Albany Student Press, Volume 70, Number 31, 1983 October 14

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OCTOBER 11,1983

from Bob Brien...

ED MARUBSICH UPS

, ED MARUBSICN UPS |. who completed a 75-yard touchdown pass on a wide receiver option. The duo also hooked up on a
Albany's John Donnelly, in front of an Ow! defender, recelving pass 27.yard pass play as the Danes won 22-12.

Albany upsets Southern Connecticut, 22-12

By Mare Berman
STALE WAITER

In what can be labeled as a major
upset, the Albany State football
team, combining a new-found big-
play offense with their usual stingy
defense, shocked Division I
Southern Connecticut, 22-12, in
front of 5,100 stunned fans at
Bowen Field in New Haven.

Three crucial offensive plays
helped the Danes up their record to
-3; a trick play which resulted in a
75-yard touchdown bomb thrown.
by wide receiver Bob Brien, an
18-yard touchdown run by quarter.
back Mike Milano, and a Sl-yard
touichdown reception by Pete
McGrath thrown by substitute
quarterback Rich Jones, who
replaced an injured Milano in the
fourth quarter.

Those three plays, a saftey, and
another display of relentless hard:

hitting defense were all the Danes
needed in disposing of the Owls,
whose winning record dropped (0
3-2,

For the Danes, it was more than
just a victory, In their eyes, it was
the kind of triumph that can (urn a
season around,

“We're a new team now," ex:

med Milano, ‘This pumps the
team} beating a powerhouse Di
sion II club, Everyone expected us
to be 1-4 right now. No way."

Milano's sentiments seemed to be
Widespread in the Dane lockeroom
following the game,

“1 knew we'd eventually become
a good football team; It was just a
matter of when," said Albany Head
Coach Bob Ford, “Our offense im:
proved tremendously today, but
‘we're still far from perfect,"

The Danes’ offense played the
best game of the season by compil:
ing 284 yards, tripling last week's

Netmen capture fi

The Albany State men’

ERICA SPIEGEL UPS.”
tennis team captured their fifth con:

cutive SUNYAC crown last weekend.

output

stead of running the ball, which he

In the first five minutes of the se~
cond half, the Danes scored all the

The opening drive of the game did

seemed to establish to the Danes:
that their offense was capable of
moving the ball on Southern Con
heticut’s defense, even though no
points were registered.
Driving 64 yards on seven rushing
plays to the Southern Conneticut
Milano's first pass was in
ipted In the end zone,
think that first series was
Critical because it gave the kids con-

successfully last week
before fumbling it, Brien cocked
back his arm and unleashed a bomb
to wide receiver John Donnely

With no Owl defender within 10
yards of Donnely, he caught the
ball and sprinted into the endzone
to complete the 75-yard touchdown
pass

“Its such a
defend,"? said Brien.
fooled them.’

tough play {0
“We really

points they would wind up needing.

Wayne Anderson took the open-
ing kickoff and found daylight
down the rightside for 46 yards put-
ting the Danes on the Owl 35 yard
line. Five plays later Milano ran 18
yards for the score at 12:31 mark of
the third quarter on an. inside
keeper which saw the sophomore
quarterback slip a few tackles

The Dane momentum continued

fidence that they could move the
football, which is what a young
club always needs," said offensive
backfield coach Eddie Zaloom:
“That confidence carried us the
whole way.'”

‘Alter a scoreless first quarter for
both teams, the Danes finally struck
with 10:12 left in the half on a play
that baffled the Owl defense.

Wide receiver Bob Brien took the
bail on a reverse end around. In-

ing in.”

Danes’ de

By Keith Marder

The New York Yankees, the Boston Celtics, and the
UCLA Bruins are all teams that have been associated
with the word “dynasty,'” By winning their fifth
SUNYAC title in a row this past weekend, the Albany
State men's tennis team has entered this select group.

The Danes captured 33 out of a possible 36 points in
the nine team tournament, This was eight points in
front of Buffalo University, the tournament runner:
pe

Albany reached the final round in all nine
calegories, The scoring of the final round was as
follows: number one singles Dave Ulrich defeated an
extremely tough opponent, Russ Tringali of Buffalo
University, 6-4, 6-3: Ken White of Buffalo got past
Tom Schmitz of Albany 6-3, 6-4. After dropping his
first set {0 Buffalo's Dave Lowman 3-6, number three
singles Rob’ Karen came back strong to take the next
two 6-1, 6-3, Scott Greene of Binghamton stopped
Dave Grossman in three sets 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. Jay
Eisenberg, whose performance prompted coach Jim

sbalik 10 say, ‘Jay played as close to his top poten:
tial as a player could,”” blanked Joe Davis of Buffalo

the final round 6-0, 6-0, Mark Sanders, who came
into the tournament unseeded, turned some heads by
winning number six singles, He defeated Binghamton's
Sean Reed 7-5, 3-6, 6-2.

‘They weren't expecting it,'’ said
Milano.''The defense were all com-

Said Coach Zaloom
the play was Brien's cool, He had to
throw the ball with a defender in his
face, It was a super play.”

The one touchdown lead held up
at halftime and even though the
Owls gained 138 total yards, the
nse came up with the
big play when they needed it 22>

to build on the next possessio
When Owls! punter John Dupois let
@ high snap go over his head into
the endzone, Dupois made a smart
move by hitting the ball out of the
endzone, costing Southern Con-
neticut two points instead of a
possible six.

Down 16-0, the Owls started to
make their move scoring two
touchdowns in the span of 1:25

“The key to

fth straight SUNYAC crown

In doubles play, number one Ulrich and Grossman
beat Tringali and Lowman of Buffalo 6-4, 6-4
Number two doubles Karen and Schmitz defeated
Davis and Mike Rosillo of Buffalo without too much
trouble 6:2, 6:2, The only loss the Danes suffered in
the doubles was number three doubles as Eisenberg
and Mike Detmansky had their share of trouble
‘against Buffalo’s team of White and Tom Saunders
losing 6-1,7-5

Coach Serbalik was elated with his team's victory

“This was a very enjoyable weekend, I'm very hap:
py with the way they played. 1 was also pleased with
their consistency; there wasn't one letdown in the
whole tournament

It was alsoa

Karen said, “This is my last year on the team; it was
8 great season, I had a lot of fun, this is a great bunch
Of guys. I'm happy we did as will as last year’s team."

The players were just as happy to win the tourna
ment for the coach as they were to win it for
themselves. The overall sentiment of the team is that
Serbalik has a way of keeping them loose with his "'g0
for it” attitude, while at the same time he can get them
Teady to compete. The players were obviously upset at
the loss of regular coach Bob Lewis to a back injury,
but were happy to get a coach of Serbalik’s caliber,
Who did a much more than adequate job of filling in.

at victory from the players point of

PUBLISHED AT THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT \ALBANY BY THE A.

VOLUME LXX

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CORPORATION

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SIEOENT October 14, 1983 -

NUMBER 33

Poor attendance marks bus fee public hearings

By Jon Willmott

A public hearing by the SUNYA Task
force investigating a proposed bus fee drew
only five people at the Page Hall auditorium
on the downtown campus Thursday night.
However, 12 of 15 scheduled speakers strong-
ly opposed the fee.

The meeting was the last in a series of
public hearings on the fee, the first two of
which were held on Monday. Those two also
had a virtually non-existent turnout, with one
person showing up for the 3_p.m. to $ p.m.

hearing, and no spectators at the hearing held
from 7 p.m, to 9 p.m.

The task force, made up of students, facul-
ty, and administrators, was formed on
August 31 when University President Vincent
O'Leary postponed implementation of a bus
fee to allow greater input and evaluation of
the fee's implications,

At the start of the hearing, Shelton Bank, a
chemistry professor and the chairman of the
task force, explained that the group would
work in three phases, the first being the
gathering of information through public

hearings and visiting other campuses. In the
second phase, he sald, the committee will
Analyze the information . Lastly, they will
Prepare a report to be presented to University
\President Vincent O'Leary, Bank also ei
couraged the audience to write to the task
force with their ideas.

Of the 15 scheduled speakers on Thursday,
only two, Van Henri White, a Wellington
student, and a Feminist Alliance represen-
tative, did not appear, The speakers
Tepresented groups including Albany city
government, Central Council, Off-Campus

Association, and both on and off-campus
students, Only one speaker, off-campus stu-
dent Kenneth Weeves, posed no objections to
the proposed fee. Although he admitted he
found it hard to caich a 9 a.m, bus uptown,
he said he didn't sce **bus service as a part of
education.” In reply to objections 10 more
fees, he cited the mandatory Student
Association Tee, saying that “both the SA
and the bus service are good things,"

The remaining 12 speakers spoke against
the fee from a variety of positions,

Robert Coleman, representing the Albany

afely, noted that many
students frequent bars away from campus
and added that "if theytre drinking we don't
want them driving.”” He further noted that
the bus service helps ‘keep our strecis
safe." Several speakers said they con:
sidered the Implementation of a bus fee, a
“breach of contract,! Adam Barsky, the SA
comptroller, said that buses are part of the
central educational services that are included
intuition, He said he considered i a breach
because students have paid in advance, and
bus service Is required in a split campus situa
tion, He also protested that the issue was the
iniversity's problem because they tnd
already accepted the responsibility. of pro:
Viding bus transportation,

The alienation of ALumni Quad residents
Was also raised, en Ryan, Central
Council Alumni Quad representative, ob-
jected to the fee because it "will be seriously

restricting the interchange between the up=
town and downtown campuses.?!

“Discontinuation is discrimination against

{campus students,"" charged Off-Campus

tion representative, Robert Fishkin,

ig his own dependence on the bus ser

Sieven Waldman, an Alumni Quad stu

ROBERT LUCKEY UPS

SUNYA bus at university circle; Inset: Bus fee task force Chair Shelton Bank
Onie speaker charged a bus fee is discrimination against off-campus students I

Area campaigns heating up as election nears

By Robert Gardinier
ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

SUNYA students will have the opportunity
to get involved in local politics with this
November 8th’s general election. They will
be eligible to vote in contests for 3 legislative
districts? seats along with a number of city
and county seats,

All SUNYA students are eligible to vote in
city-wide elections except the Guilderland
22nd district (Indian and one half of Dutch).

In a prominent county race for which all
SUNYA students are eligible to vote, incum-
bent Democrat Jim Coyne, holding the office
of County Executive, is opposed by a 1978
SUNYA graduate, Paul Burgdorf, who is
running as both Republican and Indepen
dent.

Coyne has held the post for eight years,
but has recently come under fire as a result of
Times Union reports of mismanagement of
County funds, The Times Union reported
yesterday that Coyne called for an audit of
county purchasers

Burgdorf explained that he felt the county
had been wrongly represented because of a
history of 52 years of Democratic control,
“The county needs a system of checks and
balances," he said, “which it would get if it
elected a Republican to the office

According to the Albany County Board of
elections the county had 79,142 registered
Democrats last year compared to 40,892
Republicans. By contrast, last year there
were 44,354 Democrats compared to 2,732
Republicans registered in the City of Albany,
according to the Albany County Board of
Elections.

dent, added that "a lot of students don't ex-
pect to be living downtown," He
that the present system is al

In Guilderland district 22, which included
all of Indian Quad and one half of Dutch, in-
cumbent Republican Kevin Moss is contested
for his position of town supervisor by
Democrat Francis Melfe.

Moss, a local lawyer who has held the posi-
tion since January of 1982, was instrumental
in creating the new Guilderland district 22,
which is mostly popuplated by SUNYA

students, He also helped provide a polling
place at the SUNYA gymnasium,

Melfe, who works for the New York State
Division of Youth, and who has never held a
political office before, graduated from
Mount Saint Mary College in Maryland in
1954, He said he felt that Moss is not pro-
Viding adequate service to the town.

ir. Moss is what I call a P.M. super-

Numbers in tens of thousands

) Democrats
GMM Republicans

County

Comparison of Albany county and city voter registration in 1982

ASP ORAPHIC HOLLY PRESTI

Democrats are overwhelming majority in Albany

Visor. He works in a law firm in the morning

nd does not devote full time to the job.
Kevin is a nice guy but he has a lack of
managerial abilites,’” sald Melfe,

Melfe pointed out that offic
Guilderland are always complaining about
the Democratic machine of Albany county,
but “a Republican machine has existed in
Guilderland for 113 years!” he said, He
stated that it was his desire to be bipartisan in.
regard to the town board, and that no
Republicans or others on the board need fear
their position if he were elected, Melfe added
that he believes in merit, not political affitia-
tion in appointive positions.

Moss, who was appointed Town Judge in
1978 and then later filled the position of
Town Supervisor, graduated from Siena Col:
fege and Albany Law School in 1972 and was
admitted fo the bar in 1973, He has had trial
law practice with the city firm Hesson, Ford,
Sherwood and Whalen (no relation to the
mayor),

Moss countered Melfe's claims of inade-
quacy by mentioning his, and the board’s,
work on the new Guilderland budget, which
Includes outlays of over $4 million, “The
budget this year provided for a 44 percent tax
cul,"” according to Moss. ‘1 don't know

Voting rights in their college town as impor

tant to student life, Moss said his actions in

the past over the establishment of aSUNYA

polling place has proved his ci

students add to the dimensions of the c

munity,” said Moss. Melfe stated that he
15>

Q ALBANY STUDENT PRESS © OCTOBER 14,1983

WORLDWIDE

El Salvador warned

San Salvador, El Salvador
(AP) Henry A. Kissinger warned Salvadoran
officials that human rights abuses must be
curbed if they want continued U.S, ald for
the war against leftist rebels,

With violence by rightist death squads in-
creasing, the former secretary of state told
political leaders Wednesday that Americans
must not be forced to\ ‘choose between
Security and human rights’ in deciding
Whether the government deserved further
support in the civil war.

Kissinger heads a bipartisan fact-finding
commission on a six-country tour of Central
America to make recommendations on U.S,
policy in the region,

“‘It is imperative to defend these principles
of democracy and human rights, to preserve
and expand them. And as the American peo-
ple cannot be asked to choose between the
two, the Salvadoran people must not be ask-
ed to make stich a choice," he told reporters
after meeting with President Alvaro Magana
and other political leaders.

Reagan signs pact

Washington, D.C,
(AP) The Vietnam-era War Powers Act has
been put into effect for the first time ever
with President Reagan's signature on legisla:
tion authorizing U.S, Marines to stay in
Lebanon another 18 months.
Reagan signed the compromise legi
Wednesday following weeks of bar;

between Congress and the White House.

Tie legislation marks the first time the
10-year-old War Powers Act has been cited
to govern the warmaking powers of the presi-
dent.

Despite demands from Congress, Reagan
had refused to invoke the War Powers Act
When the Marines first came under fire Aug.
29 in Beirut in fighting that eventually killed
four Americans and wounded dozens more,

The law says U,S, forces involved in
hostilities must be brought home within 90
days unless Congress declares war or allows
them to remain. In a statement, Reagan
Argued that “isolated or infrequent acts of
violence’? do not necessarily constitute
hostilities, even if there are casualties.

Moslems storm Tripoli

Beirut, Lebanon
(AP) Hooded Moslem militiamen stormed
and burned Communist Party strongholds in
Tripoli Thursday on the third day of street
battles that have killed 60 people in
Lebanon's second largest city, police said,

The fighting raged as representatives of
President Amin Gemayel and the nation's
top Moslem and Christian leaders met behind
closed doors in Befrut to draw up an agenda
for a “national reconciliation conference’”
next Thursday,

Italian peacekeeping troops and armored
cars ringed the 10-story Health Ministry
building on the “green lin
Beirut into Moslem and Christian sectors as
the preparatory committee convened at mid-
day,

All approaches to the meeting site were
sealed off by Italian soldiers, who allowed in
only committee members and journalists.
Even bodyguards of the participants were
Kept out,

‘Korean victims burie

Seoul, South Korea
(AP) More than a milion mourners attended
funeral services in a vast plaza Thursday for
17 South Korean officials killed in the Burma
terror bombing.

South Korean Prime Minister Kim Sang-
hyup culogized the victims, including four
Cabinet ministers, as ‘proud pillars of this
country"? and laid the blame for their deaths
on North Korea,

“This cursed tragedy cannot be the real in-
tention of heaven,” the prime minister said,
“Incredibly, this heinous atrocity. . .was
perpetrated by the North Korea Com-
munists, who are of the same blood as we."

President Chun Doo-hwan, who escaped
the bombing in Burma by a few minutes, did
ot attend the funeral, Government sources
Indicated he felt his presence might have
drawn attention away from the services,

NATIONWIDE
BRIEFS
Soviet kids fear war

Cambridge, Massachusetts
(AP) Soviet children have the same nuclear
nightmares as their American counterparts,
but they have greater fears that they won't
survive an atomic war, according to a study
by three psychiatrists,

Results of the study, to be announced
Thursday in New York, also indicate that
Soviet youngsters are much more optimistic
than American children that nuclear war will
not happen, sald Dr, Eric Chivian of Har-
vard University, who headed the project

American teen-agers, however, question
authority more often and blame adults for
bringing the world to the brink of nuclear
disaster, he said,

The project, sponsored by International
Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear
War, interviewed $0 Soviet youths on
videotape and 300 others by written question

aire, and an unspecified number of U.S.
children, The Soviet children were not
selected by the government

Charges dismissed

Wednesday, saying ‘'There is nothing 1 can
say at this time.’
| Cheney's name began circulating as a
possible replacement for James Watt, who
fesigned Sunday, as former Sen. Clifford
Hansen another Wyoming Republican, said
he did not want to be considered,
‘Cheney was chief of the White House staff
under President Ford,

STATEWIDE
TBI

Mondale endorsed

New York

(AP) Gov. Mario Cuomo and Sen, Daniel P.

Moynihan Thursday endorsed former Vice

President Walter F, Mondale for president,

saying he has always been true to ‘the prin-
iples that make us Democrats.

Mondale, beaming, said he considered the
endorsement “a very important argument in
my behalf."” New York will bring 285
delegates, the second largest group, to the
Democratic convention next year.

“We have decided that of all the can-
didates, Walter Mondale will make the best
president,” they s

Hospitals deficient

New York

(AP) The State Department of Health has
cited hospitals in Buffalo, Fulton and on
Long Island as ‘deficient’? for failing to
Teport incompetent or drug-addicted doctors,
A department spokesman, Frances
Tarleton, said it had not been decided
her the hospitals will be fined. The in
tions involved are University Hospital on

the campus of the State University at Stony
Brook; Millard Fillmore in Buffalo, and A.I

State officials said the citations are part of
4 state-wide crackdown on misconduct by
doctors. They said it is not only insufficient,
but unlawful, for a hospital to dismiss a doc
tor or curtail his hospital privileges because
of incompetence or drug impairment without
reporting the action immediately to the state
Office of Professional Medical Misconduct

The citation against the Stony Brook
hospital was based on failure to report the

OCTOBER 14,1983 (1) ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 3

Women’s Safety sought with rally and march

By Sheilah R. Sable

In an action that symbolizes the one time
that women will be able to walk the streets
alone at night, women will march together
through Washington Park on Saturday, Oc-
tober 15 as a part of a “Take Back the
Night" march and rally.

The rally, which will begin at 7:00 p.m. at
the East Capitol Park, will be followed by a
three mile march from the Capito! building
steps. west on State Street, through
Washington Park, and then back toward the

tol.

Men will not be permitted to march,
although they will be permitted to participate
in the rally. Debra Dettor, a member of the
Albany County Rape Crisis Center, explain-
ed, ‘If a man shows Up to take part in the
march, we will ask him to please respect our
rights to march alone."” The men Who want
to participate will have to be satisfied to par-

ate in the rally only, while the women’
walk in protest of violence against females,

There will, however, be male members of
the Eleanor Roosevelt Democratic Club, who
have been asked to hand out pamphlets, but-
ons and sell T-shirts, Dettor said. Also, the
mien will be taking care of the children, as the
sponsors have provided this service for the
Women who can not or do not want to leave
their children at home, Dettor added

Before the march, several women will
speak from the Capitol building steps. An in
letpreter for the deaf will be present,

The list of speakers includes Saratoga Spr

ings Attorney Nancy Bunting, former Direc-
tor of the N.Y, State Commission on
Domestic Violence Carla DiGirolomo, poet
Orie Thyla, and Pat Donovan, a former first
investigator for the Albany County District
Attorney sex offense unit.

After the three mile march, Judith Condo,
the! Ditetar St thet Albay, Gout Rape

sis Center, and N.C.A.S.A, Region 1
Rape , will make some closing
statements on this symbolic women's march
and the effects that they hope to have on the
gommunity. A-self defense demonstration
and workshop will also be presented at the
close of the rally and march, followed by a
discussion on safety procedures for walking
in the city at night and defense techniques
that could be used in case of an attack,

Similar marches wil take place on October
15, at 7:00 p.m. in Hudson, N.Y, and Oc-
tober 14 at 7:00 p.m. in  Pitisfield,
Massachusetts.

The crisis centers involved hope that these
protests Will educate men and women who
would like Co learn more about rape and its
effects on victims, families, and society, and
aid in reducing the Incidence of rape and
violence against women in our society.

