Albany Student Press, Volume 68, Number 33, 1981 October 23

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Women Netters
page 17

Win

October 20, 1981

‘Danes Run Out of Time; Cortland Wins, 20-14

by Mare Haspel
CORTLAND — Usually 60
minutes of football is more than
ample time for a team to answer
‘any lingering pre-game questions.
Normally those questions left
unanswered by game time get
answered by game's end, But the
Question facing the Albany, State.
Great Danes prior to Saturday's
ime with the Cortland Red
Dragons at Carl “‘Chugger’* Davis

Field wasn’t just a normal question.

Rather, considering the time of
the season, it was quite an extraor-
dinary one: whether or not an inex~
perienced sophomore quarterback,
‘Tom Roth, could lead the wishbone
offense in place of the injured Tom
Pratt? For a good part of the game,
it appeared maybe not right away,

. It looked as if Roth needed more
time tb adjust, Then as the game
wore on, the answer began to look
increasingly yes, However, time ran
out on Albany before it could sce

Rob Nearing displayed his versatility out of the backfield,

eatching four

passes in Saturday's loss. (Photo: Mark Nadler)

cessfully qualify that positive ver-
dict as the Danes fell to Cortland

th) not as good a
thrower as Pratt,’ assessed Albany.
State head coach Bob Ford, ‘But
he moved the ball as well as we
could have expected.

But in the first half ball move-
ment was almost non-existent as the
Dane offense just couldn't seem to

“get it going, With the relatively
untested arm of Roth, Ford was
reluctant to put the ball in the air
during the opening half, Albany
felied heavily on its ground game to
compensate for the loss of Pratt's
throwing ability, As a result,
Albany had) possession six times
‘over the opening thirty minutes of
play, but got no further than the
Cortland 36 yard line the one time
they penetrated Dragon territory,

‘On the other side of the coin, all
the offensive fireworks were turned
in by Dragon quarterback Jay Clep-
ly (five for 10 for 113 yards passing)
and his two strong backs, Mike
Bowe who rushed for 73 yards and
Daye Cook, a 175 pound fullback,
Who netted 111 yards on the day,

"The backs ran with a tremen-
ous amount of ability," said Ford
of the Dragon backfield,

But the big difference in the first
half as Cortland took a 13-0 lead
was the play of the Dragons’ huge
offensive line. Weighing in at an
Average of over 250 pounds,
linemen Paul Alexander,
Vairo, center John Irion,
torino and Rich Ryan pro

Ciéply with plenty of time to work
While opening up many holes for
the Dragon power backs.

"They were big up front,’ said
Ford, ‘We thought they were not
capable of manhandling us but they
did, When they had to, they popped
4 couple of long ones,””

And those long ones started early
for the Red Dragons. Cortland’s
‘Tom Lee returned Tom Lincoln's
opening kick off 40 yards to the
Albany 48. Again uncertain of
Roth's aim at quarterback, the
Danes had hoped’ to pin the
Dragon's back with their kicking
game. So, Lee's return was a blow
to the Albany game plan right off

Harriers Third in SUNYAC Meet

by Ken Cantor

The Albany State men's cross
country team placed third in the
SUNYACS at Fredonia on Satur-
day, while the women’s team finish-
ed eighth in the ten team Hartwick

llege Invitational tournament,

The men's squad came in third
behind Fredonia and Binghamton,
Fredonia had 27 points, while
Binghamton finished with 76
points. Albany finished with 88
points, and Cortland followed with
115 points,

“Fredonia had a very tough
team. We really didn't expect to
beat them,'? sald Albany State
men's coach Bob Munsey,

Scott James and Bruce Shapiro
excelled for Albany on Fredonia's
8000-meter course, James came in
second for the Danes with/a time of
25:41, Shapiro came in ninth with a
time of 26;16, Jim Roth came in
19th, Chris Lant finished 24th, and
first year runner Jim Erwin came in
40th place in the field of 90 runners, |

“The competition was tough, but
I think that our team did a good
job,’ said Shapiro,

The Danes are off until next
Saturday when they compete in the
Capital District meet at Central
Park in Schenectady, Munsey com-
mented on his team’s chances after
Saturday's meet, “We're hopeful
that we'll do well next weekend. 1
was very happy with our perfor-
mance in Trenton last week, and in
Fredonia this week," he sald, “The
Capital District meet is very impor-
tant,'"

“T think that our team will be
ready,” Munsey continued. ‘Our
experienced runners are starting to
come into their top form, In addi-
tion, our rookies are starting to ex-
cel, Winston Johnson and Jim Er-
win ran yery well on Saturday, 1
think that we should fare well on
Saturday, :

After Saturday's meet the Danes
face Siena on the 26th, and then

host the Albany Invitationals on the

3st

The women's cross country team
did not fare that well at Hartwick,
The harriers finished with 250
points, which left them in eighth
place in the ten team meet, Cor-
tland came in first with 33 points,
and Syracuse finished second with
58 points,

Albany's Sara Cawley finished
39th with a time of 23:43, Erma
George clocked in with a time of
24:16, and Kim Bloomer came in
Sand with a time of 24:34,

Albany State women's cross
country coach Ron White com-
mented on his team's performance:
“We did not fare that well on the
overall completition, However, Er-
ma George and Sara Cawley had
fine individual performances for
our team,"*

The harriers compete in the
Capital Districts this Saturday in

‘Schenectady.

thé bat,

“With a new quarterback in, we
had to get field position out of our
kicking game and immediately they
got the long kick off return
Ford,

The Dragons took full advantage
of the golden opportunity by pro-
mptly ‘marching down the field in
ten plays and capitalizing on
Cook's 3-yard run into the end zone
at 11:03,

(On the ensuing extra point at-
tempt, Dragon placekicker Steve
Armstrong missed but the Danes
were called off-side, On the second
chance Dragon head coach Ed
Decker, elected to try for the two
point conversion, but Cleply's pass
intended for Frank Burm was in-
complete and Cortland led 6-0,

Both teams traded a pair of
punts, and on the Danes! third
possession of the first quarter, they
took over at their own 4 yard line,
Roth gave the ball to fullback
‘Chuck Priore and Rob Nearing for
short gains, but on third-and-six
Jay Ennis fumbled and the ball was
recovered by Cortland’s Brian
Moran very deep in Dane territory,

On Cortland’s first play Bowe
Tegged into the end zone on an eight
yard run, Armstrong's extra point
Was good and Cortland opened a
13-0 lead.

