 7:30 am, and
Feturn 8 p,m, For information and
feservations call Michael Daly at
783-0408,

A Public History Lecture featuring
Dr, Loule L. Tucker, the Director of
the Massachusetts Historical
Soclety, will be held Monday, March
5.at 2 p.m, In the CC Assembly Hall.
Claas Council of 1986 will meet Sun-
day, March 4 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Fireside Lounge. All sophomores
are welcome to attend,

and $1.95 with a tax card. Per.
formers {rom six different nations
will be featured,

The Class of 1987 will be meeting
©n Sunday at § p.m. outside the Stu-
dent Association Office. All
freshmen are invited to attend, For
‘more Information call Steve Landis
at 457-4722,

NYPIRG's Annual Spring Con
ference at SUNYA will be held
March 3 and 4 In the Lecture
Centers, For information call
NYPIRG at 457-4623,

fice.

Kappa Week will feature a career
night and various workshops from
March 5 to 11, The events are spon-
Sored by the Kappa Rho Fraternity.
For information call David at
455-6486,

The Minority Recruitment Task
Force will be holding its first
meeting in PH 129 on Monday,
March 5, at 6;

discussed in

State Management Office of Mental
Retardation will speak on the
changing role of women in China at
Work and at home. Admission is
tree.

The Women's Varsity Tennis Team
Will hold an Interest meeting on
March 7 at 4 p.m, in PE 123, For in-
formation call coach Mari Warner at
457-4532,

“Unlearning Judaism: Clearing up
Misconceptions about Jews and
vewishness,” Is the topic of a lec-

held every Tuesday at 4
p.m. in CC-373, "

Patrick's Parish Center, 283 Central
Avenue, Douglas Johnson, National
Cahir of INFACT will be altendina.
Committee for Olympic
Hopefuls will meet Sunday al 9
p.m. in the SA Office, CC 116.
Storles and Films for Dr. Seuss's
80th Birthday will be held at the
Albany Public Library's Children’s
Room at 161 Washington Avenue!
on Saturday, March 3 at 1 p.m.
Telethon '84 Auditions will be held
from Sunday March 4 to Wednes-
day March 8 from 6-9 p.m. Sign-ups

‘should be made in CC 130.

Vending machine vandalism soars

By Rick Swanson

The vandalism to campus vending
machines this year has risen to unprecedented
heights, according to UAS general manager,
E. Norbert Zahm.

UAS records reveal that over the past four
years vandalism costs have risen by more
than $5,000 and Zahm expects the increase to
continue,

Zahm said that most of the vandalism in-
volves the breakage of display cases and the
theft of the merchandise inside the machines,
Few of the reported breakages involve theft

UAS vending machine

of money from the coin boxes of the
machines, he added.

Most of the acts of violence on the vending
machines are by ‘‘comedians looking looking
for free food,” observed Zahm.

In the past four years, the cost of repair for
vandalism has climbed steadily, According to
UAS records, the cost was approximately
$9,000; in 1982, it rose to $10,500, and in
1983 to $13,500. Zahm predicted that if the
damage done to vending machines continues
at the present rate, this year the total could
‘easily surpass $15,000.""

Vandalism cosis have risen by more than $5,000.

UN speaker optimistic about

Young people must have faith in the future
and disregard the prevalent pessimism of the
world today, proclaimed Assistant Secretary
General to. the United Nations, Robert
Muller, in his speech during SUNYA’s third
annual World Week.

Muller, speaking Tuesday to a crowd of
about 40 in the Campus Center ballroom,
pointed out that while people continue to war
among cach other throughout the globe, a
growing understanding of one another has
led people to resolve their conflicts.

The world is made up of “an endless list of
contradictions that sometimes lead to con-
flict,”” said Muller, However, the 60-year-old
diplomat said he has observed mankind mak-
ing progress toward a better understanding of
fellow man, This understanding is needed,
stressed Muller, to maintain world peace.

He indicated that in the past 30 years,
through social programs of the governments
of the world, people have begun to recognize
certain groups’ rights that have been denied
in the past. The rights of Blacks, women and
the handicapped in the past have not been
acknowledged, but now are beginning to be
instated into society, explained Muller.

Muller indicated that throughout the
world, the diversity of religions, races,
languages and wealth creates differences in
opinions. People grouped into different
categories believe their group is right and the
other groups are wrong. “This historical
separation has gone on too long," declared
Muller, pointing out that it must inevitably
come to an end

Warning that we too often take these con-
flicts for granted, Muller asked all young
people 10 examine their own ethics and the
ethics of their government, He implored that
we should not do things for the good of
ourselves or our country, but rather for the
good of mankind.

‘On the nuclear arms race, Muller said that
the 40 year cold war “is not funny
anymore.”” He said he is hopeful that the
“younger presidents of the futare' will resolve

the ‘most dangerous contradiction of all”
between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. In fact,
he said, he expects change in policy to occur
withing the next decade,

According to Muller, we are “‘over the
hump" of danger of a third world war,
stating that the only possibility of one would
be in the event of an accident,

Muller said that both superpowers “have
gone 0 extreme measures to eliminate
errors"? in their early warning systems,

While addressing the problems in the Mid-
dle East, Muller said he does not think the
conflicts will escalate 10 a superpower strug-
gle. ‘1 have heard for 30 years that the Mid-
dle East will lead us to world war," said
Muller, but he said he finds this to be a worn-
out doomsday forecast, He said he is “pretty
sure” there will not be a third world war.

Muller asserted he sees the "‘talk-shops”* of
the United Nations as being the prime tool
for settling disputes between countries with
conflicts.

Miller, who has been with the U.N. since
1948, maintained that the role of the U.N. is
to smooth out the contradictions of
everyone.”” He said he believes $0 percent of
the conflicts of the world are solved by the
U.N. “This is not a good record,"” admitted
Muller, but he indicated the effort is a good
sign, “You learn (hat you might not always
succeed,” he conceded, “But you must
always try."

Next year will mark the 40th anniversary of
the United Nations. Muller said that instead
of celebrating, the member countries will ex-
amine where they have succeeded and failed
and try to evaluate where improvements are
needed most

Besides providing a neutral ground for set-
tling nations’ disputes, the UN has also
become the center of information for
worldwide records, ‘ticcording to Muller,
Here, one can find information on anything
from the number of telephones in the world
to the number of births, last year, he said,
Since the UN was established, it has compiled

Vending machines have become a big
business at SUNYA. This year, a new office
was created to take care of problems dealing
solely with the campus vending machines.
‘The newly appointed Director of Vending
Services, Paul Arnold, now handles all the
machines’ business,

‘According to UAS, they now sell 1,3
million cans of soda a year, all of which are
distributed via vending machines. While
Zahm said he hopes that sales continue at
their steady rate, he predicted no future in-
crease in the number of machines on campus.

Some vending machines require water,
drains, and an area to be situated, according
to Zahm. These requirements, he said, limit
the number of machines placed around the
campus,

Zahm said that proper lighting and ac-
cessibility are also factors that must be con-
sidered. With all these limitati hm said
he expects ‘no expansion of vending
machines in the near future,"

If the UAS servicemen cannot fix a van-
dalized machine, the Canteen Corporation is
called on to repair the damage,

cording 10 Bruce Myers, the Albany
supervisor of the Canteen Corporation,
most of the damaged machines require only
minor repairs, The repairmen from the Can-
teen Corporation usually repair “broken
handles, smashed display windows, and bent
within the machines," Myers ex-

The broken parts have to be replaced with
new ones, and “it can often take at least a
week 10 get new parts,"” Myer asserted,

Zahm said it is very difficult to track down
the vandalists, "Unfortunately," said
“no one has been caught in the act.”

“We are trying to find a way (o slow down
the vandalism, but it is very difficult," said
Zahm, He said that the hall directors and the
Resident Assistants (RA's) have been asked
to be aware of the acts of violence, but have
had no success in catching anyone this year

Anyone caught vandalizing machines
would be turned over to the Judicial Board,
Zahm asserted. ia)

world’s future

statistical information valuable to anyone
seeking facts of the world, Muller said,

This indicates a striving by man to unders-
tand his fellow man, according to Muller.
Before, Muller said, we knew little about
people on the other side of the globe, Now,
we are taking an interest in how other people
five, an interest that is, according to Muller,
“the greatest hope of this planet."

Muller said he believes everyone, especially
young people, musy not lose hope in the
destiny of mankind. “There is positive
energy in optimism,"” claimed Muller, “We
can only succeed if we hope we can succeed,"
he added.

Muller plans to leave the U.N. soon, after
serving for 36 years at numerous posts in-
cluding director of the Executive Office for
the Sec-General and director of the ae
Division

{LOIS MATTABONI UPS
Robert Muller
“There is positive eneray in optimism,

— Rick Swanson

ED MARUSBICH UPS

Victory brings credibility, funds,

Three end bids;
Hart, Mondale
vie for South

(AP) Sen, Gary Hart, trying to capital
{ou his New Hampshire vietéry, headed
south ‘Thursday seeking delegates as
Walter Mondale challenged him to cam-
paign head-to-head in the region where
the next big round of Democratic
primaries loom,

Marl was making quick tour of
Alabama, Geor da, three of
the states holding primaries on Super
Tuesday, March 13, and where he has
trailed the former vice president in local
polls,

Mondale, holding the organizational
ccige in the South, campaigned in Dixie a
day ahead of Hart, Struggling to regain
his front-runner's title, Mondale threw
down a challenge to Hart to battle him for
the region's convention delegates.

“4 challenge Mr. Hart (0 bring his cam-
paign to the whole South," Mondale said
in Anta, "I challenge him to compete
with me here head-to-head."

On the Republican side, President
Ronald Reagan's partisans say they are
delighted by Hart's win in New Hamp-
shire because it means Democrats must
continue fighting amongst themselves,

“That'll stir things up,"” said Reagar

Reagan-Bush campaign spokesman
John Buckley said, however, he thought
Mondale was still in a strong position,

California Sen, Alan Cranston an-
nounced he was dropping out of the cam-
paign after finishing seventh in the eight-
‘man race, with just 2 percent of the vote,
“1 know when to dream and when to
count votes," he said,

And Sen. Ernest Hollings of South
Carolina abandoned his two-year quest
for the Democratic presidential nomina-

y, saying “it’s plain that my
through to enough
people, Well, nothing happened (o me on
the way to the White House,"” the South
Carolina senator said at a news conference
te committee hearing room pack-

ed with his campaign supporters,

Hollings was. the second Democratic
contender to pull out of the race. ‘Ht was
one of the best educations I've ever had,"
he added

Former Florida Governor Reubin
Askew bowed out of the race Thursday,

This is the last day, the last stop
and the last mile of this campaign."
Askew had come in cighth in the New

y

Other candidates looked’ to the next
round.

Ohio Sen, John Glenn returned to

shingion to regroup after his third-
place finish in New Hampshire and pl

southern campaign swing (00,
cluding stops. in. Montgomery and
Auburn, Alabama,

The Rev. Jesse Jackson also looked
south, campaigning in Mississippi and
calling his fourth-place finish in New
Hampshire a victory. of sortsv<In. Hat-
tiesburg, he called his showing **a high

moment in-American and black.history.””
er

4 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 0 FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984

Council Vice Chair resigns; blames SA politics

By lan Clements
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

Barbara Hurwitz resigned Monday from her position as
Vice-chair of Central Council saying ‘1 no longer wish to be
4 part of the politics of SA (Student Association).""

Hurwitz is the second vice-chair to resign this term, Lisa
Kerr resigned last October ‘for reasons
both internal and external to SA." Central

Hurwitz said that she is usually “not one
for resigning,"" but she left SA because it Council
Was no longer a ‘prodiictive"” organization,
nd she no longer wanted to be a representative

One of the problems, she said, is that Council represen-
tatives begin to prepare for re-election as soon as they are
elected, “Political movements start and we end up not doing
anything,” Hurwitz asserted, ‘SA has potential but not with
the people there now. It’s (SA) not an asset to the student
body,"" she maintained,

Kerr sald at the time of her resignation that she no longer
had “time for the petty arguing that goes on in Council,"
She later added, “I'm sick of the whole place,

{twas announced during the Council meeting last Wedn
day that a new vice chair will be clected during next Wednes-
day's mecting,

In other business ai the Council meeting, a heated debate
broke out over SA nomination and election dates, Elections*
Were eventually set for April 9 and 10 and nominations will
be hield March 12 to 20.

The original bill would have set the nomination period
from March $ 10 March 16 and the election dates on April 4
and 5, ; fame 2

SA vice president Jeff Schneider was among the more
Outspoken opponents of the original bi
Chair Bob Helbock co-sponsored. It was Schneider's
criticism that sparked the.debawe-incouncil and Schneider's
amendment to Helbock’s bill that Council eventually ap.
proved

Debate stemmed from Council members? desire 10 hold
elections after midterms but before spring break, and sill
leave enough time 10 publicize nominations, Helbock wanted
{0 hold elections before work begins on the SA’ budget, but
several students argued that in doing so, Council would be
tailoring elections to fi their own schedules. This, they said,
was unfair to prospective SA candidates who are not cur
ly involved in SA,

Helbock quickly conceded that the nomination period in
the original version of the bill which he co-sponsored with
Off-Campus representative Mitch Feig and Alumni Quad

representative Maureen Ryan was unfair, but he maintained

support for the early election dates contained in the origianl

version,

He reminded Council that the budgetary process takes
place from April 8 to April 11, During these days, he sai
Council representatives would be required to spend much
time working on the budget. He said that scheduling the elec-
tions during the budgetary process might detract from some
Council members’ electoral campaigns and from their work
‘on the budget.

Helbock added that he was “trying to find a date open 10
most people."

Off-Campus representative Dave Silk agreed that the dates
Were “very convenient" for Council members, but, he con-
tinued, “it's not our job to find a convenient time for us
(Council)

Off-Campus representative Dave Tu concurred. "I respect
Bob (Helbock)'s rationale,"” he said, “but it's a bit selfish,”
Tu continued, “We have to get the whole student body in-
volved,"

joon alter Tu spoke, Helbock withdrew his version of the
Ill. The new dates were approved by a vote of 21-3-2,

Helbock said that he had no “ulterior motive" for pushing
for the carlier dates. He reminded Council that he isa senior
and will not run for office in April

The elections commissioner must be notified by March 7,
80 that he can establish election procedures

Also during the meeting, WCDB requested funding for the
Purchase of a cart recording playing machine, which the sta
tion Uses for recorded announcements, The machine that is
being used now is in constant need of repair, said Fei

he bill, (0 appropriate $900 for WCDB from’ the

nergeney Spending L

The Racquetball Club is not an SA funded group, but
Council appropriated $150 from the ESL so thal ten of the
Club's members could attend the New York State champivin:
ships in Binghamion, The funding bill was approved by a
172-4 vote,

Council passed a revised Intercollegiate Athletic Commit
tce Finanee Policy by unanimous consent. The measure was
Opposed by SA Athletic Controller Mike Brusco, According
10 Bruseo, students will lose some of their power aver th
auletic budget,

Currently, the Athletic Controller prepares vouchers
Under the new policy, an Athletic Department employee will
do that job. The SA Controller Adam Barsky said that he
Will’ stil have power of final approval of the athletie

Boe soucer ves
Former Vice Chair Barba

‘SA was no longer “productive.”

Hurwitz

8th Annual CROP Fast
by People and Food

SUNYA Hunger Awareness Group (SA FUNDED)

All Fast Programming in CC 370

Exiday Evening ~ March 2

7:30 - People and Food

“Why A Hunger Group on Campus?!”

8:00 - HUNGER FILM

URDAY - March 3)

12:00 MEALS AND MISSILES
simulation game

1:00 MAUREEN CASEY - Director of
INFACT - Albany speaking on the Nestle

Boycott

2:00 “Voices from the Quiet”’- play drama

3:00 ED MURPHY- Bread. Sor the World
Speaking on effective letter writing and

affecting public policy

budget

+ hunger

WIRA

Student Assistants

- positions open for
Spring Intramural Position

If interested come to the
WIRA meeting at 7:30 pm
on Monday 3/5 in CC 370,
to fill out application.

FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984 fi ALBANY STUDENT PRESS. 5

Co-ops offer new look in effort to in crease sales

By Michelle Busher

STAM WHITER
There are two new looks ai
SUNYA this semester with the
February 8 re-opening of the Food
Co-op and the new record co-op,
now called SUNY Tunes, which re-
opened February 12. Both co-ops
have remodeled and increased their

variety of products,

“Over the past couple of years
the excitement over the food co-op
has been dying down, because there
has been nothing new," explained
the Food Co-op treasure Tracey
Kropa

“Before we remodeled, it looked
disorganized and the walls were a
bland white,"” she said, ‘Co-op
Workers got together and painted
the walls blue, which is more pleas-
ing to the eye,"* she added.

SUNY Tunes was also painted,
According to one of its managers,
Jason Friedman, ‘We've also ex-
panded our music selection so that
we may become a serious alter-
native 10 other record stores. One
way that we have done this is by ad-
ding pre-recorded tapes to our
ventory. We may even have special
order items that we do not carry
and are hard to find."

SUNY Tunes has also aided such

items as blank tapes, rock buttons,
record accesories and they hope 10
be selling rock posters soon,
reported Friedman.

Some changes at the Food Co-op
as stated by Kropa, Gail Watson
and John Weiss, all Co-op
managers, include the building of
new shelves, a spice rack, new con-
tainers with plexy glass covers and
an expanded stock which includes
cookbooks, woks and may include
vitamins in the near future.

The Food Co-op has also begun
to carry what Fropa calls leading
items that are popular 10 on-
campus students, These products,
include such items as Pop-Taris,
canned soups and foods that can be
prepared in the dorms,

“In the past," said Kropa, ‘the
Food Co-op had only been breaking
even. Since we re-opened on
February 8h we have seen sales go
up about 30 percent more per day,"*

The Food Co-op still carries
dl yogurt, produce and health
foods like granola mixes. “We want
to make it kind of a. specialty
shop,"” stressed Kropa, “People
can come in and buy all of the in-
gredienty for a complete meal
now."