The rally and march are being sponsored
by the Albany County Rape Crisis C
along with Rape Crisis Centers
Saratoga, Utica, Schenectady,
Rensselaer

The Albany Rape Crisle Center i fosated
in room 640, at 112 State St. in Albany

Women at the 1982 "Take Back tho Night” rally
Watking in protest of viole

‘against females,

Recent audit leads to energy Savings at SUNYA

By Amy Weiner

Two SUNYA scientists recently conducted
audit of energy use in public buildings, and have made
recommendations for more economical energy use, accor- Stevens said the

ding to a University News Bureau Press rel
Ronald Stewart and Donald 1

the press release

MeClenahan_ of
SUNYA's Atmospheric Sciences Research Center have just
completed 5,000 statewide energy audits under a $1.5
million contract with the State Energy office, according to

primary heating system:

energy effici

Additional caulking and Weatherstripping of the dorms
Will be included in next year's modifications, Stevens add-
Statewide ed, Caulking of the podium deck has been done over the
past five years (0 keep water out and heat in, he noted.
“major efforis for modification is in the
He added that effic
boilers and alr exchange units is also important,
ing the library with fluorescent bulbs, which are much more
1s another step toward better energy con-
servation," Stevens noted, More light switches have been
added for “finer control!” of energy use on the eampus, he

dismissal on Aug. 16, 1982, of Dr, Mitchell
Stewart Gagin, a 35-year-old
anesthesiologist. The state charges that after
hie left Stony Brook, Fagin joined the
anesthesiology department at St
Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital in Manhattan,
and on Oct. 5, 1982, almost caused the death
Of a surgical patient

Fagin'’s dismissal after that incident was
Feported 10 ihe state, but the following
month he was hired by St. John's in Queens
to work in its emergency room, without a
check on his credentials with the appropriate
medical committee,

Correction

Los Angeles, California
(AP) A state appellate court dismissed
murder charges against two doctors, ruling
that food and water — like medicine and
mechanical life support — may be withheld
from brain-dead patients.

“This is a strong, landmark decision,’
defense attorney Harland Braun sald after
the court blocked murder and conspiracy
charges against Drs. Robert Nejdi and Neil
Barber

*No one previously has ever come out and
said that removing food and water is the
same as removing other medication," Braun
said, “It's always been a myth that that's like
starving people to death.

California law permits brain-dead or ter
minally ‘ill patients to be removed from
mechanical life-support systems but docs not} Correction: Due to ambiguous wording in
address the issue of cutting off food.and | budget text and a SASU release, it was in
water, correctly reported in the Oct. 11 issue of the

Cheney considered ASP that the SUNY Trustee's 1984-85

oposal for

Washington, D.C.
(AP) President Reagan's political advisers 'Y financial plan which was signed into
are sounding out Rep. Richard Cheney, | law in February, These cuts will nonetheless
R-Wyo., about becoming the new intertor | effect the development of this year's

secretary, Republican sources say budget. We regret the error

Cheney refused to comment on the report

budget request contained a
1100 position cuts, The 1100 cuts, however
are included in the 1983-84 budget and

Revislonist Zionist Alternative of The Anthropology club will

present “Fiddler on the Root” a
Albany will Join TAGAR Zionist Ac- speakar Adam’ Fortunato, Eagle. eared by international File Goo,
Wists {fom across Now York Stato Nordwall on Wednesday, Oct. at wil be ghows on oetine oa
at SUNY Contral Plaza in Albanyon 8 pm. In the Campus, Canter ei? and ionms ie teck war enlae

PREVIEW OF EVENTS
‘FREE LISTINGS
Pelley’ of supporting antl; dan ast a's ataetreenedt 3 81,.WIM 9s curd and $1.50

The SUNYA Pre-Law Association SUNYA Professor Al Higgins will zionism/ant-semitism bolng taught American Indian civil rights, and

presénts the Fifth Annual discuss "Debunking Pretenso; Us: at SUNY's Stony Brook campus, For other related Issues, Ad

SUNY/Albany Law School Fair. It Ing Sociology to Strip Away more information call Steven at free, ere Sesen Sle Orato) vl spon:
Will be held In the Campus Genter Facades,”” The lecture, one of a 4895750 or Gady at 455.6600, Advlgomant In Preparation for Pro
Ballroom on Saturday, Oct, 15 rom series epiitied, Celebrating The Student Health insurance Plan Registration", on Monday, Oct. 17
10-12:90 and 1:30-4 p.m, For further Sociology” will take place on Tues: The Office of International Pro deadline has been extended until at? p.m. In LO a

Information call Richard Golubow day, Oct. 18 In Campus Center 347 grams will hold an Informative Monday, Oct. 31, The student iy

‘at 457-8087, at 5 p.m, Admission Is free. meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 18 at 1 surance which costs $111.00 per

Student Association will hold a Pam, In Huinanities 290 to discuss year is avallable for dependent and Gentral Council, the legislative
special Interest meeting to discuss “Watership Down", an animated the SUNYA study abroad program major medical coverage, For more branch of Student Asseclation
the development of Camp Dippikill film, will be shown In Campus in Wureburg, Germany. Former par- information call Douglas Bauer at moots ovory Wednesday at 7:20
‘9n Monday, Oct. 17 at 7:30 p.m. In Center 224 on Tuesday, Oct. 18 at ticipants will be present to share 459-1850 or stop by the Infirmary, pm. In Campus Centor 976, All ara
the 8A office, 11:90 a.m, Admission Is tree. thelr experiences. Room 101 "welcome, ‘

The audits were done by the two along with specially
trained students from nine community colleges in the state
At schools, hospitals and government buildings across the
state, the release explained,

The conservation methods suggested by Stewart and M
Clenahan “have all been or are in the process of being im-
plemented at SUNYA," according to the Director of
Physical Plant Dennis Stevens. These recommendations in
clude the installation of automatic setback devices on the
thermostats to adjust both summer and winter room
temperatures,

When the buildings are unoccupied, Stewart explained
that a computerized system "will set back the thermostat to.
the proper temperature for the proper length of time, and
they are so inexpensive they will save in energy what they.
cost within a year.”

Anoltier recommendation by the two reseachers to con
serve energy is the repairing, instead of replacing, broken
or cracked windows. "We have replaced 2,000 windows
the last three to four years"?

said,

According to Stevens these and other modifications came
AS a resull Of energy audits at SUNYA in the last several
years, What has to be understood, both Stewart and
Stevens stressed, ls that while consumption has decreased,
there Is still an increas in cost

Stevens said in an October 9 article in the Times Union
that "energy conservation over the last cight years has
achieved a utility cost sayings of $9 million.’ The article
stated that the “four main boilers uptown can generate 280
million BTU's (British thérma-tinits) of energy per hour,
which translates as roughly 2,014 gallons of oil an hour,’

Stevens says the physical plant is putting a budget request
in for tighter temperature controls in the dormitories. It
will be ‘a $3 million project phased over 2 or 3 years,"" he
said,

‘A major accomplishment by the physical plant, said
Stevens, was the installation of meters in cach building,
This makes it possible to see how much energy is being used
in each building, he sald. Stevens said that this will be

QaAlh

ee

WARREN STOUT UPS

SUNYA scientists Donald McClenahan and Ronald Stewart

A “finer control” of energy use on campus is sought

helpful in his plans for “incentive programs,"’ He explain-
ed “incentive programs’? as a contest belween quads of
Who can use less energy, This iy all part of what Stevens
calls “attitudinal changes! the Physical Plant is attempting
to undertake, "Students niust be made to realize that every,
Iiitle bit helps and it really does add up when there are
20,000 stiidents involved."

Last year SUNYA was the recipient of $80,000 in energy
grants from state and federal energy offices, Stevens sald.
He added that these will be used for modific in the
heating and ventilation of the library, which is a large
energy User

Over the past (en years many steps have been taken at
SUNYA for energy conservation, and there are still pro-
jects in progress anid more changes in the future, Stevens

Oo

concluded,
oe

State conference
aims at consumer
awareness of fraud

By Jerry Campione
KITE

STARE

On this Tuesday, October 18, the Consumer Frauds
‘and Protection Bureau of the New York State Attorney
General's office will present a Consumer Awareness Con-
ference at the Empire State Plat

The Conference, a two-day event (Oct. 18-19), will
feature addresses by several noted authorities and
workshops with qualified consumer experi

This third-annual conference is open to the general
public and, although pre-registration was advised,
“everyone will be welcome,"? according to Bob Buchner,
| Assistant Attorney General for the State of New York,

The most important aspect of the conference, accor-
ding 10 Rick Ostrock, a legal aide at the Attorney
General's office, will be to n vke sure people “learn your
consumer rights,"”

We've been doing this type of thing because We strongly
believe in consumer education," said Buchner, ‘Con
sumer education is a preventive thing," he stated, adding
that, “if the consumer is aware, he can prevent himself
from getting tipped off.”

According t0 Buchner, this year's conference has been
“particularly geared for students! and will feature
Workshops on such topics as auto ownership, landiord-
tenant rights and credit and loans which, Buchner said,
“are especia

The workshops, which will be presented in both morn-
ing and afternoon sessions on Tuesday, will also include
topics such as food and drugs, mail: order fraud, utilites,
changes in the telephone industry and consumer redress,
‘as well as an update on consumer-oriented legistation,

Tuesday's schedule starts at 8:30 a.m, with registration,

15>

kkk * DAVID BRENNER 444% %
WILL KILL YOU WITH LAUGHTER

Speaker’s Forum Presents
DAVID BRENNER
On Sat. Night Oct. 22 In The Gym

LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE
SO BUY YOUR TICKET
BEGINNING MONDAY, Oct 17

IN THE TICKET OFFICE
ON THE 8rd FL. CC.

TICKET PRICES ARE
$8.00 w/taxcard $13.00w/o

Look Out For Nov. 1 Limit 3/Tax Card

David Brenner’s Latest Album Will Be Out
SA FUNDED

ition

OCTOBER 14,.

1983 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 5

ASIA member Mike Fedele

[sta

{the Christian group, lasted over two hours
both Tuesday and Wednesday nights,
At the door to receive interested students

By Maddi Kun
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

The leader of Albany State International were members of ASIA’s Church, The
Assembly (ASIA), Paul Capobianco, said Capital District International Assembly,
that the group is ‘trying to reach every single ding out leaflets entitled ‘Historical
student on campus to ste that they have a Evidences for the Christian Faith.’
clear interpretation of the Gospel and Jesus
Christ."” But despite advertisements appear- ting “Why I became a Christian,"” asserted:
Ing since September on radio, cafeteria “If you're seeking truth then you will study
tables, blackboards, the podium and in the the Bible further!”

ASP, 30 students attended ASIA's Tuesday
night lecture,

Fedele, who began his speech by recoun-

He also discussed ‘‘old testament prophecy
‘The Bible: Hoax or History.”” that has been fulfilled in history and the way
The lecture, given by senior Mike Fedele of that we can see the evidence of this today, as

LAUREN STITLER UPS

i's @ lot of fun to watch the dijerent reaction:
a =

tate quad students charged
in theft of lounge furniture

By Betsy Eckel

warged with stealing a carpet and furniture from State Quad's

fastman Tower in September received one year's disciplinary probation, in a decision
by Assistant Dean for Student Affairs, John Murphy.

Because the students were not formally placed under arrest, thelr names were
withheld in accordance with university policy.

In addition to the probation, the students must devote eight hours to community ser-
Quad and pay for the replacement of the carpet because they
are charged with ripping the old one,

The seven claim they did not cut the carpet, but that it was loose when they found it,

Murphy did not want to discuss the reasoning behind his decision but said he felt the
students are ‘young and inexperienced freshmen, but should know what is right and
what is wrony

The students appeared before a four-member judicial board in the basement of
Eastman Tower Sept. 28. Both University police and the accused made statements,

According to police, at 10 am on Sept, 15, Officers John Canto and Dave Carpenter
found three chairs, a three-piece sectional couch, and a 6-by-18 piece of gold carpet in
suite 2104 of Eastman Tower.

Four of the seven living in the suite were taken to university police headquarters and
questioned, police said, where they confessed to stealing the items from the penthouse
of Eastman Tower, according to police,

According to the formal notification the students received, all seven were accused of
university property damage, theft of property, possession of stolen property, and
unauthorized entry to university facilities.

Custodians working in the tower noticed a piece of carpet missing from the pen-
thouse, according to Assist, Director of Public Safety, John Henighan, While doing
routine cleaning, the custodians later spotted the carpet in suite 2104 and notified the
University Police, Henighan said.

The students said that on Sept, 12 they went up the emergency fire stairwell to the
penthouse and found the door open,

‘The boys claim that there were other students in the penthouse, but when no one was
looking, they took the chairs and carpet

According to one of the students, their new acquisitions looked so good in their suite
that they “just had to have that couch,”

evidence that God is behind the scriptures,"?
He concluded by saying, “I have nothing in
common with those who think that Chris-
tanity is historically unreliable and have not
seriously examined the evidence,

ASIA Is also well-known for its preaching
on the podium. ‘We're not looking to co
Vert anyone on campus,'* Capobianco sald,
‘We want them to know the truth,” He
asserted that ‘we're pro-Israel, pro-Zionism
and anti-antisemitism,"”

Capobianco explained that when ASIA
preaches on the podium, ‘we ‘plug’ it out
there, Mike preaches the evidence and then 1
present the Gospel, We are born-again
Christians,

Student Steven Oakfield, Jr., who attend-
ed the lecture and then left, sald, ‘1 became
an atheist two years ago, and I'm interested
in what they have to say,

Another student who declined 10 be iden-
tified added, "It was m rather closed forum -
everything sald tonight was taken from their
perspective,""

ASIA was formed in September 1981 by
Vincent Capobianco, Paul's brother, then a
freshman, Yvonne Cuomo, a member, ex:
plained that “We got a vision to start a
minisiry at Albany State." She added that
ASIA is recognized but not funded by Stus
dent Association

"We'd like to get funded but they won't
fund us because we're a so-called religious
organization," another member added,

SA presently recognizes several Christian
groups on campus, “These groups can put
up posters and hold meetings, but none of
them are SA funded," sald Director of Stus
dent amming Richie Golubow, He ad.
ded, “People have continuously had: pro:

New Stewart’

By Lisa Mirabella

‘A new Stewart's Bread and Butter shop go-
ing up on the corner of Quail and
Washington is scheduled to open November
9 and Manager Herman Mandel said he is
already swamped with applications for the
nine or 10 positions available,

Mandel started taking applications last
‘week and has already chosen five workers for
the new store. Two of those are SUNYA
students and Mandel anticipates hiring other
students as partstime workers,

The store will have a full deli and, accor~
ding (o Stewart's Marketing Vice President,
Betsy Hamilton, will try to cater to students!
needs by stocking a variety of easy to prepare
foods, Also, Hamilton said, “It will be
modified with a few booths and ice cream,
sandwiches, chili and such things will be sery=
«

Holden's Market, a small grocery located
in the center of the off-campus housing area
on the corner of Quail and State Streets,
could be hurt from the Stewart's compet
tion, Holden's has been serving students for
over nine years. Owner Pete Sivaslian
estimated that 40 percent of his customers are
SUNYA students. He said the new Stewart's

Podium preachers seek to reach all students"

{blems with ASIA on the podium, There are a
lot of people who find the preaching offen-
‘sive, Recognition can always be stripped
from an organization if we get enough com-
plaints,"” he sald,

SUNYA student Kathicen Reagan sald, ‘1
listen to them preaching out of entertainment
on the way to my classes. The times I have
Seen them they seemed angry and hostile
toward the general public on the podium, 1
believe he (the speaker) has a right to express
himself but if he did it, for example, in the
Campus Center that would be infringing on
my rights and everyone elses!,"?

ASIA, which is associated with approx-
Imately 30 other campus ministries, holds
noontime Bible study classes twice a week,
An average of five to ten students attend each
session, according to Paul Capobianco,

Capobianco, who preaches on the podium
every Thursday said, “I preach gospel on the
podium because people on the podium are
fed up with religous baloney; that's why
they're not in the classrooms listening to ft,
We get our hecklers, and we get the ones who
tire searching. It's a Jot of fun to watch the
different reactions,"

We've had a lot of complaints from
students," he added. "But we believe that
they're not willing to recognize thelr sins
That's why they complain about us,"”

ASIA members admitted to having dif-
ficulties about getting permit to solicit
"We were having problems so we passed
around a petition last year on the podium
asking if ‘one has a right to voice his own opi:
nion on the podium.’ We got about 400
signatures, People sald that they liked us
there and that we had a right (o be expressing
our views," he added, o

sin Pine Hills

“doesn't bother me, Naturally they're going
{o lake some business from us,!* but he said
he did not think the effect on his income

would be noticeable,

Sivaslian contended that the Stewart's
shop is in a ‘dead area’ because it is located
on the north side of Washington Ayenuc,
iverybody (urns this way when they get off
the bus,"" he added,

Hamilton said she is looking forward to a
large market for beer and soda, which she
said are Stewart's most competitively priced
products. Stewart's sells two types of bee!
Stegmeler for $2.79 per 12 pack and Nar-
raganselt for $3,19 per 12 pack,

Holden's does $300 to $400 of business a
day on beer and soda, said Sivasiian, noting
that there 1s @ beverage distributor right
around the corner that does not hurt his
business,

Hamilton said students may also be able (0
do their banking at the Metro-Teller before
shopping at Stewart's. However, she did not
yet know which banks would be part of th
system they are installing. The banking facili
ty will be available 24-hours a day and the
store hours, Hamilton said, “will match
Holden's hours’? by staying open at least un=
til midnight, oO

a manent i
‘on a
errata
amet

fee rN ne
ine ogee,
Ta cat
Meth ag WN
. OR,

ERICA SPIEGEL UPS

Convenience market at Washington and Quail

Holden's challenged for student business,

UNIVERSITY CONCERT BOARD

&
WCDB 91 FM ey

an
PRESENT

OCTOBER 14,1983 GQ ALBANY STUDENT PRESS, 7

By Meyrl Reichbach

Toni Tisinger chose a student
from the more than 60 people atten-
ding ‘The Realms of Psychic
Perception,'’ and asked the student
to speak loudly. The audience was
silent when she said that ‘you have
some things on your mind,
something about a class.'’ She add.
ed, "These things will settle soon.'?
The student had just experienced a
“reading' by clairvoyant and
member of the Foundation for
Spiritual Evolution, Toni Tisinger.

This was one of several
demonstrations presented to the au-
dience on Wednesday night in the
Alumni House,

everything else."

When asked If his parents were
angry with the Way he spends his
money one young man said, ‘She
was right, my parents are upset

+ about my spending money,'”

“The Realms of Psychic Percep-
tion’? consisted of several
demonstrations and a lecture by
Foundation feader, Joe Guice,
Guice, a medium, gave a brief in-
troduction into the world) of
“psychic phenomenon,” He has
been involved in psychic studies for
nine years and has also taught the
t9ple for the past five years,

Ghiice stressed that ‘by learning
to {une into energy that exists in all
of us we can all gain some control

Psychic demonstrates phenomena at session

system,"* said Guice. “'No energy is
fost or gained," This supports the
concept that there is no death,
merely a passing on, he explained,
The other reality is "'an existence we
cannot,percelve any more than we
fe aware of TY.or radio waves that
‘ass through this ¢oom,'’ he said,
When questioned About mediums,
he explained that, “every person
has'@ gulde on the other side who
sares for them,"

Th an informal discussion afier
the lecture, Tisinger explained that,
"the people on the other side want
(help us!” and through hard Work
and meditation exercises she can
receive this help.

Judy Reill, also a member and over it."
clairvoyant, chose a man from the According to Gulce, physics sup- If anyone is Interested in pursu-
audience and expressed, ‘a sisterly ports the theory of ‘psychle ing the study of psychic awareness

ith him,’ Reill add- phenomenon," He added, ‘Since they can contact the Foundation for

died of achest we are all made up of energy, there Spiritual Evolution which is located

disease,"” The man confirmed this Is No reason why We can't tap into in Guilderland, Courses in healing,
Paychlo expert Joe Guice but later added, ‘*Reill was correct the energy of others," psychic development and con:

"The people on the other side want to helpus™ —SCSCOUL my wife but wrong about “We are living in a closed sciousness will be offered a

OBERT LUCKEY UPS

EDDY GRANT ::
IN THE CAMPUS CENTER
BALLROOM

ALFREDO'S DELI &
MARKET

Thickly cut sandwiches and
subs, produce, & homemade
salads. The
homestyle PIZZA and other
Italian delicacies including
imported pasta and veal parm,
subs, This week free quart of
ginger ale with purchase of
pizza, Open 7 days until
at 226 Quail 462-3614

MONDAY OCT. 17th ef

WYN THEATRES

$02 Bane win

DAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY

TRADING PLACES,

HELLMAN

[WASHINGTON AVE, ALBANY 486 5322

TICKETS ON SALE IN THE CAMPUS
CENTER LOBBY M—F 11AM—3:30PM

NATAUIEWOOD - One txre

BEAINSIORNG:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 457—8520

aaa SONG REMAINS Some things speak for themselves”
THE SAME LJ

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|

i
i

& ALBANY STUDENTPRESS (1 OCTOBER 14,1983

Salvadoran tells of terror

By Robert Gardinier
ff TOR,

SSOCIATEE NEWS EDI

Calling the government of El Salvador a
“militaristic rascist dictatorship,"” an exiled
Salvadorian unfon leader, Sonia Galan,
described oppression she and others faced at
the hands of the Salvadorean government,
during a lecture in LC 20 on Wednesday ¥
night,

Galan, 25, outlined a chronology of abuse
that started in October of 1979 when a
military-civilian Junta was established in the
small Central American country,

Speaking through an interpreter, Galan
criticized the U.S, sponsored elections held in
1982 in El Salvador. She scoffed at the con-
tention that the elections were in fact *free,"”
“People were forced to vote in a climate of
terror," she sald. People had 1 hands
stamped with ink to show that they voted and

ifthey did not have the stamp they were turn-
ed in by their employers and harassed by the
National Guard, she explained,

Galan was born in San Salvador and
Braduated with a degree in accounting from
the David J. Guzman College located there.
She began her work in the General Garment
Workers Union in 1977 and is presently a
member of the FENASTRAS union, She
said she has been instrumental in the forma-
tion of numerous other unions, but because
of threats she escaped to the US. where she
Js still involved In FENASTRAS

In actuality, according to Galan, the
government of El Salvador is unconstitu-
tional because of decrees that have been put
into place that are repressive, Dec: 15.
she sald, legalizes the state of seige by the
military, Under this decree, it is legal for the
army to ransack working places, churehes,
‘and residences, she asserted,

Among the most brutal government
decrees is $07, which, she said, in effect
legalized torture, Some of the processes of
torture used by the government and military
that lan has seen are electrical shock, acids
splashed on the body, especially the face, and

“THIS WEEKEND

SOPHIES CHOICE

SHOWS AT

UNIVERSITY CINEIWae |
Ny

UNIVERSITY CINEMAS
PRESENTS

PORKYS

IN LC7&LC 18
PRICE 1.50/tax
2.00/without tax

4 hood torture’device that suffoctes a person
slowly.