In the second quarter, neither
team was able to put points on the
board, Cortland threatened but
Armstrong's 46-yard field goal at-
tempt was not good,

‘On their final possession of the
half, Albany at last started to move,
A drive that originated from the
Danes! 29 yard! line penetrated the
Dragon end for the first time in the
game and was highlighted by a
prising 22 yard pass completion to
back Rob Nearing, but the Danes
were stifled at the Cortland 36,

Cortland increased their lead to
20-0 on a 56 yard pass to wide
receiver Pete Schwan with 4:00 re-

maining in the third quarter.
Schwan was wide open down the
fight sideline as Dane cornerback
Bruce Collins tripped while coming
over to cover him. Collins went
down and had to be taken off the
field with a stretcher.

At this point, nothing scemed to
be going right for Albany. But on
their next possession things started
changing and Roth looked. very
poised as the Danes drove 84 yards,
scoring on a 3-yard pass from Roth
to receiver Bob Brien. Brien was
isolated on the right side and then
ran a crossing pattern in the end
zone with 10:39 left in the game,
Lincoln's kick was good and
Albany cut the lead to 20-7

On the following kick off, the
Danes successfully retained posses-
sion by pulling off a beautiful on-
side kick,

“The onside kick was a beautiful
execution," commented Ford,

Now with excellent field position
on the Cortland 43, the Danes went
to work again. A 28-yard Priore run
brought Albany to the 15, then
after three short runs by Ennis,
Priore and Nearing, Roth bootlege-
ed it in from six yards out with just
8:35 {0 go in the fourth quarter.
Again Lincoln was good on the con-
version and Albany trailed only
20-14,

Cortland’s tight end Mike
Hilliard fumbled on the Dragons?
Text possession after he was crunch-
ed by Dane John DiBari, Albany
recovered on the 45 yard line with a
great opportunity to even the score,
On the'first play from scrimmage,
Nearing ran for 10 yards and
another first down. Priore went up
the middle for another four yards to
put Albany on the Dragon 31.
Roth's next pass attempt intended
for Ennis fell incomplete and on
thitd-and-six Priore added three
more yards. But then on fourth.
and-two, Roth kept the ball as he

continued on page eighteen

‘The Albany State men’s cross country (eam placed third in the competitive
SUNYAC meet at Fredonia, (Photo: UPS)

State University of New York at Albany

E StUGENT

copyright © 1981 by the ALBany Stupent Press ConPorATion

Friday

October 23,

1981

Volume LXVIII Number 32:

State Official Charged in Assault of Dusenbury

Incident Occured in State Office

by Wayne Peereboom

A state public information of:
ficer has been arrested and charged
With assaulting Albany Citizens
Parly mayoral candidate Fred
Dusenbury,

Francis Rivett, a public infor-
mation officer with the state Public
Service Commission, was arraigned
in Albany Police Court last Tues-
day and charged with third degree
assault.

The arrest stemmed from an incl-
dent at Riveit's office at the Emping,
State Mall on October 14.

Shortly after 9a.m. that mornit
Dusenbury said, he went to Rivett’s
office and requested some informa-
tion concerning the recenily signed
Home Energy Fair Practices Act
Dusenbury said Rivett told him the
information “may be ready.!
Dusenbury said the documents were
covered under the Freedom of In-

formation Act and threatened to go
to the press,

At this point Dusenbury said
Rivett “pointed his finger at me and
said, ‘You can shove the media up
your —!" Dusenbury said a few
Words followed and Rivett ‘‘slugged
me hard with his fist three times in
my head,”

Dusenbury said the Capital
Police were called and Rivett was
taken to police headquarters where
Dusenbury said he wanted to press
charges, He said that state Public
Service Commissioner Paul Gioia
“came to the police station and
pleaded with me to drop the
charges."

Finally, after Gioia promised a
written apology and a reprimand of
Rivelt, @ copy of which was to be
sent to Dusenbury, the mayoral
candidate agreed to drop the
charges,

Mayoral Candidates Clash
On Local Issues In Debate

by Charlie Perrillo

and Darrow Gershowitz
Incumbent Mayor Brastus Corn-

ing II stressed his past record and
experience while opponents Charles
Touhey and Fred Dusenbury at-
tacked Corning for creating a
40-Year Tragedy’ in Albany dur
ing a mayoral debate held last night
in the Albany Public Library

The candidates spoke on topics
concerning Albany's budgetary
process, tax assesments. the propos-
ed security ordinance and student
voting rights in the 90-minute
debate sponsored by the League of
Women Voters.

Dusenbury,
Citizen's Party
public hearings should be held
before the budget is made, and
stressed input by ouiside agenci
and groups in budgetary, as well as
other, matters. Corning said he also.
welcomes outside ideas and input,
but Touhey negated this assertion,
saying Albany's budget process
should be brought up to date,

“This is 1981, not 1941," said
Touhey

A, registered Democrat running
with Independent and Republican
endorsements, Touhey denounced
the political favoritism he felt was
involved in the assessment of pro:
perties, calling the present system

‘a_game.”” Corning any
political favoritism, although he ad
mitted there are ‘some inequil
in the system, Corning also felt
some of the blame fell on the state
government for ‘fiddling
around."?

Touhey felt that
posed security ordinance should be

running as a
candidate, felt

denied

Albany’s pro

enacted and enfoced in light of the
ccel of sexual’ ablise on
willet Corning, however,
felt Albany's habltability laws,
Whichstatethat everyone has a right
‘fo @ well-secured home, were pro-
tection enough, adding that he
hadn't heard one complaint about it
these past four months. Additional=
ly, he blamed individuals for lack of
safety precautions.

continued on page thirteen

However, when he had not
received the apology or the repri-
mand by last Tuesday, Dusenbury
held’a new conference at the state
Legilative Office Building and an-
nounced he had reinstituted pro-
ceedings to have Rivett arrested,

Reached for comment, Rivet
sald, ‘My version differs from his
(Dusenbury’s) but I'm not going in-
to detail because it’s in court,
Rivett ‘pointed his finger at me and
ed the reprimand from Gioia and
the apology had been mailed out on
Friday, Wednesday night Dusen-
bury said he had yet to receive the
apology although he had received a
copy of the reprimand at that time,

However, Dusenbury says, an
apology is not now sufficient."” He
said Rivett told a local reporter, ‘It
was like a baseball fight.’ There
‘was an incorrect impression that
there was a fight, I can't have that

I'm a mayoral candidate. My
credibility as a candidate {5
destroyed if it looks like 1 get

heated arguments and fistfights, 1
don't do either,

1 didn't touch him at any point,
There was no fight. The charges will
not be dropped. Now I have to have
him correct what he sald to the
press."