Friedman that,

mentioned

CROP fast designed to help
alleviate hunger worldwide

By Bette Dzamba

Heginning at noon triday
over 230 SUNYA students will em-
bark upon 30 hour fast in a fun
Uraising effort to alleviate local and
world hunger.

The fast is being sponsored by
People and Food, an on-campus
organization whose aim is 10 work
a the grass roots level in the attack

inst hunger, Guy Ribeiro, the
event coordinator, said the fast is
and financial pur
poses. The “most important are
education and Eduea-
tion is even more important than
the money", said Ribeiro. People,
he explained, need know “what's
going on."

As of February 29 over 230
ple had signed up to fast. Fasters
will be sponsored a certain amount
of money for every hour they fast
Last year 220 fasters earned around
$2,200 according to Ribeiro.

The fast will end at 6:00 P.M.
Saturday with a meal of rive and
tea, Mary Robinson, a student
Working with People and Food as a
community servige project, deserib=
ed two reasons: for ghoosing rice
and tea, The first is purely
physiological, she saig..**A fier, not
for thirty hourg you have t0
which is easy 10
The

eatin
have someth
digest”* explained Robinson,

second reason she noted, iy more
symbolic. “The meal of rice and tea
is 4 Way of expressing our common
union with people all over the world
simply: when they
all, we
10

who always
10 eat al all, After
asting for @ cause, not j
Robinson asserted
People and Food
Diane Jordan, expl
iwenty-five
nied will
The funds set aside for local

¢ will be distributed to several
s. she said, including
smal Food Task Fore
distribute some money 10
ntries. In addition,
some of the funds will go to,
Lwanga house, which is a shelter
for men; and Mery House, a shelter
for wo
The other seventy-five pereentfot
the money’ will be given to CROP,
Jordan said. CROP is an
ecumenical organization attempting,
1g deal with both international and?
national thunger. It operates. by

an

local food

“SUNY Tunes is trying to tighten
its organization, For a few years
back," he said, “the people that
ran it had problems with unreliable
people.'* He altributes the deficits
that the co-op has suffered in the
Past to this,

Another SUNY Tunes manager,
David Luntz, said that, ‘For the
first time in three or four years sales
have been higher than ever,"" Fried-
man added that, ‘Last year the co-
op broke even,"?

Luntz also remarked that, “If

these first couple of weeks\as the
new SUNY Tunes is any indication,
we should be doing a lot better
financially,” Friedman predicts a
Substantial profit for this semester.
Both the rowdico-op sad SUNY

it SUNYA's Food Co-op

h the Fwd

emia

Alice and Fred

The Black Sheep of C.
Discover Yukon Jack. Proud and

potent at 100 proof, Yet so smooth

So flavortul. it tempts even the most

“Listen to the wild.
Its calling you"

nuadian Liquors

Robert Service
‘The Call of the Wild?

4:00 LAURIE COX- Regional Emergency Food
Task Force speaking on REFT, local hunger,
Sood stamps

5:00 CLOSING SERVICE- BILL RYAN

civilized. StraigMt nixed or on the rock
Yukon Jack truly stands apart

Always Smooth. Always Potent

Yuko Tac

TAD ek Leu preg ana BeTieay Heer eH
Sam

Aworld premiere by Dan Ellentuck
February 25-March 18

Five young people face the onset of the 20th Century
—and their own adulthood —with explosive results,
Corporate sponsor: Ocean Data Systems, Inc
Performances: Tuesday-Saturday 8:00pm:
‘Sunday 2:30pm and Wednesday. Feb. 29, 2:30 pm
Non Student Tickets $8-$13

Students with | D *, price Tuesday-Thursday evenings. and
Sunday Matinee. Limited availabilty 30 minutes betore curtain

HiiNonth Peat Stent. Albany New York 518-462-4534,

Tickets available at The Market Theatre and Community Box Ottices
MasterCard and VISA accepled (No relunds or exchanges )

6:00 Break FAST with Rice and Tea

FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS. 7

6 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS (3 FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984

Kissinger study assailed in World Week lecture

By John Skelly

Claiming that United States
credibility, has ‘stretched beyond
belief,"” Dr, James Cockcroft
criticized the U.S. Foreign Policy in
Latin America Wednesday,

The speech was the third in a
series held in conjunction with
World Week and was sponsored by
the tmeralonal Development Pro-
8

Cockeroft's. speech «centered
primarily on the Henry Kissinger
report on conditions in Central
‘America, The report, commission-
ed by the Reagan administration,
dealt primarily with two aspects:
the Soviet-Cuban threat and U.S.
credibility.

“There fs no concrete proof of
Soviet-Cuban aid to insurrectionist
forces in Central America,"
Cockcroft said, adding, ‘the threat
is unproven and a figment of the
authors,”

Cockcroft said that although the
former Secretary of State is well
regarded in this country, he is **not
popular in the rest of the world."

Cockcroft added that the reason
he disapproves of the report is
because of Kissinger’s previous
record, including ‘the bombing of
Cambodia, approved ill
wiretaps, and his recommendation
of the Christmas bombing of
Hanoi.'’ He called the report a
“forfeliture”” and said it was ‘a
strange world the report moved in"?
with only two dissenting views on
the committee,

Cockcroft said he disagreed on

three of the points made in the
report, in general. The first point he
mentioned was that the U,S, should
show support of the central govern-
ment against the right and the left
wing factors in Guatemal

This, Cockcroft said, is impossi-
ble because there is no real central
government. Cockcroft said that
either the U.S. supports the right or
the left and he described the right as
murderers and the left as extreme
terrorist guerillas,

The second point Cockcroft men-
tioned was the elimination of the
U.S. ban on military aid to police
forces in Central America

News Updates

IFG gets projector

feels that there should be three separate cam- their

pus film organizations.

Cockcroft also disputed the point
that El Salvador is a democracy.

He called this belief a fallacy and
said that ‘they allow aspects of a
democracy."" However, he noted,
‘Archbishop Romero of El Salvador
was ‘killed during mass by govern-
ment soldiers.!” TI
Cockcroft, is not an aspect of
democracy,

According to Cockcroft, the
reason the U.S. has a Latin
‘American Foreign Policy is because
of economic interests, "The U,S.
invested $150 billion worldwide last
year, reaping $20 billion in profit
with sales of over one-half trillion
dollars," Cockcroft. said, adding
that, “the Latin American share
‘was 20 percent.”

The truth about Latin America is
“widespread “poverty,"” according
to Cockcroft, ‘76 percent of Hon-
duran children suffer malnutrition,
one of three Salvadorans dies
before age five; in El Salvador
murder is the leading cause of

death, and less than five percent Of p, Jamas Cockcroft

LOIS MATTABONI UPS

the people own the land,'*

Cockcroft said.

“Skoal Bandits
Sweepstakes,"

press release,

© The truth about Latin America is

Spring Fling
according (0 a Skoal Bandits

The International Film Group's projector
problems seem to have been solved for this
Semester at least, according to Student
Association Programming Director Rich
Golubow. University Cinemas is allowing
IFG to use its projector on Thursday even-
ings, he said,

Last semester all four of IFG's projectors
broke down, The film group was forced to
Fent equipment from the Campus Center
Audio-Visual department in order to con-
tinue showing films,

IFG's future remains in doubt, Golubow
said, The organization may request funds for
@ new projector, he said. A new projector
would cost approximately $2,500, he
estimated,

Another possibility would be a merger with
the third campus film group, the Fireside
Theater. But, said Golubow, this plan has
not been seriously considered. He said that
the president of the Fireside Theater, Ron
| Cowit, is opposed to that idea because he

April polling places

Student polling places for the April
primaries will be at the same locations as they
were for the November, 1983 elections, ac-
cording to Student Association President.
Rich Schaffer,

“We are in the process of appealing the
polling place decision,” said Schaffer. SA
had previously charged the city of Albany
with gerrymandering, disenfranchisement of
voters, and illegal redrawing of election
district

Schaffer said that SA is currently working
with the Board of Elections to correct the
problem of misplaced student cards.

Skoal contest winner

U.S. Tobacco, the company which’ pro-
duces Skoal Bandits, a wintergreen-flavored
tobacco, recently announced the winners of

Lynn Rosenthal, a junior at SUNYA, was
awarded one of the 10 grand prizes, accor-
ding to the release, She will be flown to
Daytona Beach, Florida, for a 10-day all-
expenses paid vacation, U.S, Tobacco said,

The Contest had attracted over 60,000 en-
{ries from more than 300 colleges and univer-
sities nationwide, according to the release,

Angels in Albany

The Guardian Angels will be organizing a

iapter in Albany beginning in mid-April,
according to the Times Union,

Group founder Curtis Sliwa said that an
opinion poll of area residents showed that the
Guardian Angels were wanted in Albany,
said the Times Union.

Albany Mayor Thomas Whalen Ill, and
other city officials, have said that the city
could control crime without the aid of the
Guardian Angels, the Times Union said,

“widespread poveriy,""

Open meetings ruling

The ASP, which has been trying to gain ac-
cess 10 certain University meetings that are
closed to the public, such as the alcohol
policy and bus fee task force mectings, has
recently received support from the Executive
Director of the New York State Committee
‘On Open Government, Robert Freeman,

In a letter to Assistant Counsel to the State
University of New York, Carolyn Pasley,
dated February 8, Freeman urged SUNY to
declare those meetings open.

SUNY maintains that its closed meetings
do not fall under New York's Open Meetings
Law because the task forces are advisory
bodies. Freeman said that such meetings are
covered by the Open Meetings Law.

“it is difficult to understand, from my
perspective, how the leadership of the State
University can in good faith ignore statutory
changes as well as judicial confirmations of
the expansive scope of the Open Meetings
Law," Freeman stated.

Ex-Colonie mayor serves as Dutch Quad’s chef

By Eric Hindin
STAPE WRITER

SUNYA students, you may be eating food
cooked by,a man once the mayor of the
village of Colonie

Charles S. Milton, affectionately known to
friends and co-workers as
“Uncle Chuck” is, as he
puts it, “having a ball"*
working as a cook at the POMC
Dutch Quad Cafeteria.

Milton was also the mayor of the village of
Colonie from 1969-1979,

Milton, before coming to UAS, owned his
own restaurant, called ‘Chucks! for 28
years, I sold the restaurant in 1979," he re-
counts. ‘It was a cross between a fast-food
kind of place, and a diner, and to successful-
ly compete with other such establishments re-
Quired 12-16 hour work days,"* For those

good memories, ‘Chucks was located
at the torner of Central Avenue and Mann-
ing Boulevard.

For now, Milton is happy with his position
at UAS. Besides enjoying the art of cooking,
Milton is getting, as he puts it, “the college
experience.”

“I didn’t attend college," he explained,
“After getting out of high school, | im-
mediately joined the service, and spent three
years in Korea," If Milton could have his
way, he would spend more of his time at
UAS serving food. “That way," he says, *l
could get to know even more students than |

“Being the mayor
and running one’s
own business required
very long work
days.’’

—Charles Milton

Milton describes his ten years a
“lots of fun," and a “learning experience
Being mayor of a village like Colonie is en-
joyable," said Milton, "because the political
setup is such, that ane could do something,
and see tangible results

Milton's record as mayor, does indeed in
clude some major accomplishments. ‘At the

time 1 took office,"” he recalled, “'the com-
munity was in the process of growing. We im-
mediately began work on a new $20 million
sanitary sewer system, to replace the existing
‘one which was old and inadequate.

The actual cost to the village,” said
Milton, ‘was $8 million, the other $12
million we obtained through Washington.’
Dealing with Washington, according to
Milton, was an extremely complicated pro-
cess. “‘After our engineers designed the
system, we had to put our proposal in the ex-
act form Washington wanted. The issue had
to then be put before the electorate.”

Then, according to Milton, the games
started, ‘Like everyone else, we had to pat
some people on the back, and wine and dine
some others. Finally we were granted the
funds we wanted."” At the time, many other
villages applied for such funds, but not
everyone, he recalled, was able to get them.

While Milton served as mayor, he also in-
stituted free trash collection, Before devising
this system, he explained, residents were
responsible for getting rid of their own trash,

According to Milton, the village was for-
tunate to have gotten as many grants as it
did. Such grants, he explained, were usually
used for capitol improvement, and any funds
obtained would replace money already
allocated in the budget for these im-
provements. The village of Colonic was thus
able to save this money, and use it at a later
time, instead of using bonds. Milton
estimates that his efforts at scrimping and
saving netted the village of Colonie $2.25
million, during his ten yea's as mayor. Taxes,
Milton proudly recalled, were never raised
during his term

The village also opened numerous parks,
recalled Milton, and land
preservation were al cern of
mine."" In honor of his efforts, one of these
parks was named after him. Milton Park,
which takes up approximately four acres, is
located on Rapple Drive, in the village’ of
Colonie

Milton moved to Colonie in 1959, the same
year he was married. Colonie at the time was
predominantly republican, and as a

Milton was asked by a neighbor 10
polities. In 1967 he
ly entered what he termed the “local
when he was elected trustee of the
village.

“Having a ball” working at Dutch Quad Cafeteria

Milton was elected mayor in 1969, Being
elected, Milton recalled, took many hours of
hard work over a long period of time, "Cam:
paigning in those days," he explained, "ine
volved going door 10 door, and discussing

position on the issues.” Milton became
Colonie’s first democratic mayor in quite a
tong time,

In 1979, Milton lost tion bid to
Herbert Ki he recalled, “had
7,000 registered voters, and I lost by 70 votes.
1 probably didn’t campaign as hard as |
should have that year, 1 really didn't think
my opponent, whom | had appointed as a
trustee, could beat me,"

OB LUCKEY UPS

Being mayor, Milton recalled, was a job
one did out of love. With a raise that he
voted himself while in office, the most Milton.
varned as mayor was $4,000 a year, As a
trustee, he earned $720 per year. “Being the
mayor, and running ones own business re-
quired very long workdays,"" said Milton,

Right now, Milton has no plans to run
again for mayor, but he doesn't rule out the

Of getting involved in some aspects
politics, in the future,

Milton's wife, Kathleen, also works for

as @ cashier in, the Campus Center
His daughter is a freshman at
SUNYA and lives on Colonial Quad, a

Parents volunteer career advice to undergraduates

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Bette Herzog

“Job placement offices don't always find the perfect job.

By Betsy Eckel

Many SUNYA students may have
misconceptions about what their planned
careers will really be like. To combat this pro-
blem, University officials have devised an ad-
visory program,

Parent Career Advisors is a unique pro-
gram that allows undergraduates to gain first
hand knowledge of opportunities in the job
market, according to Assistant for Univer
Communications Bette Herzog.

Several hundred parents of SUNYA
students are willing to speak with students
about opportunities and requirements. in
their own particular fields of specialization,
They work in different areas — business,
engineering, the arts, education, law,
medicine, and all types of related fields, said
Herzog.

The parent advisors listed are from all
parts of New York State and surrounding
areas, including Albany, New Jersey, and
Long Island. Students can find a roster of
names and addresses of the career advisors in
the Deans’ Offices, the Quad Offices, Center
for Undergraduate Education, or Student
Affairs,

Herzog urges students to stop'in any of-
fice, review the list, and contact the parents
in their home area.

Assistant Dean of CUE Dick Collier, sai

“maybe one or two students a month

im for the lists. Collier said he doesn't
know how frequently they are used in the
other offices.

“The job placement offices don't always
find the perfect job," said Collier, Students
frequently “luck out! when they look for
jobs through the Parent Career Advisement
service.

“What [hope is that a student will meet a
parent whose company is hiring, but I want
to stress that this is not a job placement pro-
gram. It is primarily an opportunity for
students to meet someone actively working in
their field of interest who is willing to share
their knowledge of the field,"” explained Her-
208.

“What one learns in school is not what one
needs to get out in the world and make a liv-
ing," said Mary Kane, who signed up to be
an advisor for students in Arts and Design.
She said she believes that the service could be
vety useful in getting a job.

Kane said that she had not yet been con-
tacted by any students

Several hundred
parents are willing to
speak with students.

"It scems to me very interesting to learn
how someone got into his chosen field,’*
elaborated Herzog. ‘Students may be in col-
lege with a certain career in mind and may
end up doing something else because they're
unsure of the requirements or special training
involved, Hopefully, Parent Career Advisors
will clear up some of the problems," added
Herzog.

Many of the parents in this area said they
have not been contacted at all and are disap-
pointed that students are not taking advan-
lage of the new program, Herzog said she is
optimistic about a greater response in the
future, ia)

8 Aleany STUDENT PRESS — FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984

The Class of ’85 and
University Cinemas
present

JANIMAL
HOUSE

uncut/uncensored

Sunday, March 4

7:30 & 10 LC18
Tickets:

$1.50 w/ tax
sticker

[$2.00 w/out

Seale recounts radical past

sivists the
‘oni police
-ause it would-get the most atten:

od the Panthers stunned the ci-

by driving around’the streets

ne Qakland Police and referring
HEE AC the “Police Review Board.”

it platform was all American: all
a black American," he said.
“Our long term plans for the Panthers,

I xemuned trom
ing the 1968 1.
janal Conseniion and Se

FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 9

Importance of internships emphasized at forum

By Michelle Busher

‘Speakers emphasized the impor-
tance of internships and
ty if you are looking at interna-
tional careers, at the International
‘Career Forum held Monday night.

The Career Forum was part of
World Week, an annual program
that is sponsored by the Office of
International Affairs. World Week
is designed 10 explore cultural varie-
ty on campus through exhibits,
music, drama, dance and films,
‘World Week will go on through this
week ending March 3,

Dr. Eric Kocher, author of Inter-
national Jobs: Where They Are and
How to Get Them was the guest
speaker. He gave a general overview
of possibilities for international
jobs,

The forum also featured a panel
of speakers who discussed specific
Job opportunities and the academic
Preparation that is recommended
for these jobs.

Each speaker represented a dif-

the added that ‘‘chances are
whatever you are today, you won't
be five years from now.””

“It is essential for you to im-
merse yourself in another culture,””
‘stated Director of the Center for In-

“Chances are whatever you are
today, you won’t . 2 five years
from now.”’