‘She explained that the work of her union
and other unions along with college students
and other citizens is to topple the existing
government and in its place establish a
“representative democratic government that
‘would provide a voice for all the factions in
the country.

Urging all SUNYA students to oppose the
Reagan administration support of the
Salvadorean government, she emphasized
that the reason she was speaking in the U.
fs that only the concerned citizens of America
can pressure the administration to stop sup-
porting the military dictatorship.

When asked what the relationship is bet-
Ween the FENASTRAS union and the
Salvadorean guerrillas she sald, “*We do not |
Speak for them, we represent the union but

that does not mean that we are separate from

Teal

oe eae 3

CHESS CLUB will be holding its annual Qualifyin,
tournament to field a team for the 1983 Pan y
American Intercollegiate Chess Team Tournament

Tournament will begin Monday night, Oct, 24th
Rounds will be from 7:30-11:00 on six consecutive

Monday nights. Entry fee is $5.00. Prizes: Top 4
finishers will recelve a free trip to Worcester, Mass,
to compete in the Pan-Ams. For info. contact Eric

Niler at 482-0509 and attend the Oct. 17 Chess Club |
meeting.

OF VEWAID CWO FD EWE F DTW, DWI Ne

SA Funded |

ther

“The dictatorship depends totally on the
United States ald,"" she said, *41f the aid in-
reases, It would be detrimental to the guer-
las: but if it does not, the people of El
alvador may soon win," said Galan, |
FENASTRAS, she explained, is composed
of garment, construction, electrical, fishing,
loyees and agricultural workers,
26 affiliated unions and the struc-
ture is similar to the American AFL-CIO,"
She sald that 80 percent of the workers were
unionized now in the county, but since 1980
"wages have been frozen and collective
bargaining has been made illegal."” The
AFL-CIO has been helpful in the cause |
st the government and US, interven
tion in the country," she added.

The 8 of four North American
religious women in December 1980 was in
retaliation for their part in helping union
mbers, Galan said. After this the union
‘and student groups fighting for liberation
were forced underground,

Galan accused President Reagan of “op-
posing representation in El Salvador, h

o>

( THE INTERNATIONAL FILM GROUP

=
PRESENTS
FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
Sat. Oct. 15 LC =
7:00 and 10:00 LDN
$1.00 with tax card if
$1.50 without tax card

SA FUNDED)
— Z

AT THE MOVIES””

De

& |

7:30 & 10:00

SA FUNDED

The SUNYA Pre-Law Association
presents |

The Fifth Annual

SUNY/ALBANY |
LAW SCHOOL FAIR

Featuring Admissions Counselors from:

ota” \\
ee @

@ Antloch
@ Vermont
© CUNY — Queens Colle
ge |
© New York Law Sch
© Albany = |
: Trosklyn law
ashington and Lee U.

e University of Connecticut - ag

and many more

Saturday, Octoher 15, 1983
10:00 — 12:30 & 1:30 — 4:00
SUNYA Campus Center Ballroom

For further Information call: Richard Golubow 487-8087
sccion to ne Crit Undargedeal fovcaon

OCTOBER 14,1983 (2) ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 9

Diverse history adds to Chapel House charm

By John Thurburn

Across perimeter road from the
gym is the Albany Collegiate Inter-
faith center, otherwise known as
Chapel House, which provides
religious services for Roman
Catholic, Episcopalian, Lutheran,
Jewish, and Southern Baptist wor
shippers, along with counseling,
and other services for students,

Chapel House was formed in the
fate 1960's by the Interfaith Cor-
poration, a group of 21 people
(Seven catholics, jews, protestants)
who were concerned for the
students’ need to have a religious
institution to which they could go.
“We (Interfaith Corp.) wanted to
have a place where religion would
be evident on campus,” said Milton
Olsen, a former Vice President of
the school of Management and
Planning, as well as a Dean of the
School of Business here at SUNYA,
A present member of the Board of
Directors for the Interfaith Corp.,
he was a founding member of
Chapel House, ‘Chapel House is
Hot a part of the University," Olsen
pointed out, *We own the building

Pa. Judge rules dorm
sales can’t be barred

University Park, PA (CPS)—Sales,
companies can invade dorms and.
make their pitches almost at will
from now on, if two recent court
rulings stay in effect.

A federal judge has said Penn-
sylvania State University cannot
ban group sales presentations in ils
dorms because the restrictions
Violate students’ free speech rights.

The decision, coupled with a
similar ruling earlier this summer
against the State University of New
York-Cortland, may have far
reaching implications for dor
mitories across the country which
try to restrict dorm sales and
solicitation.

Pennsylvania officials had argued
they had the authority to bar group,
sales meetings in their dorm rooms
beemuise the meeting disturbed other

But U.S. District Judge Malcolm

Muir has now ruled that the ‘free
flow of ideas resulting from atten:
dance at group commercial
demonstrations and solicitations is

Salvadoran
“8

in El Salvador that is the question,
it is the terrible repression of our

people that we fight against,'" she

asserted
“The U.S. people are going to
suffer like our people are going 10

be afflicted by a total
she said

intervention,
“American taxpayers are paying to
arm the dictatorship in El Salvador
While social programs are cut. It
Will be the working classes and the
sons of the working classes that will
aid Galan.

suffer and die,

Galan was a replacement speaker
for Al iro, Molina Lara,
organizational leader of
FENASTRAS and also an exiled
Lara could not

trade union leader
show up for his talk because of re-
eats (0 his family in El

cen
Salvador, according 10 a specch
coordinator. The lecture was spon:
sored in part by the Puerto Rican

Independence Solidarity

Alliance

and the land that it is on, but we
don’t interfere with what they (the
staff) do,"

The house was built in approx.
imately 1910, by publisher and
Albany Republican boss William
Barnes, Jr, The house, once used as
a summer home for Barnes, has
recently been noted in the National
Historical Register because of its
‘Arts and Crafts" style, which was
popular around the time of con-
struction,

"This style emphasized prac-
ticality and simplicity in design,”
said Austin O'Brien, Field Resear-
cher for the Historical Preservation
Service. ‘The house is noted as a
Very good example of the style,"

The Capital Area Council of
Churches owned the house previous
tothe Interfaith Corporation, They
sold it while acting as ‘a forum to
help establish new religious
organizations," according to
Joseph Lynn, Chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Interfaith
Corp, "Right now, the house will
gost us (the board of directors) Hy
$10,000." Lynn also said that they

4 constitutionally protected right,!”
and ordered the school to lifts its
restrictions.

In the New York case, university
officials had also insisted their ban
‘on commercial dorm sales was’
necessary to insure student safety:
and security

In July, however, U.S, Disetriet
Judge Newl McCurn ruled ‘ta
blanket restriction on commercial
speech is a particularly overbroad
and inappropriate means of protec
ting students from commercial

abuses."”

But, MeCurn added, while the
school could not ban commercial
sales meetings and demonstrations,
it could place restrictions on the|
time and place the meetings are!

held

Furthermore, the judge said, the
school was only obligated to allow
demonstations and. meetings, and
could ban actual sales of products}
in residence halls,

Both suits involved American}
Future Systems, a Pennsylvania.
based housewares firm which
recruits students on campuses ni
tionwide to help sell its products.

Usually, they ask a student if
they can have one of their sales reps
hold a sales demonstration in their
dorm room,’ says Lee Uperaft
Penn State's manager of residentii
life,

“Fortunately, the law only ap:
plies to schools in the Iwo federal
court districts involved,” says Gi
North, housing director at
University of Illinoie, and former
ident of the Association of Col-
and University Housing Of-

1s
North says colleges should ha
the right to restrict such meetings
“to prevent things from getting out
of hand,

Indeed, at Penn State the number|
of dorm sales meetings ‘tis building
each day as the word gets out (that |=
the school cannot restrict them),
says Uperaft.

“We're probably having at least
three or four a day on campus
now,” he laments, ‘It may soon
reach @ point where it's difficult to
maintain a good study environ-
ment."

Both schools plan to appeal the|
New York and Pennsylvania deci-

M

solicit funds at times, but rely main-
ly on their own individual funds to
finance Chapel House,

Father William Ryan of the
Catholic contingent, said the house
gets some use by students but that
he hopes more students will come
by. Services are held at Chapel
House for Jewish denomination
for the Shabbat on Fridays, 6:30
pm, Masses are held in the Campus
Center on Sundays at 12:30 and
6:30 pm.

“We are open seven days a week,
24 hours a day,’ said Father Ryan,
Chapel’ House, Father Ryan, with
Sister Danielle Bonetti, Reverend
Gary Kriss, Reverend Christopher
Hoyer, Reverend Braxton LeCroy,
and Jewish Student Coalition
Director Rebecca Gordon take on
the task of providing the student
body with access to their particular
religious needs, Groups such as Al- The rustic setting of Chapel Hou:
An and Middle Barth use the bul
house at times for meetings and get
togethers o

CINDY GALWAY UPS)

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sions, f

EDITORIAL

long hard hours to produce the newspaper you

now hold in your hands, The ASP has no faculty
or administrative advisors, We receive no funds from the
university or Student Association, No academic credits
are given to those who work here, This Is a completely in-
dependent newspaper and we're proud of it,

Although 10,000 issues of the ASP are distributed two
times a week, it’s apparent that few readers realize the
way in which this newspaper is produced, as well as the
manner in which editorial decisions are made, Those in-
dividuals who actually make it past the classified section
might find the following information worthwhile,

C Tose to 100 full time students have worked many

First and foremost is the task of destroying the widely
held misconception that the ASP is funded by Student
Association, Let it be known that the Student Assoctation
has no control whatsoever aver this newspaper.

Over seven years ago the ASP did indeed function as
the result of the student tax dollar, The fact now is that we
are totally supported by our own advertising, This means
nobody can infringe on our first admendment rights, The
editorials and policies set in this newspaper are strictly the
opinion of this editorial board,

Our policy of not excepting military advertising is
perhaps the most well known and most controversial
Policy which we now foster, We belleve that the military
and intelligence agency ads lle by not stating that they

 |Everything you ever wanted to know

discriminate against homosexuals. We

sacrifice $7,000 to $8,000 a year in adverti

back our beliefs. ASP policy also states that we

run ads that lie, are obscene or sel illegal products or ser-
vices,

All editorials are written by the Editor in Chief with
members of the editorial board. The nine editors and
managers each have a vote in making policy and editorial
decisions, In Editor in Chief elections, which are tradi.
tionally held each December and allow any full time
Albany State student to run, the 16 editors, associate
editors, managers, and associate managers each have a

If a reader disagrees with an editorial viewpoint, or
feels there was an error or injustice committed in this
ewspaper, the concern can be addressed by either writing
or talking to the editor. Letters (0 the editor are printed
Whether or not they agree with our editorial standpoint.
Letters to the editor will not be printed if they contain
personal attacks, The authors of all letters are verified by
Our editorial pages editor.

The columns which appear underneath our editorials
fare written by members of the university community and
do not necessarily represent editorial policy. Advertising
policy also does not necessarily reflect editorial policy.
The political cartoon which appears on the editorial pages
does reflect editorial policy.

News, sports, aspects, business, and production are the
five major departments that comprise this paper.

News coverage includes primarily campus and com:
munity news which pertains to the SUNYA student. The
section also includes one page of state, national, and
worldwide news briefs

The sports scction’s responsibility consists mainly of
reporting on Great Dane varsity teams. The section docs
features on various other teams, clubs and players. In ad.
dition the department now boasts a monthly magazine
which includes interviews, columns, intramural coverage
local pro coverage, etc. |

‘Aspects in the paper's feature section which produces
an eight (0 12 page weekly pull-out section. 'Spects’ in
cludes previews, reviews, perspectives, local entertain
ment listings, interviews, etc.

The business department keeps this paper afloat
Salespeople are actively out soliciting ads from the com
munity, The business production staff designs and lays
‘out all the advertisements. Everything to do with finances
is handled by the business personel.

The production crew is responsible for the actual plac.
ing down of the articles and pictures, They do most of
their work Monday and Thursday nights from nine in the
evening to eight the next morning.

Together, we produce the product that you have in
front of you, So now that you know what went into this
newspaper, go ahead and read the rest of it

COLUMN
Honoring D

The recent filibuster in the U.S, Senate, led by Senator
Jesse Helms of North Carolina, concerning legislation sup-
porting a national holiday for the slain civil rights leader
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, has frightened and angered
many people, especially me, On August 2,1983 the House
passed a bill making the January 15 anniversary of the birth
of the Reverend Dr, Martin Luther King, Jr. a national
holiday (0 honor "a person who shook the moral con
cience of this nation,””

Gerry Rolley

Born January 15, 1929, Dr, King symbolized what mo
people strive to symbolize, He represented meckness, love
A national
holiday honoring Dr. King will not only promote justice
and world peace, but instill virtuous values in children

generosity, and genuine concern for others,

whom can follow in the footsteps of such a gentleman.
Honoring Dr, King will enhance deteriorating racial rela-
tions in America, Moreover, never in the history of
mankind has anyone touched so many hearts and souls as
this scholar, America cannot afford to forget Dr. King, His
philosophy must not be left by the wayside, In the nuclear
era in which we now live, justice, peace, and nonviolence is
the only route to world salvation.

The most important things in his life, he said, were his
constant efforts to serve humanity— to provide the proper
advice to the nation about the war in Vietnam, (o feed the
hungry, to clothe the naked, and to visit those in prison, He
felt that his stands on justice and peace were extremely im-
portant and they formed the foundation of his philosophy.

It Is imperative to point out that the prerequisite for
peace Is justice, Its illogical, nal, irresponsible, and
absurd to believe that there can be peace without justice. 1
totally disagree with those Ph,D's, Ed,D's, J.D's and other
D's who claim that peace can be achieved through MX
missiles, B1 bombers, F16 fighters or amphibious tanks, As
Dr. King stated many times, peace cannot be achieved
through force,

In @ hostile world in which we live, peace cannot exist
where grave injustices prevail. It is evident that no one is
safe and secure unless everyone is healthy and "t, You can
never be full as long as someone else is hungry. The sooner
the world citizenry realizes these crucial facts the sooner an
atmosphere of tranquility will evolve. Former Secretary-
General of the United Nations, U Thant, said, “It is not by
the force of Nature, but by his own will that man finds
himself engaged in a race between building a better world
and destroying an imperfect one. And itis in the power of
man alone to determine how that race will end," So you
see, We are not only at the mercy of God for our existence,
but at the mercy of each other 100, Dr, Martin Lutherking,
Jr. strongly advocated this sentiment and should be
honored for his courageous contribution to humanity. Dr.
King believed that since God was the architect of the
universe, the world bends ultimately toward justice,
righteousness, and mercy, he thought of evil and injustice
not as ultimate, but ax merely episodic,

r. King

Many scholars, politicians, educators and laymen alike
contend that peace is right around the corner and Justice Is
highly revered around the world, But how can there be
peace when three fourths of the human population is poor
and one fourth of the human population is rich? How can
there be peace when the worlds’ natural resources are
allocated shamefully equally? Can peace realyy be achieved
when countries are invaded, terrorized and occupied by ex-
{ternal forces, such as Afghanistan and Lebanon? Do you
think peace will come any day soon when human rights
Violations are overlooked and often ignored in places like
South Africa and the Philippines? OF course not. These in
justices and inequalities must be settled amicably or the
Word "peace" will only be a catch phrase (0 be used by
presidential candidates and bored housewives

Itis no secret that injustice’prevails in America, just like
anywhere else, Dr. King challenged America to reexamine
her most cherished beliefs and come to grips with the fact
that all men are created equal, He challenged America to
make freedom, justice, goodness, mercy, and love a reality
for all the people, Although some progrees has been made
toward a more just society, (oo many Americans still suffer

» inadequate health
living conditions, and

from malnutrition, insufficient he
care, inferior education, deplorab)
massive unemployment
‘As a strong democracy and
not too late for the United States to play a vital role in
and world peace, Today, America Is in a
nto be a model democracy for our neighbors
{o imitate, Unless the image of God be obliterated from the
soul, all men cherish the virtues of liberty, peace and
justice, If we stray away from the path outlined by Dr
Martin Luther King, Jr., itis only matter of time before
the streets of New York City, Philadelphia, Boston,
Chicago, Los Angeles and else where will flow with blood
like the hills of Arizona and Texas are now flooded with
water,
T submit then, that We honor Dr. Martin Luther
Jr., with a national holiday, and work toward fufilling hi
dream, Then, as Dr. King said, we will be able to sing with
true meaning, *My couniry, ‘tis of thee, sweet land of
liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died, land of
the Pilgram’s pride, from every mountainside, let freedom
ring."”

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Heaven Can Wait

NFRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983

Closing The Deal

‘© You Want to go to heaven?”
T looked up in surprise, closing
the book I'd been reading, The
small, bespectacled man in front of me
Walted humbly as | studied him, He was
Wearing what must have been a $250
business sult(hering:bone), and carrying a
leather brief- case. His round, smiling face
was highlighted by a pair of patient blue
eyes.

John Keenan

Never really thought much about It,"1
replied easily, and slid my hand under the
counter to wrap It around a heavy length of
Pipe the boss kept there to chase the loons
away with, The man didn't look like a crazy,
but working at Horizons Religious
Books, I'd met my share of salvation ped-
dlers, My own personal experiences ranged
from the monk of the Order of the great God
Osiris, who'd offered to canonize me, to a
very sincere lady In a very expensive mink
who'd sworn that only by living alife of com:
plete celibacy could | hope to enter the
kingdom of Our Lord, I've been damned 15
times by irate customers; {t's a statistic I'm
rather proud of,

My noncommital reply didn't seem to faze
the litte man in the slightest, “Well, you
really should, you know,"he Informed me
eamesily, It's getting late, and soon there
won't be any more room left.” He opened
his briefcase and began fishing around inside
It

“Room for what," asked, when, with a
trlumphant "AHA!" he jerked his hand from
the case. This startling combination of nolse
‘and movement almost earned him a pipe to
the temple, except { saw that all he held in
his hand was a fistful of brightly colored
brochures, which he promptly handed to
me.

The pamphlets were bound tightly by a
large rubber band, and emblazoned across
the topmost leaflet was the eye-catching
legend, Valhalla; We're Looking for a Few
Good Men!

Uooked at that for a long time

The brochures were a classy job. In all the
years I'd worked the counter at the store, I'd
ever come across a more convincing form
of lunacy. In addition to the Valhalla blurb,
there were upwards of twenty other
brochures, regaling the wonders of such pro
minent paradises as Hades, Elysium, and (lo
and beholdjeven Christian Heaven, The
man was a nut case, pure and simple, but
you had to admire a nut with that much
style. | pulled out the top brochure and flip
ped it to him.

“Tell me about Valhalla," | told him.

“Oh, dear,"he murmured, his round face
becoming momentarily fishlike in its wrinkled
disapproval. “A very popular first choice
sir, but most of our clients reconsider. After
all, why would you want to go fo a heaven
do 10 be destroyed?"

Iwas amazed. The man was attempting to
sell me an afterlife! | felt laughter bubbling up
from inside me, but | managed to cut It off, a
sound like a strangled snarl emerging in Its
place, All man, that was me! Viking from
womb to pyre! "Never mind that,"! grimac:
ed fiercely. “Just tell me about Valhalla!"

He sighed, and with a doleful shake of his
head, bent over his briefcase once again. It
took control to keep from laughing outright;
the man was so serious

He was muttering under his breath as he
began flipping through a small, leather

bound notebook, “When I think of all the |

trouble they've caused. .. Val... Valhalla, here
itis!

He looked up. “Well, there is room."

“What trouble?" asked. The man was in:
triguing, so much so that I'd absent-mindedly
released the pipe. | leaned toward him,

“Well, sir,” he began,as you may be
aware, the Norse...the vikings, you unders-
tand...be- lieved that after death all the
greatest heroes were summoned to the great
mead-hall Volhalla, where they would awalt
the final battle between good and evil that
Would destroy not only most, gods, but the
World ds Wal! He pasedforiireath, “That
battle...Ragnarok, | believe they called {t..1s

| ,
“The enjl of the world had'to be a great se

ing angle) I thought, and felt a familiar tickle'ii

my ribs that told me I was very near hysterics.

scheduled to take place on Novem: ber
twenty-first.” He glanced down at his watch
and smiled thinly. “Only twenty-one days
from today. And that is why my company
has been contracted to fill as many heaven's

ecan before the end, We're experienc

The end of the world had to be a great sell-
ing angle, | thought, and felt a familiar tickle
in my ribs that told me | was very near
hysterics

"Ah," I said softly," see. Well then, since
Volhalla...and the world.,.cease to exist in
only twenty-one days, what can you tell me
about...oh, say, Christian Heaven? And isn’t
selling berths in a Christian Paradise sort of
contrary to the entire ideology?
Moneylenders in the temple, and all that?"

He smiled beatifcally at me, “Well, sir,
We're hardly selling anything, aciually,

Christian ideology Is sort of against the né
tion‘of buying places in heaven...nowadays,
anyway, But the actual place in heaven Is
free, Rather a good deal, I'd say."
e, huh?" I asked in disbelief.
ing for you or the company?”