However, Dusenbury said if three
conditions are met, he will negotiate
with Gioia, First, Rivett would have
to call a news conference and say
that a fight did not take place, Se-
cond, Gioia must take away the im=
plication in Rivett’s reprimand that
there was a heated argument
before the alleged assault, The third
demand, Dusenbury said, {s in reac-
tion to statements of other office
workers who witnessed the event,
that “if the police come, we'll {cll
then that we didn't see anything,
Dusenbury said Gioia must issue a
memorandum stating that this
behavior is not acceptable,

In reaction to the latest demand,
Rivett said, “He asked for an

Albany mayoral candidates Corning, Dusenbury and Touhey.

apology which he got. Now he says
something else,””

Gioia could not be reached fr
comment,

Further, Dusenbury said he is
discussing the possibility of a civil
damage suit against the state Public.
Service Commission, and at-
torneys are advising him to sue the
Times-Union,

He said the possibilily of the
Times-Union suit arose from a Sun-
day article which referred to the in-
cident asa fight. Dusenbury called
the statement "libelous,"?

Times-UnionExecutive City
Editor Joe Sharkey said, ‘We tried
to get hold of Fred Dusenbury for
three days but he doesn't have a
home phone." Sharkey sald Dusen-
bury did not get hold of the Times-
Union. “Fred! Dusenbury did not
choose to give his side of it,"
Sharkey said.

Rivett is scheduled to reappear in
Police Court on October 27.

Covered budget, security ordinance and student voting issues

Freedom of Information Challenged

week proposed new restrictions on
the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) on the premise that ‘the
Act was being used in ways Con-
gress never intended,"” according to
U.S. Justice Department spokesper-
son Mark Sheehan.

Testifying before a Congressional
committee, assistant Attorney
General for legal policy Jonathan
Rose pushed for six major revisions
of the 1974 amendment which is in-
tended to make governmental
records public.

Rose said the act needs a
“clarification of cer
tain... exemptions and pro-
ceditres."” Shechan explained this
unwarranted inva

lay
effective

would prevent
sion of personal privacy
enforcement . . . and the
collection of intelligence,”

Sheehan said the administration
was concerned about the availabili-
information in

ty of certain

Flip ’e

de’em, Swap ’em.

Bus Driver Trading Cards Are

Here

See Aspects

“foreign terrorists and organized
crime.

Rose also prepared to ‘preclude
the FOIA as @ means to circumvent
the discovery rules by parties in
litigation,”” Legally, Shechan said,
lawyers cannot present "surprises"
in court; they must demand relevant
information from the adversary
party before trial. Sheehan said the
FOIA is often used to skirt that
rule,

Further, the Assistant Attorney
General asked for ‘a more
reasonable time limit"? for agencies
to respond to FO! requests. The
current deadline for initial response
is ten days,

In addition, the proposal would
establish a procedure by which par-
ties submitting classified material
may object (0 the release of that
material, If the revisions are ap-
proved, a person or agency who
submitted sensitive material would
be notified beforehand each time
that material is requested, thus
allowing the submitter to argue the
case in court.

The Reagan administration pro-
posal would also permit the govern-
ment to charge requisition fees that
‘more closely resemble the cost 10
research and find a document,"

the
for
for

Currently,
charge
but not

said,
may
costs,

Shee
government
photocopy
research,

Lastly, the proposal would pro-
vide for two new exemptions from
the act: records generated in legal
settlements and records containing
“highly technical information the
export of which is controlled by
law,"” Rose testified,

Shechan said the Reagan ad-
ministration is worried that a
foreign government might set up an
agency in the United States for the
purpose of obtaining national
security information through the
FOIA.

Sheehan said the outright exclu-
sion of the CIA from the act was
not directly proposed, but the ex-
clusion of “informant records!” was
provided for in the new revisions,
Shechan said, however, he expects
the administration will eventually
propose a bill completely excluding.
the CIA from FOIA compliance.

‘The most vehement opposition to
the proposal has come from jour
hillists; Reporter's Committee for
Freedom of the Press President
Jack Landau described the action as
a frontal assault."

‘A: spokesperson for FEN, an

association of writers,
‘organization ‘‘is definitely against.
the new guidelines,

“They close resources for jour-
nalists .. . close the FBI and the
CIA... and set a precedent for
other agencies,” she said. ‘We
have protested (such attempts) con-
stantly throughout the years."”

Bob Freeman, who directs FOIA
requests in'New York State, said he
‘tends to think that many reacting
to the federal FOIA have lost sight
of the original intention of the
‘ict «« . (andl its) very simple: make
all government records available
Unless it would hurt the «gency.

“] prefer to see exemptions made
that are potentially harmful than
exemptions that remove rights of

ccess,"* he said, ‘for the CIA or
‘any other agency."

John Rosenberg, a spokesperson
for the Nation Institute, said the
FOIA “is an effective tool for fin-
ding out what's going on in govern-
ment."’ He added, "I find it ironic
that an administration presumably
sommitted 0 getting government
off our backs doesn't want to tell us
what it’s di

‘The proposal is pending in com-
mittee,

§
a
|

World Capsules

Con Ed Taken to Court

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) New York's largest clectric utility
has been taken to court by the state's top lawman, who
charges the company has illegally collected at least $336
million for “phantom taxes!’ during the past decade.

State Attorney General Robert Abrams, in a suit filed
in State Supreme Court here Wednesday, said Con-
solidated Edison has been routinely charging customers
for ‘‘deferred"’ federal taxes which will probably never
be paid,
* Inhis action, Abrams also namied the state Public Ser-
vice Commission, which approved ulility rates which i
clude the tax charges,

The attorney general, who filed a similar $1 billion
suit agains| New York Telephone Co. in June, claims
that the phantom tax charge policy “amounts to an
interest-free loan from the customer to the company."

Con Ed and PSC officials said they would fight {he
charges. A spokesman for {he attorney general, Nathan
Riley, said the New York Telephone and Con Ed suits
Were the first in a series of similar claims to be filed
against other utilities,

AWAC Sales Jeopardized

WASHINGTON, D.C, (AP) President Reagan, losin
ground in the last week of his baitle to sell AWACS
radar planes (o Saudi Arabin, must win new concessions
from the Saudis at the summit mectiny in Mexico to save
the deal, opponents and uncommitted senators say.

Reagan's uphill fight suffered its biguest setback yet
Wednesday When Senate Democratic leader Robert C.
Byrd of West Virginia, considered an influential swing
Vole, announced that he will oppose the $8.5 billion
arms packaxe,

Sen. Alan Cranston of California called Byrd's deci-
sion ‘a crucial turning point,’ and Senate Republicar
der Howard H, Baker Ji. Reawan's chief ally,
cknowleded that it still may be los!