—Lorraine Benvenuto

ment than anything learned on cam-
pus.”’ That, he explained, is why he
strongly supports internships and
study abroad,

‘Aasociate Vice-Chancellor fot In-
ternational Programs at the SUNY
syitem, Wilbert LeMelle, informed
students that most international
jobs involve ‘working with moder-

‘economies in transformation

largest share of profit to the inter-
national market.”

He went on to discuss other iater-

from traditional to modern P

ferent international field. Lorraine
Benvenuto, Manager of Personnel
Resources for IBM World Trade
Corporation, when speaking of
jobs available in IBM said that
students should “be adaptable.”

ternational Programs and Com-
parative Studies of the State Educa-
tion Department, H

He maintained 1
tal learning is more
rying out an international assign-

ministration and population
studies, added LeMelle.

‘According to Kocher, banking is
Presently the international field
with the most opportunities. He ex-
plained that most banks ‘gear their

iso income, ‘The Peace Corps of-
fers experience," he stressed,

said Seale."*were 10. become a. part of the ing what by then and s.
| community in Oakland, to get peo- some strange things.
, Officials and poli
Broup in 1971, said

chigh
" jow income black families n

Mondale, Hart head South

Wednesday thru Sundaye6 P.M. till 4AM,
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Wednesday is Ladies Night

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WE C02. ere costings
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Boe fo each he well on Sui
spending i million for the New hold prima

The Colorado senator has spent almost no
money in the state so far, Siegel said, so Harr
can spend almost the entire legal limit in the
weeks leading 10 the primary

Gov. Mario Cuomo, who is Mondale's
chief backer in the state, said the former vice
President's second-place finish in New
Hampshire will be “very good" for him

“Ht will give the vice president a chance to

York primary

Hart captured 40 py
Hampshire vote, whil
and Glenn had 13

candidates
with an orga:

Students fight world hunger
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sponsors. 6

organiza- just charit
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+ and Catholic

distributing funds to various
tions such

According to Jo
People and Food has organ

pe i :

take place in CC

‘Robinson said
work for CROP
directly bring tood to
fight hunger through

W helps not only to
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Tonight

The SUNYA Irish Club
Presents Its Annual

e St. Patrick’s Day Party

In The Campus Center Ballroom
9:00 PM- 1:00 AM
Featuring Live Entertainment by
“THE IRISH THREE’’
Imported Beer- Soft Drinks- Munchies
Tickets $3.00 w/ Tax Card
On Sale At The Door __ "me

=

POSITIONS AVAILABLE
ete SUMMER PLANNING CONFERENCE sapapap

/POSMONS: Orientation Assistants(0A)
‘Student Assistants)
ELIGIBILITYStudents who will be SUNYA undergraduates during the fall 1984
semester,
QUALIFICATIONS: Includes;
Ofexcelient communication skills
ability to build rapport quickly

TIME COMMITMENT: Approximately June 1 through ‘August 10, 1984
RENUMERATION: $860 plus room and board

APPLICATION: Available in Student Affairs Office, AD 129 beginning

, March 2, 1984, Application deadline Is Thursday, March 15. at 6:00 pm

i ee ae
(The following is a siiyhlated dialogive beriteen Mrs
victory in the New Hampshire Democratic primary.)

Media: What a tipoff! I had this election wrapped up in
record tjme,.ans) now look what they've done, —
Poll: Where did’ we go wrong? Ii was foolproof, Every
statistic in the book had, Mondale a runaway winner. You
hand them an election on a silver platter — vole Mondale, no
questions asked; just like the polls said — and this is what
you get, Voters — always have to have their own way
Media: They just don't appreciate a good thing when they
see il. My peopte 100k this primary so much for granted they
didn't even bother considering whether Mondale would win,
‘but just how much he'd win by. You'd think those vorery
would have taken our word and landslided the guy in,
Media and Poll: We slave away for months to smother the
elections|in: predictable,’ palatable.resulis for our consumer
citizens, All we ask is:that"they jump’ On our, little band-
wagon, But no! What do they want frori us!?

(enier Mr, and Mrs,. Voter)

COLUMN

Media k
and Ms, Poll, who have ‘just learned ofsGary.Hart’s tigset)

Voters: Look, we
stuick on the i y an We
hhave (o blindly follow your lead. You've had your say day in
‘and day: out for months, ad nauseum, But when Those’ polls
Shin, we're'the only voice that counts: Hse

But don't you realize what, you've done? “All “our

3 Ape

: What we've done is to prove 16 Ameticans: thal
regardless of the constant barrage of media hype ‘and
pollsters’ statistics, democracy is alive and well and still in the
hands of the people. Maybe we'll have inspired them to defy
your pat conclusions and discover (heir own pol
Media: But— :

'séparty.into a bo}

for the top spot eg
have to address the Iss
citizens who for the first HmeaKigear may be
scope of hein, BOWE y2y2ce pope

Poll: 1 wonder what-percent@ges-s0
Media: “The Scope and Power of {he '84 Vote: ang
multimedia exteavaganza.’” Hmmm. ¥¢

Voters: And. dén't forget: abe primates are not an edd jn
‘themselves. The Démacraig: fave BEEN so bogged down in
_Aheir owe muddled infighting eyhaven’s realy offered
anything of substance (0 6 (Reagan with. Now, with the
shope of afreshixace begirining, people’might siart taking the
‘Democrats'asA seridus challenge (o.Reagan in November,
*Poll; ‘Has theaNew Hampshire primary inspired you to rc
ject the pat conclusions of the media’and the polliakers, and
turn a fresh eyé fo the "84 campaign?”

‘Media: “‘New Hanipshire primary rocks polls and media:
signals new hope for citizen power in '84 vote.”

Voters: Well, it's an improvement.

val
alizing the

Graduate student fee unjust

Last semester the undergraduate Student Association pro-
posed instituting a mandatory graduate student activities fee,
‘The SUNYA administration placed the proposal on hold un-
til it received input from graduate students.

Before discussing the issue as it presently stands, a discus
sion of the issue's history is in order, The proposal last
semester included holding a student-wide referendum on the
issue, Both graduates and undergraduates would vate an (he
issue, but before the referendum could be held, the issue way
pul on hold,

Robert Martiniano

This semester a combined commilice of faculty, ai
ministrators, undergraduate, and graduate students formed
to deal with the issue of a graduate student activities fee. lis
deadline for making a recommendation to President O'Leary
is early April. Discussion, however, has not been equitable.

Major consideration in any voting is who will vote. The
Student Association cites “‘one man/woman one vote." The
Student Association understands that stacking the vote will
undoubtedly result in an overall vote of approval, even with
graduate student disapproval. Currently undergraduates out
number graduates by a three 10 one margin and have more
access to the voting process. With the graduate population
sixty-three percent part-time and the hours and availability
of voting restricted, under
teferendum’s outcome, To anyone versed in political
fairness, this voting proposal is blatantly unfair. The Student
Association would bitterly oppose the people of the City of
Albany determining student rights; yet, the Student Associa-
tion has the audacity (o let one group of people decide the
rights and obligations for another group of people.

Once voting procedures are dealt with, the substance of
the proposal can be dealt with. Officials of the Student

Association proposed the graduate student activities fee to
both improve overall services to all students and 10 deliver
perceived needed services (o graduate students. Anyone who
has understood the art of taxation realizes that taxes and tees
are levied only to increase or create revenue, Seldom ever has
increased revenues increased services, The Sitdent Associa
tion is no different. Existing groups have been fighting over
the limited revenues the Student Association currently brinws
in. These existing groups will fight over new revenues even
before graduate. student groups have the opportunity to vie
for these revenues

Graduate students, also, hi

¢ neither expressed the need
or the desire (o recieve Student Association sponsored ser
vices, Graduate student representatives have stated that they
do not need or want Student Association sponsored services.

Currently students without tax cards cannot use Student
Association sponsored services, though some do, For film:
and concerts, students, who do not pay an activities f
an additional cost above those students who pay their ac

—

Wanted:

Columns and essays on political and other
topics of interest. Maximum of 600 words.
Please contact Ed Reines at the ASP or
leave your column in CC 329, Please in-
clude a name and telephone number

Aivities fee. For other services such as the Student Association
lawyer oF joining Student Association sponsored and funded
organizations, no such stipulation exists. The Student
Association believes that graduate students use these services
substantially enough to warrant imposing a mandatory ac-
tivities fee on graduate students.

Two of the bigger expenditure items for the Student
Association are films and concerts. Again, students without
tax cards pay a higher price for these services. Services such
as the lawyer, the radio station, and the operating costs of
the Student Association are also high expenditure items for
the Student Association. The radio station is a public com-
modity and cannot have its expenditures meted out between
graduate and undergraduate students, though | would con-
ject that most graduate stiidents living off-campus are (oo
busy (0 listen fo it, Overwhelmingly, undergraduates use
legal services. For non-tax card holders, the Student Asso:
ion could establish a fee schedule similar to the prorated
Prices paid at concerts and films, And for the operation and
stipends of the Student Association, well especially for
graduate students, it is an unnecessary expense,

Expenditures for services arn contingent upon proximity.
Towa does not attempt to tax or supply services to the
residents of New York; yet, the Student Association pro:

UN OBSERIERS
SEE ACTION
IN LEBANON

poses to tax a non-contiguous group of graduate siudens,
Most graduate students live off-campus in contrast (0 mos
undergraduates living on-campus. Many graduate siudenis
have internships and professional work experiences which
take them away from the classroom and the university setting
a substantiat portion of the day, Only thirty-seven p
the graduate students are full-time. Part-time graduate
students attend one or two classes a week and work full and
have families and substantial lives away from the university
setting. Six graduate programs exist totally separate (rom the
uptown campus. These students usually are on the upiown
campus twice a semester — once to preregister and once 10
purchase books.

Taxing these individuals is not only unwarranted but
travesty of justice. Any amount no matter how small would
Fepresent more money spent than services received

During the entire debate on the graduate student activiti
fee, the Student Association has showed an insensitivity
toward the interests and the needs of the graduate sudeo!
With only dollar signs in front of them, Student Association
officials have attempted 10 assess additional
graduate students who currently pay more in tuition than
undergraduates. The Student Association should ascer
needs before attempting 1o increase costs, somieth
yet not done

didrit you
think? 67)

Si

ESTE E331) 2

= ‘Introspect

C’est Moi

Okay, okay, let’s put this thing to bed and then get out of here
and put myself to bed..I'm sitting in front of a computer screen star-
ing blankly into it,and every few minutes, | tend to fugue out and
come back to my senses five minutes later thinking Test! Test! Test
at one o'clock!

Test. Only the second test this semester. This, on the other
hand, is my ninth issue of Aspects,

As | sit here in a stupor, I'm feeling a little proud of myself
(What, John Keenan proud? Can't bel), but there it is, because in
spite of the numerous foul-ups which seem to becoming my
trademark, and despite the fact that I have to: make a long apology
to a professor a mere three hours from now, and explain why I'm

+ so far behind in his course, I've put together what right now seems
to me to be the best issue I've done while I've been editor.

I'm doing good, dammit.

My parents will be getting this paper in the mail. They'll read that
I'm behind in my classes and call my suite to tell me to get my ass in
gear.

I'm getting it there.

That's the lure of this paper, though; it makes it so easy to ra-
tionalize not keeping up in your classes. It makes it almost okay to
not keep up in your classes, because after all, if 1 want to be a jour-

nalist, this is giving me just as much experience as any class would,
fk But - when all's said and done - it’s not the reason I’m in school
ere,

Every so often I remind myself of that.

Quote of the Week: /

“We're dropping your byline, because there’s no excuse for your
story coming in this late, Anyway, how are you?”
News Editor Heidi Jo Gralla demonstrating

the quick diplomatic tactics that got her where
she Is today,

Inside. . .

Frogs, Murder, Russians,

centerfold

Woody Allen, and Democrats

Campaign '84: University Photo Service ‘photographer Ed
Marussich relates his experiences covering the Democratic
primaries in New Hampshire.

6a:

Two Irish Guys Sitting Around Writing: Gentleman Jim O'Sullivan
takes in guitarist Ruth Pelham's concert-at the bloomin’ Chapel
House Wednesday night, and Shanty Jim Lally tells us of the
murderin’ madness of Jackie-boy Brown, a writer who's a wee bit
touched /’th’ ’ead.

7a
Perspectives: James Sale has an intriguing encounter with a Rus.
sian exchange’ student, which stirs up images and visions of his
own ancestry. lan Spelling enjoys Woody Alllen’s latest comedy
Broadway Danny Rose, starring Woody, Mia Farrow, and Nick
Apollo Forte, Also an Aspects original — a new recipe! Ribbit!

Ba’
Retrospect: Look ahead to stimulating and exciting cultural
musical, and cinema events at SUNYA and around town with
Spectrum's calendar of future happenings. The Freshman
recognizes where real popular control lies in America, and Campus
Views questions whether the grading practices of some SUNY pro-
fessors are as fair as they should be.

This Is Your

Rules

March 30.

3. Contestants

Last Chance!

Aspects Writing Contest

Fiction
Personal Essays

1. Rule one has been revised: we are
now accepting submissions from reptiles.
We also welcome the works of amphi-
bians, insects, mollusks, and any other
squirming organism.

2. The deadline for contest submis-
sions is March Sth. The winners of the
contest will be published in Aspects on

must be registered

students at SUNY at Albany.

4. All submissions must be typed and

double-spaced, or
sidered,

they will not be con-

5. All contestants may submit as many

entries as they like

6. Contestants
names, addresses,

tion of thelr work.

Photography

Deadline: Friday,

must provide their
and phone numbers;

winners will be notified prior to publica:

MARCH 2, [9841

woman | met at a primary eve rally for Gary Hart in New
1 A Hampshire told me that at a local luncheonette where she
lives, the owner conducted a poll by having his customers
write on a matchbook cover the candidate for which they would
vote on primary day. According to the poll, she said, Gary Hart
would be the winner of Tuesday's Democratic primary
This poll must have been more accurate than the official polls
that showed, until just two days before the primary, that Walter
Mondale would come out ahead. In fact, until just a few days ago,
everyone thought that this would be a one man race
However, Colorado Senator Gary Hart's unexpected victory
over former Vice President Walter Mondale in the Democratic
Presidential primary on February 28th changed all that. And
though the victory was unexpected, political analysts have been
telling us for quite some time now that the unexpected is what we
should expect from voters within the small, conservative state
New Hampshire has a political history of reversing the trends by
supporting underdogs instead of front-runners. Also important is
the fact that since 1952, no one has ever won the presidential elec:
tion without first winning his party's primary in New Hampshire.
What was even more unexpected was the overwhelming margin
by which Hart won the race. He carried more than 75 cities and
towns, picking up over 11,000 (or 13 percent) more votes than
Mondale. Hart led with a total of 41 percent of the vote, Mondale
finished second with 28 percent, and Ohio Senator John Glenn
trailed with a disappointing 12 percent
None of the other five cadidates received more than six percent
of the vote. President Reagan won more than that six percent just
in write-ins on the Democratic ballot. Virtually unopposed in his
own party's primary, Reagan took 97 percent of the vote
Portraying himself as the candidate of the “new generation” of
leaders, Hart took about half the vote of the youngest age group,
those under thirty years of age
But it was the political independants, making up more than a
third of the voters Tuesday, that really determined the winner. A
New’ York Times-CBS News poll showed that although Hart and
Mondale recieved the same number of votes among Democrats,
the Colorado senator recieved twice as many votes from indepen-

dants as Mondale did

Hart Wins New Hampshire

Mondale also apparently lost votes due to his close i ks to
organized labor. About half the Democratic voters polled Tuesday
criticized Mondale on that issue

For some of the other candidates, the results on primary day
presented a question of whether or not their first primary would be
their last. Both California Senator Alan Cranston and South
Carolina Senator Earnest Hollings dropped out of the race
Wednesday. after receiving two and four percent of the vote,
respectively, Reuben Askew trailed the other seven candidates
with just one percent of the vote, and said that he would declare
next week whether or not he would continue his campaign
Both the Reverend Jesse Jackson and former Senator George
McGovern received six percent of the yote, and McGovern said
that the results of the Massachusetts primary on March 13th will
determine whether or not he will continue his campaign
Massachusetts voters strongly supported McGovern in the 1972
presidential election against Richard Nixon.

Ohio Senator John Glenn conceded disappointment, receiving
twelve percent of the vote in New Hampshire after trailing in fifth
place in the lowa caucuses just eight days earlier. Glenn indicated,
though, that Hart would not do as well in the South, where several
primaries are scheduled March 13th

Although Hart poured almost all of his money and organiza-
tional resources into New Hampshire, he is confident that his cam-
paign will now gain money, workers, and delegate candidates as
the field of presidential candidates narrows. Hart is hoping for a
strong showing in caucuses in Maine and in Wyoming on March
next week

The next set of primaries will be held March 13th, “Super Tues-
day.”when 11 caucuses and primaries across the country take
place

Though leading in the competition for delegates, Mondale's
strategy to lock up the nomination by mid-March is all but shat-
tered. Much will depend upon whether Gary Hart's surge of
popularity gains momentum, or fizzles out,

Lisa Perlman « *

Photo Credit, Bob Luckey:.UPS:

@a ASPECTS!