Jel, sir, If you're offering, I could rather
use some money. just a bit. | mean, since
you're going to heaven and all, and I've stil
got my job to do. These suits do get rather
expensive,”

Just what'd thought, “Get the hell out of
here, you bastard,” Softly, Very softly and
calmly."People like you make me sick, You
{ell me all I need Is belief, then you ask me
for money. Well, I've got the belief, and |
don't need to give you my money to prove
i"

He regarded me steadily. "Do you really
think you have faith?” He shrugged. "You
don’t, you know. And money or not, you're

| golna to need that falth ina very shor time,”
| He swept the pamphlets back into his brief-
case, and turned to leave. I watched him
walk to the middle of the floor, pause, and
call softly, "Michael? No sale,”

There was a flash, and a boom, and |
woke up.

The lightning, of course, The lightning
had awakened me, that and the thunder. |
tolled over on the bed, pulling my covers
tight about me and grimaced, Imagine
dreaming about that ‘stupid little inciden
every night since it had happened, And
these thunderstorms this past week, It's fun
ny how storms can affect you

As | rolled over, my eyes fell on that pam-
phlet Iying on my clock radio, Yes, I'd kept
it [ picked’ it up,

Looking for a Few

‘That was twenty days ago. And I'm wor:
ried,

\\

- Unmasking The Myth O

by Gail Merrell

Are there any serlous college students
to be found in America today? And for|
that matter, were there ever any in the
first place? To ‘solve that mystery our
research team found itself in Long
Island, speaking with Charles, a Senior
Consultant at a major computer cor-
poration, Charles Is of middling helght,
but with a thin frame and small, in-/
telligent eyes.|

Charles began his college career in
Cornell University in the early 50's and
finished at Brooklyn Polytechnic with an |
engitieering degree, He claims to have
been an education-oriented student,

ing his educational accomplishments]
outside of the engineering field. Besides]
the fact that he Is a self-taught computer]
programmer, Charles knows French|
and Spanish, worked on a novel, is a
former president of the Village Camera
Club, dabbles in oll paints and sket-
ching, tunes up cars, Is a history buff,
plays clarinet, plano, saxophone (both
alto and tenor) and ukelele, and does
windows:

Despite his impressive list of educa
tional accomplishments, he does not}
feel that he was the exception rather
than the rule at college.

“| remember when I went to school |
took one big sultcase and it contained all
of the clothes and everything | was go
ing to have with me for the year. No
one had refrigerators or TVs, since TVs
were just coming In and all you coula|
watch were roller derbies, This was al
long time ago. No one had posters on}
the walls; they were just white, Can you!
believe it? Nobody went around feeling
deprived: we didn't think there was
anything wrong with this. If you wanted!
to study there were far fewer distrac:|
tions. |

“There wasn't music blasting in thel
halls. One guy on the floor had a
phonograph that you attached to your|
radio, Columbia had just come out with
8331/3 rpm records, It just played the
records and had wires coming out of the
back; they didn't even havel
loudspeakers,

“The people 1 knew were all in-
terested in learning and studying, | went
to engineering school and if you didn't
study, you flunked out, There was no
reason to be in engineering school if you
Weren't going to study.” hi

The school that Charles’ daughter at+| o1
fends is the State University of New| h
York at Albany and it was here that our] pl
crew found a student that was eager to} pi

It’s like somebody saying ‘I wanna go to Europe.’ It’s

is guitar and amp placed haphazardly
n the floor, Brian quickly explained,
jowever, that the type of music he
lays Is“, . soothing, At this point |
ick up a guitar to soothe myself. It's .

learn just a mental exercise.”

We tracked down Brian after noticing}

Brian lives alone because “I just enjoy

him reading a book, following him Into] personal space.” His mind Is always ac-
his apartment on State Street, Once in-} tive. “Instead of getting my work done |

side, we found that Brian's studio] si
mimicked the dorm rooms of the 50's} |
college student that
described to us, In itis a large bookshelf

it on my bed and think, I suppose. But
enjoy that a lot. Without being

Charles had} egotistical, | enjoy being myself.

“I do write a lot. I guess | still read

that fs home to his many books, His] more than I write, although I do keep a
oversized desk is drowning in papers, journal. It's more of a retrospective jour

while the floor covering is day-old issues

of The New York Times. A worn chair,
draped with drab clothing and scream
ing white ballet shoes, stands before a|
small poster publicizing Amnesty Inter-
national. The rest of the walls are bare
There is no TV.

Brian does, however, own a stereo,
but admits he is getting away from his
generation's passion for rock 'n' roll and
Is moving on to more complex and
sophisticated music

"I'm getting away from rock ‘n’ roll
I'm still interested in rock, but I like fu-|
sion, classical. Beethoven, I'm in
terested in Bach, too. | think that it's}
hypnotic,”

He seemed to be a genuinely!
education-orlented student, even as far}

a5 music Is concerned, until we noticed

nal, it's more of an analytical journal to
try to understand what past events
meant, what they were. I think it's hard
to encompass your present life and your
present circumstances because it's so
hard to see that when you're in the thick
of it, I's therapeutic, Even In the jour-
nal, | try to poke fun at myself. [like to
look back, and it’s there, I deal an even
hand,"

He admits that he still reads more
than he writes, ", . :Ulysses is a master-
plece. Joyce is caught up in the human
condition, I swear after reading Ulysses
it Was frustrating when I would speak to
someone; there would be like a dual
monologue, It went on to the point
where I would actually see the print of
my own thoughts as It was in Ulysses.”

Does Brian, we wondered, incor-
porate everything into his education?
“feel like there's not much else left
for us to do, It’s funny, it depresses me
that s0 many professors are so arrogant
and, there's a belief that we have
nothing left to learn in any area and |
think too many professors adopt that. |
mean, of course, they won't admit it.
That's a general statement and there are
exceptions, but I think it's sad now that
some people teach us while they
themselves are not open to Ideas.”

Another education-oriented student
that we found at SUNY-Albany was
Dave. We discovered Dave proclaiming
the virtues of existential love while on
his way to his Chinese Philosophy class
Dave got very excited when we asked
him if he felt he was at school for the
sake of edication, He calmed down
considerably, however, when we men-
tioned how Charles had equated study-
ing hard with educating oneself

“I ended up taking five courses last
semester, all of which required papers,
I's not possible for me to turn out
papers on command, I really feel that |
have to do quality work, that I'm
creating something substantial, | ques,"

Speaking of not turning out material
on command, we asked Dave about the
truth to the rumor that he walked out on
a final that he wasn't enjoying.

‘I wanna go to college.'”

“It was the last of four finals
Wound up feeling disillusioned about
the whole process of one-week
memorization and regurgitation. | really
feel that anything | write seriously
should contribute to my education and
help actualize my potential. I was just so
Weakened by what | hated doing so
much that I didn't have the strength to
do it again.”

Dave is somewhat of a campus
celebrity, first garnering attention when
he showed up to his classes in along red
mohawk, But that was a year ago, and
today he wears a head of soft red curls.
Among his more interesting clothes is a
shirt and skirt from Kenya ("I went there
to visit my best friend, who had called
me the week before from Uganda") and
a flaming peach Jacket that can “go with
me anywhere," Although he is well over
six feet, Dave is as soft and cuddly as a
teddy bear

We were able to obtain a list of his
Weird papers, being shown for the first
time ever. We begin with the infamous
Critique of Jean-Paul Sartre's Entire
Philosophy. “This |s the first paper |
ever wrote, and it was a critique of one
of Sartre's philosophical treatises. |
thought had Sartre on that one. | got a
D on the paper." Undaunted, he went
n to create a parable in the Jainist
tradition, which was handed in a mere
three weeks late, Jainism Is “an obscure

f College Education Today

“I remember when I went to school . . . there were far fewer distractions.”

Indian religion, in which the practi-
tioners walk around unclothed, sweep-
ing the ground in front of them to avoid
harming any other life-beings, which
would violate the principle of universal
consciousness.”

The rest are almost self-explanatory,
or self-confusing, as the case may be
There was the Existential Adaptions of
Romeo and Juliet and Casablanca,
which tested the ropes by coming in six
weeks late, Coming in at the three-week
late mark was The Biblical Conception
of War. His masterpiece, however, was
his Joycean Adaptation of a Passover
Sedar, which, assigned a year-and-a
half ago, has yet to be handed in.

In the works for Dave are A
Phenomenology of Kindness, A Freu
dian Analysis of “Archie” or "Super
man” and The Metaphysics of Dental
Hygeine

Contrary to Dave's interest in
philosophy and theory is Ter!’s interest
in the communications field. Our crew
came upon Teri by accident on the third
floor of the SUNY library, where she
was Working on a paper. Her small, thin
face nods up and down to overem-
phasize the finality of her opinions,

would hate to see education get too
vocational, | would think if you're
young and you haye your major so
definitely planned it's bad. One of a stu-

dent's biggest complaints is that ‘i can't
use anything I learned on the outside,’
There's got to be more courses geared
toward the world; it's gotta apply
more! . .I'm not arguing that theories
aren't important, but courses have to be
applicable.”

Teri then proceeded to Inform us of
her educational goals, The conditioning
has been successful — she speaks in
proper “rough draft” form,

“My purpose here is three-fold: one,
academic. But by that! mean things that
don't apply directly to a job but are very
important, like English, Two, social
Three, environmental. Where you can
apply what you've learned to a working
environment, the practical things.”

Ter! asked us to come to her apart
ment, located within the student ghetto.

When we sat down with Teri at her
plastic yellow-and-white-checked
tablecloth, her apartmentmate Caryn
decided to join us. Sensing a lull in the
coversation, Caryn complained,
“Reagan is so anti-education — he's
ruining everything,"

Teri snapped her head around to em-
phasize a new idea, “I think students are
more interested in grades than educa:
tion. I'm more interested in grades.”

Caryn agreed, saying that “education |
1s just a means to an end § H
It got very quiet as the two started!

thinking about their grades, "What's a
cum laude?” “3.0, What's higher, sum:
ma or magna? Look, it's the laude that's
important. That's what goes on your

resume

Through Teri we were able to meet
Rob, who graduated from Albany State
@ year and a half ago, Rob is well-
educated, with his knowledge ranging
from Monets and Mondrians to Reagan
and Russians, Rob was easily the most
popular guy in the class of '82; he can
imitate anyone from Bill Murray to Elvis
Costello.

Throught the yelps, the rolled “1's,”
the whimpers and the assorted laughs
{come his thoughts on education. Rob
admits that although he could not have
earned much of what he knows outside
of school, his main venue for learning
Was not the classroom.

“My main purpose at college was
education both in and out of classes,
because | realized that to do what |
Wanted to do, [couldn't learn that much
in classes. | had to go for practical ex
perience, . .I wanted to be a pear! diver
and, no, I wanted to work on e
fmagazine and | wanted to write. and
if you take literature classes it helps you
to write, However, if you want to learn
production and editing, the best thing to
do is to work at the ASP, here, and get

more practical experience elsewhere.

How does Rob view college?

*, . college Is what you make of it, You
iknow there are people who really hate
going to school and people who really
love it, I'm one of the people who really
lloves it, 1 don't think that there's too
much of a concentration on grades;
that’s an individual thing as well, ! didn’t
‘really think about that so much. It
depends, it completely depends, on the
professor, | had some professors that
Were uninspiring and others that were
just fantastic, For literature classes it
depends on what you're reading, and
how the professors help you to interpret
things, I'm glad that I didn't have classes
that were required. Ina way, I think it’s
very good; | think people should have
to take certain classes, but if | had to do
that, | would have been forced to take
things like math. I took forly minutes of
‘math at this university, and after (wenty
minutes | was asleep.”

Now that you are working on a
magazine, do you ever miss taking col
lege courses?

“There are a load of course that | wish
Tcould take, weird courses like Chinese
which you have to take every single day
‘or something, If | went back to school, |
would go back because classes inspire
me to do things, like a class would {n
spire me to read a certain book or
something, | don't think | was a very
class educational-orlented student. One
of the least important things seemed to
be going to classes,”

So, if classes don't
stimulate Rob, what does? "I guess it's
just a burning curiosity, I'm a naturally
curious person. And | want to find out,
not because | want to participate in the
conversation al the men’s club on Satur
day night; that's the last thing [ want to
do, it's not my sort of lifestyle, It's just
that I really want to know so that I can
think intelligently about things. Make up.
my own mind about things.”

We asked Rob if he felt he would be
as educated as he is now if he didn't go
to college. He answered immediately
“No, Part of the reason Is, . .1 would
have missed four yers of observing this
lifestyle, And it’s 9 very. inspiring
lifestyle. And it's an essential Ifestyle, 1
think. I's a thing you have to ex
perience, it's like somebody saying, ‘I
Wanna go to Europe.’ I's l wanna go to
college.'”

themselves

Rob then told us how just last night he
met up with a friend who was an ac-
counting major.After just four months
of working as an accountant he decided
it was the last thing he wanted to do.
Now he’s “hanging out. He wants to
write music articles."

Rob said that he wishes all students
would, . .get anything you can out of
everything, not just classes, Be open in
everything, relationships, atmosphere
visit Albany, do all those
things. . Education is all over the
place
P'So there you have it. Chris, Brian,
Dave, Teri, Caryn and Rob, Six very
different college-educated people, all of
whom see education in their own ways.
All of whom help us conclude that there
are education-oriented students in the

United States today.
Please join us next week on In Quest

Of as we track down the famed four
teenth tribe of Israel, the sons of
Sewhat, who, for thousands of years,
have travelled the deserts of the
Mideast, doing fine alterations at
reasonable rates, as they wait for th
Messiah to guide them to the holy land,
where they may set up a modest
business and makeaniceliving.
Cover and centerfold
photos by Ed Marussich

6a ASPECTS

Sound and Vision

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983

The Lords Of Punk

's Nothing Sacred?, the second

album from the Lords of the New

Church, is a redefining and refining
of that band’s sound. {f you liked the first
album you may feel slightly let down by Is
Nothing Sacred?, but certainly not cheated.
Ifyou didn’t ike the first album, you will pro-
ably like Is Nothing Sacred? better.

Norman Kee

The Lords of the New Churel
tough Punk/Rock band, something that is
hard to come by these days, The union of
Stiy Bator, ex-lead singer of the Dead Boys;
Brian James, original guitar player of The!
Damned; Dave Tregunna, ex-bassist for
Sham 69; and Nicky Turner, former drum-
‘mer of The Barracudas, was promising, By
drawing on thelr previous musical endeavors}
‘and throwing In a good helping of the New
York Dolls and Iggy Pop, the Lords of the
New Church came out with a raunchy album
at about the same time that Men-at-Work
‘and A Flock of Seagulls seemed to be sleep: |
ing with most of the radio programmers in
the country.

Stiv’s powerful Iggy-esque vocals and|
Brian James! frantic, Johnny Thunder's in-
fluenced guitar playing work together in such
‘a decadent manner that it only seems natural
for them to wear all black and avold sleep
and nutritious food. With the support of
Dave Tregunna and Nicky Turner on bass,
and drums, It was manna served on vinyl, a
died-and-gone to punk heaven. Best of all,
these guys weren't even all that stupid. Stiv's
Wyrics, although occasionally awfully sexist

* ond self-indulgent, were literate and often
rather good, The band's musicianship was
solid and Imaginative and their willingness to
throw In an occasional saxaphone and
keyboard was rewarded with an AOR
{Album Oriented Radio) semi-smash, "Open.
Your Eyes.

‘There latest release, however, displays a
broader, more diverse and, dare | say it?,
more accessible band than the first album.
Keyboards are featured much more pro:
minently and there seems to be less em:
phasis on Fury and Thunder, Don't get me
wrong, Chris Cross this isn’t, it's just less bad.
boyish, Whereas with the first album. It
sounded like the band was listening to a lot

Claire Bloom At The E;

nly the rarest of artists successfully
command the stage alone. Claire
Bloom, In her one woman show
These Are Women (A Portrait of
Shakespeare's Heroines) captured and held
her audience Sunday afternoon at the Egg.
Bloom, a small bird of a woman, soared in
character, moving her audience to laughter
‘and pathos

Megan Taylor

Bloom started her career at age
Florida where she and her family had been|
moved during the blitz in London (1940). In]
1943 she returned to London and began her |
Jong and well documented climb to the posi-
tion of honor and respect she now com:
mands, She may be most familiar to
‘American audiences for her role as Lady
Marchmpain in the acclaimed BBC series
Brideshead Revisited, but her achlevements
span almost 40 years of leading roles in most
major Shakespeare plays both in England
and the United States, as well as the lead in
Charlie Chaplan's film Limelight, She has
also played opposite Richard Burton in The
Spy Who Came In From The Cold and
Laurence Olivier in the film Richard Ill

Bloom's reputation will only be enhanced
by this, her latest tiurmph. In her one woman
show she statts by creating the characters of
Viola and Olivia from Twelfth Night, a feat of
oral interpretation that was nothing less than
spectacular. Interspersed with the dialogue
she creates the scene and plot for the
uninitiated, and all were quite caught up In|
the humor of her Viola. She followed this
with a series of portraits of Shakespeare's
married women. This iheluded ‘the bridat

@

{

Iggy Pop and the New York Dolls before
recording, It seems as if they listened to the
Rolling Stones’ Aftermath and Nuggets
before making Is Nothing Sacred?, The

‘album, especially side one, has overtones
from mid 60's AM psychedelic pop. Th
cover of the Grassroat’s "Live For Today" Is

(Othello), Portia's speech to Brutus about
the difference between a wife and a harlot
(Julius Caesar), Catherine of Aragon’s
pleading before the court for justice in Henry
Vill and finally Virgila’s pleading with her
son Corlolanus in the play of that name. The
last two kept an almost {ull house spellbound
as the range of emotion from calm reasoning
to embittered pleading found their place in
the face of the actress.

The performance concluded with excerpts
from Shakespeare's most loved tragedy,
Romeo and Jullet. Bloom opened with a
scene between Jullet, the nurse and Ledy
Capulet that, despite the rapid dialogue, left
no question in the viewers mind a5 to who |
was speaking. She followed this with the
scenes between Romeo and Juliet both at
the ball and the famous balcony scene, and
closed with Jullet’s last monologue in the
tomb, Although the nurse was the finest
recreation of the afternoon, | found Juliet a
bit too mature, not in gesture as much as
pacing. But this remains a small flaw in so:
fine a presentation

Bloom, in her autoblography Limelight
‘and After: The Education of an Actress, says
of her profession: “I think that few profes:
sions - from thé beginning of a career until
the end - have so much to do with chance
and so little to do with the calculations of
will!” Throughout her career, chance has
been a very good complement to the con:
siderable talent of Claire Bloom. She js the
product of the great tradition of British ac:
ting, bul she say that the turning point for her;
‘was her co-staring with Chaplin. It was thi
first time she truly recognized the relationship |
of her graft to life

She claims she learned *how atv actress]

night scene between Desdemona and Emilia

could he a woman” from Vivian Leigh when

‘an example of this, Produced by Todd Run
dgren, who also produced the New York
Dolls debut album, the song seems to have
more keyboards than guitars, which helps it
‘obtain that sing-song psychedelic feel
"Dance With Me," co-written by Batogs and
James as are most of the originals, als has
the same sort of sound.

they co-stared in Duel of Angels, just as she
learned method acting from her first husband
Rod Steiger, But Bloom’s favorite role was in
A Doll's House, a character where she {clt
that "my two halves, the frivolous, silly,

childish woman, and the stern woman”
came together. “I assimilated, all, my ex-
perience as a woman and brought it all
together as a woman.”

In a different vein, “Jotinny Too Bad" is
ska-like, with trebley ching-a-ching-a guitars
and Interjecting horns. The story of a kid
gone bad in the big city, “Johnny Too Bad”
{sin a new musicial territory for The Lords of

@ New Church. Also in a new direction |s
‘Don't Worry Children," Complete with 2
heavy duty horn section, this song almost
sounds like It could be on Elvis Costello's
Punch the Clock, This R 'n’ B influenced
song says not to worry if things don't make
sense that’s the way It was intended, Just
hang on to your Integrity and everything will
be A‘O.K.

Two songs on side one are slower and a
bit more tender than most Lords of the New
Church songs. “Bad Timing” has Stiv telling
the story of a man who didn't respond to a
H woman's needs and haw he has trouble after
her resulting suleide, Stiv’s vocals carry the
lemotions of the song over a Joy Division
style bass and drum line. “The Night is Call
ing” Is a slower, somewhat pretty song sing:
Ing the praises of the night and the safety and
the confessional quality of it

Side two, with exception of “Live For To-
day’ Is more similar to the Lords of the New
Church's first album than is side one, The
first song of the side, and perhaps my
favorite song of the album, Is “Black
Girl/White Girl.” The introduction reminds
me quite a bit of “Going to a Go:Go,”
especially of the Rolling Stones’ version
Over Keef-ish guitar and solid:rock bass and
drums, we hear abdut ‘the city’ and the
pleasures it hold for Black and White
Women and visa-versa

Another highlight from side two Is “Part-
ners in Crime.” A fairly short song, itis very
reminisent of the style of the first album, Stiv
alving @ powerful vocal performance and
Brian James tossing in lots of bent-string fills.
I's probably the simplest or most straight for:
ward song on the album and is noticable and
noteable because of that fact.

Is Nothing Sacred? \s a step forward for
the Lords of the New Church, It ls more ac
cessible and diverse than the first album and
it shows % certain security that the band
seems to have gained from experience. It
has taken the good elements of punk that the
band has inherited and then made It bigger
betterand wiser. It Is worth giving your ears o
chance to witness this album.