Electric Rate Hike OK’ed

ALBANY, N.Y; (AP) The state Public Commis:
sion has granted New York State Btectric and Gas Corn,
Inerease in elecirie rates for more than
658,000 customers: » iv

‘The $124,5 million increase, approved Wednesday, iy
slightly less than the $143.8 million oF 25.2 percent in-
Grease the company had souwht earlier this year.

In secking the increase earlier this year, the uiilliy
cited the general effets of inflation and higher capital
construction costs,

Since the utility was ranted @ temporary increase of
$45 million in May, the latest increase amounts to 14
percent over current rales, a PSC spokesman said,

U.S. Pilots in Libya

NEW YORK, N.Y. (AP) Americans recruited and paid
by a fugitive former CIA operative are reportedly fying
and maintaining Libyan air force planes, The New York
Times said today

The Americans, and also Canadian and British pilots,
have flown U.S.-made transports and helicopters, the
Times said, attributing the information (6 associates of
the former Central Intellixence Aue
Wilson,

It quoted one Western pilot as sayi
piloted helicopters in Libya's in

The newspaper, in an article from London, a base of
‘operation for companies controlled by Wilson, said the
activities of Wilson's American recrults apparently do
not yiolate any U.S. laws. *

Aid Cut-Offs Discussed

WASHINGTON, D.C, (AP) The Senate trying to
xercise a little bit of sanity” in nuclear proliferation,
wants to automatically cut off foreign aid {0 countries:
thal for the first time develop and explode an alomic
device,

The aid cutoff, proposed by Jesse Helm
R-N.C,, broadens a Senate-backed amendment to sis-
pend aid to Pakistan or India if either nation explodes a
nuclear device,

Pakistan is believed to be developing nuclear bombs.
India, which has fought three wars with Pakistan, ex-
ploded what it called @ peaceful nuclear device in 1974,

Congressional sources said a contingency clause
elsewhere in the $5.8 billion foreign aid authorization
bill probably could permit the president to waive the
automatic suspension if there is a compelling foreivn
policy need.

Such a clause could keep U.S, aid flowing 10 such
allies as Israel, which is suspected of developing nuclear
weapons,

60’s Radicals are Suspects

NANUET, N.Y. (AP) Two prominent radical women of
the 1960's, one a fugitive for more than a decade, have
been {dentified as members of a heavily-armed gang that
killed (wo policemen and a guard while robbing @
Brink's armored car of $1.6 million,

Police and the FBI said the women are Katherine
Boudin, 38, on the run since she fled naked after a
Greenwich Village townhouse bomb factory blew up in
1970; and Judith Clark, a fugitive from charges that
Brew out of the 1969 ‘Days of Rage" demonstrations in
Chicago.

They and (wo men were arrested after a shootout with
TMachineguns at a roadblock in Rockland County Tues-
day. Police were still looking for as many as eight ojhers
Who might have been part of the gang.

No Recall for Ford

WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP)A federal judge has upheld
4 1980 seitiement between the federal government and
Ford Motor Co, that prevented the recall of 16 million
Vehicles, which would have been the largest recall in
automotive history.

‘There was a rational basis!’ fs ‘hie secretary of
ransportation to settle the dispute with Ford, which op
posed the recall, instead of pursuing the issue, U.S.
District Judge Oliver Gasch ruled Wednesday.

Ford agreed in the Dec, 31 settlement 10 send
dashboard siickers 10 owners of vehicles with five types
Of automatic transmission giving instructions to prevent
them from slipping from park to reverse while unattend=

ed.
ch's ruling upholding the settlement said St was
proper because most problems with the transmissions
could have been prevented if drivers were more careful
when shifting into park.

Quake Shakes Long Island

RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP) A minor quake under Long
Island Sound provided the first earthshaking news since
1937 for residents of Long Island, parts of Connecticut,
and upstate Putnam and Westchester Counties

There were no reporis of damage or Injuries hecause
of the quake

Dr. Alan Kafka, selsmotogist at the Lamont-Dohery
Geological Observatory in Palisades, N.Y, said the
iremor registered 3.4 of the Richter seale, the “largest

reading’? for the area since his observatory began keep-
Ing records in 1970.

Viadimer Vudler, a senior geophysical analyst at the
Weston Observatory in Weston, Mass. put the quake at
3,7 on the Richter scale.

The quake struck at 12:49 p.m. with an epicenter
under the Long Island Sound, 10 miles northwest of
Greenport, N.Y, and 10 miles south of Old Saybrook,
Conn, according to Kafka.

Residents in Connecticut reported that their houses
shook, but on Long Island, most residents reported just
‘“hearing’’ a rumble,

Malpractice Suit Settled

SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) The widow of a Schenec
lady man who died after being administered a “deadly
drug!” instead of a tranquilizer at a hospital emergency
room has seitled her malpractice suit for $380,000,

The settlement of Eva, L. Roe's suit was approved by
State Supreme Court Justice Carrol S, Walsh Jr. Mis
Roe's husband, Irvin, 28, died on Dec. 17, 1977, a day
after being taken to the Ellis Hospital emergency room.

Mrs, Roe sued for $3,250,000, blaming his death on
the hospital, Dr. William J, Farrell, pharm
Robert Cornell and Nurse Mae Weed. She charged that
her husband was given pancuronium, a curar
derivative, rather than paraldehyde that had been
Prescribed,

Continuing Slump Fore.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) Commerce 5.
Malcom Baldrige, noting that “Wwe don't have a great
deal to cheer about,'? says the weakening of the natic
economy is likely to continue in the fourth quarter
Baldrige’s comments Wednesday followed release
new report that showed the inflation-adjusted prc
tional product declining at an annual rate of 0.6 p
in the July-September quarter
That was the second straight quarterly deeli
“real!” GNP — a common definition of recession
"Real GNP in the fourth quarter is likely \
* Baldrige said. “The indication

pen

another decline,
to be pointing that way.”

That would probably mean more production cut!
and worker layoffs with unemployment rising 10 aly
percent of the labor force, he acknowledged, adi
that “the n lives in not somethin

anyone likes.”

{fect on hum:

Campus Briefs

Whitlock Serves Well

SUNYA’s own Director of Financial Aid, Donald
Whitlock, has received the 1981 Service Award from the
New York State Aid Administrators Associa
tion

The Service Award is made annually to that individual
Whio advances most the cause of the financial aid profes:

Sate of New York. Whitlock received the
d for his “continous and outstanding service

Som in the
1981 aw
fo the fi

Middle East Discussed

Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar Malcolm H. Kerr will
formal discussions on topics concerning the
and Tuesday at SUNYA.