McGovern was all smiles, until the results came in

i

Marussich UPS

M2) 7) ao

Campaign '84

Bob Luckey UPS

Fanest Holla of South Carolina found New Hampshire not se warn and friendly. andl dropped out of the eampalgn

Capturing The Candidates

‘The heartless alarm clock blasts forth its message that it is time to awake to
Prepare to hit the road for the New Hampshire primary. The day begins at 6:(00)
a.m., calling from headquarters to headquarters trying to map out a plan of at
tack. Then it's time to roll out and track down the candidates

After an hour of driving we roll into the diminutive hamlet of Exeter, New
Hampshire, in-search of Senator George McGowvern. We found him at the
Phillips-Exeter Academy speaking to a small group of people. All worries of ever
getting close to a presidential candidate were quickly extinguished as we slipped
into our respective press slots six feet away from the senator

Twenty minutes and two rolls of film later we were on the road again, jumping
up on cars trying to catch a glimpse of the Senator shaking hands with a pass
by. Alter this incredible experience, it was time to blast off to some outer region
of New Hampshire to find Senator John Glenn. Our schedule allotted us twenty
minutes with the former astronaut but an accident held up traffic for forty-five
minutes and forced us to change our course back to Durham to find Se!
Cranston. After not finding him we decided to take a break and wait for Senator
Gary Hart to speak at eight o'clock

We shuffled our freshly fueled bodies into the Meadowbrook Inn to set up for
Gary Hart. After we had been standing crushed between thirly or forty other
Photographers for an hour and a half, Hart arrived, an hour and a half late, and
Proceeded to talk for five minutes, He then left. The day was finally over

Ed Marussich UPS.

by Ed Marussich

@ sunshine of Monday turned into glacial ice storms on Tuesday. The can
ates worried over whether the voters could make it to the polls. and we w
‘we could make it to either the polls or the candidates. The day began with
arning cruise to the University of New Hampshire for an early morning bon
with Jesse Jackson. It was twenty degrees and the news that Jackson would

forty-five minutes late was not exactly sweet words to my already frozen ears.

a caravan of vans and police cars came tearing over the hill, and what was
hi to be a casual get together around the campfire turned
»n of the media. I was introduced to this media quickly, by being cracked in
ead by a T.V. camera then being pushed into one of Jackson's Secret Ser
Dinosaurs. who constantly reminded me how many times | stepped on his
# leather paw and what he would do to me if it happened again. So | decid
take a firm stand. litle knowing that it was almost my last stand. as Jackson
noned the crowd to join hands and form a circle, thus lock’ ing me in the

four feet from the fire. This wasn't bad until the wind changed direction

turned out this was the high point of the day because from nine o'clock

never saw another candidate. We journeyed to Manchester, the head:

10 be a con

aters of all the candidates. Manchester looked more like Alaska than New

Hampshire. Ice and snow encrusted the entire town and closed the airport. After

fin

treking through the snow for seven hours we decided that we were not going B

anupne so we decided to head for home

uupponters look to. him for sup
:w Hampshive found him flounder

Bob Luckey UPS

Cover Photo by Ed Marussich

Two Irish Guys Sitting Around Writing

IMARCH 2, 1984"!

elham Is Plainly Perfect

‘elcome to the Singing

Welcome to the Gathering

Take time to take in what's happening
‘And what's happening will take to you."

Ruth Pelham spent two hours at Chapel
House Wednesday night, singing her original
folk songs with no accompaniment but her
guitar and a plain, sometimes shrill, but always
melodie voice,

Jim O'Sullivan
the

Pelham began with a song based
Iyries above, and before the end of that first
song, had taken forty people out of thei litle.
Isolated bubbles and cliques and into a world
‘of music and hope and belief that the common
person has a lot to love in his world.

The forly-odd people had gathered for
Chapel House's weekly Community Supper.
which this week had been prepared by JSC
and was opened wih: traditional Hebrew
prayers. Pelham took the little groups people
Were siting in and brought them together, for-
ming a room full of people singing loudly and
enjoying themselves,

A political activist in part through her music,
Pelham sang a short but fast paced song thal
she said was partly based on what she sees as
the questionable sincerity of President
Reagan. "I thought of Reagan Just gririning on
the television . . , and how he’s an actor."

we work all our lives to make money
Someone is fattening his tummy
On you and me
Who could it be
It’s Uncle Sam
What he giveth he taketh tomorrow
Smiling, conveying his sorrow
Personally live on TV
It's Uncle Sam

Pelham is the founder of a well known
Albany establishment, the Music Mobile,
Which she takes to area schools, and in the
summer to neighborhoods, and sings for
children, Through her work with the Music

for others, “These are concepts that are really
dear to me.” she said.

One of the songs she has written for
children is about an instrument which can be
made with an egg carton and some pebbles
Which sounds like a maracea, She calls it the
‘Shaker Song." and what is most memorable
about this simple song is the anecdote she told
after she sang it

Pelham said that she received a let
man she would not me

er froma
Until several months
later. In he described how her song had
helped imprisoned demonstrators in Califor
its up. He had learned the
song with a different tile. “Gravel in the Car
ton’ is how we boogied at the Santa Rita
prison after the Livemore Lab blockade In Ju
Iy" read the letter

“The contrast of litle street ruffians to peo:

Mobile, Pelham tries fo educate children on
values she believes in, concepts of work
recycling, sharing, cooperation, and respect

ple putting their lives an the line just delighted
me,” she said Wednesday night
One of the most incredible moments of the

|

Bob Sousa UPS
evening came when Pelham sang a song sim
ple in its words like almost all her songs. about
her maternal grandmother, who she told us
had emigrated from Europe, married David
Goldberg, and opened a store in Brooklyn in
the early 1900s,

“Wf there's a woman who | love in my life
Its my grandma Minnie
From Rumania she came.

iy mother’s mom
Goldberg is her
She's my grandma, my mother’s mom

then asked for audience member:
wid
The

Pelham
Yo tell about their grandmothers,
substitute thei
group was told of Rebecca
from Kiev, married in 1922.
fending a Manhattan store. Si
mother hailed from Pittsburgh, and had just
celebrated her th birthday. Her grand
daughter told us how she had been taught

specifics Into her songs.
who emigrated
and lived her life

neone’s grand:

en Jack Brown was not quite nine
teen, Immediately following a breakup
with his girlfriend which many
sychologists have since theorized left deep
motional scars on his psyche, he sat down in
‘ont of his Smith Corona one evening at just
ast twelve o'clock and said to himself, "Fuck
this Introspective, present tense, F.Scott Fit
gerald bullshit, let me try to develop my own
uyle, to branch out in new directions, to carve
niche In literary history for myself."
And, so saying, he went to work

Jim Lally

The attempt went well for a time, but when
own finally finished his first short story
yolished it and toned it up, and handed {t in to.
ls creative writing teacher for constructive
ritilsm, he was told, “Very good, Jack
leads a lot like F, Scott Fitzgerald.”
Psychologists now believe that it was at this
int that Brown's mind completely snapped.
Ithough there is no evidence to substantiate
ls theory other than Brown's sudden and
rutal murder of the professor, an anatomical
[paradox that was accomplished with erasers in
manner no coroner has yet been able to ex-
lain or duplicate, The deranged writer then
fet out, on the run, with a year’s supply of
lash tapes and typing paper.
Needless to say, every publisher in the
jountry was now clx-noring for his work, and
ne public, for its part, was reading his stories
fps voraciously as if they had had some literary
merit, and the popular concensus, especially
the gigantic World Trade Center-
ar blimp disaster (again, a puzzling
t accomplished solely by the use of
rd erasers and a half-chewed stick of

Doublemint), was that whatever publishing
the rights to the book he wrote

An Original Style

&

>

Zf

a

ote

when he was finally caught and put on death
row would have a volume rivaling the New
Testament in market value :

Obviously, Brown's run of luck couldn't
last, and for years he was impossible to ap:
prehend, a feat which probably did more
damage to his career than anything else that
ever occurred to him, even more than the fact
that he didn't know the difference between an
adjective and an adverb. and was constantly
Using one in place of the other.

He found solace. . .maybe even love, for a
lime. . in the arms of a Haitian immigrant
named Ingrid, and for a short while slipped off
the FBI's well-known, Most Dangerous
Loonies List. In fact, it wasn’t until three mon-
ths later, after Ingrid had died of some new
disease, that the well-beloved criminal return-
ed to the Most Wanted List with a stunning tri-
ple murder involving twa. week-old bananas

and a small jar of brown Kiwi shoe polish, ar
jumped onto the best-seller list with his magni-
fying philosophical epic. My Mother Was a
Hamster Salesman.

In early 1975. however, the FBI arrested
Brown outside the offices of Doubleday in
New York, where he was dropping off a new
novel. The insane auteur was charged with
seventeen separate counts of first degree
murder, and 457 counts of dangling par
ticiples. a crime that was, in the early seven-
ties, punishable by death,

‘Things looked grim for Brown,

On the other hand. book sales had doubl
ed

To his publishers, it seemed an equitable
wade,

——_

John Harold (Jack) Brown was executed

onjApril 13, 1975. The above story is totally

true: only the names have been changed. [i

how to drink and play poker by this lady, who
is now living in a Maine nursing home. “We
should sing loud so she can hear us," Pelham
told the group as she began the same verse us
ing the woman's name and birthplace

The audience was visibly moved as people
told of their grandmothers, one of whom
Worked till the last year of her life. When the
doctors told her she was dying of cancer, she
didn't stop her work and walt to die, but in
stead took the year off to take a cruise around
the world

One of the last people to speak told of a
grandmother who fled the Nazis with her six
daughters, and was on the second to last boat
out of Hungary before that country fell to the
Germans. The room was filled with silence as
the git! said she had never met her grand.
mother, but, at Pelham’s questioning, told of
the pictures she has of her grandmother

Pelham told of the time she spent last sum
mer at the Seneca Women’s Peace Camp out
side the Seneca Army Depot. A group of
women sat in a circle and sang. each one in
turn, telling of one of her grandmothers, After
the song the women drew pictures of their
grandmothers and lacked then to the gates of
the depot, only to watch as guards ripped the
papers olf

"We were doing nothing that
defiant . . . but when | saw the MP g
piece of paper that had my grandma's name
on it. and it was sacred to me, in that one act it
showed how far away we were” from the
beliefs of the MPs, she said.

‘One of the most magical moments of the
evening came when Pelham was singing a

for the

song she wrote based on conversations with
hhursing home residents. She began by asking
for finger snapping, which the audience
thusiastically responded to. When, hall
through the song and out of nowhere
asked for some toe-tapping, the
responded immediately without consciow
thinking about it, and then finally stared clap

ping along without any prompting. After tha
the began singing

Pelham having to ask, and she
delighted i. the additional voices and en

thusiasm
One of the

Pelham’s songs was a song about divorce that

she sang in a quiet, subdued voice as she told

of a child's difficul and

and then of the anguish of parents ithe sifu

most thought provoking. of

Your Mom and 1 are friends
No longer husband and wife

But we will love you always
Weil love you all our lives

And then we cried. cried, cried.”

ve seen so many kids walking around
feeling sad about it (divorce) . . . and I really
didn't know of any song that addressed that
concern.” Pelham said she had received many
letters from parents thanking her for the song
which told of the healing it facilitated

Petham's last song, entilled. “Il Am a
Woman,” was one she wrote while at the
Seneca Women's Camp. It was inspired. she
said. by a Chilean poet and singer named Vic
tor Jara who was killed by the junta. Jara died
singing one of this many songs about Chile
and the political situation there, while he was
being tortured by government troops

Personally, | ike The Who. Elton John, the
Pretenders, and | love Roman Holliday and
Billy Joel, But Pelham sang with an honesty
which was shattering. Her voice alone is not a
beautiful singing voice. and her guitar helped
basically in that it was a pleasant background
accompaniment, but when she added her sim
ple words to the voice and guitar she was fully
inspiring, If you don’t believe that everyday
People can win against the big guys. an hour
of her music will leave you confident that grass
Toots movements can win. but you'll also
know the pain and suffering that goes with the
territory.

Men and women alike sang Pelham’s last
song together, for as she explained, she tried
to use “person” or “human,” but felt that each
ol these ended with male suffixes: So instead
she used the word "woman,"

jlgm_a woman here on planet earth,
lave a song to sing, a song sung birth-to-
Hus 1g sung birth-t

No one, nobody. no powers that be,
Shall ever. ever, ever take my song away from
me.”

Joday | spoke with one of the Soviet
students, They only came over a cou-
[ple of days ago, enroute from Moscow}
k tles wrapped around their necks. |
for them because they stood out so
jously al the reception that was held in
prior. There was no question as to
Bi the bodies roving around the room
Jd to a Soviet. No one had to hunt
jown like wild rabbits under the dark
the woods.

mes Sale

stood out.

e shore of respectability and the,
ic daily grind, Most of them looked

school honor students with teenage
outing from their cheeks and chins.

paper reporters had a field day with
jought provoking questions as: “Just
jo you hope to gain In coming to the

iy dammit. | really needed a change of

Twanted to push away the clouds|
Buch the sky... Contemplate in a|
but nothing in particular.
in anew gust of wind from a place I've
jeven heard of
mity and live in obscurity
maybe not for good but at least for
ion. I'd have gone to the Black Sea if
asked me. They offered the U.S. In-
pI took it, You only live once." But I'm
pne of them said that. They just recited
al pleas for Peace and International
standing like an Intellectual recites
bin. Forget about improvisation.
Bollared one of them roaming around the
today — International Day. He was stil
Mf sult and tle;-and what's more, a tren-
la KGB. It was alittle rough going at
cause | asked him such stupid ques-
lion “Did you have a class yet today? How's
the fod so far . . . and living conditions?”
The Russians have come. The Russians}
have!come .. . and now that I've got one,

All :
elcome back, Woody. After making a
pair of miserable so-called comedies,
‘Stardust Memories and A Midsummer
Night's Sex Comedy, Woody Allen pulled off
4 sitcessful screen comeback this summer in
the technically fascinating Zelig. Zelig was an
iifefesting experiment, but was less a truly!
lunfy or engrossing motion picture than it was
a technical marvel. Now, with a little fanfare,
MraAllen has returned to do what he does

best} good, old-fashioned comedy.

Tan Spelling

Although Allen's latest entree, Broadway
Danny Rose, is more amusing and wistful than
tigtbusly funny, it stands up well with his
previous classics like Take The Money And
Ruin, and Sleeper.

Danny's story Is told rather uniquely. A

up of comedians are gathered around a|
table in New York's Carnegie Delicatessen to]
trade stories about their favorite bargain base-
ment talent agent.

first’

aaedote, When he begins to narrate the
sigry, the picture fades from the dell and shifts
lathe story itself. Except for occasional, early

ferruptions by the comedians to ask ques-

s ("This Is a funny story?"), the film re-

ins in flashback form.

the flashback takes us back in time to where’

stable with a decent chance to reach the big

. for his’ latest nightclub performance.

. @ rotund and fairly talented teen-dream|
ner from the fifties, has high hopes of
ing a belated comeback, a comeback}
ich depends on Danny's convincing Milton

le to come and hopefully enjoy Lou's act.

tle does enjoy Lou's work, the singer
ld then appear on Berle's nationally

vised show.

ter securing Berle's appearance, Broad-
Danny Rose really takes off, as we are in-

One of the men soon|
ares that he has the ultimate Danny Rose

luced to Tina, Lou's mistress,

who

what the hell do | do with him? Actually he
wasn't a Russian, but a Tartar. What luck! A
Tartar.

‘As he was answering my question about
Soviets tiling thelr private land out in the
country | saw him climb aboard a beautiful
Black Stallion, He took off his trenchcoat and
used It for a saddle. Then he screamed out
some hellishly spine-chilling Tartar war cries at
a throng of astonished students. Tables,
chairs, wine bottles, books, rucksacks, and
Long Island girls with real color coming to
thelr cheeks bounced across the floor as my
friend the Tartar made off for the other side of

ose-Col

manages to get Danny into all kinds of trouble,
which he spends a large portion of the film get-
ting out of,

But the heart of this bittersweet Rose Jles in
the trust and love between Danny and his
“family” of misfit clients, He loves them all,
and takes a deep, honest, and personal in-
terest in each of thelr careers. He believes in
his clientele as much as they believe in him.
And this is by no means your ordinary group:
included in the menagerie are a one-legged
tap dancer, a blind xylophonist, a couple
which makes balloon animals, and a ventrilo:
quist so awful that kids at birthday parties
heckle him for moving his lips

‘At Thankgiving, we witness a down-but-
ot-out Danny Rose happily serving T.V. din-
ners to his adopted brood. This scene Is not
only truly touching, but itis also the most poig-
nant moment in a film filled with emotional
scenes.

Allen, of course, directed and wrole Broad:
way Danny Rose. Also as usual,
cinematographer Gordon Willis has shot the
film in black and white, Unlike the earlier
Zelig, the technical aspects of Danny Rose are
not overwhelming, Instead, we are given an
honest and realistic story about a kind-hearted
man who deserves admiration rather than
sympathy or pity.

Allen, as an actor, breathes life into an
already well-developed character. The au-
dience cares about Danny Rose, and this is
Alllen’s first film in which his character has
yen an accessable one. We know that Danny
a loser, that he will never make it big, but the
Talent Agent Hall of Fame is not his goal; and
that {s why both Danny and the film are so
likeable, Neither attempts to be something itis
not.

Not to be neglecta in during all of this praise
for Allen are the performances of Nick Apollo
Forte as Lou and Mia Farrow as Tina. Forte's
assured acting style and natural charisma aid
In turning a potentially negative character into
cone which complements Allen perfectly,

Farrow plays the brassy love interest of both

the world, His pasty white face had transform-
ed itself into wild sage and he wore a long
black moustache of porcupine needles. He
and his steed dashed through the glass doors
dragging along one of those frail litle college
girls. . . Into the unknown, With his neckties
in one hand my Tartar urged his horse on-
ward, ended the day by rubbing his porcupine
quills against the soft down of Miss P's
cheeks . . . and just maybe he hung the set-
ing sun with the noose of that necktie

Tartar blood. It must be running around his
hody doing the work of Mexican hot sauce on
an innocuous bean and cheese burrito. 1 know

men admirably. With her eyes hidden behind
a large pair of sunglasses and her hair bleach-
ed blonde, no one would immediately
recognize that it was indeed Mia Farrow
leading real-life paramour Allen through the
woods of New Jersey in order to avoid two
Italian terrorists in tuxedos.