8

Claire Bloom, in choosing the earliest
Views of strong women, Shakespeare's true
heroines, recrates a long tradition of strong
women, a tradition that needs to be examin:
ed and assimilated into performance and
classroom alike. Bloom's one woman show
was both the highest form of education and
entertainment. Jt is difficult 10 describe a
legend-in-her own time, but for me it wes a
thrill not to be soon forgotten a

hey've been called boogic boxes,

ethnic units, and ghetto blasters,

“They,” of course, are the elf
Jcontained, all-in-one stereo cassetté/radios
which people can take just about anywhere
they go. Most of the time these hoxes can be
heard blaring upbeat, danceable music.
Often this music is “rap” style, with the
vocalist rapidly and very rhymthically singing
le number of rhyming verses, usually telling a
sory. This brings us to the group WhamlU.K.
Their recently released album Fantastic in.
eludes five sone which sre in the'rep style

Keith Van Allen

Luckily, I didn't know this before | heard
the album, because | might have opted for
another album to review without giving Fan.
fastic a chance. It's not that | dislike rap
fmusic; some of the Iyrics to “The Message"

{a rap song by Grand Master Flash and the
Furious Five) are stuck in my brain forever
jut, before hearing Wham!U.K., | had
decided that rap was repetitive, monotonous
ind inevitably boring, As a rapper might put
I, though, “When it came to rap, that boy
vas wrong, But now he's singin’ a different
pong.” After listening to Fantastic, | realized
that the bad rap | had put on rap wasn't
justified. The music of Wham!U.K. changed
iy mind.

The song “Bad Boys” opens the album
ind gets you dancing quite rap-idly. Writer
roducer and lead vocalist George Michael
lls us about a boy who rebels against his
rents’ plans for him, and winds up with the

i Bod Biys.” Like all the songs on Fantastic,
Hthe music to this one is excellent. Dominated
Wby the bass line, the song also features some
Wbood electric guitar work by Robert Ahwal
Bend Andrew Ridgeley. The vocals top off the
ng, with Michael's voice ranging {rom
leep male to high female (as when he sings,
Girls ike me, always seem to be you. . .")

“Can't you see I'm ready to dance?”
Michael asks in "A Ray of Sunshine.” This
Tsong won't leave you asking the same. Once

phasize the high points of the music very ef-
fectively

WhamlU.K. hasn't ignored social com:
mentary on Fantastic, The commentary is
most pointed In the song "Wham Rap (Enjoy
What You Do)”. The message of the song Is
that a man Is a man, "Job or no job." Insead
of pitying the unemployed, songwriters
Michael and Ridgeley suggest that the jobless
are better off without jobs, “I may not have a
Job, but I have a good time.” The song con-
Jures up an image of ten or twenty people
hanging out, clapping to the music, and real:
ly enjoying life.

The line In the song that turns it from an
unlikely story to social commentary 1s ap:
propriately highlighted in capital letters on
the Iyric sheet. "GIVE A WHAM GIVE A
BAM BUT DONT A DAMN COS TH

‘egain supported by an Infectious bass line
Which won't let you sit stil, this song Is a

BENEFIT GANG ARE GONNA PAY!" This
line shows that Michael and Ridgeley know

‘of WhamlU.K, |s thelr use of horns. “A Ray } that the government is picking up the bill for
Tef Sunshine” features horns which em: fall these good times, The message |s capped,

musical call to hit the dance floor. A strength

‘Eddy Grant Is On His

ddy Grant has done everything
from building his first quitar to own
ing his own record label, studio,
ind pressing plant; to producing, playing
very Instrument and singing every song on
his recent top ten’album, Killer on the Ram
age, which includes the top ten single,
"Electric Avenue.” Two other groups have
jone suoressful covers of his songs. He is
methirig of a national hero in Barbados.
lwhere he resides, In the sixties he appeared
fon Britain's "Top of the Pops” TV show, and
has survived to be seen in the eighties on
IMTV. Perhaps sensing that there is one
Imusical experience he has not yet par

concert in the Campus Center Ballroom on
Monday, October 17 at 8pm.

Maddy Pascucci

Grant was born in Guyana, a small coun
try on the Caribbean coast of South America
whose jungles and primative tribes make it a
National Geographic favorite, but moved

clan, and Eddy began taking trumpet lessons
at the age of six. In London, Grant
daveloped his own musical taste. He wanted
to take up the guitar and experiment with the
rhb and rock and roll that were popular in
England at that time. When his father would
not agree, Grant bullt his own guitar In
woodworking class at school.

His experiences with his first band, she
Equals, also taught him some lessons in self
determination. Grant managed the
multiracial band himself, and had to fight
against manipulation by lawyers, agents, and
record companies. The Equals had two

o

off beautifully with an exchange at the end of
the song when the singer asks, "Do you want
to work?" to which a crowd replies, “No!”
“Are you gonna have fun?” "Yeah" Yeah,
at the taxpayer's expense.

The most interesting song on the album,
which shows the band’s diversity, Is “Club
Tropicana," after an opening with ericket
Sound effects which lead nicely into the
song, we're presented with an unexpected

in beat, Following the funk songs on side
one, “Club Tropicana’’isa light, catchy tune
about a mythical club where “Drinks are
| free." Once egain, enough cannot be sald
|for the music, which is simply entrancing,
Subdued drumming along with a high, flut:
{ering plano and the ever-present bass com:
bine for a very pleasing tropical sound.

The album's final song Is a true grand
finale when I first heard “Young Guns (Go
For It)” on WCDB early this year, | liked It
immediately, Not only is the song a foot tap:
Pin’, hip movin’, body shaker; it's also great

number one songs in Britain, “Baby Come
Back,” and “Black-skinned Blue-eyed Bay,"
and also appeared on "Top of the Pops.” By
1971, however, stress had so affected
Grant's health that he had to quit the band.

Having leamed something about the
music business, Grant opened his Coach
House Studios. It was the first black-owned

o

{0 sing along with. The lyrics, about the ad-
Vantages of staying single, are especialy ap-
propriate here al SUNYA, The chorus of the
song s one that will rattle around In your
head for days after only one listen, The best
line from the chorus Is “Wise Guys realize,

there danger in emotional ties." There are
alot of guys (and girls) who can attest to that

The song also contains the best vocal ex-
change on the album. From the left a group
of guys shouts "Get Back,’ to which the girls
reply from the right, "Hands Off." The guys
fend the exchange with a hearty "Go For Ii!”
This song alone should break WhamlU,K.

linto the U.S.

THe boys from WhamlU.K, have record:
ed an album which Is super, both lyrically
‘and musically, Fantastic Is definitely boogle
box material, Everything about this album
lends itself to hanging out and cranking It up.

Slep out now and buy this disc, Throw
down your money, there ain't no risk, If
good music’s what you need, this one’s got it

guaranteed.” Qo

wn

Holland, Zimbabwe, Portugal, Uraguay and
South Africa, Not only did the album do well
Itself, but one song off the album, “Walking
on Sunshine,” became a hit for a band called
Rockers Revenge. The Clash covered
another tune from the album, "Police on mi
Back." a
‘After releasing his next album, Do You
Feel My Love, Grant moved back to the sun
= to the island of Barbados,
A conflict on the island between wealthy
estate owners and locals selling corals and’
other tropical wares on the beach, led Grant
to write "Jack (Dah Beach is Mine)," a soul:
calypso tune which sold 30,000 copies in
Barbados, That means thal one in eight peo:
ple in Barbados went out and bought the
record, If the same phenomena were to oc-
Cur in the United States, it would result In the
sale of over 33 million records, It Is no
‘wonder that Grant became a national figure

studio in Europe, A few years later he form=
ed the Ice Records label, which released
Grant's first solo efforts, as well as records by
other reggae and ska influenced groups.

The LP, Living on the Frontline, was a
great success for Grant, It gained Grant
recognition in countries as diverse as

there. He is so well known that mail is
delivered to him addressed only to “Eddy
Grant, Barbados.”

Until recently though, he was not nearly as
well known in the United States, His latest
album, Killer on the Rampage, has certainly
done a lot to make the name Eddy Grant
familiar, But often, behind the top-ol-the-
charts music, there sill lies a’ politcal
message, Behind the danceable beat and the
Iiing accent of the popular “Electric
Avenue,” for instance, Is a song about life in
Brixton, a black ghetto In London. "War
Party” may sound like the latest Quad party
theme, but itis Eddy Grant's refutation, with
‘an easy going humor, of the draft,

Grant is scheduled to release his next
album in January. He is currently on a world
tour which Includes, on Monday, October
17, the Ballroom eee

8a ASPECTS,

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1983

End Game

Spectrum >

music

New York City Cafe I (459-9326)

Oct 14-16—Seth (formerly of Toronto) Oct
17—The Rescue; Oct 19—The Acts; Oct.
20-22—Buxx; Oct, 23—Nighthawks and
the Mob; Oct.-26—Blotto; Oct. 30—The
Shirts

Yesterday's (489-8066)

Oct, 14-15 Finder

Poetry Reading

Oct, 24 at 7:30 p.m. dessica Lawrence,
Jean Enston, Frank Schmertz, Paul Wein:
man at Cathy's Waffle Shop on Lark Street
Wine & Cheese, Free. Call 436-9495 for
more info.

CC Ballroom
Oct 17 — Eddy Grant at 8 p.m. $6 SUNYA
students, $8 general public,

Gemini Jazz Cafe (462.0044)
Fri&Sat — Fats Jefferson; Second floor to
open Oct, 21 to feature NYC jazz bands

Lark Tavern (463-9779)

Eighth Step Coffee House (434-1703)
every Tues nite—Open stage for anyone for
15 minutes; Oct. 14—Contradance with Pat
Rust; Oct. 15—Tom dJuravich; Oct
16—The Sloop Singers; Oct, 19—Laura
Burns and Roger Rosen.

The Chateau Lounge (465-9086)
Cagney’e (463-9402)
Skinflints (436-8301)

Palace Theatre (465-3333)
Oct, 15—Albany Symphony Orchestra
Oct, 23—The Band

288 Lark (462-9148)

DJ on’ weekends; Oct. 18,—Operation
Pluto; Oct. 19—Lumpen Proles; Oct
20—The Tragics; Oct. 25—The Watts; Oct,
26—Johnny Reb and the Rockin’ Shadows;
Oct, 27—10,000 Maniacs; Oct. 30—French|
Letter

Cinnamon's (at Albany Hilton: 462-6611)
Oct, 14-15—Martin at the plano
Halfmoon Cafe (436-0329)

Oct, 14—General Eclectric; Oct, 15—John
Ragus and Roger Mock

Lark Tavern (463:9779)

Oct, 14-15-Gina DiMaggio and Tim
Foldsey

art

Albany Institute of History and Art
(463-4478)

Sept 6 thru Oct 30—Dutch Paintings in the
‘Age of Rembrandt from the Metropolitan
Museum of Art

Picotte Gallery (College of St, Rose, 324
State St,, Albany, 454-5185)
Faculty Exhibition

Rathbone Gallery (JCA; 445-1778)
Sept 26-Oct 14—Claudia de Monte

Historical Society for Early
American Decoration, Inc, (462-1676)
Until June '84—The Ornamental Painter,
‘The Flowering of Tin

New York State Museum (474-5842)

Sept 10-Oct 30—Seneca Ray Stoddard:
Adirondack illustrator; Oct, 1 to Jan 4 =
Community Industries of the Shakers... A
New Look; Adirondack Wilderness, New
York Metropolis, World of Gems,
Firefighting Exhibit :

SUNYA Art Gallery (457-3375)
New Decorative Art; works by N, Graves,
Stella, Samaras, Benglis, others; Sept
13-Oct 9—photos by Rollie McKenna; Art
Faculty Exhibit, Oct 18 — Dec 16

Kinderhook Antiques Center First
Annual Quilt Show Route 9H in
Kinderhook, Oct 15-16, Call 758-7939 for
more Info

New York State Museum Snakes Alive!
Films and live snake display, Oct. 8-Oct 15:
Shakers Day and Ways

Albany Academy (462-0318)

Larry Kagan through Nov. 11

theatre

ESIPA (The Ega: 473-3750)

Oct 9—These Are Women by Claire Bloom,
main theatre; Our Town—Oct 14 preview,
Oct 16, 17 19-22, call for times (473-4020)

SUNYA PAC (457-8606)
The Wool Gatherer—Oct 11-15 at 8pm in
the Lab Theatre $3 w/SUNY ID

Coliseum Theatre (785-3393)

Proctor’s Theatre (382-1083)
Jerry's Girls—Oct 21 at Bpm & Oct 22 at
2pm. 8pm; Amadeus—Sept 22 at 8pm

Capital Rep (462-4534)
‘The Glass Menagerle—Oct 29:Nov 20

Slena College (783-2372)
Hamlet—Oct 7 at 8pm in Foy Campus
Center Theatre

Albany Civic Theatre (462-1297)
Once Ina Lifetime, Oct 12-16, 19-23

Cohoes Music Hall (235-7969)
Oct 6:23 Good Old, Bad Old, Good Old
Days

2 2 hy

miscellaneous

Bethlehem Public Library—Haunted
Houses/Haunted Heroes; The Experience
of Contemporary Fiction with Mary
Arensberg, Sept 22, 29, Oct 13, 27 & Nov
10, 17, $20 per person or $35 for two, call
457-3907 for more info

Performing Arts Loft at 286 Central
Ave, between Quail and Lake (465-5503,

nights) is a free, non-profit arts org, offering

the following sessions: Modern Dance

(Thurs, 7-8:30pm); Children’s Dance (Tues

& Thurs, 4:30-5:30pm); Middle Eastern

Dance (Mon, 7-8:30pm); "T'al Chi (Wed,

7-9pm); Stretch & Strenath (Wed 6-6:45pm .|
and Thurs 6-6:45pm); Movement Group,

The Inner Dance (Tues 6:30-8pm); and

Middle’Eastern Aerobics (Mon 6-7pm). All

sessions last 10 weeks. Also, African Dance

Workshop with Omoye Cooper, Oct. 22
from 2-4 p.m. Fee: $7.50.

Research on Women Colloquium
Oct 19, “Being Single in Albnay: A
Historical Perspective” w/Patricla White.
12;15-1:30 in HU 354.

Speaker's Forum
Oct 22 — David Brenner in Gym at 8 p.m.

Omega Psi Phi Jam
Sat,, Oct, 15 in Indian U-Lounge. Damage
$1.50 a person

Earthquake Warning: Let's Dance

Party
Colonial Quad U-Lounge. Friday, Oct. 14 at

Market Day at South End
Oct, 15 10-2p.m. at South Pearl and Fourth
Ave, Call 436-8777 for info.

Seminar — Homophobia and You
Oct, 19 8-10 p.m. at the Lesbian and Gay
Community Center

Cine 1-6 (459-8300)

1. The Golden Seal 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:05,
9, 11; 2. The Big Chill 1:50, 4:10, 6:45,
9:10, 11:25; 3, Beyond the Limit 2, 4:25,
7:35, 9:50, 11:50; 4. Trading Places 1:30,
4, 6:50, 9:25, 11:35; 8, Easy Money 2:15.
4:20, 7:30, 9:40, 11:45; 6, Eddie & the
Cruisers 1:45, 3:80, 7, 9:15, 11:30. Late
Shows only Fri & Sat

"HO Fox Colonie 1 & 2 (159-1020)
1 rn of the Jedi 7, 9:30; 2. Mr. Mom 5,
7:30, 9:30
'

Spectrum Theatre (449-8995)
Oct. 14 — Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence

UA Center 1 & 2 (459-2170)
1, Final Option 7:20, 9:40; 2
Comedy 7:30, 9:40

Romantic

UA Hellman 1 & 2 (459-5322)
1, Zelig 7:30, 9:20; 2. Brainstorm 7:30,
9:30.

Third Street Theatre (436-4428)
Oct 14-16 Frances 7, 9:40; Oct. 17 Yol,
7&9; Oct. 18-20—The Ceremony, 7&9:35

Madison Theatre (489-5431)
La Traviata 7, 9:20

University Cinemas (457-8390)
Sophie’s Choice Oct. 14-15, 7:30, 10 LC
18; Porky's Oct. 14-15 7:30, 10LC 7

International Film Group (457-8390)
Inspector General Oct. 14 7:30, 10; Fiddler
On the Roof Oct. 15 7:30, 10 in LC 1

Not A Love Story
Oct, 20 at 7:30 and 10 p.m, Film by Cana-
dian Feminists Against Pornography, In LC

9 p.m. $1 w/tax card; $2 w/o.

18,

Violent Femmes Violent Femmes

x More Fun in the New World

Bongos ‘Number with Wings

Elvis Costello Punch the Clotk
The Alarm The Alarm
Big Country The Crossing
Neats ‘The Neats
Siyle Council ‘Style Council

Is Nothing
Sacred?

Lords of the New Church

10. Public Image Limited

Public Image
Limited

Top Twenty

11, UB-40 Labor of Love

12, Interferon Get Out of London
13, Nena ‘Nena
14, Gang of Four “I This Love?"
15, Smithereens Beauty and Sadness
16. Aztec Camera High Land Hard Rain
17.Lyres “I Really Want You Right Now
18, Roman Holliday ooking on the Roof

19, Limbo Race

20: Adrian Belew Adrian Belew

“Ina’s Song" |i

THE ERESHMAN TRIES To Pick Up

A TUNIOR.

yrs cock is
MEN FYtM MEALL
Nladr. TINE Foe

HE), BABY CARES WANA
LUKE, St/b Back To Ary
RACEZA Fey TES 2

< A DRINAY? Z VE

4
ar A FRESH Bemie
_ Fe OF be. PEPPER,

é

the Editor:
Regarding your letter in the October 7, 1983 edition of
ASP, it is obvious to me that there is a great
understanding of the rules and policies of the AMIA.
jerefore, I felt that it is my responsibility to clarify a few
the discrepancies in your letter, To begin with, I must
ss the fact that the AMIA Council did not recently in-
lute a mandatory forfeiture to all teams for games played
fhout proper signatures on roster sheets, this has always
nn our policy, but only in the case of it being brought to
aitention, i.e. the opposing team protesting the game,
wever, toward the end of last semester, the AMIA
juncil passed a motion that said we would actively seck
illegal rosters and this new policy was properly posted
ithe AMIA display case located in the Campus Center,
jo, all team captains were informed of this new pro-
Bure at the Softball Captains Meeting prior to the open:
of the Fall 1983 Softball season,
in response to the statement that in previous seasons
ters were available at ‘‘one of the first couple of games
insure proper signatures and complete rosters’? I feel itis
ressary to inform you that for the last three years it has
been the policy of the AMIA to bring rosters to any
nes, rather, it has been left up to the captain to insure
it the proper amount of signatures were on his roster
or to his teams first game. Additionally, itis the AMIA’s

Her up until their third game, but that does not mean that

¥y can play a game with less than the required amount of

ch team must have at least

ht players to play a game.) The reason why this policy is.

iG vehemently enforced is because each player's signature

erves as a medical waiver and a possible protection against
jal action for the AMIA.

Hin reviewing your letter, it becomes obvious to me that
You do not have a firm and proper knowledge of the rules
Wid policies of the AMIA, whether it be softball or any
(Other sport. What I can suggest is that you, and perhaps the
(ther 23 teams you speak of, take a little time out to read
the rules of the AMIA which are handed out at the Cap-
fain's meetings of each sport sponsoredby the AMIA, and
Keep abreast of the changes in AMIA policy by way of the
AMIA-WIRA display case. If there is still some
Misunderstanding as (o the interpretation of the rules,
Please feel free to stop by the Intramural Office located on
the first floor of the Gym or come to any AMIA Council
Mcctings which are held every Thursday night at 6:30p.m.
in CC373,

— Vinny Cirillo
President AMIA

Not so comic strips

To the Editor:
© For the past few weeks, readers of the ASP have been
ied 0 a comic strip by R.A. Hayes. These strips have
attention around “Joonies"’, “looney bins’, and
men in white jackets'’, respectively, in the October 3rd,
Tih, and {1th issues of the ASP,1 have worked with the
impaired andsphysically disabled since 1 was a
Senior in high school. 1am now asenfor at Albany and have
found that discriminaion against both groups has not
Giminished in the least bit.
Teel that Mr, Hayes’ comic strips are tasteless examples
GF this discrimination and fecl that the ASP. should
Fecyaluate their position on humorless, discriminatory

comic strips, such as “‘Otis!*, which insist on using the men-
tally impaired as subject matter, If Mr. Hayes feels that
poking fun at the mentally impaired is acceptable} I sup
pose that we can expect more comic strips from him which
Use derogatory terms. May I remind you that these strips
compound and perpetuate the Ideas and prejudices that
most people have by turning these groups Into subjects of
humor
I also feel that if Mr. Hayes’ creativity does not allow
him to find Suitable subject matter for his comic strips, then
he should seriously reconsider drawing comic strips for the
ASP.
— Albert Hsu
Chinese American Student

Issue isn’t simple

To the Editor:
1 would like to settle this ROTC question once and for

all, 1 will address myself to the October 11th letter entitled

“Congratulations due’ by David Janower,

Mr, Janower states that the issue seems a simple one,
However it is quite evident from his article that he has ab-
solutely no idea what the issue is,

Mr, Janower, we in America live in a democratic so
that means we elect officials who make the public policy
and laws that govern our society, The law states that
homosexuals are barred from service in the Army, Navy,
Air Force, Marines, CIA, and the NSA, That is a congres-
sional law. People who wish to test the law bring their cases
to the Supreme Court, In every case that has come before It
the Supreme Court has upheld the law.

Now Mr. Janower, you would have us abandon public
policy and substitute it by your own private policy. You
‘would have us ignore the laws made by officials clected by
the democratic process and in (urn comply with your own
private laws that would remove ROTC from our campus,

I sincerly wish that it wasn't necessary to explain the
democratic process to a member of the university faculty,
but by your letter you haye demonstrated that you don't
know how it works, So I will continue,

If you feel that this law is unjust then you change it by.
petitioning your elected officials. You have 16,000 students
Of voting age that go to this school, Mr. Janower. Why
don't you start a letter or petititon drive to your con-
gressman, That, Mr. Janower, is how we change laws, not
by ignoring them and substituting your own,

— Jonathan A. Newmait

Democracy reigns

To the Edito

As the guardian of the freshman class, | feel it is my
responsibility to respond to Mr. Steve Heller’s letter of
Tuesday, October 11, 1983,

Tam sorry that Mr. Heller finds it istressing’’ that the
President, Vice President, retary, and Treasurer are
elected within the Class Council consisting of fifteen
university-wide elected students, and that he further is in
disagreement because he feels that the freshman class as an
entity does not have influence over the leadership of their
class, However, Mr, Heller is, in my opinion, worrying over
nothing, Does he not respect his peers enough in as much
that they will choose the most competent fifteen represen
tatives, who in turn will elect @ competent executive
branch?