Kerr, a political science professar at. UCLA, was ihe
director of the von Grunchaum Center for Near Eastern
Studies in Cairo, Eeypt,
Middle Eastern politics,

He will discuss “Problems of Development in Arab
Ol] States!” from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Assembly Hall, Oc
tober 26, and will speak on “Isracl and the Arabs
Beyond Camp David" at the same time and place Tues-
day

Additionally, Kerr will discuss reform and revivalism
in modern slam Monday morning from 10 10 11:45 in
Professor Matthew Elbow's history course, and will lead
informal discussions Tuesday morniny from 10.10 11:30.
in the political science department at the invitation of
Professor Alvin Magid

These sessions are open 10 the public

Campus Site of Debate

The fearsome threesome-Mayor Erastus Corning,
Charles Touhey and Fred Dusenbury--will debate the
issues of the upcoming elections in the Campus Center
Ballroom, Tuesday, October 27, at 12 noon,

If you're registered to vote in Albany, you won't want
to miss this opportunity to hear the mayoral candidates
speak, The debate is sponsored by the Commitice for
Fair Student Representation in Albany as well as by the

ancial aid community,’

present

id is considered an expert on

Student Action Commitice, a sub-committee of Central *

\Council.

Nominate Your Prof

Now is the time to nominate faculty persons for
cellence in Undergraduate and Graduaie
Research, Academic Advising, Librati
sional Service and Support Services

Winners of the Chancellor's Awards will recive $50
and Winners of other University: Exe
receive $300,

The nomination deadline is October 30, 1981. |
more information conceming nomination reeulat
contact Fred Volkwein at 457-4545

Scholarships Available

Attention Computer Science majors!

International Computer Programs, Inc. (ICP)
sponsoring a national scholarship competition. 1
scholarship, covering tuition, room and hoard «
educational expenses up to $5,000, will apply’ tc
1982-83 academic year.

Deadline for applications to be filed is November
1981. For more information, write to ICP at 9X”)
Keystone Crossing, Indianapolis, Indiana 46240,

ship, Ps

lence Award

Study in Scandinavia

Scandinavian Seminar is now accepting applications
for its 1982-83 academic year abroad in Denmath
Finland, Norway, or Sweden. This program iy desizne
for college students, graduates, and other adulis wh
Want to study in a Scandinavian country and le
culture and language. A new one-semester program, ‘
ly in Denmark, is also now available.

Afier orientation in Denmark and a 3-week intensive
language course, generally followed by a family stay

students are placed individually at Scandinavian Folk
Schools or other specialized institutions, where they |
and study with Scandinavians of diverse backyroun
The Folk Schools are small, residential educational coi
munities intended mainly for young adults.

Midway through the folk schoo! year, all the Semin
Students and staff meet in the mountains of Norway 10
discuss progress and make the year's studies and ex
perien

The fee, covering tuition, room, board, and all
course-connected travels in Scandinavia, is $5,900.
Interest;free loans are granted on the basis of need, as
are a few partial scholarships.

For further information, please write to Scandi
Seminar a} 100 East 85th Street, New York, New
10028,

-)

October 23, 1981

Page Three

Albany Student Press

Weathermen Are Linked to Schenectady Blast

(AP) Authorities believe there may
be a link between members of the 1
radical Weather Underground
group who were arrested this week
and the explosion that rocked the
Office of @ local fugby club last
month, the Albany Knickerbocker
News reported today

In a copyright story, the
newspaper said il learned from
Walter Bleyman, the agent in Ii
charge of the Albany office of the ©
Federal Bureau of Alcohol, To!
¢o and Firearms, that authorities
are probing a possible link between
a New Jersey bomb factory and the _«
bombing in Schenectady, which
preceded a controversial rugby I
match involving # South Afr R
team, {

New Rolling Plan Instated
To Help Reorganize SUNY

by Mark Hammond
A Mulli Phase “Rolling Plan’ |

designed 10 make the efficient use tion,

of SUNY's reduced resources for
budgetary and
academic concerns has begin its in-
ation into. the normal SUNY

system-wide

Tex

budget with the 1981-82 fiscal year. on
Chancellor
Wrote in the November 1980 Multi

Proposed by SUNY Central, the
first part of the three-part plan,
Would allow an individual campus,
flexibility and opportunity within,
iiself 10 strengthen one program

while reducing or phasing out
another judged to be of lesser
priority.

Secondly, camp
affiliate programs with each other
to lessen duplication and strengthen.
weak areas, SUNY Associate Vice
Chancellor for Policy and Analysis
Dr. Thomas Freeman stressed that

s may trade or

SUC New Paltz SA Restructured

by Felecia Berger

SUC New Paltz administrators
hope that a restructuring of the Stu=
dent Association there will help 10
prevent some of the problems that
SA officers 10

caused most of the
resign,

A new referendum to the SUC
New Paltz constitution which was
approved by a majority of the stu
dent body this week, calls for the
creation of wo governing houses in.
the SA

‘One house will be a council of all
SA member organizations, They
will deal primarily with organiza.
tional programming and budgetary
concerns. The other house will be
made up of 30 elected represen:
one from cach of the 11
lormatories, 11 from off

tatives
campus
campus and two
from each class year

Vice President of Student Affairs
Kenneth Burda said both houses
will be fiscally equal and there will

representatives

be a new system of checks and

balances,
Citing
concerns, most SA officers resigned
over the summer, SA President
Brenda Lewis and Nadine Spits:
new position of SA
run the

personal and academic

ting as the
Manager, were left 10
organization, Lewis and Spies also.
plan to leave the organization in the
near future.

Burda feels that
structure,
were thrust upon SA
there was no senate
the work load.

with the old

heavy responsibilities
officers as

‘or business

manager 10 shal
was extremely difficult
posi

Burda said it
for students to hold their SA

authorities blamed on a well
powerful
estimated $50,000 damag
building housing the Eastern Rusby
Union offices, which Were only

American tour by the
African Springboks.

will require the
extensive involvement of all consti-
iuencies involved,

it was similar to bombs ‘al-
ribuited to the Weathermen in years

past,”” Bleyman was quoted as say-

ng
The Sept, 22

which
mad
explosive, did an
to the

blast,

lghily damaged. The ERU was the
ie sponsor of a three-game
Soult

The possible break in the case
ame Tuesday after robbers am=
bushed a Brink's armored car at a.
hopping plaza in Nanuet, in
Rockland County. Authorities cap-
jured four suspects, two of who

‘individual campuses will ullimate-
y decide upon trades and affilia
Our role at SUNY Central is
ify potential areas wh
ht take place,
the primary purpose of
he college may be changed based
SUNY
Wharton’

statewide needs,
Clifton R.