Broadway Danny Rose will disappoint no

I've got it inside of me, My grandparents came
from Russia and it's not for nothing that I've
got slanted eyes,

Tartar blood. Most of the time it has left me
stranded in the Caucasus of my mind, Strung
out in some outlying region galloping along on
te horse that Pechorin used to ride, Ahhhhh,
Kalinka Kalinka Kalinka maaya, There aren't
any Kalinkas around here; at least { haven't
seen any riding the school bus on cold winter
mornings, or squeezing themselves into the
security of school desks,

And Kalinkas just don't agonize over mak-
sng 100 grand a year — whetber they should
become lawyers or bank managers, | don't
think there are elther lawyers or bank
managers in the Caucasus, The place 's not
renowned for such things, They speak a dif-
ferent language there... many different
languages. They don't understand terms like
“in fact" and “without a doubt.” There is no
reed for such linguistic makeup in the
Caucasus, Life winds itself around a coll of
uncertainties and springs to life in a flash, The
sun may rise in a series of explosions, Shatis of
lighining might shoot thelr arrows Into the
morose humming of tedium, Rain thunders
down and washes away the petty v:hining of
modern day business as usual relationships.
Nineteen-eighty-four 1s beyond comprehen-
sion since the Caucasus isa place that time has
forgotten, Men in Tartar caps sill ride around
con horses, and horses in eternity stil gallop
‘across the earth, And the earth remains fertile,
{The alr filled with haunting music that has no
ineed to be written down. It lies Imprinted
upon the soul and yet it Is reinvented each
time anew . . . cha cha cha cha cha,

We sang Russian melodies today: rousing
songs, nasty licentious songs, and songs drip-
ping with sentimentality. We sang because It
was fun... because music Is one of the truly
rare forms of communication in which people
share themselves... because music
transcends the necktie world, | only wish my
Tartar friend could have been with us, but by
then he was probably racing across the ex-
panse of his own Caucasus pn the way to his

next class, Q

ored Glasses

jones however, some moviegoers may, and
\rightly s0, object to paying four or five dollars
to watch @ movie only eighty minutes long
jHowever, although Broadway Danny Rose Is
too short (an extended ending would have ad-
ded a great deal), an hour and twenty minutes
for vintage Allen is far superior to three
quarters of the crap that passes for entertain-
{ment today. i]

| that are (or were) plump and not]

GCG out to the nearest pond, or watch the highways well for prime|

squished frogs. Choose several
too desiccated to prepare for tl

his unique and delectable recipe,

Day One: Pummel frog with heel of old work-shoe or run it over with]
la lawnmower. Set the frog out to dry in the sun, Overnight, keep the|
frog in a warm place, i.e., over the oven, on a heater or, if you prefer,

in bed.
Day Two: Take frog and pummel

it beyond recognition, If you wish,

lat this point, accentuate the legs by straightening them out and
smashing them with a brick. This adds a little aesthetic touch (a star-like|
shape) to the finished piece de resistance. Set it out in the sun again, or

in the oven on low if it's raining outsi

element, it does not enjoy water. It
Day Three: Take frog and rub it wi
castor oil, Rub the oil in well, then pc

ide. (Now that the frog is out of it’s|
will not be amused.)

ith peanut, safflower, crankcase or|
ound frog some more until you at-

tain that desirable chewy consistency one associates with the best
'jerkies,’ Take the frog to school or to work as a snack, or serve it in bite-|
sized chunks as an hors-d’oeuvre. Never serve this dish sauced, for the}

full character, flavor, and appearanc:
‘dressing up.’
Enjoy!

e would bé masked by any kind o}

every Tues nite—Open stage for
anyone for 15 minutes; every Wed
nite—game night; Mar, 2; Pasay: Mar,
3: Do'a World Music Erisemble

The Chateau Lounge (465-9086)

‘Skinflints (436-8301)
Fri. 5-8 Fabulous Newports; Fri, 10:00.
The Jet

Palace Theatre

268 Lark (462-9148)
Mar. 6 Johnny Rabb, & The Rocking
Shadows; Mar. 7, Jeannie Smith & The
Hurricanes; Mar. 8 Cost, of Living

Halfmoon Cafe (436-0329)
Mar. 2 Rudy Gabrielson on Jazz plano;
Mar; 3 The Either Ore Band

Skyway (399-4922)
Mar, 2-3 Reckless Romance

Christopher's Pub (459-7757)
RPI Field House (783-1333)
ART

New York State Musenm
(474-5842)

‘The Humnities Experience: The Subject
is You.; Exhibit: The World of Gems

SUNYA Art Gallery (457-8390)
Operning March 9. Rural Vistas:
Rediscovery of the American Land-
scape, Prints from the 1920s and
1930s. Twentieth Century American
Watercolor: An exploration of the
mastery and variety of experession of
forty American artists. Richard
Stanklewicz Memorial: A small exhibi-
tion of sculpture and’ photographs in
honor of this distinguished American ar-
>

oe an y
so poae stem (aun

0

Seventeenth Century Dutch Majolica,
Hudson “River School Landscape
Painters, Paintings from the Institute's
Collection, People of the Great Peace:
At the Gallery: Black and White Plus. A
multimedia study of contrast. Opening
reception March 2, 5-7 p.m.

The Hyde Collection (792-1761)
Stelglitz? The Lake George Years,
photography exhibition, Glen Falls.

Schick Art Gallery (584-5000)
Skidmore College Faculty Exhibition;
Patterns in Art, Contemporary. March
8-April 15. Opening reception March 8,
7-9 pim

Half Moon Cafe (436-0329)

Guatemalan Clothing and Gabrics,
m/Brickman Gailery

rere 8322)

Anaglyphs. 30 _Dye-Transfer

photographs by Eric Elas, Until March

15.

Dietel Gallery. (274-4440)
Jeffrey Blgin. Drawings and Paintings
Until March 7.

THEATRE AND DANCE

SUNYA PAC (457-8606)

The Three Sisters. Anton Chekhov's
drama of romantic illusions, Mar. 1-3,
7-10, 8 p.m, Lab Theatre (PAC)

Faculty Showcase Concert. Music
of Beethoven, Mar. 2-3, 8 p.m. $3 &
$2.

dosee Vachon. Franco-American
Singer from Maine, Sponsored by
Franco-American and Quebec Heritage
Series, March 3. Free.

Annual Student Concerto Con-
cert. University Community Orchestra
March 6, 8 p.m. Free

Coliseum Theatre (785-3393)

Proctor's Theatre (382-1083)

BY K.FORD

Skidmore College (584-5000, ext.
344) .
Dance Concert. Mar. 1-3. Free.

ESIPA (473-3750)
Bobby Short in Concert. Coming Sun-
day March 11..2.p.m.

Albany Civic Theater (462-1297)
The Deadly Game. Mar, 1-4, 7-11.

Russell Sage College Theater
(465-9916)

Schenectady Civic Playh
(382-9051)

Sie -Foy C
Center Thester (783.2527)

Desire Under the Elms, March 1-3. 8
p.m,

Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
(465-4755)

Albany Institute of History & Art
(463-4478)

Capitol Chamber Artists: “An American
Beauty” Works by Piston, Copeland,
Ires, Corigllano, and Willey, Sun., Mar
4.3 p.m

FILMS

Cine 1-6 (459-8300)

1, Terms of Endearment 1:20, 3:50,
6:35, 9:30; 2, Broadway Danny Rose
2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; 3
Footloose 1:45, 4:20, 7:05, 9:50; 4
The Dresser 2:05, 4:30, 7:15, 9:15; 5.
Mortuary 3:30, 5:50, 7:30, 9:50; 6.
Never Cry Wolf 2:15, 4:30, 6:50, 9:05

RKO Fox Colon
(459-1020)

1. Blame It on Rio 7:15,
Silkwood 7:00, 9:45

1&2
9:30; 2
Spectrum Theatre (449-8995)

Experience Preferred But
seential

Not

UA Center 1 & 2 (459-2170)
1, Unfaithfully Yours 2:00, 7:20, 9:20:
2. Lassiter 2:00, 7:35, 9:40

FRESHMAN

1. Educating Rita 7:20, 9:30; 2. Yentl
200, 9:30" :

Mar. 2-4 Educating Rita 7:00 and
baat

<s'  .a Theatre (489-5431)
Tt © Rig Chill 7:15 and 9:00

University Cinemas (457-8390)

Fri. & Sat., 7:30 and 10:00 — LC 7
Trading Places; LC 18: An Officer and
a Gentleman

tional
tas -8390)
March 8 ‘Cocteau'’s Orpheus 7:30 &
10;00, LC 1. $1 w/tax card, $1.50
w/out

MISCELLANEOUS r

Intercultural Ultimate Interna-
tional Concert ‘84 March 3, 7:30 at
Page Hall.

(CLASS WARS! Thurs., March §.
8:00-9:30 in the Rat. Sponsored by the
Purple & Gold and:the Class Councils.

Der J Torless & Das
Faleche Gewicht presented by the
German Club. Match 3, 1 p.m: in LC 5
$2.50. w/tax vcard, $3100 w/out
(English Subtitles)

Day Trip to Atlantic City Playboy
Hotel. LSat., March 3. $25.00 Spon
sored by Pi Sigma Epsilon.

Korean Night Fri., March 2. BRU
Ballroom. 7-8 Dinner, 8-9: Perfor:
mance, 9:30-1:00 Party. $6. W/tax
card, $7 w/out. Info: call Ellen Yup
457-8984.

Guys and Dolls State Quad Cale
8:30 p.m, $2.50 w/tax card in advance
$3 at the door or w/out tax card.

March 2

Pre-St. Pat's Party Fri
9:00-1:00 Campus Center Ballroom
Music by the Irish Ill. $3 w/tax card

35.50 w/out

Jawbone Series March S

in Humanities Lounge. Jerry DiCar

and Gary McLouth

ont |
TWNK SVE GAG)
sported I
The Praguen

ALREADY,

: Peet

THE (DEMOCRAT)

ne
Tie ¢
Ay CHOKET

ALRIGHT, GANG
WHO bo we WANT
Foe PRESDENTI? \

Sea raat wane erica”

oHAAM

Fol Was dicappoiicd by is thrsuta the “Fight the

* rally last Tuesday. But my disappointment is not

Jed at thie organizers af:the rally, its'sfor those students
puietly choose,(o, be stepped on rather than fight.

Imy position, I work very hard to reach students on a

and personal level, trying to help them sce the

— 1984. This year — an

5, fighting the hike is only a portion of what's

¢ for stidents. “Put up or shut up" is not just a sharp

Fy. $1,350 oF $1,550 for tuition next year is not the only

Ball studenis becomie:a recognized atid whified voting bloc,
1 their programs remain on the chopping block in this
light budgets? Witness the cuts in financial aid pro-
: Programs for Disadvantaged Students, which has had
Jdget halved to $82.3 million; SEOG, NDSL, SSIG have
eliminated, totaling: more than $600 million; and
Security benefits for students has also been
ated, totaling more than $2 billion in lost aid,
fever disturbing these statistics may be, the stakes in
tion year extend beyond the budget. Less than fifteen
Jago, 18 year-olds gained the right to vote, Unfortunate-
ly (wo in five eighteen to twenty-one year-olds regularly
se that right, What have we seen in the last decade or
jo sooner did 18 year-olds gain the right to vote,than
w York State Legislature passed residency laws to pre-
your college community. No sooner
he draft end, than draft registration was implemented by
fress. No sooner did this draft registration begin, than
ity for finan-
id — the Solomon Amendment.
ians have gotten away with these actions, because
ts have faited to deliver their message. To deliver that
ge, there are three things that you must do: 1) you must
the issues; 2) you must learn who makes the decisions
federal and state legislators); 3) you must register 10
fand ‘then vote.

Eetabiahed in 1018
David LL. Laskin, Etfor in Chief
Patrica Mitchell, Managing Eaitor

Mark Geunar, Senior Edior
bung Er: Dean Bez, Dubie udgo, Mars Lo
Lisa Sain

18, Jim O'Sullv
‘Alla Cimbora, Kevin
1 Gersten, Adam Good:

ing, Megan Gray Taylor, John Thor
‘Weinstois, Mark Wingard, John
Ello Fitzgerald, Rina Young

Judy Tore, Business Manager
Lynn Saran, Associate Business Manager
Jane Hirsch, Rhonda Well Advertising Managers

Sties Manager

ae

[geroosition managers Jenny Block

PB rerising Sates: Davia Daniels, Rich Golden, Susan Klein, Stove Loibor.
Production: Lve Erickson, Dein Freaman,

frie Dor, Steven Markl

EBbse contents copyright © 1984 Albany Student Press Corporation, all
his reserved
The Albany Student Prass is published Tuesdays and Fridays between
Joust and June by the Albany Student Press Corporation,

policy does not necessary rellect ediotal
Matting address:
‘Albany Slucont Press, CC 329
"400 Washington Ave
‘Albany, NY 12222
(61) 457-8802733227360,

You can take step one this Sunday. This Sunday after-
noon, March 4th at 2:00 p.m,, NYPIRG is staging a large ral-
ly on the Podium. Students will be rallying in support of the”

student bill of rights, aimed at convin-
cing the New York State Legislature that students are United :
and their coneerns:must-be taken-seriously. :

Highlighting the rally will be speeches by: James Tierney,
the President of SASU; Melvin Lowe, Chairperson of USS;
Rich Schaffer, President of Student Association at SUNY
Albany; and Diana Klos, the Chairperson of NYPIRG.
Let's rally *round!..,

—Paul Herrick
Project Coordinator,
NYPIRG at SUNY Albany

The name game

To the Edit
This letter is in response to the Feb. 24 front-page article ap-
pearing in the ASP’s regarding the Heterosexual Alliance
dilemma, My arguement is straightforward and simple, How
can one say that the name ‘Heterosexual Alliance,'’ accor-
ding to Gloria DeSole ‘suggests an alliance of heterosexuals
against homosexuals" while at the same time the name “Gay
and Lesbian Alliance is not threatening to the heterosexual
community? Another question one must raise is in reference
to the new name given (o the Heterosexual Alliance, that be-
ing “‘the Social Alternative." The term alternative implies
that homosexuality is commonplace and that heterosexuality
is an alternative, This is clearly not the case. It is sad that the
first attempt at a group stressing heterosexual values was
greeted with such adversity. It is my opinion that homosex-
uality is an alternative to heterosexuality not vice versa. | am
not denying ones intrinsic right to be gay but I still feel, since
heterosexuality is commonplace, homosexuality becomes
“The Social Alternative.’ It is my steadfast conviction that
if the Heterosexual Alliance is forced to change their name so
should the Gay and Lesbian Alliance,

— Richard Lesman

Proud Americans

To'the Editor:

Like Mr. Grossman we are proud to be American citizens
and we are in complete agreement that our country is ““un-
matched" by any other nation. This nation is “‘unmatched,"”
however, not because of people like Mr. Grossman who
choose to apathetically accept their political environment as
itis, Rather, because there are people who do choose to exer-
cise the berties to change what they feel is unjust

Mr. Grossman, what is your definition of a left wing
socialist and communist sympathizer? It is apparent to us
that anyone who thinks differently than yourself towards
this country is indeed included in this group. The
“troublemakers and bleeding heart rabble rousers'” who
voice their opinions are the citizens who choose to accept the
realization that change is inevitable and necessary for a grow-
ing society and is, in fact, a basic concept in the overall
design of our government.

Mr. Grossman, perhaps in your definition of our nation's
bleeding heart troublemakers, you would include Thomas
Jefferson, He spoke out against tyranny and fought for the
freedom of his fellow man. Of course the president and
founder of the American Civil Liberties Uni
Baldwin, would fit your definition of a “left wing
troublemaker.” Who could forget that “rable rouser"’
Franklin Delano Roosevelt who conducted drastic social and
economic changes that led our country successfully out of the
Great Depression. In the 1950's and 60's, a man helped bring,
about one of the greatest changes we have ever witnessed in
this country, He is, of course, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
who lead his people's fight for their right to use the civil
liberties that even Mr, Grossman deems so important 10 our
society

Perhaps Mr, Grossman should realize those who
love this country are the ones who question the injustices that
the ignorant choose (0 ignore, As long as we afford the right
to question a wrong, we plan to stay

Sniping innuendoes

To the Editor:

Certain student leaders and homosexual activists: should
realize that the recent Homosexual Alliance/Social Alter
debate undermines respect for the aspirations of

Sniping a innuendoes in an
ame implies over-sensitivity and a lack of
fas well ay a failure to find constructive ways,

nativ
self-confidence
to spend time and energy
— Ben Gordon

Poor communication

To the Editor:

1 was exiremely troubled by the editorial entitled
“Fightinguthe Hike” printed in last Tuesday's ASP. The
editorial recorded correctly that a rally on the podium pro-
testing the proposed tuition increase had taken place, but
beyond that single fact, the distortion of both the intent and
purpose of Monday's demonstration was remarkable, An

#
unforgivable sin in newsreporting had been committed and
the results were evident.

+ The facts and purpotes behind the rally, as portrayed in
the editorial, seemed to be created out of thin air. Firstly, the
editorial‘alluded to the misconception that Monda
‘against the proposed tuition was some sort of culmination of
the student campaign against the proposal, as was last year’s
rally, Secondly, the purpose of the rally was misconstrued as
‘an attempt to sign up hundreds of students ‘‘to participate in
the lobby day planned for late in March’, Such a lobby day
hhas not been planned by any student organization, Finally,
the editorial complained that too few student lobbyists were
being utilized, pegging the total nurtiber of students involved
at an arbitrary figure of fifteen. The Student Association was
advised that ‘fifty students would carry alot more weight,””

It is important to explain the true purposes of Monday's
rally, in the context of the Student Association's campaign
against the proposed hikes, and (o.correct the gross errors in
Tuesday's editorial. The idea of a rally on the podium had
been conceived in one of my Student Action Committee
meetings. The goal was simply to increase student
Awawreness of the (uition issue and not to sign up students
for ‘the lobby day late ini March,’ There is no such lobby day
planned and no one is exactly sure just where the ASP receiv-
ed their information from,

The ‘Rally on the Podium’ was a concept that we, as a Stu-
dent Association, were not afraid to try, It was organizing
tactic that had not been attempted previously and no one
knew for sure what the results would be. I am the first to ad-
mit that the rally was not nearly as successful as we had
hoped. However, the positive net results were that an addi-
tional (wenty interested students have gotten involved in our
lobby efforts.