Mir. Heller mentions an appointed ‘‘steering committee’"
that was ‘empowered with writing a constitution," That
group of people did not “write'” a constitution, but simply

Esteblahed in 1018
Mark Gesner, Evior In Chie!
Patiicla Mitvll lee Stan, Managing Edin,

‘Stove Fox, Anthony

News Editon.
i Hold Gralla, Bob

Lissrine Sokolowak!
Mare Schwa
ark Lovina, Tom Kacande
cE

ng Manager
Mike Krolmer, Seles Manager

Usa Clayman, Randeo Behar

Billing Aecountante
or ‘Gay Pore
M

Palge Marcus, Ell Muto, Sharon Okun, C
Ryan, Lynne Siege, Rhonda Wolt, Sloven Zelgor,

Hotty rest, Produetion Mé

Caihie Ayan
mdnor Ty
dim Gaporzola, Lancey Heyman, Viginia Hubs, Felco Klaas, Sue Miligan,

Holly Rew Driver Erie Dorf

holography principally supplied by Univesity Photo Service, « sl
group.

Chie! Photographer: Susan Elaine Mindich, UPS Statt: Amy Cohen, Barry
Cohen, Rachel Litwin, Ed Marvasleh, Lois Mattabon, Lisa Simmons, Erica
Speige, Warren Stout, Jim Valentino, Frank Wepolin|

Ente contents copyright © 1083 Albany Student Pre
rights reserved

Corporation, alt

The Albany Siudont Prose Ia published 1
‘August and June by the Albany Sludent Pr
ot or pro eorporalion,

fand Fridaye betwoon
‘Corparatlon, an Independent

poly,

(818) 487 -seoars3220300

drafted a version that will be presented to the elected Class
Council. They in turn will either accept it as drafted, or
revise it to their satisfaction and to the satisfaction of their
constituency that they were elected to represent,

The steering committee did not take complete control of
the class, but rather did what they thought was equitable at
the time, The students at the general interest meeting were
presented with all relevant facts i.e.: what happened |
year with the class of 1984, They then discussed all
ramifications of their options, and then democratically
decided for an “in council election." Furthermore, they
still haye the option of changing their decision by an
amendment fo the drafted constitution at the appropriate
meeting,

Mr, Heller is also confused to the fact that before any
class expenditure the class council must vote on the expen:
diture, Furthermore, as it stands now, a person may
Achieve voting rights on the class council by attending three
consecutive meetings, The class council is not an elitist
body, but rather allows anyone who attends the regular
mectings to voice their opinions and suggestions,

If Mr, Heller or anyone else has any questions about the
Freshman class they may feel free to contact me at the Ste
dent Association office,

— Ann Marie La Porta
President Class of 1984

Equal access

To the Edltor:

I have read with interest the articles concerning ROTC
and the equal access policy here at SUNYA, Many of the
individuals who comment on this issue seem unaware of the
basic facts, If one looks closely, ROTC does not appear to
be in violation of the equal access policy,

First, let me be bold enough to assert that ROTC {Is not a
SUNYA course, and therefore does not fall under the equal
access policy, unless this policy is interpreted in a manner
which I believe was not intended, To enter Army ROTC,
MSIII or MSIY (the courses fostering the heated debate)
‘one must cross-enroll at RPI, The main purpose of the Ar-
my ROTC extension (yes-"'extension!") at SUNYA is to
save the SUNYA cadet from commuting to RPI for his or
her military science classes. Further proof that Army.
ROTC is not a SUNYA course comes from the SUNYA.
83-84 undergraduate bulletin, where it is stated (p.19)
“‘Cross-registration enrollments must be in courses not
available from the University's curriculum,"

If the Army ROTC extension office is eliminated from
SUNYA, this will serve no purpose, SUNYA students will
still be able to cross-enroll at RPI, for Army, Navy, or Air
Force ROTC (some SUNYA students commute for Naval
and Air Force programs now) while admitted homosexuals
here at SUNYA would still not be allowed access 10 cross-
register for these courses, exactly the situation that exists
with the Army ROTC extension on campus!

Of course you could attempt to eliminate the cross.
enrollment for ROTC courses completely but I personally.
Would consider this a violation of my own (and many
others’) rights to register for ROTC, This presents a diem:
ma {o those who oppose the Army ROTC extension, Either
remove it and serve no purpose, or eliminate ROTC eross-
registration, which would violate the rights of countless
people,

Mr. Janower in his letter to the ASP of the 11th of Oc-
(ober states, “Our equal access policy makes a strong state-
ment that we believe in something, that no one may be
discriminated against for reasons not having to do with
their ability to perform academically." If Mr, Janower had
done his homework, he would find that the handicapped
and people with other medical problems may not be com
missioned in the military(and therefore are not eligibl
ROTC), Yet, we hear little, if anything, fro
dividuals about equal access Violations, (Iam not equating
gays to the handicapped.)

What it boils down (0 is this: Does the SUNYA policy in
clude cross-enrollment? Aren't schools like RPI already
obligated to equal access by federal law, even though
federal law concerning the military prohibits gays? If we
consider the last question, We see that the contradiction is at
the federal level, as has been asserted previously.

— Timothy Taylor

Letters

to the editor should
be typed, no more
than’ 350 words in
length, and should
include the name
and phone number
of the author, Name
may be witheld on
request.

12 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 0 OCTOBER 14,1983

WEtteC Lore eee er eee eee terre eee)

POR MEN AN

*

Jean Paul Coiffures brings to the

WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL.
Get « 10 percent discount on all
vices and products with student 1D.
EXCEPT WITH J.C, MARSHA,& PAUL

can i a Bt dense any
anal COTA SUNT bo te.

DEWITT CLINTON ENLPARAING Wot Gage Hewird S

142 State St,, Albany

463-6691

PeveVUTECrr rr eter eee ee ee

sree seereeeesenssceses

Part Time
District Manager
Wanted for
TECH SALES +-

Set up retail accounts, coordinate home
sales division of electronic and novelty
Items. Write to: TECH SALES + 1775
Broadway 7th Flr., New York, NY 10019 or
call 315-699-8470 (Syracuse) or
212-246-1482.

tne”

FLORISTS, Inc.

‘STUYVESANT PLAZA’

CENTRAL AVE PHONE 4382202

PHONE 4ab-5404
ALBANY, NEW YORK.

MF amon

Saluiday 4m,
Sunday 128

Always a Cash-n-Carry Special
Fresh Flower Bokay
as low as $4.95

jore Hous

{COURON SAVINGS TOR PALE,

ITALIAN-AMERICAN
RESTAURANT LOUNGE
1 FULLER ROAD (AT CENTRAL AVENUE)
ALBANY

TAKE OUT SERVICE
AVAILABLE

482-9444 or 482-2615 °
ah’ SUNDAY NITE STUDENT SPECIAL "25

ALL AT

Spaghetti with meat balls or sausage
Served with a fresh garden salad
and bread and butter
Offer Good Sundays 4pm-9pm.
(bring your 1.D,)

awe neem DOWNTOWN] nnn nn:
STOP BY THE ELBOW ROOM

170 Delaware Avenue
(Corner of Holland Avenue)

ANY BURGER Limit one coupon per customer
50 OFF Per visit EXPIRES 11-31-83

CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
POLICY

Deadlines:
"Tuesday at 9 PM for Fil
Friday at 3 PM for Tuesday

Rai
‘$1.50 for the first 10 words
10 cents each additional word
Any bold word Is 10 cents extra
$2.00 extra for a box
minimum charge Is $1.50

Classified ads are being ac
cepted in ihe SA Contact Ollie dur
Ing. regular business hours.
Glassitied advertising must be paid
In cash at the time of Insertion, No
checks will be accepted, Minimum
charge for billing 1s $25.00 per
Issue.

No ads will be printed without a
fullname, address or phone number
on the Advertising form Credit may
be extended, but NO refunds wil bo

given. Editorial policy will not pe
Piltads to.be printed whieh contain
blatant profanity or those that are
in poor taste, We reseryp the right
fo refect any material deemed un-
suitable for publication.

i-you have any questions or
blems concerning Glassilied Adver-
tising, please feel free to cull or
Stop by the Business Office.

INSURANCE

Auto Insurance

No. polley

Sato Wier
Young Insurance Aaaney
66 Everett Rd.

438-5501 498-4161

FOR SALE

Tiving Room Sor
Includes: Sofa, Loveseat, Chall
Very Good Ganditin. Asking $26¢
Call Ann at 869-604

Women’s Clothes, rea Conuiton,
Siz0 10-12. Swi
$3.00.810,

$20,00, Gall 459-5741

Portable Typewslter (Manual) wiih
case. Ollvetti, Excellent Gonition,
$65 or bost offer. 482-0422 Even
ings.

SERVICES _

Guitar Lessons - all accoustic ani
slecitie styles taught, Also ban,
mandolin, and fiddlo,

Call Glonn 434-6819,

TUTOR
Math, Calculus, Physics, Franch by
French engineer, Call Charles at
465-4446,

Great Halrstylos! Great Price
Student Discount at Allon's
Hairstyling, Gall 669-7817.

Tyeing-Fast, Accurate, Pickup and
Delivery. 465-1697,

Aifordalo Word Processing
Paper, Rosumes, Cover Lottrs,

Cail 489-0636, 0.0

alg Delivor Your
Ww York Times Dally
call ta’ § Vending Service

cA ona

en.

Bikin Man,

Hula Dancers

Dolly Parton...even a ‘Chorus Line,
Cail 462-1703,

Professional vi
Selacttic Corealing Typ i ypowriter, EX
perience, Call 477.
1 Pick
The Sunday New York Times
‘On Your Quad Brunch Line:
Call U.A.S; Vending Servic

AIT} iene

12442 between 5 anc
pam, for information,

Dally ang Sunday
w York Times
cai USS, ims vaeana se Service

GOVERNMENT JOBS,

$16,559:$50,55a/yoar.
iting. Your Area,

Call 805-68, 800 Ext. e306,

OVERSEAS. JOBS -_ Summer/year|
found, Europe, S. Ami
Australis wr) All Pela
1500-$1200 | monthly. Sightseeing:
Free info. Write UG Box 52:NY-+1
Corona Del Mar, CA 9262!
Earn $600 or more each aaa year.
Flexible houra. Monthly payment
lor placing posters, on
Bonus based’ on results. Prizes|
awarded as well. 800-526-0883.

PERSONALS

Rich Cantwell for
Clans of 1987 Class Council

Here's your promised personal and
my absolution for past actions.

Love ya,

Gary.

And this fountain jumped out and
altacked me.

Pissy

Fran, =e

NOT been bad getting to know

Love,
David

Off-Campus Students:
Vole For
Cheryl Khaner
and
Malinda Miller

(or
Off:Campus Association Board of
Directors
October 17 and 18 GC Lobby

To "The Big Leak”

With Love From

The Other Halt Of
; Albany's Hottest Item.
{ Coach Mari:
Gan we have our bread and wate
now?

Lauren
Happy Birthday Marcing

PHIL GRASSO
for

Freshman Council
DAVID BRENNER

FOR
PARENT'S WEEKEND
Octobor 22
The best man for the job

Sorkey,
71 had'to come up with one ward to
describe you it would be
"SPECIAL", On Sunday | hope a
jery special person has a very
"special day”
1 Love you
Ed-wad

Sear Moo-Cow,
Sova you. Thanks for balng my best
rlon

‘The Man With The Ticket Out

Vote for
Jayne Rand

For Glass of '87 Council
Freshmen:

Yo Want
Groat Freshmen Year?

Dabble ars

Ciass Council of 1987,

ido got whipped by Goren (and en:
Joyed itt!)
~ OUTRAGEOUSLY FUN
DANCE MARATHON
‘Coming Soon-Look For Information

Community Service Information
Days. Oct. 19 and 20, 10-4.at tha
Campus Center.

WORK FOR THE ASP
Techies needed!! Monday and
Thursday se for ‘production!
These are pald positions Call Lisa

he ate aa cals. ave ate

and I'm damn tired of it” Lisa

Strain, former {rlend of felines who
ly) Saw the light,

Dearest Martin,
You are one hell of a arty animal
Anyone who asked to ted to his

bod-and’ then stangs up proudly
when smashed inthe face with cake
just has to be the partyingest guy
aroundil

sLove all your fans and admirers.

PHIL GRASSO
oF
__ Class or 1987 Class Council

DAVID BRENNER OCT, 22
(His new album Nov. 1)

Jayne Rand
fo

Class of a Council
‘Oct. 17 and 18

Bus fees

“Front Page

One of the most common
arguments was against (he nature of
fees, The argument here was that
acceptance of this fee is likely to br-
Ing on fees for many mote services.

Barsky argued that along with the
bus fee, additional fees, including a
“computer use fee," are imminent
He added that if bus fee is put into
practice, gym, library and other
fees are only a matter of time,

Gregg Rothschild, a State Quad
fesident, noted that while ten
dollars is not impossible for most
people to obtain the addition of
thier fees would be hard to cope
with

Rothschild added that the fee
would affect the educational pro:
cess because in the downtown
library “there are many important
documents that the uptown library
does not hay

Most speakers argued that rather
than a fee, a reallocation of funds
within the university should be
made, Central Council. member
Steven Russo asserted that “a fee is
Not the answer, reallocation [s.!"
He added that the securing of
tickets would be a “pain in the
neck"? and ‘the very vital
perience of Alumni will be lost."

The President's Task Force now
faces the task of analyzing the in
formation they have gathered and
iting a report for presentation to
O'Leary by December 1
Telethon '84 n four can
Drop olfs = CC table ALC boxes.
David Brenner for
Paronis Waokend

Oct,
-The bost man for the Job.
Vote For
Phil Grasso
For Freshman Council
On Oct, 17 and 18
$49 for $month session, Bodyworks
Health and Fitness Center
Nautilus, ae and paramount

scene a0 ad 489-4475.
Cari, Sue,
Fink tigate sleep now. | have to
wake up in § minutes.

Lauren
Mike Silberman,
D0. you..!"Touch up’
losel?

when you

signed,
not-a-fan

Sweeipea,
It's been’ a long time since I've
taken out a realiady. Too long! You
know, one with class and style, To
remedy this situation why don't you
let me take you out for dinner this

| weekend,

Love Always,
URX

DAVID BRENNER OCT, 22
(His New Album Nov. )

TELETHON '64 THEMES NOW BE-
ING ACCEPTED IN SA OFFICE,

Vot
HIL GRASSO
For Class 61 1987 Glass Council
‘On October 17 and 18.

This past month has been the best

one of my life. Words can not ex-

press what you mean to me, | Love
Ou

BH Bear

Osa, =
Gne year spent with the most fan-
patie gt!
Happy Anniversary, | LOVE YOU.
joug
‘aurl Cole Your Off-Campus
Conia ral Coucit Representative,

6re7
VOTE FOR
PHIL GRASSO.

Adria and Laimel,
Welcome back!’ Bet you thought
you'd never get another personalll
4ere’s to a great weokendll!

Jackie and Kim

07 North Lake,
4 good time was had by all during
Saturday's ier study-breakll!

Work for IN ASE on Monday or
| Thursday production nights. Ex:
Derlence not necessary. This Is a
ald position. Gall Lisa or Patty at
457-3389 or 457-8892,

MODELS FEMALES. Amateurs
Welcome. Pose for local
Photographer. Hourly Rate - Con.
tact #.0, Box 99, Rensselaer, N..

OCTOBER 14,1983

IT'S WORLD SERIES

TIME AGAIN

STARTING TUES. OCT. 11th ATTHE

CHISOX2
ORIOLES?

‘Campus

DODGERS?
Se, PHILLIES?
CS

Center

£

1

"6IX FOOT COLOR SCREEN”
(mR (>

HOTSBO! BPE ee Lex
tip Cuno’

TUES. OCT. 11th - 8:30PM
WED. OCT.12th - 8° 2OPM

FRI.
SAT. OCT, 15th -

OCT. 144, - 8:30PM
4: OOPM (OR 4:00PM)

SUN, OCT. 1G th - 4:30 PMCIFNECESSARY)

TUES, OCT.

18 th - &:2O PM(IF NECESSARY)

WED, OCT, 19th 8: ZOPM(IF NECESSARY)

PLAY BALL!

University Auxiliary Services Sponsored vTN

na uatirveramy

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 43

Nobody carries more models. We have hundreds
of books and magazines. We even carry robots.

Hewlett-Packard, Commodore, Eagle, Franklin,
Epson, Texas Instruments Professional, Atari,
Sinclair, Coleco Adam, Androbot.

Software galore!

Communicating micros our specialty...let us turn
your micro into a terminal.

We're the area's largest computer store.

@the
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Westgate Plaza, Central & Colvin Avenues
Albany, New York 12206 482-1462, 482-1463

Open weeknights 'til 9, Saturday ‘til 6

A FUN FOOD Res

ONLY THE NAME,
IS EXPENSIVE!

EVERY FRIDAY EVENING IN THE PATROON ROOM

——

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CAMPUS CENTER MEAL CARD DINNER OPTION ACCEPTED

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Pre-preregistration for
ECONOMICS MAJORS

Economics majors with a program card
signed by their
Economics Department.

Corridor between BA 110 and BA 111.
October 25 and 26, 1983

advisors in the

Tuesday, October 25, 1983

Seniors
Students whose si
degli

jurname
ins with’

8:30 a,m.- 10:00am, A-!
10;00 a.m, - 11:40 a.m.
11:30 a.m, - 1:00 p.m.

J-R
8-Z

AF

Wednesday, October 26, 1983
Juniors
10;00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m,
11:30 a.m, - 1:00 p.m.

Sophomor
1 1:45 p.m.
1:45 p.m. - 2:80 p.m,

>)

Welcomes Students Back

Open Seven Days A Week
Phone 434-6854

Corner of Clinton and Quall
Home of Pelican Power

Attitude Adjustment Hour
4-7 Mon.-Fri.

SHUFFLEBOARD
IMMEDIATE SPORTS RESULTS

Food Served till 3:30
TAKE OUT AVAILABLE

‘HURLEY’S SAYS
FAREWELL

TO IT’S TWO
PRIZE BARTENDERS
AS THEY LEAVE IN
PURSUIT OF REAL JOBS

SO LONG

BOBBY ‘MAI TAI’ LANE

SURLEY TIMMY GUNTHER :

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ALBANY, N.Y.

PHONE ° 482-9432

438-1718

MONDAYS
FOOTBALL - BIG SCREEN

9:00 - 1:00
2HOT DOGS & DRAFT $1.00

$3.00

TUESDAYS
OLDIES NIGHT ON NEW SOUND SYSTEM

9:00 - 1:00
ORDER OF WINGS & 32 oz. PITCHER

WEDNESDAYS
32 oz. PITCHERS OF MIX DRINKS $3.00

(BAR BRANDS ONLY)

OPEM DAILY NOON TILL 3:00 am
--PIZZA : SANDWICHES : WINGS--

Attention Mew Students
Freshmen/Transfer Support Series

= ‘Academic Advisement in
Preparation for Pre-Registration”

“Dealing With Stress and
Test Anxlety’’

Oct. 2ist

All programs will be held on
Monday evenings from 7-9pm
iim Lecture Center 3.

Sponsored by

che Student Affairs Division

OCTOBER 14,1983 0 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 15

Reagan campaign committee to be established

P) Washington
President Reagan's political ad-
s will formally establish a cam-
ign committee for his re-election
Monday, with the president's
Hessing.
“He will legally be a candidate at
at point, "said Seri. Paul Laxalt,
FNev., who will head the cam-
ign, While Laxalt said the presi-
nt was leaving himself some
iggle room!” in case he decides
Bt to seek a second term, the
Enator told reporters outside the
hite House after conferring with
agan on Thursday: “I have no
bubt... that Ronald Reagan will be
{candidate for re-election.”
Laxalt’s latest announcement was
rt of a timetable that has been un-
iding for several months, and is
ely to culminate with the presi-
int’s formal declaration of can
acy. That, he said, would pro-
bly take place around Thanksgiv
Ws, after Congress adjourns for the
Fer
1B George Bush expects his boss to
cp his current job, the vice presi
int said at a fundraising dinner
HBB helped raise $120,000 for Sut
lk County Executive Peter
phalan's re-election effort
President Reagan will run and
Mill be overwhelmingly re-clected in
M984," Bush predicted Thursday,
Burs after Reagan agreed to the
fablishment of a campaign to re:
ct himself and Bush, Reagan has
NOI formally declared he is running
i re-clection. Bush also called
William P, Clark, Reagan's
Tiomince {0 replace James Watt as
IBterior secretary, “an extraor

‘dinarily able man,” adding, “1
have worked closely with him
almost daily and he will be very ef-
fective with Congress,””

Clark also was supported by Sen,
Alfonse D'Amato, R-NY, who at-
tended the fundraiser, He said the
nominee, currently Rei
tional security adviser,
strength and the respect of Con-
ress.""

Reagan nominated Clark on
Thursday, five days after Watt
resigned, At the $150 per plate din-
ner at Colonie Hill catering com-
plex, Bush told diners to consider
whether they were better off now
than when President Carter left of
fice.