Phase Rolling PI

Feport that this
nd

‘most careful

is termed a rolling plan in that
as it projects goals and targets for
the next five years, it will be subject
to annual review and change in a
“rolling!” manner

Siill in {ls infancy, the effect and.
value of the Rolling Plan has yet to
be tested, Freeman expects

tions and maintain their academic
standings.

Former SA Grey
Joyner, for example, said 80-50
percent of my time was spent on
SA," Joyner said he had problems,
keeping up with school work

controller

This hoped that the new structure
will help lighten the work Joad_ on
SA officers

It is also hoped that the new

Were identified as members
of the jong dormant Weather
Underground, a 1960's radical
group that dropped out of sight
afier a March 1970 explosion that
destroyed a Manhattan town house.

‘On Wednesday authorities said
they had found 8 New Jersey bomb
factory that they believe was the
group's headquarters,

According to the newspaper,
police In Rockland County said a
Honda vehicle used as a getaway
car by the robbers Tuesday was
registered (0 Eva Rosahn, 30, 0
woman arrested on riot and assault
charges during a clash between
police and anti-apartheid
demonstrators at Kennedy Airport
The demonstrators were protesting

‘evaluations and suggestions from:
individual colleges in carly
November. This iy our first bit
feedback, and will be a big con:
sideration in the formulation of the
continued on page thirteen

Structure will help to improve SA:
accounting practices, Burda denies
tumors that the SA was in debt
$67,000 al the end of tasty
However, Burda did say SA spent
most of their funds, althoug
nothing illegal was done, Burda at-
Iributes the spending 10 poor ac
, It is felt that
with the new system, wiser
monetary decisions will be made in
the future.

counting practices,

Individual characteristic, Tcan't tell
you exactly what it was that tipped
ls, but when we reconstructed the
bomb, we knew right away it was
the type used by the Weathermen,
Shorlly before the Schenectady
bomb exploded a woman called
radio station WWWD to warn that
a bomb would go off someplace in
downtown Schenectady,

(Homecoming Events Bring )
School Spirit to the Campus

by Judie Eisenberg
There'll be something in the air this weekend — mainly fireworks —
sy SUNYA'S annual Homecoming celebration gets its starts

Balloons have been given out all week in anticipation of tonight's
Pep Rally by the Indian Quad Lake and soccer fields. Lucky Salloon-
riers Who received “1 SPOT U'* tickets around campus can win gift
certificates 10 Macys or Hermans, SUNYA jackets or hats, sa
{or of Student Proxramming Steve Gross.

Other Homecoming activities include dorm and/or group Bi
Competitions, in which groups carrying the best banner, as wi
those showing the most schoo! spirit, win prizes,

The fireworks will start around 7:30 tonight by the lake, with free
beer, hiot chovolate and food for those who attend,

And, of course, the traditional football yaine will be played Satu
day, a 1:30 p.m. A victory Party will be Held (wliethier the Danes win
oF lose) on Dutch Quad Saturday night,

Central Council allocated approximately $3,000 towards Homecor
ing expenses, the Office of Student Affairs contributed $450, and UAS
rave $500 towards supplying food, Gross sald

Homecoming '81 will provide an opportunity for SUNYA students
to show thelr school spirit, Gross sald

“The question is whether this place has an inherent lack of spirit or
Just a lack of oryanization,’ Gross sald, "So this year we're trying to
organize, 10 have innovative ideas 10 draw people,

So ge! on out {0 the lake tonight and to the game tomorrow, and
shake the borders of Guilderland with the sounds of SUNYA spirit,
Unless, of course, it rains, {n ease of inclement weather, Gross said,

the Springboks! tour because of
South Africa's policy of racial
separation, or aparthei

The Knickerbocker News quoted
an unidentified federal investigator
fs saying, ‘We have known almost
since the beginning that the bomb
used in Schenectady was the type
used by the Weathermen,

“Each bomber and bomb has an

Pep Rally cyenis will be cancelled,

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10 poet discount with Student
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238-0492

v Pan-Catribean A
‘Association

wishes to thank all the people that made our Reggae con-
cert on October 16th , 1981 most memorable. Special
thanks is-extended to the staff: Howard Straker, Paulette
Vassell, Brian Clinton, Toni Smith, Mignon Donegan,
Marjorie Pieters, Cosmore Marriot, Donna Donegan,
Carol

Marie James, Arthur Bowen, Faith

PID OII ODO S aM:

oe

MEETING
monday oct 26

153 floor classroom
Cheyn building 5pm

Veccccwrres sere was eae aa

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:

Do Soviet Dissidents

Have Any Legal Rights?

Join us in hearing guest speaker:
Jerome Lefkowitz, noted attorney and
international spokesman on the plight

of Russian Jewry.

Wednesday, October 28th

Campus Center Room 370

8:00 pm

|

Sugarbush Valley,

Vermont

Stay in Slopeside Condominiums

in the heart of the valley!

$159.00 includes lifts lodging

dan. 3-8

Parties, Movies and of course

Turtle Races!!

For reservations call Skip
or Steve 482-3482

| Parents Weekend

at the

eas” gh? enter
AOE
NS
woo (A) tr
Gee | OY) Music Machine”
Featuring
Glenn

Harold
Don

The Good Old Time Sing A Longs
(Good Old Fasioned Prices)

A SELECTION 04 FINE WINS A COMPLETE Lint
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AN This Parents Weekend
Thursday October 22nd
Friday & Saturday October 23rd & 24th
Aniverstty Auxiliary Services Sponsared

De esnaTy Ae A

Gpm - 12:30 am

WAS

First Annual Minority Parents

Weekend

“Sponsored by Albany

State Ski Club!

Sooo!