The entire thrust of this year's campaign centered upon
avoiding the mistakes of previous years. Last year, a major
rally was held that had a tremendous impact in the
legislature, However, the student's efforts peaked at that
point and subsequent lobbying visits were almost nonexis-
{ent, This year the goal is to put forth a consistent, determin-
ed, and long term lobbying effort utilizing a small, but ever
increasing core group of well informed student lobbyists.
Next Tuesday's lobby visits will represent the fifth week in a
row that the SUNYA Student Association has visited the
Legislature, Coupled with similar visits by other SUNY
schools across the state, on various days of the legislative ses-
sion, the perserverance of the student effort has had a
positive effect on Legislators. As of now the number of core
group lobbyists stands at fifty, not fifteen, We are still ex-
panding that number and hope to have at least one-hundred
well informed student lobbyists as we come into the home
stretch in the last weeks of March, 1 urge interested students
to get involved — a dangerous precedent of increases will be

set if this tuition hike is passed,

The problem of communication, or rather the lack therof,
between the ASP and the Student Association has already
been partially rectified. However, there is a great need to
assure both the students and the student press that the Stu-
dent Association's efforts to fight Governor Cuomo's
‘aitack upon our educational system neither began nor ended
with Monday's rally, The student leaders of SUNY at Albany
will continue to fight for and vigorously pursue the student's
interests, Hopefully, none of us will have to “reach into our
pockets’ to pay addtional tuition for decreases in faculty
and programs,

— Steven Gawley
Albany Student Association
Student Action Chair

Successful idea

To the Editor:
| would like to call attention to an event that took place
last weekend, Telethon '84 is very grateful to Steve Infield,
Mike Carmen, Rob Rogers and Tom Busby for their undying
efforts during TV Telethon, These four SUNY Seni
ed that they wanted to do something for Telethon
(or maybe in addition (02) getting up on stage at the end of
this month, Well their efforts amounted to $625 worth of
pledges from over 250 sponsors, Sure, some students, when
asked 10 get sponsors, said that they, oo, could watch TV
for 24 Hours, However, as one TV viewer so aptly put it,
they (urned it into a way (0 raise a large sum of money for
Telethon ‘84 and. in turn for Wildwood School for
developmentally disabled children and. the Capital Area
Speech Center. Channel 13 covered the event on the 6:00 and
11:00 p.m, news which added (0 the excitement for the TV
watchers and for those of us who were loyal supporters (you
know who you are!)

On behalf of the Telethon *84 staff 1 would like to thank
Rob, Mike and Steve for a phenomenal job! | would also like
to thank each of you, who pledged money for each hour that
they watched, Now the task at hand is collecting the ouistan
ding money. Most of you who pledged will be receiving an
envelope with your name and the amount that you owe on it,
For those fo you who do not receive an envelope, yours will
be waiting at the Telethon table in the Campus Center lobby,
J urge you to drop off your envelope at that table as soon as
possible. TV Telethon was an innovative and successful idea,
Let's complete it by collecting ev {that was pledged,

Leis do it for the kids!

— Linda Schwartz
Events Chairperson
"Telethon "4

Bee RT

SES

12 ALBANY STUDENT. PRESS (i FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984

SIFIED

. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Policy

iy at 9 PM for Friday
‘at3 PM for Tuesday

jasified ads are being accepted in the SA Contact Oltice during
business hours. Classified advertising must be paid in cash at
Of insertion, No checks will be accepted, Minimum charge for
g /s $25.00 per issue.
6 ads will be printed without a full name, address or phone number
{nthe Advertieing form, Credit may be extended, but NO refunds will be
Given. Editorial policy will not permit ads to be printed which contain
blatant profanity or those that are in poor taste, We reserve the right to
reject any material deemed unsuitable for publication,
If you have any questions or problems concerning Classified Advertis-
Ing, please fee! free to call or stop by the Business Offic

FOR SALE

{977 WW Camperbus, popioy
chen, seats/sieeps 's, excellent
condition, $4000. Call’ 584-3508,

T&A bedroom apariment. Lar
rn, on busine, Call
asus of 400-4784,
Wanted:
females to look for and
share off-campus house. Friend:
y to get along with,
Call Rich, Bruce at 457-7903

JOBS

‘Summer,
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, eer

TOP RATED. NYS COED
SLEEPAWAY CAMP Seeking:
Bunk counselors (19 and up),
Gramatics, Fencing, Sailing,
Windsurfing, Typist, Jewis!
Culture (singing, dance), Dance,
Gymnastics, Ceramics, Arts and
Gralts. Contact: Ron Kiein, Direc:
tor
Camp Kinder Ring
Now York, Nf. 10016
yw York, N
(212) 889-6800 Ext. 677
jfed In earning up 10
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Image
641. Latham, New York 12110.

TOR SAGO
NEW SPEAKERS -SAQ0'S
Stereo Monitor IX - 150 watts only $2.60 each!
Design Audio 6-2 100 watts Call Rick! 457-8899
Factory Clearance Sale

Bill 434-3023,

ind a hall foot Fisher
‘80 watl, 4-way, $50

Call
Stove 458-2856.

SERVICES

Alfordable wordprocessingltyp-
ing): papers, resumes, cover let-
ters, editing. Gall 489-8636, 9-8

NEW GREDIT cardl Nobody refus-

26 and 27 Cantal Ave,
‘pan Dally 10AM-SPM
General ‘of Used Books

@
Also Visa/Mastercard.
805-687-6000 Ext. C-3106

fofessional Typing Service, Ac-
curate, experienced. 18M Selec
tric Typewriter. Call 477-5964,
Heving trouble with STATISTICS?
Help available for MAT 108, MAT
961, ECO 920, PS! 210, MSI 220.
Reasonable fates. Call Bruce
457-7971,

HOUSING

Wanted: Female housemate to
share 4-bedroom apartment on
corner of Hamilton and Quall (bus-
ling) for Fall semester only,

Gall Sue, Sheryl, Stel at 457-7051

On
mentees the Black J
Seen Stallion

VY tmeatnes
$50 Eanty sino

CENTER 1&2
COLONIE REAR OF MACY'S 4

TOM SELLECK

LASSITER |

URGENT! Two females needed to

fil 2-bedroom apartment with lols

‘of character. Bedrooms complete

with lofts. Gall Dot at 482-0819 or

landlord at 438-1093, “100Imontn
nt,

Summer Jobs with children, New
York State co-ed camp counselors
(19 and up). General and
Specialists (positions for faculty
available, Contact: On campus,
Box 908 Colonial Quad.

PERSONALS

SATURDAY NIGHT -
PARTY A BUCKI!
DUTCH U-LOUNGE 9:00-2:00

Join Hands Join Hearts with

Telethon '84, ONLY 28 DAYS

AWAYI! T-shirts & Hats on sale in

CC everyday

CLASS WARS" IS LESS THAN A

WEEK AWAY! — Support Your
8 At The Competition On

Be there to welcome OPAL GARD:
NER (Dorothy Lyman) to Albany.
age

a
"LL BE PATIENT.

rue WHENEVER
YOU'RE READY.

LOVE FOREVER,

RICH

Don't miss Dorothy, aka
Opal Gardner) on March 7th at
Page Hall,
NOE -
When you least expect It - better
not laugh!
SATURDAY NIGHT -

PARTY FOR A BUCKI!
DUTCH U-LOUNGE 9:00-2:00

Mike Foote, Hung like Sha

Study: U.S. already runs
national service system

Washington, D.C.
;couiece press senvic Coming on
the heels of predictions that some
sort of military draft or national
service obligation will be imposed
‘on all students in the next few years,
a Washington’ group has released
the results of a three-year study sug-
‘gesting the U.S. already has a na-
tional service system.

“Our unique contribution to th
‘continuing debate on the subject,
said Mery! Maneker of the Youth
Policy Institute, a seven-year-old
‘agency of the Robert F. Kennedy
Memorial that monitors youth-
oriented federal programs and
reports, ‘tis our assertion that the
U.S. operates a de factor system of
national service already."”

The armed forces, Peace Corps,
VISTA and state-run conservation
corps involve some 1.2 million
young people, Maneker explained,

Mancker and co-authors
Jonathan Foley an Jeffrey Lee
Schwartz foresee revamping the
current system into a more com-
prehensive, albeit still voluntary,
system that would encompass all
youths.

In recent months, many public
figures — from Henry Kissinger 10
M.LT. head David Saxon — have
called for starting a national youth
service program under which all
I8-year-olds would have to devote

KEN BAYNE...
What a nice guy.
You know who
‘And now for something complete-
ly different: hold It - wait a minute,
Vean't read my writing, my own
writing!
BF.
Van,
It you're really Intereste, t'm in
the tower,
Brown Eyes
Have you auditioned for Telethon
‘a4 yet? Hurry ~ signup in Cc
1

~~ BEWARE OF THE”
FISH

Rich and Rion -

‘One term is enough!
SATURDAY NIGHT -

PARTY FOR A BUCKIt

UTCH U-LOUNGE 00
AFTERNOON AT THE BARS is

coming soon! Tickeis on sale
March 7.

Here's an apology, to tho 17th
18th & boing friends’ always.

ove,
Barney in Livingston

TOWNE 142

JOHN LITHGOW

FOOTLOOSE

[SHIRLEY Moet AINE DEBRA WINGER|
TERMS OF Yon.siAadAnna
ENDEARMENT |
HELLMAN
[WASHINGTON AVE. ALBANY 458 6322]

The Albany Medical Colles

tion in the students area of speci
of Philosophy or Master of Science,

Requirements

qualified students motivated toward teachi
the basic sciences. The Prog! prose stele so a 0
round in all aspects of modem scientific study with advanced instruc:
fi P ation leading to a degree of Doctor

ALBANY MEDICAL COLLEGE
GRADUATE STUDIES PROGRAM

Gracliate Studios Program is

‘and investigative careers in
student with a solid back

PAUL NEWMAN ROBBY ACNEOH
HARRY & SON
re i Bae Examination prepar
FANNY & ALEXANDE!

Fields Of Study

Applicants must have a Bachelors Degree from an accredited college or
university and should have taken courses in general and organic chemis-
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Graduate Studies Program are required to take the Graduate Record
and administered by the Educational Testing
Service, Box 592, Princeton, New Jersey 08540,

JAIONIGHT MABNESS
CENTER 1&2

Financial Aid

‘Anatomy, Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, Pathology,
Pharmacology and Toxicology, Physiology.

financial assistance can be arrany
TEDZPPELIN

THE SONG REMAINS

THE SAME.

HELLMAN
THE BLUES

BROTHERS College has also

A limited number of full tuition scholarships and stig

teaching assistantships and soot aaaeeities are available, Other
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the student applies and through the Medical College Office of Financial

Aid,

snds based on
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Located in Albany, New York, The Albany Medlical College tons founded

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(Office of Graduate Studies and Research, Albany Medical College of
Union University, 47 New Scotland Avenue, Albany, New York 12206,

SATURDAY NIGHT -
PARTY FOR A BUCK!
ICH U-LOUNGE 9:00
Telethon theme song auditions

March 11, 57pm. in CO 375, Sion
34

idy Tor

MASQUERADE BALL
March 10, CC Ballroom 9 p.m.1
a.m.

N.
Tm talling in deeper than | ever

thought | could. | love you!
Kabeba

RUGBY INTEREST MEETING
Wednesday, March 7, 7:30 p.m,
Colonial Quad U-Lounge.

Daytime Emmy Award Winning
Actress! Dorothy Lyman (Opa
Gardner, AMC) March 71h at Page
jal.

SATURDAY NIGHT-
PARTY FOR A BUCK!
DUTCH U-LOUNGE 9:00-2:00

ONCE A YEAR SPECIAL. Half
Brice hairstyles with SUNY 1.0.
Allen's 869-7817,

Fi. Lauderdale: Right behind the
Gandy Store! Only a few afficien-
cles and sultes left. From $85,

Hot tub, sun-deck, and bar-b-que.

Call for reservations. "THE
OCEAN WALK” (305) 487-7951,

is

two years of service to the couniry.

‘An 18-year-old could choose bet-
ween serving in the armed forces, as
a volunteer in hopitals or nursing
homes, in the Peace Corps, or with
other human services agencies,

Uniler the Saxon plan, for one,
18-year-olds would earn educa-
tional benefits in return for their
service.

The Youth Policy Institute,
however, found the skeleton for
such a system already exists,

*We first have to make
legislators recognize the existence of
our present system,"" Maneker said,

Even after the system is coor-
dinated and expanded, the YP1 sug-
gests it remain voluntary.

“We have to recognize budget
constraints," Mancker said, "A
compulsory system would cost
about $24 billion, so it can't be con:
sidered. Besides the public would be
less hostile to a voluntary system."

The public apparently is becom-
ing more hostile (o a return to a
Iraditional military draft, however

‘Only 30 percent of the people
favor a peacetime draft, an Oc
tober, 1983 survey by the University
of Chicago's National Opinion
Research Center found,

‘A year before, the center's poll
found 44 percent in favor of «
peacetime draft,

Nonetheless, Selective Service
spokesman Donald Eberly last
month predicted there probably will
be some sort of mandatory con
scription by 1990, although he
believes it will be for a national ser
vice system that includes civilian
alternatives.

The YPI study found ¢
jority of the nation’s youth would
choose military service even though
there would be civilian
alternatives.

SUNY Co-ops

“5
Tunes are totally student run, They
fare run by members who pay a
at the beginning of th
and then work one hot
week in exchange for discounts on
items in the store. It is also possible
working member by
paying a slightly larg

Because the two co-ops do in
have to pay for sal
Kropa pointed out that it is possible
to sell products at close to wholestle
which makes for lower prices for sll
customers.

Being a member is more tha
extra discounts explained Foo
‘op member Julie Feinberg,
way to meet people and it’s a lot of
fun,"

“Working in the co-op offers
business experience 100,"
Friedman,

Both co-ops are funded by SA

added

Which helps them stock the shelves. 2

“They provide the capital for us to Gig
purchase new albums," explained 1
Friedman. “In return all of our @

finances are handled through SA fg
and any profit that we make gocs 3

back 10 them, 4

Jody the UAS years

FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984 () ALBANY STUDENT PRESS. 43

Schools ponder question of program ownership

(COLLEGE PRESS senvicoLast fall, Dr, Wade
Driscoll simply decided to ‘‘ask questions"*
abouyt,,,how to market. software he'd
developed. for. his engineering courses. at
Youngstoyy: State University.

The . possibilities, were, intriguing: con:
tributing to engineering courses at other cam-
puses, improving his professional standing as
muchashifche'd written. a new textbook, and
even making money from it.

» Bul Spme, five months Jater,:the school is
laboring {9 resolve what has become a knotty
problem.

YSU, wants to solve it before it opens the
doors of its.new computer center soop. But
the head of the faculty union says the school
may be violating state law. Other faculty
members may be hoarding computer soft-
ware until some thing is decided. A YSU ad-
ministrator claims YSU owns it all, Another
says faculty members are being inadvertantly
punished for working on sofiware instead of
on books.

And Driscoll, somewhat wary of what may
come of it all, doesn't even want to talk
publically about his case now.

Although the head of the school's Soft-
ware Rights Committee said ‘there is no
acrimony" in the case so far, the confusion
and even the suspicion surrounding it are be-
ing played out on campuses nationwide as
staffers, teachers and students argue over
who owns the mountains of software now be-
ing written and generated in academia,

The problem is bound to spread,
moreover, as more schools complete

reements like the ones signed last week bet-
ween Apple Computer Co. and 24 colleges

“The problem is now getiing bigger,"
observed Sheldon Steinbach, a lawyer for the
American Council on Education,"*It's a
highly-sensitive issue because it
money,”

“This is a problem of more money and
larger profits,"" added Ken Magill of the Na
tional Education Association, the nation's
biggest faculty union.

Microcomputers’ invasion of campuses has

ated tremendous potential for software
sales,"* points out Church Thomas of

CAUSE (College and Unibersity Systems Ex-

change), a firm that helps campuses share ad-
ministrative software for mainframe com-

T micro package ranges from
$50 (0 $450," Thomas explained, “Take that
times 200,000 sales, and you see what" pro-
fits are available.

It's also evident what kinds of profits can
be missed, In the early sixties, for example,

mon. tue.

wed. thur.

two Dartmouth professors invented a new
computer language called BASIC, In the in
terest of scholarship, they,donated BASIC's
copyright to Dartmouth, which proceeded to :
sive it away free — again in the’ interest-of |
spreading knowledge’ =’ fo’ aigont™ who
wanted it,

‘The largesse was probably worth “‘millions
and millions of dollars to’ Dartmouth, had it

The two, professors recently setup an: in-
dependent, for-profit company to market an
“improved"” BASIC, They've kept the
copyright,

"T-don't think there’s any doubt the pro
fessors who write this course ware and soft
ware want the royalties they're entitled to,
said a Brown University faculty member who
asked (o remain anonymous,

“They don’t make much money being pro-
fessors,"" he added. “This is a big chance for
them, They want to make sure they get pro-
fessional recognition for their work, too. It
ought to count toward tenure,

College administrators see it differently,

Youngstown State “wants to foster the ex-
change of software ata nominal cost” bet-
ween schools, said Tom Doctor, head of
YSU's Computer Center.

‘Our position,"* Doctor said, is to keep the
cost of computer courseware down" by

a campus-by-campus basis,

“Right now the question is that the univer-
sity-lacks a definitive policy"? one way or the
other, sald Dr, Bernard Gillis, YSU's pro-

-vost.

~Tom Shipka, who heads the YSU chapter
of the NEA, said that leaves professors in
limbo because YSU's current non-definitive
policy’ conflicts with state law, which
prescribes that professor and college share

Federation of Teachers, the second-biggest
teachers’ union, confessed the AFT’s Robert
Nielson,

Some faculty members aren't’ waiting for
negotiations. "A lot of professors and stu-
dent are forming” profit-making corpore
tions’? to avoid the conflict altogether,
CAUSE's Thomas said,

At the University’ of low, professors
recently formed a private firm to market

royalties in most cases,

engintering software for ‘courses and
The problem is also new to the American ie}

manufacturing companies,

Microcomputers’ invasion of

campuses has ‘‘created
tremendous potential for
software sales.’’

—Church Thomas

swapping instead of buying,

If Driscoll, for instance, owned the rights

to the engineering courseware he developed &

— with considerable help from YSU's Com-
puter Center, Driscoll emphasises — YSU
couldn't secure other courseware from other
campuses "on a courteous exchange basis.

Exchanging, moreover, is being encourag-
ed by computer companies themselves.