Even President Reagan's senfor
staff were kept until the last minute
from hearing the president's plan {0
name national security adviser
William P, Clark as the new
secretary of the Interior Depart
ment, presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said. Chief of staff James
A. Baker II,deputy chief of staff
Michael A. Deaver and counselor
Edwin P. Meese did not learn that
the president was considering Clark
until midday ‘Thursday, Speakes
said, Reagan decided Clark was his
man several hours after suggesting
it to his staff, He made the decision
public during a speech to a gather
ing of women leaders of Christian
religious organizations, A longtime
Reagan confidant, Clark was pr

Reagan discussed Clark
as a candidate with his staff said
Speakes. The White Hous: said
that 27 people weres being con:
sidered for the job.

Albany elections

Front Page
Hwould like (0 see students becom
More involved in politics if they
hive the time and interest."

‘Other contests that students can
take part in include

The contest for City Comptroller

That pits incumbent Democrat
Charles Hemingway, who has held
the office since January, against a
9982 SUNYA graduate Hilary D.
Ring, running on the Republica
Hicket.

Ring said Albany “has been a
Blosed system)” and projected that
fie could save the city $10.7 million
Hby plugging holes and looking for
Moncy,"” Hemingway sald that his
Gffice has “‘cut back on spending
Gver the last half of the fiscal year."
He added that the city may have a
Gurplus this year

Hin the 11th election district of the
iy which includes only the
@owntown SUNYA
any off-campus stude
contested seat for county
gislature, Incumbent Democrat
ive J, O'Brien, who has held the
Gffice since 1974, is opposed by
Bharon Gonsalves who is running
nthe Citizens Party ticket, Last
Bear, according to the Albany
Hounty Board of Elections, there
Ppcre 2,391 Democrats enrolled in
Mie district compared 10 261
Republicans,
A large section of the uptown
Bampus is eligible to yote in the race
for county legislator from the 15th
ict, Democrat Frank Com
nisso, who held the position. for
\wo months following the death of
dward Perrone, is matched
ainst Republican David Perle
This legislative district includes
lection districts 22,(half of Durch
nd all of Indian),3 (other half of
Dutch and the new district), and 6,
reated by Mayor Whalen and the
‘ommon Council this past summer
only Colonial Quad).

In the 13th legislative district that
Includes only district $ (State
Quad), incumbent Democrat
Joseph J. Dolan is running un
contested:

SUNYA student polling places

as follows: Guilderland district
22 votes at the SUNYA aymnasium,
Albany district 3 votes at the St
Margret Mary School, the new 6th.
district votes across Washington

Ave. at the Thruway House, and
district $ votes at the State Quad
Flagroom.

The Albany County Board of
elections announced yesterday that
the final day for registering to vote
in the general election will be this
Saturday, October 15th,

1- What’s
2- Where Is

On Monday, after Reagan signs a,

Ietter authorizing the establishment
of the “Reagan-Bush ‘84° "” com-
mittee, Laxalt will file the necessary
documents with the Federal Elec-
tion Commission, An office near
the Capital has been selected for the
committee, and the president's top
political affairs aides on the White
House staff, Edward Rollins and
Lee Atwater, have been designated
to shift to the committee payroll,

In addition, key Reagan political
allies around the country have been
lined up for regional roles in the
campaign,

During the brief news con-
ference, Laxalt said that Bush
‘very definitely will be'’ involved in,
the effort, "The committee will be
Reagan-Bush, This is a package

from the front end on,”” he said,
While the 72 year old Reagan has
steadfastly refused (o state publicly
whether he will run for second
term, Laxalt took up the question

of when the president made his _

decision,

“Consciously ... 1 think pro-
bably from almost the beginning
it’s been apparent (0 him as well as
all of us that this job that he's
assumed cannot be effectively done
in four years,” the senator sald, ad-
ding: ‘He's probably focused on It
very actively in the last few days,

Reagan has frequently sald that
he was avoiding a declaration of his
campaign intentions because a for-
mal announcement would cast all
his actions in a politial light.

Laxalt, who repeated the presi-
dent's reasoning on Thursday,
stated: “1 think that his position in
delaying his final announcement
until after Congress adjourns is en-
tirely appropriate,

“The month President Reagan
and I took office inflation had settl-
ed into double digits and the prime
rate of interest reached its highest

vel... since the Civil War, “Bush
said, ‘Now, two years after we set
policies in’ place, the United States
has one big program to help every
American man, woman and child,
I's called economic recovery,”

Bush said 3) million people have
found work since December, thi
prime rate has fallen and inflation
has dropped to less than
percent

CSSA attacked as ineffective

Long Beach, CA
(CPS) — One of the largest
statewide student organizations in
the U.S. has had to quell a rebellion
of restless student raiment
presidents by promising to adopt
more radical tacties to fight tuition.
and fee Increases

“There are a lot of mad students
in this state,"” says Ed Van Ginkel,
head of the glant California State
Student Association (CSSA), which,
represents the student presidents of
19 California State University cam
pus presidents,

Some were so mad about the new
huge tuition and fee increases in the
state and about CSSA’s apparent
inability to stop them that they
threatened to withhold financial
support of the group statewide.

Van Ginkel and the CSSA board
managed last week to retain the
funding by promising to drop its
"work from within!’ tactics in
favor of organizing **mass actions!"
among students to protest the (ul
tion increases,

Specifically, Cal State-Hayward's
student government resolved not to
pay $4,650 in dues to CSSA until
CSSA dropped its ‘conservative’?
tactics, stopped running 1
“Tike a social gel-togethe
got out and mobilized the students
in this state,'" says Hayward stu-
dent president Jay Adler.

California, strapped by the reces~
sion and now left chronically short
of money by 1978's Proposition 13
tax revolt, has been trying to
balance its higher education
budgets by imposing larger fees on

TRIVIA

students,

Fees at the nine-campus Universi-
ty of California system went up 75
percent, from $800 to $1,400, in
(wo years,

The Cal Siate campuses are also
imposing big hikes, San Diego
State, for example, pushed fi
from $440 to $700 only three weeks
before classes started this fall

California com
students are paying tuition (called
jon fees!) for the first

Everyone, says Van Ginkel, {5
“getting fed up with students hay.
ing to bear the brunt of the state's
budget problem,’

Consumer conference

33
followed

Yam, by addresses by
Robert S

Attorney
¢ Swanson,
jon Associate, Cornell
ive Extension, After this,
pants will proceed to thelr
morning workshops.
Following lunch
neth Rosenblum, C
the Suffolk County Dept. of Cc
sumer Affairs, will address the Con-
ference, as will Paul L. Gi

vice Commission.

Two more sessions of workshops
Will follow and the first day will
come to a close at 3:30 pm.

Wednesday will consist of a con-
sumer legislative hearing with the
New York State Assembly Commit-
tee on Consumer Affairs and Pro-
tection.According 10 Ostock,
Wednesday's session will be geared
more towards lawyers and
businessmen

“About 600 people have
registered already,!” said Ostrock,
Who expected a large turnout for

_BUEES..

(pemeeeeaaaAA AAI

TAKE THIS QUIZ— BET YOU CAN’T

the name of the New On-Campus Restaurant
it located ?

GET THEM

What Days & Hours Is it opened ?
Is there anything on the Menu priced over five dollars

What Types of Food are they serving ?

(See BLA AeA LLL LLL LILLIA ALLL LALA LLL

‘aspajg 1auojsng 12d 2uoQ

NOMOWOUd TWIOGIS V HOT AAV SIHL dITO

-jno pul pun auoo 07 noh 1of 8 IDYT -G-jON -F W

‘ud 00:6 07 ‘urd ogig sOujuaay fopiiy -¢

dajuag snduny ‘wooy uo0sng -g-88ayojng -7

the event,
“It's an excellent kind of presen-
tation,” Buchner, who added
that “consumers can learn up-to-
date information,

Besides the Attorney General's
office, sponsors include the
Cooperative Extension Associ
tions of Albany, Columbia, Gree
Rensselaer, Saratoga, and Schenei
tady coun! the Cornell Regional
Office; the NYS Consumer Protece
tion Board; the NYS Public Service
Commission; the NYS Assembly on
Consumer Affairs and Protection;
Putnam County Consumer Affairs;
and Columbia-Greene Community
College

The conference costs 2 dollars for
the general public and 1 dollar for
students and senior citizens, It
‘starts at 8:30 in Meeting Room 6 on
the Concourse Level of the Empire
State Plaza, The workshops will be
held in meeting rooms 1 through 6,

Wednesday's program, which
starts at 11 a.m, will be held in the
Hamilton Hearing Room of the
Legislative Office Building, if

($5.00)
Yes or No?

&

* ssamsup

YOU DON‘T HAVE TO BE 18 TO VOTE

1983 SA FALL ELECTIONS
October 17 & 18

CENTRAL COUNCIL

ALUMNI QUAD (1)

STEVE SINATRA KAY CARPENTER HOWARD
FRITZ PHIL-GRASSO NATHANIEL CHARNEY

COLONIAL QUAD (1)
JANINE M, WOLF SHARON

CASSUTO FRANCES CONCEPTION JAMES

STANLEY
DUTCH QUAD (1)

MIKE SIRIGNANO ADAM ZALTA SHERRY

SHERMAN

VOID—SAM

INDIAN QUAD (1)

ERIC DORF GIL MEYER

STATE QUAD (1)

SCOTT MINICK ANN FUCITO ANDY
TARGOUNIK BOB GORDON

OFF CAMPUS (5)

MARC GOLDBERG RICHARD A

SALADINO STEVE APPELSON LINDA CAR-
SON BILL BANKSTON LAURI COLE ROBERT
SOUCY MICHAEL DA CUNHA JOSEPH P.
SULLIVAN CHRISTERPHER HERMANSON

PLE MICHAEL BAUTISTA ELLIOT BUDASHEWITZ

OFF-CAMPUS BOARD OF DIRECTORS (15)

BOB HELBOCK
LAURI COLE
MELINDA MILLER
CRAIG R. WALTZ JR.
NEIL R, SHAPIRO
LINDA CARSON

UNIVERSITY SENATE
COLONIAL QUAD (1)

TODD BENTON DANIEL R. PORTMORE JACKIE
DUSAULT JOHN LABATE BRIAN ANDREWS

JANINE M. WOLF

VOID—SAMPLE H

Pitot oussaeuananacsansssanseansabescencn ri

CLASS

DEBBI HARRIS
LAURA DI CLEMENTE
LAURA BREZOSKY
LORI SHAPIRO

JANE SZLASA
MICHAEL BAUTISTA
LISA IEZ2I

TERRY CORALLO
DAN O'CONNELL

STEVE LANDIS
TAN SPELLING
JAYNE M. RAN!
ANN FUCITO

a

JENNIFER A, JUENGST.
CRAIG R. WALTZ JR.

LARRY MILLER
WARREN ROTH
JACKIE BERNSTEIN

WILLIAM BROWN
JANICE D. HAYMES
TIMOTHY J. HALLOCK
BRIAN C. FUSCO

JOHN P. ROVERE
DANIEL W. BRODERICK

JOSEPH P. SULLIVAN
ROBERT SOUCY
MICHAEL DA CUNHA
ROB FISHKIN

CHERYL N. KHANER
ANN MARIE LA PORTA

VOID—SAMPLE

SASU (2)

KAY CARPENTER
MALARIE STEIN
JACK SIMON

VOID—SAMPLE

OF 87 COUNCIL (15)

ERIC BLAHA
CASHELL JAQUISH
SHERRY SHERMAN
RICH CANTWELL
D LARRY HARTMAN
JOHN BRANCATO.
PETTER KATZ

BOB GORDON
MARCIA FRATE

ROCHELLE HELLMAN
PHIL GRASSO

GARY CALDERONE
GINO VISCO

DOUG TUTTLE

CHRIS HERMANSON
LINA MALATESTA
HECTOR DACOSTA

VOID—SAMPLE

VOTING WILL TAKE PLACE IN THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS?

Colonial Quad — Flag room — 11
Dutch Quad — Flag room — 11-1
Indian Quad — Flag room — 11-1
State Quad — Flag room — 11-1:30 & 4-7

TO VOTE: Bring Student ID with activity sticker

Alumni Quad — bottom of Waterbury dining room stairs
and bottom of Brubacher dining room stairs —

11:30-1;30 & 5-7
Campus Center Lobby — 9am- 6pm

on the back. You can pick up your activity sticker in the Contact Office

, THERE WILL BE A MANDATORY MEETING FOR ALL CANDIDATES SATURDAY AT 2:00 IN THE

FIRESIDE LOUN'

IGE (2ND FLOOR CAMPUS CENTER)

}VOMENS FOIL
Misa Funded

OCTOBER 14,1983 (1. ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 1 7

Book rai
House
of Stuyvesant
Plaza

489-4761

BOOKS

The Oldest Classics
The Latest Novels

MAPS

We Cover
The World

TRY OUR COMPLETE,
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SATURDAY OCT. 15 MAIN GYM A
1:30-8:00 PM

OPEN EPEE

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91 FM

Wes) Public Affairs

Presents:

eZ IA

iF a THE CENTRAL COUNCIL
| \\ AnD SENATE CANDIDATES
jrina Out What the Contenders
p Thi ink Before You go Vote In

MENS FOIL

4c Also, Catch The Second >
Si t
YX ot ‘THE DEMOoRATIC >

FORUM
Held Last Week In x
1 New York City.
TUNE IN

ext Week’s S.A. Restore
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OON
XK SSL YE Ar tunded %

AMIA enforces stricter policy

By Rich Udewitz

“If you don't have enough signatures before the
first game, you're out of the league,"’ This is the harsh
stand taken by AMIA Secretary-Softball Commis-
sioner Mike Silberman in reference to the upcoming
hockey and basketball seasons, AMIA has installed
new "get tough policy,"” which has calised a great deal
of controversy within the fall softball league,

The council made a resolution last year to actively
seek out illegal rosters, and as a result have disqualified
thirteen teams, including three-time league 3 winner,
In Memory of Dom, The reason for the disqualifica:
tions were an insufficient number of signatures on
those 13 rosters, According to AMIA president Vinny
Cirillo, the signature policy has always been in effect,
but it wasn't strictly enforced in past years, Thus, the
misunderstanding of the AMIA council,

following pol
m rosters were
ually available
f
Were handed out at the captain's m
point in question was the inability (o sign the softball
rosters de (0 the utter unavailability of officials in the
intramural office,

According to Silberman, tables were set up in the
campus center lobby for iwo days prior to last

teams argue th
the fact that th ¢
ays before the

AMIA has toughened I
Jnevate y tnt for intramural

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ind on filling out rosters as over a dozen teams have already been ma

Wednesday's roster deadline, so teams could make
their respective rosters legal,

In the wake of the controversy, over a dozen softball
teams are deprived of intramural play, However, the
council offers a powerful and well-founded argument
for the disqualifications,

A signature on a tenm roster is likened to a signature
on a medical waiver. Without that signature, the
AMIA is held liable for any injury that occurs on the
playing field,

In 1975, the roster signature was tested in court, as
an intramural participant who suffered a broken neck
in Challenge Cup Hockey attempted to siie AMIA,
The signature held up in court that day and AMIA was
held blameless,

Aside from insufficient roster signatures, a team can
forfeit a game if they play with non-roster players, Ina
brief clar ion of that rule, any team can add
plays ¢ three, ust have a legal roster
before e| Is comprised of an
eight player num and the intramural team must
field only those eight players:

“I don't like the fact that teams # paying $18 and
hot getting the sports," Those were ihe sentiments of
former AMIA president Mike Bri .o, Cirillo shares
the same feelings, as he states the purpose of AMIA is
for people to go out a

By the same token,
to be disqualified under AMIA's n
legal rosters.

8 will continue
crackdown on il-

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18 Sports 4424N¥ STUDENT PRESS 3 OCTOBER 14,1983

Sports Briefs

Spikers win

The Albany State women’s
Volleyball team beat local rival
Union on Tuesday. This win ex-
tends the Spikers’ record to 13-2,
This ranks them 15th nationally
Jamong Division III volleyball
teams,

‘Tomorrow Albany travels to Spr-
ingfield, Missachussets to compete
in the tough Springfield Open.
Coach Patrick Dwyer expects a
‘ough battle, ‘In our pool of op:
ponents, We could wind up facing
IMIT, which is now ranked sixth na-
tionally, We lost to them Jast year in
the NCAA regional, and
would be a tough team to fac

Serbalik honored

The SUNYAC conference will
announce that Albany State men's
tennis coach, Jim Serbalik, has

ED MARUSSICH UPS

Larry Cavazza was named to the ECAC Upstate Honor Roll for his performance against the Southern
Wook. He was starting in place of Jim Cant

been named Tennis Coach of the
Week.

Serbalik led a very young Great
Dane team (o a championship in the

SUNYAC tournament. In addition
the team is 4-1 in dual meets this
year, Serbalik took oyer the team
just to days before practice began.

Dave Johnson named
Mets’ manager for 1984

Philadelphia, Pa.
(AP) The New York Mets reached
into their farm system today and

‘Tidewater went on to win the In-
ternational League playoffs and the.

He was named interim coach duc to
lan injury to coach Bob Lewis,

Cavazza tabbed

Albany defensive lineman Larry
Cavazza was named to the ECAC
Upstate Honor roll for his stellar

Cayazza was starting in place of
the injured Jim Canfield.

Women’s tryouts

Tryouts will be held on Sunday
October 16 for the women’s varsity
basketball team in University Gym
from 4-6 pm, Head coach Mari
Warner will also hold tryouts on
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,
Oct, 17, 18 and 19 from 6-8 pm.

For more information contact

Upcoming events|.

Looking to reach the .500 mark
for the first time all year, the
Albany Great Danes will pay a visit
to the Cortland Red Dragons Satur-
day afternoon. The Danes are com-
ing off a strong performance in a

outhern Connec-
ticut last Saturday..: The men's soc-
sam will also be seeking the

visit the Binghamton Colonials for
a key conference game. The Danes
are currently 4-5 overall and
the conferenc
volleyball team will compete in the
Springfield Open on the raod Sgtur-
day... The men’s cross country
team takes the long journey to Buf-
falo to compete in the SUNYAC
Championships on Saturday... The
Women’s cross country team will
also travel to Buffalo to take on
SUNY Buffalo in a dual meet on
lurday... The men’s tennis team
is looking to defeat its second Divi-
sion I opponent in less than a week
When they host the University of
Massachusetts tomorrow beginning
at 1:00 p.m... The women’s tennis
team also'has a home match on
Saturday as they will host Skidmore
at 1:00 p.m... The women’s soccer
team will take to the road and play
Rochester University on Saturday,

OCTOBER 14,1983 (1) ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Sports 19

etmen keep on rolling; defeat Vermont, 6-3

Karen didn't fare as well, dropping their match 6-2,

By Keith Marder
STAFF WRITER

This conversation in the Albany men's tennis team’s
llockerroom Tuesday set the tone for the afternoon's
Imatch: Captain Dave Ulrich said to Coach Jim Ser-
balik, “Coach we're gonna win today,"" to which the
poach responded, ‘I didn't drive all the way to Burl-
ington (Vermont) to lose,""

A confident attitude like that, and the fact that the
Danes were still riding a high from thelr SUNYAC
hampionship enabled the Albany State men’s tennis
jeam to stun the Division | University of Vermont in a

4 victory at Vermont's beautiful indoor facility.

Albany took four out of the six singles matches and
Wo out of the three doubles matches from the Great

ane Classic Champions,

Ulrich, in what Serbalik called, “The highest caliber
pf tennis I have seen this year,"’ beat reigning ECAC

umber one singles champion, Mike Duffy,
B-2,5-7,6-2, Number (wo Singles Tom Schmitz lost his
first set 3-6 (0 Tris Deery but came back to win the se
‘ond two sets 7-6, 7-6. Number three Rob Karen
Butplayed Vermont's Peter Fayrolan, beating him 6:3,

2. Number four singles Dave Grossman beat Vic
Ail , 7-6. Jay Eisenberg, coming off of a

epuperb showing in the SUNYACs, was stopped by

Rich Greene 6-3, 6-1. Albany's number six man Mark
inders Was taken in straight sets by Ross Abrams 6-4,
4
As for the doubles, the number one doubles team of
lirich and Grossman revenged their Great Dane
Classic defeat to Duffy and Fayroian by beating th
THG-2, 7-6. The number two doubles pair of Schmitz and

4-6, 6-1.

To finish off the match on an up note the Danes
fumber three doubles team of Eisenberg and Dave
Feinerman defeated Green and Abrams 3-6, 7-6, 6-3,

‘A very emphati
nuked them,

ichmiltz said after the match, "We
Which is recognized to all Great Dane

tennis fans as the team’s motto, Schmitz also added

“Everybody played great,

We knew how good Ver-

mont isso we were up for them. Our confidence Is
very high now, if we were playing Army right now 1
think we would beat them,"’Army is the only team this
year that has beaten Albany is a dual meet, The Divi-
sion I Army squad did not beat the Danes very easily
though, many of the matches had to go to decisive

third sets,

Coach Serbalik, who was proud of his team’s excep-
tional showing against the Division 1 school, com-

mented,

hhe team's intensity level was still high from.

last weekend (the SUNYAC), and there was added in-

centive be:

this is the team that beat them in the

Great Dane. 1 wouldn't say 1 was surprised but 1am
certainly pleased. I just hope they can stay up for one

more,!
The “one more’
am’s last duel mi
Ther

tes, who

Lof the

the coach was referring to is the

ch {s against the University of Massachuset
has a history of being tough,!” added Ser

The Danes are now 4-1 in dual

meets...The match against

the University of

Massuchusetts will be at home, at the Dutch Quad (en-

nis courts at 1:00,..UMass, lke t

mont Is a Division 1 schoo

University of Ver-

ERICA SPEIOEL UPS.

Co-captain Dave Ulrich played an outstanding match In defeating

Mike Duffy, the currant ECAC number one singles champion,

three-way championship involving |performance against the Southern
the winners of the American [Connecticut Owls last Saturday in Warner or assistant coach Patti Tuesday afternoon, the booters
Association and Pacific C New Hayen, Becker at 457-4532, defeated RPI 4-0...