For the first time student organizers
are welcoming their parents to the
Ninth Annual Community

9am
12 noon

1104 p.m

6pm

Community/University Day Activ

University Day
PROGRAM

Bus to University from Port Authority

Arrives on Campus

Barundi Dancers
Centro/civie Dancers
Departmental Activities
Campus Tour

NY«

Legislative Tour (leaves from Main Circle

Social Evening

The “ Alumni House”

Fashion Show

The exquisite: "MEN FOR ALL SE
Martial Arts Exhibition

Easy Riders Dancers

Speakers

Refreshments

Supporting Organizations

Cultural Groups

SUBA
Fuerza Latina

Pan-Caribbean Association

SUNS

Student Association

eks

ASONS

Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Ine

Delta Sigma Theta
Omega Psi Phi
Alpha Kappa Alpha
Kappa Alpha Psi

Party will follow with the Brother of Phi Beta
Sigma Fraternity, Inc. - Henways, Indian

_Quadrangle

October 23, 1981

Anti-Apartheid Movement Grows

(CPS) More than 125 student
leaders of anti-apartheid efforts on
early 50 campuses, meeting in New
York in the wake of militant college
Protests against touring South
African rugby and choir groups,
have decided to harden their tactics
and try to hook up with other pro-
test groups, like anti-nuclear ac-
tivists.

Until recently, most camptis ef
forts against apartheid — the
system of racial segregation practic-
ed in South Africa — have been
aimed at convincing college trustees
to sell off stocks in companies that
do business in South Africa,

But at the New York conference,
co-sponsored by the American
Committee on Africa and the
Hunter College student govern-
ment, a number of delegates said
they were dissatisfied with the anti-
apartheid movement’s emphasis on
stock divestiture,

“What we're about is not only
divestment, but supporting a total
liberation movement in southern
Africa, and also making changes in
this country," explains Joshua
Nessen, student coordinator for the
American Committee of Africa
(ACOA),

"Too many schools got involved
in the mechanics of divestment
when they could be spending time
‘and money on other issues as well,"
he adds,

“Is not a malter of just one
Issue)" asserts Howard Hawkins, a
Dartmouth anti-apartheid activist,
“The system is the problem,’?

Chris Root, a student at
American University, advocated a
similar approach. ‘We have to be
doing“some™ yelling and some
screaming,"

The conference came on the heels
of a series of ‘yelling and scream-
ing’? protests against the U.S. (our
of the Springboks, the
African national rugby team

Political and legal pre:
including a threatened international,
boycott of the 1984 Summer C
pic Games in Los Angeles — cut
short the Springboks’ tour, Protests
me from Chicago t

Wisconsin,
ters Were ar-

forced one gi
site at Racine
where two of $00 prot

“secret!

rested,

A court order ultimately enabled
the team to play a second game in
Albany, N.Y., where it was greeted.
by some 2000 protestors, In. the
throng was a delegation of some
300 SUNYA students. They
chanted for the removal of Albany

Mayor Erastus Corning, who
originally okayed the Four
demonstrators — including a H

vard student — were eventually ar-
rested,

The rugby team, Nessen claims
with some pride, was “harassed
from beginning to end,"

A similar fate awaited a South
African boys’ choir tour, arranged,
according to Kenneth Zinn of the
Washington Office on Africa, as
‘sjust another attempt to give apar
theid a human face."

Zinn organized a group of 25
black children to meet the choir in
Washington, D.C. recently. As the
choir began to sing a noontime
public concert, Zinn had his group
of 25 walk up to the choir, face the
crowd, and sing, ‘Children in
South Africa are dying, not sing-
ing.”

The South Africy..s — called the
Drakensberg Boys Choir — were
barred from playing at the Universi-

ty of Georgia the next week, when
two black student groups asked the
campus union to cancel the concert,
‘The union agreed to cancel it,

In the past, the movement's
direct confrontations have been
limited to facing down campus ad-
ministrators in efforts to convince
them to rid their college portfolios
Of stocks in companies that do
business in South Africa.

By and large, however, protestors
have used fess militant kinds of
pressures (0 force financial action,
In the last year, they've brought on
various anti-apartheid shareholder
yotes, stock sales, and bank ac-
count transfers at Swarthmore,
Eastern Michigan, Colby College,
Harvard, Williams, Mount
Holyoke, Kansas, Princeton, Stan-
ford, UCLA and, among other
schools, Michigan State, which
became the first university to divest
itself completely of interests in
South African business operations.

No one at the New York con-
ference of movement organizers ad-
yocated ending divestment efforts
‘on campus, There was, however, a
formal effort to place those efforts
ina larger perspective.

Albany Student Press

, Page Five

“Divestment is only @ tool,’?
Nessen told the delegates. ‘It's a
means, not an end,

Nessen suggested the new look at
divestment may reflect a recogni-
tion that university stock sales are
more symbolic than. meaningful
fiscal blows to apartheld in South
Africa.

‘The campus anti-apartheid move-
ment, Nessen adds, has grown since
Ronald Reagan took office and an-
nounced he'd seck closer ties to the
South African government,

The delegates’ willingness to try
some broader, somewhat more mili-
tant tactics may reflect a feeling of
greater strength, as well as a desire
to join forces with the anti-nuclear
movement, which seems to be
stronger west of the Mississippi,

“Linkage” with other protest
groups was a major topic of discus-
sion at the conference,
‘Anti-apartheid groups have
been close-knit in this region,’
Nessen points out, ‘but are discon-
nected everywhere else, We need to

te efforts outside the nor-

The conference set up seven
“regional coordinators’ to com-

py

snunicate with each other and other
groups. Among their new, direct
tactics are physically confronting
South African ‘honorary con-
sulates!’ in citfes around the coun-
try, orgainzing a major lobbying al
tack against. the administration's
proposed repeal of a law requiring
congresssional approval for military
aid to southern Africa, and a two-

AP

Sexism

ac Murders: Naz

Students protesting Apartheld during Albany rally

on Campuses

‘week-long national protest “in sup-
port of liberation movements” next
March,

But that wasn't enough for some
delegates, Negil Ilseven from Berea
College in Kentucky suggested giv-
ing’dlrect student monetary aid to
SWAPO, the army now fighting
South Africa for the independence
of Namibia,

Ves
DRAG:
« Five Otwnersip dF

Wintas Mayor Hac

Focus moves from divestment to the Injustice of the system

j

q

qi

m
i |

4

t

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+

{

Giveaway:
Atari Video Game
and
Kraftwerk Albums

Halloween Drawing
Stay tune to 91 FM for details

Holiday Shoppers. . .
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CC Assembly Hall

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October 23, 1981

Indian Quad is Faced

by Steven Gossett

Campus Security cannot get rid
Of the intruders in Keith Saxe’s
room, but Indian Quad personnel,
are doing their best to get rid of
these invaders,

The pesty intruders are mice, who
have been making the rounds’ of
garbage pails in Onondaga while
creating hayoc in the dorm.