The recent emergence of the “Apple
University Consortium’? included agreements
not only to buy some $60 million worth of
Apple computers, but to develop and share
software for the machines,

h university,'" said Apple
spokeswoman Linda Merrill, “is required to
develop new courseware to be shared with the
other consortium members."

ach school, however, has different rules
governing who gets to own and market the
courseware. Some schools have no rule:

get courseware from a Michigan pro:
fessor,"” hypothesised the Brown professor,
“and 1 change it just a tad to better fit my
class here. Now it's a different piece of soft-
ware. Does the Michigan professor get com:
pensated for his long hours of work? Do 1?

The NEA's Magill predicts the answer will

FOR INFO: CALL ROSS ABELOW

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41@ ALBANY STUDENT PRESS ‘: FRIDA ¥, MARCH 2, 1984

— seems meas: ax

UPSET BY A BREAK UP?
YOU"RE NOT ALONE.

We're starting a support group for
people going through the break up
ofa relationship...

A place where. pepe can express
their feelings and help themselves
through the hard times...

A place for letting go and moving on.

We will meet TUESDAYS at 7:45 pm

Call 457-7800 for information and
sign-up.

Sponsored by Middle Earth Crisis
and Counseling 'Center.

SA FUNDED

we

This Sunday
at the ASP

Advertising production workshop: Hay
6 p.m. given by Dean Betz on Prategeronallem

in advertising design.

News production workshop:
9 p.m. given by Editor-in-chief David Laskin on

conquering i of machines.
News Write Workshop: “Bh
7:30 p.m. in the newsroom given by Dean Betz,

a former ASP editor-in-chief and now a working
reporter, on “What goes in a news story and

why?” eed
\s (ee

Editorial Board Meeting:
6:30 p.m. all managers and editors must attend.

FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984 D0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS, 15.

American Marketing Assoc. in conjunction with the Miller Brewing Company present:

So
Sos SeckeanE C aecee

THE

MILLER BREWING COMPANY
PRESENTS...

‘A multi-image presentation of the marketing and

advertising strategies that have catapulted Miller
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to second place today. This entertaining program is free
“and open to the public.

SEEEEEESESESSETEAE

THE
MILLER MARKETING
STRATEGY

Tuesday March 6th, 8pm in LC 18
Product samples will be available

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1982 Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

This Weekend At

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DAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY

just getting rich... They're getting even.

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Some very funny business.

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COLLEGE NIGHT
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Friday & Saturday
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FRIDAY, MARCIL2. 1984

STUDENT PRESS

Santa Barbara, CA
entitur press seevichy The onee-heady: cam
pus boycott of Coors beer went a litile Matter
last week ay the University of California-
Santa Barbara's student government voted 10
let the beer back on campus,

Two weeks before that, Cal ong
Heach sudenis drapped thelr boycott of
Coors products,

Hut the boyeott is still on at some eam-
puses and in many communities, stresses
Duvid Stickler, who coordinates boycott ac
tivities trom the AFL-C1O's Los Angeles of-
fice. “Nothing's changed," he said, “All the
issues ar id as long as they
we'll continue the boycott.”

But San Diego State, UCLA and Cal-
Horkeley ate ihe only anes we know of sill
hoveoning usc sail Melons, a
Coors! spokesn Golden, Ca

The boycott began in 1968 as a University
‘of Colorado student protest against conse
vative. brewer Joseph Coors’ proposed
punishments of anti-war students and his &
forty to control the campus’ speaker pro-
gram, Coors was then a university regent.
The boycott broadened into a nation
labor issue when an AFL-CIO union lost a
strike ai Coors over alleged company
discrimination against. women and
minorities, and Coors’ insistence that all
employees tke lie detector tests.

But “from what we've seen, it was deter-
mined the boycott was no longer necessary,"”
asserted Scott Moors, the student politician
who engineered Santa Barbara’s repeal of the
boycott,

Meadows said schools are abandoning the

Softball Fever !

All The Excitement!
All The Competition!
All The Fun!

M Catch It!

Meeting ( All Leagues )
March 12

Check AMIA Board
For Details

=

Greeley, CO
(COLLEGE PRESS seavice) Darryl Miller, head of
the Black Student Union at the University of
Northern Colorado, was preparing to leave
to address UNC's student government on
January 11th when the phone rang.
A distorted voice warned Miller that, if he
attended the meeting, ‘We'll blow you nig
gers away."

~“GAPTAIN’S MEETINGS
COMING SOON

SOFTBALL - MARCH 12
WATCH FOR DETAILS

rt

Get your teams ready
for a great season!
SA Funded

W I R A Another BSU officer, the student
eke e eo
dent government secretary all received similar
calls on the same day.
although “we had a bodyguard there to
watch us, and they searched the place before
series that has frightened many black
- Coed Softball . students on campus, attracted the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, and last week pro-
° ft ll mpted UNC to restate iis commitments to
- Women’s Softbal Mena a mere tock Ginteat
At about the same time UNC ad-
- Women’s Soccer fulten! 1 a(Tmave ection, ay‘Alsbann
{don't hire enough black people.
Just a month before, Vanderbilt's student
ty Co press its affirmative jon plans more
While the three schools’ efforts to revive
“Now there's not much vigor on the
ROSTERS AVAILABLE IN of the Justice Dey 1 in enforcing vivil
INTRAMURAL OFFICE IN THE GYM University and president of the
Shelton contends some white people sce af.
and even a rise in harassment of black
“I's a growing concern of blacks and
minorities in predominantly white schools,""

Newspaper, the campus police and the stu-
We got there," Miller recalled.

hiring more black faculty members and
legislator asked the. U.S. depariment of
government resolved 10 pressure the universi-
atfirmative action may not be a trend’ yer

forcement of civil rights laws,

College Students,

recruit and hire black people on campuses
he said.

Colleges abandon Coors boycott

LD,

boyeott because we've been able 10 present
our side to students.
“We've found that at a lot of schools, no
ne really knew why they were boycotting
Uus,"" he said, "All the information they got
was from anti-Coors organizations."”

Since 1979, Coors has been sending of
ficials to boycotting campuses, flying student
politicians 10 the Golden brewery for tours,
‘and paying to stage campus-wide events at
schools that agree to drop their boycotts

‘At Santa Barbara, Meadows ‘has per
sonally come out and said ‘thanks a lot,"
Moors said. The company is now “sponsor
ing some comedy nights and things down at
the student pub.'*

“They wine and dine them and feed them a
bunch of bullshit,"” Sickler charged. “Coors
has campus reps lobby to get_money ac
cepted'” by the schools.

The tactic seems to work. Asked if
Meadows’ estimate that only three college
maintain boycotts, Sickler said, "There
could be more. I'm not sure."

Campus racial insults lead to
affirmative action commitments

At Southern Cal, for example, black stu
dent groups in December acctised university
police of arassing black students by frequent
ly stopping them on the street and inter
rogating them.

AL the same time, a USC committee releas
ed a report the'college and various
black student services offices of failing to in.
tegrate black students into campus activities,
an encouraging “a sense of alienation and
isolation.”

It recommended redoubling USC's aftir
mative action efforts.

In October, Virginia Prof, Vivian Gordon
said in a campus speech that black students
on white campuses, often feeling ill-at
often react to attacks on affirmative actio
they used to react to the word ““nigger’ or a
KKK on the door.””

They've experienced that, too, recently

At Northern Colorado, a cross way found
outside the Black Student Union offices a
year ago, During the summer, three white
males parked outside the house of UNC's
financial aid director, who is black, shouted
racial slurs and threw firecrackers at her

Three men were arrested, and are whedul
ed 10 go on trial this month.

But in the cross incident, “the university
did not do anything,” Miller complained
two students who later admitted planting
the KKK symbol did publicly apologize, but
“they were neither suspended nor expelled."

One, infact, subsequently was elected
president of UNC's Tau Kappa Epsilon

UNC \Vice-President John Burke ayseris
the university did discipline the offenders,
adding the punishments were ‘ta confidential
matter."

“1 made a mit
Scott Stephens,

esidemt

Ike," said TRE Pr
and I paid for it."*

While stressing UNC takes such matters
seriously, Burke conceded that “one of the
serious problems faced by (black) students on
campus is they feel isolated because they ‘re
so few in number.”

OF the 10,000 students at UNC, Miller said
158 are black, There are only three black
members of UNC's $25-person faculty
‘Our goal," Burke said, “is to increase
the presence of black students, faculty and
administrators so that feeling of isolation is
climinated.”"

Indecd, achieving the safery of numbers
seems to be a goal of all the newly-restated
affirmative action programs.

Tape blames Caseres

<19
again but to compete in the Division
H tournament.

Prior (o this season, Demeo and
‘Averill had a big meeting where cer-
tain goals were set,

““DeMeo said he thought I could
win the title,"” recalled Averill."
didn't believe 1 could do it especial-
ly after | placed seventh two years
in a row. But all season he kept in-
stilling in me that | could do it,"’-

“Even before the tournament 1
fidn't believe it," continued the
[Dane junior."* Then when I reached
fhe finals he said to me he really
Rhought 1 could beat him. And he
jold me 10 go out there and do it.
t's great having someone believing
‘ou can win."

Averill knows firsthand why
DeMco was voted AAU coach of
he year, an honor given to the best
coach in all styles of wrestling,
*He’s the best coach in the coun
ry,"* said Averill. He's a great
motivator. He knows every aspect

of the sport."*

DeMco's wrestlers have earned
11 All-American spots in his five
year reign. To make that statistic
even more phenomenal, there were
only six All-Americans in the 30
years preceding DeMeo,

The Albany State coach hardly
had time to celebrate Averill’s
championship or the Danes overall
ninth place finish, the second best
in Albany State history. He board-
ed a plane yesterday for Norway to
join three-time All-American Andy
Seras and the Adirondack wrestling
club, who are competing in Euro-
pean tournaments in preparation
for the Olympic trials.
heldon, who earned All-
honors with his sixth
h, is also gunning for an
Olympic berth, He flew to Norway
on Wednesday, Next weekend the
bunch treks to Hungary.

For Averill, it is time for rest and
recuperation, He's earned it,

Albany State Wrestling Coach Joe DeMeo saw proof that Trenton Stat
tionally threw Albany's Dave Averill to the mat

tonight

vs.

Alfred;
Nazareth 8:00

Women’s ECAC playoff action
in University Gym.
First game jis 6:00- Oneonta
Albany vs.

Jv Danes lose

Out of nowhere, Chapman leaped fo save the
ball under his basket and threw it to a startled
Scott Neuman.

Down by a basket with 22 seconds lef, the
Danes had a chance to tie. The ball was
worked to Neuman in the corner, who threw
a picture-perfect pass to a cutting Fabozzi,
who scored to pull Albany even with HVCC.

“Hudson Valley attacked, Newman in the
corner,” said Fabozzi. “They were guarding
me just off the key when 1 cut to the basket
Scoit"s pass was perfect."*

Only nine seconds remained when Fabozzi
canned his shot. HVCC inbounded the ball
and threw it downcourt within seconds, The
ball was released from Lake's hands 18 fee
from the basket as the horn sounded,

Game,

ileisisdincnartcnae ack ise sesasc

Wed,

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ra
(also kaart, ab ~

March 7 (rainesemiy
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tin Cinpus

center

Orlando Cageres inten:

We've won our. share Of, games. liké
said Freeze Storey. '*In the beginning,
of the season, we beat Schenectady at the
buzzer. Justagtweekend, we beat Union the
same wily, Aufie know how it feels to lose

The Danes! inability 10 work as a team in
the first half and in the opening minutes of
the second half hurt them::Chapman had to
get the ball inside, and not 20 fect away from
the basket. When Chapman didn't see the
ball, the team suffered for it. In the second
half, Chapman notched 14 of his game-high
20 points, grabbed 10 of his game-high 11 re-
bounds, and blocked three of his four rejec-
tions. That's what happens when the Dane
offense

RIM SHOTS: The loss left the Danes one
short of 1974's junior varsity tea
of IB2.

18 Sports ALBANY.STUDENT PRESS FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1984

_ Albany women gymnasts fifth in States;

Armstrong and Bailey top performers

By John.F. Parker

STAFE WRITER:

For a Division III school like
Albany State, the New York State
women's gymnastics champion-
ships area fun place to be, But once
the competition begins, the fun
usually ends, very abruptly, This
was the story on Saturday as the
fouth-seeded Great Danes fared
almost as well as expected by
finishing fifth in a field of eight
powerhouse schools.

Long-standing. state champion
Cornell University remained in the
top spot, followed closely by host
Ithaca College and Cortland State.
The Danes compiled a total score of
153.2, a score which, by right,
could have been higher and could
have placed Albany higher in the
standin

Saturday, the Danes’ stand-out
had to be sophomore Brenda Arm-
strong. She won Albany's all-
uround competition by beating her
teammates in three of the day's four
events and registering @ score of
31.5 points.

The only event
didn’t record the teai
was in the floor exe
was won by Karen Bailey with an
8,05. Nora Bellantoni did a fine job
by scoring a 7.85 in the event,

Other fine performances on the
day were registered by Virginia
Lockman in the vault, Anne
Thamayett on the uneven pacatlel
bars, and Jennifer Cleary on the
balance beam.

The Great Danes’ meet at Keene
State was ‘cancelled on Tuesday,
due to the inclement weather, and The Albany State women gymnast took fifth place in t
rescheduled for Thursday State Championships last Saturday,
evening, o

Great Dane Sports
this week:

(buny vs. Nazareth

ial University Gym

Women's Track- Eastern Conference Championships
Friday and Saturday at Bates College,
Maine

Men's Swimming- SUNYACs
Today, tomorrow and Sunday at Oswego

Danes lose to Binghamton

“Back Page
ton only managed (0 hit six out of 21 shois! This offensive inepritude leit
10 the hatflime Score of 16-16

The Danes had an especially rough 1
opening minutes. Binghamton took advantage of this as they jumped out
to a 10-2 lead, Albany’s defense, showing no ill effects from the layort,
then held the Colonials scoreless for eight minutes as they tied the score a
10.

Crouitier then came right off of the bench to can a jump shot which
gave the Danes their first lead of the game, 12-10 with 8:58 left in the

ne On the offensive end in the

im this year,"*said Croutier. “They deserve to go.”

‘A: Croutier has hit 64 out of his lust 68 second half foul shots

for a phenomenal 94%. ..The Colonials outrebounded the Danes
48-34, . .The loss dropped the Danes’ final season record (o 14-11.

1808 LUCKEY UPS.
ihe New York

Open Seven Days A Week
Phone 434-6854

Corner of Clinton and Quail
Home of Pelican Power
Attitude Adjustment Hour

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SSIS eN Wines

Trenton State's Orlando Caseres throws
down Dave Averill as the referees hand
‘motion him to stop. Averill hit his head

and could not

contin

MATTHEW 4. MENDELSON PIPE DREAM

MARCH 2, 1984 0 ALBANY STUDEN TERED Sports.19

Videotape shows Averill dropped intentionally

By Marc Berman
ASSOCIATE SPORT EDITOR

Albany State wrestling coach Joe DeMco
kept rerunning the same videotape over and
‘over at his Schenectady home on Tuesday
night.

Each time the five-second segment was
flashed on the screen, the images revealed the
same conclusion; NCAA 126-pound cham-
pion Dave Averill did not slip out of the
grasp of Trenton State's Orlando Caseres in
last Saturday night's finals of the NCAA
Tournament.

On the videotape, it was clear that Caseres
had intentionally slammed the Dane three-
time All-American to the mat, thus wiping
out whatever still existed of the controversy
over the decision to award Averill the Na-
tional Championship by disqualification,

It has been six days since ‘“i"” happened.
On that memorable Saturday night in the
Binghamton gym, Caseres, up 9-5 with a half
@ minute remaining in the match, hoisted

fireman's carry and
dropped the Dane wrestler on his head
Averill slipped into unconsciousness for four
seconds then remained in a semiconscious
state for over 10 minutes as he laid on the mat
surrounded by medical personnel.

In accordance 10 Rule 7 Secion 8, Averill
was named the 126-pound NCAA’ Cham-
pion, The rule states that if'a contestant is in-
jured by an illegal move and can't continue,
the match shall be defaulted the the injured
wrestler.

There was a large amount of controversy
afier the decision was announced, Both
Caseres and Trenton State's coach Dave
Ieenhower claimed Averill had slipped off the
shoulders of Orlando with the latter off

wee and with no control, Even DeMco
originally thought the move was uninte
tional; but after the viewing of the videotape,
the Dane coach was singing a different tune,

“He (Caseres) was in total control,"* said
Demeo. “He never lost his balance, He
tionally threw Daye to the mat, Whether he
intended 10 spike hiy head against the mat
well that's not for me to infer."

Averill,, who is. still recovering trom bis
concussion, would not say. outright “if he
thought Caseres had intended 10 hurt him

but he did imply Caseres was a dirty wrestler
and he spoke, with bitterness in his voice,

“In the second period he twisted my arm
all the way back and he got a penalty point
for it,"” said the junior from Shenendahowa,
“in the third period he lifted me up and just
hammered me. 1 don't know why he did it,
Maybe he was trying to show off to the
crowd (Trenton State rooting section), I'm
‘not going to say he did it nient to hurt
me, only Orlando knows that.’

Averill was asked if he feels like the Na-
tional Champion, He responded, ‘1 don't
really feel like 1 am, Everyone keeps telling
me that I should feel like 1am and I deserved

Well, 1 know for one thing, Caseres
doesn't deserve

From the time Averill’s head made contact
with the mat to the time he was lying in the
hospital was all a blur to him, He does
cemember his first emotion when he realized
he was national champion,

“+L wasn't even thinking about it,"’ said
Averill,"” Then when I found out, I felt terri-
ble. I didn't want to win like that,"”

What has happened 10 Averill in the past
week hasn't really hit him yet. It's hard for
him (0 comprehend that he's the first Albany
State National title holder in 17 years and on-
ly the second athlete in Albany State history
‘0 win two national championships.