Leagues, i

named Dave Johnson as their new
manager, Johnson, who managed
the National League baseball club's
‘Tidewater farm team to the Little
Woild Series title this season, was
to be introduced at a noon news
conference at World Series head-
quarters here,

“1 think it's just super he got the Dean Chang
job,'* said Darryl Strawberry, the STARUNATE
Mels rookie outfielder who slamm:
ed 26 home ruins and drove in 74
runs this year. *He knows most of

Danes improve record to 5-4

women added three more goals to thelr total,
Co-captain Dee Marfe made it 20 with her
fourth of the year; five minutes later, Sue
The Albany Siate women’s soccer team — Slagel got her second of the year to put
Went over the .SO0 mark with theird-O victory Albany up by three, Young closed out the
over RPI Tuesday. The win left Albany look scoring with her second goal of the pi
the players and hopefully he can ing forward to this weekend's matchup with RPI proved (0 be & perfect opponent for
come to spring training well . the University of Rochester. —_ Albany; several of the 13 Albany players that
prepared, He's the type of manager > Albany's dominance was epitomized by were sulted up were hurt. "We had a chance
that brings out the best in a playe the shots on goal; playing at home, All {o play everyone who could play," said Kids
Co Aeat swat yousnese WEBR gol off 42 shots while RPI couldn't manage der, ‘Those who played kept the game on the
young player: i. ; i ep, Y one, Despite this vast difference, the teams offensive} the girls often confined the ball to
‘One great thing about Johnson y oe art ne out at halftime deadlocked at zero, "1 the attacking third of the field.”
is the way he sticks by a player."* was gelting worried," admitted Albany Head Stopperbick Dana Siam, who played out
A former infielder who spent 13 Coach Amy Kidder, ‘1 anticipated the team st RPI, attested
seasons in the major leagues with having soine (rouble Wik RPI because ofe to Albany's dominance, “It wasn't w. vey
Baltimore, Atlanta and their unorthodox style of play. Everytime we —_conipetitive game,’* commented Stam, "The
Philadelphia, Johnson, 40, replaces brought the ball up, the RPI women would ball very rarely crossed the midfield fine. tn
Pranic Howards Who wasiioud on just swarm all over the ball carrier," noted the second half’ we started to pass better,
ne final dey of the ceauler aeaton Kidder whieh led (0 our shots going In:
Miah he Swolld hot Treliin — The team will face much stiffer competi
risus Saturday when they play Rochester
Howerd shes took over a8. Albuny hay never beaten Rochester; last year
serie manager in June Wien, Ceores the women lost in double overtime, Accor
elgned) ted the Mats to ing to the coach, things might be different
68 victories, the most since 1976,
although the team finished in last
lace in the NL East for the fifth

of position al sweeper a)

The four goal spread could have easily tion o
been doubled if the players had converted on.
some of their numerous chances in the first
half, “We just missed a lor of our
shots,"*Kidder s

About 20 minutes into the second half,
Albany finally got on the board as striker
Kerry Young scored her sixth goal this yea
That first goal seemed to open things up for
the team; within the next 20 minutes, the
Gene e Re RL ERE LLL LLL LOLA LLL LAA AL IL

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this year

“We certainly have the talent to win this
year,” said Kidder, “Rochester isn’t having
their best year; it Would be a feather in our
cap if we could beat them," i}

UPS
he women’s soccer team outshot AP! 42.0 and defeated the Engineers 4-0. The
jooters' record Is now 5:4, and they will visit Rochester on Saturday.

cool refreshing | Cortland next for improving Danes

eo ehart toppers
“Back Page
Cortland game with

ever st irs with | Es ANG aren

in
with the Mets as first base coach,
but it was not known Whether the
Mets will retain their other coaches
~ Bill Monbouquette, Bobby Valen-
tine and Gene Duss

During his playing carcer,
Johnson played in four World ta
Series with Baltimore and was pick
ed for three All-Star Games, (wo
while he was with Baltimore and
‘one while he was with Atlanta, He
finished his playing career with

261 batting av 136 home runs
and. 609 runs batted in,

Mets organiza-

rs, In 1981, he

hnanaged the Mets! AA afflate In

Jackson, Miss., and spent the 1982

ason as a roving minor league in-

structor.

Last season, he managed
Tidewater, the Mets’ AAA farm
club, to a fourth-place finish in the
International League, despite losing
Strawberry, pitcher Walt Terrell
and shortstop Jose Oquendo, all of
whom were called up by the Mets
team,

te =
stire with right v

ae for dance fever

Wi qi Pseagram’s 7 & 7U.
‘Seagran ta
hp fiend the perfect F

hot, dance fe
Pecaaran sist 7UP "Re

ste of Seagram's 7

ance
Seven &

the Dragons 27-20 at home. . . More (rou-
ble for the Dane offensive line: the group's
only yeteran, OT Tom Jacobs, suffered a
slight injury and might not play the whole
game. . . The game will be broadcast on
WCDB 91FM at 1:30.

with their only toss coming in their last visit
{0 Cortland’s Davis Field in 1981, . . Last

year the Danes avenged that loss by beating
eve —

Watch
for the

ASP Sports Supplement

g ge AMIA-WIRA stan-
featuring a full pase of AMIA-WIRA

“HEALTH AND FITNESS CENTER"
FACILITIES INCLUDE:

Nevilive Ex Weight Training

Body Bullding
Flexibility & Endurance

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Lf BAYS ALLEN ACROSS FROM ST. PETER'S HOSPITAL
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coming Tuesday..

dings and rankings, and a feature on Albany
198} SLAG DILLER CO, KY. LY AMERCAN WARE ABLNO 80 ROOF

‘Seton 7F eaters Se Coney

Seagram's

OCTOBER 14,1983

By Mark Levine
ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

‘Tihan Presble's goal at 2:15 of the second
‘overtime gave the Albany State men's soccer
team a hard-fought 1-0 win over Siena Col-
Jege on University Field Wednesday after-
noon,

Presbie’s goal, his sixth of the season,
broke a scoreless deadlock that was contested
On a soggy field and through a steady rain, as
both teams found it very difficult to get scor-
ing opportunities,

"We survived," commented Albany Head
Coach Bill Schieffelin following his team's
fourth win of the year to go with five losse
“We still have {0 play with more intensity
And be more hungry to score goals."”

Presbie got his goal off a fine feed from
midfielder Leslie Severe, who received the
ball from Presbie and sent It back (o him
streaking in on the left wing. He was all by
self against goalkeeper Rob Lynch, and
he fired a shot into the lower lefthand corner,

‘Leslie gave me the ball back. I brought it
fo the side, and if was just n e goalle,
‘There was no way I couldn't score,’ Presbl
said after the game,

In what has become a tradition in the
Siena soccer rivalry, the game
featured some rough and chippy play with a
low card cautions handed out.
‘Chave much talent, They more
or less just try and run over you,"

com:
mented defender Scott Cohen, ‘Their style
Is tough play."

Presble agreed, saying, “It was really #
rough game, Every time 1 went on a break
they took me out,””

The first half saw very little action offen-
sively as neither team seemed to be able to
sustain much pressure, Albany did have one
excellent chance to score in the 22nd minute
when left wing Michael Williams crossed the

Danes seek .500 mark in clash with Dragons

By Mare Berman
STAFF WRITER

Dane quarierback Mike Milano put it best
after Albany's upset victory over Southern
Connecticut last week when he sald, '"We're
‘anew team," which simply was a reference to
the club’s new confident outlook on the rest
of the season,

‘Tomorrow afternoon, the visiting Albany
State football team will try to climb to the
500 mark by beating a .500 team, Cortland
State (3-3).

‘The 2-3 Danes are coming off thelr finest
offensive output of the season, scoring 22
points against a tough Division II school in
Southern Connecticut,

Against Cortland, the Danes will be going
up against a defense quite weaker than others
they've met this season, which include the
likes of top ranked Union and Hofstra, Cor-
tland!s defense has allowed an average of 331
yards per game, which should have Dane
coach Bob Ford smiling,

No maiter how overused the expression is,
the Danes gained a large amount of con-
fidence in the offense's ability to put points
on the board, This confidence not only has
spread throughout the offense, but to the
defense as well, according to Ford,

“The defense has battled all season 1o hold
‘on hoping the offense can generate
something and get on the scoreboard, There
was naturally a tendency for them to let
down,"”

Last week was a different story as the
Danes led throughout, ‘We finally had a
lead to protect,” said linebacker Ed
Eastman, "There was no letdown,'’

‘Tomorrow afternoon, the Danes, defense
‘will have one thing on their minds, stopping
Cortland’s fullback Daye Cook, whose 1,469
career rushing yardage puts him second on
the Red Dragons! all-time rushing list.

Last week the Danes were sticcessful in

eg RRA NS

288

rather easy first half as

AB TARUESTOT UP
Stopper Mike Miller(4) heads the ball toward Siena net as forward Tihan
Prosble(7) looks on, The Danes beat Siena 1-0 In overtime.
front, but the Dan
mply as Lynch made the save.
Albany, netminder Tom Merritt, it was a defender Carl Toos won most of the loose
Siena failed to get a balls and controlled the backline, ‘Matty
shot on goal, while the Danes managed only and Mike kept the ball out of the penalty
four shots on Lynch,

‘The second half was more of the sa
Albany controlled the game but failed to get first game all year that we outhustled the
a goal, while Siena could only stay back and other team." -
play defensively. Whenever the Indians did
manage to get the ball into the Albany end of team to score in the second half came on a
the field, the Danes’ defense did a superb job freak play with about 12 minutes left, Miller

came of turning them away as Cohen, stopper
or Mike Miller, sweeper Matt McSherry and

area, and the halfbacks did a good job on
ne, as defense," Cohen sald, ‘1 think this was the

Probably the best opportunity for either

shutting down the Owls! fine pair of running offense, which has been shut out twice
backs, Kerry Taylor and Daye Schmidt, already this season. “'If a boxer has a good
holding them to 23 and 62 yards rushing, right cross you got to stop that right cross,"
respectively. They are looking for more of commented Ford.
the same tomorrow.
‘The Danes would want nothing more than of defensive end
to make Red Dragon freshman quarterback _ bably start after missing the Southern Con-
Paul Grazioplone put the ball in the air, necticut gam
Grazioplone replaced injured starter Joe ed by Larry
Ruyak, who went down two Weeks ago

A plus on the Danes! side will be the return
im Canfield, who will pro-

His shoes were more than fill-
azza, who was named to the
‘AC Honor Roll.

With or without Canfield the Danes, if

It's agreed by many that stopping Cook is they are to limit Cortland's point production,
almost synonymous with stopping Cortland’s must eliminate the punting mistakes from last

ED MARUSSICH UPS
| to Cortland tomorrow for a game against the Red
held Southern Connecticut to 183 yards last week.

didn’t really moye the football by grinding it
Out. But, I'll take the big plays."

line, the Danes are still expecting to put up
enough points on the board that would
enable them to come back to Albany next
Saturday with a .500 record. '‘Once you start
thinking about losing, you's
said Ford,

arched a high ball toward the Siena goal from
about 60 yards away that skidded on the wet
grass and bounced over Lynch's hands only
to roll just wide of the vacated net,

‘The Danes were forced to play the game
without the services of defenders Dominique
Cadet, Bob Garrett and Francisco Duarte, all
‘of whom are nursing various injuries.

“1 wanted to rest some players for the
Binghamton game,” said Schieffelin, referr-
ing to Saturday's game with the state's
seventh-ranked (eam in Division 3,"'We had
to Use some of our other players and they did
a real nice job. Matt isn't used to playing
sweeper, and he did an outstanding job for
us.’

The game against Binghamton on Satur.
day is crucial as the Danes are looking to
finish in the top two in the conference and
qualify for the SUNYAC playoffs, Albany
presently has a 1-2 record in the conference.
"Binghamton is going to be a very hard
ne," Schieffelin said. “But if we beat
Binghamton and Oneonta (at home next
Wednesday) we'll have a good chance to
make the playoffs,""

CORNER KICKS; Presbie's goal was his
first game-winner of the year. He now has six
goals, one assist for 13 points to lead Danes
In scoring...Merritt recorded his third
shutout of the year and lowered his goals-
against average to 1.22,,,Danes now Tel in
overtime games.,.Aside from Presble, only
‘one player has scored more than one goal for
Albany--midflelder Jeff Hackett, who has
three.,.Schleffelin hopes (0 haye everyone
healthy for Binghamton Saturday, including
Severe, who jammed his shoulder ngainst
Siena and played In pain the last part of the
game, a

Week. Two punts were blocked, not including
one kick that never got off because of a
fumbled snap. Those miscues could have cost
the game for the Danes if it weren't for a cou-
ple of strong defensive stands in the fourth
quarter.

Ford blamed the mistakes on a number of
things. "The snaps weren't as crisp as we
would've liked and I feel the punters were
taking too long. On the two that were block-
ed we let leakage clear up the middle,"”

Ford will continue to start freshman Mark
Piersimoni, who was replaced in the second
half by senlor Mark Galuski, Both punters
seemed to have their problems, but Ford will
stick with the youngster. In Piersimoni, the
Danes get the benefit of a punter who kicks
farther and higher but lacks experience,

Offensively, the Danes will try to
Feproduce, the performance that enabled
them to gain over 300 yards last week. The
Danes are looking to come up with the big
plays that paced them over the Owls, a
‘7S-yard pass thrown by wide receiver Bob
Brien offa reverse, and a S1-yard touchdown
pass caught by Pete McGrath,

“Historically, we've always come up with
the big play,”” said Ford, “Last week we
came up with those types of plays but we

Even with the problems with the offensive

e going to lose,

The Danes have never thought about los.
ng.

PAW PRINTS: Monte Riley Is back from a
two week suspension but might be sidelined,

19>

VOLUME LX xX

Tuesday

Al LY. 2
SONT  Qctober 18, 1983

‘NUMBER 34

Women ‘take back the night’

in march through Albany

__ By Sheilah R, Sable

Women walked in safety in some of the most shadowy
areas in Albany Saturday night, when more than 400 joined
to "take back the night."

The rally began at 7 p.m. on the Capitol steps and was
followed by a march from the steps, west on State Strect,
through Washington Park, and then back toward the Cap-
itol.

Men were asked {0 watch the children, hand out pam
philets, and sell t-shirts. They cooperated and respected the
Women's requests to march alone,

As women marched through the streets of Albany, they
shouted "Women Unite, Take Back the Night," "No more
No more violence," “Gay, Straight, Black and
All women Take Back the Night,”

Many of the women were disappointed thit they could
Hot march in the streets and that they were confined to the
sidewalks. Albany resident Karen Barclay wondered, “If all
the law enforcement agencies are supposed 10 be supporting
Us, then why haven't the police roped off the streets for us
to march?” One officer explained, You ladies are walki
the wrong way on a one way street and that made {t im:
possible for the police to properly escort the march through
the streets,!”

AL the close of the march, on the Capitol steps, there was
4 participatory self-defense demonstration, Tips for walk
ing safely at night were suggested; try not to walk alone, try
to walk in well lit areas, and if someone is following you
look for an unlocked car or go into the first public

Opening the rally, Debra Dettor, a member of the
Albany County Rape Crisis Center, said, We are here to
Jet people know that rape exists and that we want it stop:
ped, We want safety, We want to be {ree of fear when walk-
ing the streets alone at night,"?

Carla DiGirolomo, Director of the N.Y. State Commis-
sion on Domestic Violence, informed the crowd of some
figures and statistics about rape, ‘Forty thousand women
will be victims of rape by their husbands and lovers this
year alone, but nothing will be done about it lawfully.
because according to the court system there is no such crime
as marital rape,”* said DiGirolomo, “Children are the
highest risk. Forty-two percent of the females raped or
assaulted each year are between (wo and fourteen years
old," she added. DiGirolomo's point was that if the courts
and legislators don't start to treat rape as a more serious
problem then women will be victims of rape and victims of
unfair court proceedings, as well.

“The patriarchy must be ended,"’ said DiGirolomo, who
is a victim of sexual assault and battering by her husband,

Saratoga Springs Attorney Nancy Bunting concentrated
her speech on the idea that only community groups could
help to change the ways in which the issues are viewed in the
court systems. ““People can apply pressure to change the:
views on rape, demand laws and make sure they are
enacted, Legislators and judges must realize what goes on
and change the system so that women are treated fairly and
rapists get what they deserye,"” asserted Bunt

Pat Donovan, a state trooper and a former first ine
vestigator for the Albany County District Attorney sex of-
fense unit, informed the crowd of a program set up in
January of 1978. Sol Greenberg of Albany County received
funding, she explained, for prosecution of rapists and pro-
grams for the rape victims, Women who are raped can be
treated by professional help as soon as they enter the
hospital. Victims will be tended to by doctors and
psychologists. They have also been allevia
Of having the rape victims go through public hear

The only problem the marchers experienced
When they stopped in'the park (0 rest and use the f
The care taker held up the procession because he didn't
know what it was all about and he was would
be a riot or violence, "I had no idea you were coming, My
boss never said a word so I just couldn't let you in without
confirmation from my boss," the caretaker explained, The
situation was worked out and the women continued to
march back to the Capitol steps

Poot Orie Thyla read some of her work twice during the
rally, First she recited "The Voice of the Owl Rises Within
Me," which revealed the injurious psychological effects
that sexual assault has on women, The second, '*Sngil Ex
plains Herself,"” was a view on the degradation of women
in all fields

Reverend Minnie Burns of the Saratoga Universal Bap:
tist Temple referred (0 the Bible where it says that a rapist
should be stoned to death, She explained that she was not
advocating death for all rapists, just a more serious tres
ment of rapists, “Rapists should get what they deserve
she sald, "If officials would put the rapist away and give
him what he deserves, we would have peace and women
could walk’ Iai! and’do what they are supposed to do; be
soft, be sweet, be caring, be fruliful and multiply,’* Burns
contended

After the march, a song entitled Fight Back, written by
Holly Near, was performed by Terri Roben. This was an
action that also drew cheers and applause from the remain
ing crowd

Albany County Rape Crisis Center Director, Judith Con
do made a few points in her closing statements. "Violence
in (oday's society fs too glorified and {00 accepted, If this is
not changed, along with the constant degradation of
Women, we will never be free to walk at night safely," Con=
do also said that she has recelved a proclamation, {rom
County Executive James Coyne, making Oct, 1218 the
iraditional Rape Prevention Weck, Condo proudly said,
‘sAlbany can now be recognized as the leader, from its ac
tion past and present adicating rape and sexual
violenice against women,'?

The Albany Rape Crisis Center and Rape Crisis Cente
in the surrounding areas hope actions such as "Take Back
the Night,"” will help to change the way women are viewed
in society, educate society about rape and its effects, in-
fluence politicians to recognize the problems and take ac
tions to correct them, and above all eradicate rape.

A Truth Walkathon on Saturday, Oct. 29 at 7 a.m, is
another event slated to make violence against women
more discernable problem among society, and the judici
system.

WOMEN UNITE
wa TAKEBACK
THE NIGHT "=

State trooper Pat Donovan

—
ROBERT SOUCY UPS

Women can be treated by professional help when enlering the hospital,

ii
i
=I}

Audiovisual technician
System fs nat cost effective,

By Nicole Keys

TAPE WAITER

Association over the past three years,
The resolution is being proposed by S

the system — originally intended to save

cost-effective, officials said.

Vice President Jeff Schneider, Controll
Ceniral Council Chair Bob Helbock and
Kerr

A memorandum prep
that reviewed the
that a $17,000

Starr, said Schneider.
It was begun with an appropriation of

in 1982-83, Additional labor costs fotallin

not included in those appropriations. “An

sky.
The system's purpose was to “incre:

eH

“The original pure
ofthe

wards

Officials cited several reasons why 1
system cost so much and why labor
budgeted:

plus rent lights and equipment. Now the

Schneider said that Popper "decided to
department into a professional type of uni
to buy equipment without regard to any
They tried to get it too big too fast."

ment was approved by Central Council

TUBA SIMMONS UPS

SA officials propose
bill to get rid of
expensive AV system

A bill scheduled to be voted on at Wednesday's Ceniral
Couneil meeting would sell tens of thousands of dollars
Worth of audio-visual equipment purchased by Student

Officials because.
money — Is not

The bill's sponsors include SA President Rich Schaffer,

ler Adam Barsky)
Vice Chair Lisa

d by Schneider earlier this year
dio-visual system's productivity stated
inual income was estimated,

Groundwork for the system was laid in the summer of
1981 by then-SA Vice President Woody Popper and Mike

$22,755, Expen-

ditures increased 10 $61,296.42 in 1981-82 and $41,095.06

$6,513.95 were
al revenue fell

short of projections over a two year span, SA-AV (audio-
visual) does not save the organization money,"? said Bar

roup programm

ing, so groups could do more shows," Popper said
ses for audio-visual Were for sti
material (0 prepare for an expansion to a large
said Scheneider in the memorandum, He added
that the the system was intended 10 pay iiself off within two
years, with a $8,500 savings in sound systems costs ali

he audio-visual
Goss Were ful

Barsky sald that demand for the system way less than
anticipated. *Before, quads would pay for a $500 band,

elting disc

jockeys for $175 who carry their own equipmient,"" he said,

nerease the AV
and continy
type of budget,

But Popper contends that the purchases of AV equip-

‘at the summer
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Metadata

Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Date Uploaded:
December 24, 2018

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The archives are open to the public and anyone is welcome to visit and view the collections.
Collection restrictions:
Access to this record group is unrestricted.
Collection terms of access:
The researcher assumes full responsibility for conforming with the laws of copyright. Whenever possible, the M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections and Archives will provide information about copyright owners and other restrictions, but the legal determination ultimately rests with the researcher. Requests for permission to publish material from this collection should be discussed with the Head of Special Collections and Archives.

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