He feels mentally drained from the Tour-
nament and physically, he's still feeling the
effects of the concussion, He won't be fit
enough 10 compete in the NCAA Division I
Championships at the Meadowland Complex
which he automatically qualifies for, Caseres
will be going as a wildcard,

Averill admitied he “wrestled the best in
his life and he peaked at the right time" in
reaching the finals of the tournament. He
also hopes someday 1o wrestle Caseres again,
a wish most improbable considering the Tren-
ton State senior is graduating,

“He's really tough but L thought 1 wrestled
him close," said Averill.""The score was only
9-5 and I just needed w takedown, | know |
could turn him if 1 got him down, It’s a
shame he had to do what he did,"

Averill has already set his. goals. for. next
season; that is, not only to win @ national title

17

JV Danes’ comeback falls short against HVCC

By, Dean chang

1 could have been the perfect ending to a
memorable seasgn, but it}was not meant 10
be. Alier staging a furious rally to tie the
game up, the Albany State men's ju
sity basketball team was defeated Wednesday
night by a buzzer-beating shot taken by Hud
son Valley Community College's Rick Lake

“Thad a sinking feeling that the shot was
going in,” said’Head Coach Jim Boland. tn
the last 20 seconds, the crowd's emotions
went from elation to dejection. **That game
was ours,"" said John Gore. ‘1 k
the game went (0 overtime, we would”
them,"*

The 67-65 loss,put the Danes’ final record
a 17-3

The Danes came out cold in the second
half and watched HVCC turn a six-point
halftime lead into a 15-point bulge in a span
of only four minutes.

Afier an Albany timeout, the Danes
outscored HVCC 12-2 to narrow the gap 10
five, 48-43, “That's the best we've worked
the ball all season,” said Boland. ‘We kept
Betting the shots we wanted. Our perimeter
players reversed the ball well and were able to
et the ball inside."”

With the crowd behind them, the Danes
didn’t stop there, The team whittled HVCC’s
Jead down to one as Duane Corley faked his
defender up in the air to get the casy
10-footer. Throughout this comeback the
Danes put constant pressure on defense.
Albany's full-court trap led to five Hudson
Valley turnovers, four of them leading to
Dane baskets. This defensive maneuver is a
bit of a gamble, as offensive teams can get
lay-ups if they break the press effectively.
Against HVC, the gamble paid off,

“When we were down by 15, we knew that
We would have to take risks,"” said Boland,
‘As it turned out, our press really bothered
them."*

Three players who played: big roles in the
full-court press were Kevin Mann, Gore and:
Mick Fabozzi, Said Fabozzi, ‘1 was trying to
get in between the dribbler and any
man, Basically, 1 played the passing lane to
Iry for the steal or a deflection, We just hustt
ed our butts off."

After turnover,
Gore hit a soft 10-footer to put the Danes up

another press-induced

for the first time in that half, ‘The lead was,
short-lived however, as Hudson Valley came
downcourt and converted on a three-point
play. “That seemed to get our guys down,"
said Boland, We fought back 10 take the
lead and then that guy throws up a pra
and makes it." HVCC then reeled off five
consecutive points (all from the fine) to take a
commanding seven-point lead with less than
four minutes to play

The teams traded baskets until there were
two minutes left in the ¢
throws gave Hudson Vi
mountalbe six-point but the Danes
never quit. Showing fierce determination,
Rich Chapman followed up an Albany
misfire with his own miss, Chapman snared
the rebound and went right back up to make
it a four-point spread.

The Danes went back to the press, but
HVCC was able to break it easily, Hudson
Valley moved the ball inside, only to have
their shot rejected by Chapman, HCC
recovered the rebound, but Gore blocked the
ensuing shot and Albany had the ball back
with 1:08 left to play.

The Dane offense was remarkably patient
under the circumstances; the ball was worked
around until Corley threw a clean pass to
Fabozzi for the open 17-footer, Perfect.

‘Momentum was clearly on the Danes' side,
The pressure defense intimidated Hudson
Valley into throwing a poor pass which was
deflected by one of the Danes, Once again,
Chapman's fighting colors shone through.

7

ED MARUBSICH UPS.

‘Scott Neuman contests a shot in an earlier game against Union as Curtis Oliver

(24) watcher

MARCH 2, 1984

‘Women cagers host Nazareth in ECAC opener

By Mark Wilgard

STAFF WRITER,

History will be made (onight
when the Albany State women’s
basketball team tips off against
Nazareth College at University
Gym,

For the first time in the six year
existence of the team, Albany will
be competing in a post-season tour-
nament, The Danes are the hosts of
the tournament and will play
Nazareth at 8 p.m,, while Onconta
and Alfred square off at 6 p.m. in
the first. round of the ECAC
tourney. The championship game is
slated for 2 p.m, tomorrow.

‘After last Tuesday's 72-58 defeat
to Onconta in the SUNYAC
playoffs, it looked as though the
season had come to an end for the
Danes, It wasn't until, Monday
afternoon that Albany Head Coach
Mari Warner received word that her
team would be hosting the jure
ment, ‘We're psyched to play,
id Warner. “Hopefully, we'll go
right alter them (Nazareth).’

The Danes will have their hands
full with Nazareth, The Golden
Flyers have beaten the University of
Rochester, a team that will be com
peting in the NCAA playoffs.
Nazareth has a big height advantage
over Albany, but the Danes’ main
asset might offset that advantage
speed. Albany will try 10 utilize that
quickness by attempting to run
Nazareth all over the court

According 10 Warner, Albany
will utilize a full court press for
much of the game, ‘We need to get
the steals in order to play our runn-

this year

Kim Koselak looks to dish off the bail in a game earlier

ing ype of game," she said. The
Danes will have to watch out for
Denise Hickey, a strong wing player
who Is one of the top scorers on the
Golden Flyers

Rainny Lesane and Ronnie Pat-
terson are the big weapons for the
women cagers, Lesane leads the
team with 14,4 points per game (47
percent from the floor), Patterson
Is second with a 12.1 average.
Albany must get point production
from. their wing players, a
troublesome spot of the team for
much of the year,

“We just, have to hope for good
all-around scoring,"* commented
Warner, ‘We'll also need scoring
from our wing players and we have
to hit a couple of free throws.”

The foul line has been a problem
for Albany during the season, Pat-
terson is shooting 64 percent from
the line to lead the team. If the
Danes have any hope of winning
this game, they must convert from
the charity line,

‘Albany has had a long layoff
‘coming into tonight's game, Never-
theless, you can expect the Danes to
be ready for Nazareth. “When {
saw the looks on the girls’ faces, 1
knew they would be ready for the
tournament," said Warner,

If the Danes can get by the
Golden Flyers, a possible match-up
with Oneonta looms for. the cham-
pionship game, In two previous
meetings this year, it was the Red
Dragons coming out on top.
Onconta topped Albany just last
week to knock them out of the

SUNYAC playoffs. Pethaps the
third time will prove to be the
charm for the Great Danes.

By Keith Marder

ISSOCIATE SPORTS. EDITOR

The Albany State Gi

ft

are riding & Dane Co-captain Wilson Thom:

streak,

MATTHEW 3: wENDELS
takes the ball inside as Bingham.
modest (worgame home winning ton's Derek Pankay looks for the block.

Binghamton

‘at Danes saw their season come to an end as they
Just 1 the Binghamton Colonials 46-44 in the preliminary round of the
ECAC Upstate New York basketball tournament Wednesday evening.
The ouicome of the game was not decided until Albany point guard Dan
Croutier hit the side of the backboard on_a short baseline shot with four

HN PIPE DREAM

Danes lose to Binghamton in ECACs, 46-44

"ED MARUSSICH UPS,

seconds left in the game and Binghamton ahead by one point
“1 was very surprised they came out in a man-to-man,” said Albany
Head Coach Dick Sauers recalling the last play. “On every other out of

bounds play they came out in a zone,

Albany was in control most of the second half of

poorly played offen:

sive struggle while building a lead as large as eight points, With 13:48 re-

maining in the game Doug Kilmer hit
wor of the Danes.

nake the score 26-18 in

The Colonials slowly but surely closed the gap as they scored eight of

th

next 10 points. This closed the Danes’ lead to two, 28-26, with 11:47
left, The game was eventually tied at 30 with 9:32 to go in the

Both (cams virtually traded baskeis for the next three minutes. After

two foul shots by Croutier Albany took a 34-33 lead,
by scoring four out of the Danes’ next five

Croutier then went on a tei

points, giving Albany a 39-35 lead with 3:43 left in the contest. Including

the two foul shots and an earlier 12 foot jump shot Crow

eight out of the Danes! last nine points.
‘Once again Binghamton re

center Marty Young stol

court for a dunk,

er had scored

ed 10 give up and with 3:04 left 6'6""
an errant Dane pass and drove the length of the

With 59 seconds left Albany co-captain Dave Adam took a six foot
baseline jump shot which took a shooter's bounce, The shot hit the rim
twice before falling through. That shot gave the Danes a 44-43 lead.
Binghamton then (ook the ball down court and set up a play for forward
Derek Pankey. The Albany defense collapsed on Binghamton's Icading
scorer and Albany freshman Adam Ursprung came away with his fifth
foul of the game. Pankey missed the front end of the one-and-one.
However, Mark Wright came up with one of his many second half offen-

sive rebounds,

“He was going after the ball and we weren't
tot more big rebounds than us and that hurt us.

said Sauers,

They gota

Wright missed his attempt but Pankey then came up with one of his 17
rebounds and hit the shot to give Binghamton the 45-44 lead with 29

seconds left,

The Danes then called time out and set up their final play which had

many options, one of which was the Croutier shot.

“Thad to alter the shot because Pankey was coming over," said
Croutier. ‘1 was too close to the baseline and | was Ieaning."*

When
id, *Yeah— hit it.”

he

\uestioned if he wanted 10 do anything different on the last shot

The first half proved that practice does make perfect as both teams
were showing the effects of a five day layoff sirice their last games on
February 21. Sauers and Binghamton Head Coach Dave Archer each put
practice on hold until they got word from the ECAC concerning their in-

vitat

A 10 the tournament last Monday,

Albany shot a paliry 8-28 from the field in the first half and Bingham-

18>

VOLUME LXXI1

PUBLISHED AT THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY BY THE ALBANY. STUDENT PRESS CORPORATION.

Tuesday

March 6, 1984

NUMBER 10

—

Supreme Court Ruling on
college aid delivers
blow to women’s rights

By Lisa Strain
Coram rise ato
Ina blow 10 women’s rights groups, the
Tuesday: that the federal government may: not cul off all aid to a col-
fege because of illegal sex discrimination in a specific program
The 63 vote was a victory: for the Reagan administration but was
viewed by many’ women's rights groups as a major seiback,
i tremendous setback," said Executive Director of the Project
on the Status and Education of Women Bernice Sandler. “Women
will have no protection,..women will be going against discrimination
for almost all of their (college) experiences,"* Sandler added
Sandler dectared that the ruling is a reversal of more than a decade
of federal commitment, Ht covers all schools that get (federal) student
finane aid," she said. She added that the law bars discrimination
only in those programs involving federal scholoarship aid
She noted that, “only about 4 percent of federal funds are earmark-
ced for special programs, ‘The rest are in the form of research grants
and other programs,"* Sander explained that the result of all this is
that, “institutions can discriminate in other programs,"*
“What we are seen lic dismaniting of programs of the
J cconomie justice," said spokesman for
the Center for Women in Government Fred Padula. “Anytime
something happens that tends to stop the proper intent of a policy or
program it means a lot of lost time to reverse it.” he explained
The court decision gave a narrow interpretation to Tithe IX ol a 1972
Jeral law banning sexual diserimin
that receive Financial
diserimins

upreme Court ruled last

is a systen

60's that called for soc

ion at colleges and universit
mandates that if sey,
jon is. prese @ program that receives finaneial aid
Funds can be cut aff only for the program and not for the sehool ay a
whole
The ease began aya dispute beiweenahe federal:Educatian Qe
ment and Grove City College in Grove City, Pennsylvania,
According to court records, the
i ministration said Grove
‘City should be required 10 provide
evidence 10 the Education Depart
ment showing that it hay no inten:

id, The justices said the

women, But the Reagan ad
ministration also filed a. legal
Klocument with the Supreme
Court arguing thar a college
should not be cut off from all
federal aid based on diserimina:
tion in one program

City College onty

CO @ \\ | ceveives federal aid in the form of

A) feist ai thar states
{ NS. Jiiroueh the whoe con
Director of the Women’s Center

at Russell Sage College. Dr
ME Mildred Dandridge. "1 view it ast
SA Attorney Mark Miohler: Wy. Isa sep) backward fn
(ay may ot fet SUa, Main Darya
tectea, You don't have this federal law anynvore 10 fall back on to 10
issue complaint," Dandridge sak, She aso said i was to ea
pred: what impact the decision could have on Russell Sage, a private
liberal aris college

The Supreme Court ruled unanimously: that Grove City Collepe
rnust comply with Title 1X by: providing the
aid

perwork requested by
rants are a form of financial

the two sides that were litigating this (ease) repre-
sent the previous interpretation (of Title 1X) — that the entire univer
ly was required 10 establish non-diserimination," said Mary Jo Long,
an attorney at the Albany law firm of Walton and Thayer. “Now the
law is if-a schoo! gets financial aid it can't have diserimination in the
student loan department. tt is not illegal to have it somewhere els
other programs,"" Long said

“It sanctions sex discrimination in universities and we don't have a
equal rights amendment, There are some reat limits 10 the equal pro-
tection clause (of the {4th amendment) although there is the Equal Pay
Act and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act,” she said,

“H's a very substantial step backwards for equity for men and
women on college campuses,” said SUNYA Director of Affirmative
Action Gloria DeSole. She said that if there were an equal rights
amendment it would give protection in any institution for both men
and women, “It is a beautiful illustration of how that amendment
(ERA) wauld benefit women and men," she said.
DeSole also said that, **I do not think it (the ruling) would have a
profound impact at SUNYA. There are very good people at this in-
sitution who care about equal education. for women and men, We

IZ

Ed

State eon
Sunday

proposed!
Interest

legislarure
drinking
plea for
students,

the rally;
thusiastic,
read “No

to hell,
“Dorm

his back on
ing the

By Keith

TSOCIATE SE
Three SL
nd
of making
team.
SUNYA
Couneil
wrestling ¢

team,

anhiletes 10 1

March 15,

gm!

Students from all over New York also attended the rally, He_ noted

10-noing 'Siudgonty Bill-al Right

(NYPIRG),
cluded in the Student Bill of these issues they must come
Rights are demands for the together, The rally demonstraces

‘An estimated 200 people

yelled SA President Rich
Schaffer to the loud audience.

shouted, "No way! Cuomo turned + The 10-point Student Bill of

Hopefuls 10 raise the funds necessary 10 send the

of the committe
According 10 Stackel the committee has of
many fund-raising events, A mini-olympies will
highlight Lone Si

cams will participate include a chili dog-cating and
soda drinking contest, playing a track and field video
game, one frame of bowling and a balloon inflating
and popping race, The cost is $5 tv enter a team which
will compeie for gold, silver, and bronze medals.

The commitice wil
day in she Campus Center, First prize is a 19 inch color
Iclevisipn sel, second prize
an area restaurant, and third prize will be a gift cer-
lificale at a beverage distributor, The drawing is
scheduled for April 29,

* dinator for SUNYA's NYPIRG

nverged on the podium that although people from 17 cam:
10 rally in support of a. puses around the state attended,

Hl se SUNYA ying Wity. poOT
By ihe New York Public

Resear

h Group. out by students on this campus,
Merrick said, “IF they: eare about

not 10 raise the Mate unity, and gives exposure to
ge Or dorm rates, and a students
ne

Haid for part-time have the strength," he added,
Diana Klos, chairperson of

partivipants were en- board of directors, opened the rally. — mean
carrying banners which with a rousing speech, Klos praised
tion bik

done,
f

referring 10 student sent the changing pave of 1980's, by

rio (Gov. Ci

ymo) to Bo organized," Klos added that by tak-
a strong stand ont certain issues,
students will “begin to win on the
he issues. The wrongs will be righted,"

rent

n the students by propos- Rights requests 1). no tuition hike,

the drinking age, 4) stu
dent voting rights, 5) rescinding the

Marder

URIS EDITOR
JNYA wrestlers, a member of the
hr es have a good chance
the 1984 United States summer olympic

ssistant coacl

Summer games,

The money raised from these
ay follows: 50 percent will yo 10 the athletes who are
currently SUNYA undergraduates and 25 percent will
i coaches who have the talent to make

the team, The remaining 25 percent will be saved for
man 1988.contenders such as wrestler Dave Averill, who
recently won the Division 111 national championships,

wresifing eoaeh Joe DeMeo and Central
ember Gregg Stackel, a member of the
am, have set up a Committee for Olympic

go to the assista

he olympic trials, Stackel is also cha

nized

rather

Other events seheduted tui

Kilometer runathon and at coi
ack Rat. Participanis will be competing for Star belt
buckles and stuffed eagles; the official anit

&

JOE SCHWENOREN UPS,

Students rally at SUNYA
Gather in support of ‘Bill of Rights’

By Christine Reffelt Paul Herrick, Projector Coc

Solomon Amendment, which denies

Financial
registered for the dratt
registration, 7) day eare cemers, 8)
on-campuy voting booths, 9) no in:
¢rease.ig computer fees, and 10) no
“Pwish (here was a greater (urn: inerease in dorm Tees.

According to a NYPIRG
spokesperson, the’ bill of rights: is
aimed at conyineing the New York
State legislature that student con:
cerns must be taken seriously
I shows that they do Jim ‘Tierney, President of the
Student Association of the Stare

University: (SASU), said in a brief
afiended NYPIRG and a member of the speech shat students

aid for students not
6) voter

must pet

and nasty to yet things
He expressed. support. for
Vand “Use it the group, saying that they “repre- the Student Bill of Rights, em
phasizing his opposition to the pro:
rights. being politically aware and. wells” ‘posal fr a hike in the drinkin
He advocated stricter drunk driving,
laws, rehabilitation, and education
meastires,
drinking ag
not att Increase in the le
he said, “but an awareness of
uition increase and the 2) aid for part-time students, 3) no the problem.
increase, The students will 5
nd cannot stand for it

raising. the
“The answer is
al drinking,

to 2!

Schaffer said tha everyony, i

Olympic hopefuls aided by students

April 29 include a tive
foys and drop at the

al oF the

activites will be divided

14m

if Beer Nivht at the Rathskellar,
The activities in which the three-person

also be selling raftle lickels

II be a dinner for two at

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