According to Saxe, there have
been 20 sightings of mice in the last.
two weeks. But supervising janitor.
Frank Hogan thinks the actual,
number of mice is small,

Traps haye been set up in three
Onondaga rooms where the rodents,
have been spotted. Three mice have.
been caught in the building so far,
Hogan said,

University
Searched for
Controllers

(CPS) In what is apparently a
speeded-uip effort to permanently
replace striking air traffic con-
trollers, the Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration (FAA) has awarded a.
$10 million contract to the Universi-
ty of Oklahoma in Norman to par-

ticipate in an ongoing controller
training program run by the FAA in
Oklahoma City

The school is at least the second
officially contacted by the FAA to
train new air traffic controllers.
Negotiations have been continuing
between the agency and Florida's
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University to train students for con-
trollers! jobs left vacant by the
12,000 strikers.

The FAA, which had been
notably closed-mouthed about it's
Embry-Riddle connections, is mak-
ing no secret over the purpose of its
contract with Oklahoma, “(The
new program) is due to the illegal
strike by PATCO (Professional Air
Traffic Controllers Organization),"*
openly admits Tom, Ross, director
of FAA {raining at Oklahoma
“We were asked by the FAA along
with a number of other institutions
and corporations to provide train-
ing programs and teachers (0
replace controllers who have been
discharged,"”

Ross says the university and the
FAA have had a working relation-
hip since December, 1970, when
the school contracted to provide a
management training school for the
agency. The school's involvement
was increased in 1978 to provide the
initial phases of an air traffic con:
troller training program,

“We were selected (for the new
program) on a competitive basis

With other institutions,”” says Ross
A lot of other schiools expressed in+
terest, although 1 don't know their
numbers or identity, That's
privileged FAA information."
Ross wi
dent prog
The dil
contract con
federal governm
says about its permanent dismissal
of the striking co “If you
situation, we'd

unaware of the coinci-
Embry-Riddle

considers the new
proof the

usive
means what it

we asserts.

“11's strictly legal,”

The bulk of student training will
ye done at the Mike Monroney
fF at Oklahoma

idents will spend

Acronautics C
City. Ross says
20 to 22 weeks completing the
course, although it will take a
three to four years to reach the level

of qualified journeyman controller
“We're just providing the first few
steps," he says:

Onondaga Resident Director
Rick Milter believes that the traps
“are the quickest way to deal with
(the mice),"”

“We could use poison, but the
Way some of the rooms are set up,
they will die and won't be
discovered for (Wo months, It'll
just stink up the building,” Milter
said,

However, Quad Coordinator
Tom Gebhardt concedes that the
traps are not a total solution to the
problem. ‘Some of the mice are
really small and you have to wait
Until they get bigger before they
trigger the trap.”?

Milter blames Onondaga’s mice
problem "on an ‘‘over-amount of,
garbage’ in the places where the

with Mice
mice were spotted — garbage that
contained much open food.
“One room looked like the
Albany landfill,”” Hogan quipped.
Resident Assistant Laura R

son, who has caught two mice in her 4]
room, does not think there is more

garbage in Onondaga than anyplace ¥i

else on campus.+"It's just one of
those thing," she said,

Bul the consensus is that as the
garbage goes away, so will the mice,
“When there is nothing to ga after,
they (the mice) will go back down to
the basement and go back to where
they came from,"’ predicted Hogan,

For now, steps are being taken by
Robinson and other RA’s to make
Sure students? garbage is thrown out

Indian's Onondaga Hall infested

There have been 20 mice sightings in wo weeks

dally, But for some residents who
have seen mice in their rooms,
prevention is now no comfort.
Rhona Birnbaum, a student liv.
ing on the third floor of Onondaga,
Said she stayed with friends
downtown after spotting a mouse

for the second time on Tuesday, ‘41

didn’t Want to wake up and have
mice running across my floor,” she
said).

Saxe sald he was equally unhappy
about the situation, “I stayed) on
campus becaule I got a single room,
It's not a single room any more
because I'm sharing it with mice,"

n roll really stirs

Rock'n 10 nd disco-

with the
in fact, every

gene angy

Seven

wsthoul a teace

AMERICAN WHISKEY
A BLEND

OP elisha of datmeaig cate
bee fy 7 see

i Ul
cof Sener are 7g. Boy rau
ds better

Crown:

howe

rp. And
with 7&

go does country
lity inm

and westerns
oderation:

CHARLES TOUHEY FOR MAYOR

“Ask not what your country can do for you—
‘ask what you can do for your country”

These words of President John F. Kennedy have had

a strong influence on my thinking and on my
commitment to community service. When | completed

college 13 years ago, | joined the U.S. Peace Corps. As

a teacher in Micronesia | witnessed the upheavals
brought about by the impact of American culture and
foreign values on the native society of these Pacific
islanders, Returning home | took a Job teaching at a
small parish school, St. Anthony's, in Albany's South
End.

Living there as well, | saw the steady deterioration
of old neighborhoods and the effects of constant
poverty and discrimination on the people with whom |
lived and worked. This was my first experience with
poverty In our own community.

When St. Anthony's closed, | began my career In
housing rehabilitation. For 10 years | have headed
Capital Housing of Albany, which purchases and
tehabilitates houses at minimal cost, and resells them
to neighborhood residents who have never had a
chance to own their own homes.

In 1973 my father ran for mayor of Albany against
Erastus Corning. That was my first experience with
Albany “machine” politics. At the time a State
Investigation Commission exposed waste and
corruption in our city government which cost the
people of Albany millions of dollars. To give one
typical example, a ward leader bought an old jeep for
$500 and rented it to the city for use at the city dump
for $24,000, My father lost the election by just 3,000
votes.

In 1976 | ran for School Board, and after surviving a
court challenge to my candidacy by my machine-
backed opponent, | was elected to a five year term on
the board of education. During the past five years, as
a member of the board of education, | have seen at
close range how politics in Albany affects even the
lives of school children.

1 will never forget tHe*time when the mother of a
handicapped child came to a Board meeting to ask for

better services for handicapped children. One of the
machine-backed board members peered down at her
and said, “Listen honey, | know where you work." That
sort of thinly disguised threat is all too common in
Albany politics.

Over the past 40 years, we've had the same mayor
in Albany, and things haven't changed very much.
(That’s right, 40 years of one man—hard to believe
isn't it?) The city still wastes hundreds of thousands of
dollars because the mayor says he likes doing
business with his political friends.

Earlier this year the city spent $20,000 more than It
had to for bullet proof vests which were bought from a
committeeman who runs a clothing store that usually
sells blue jeans. Another recent example—you can
buy Lysol at the Price Chopper for 79 cents for a five
ounce bottle, but the city buys Lysol from a
committeeman for $2.07 for the same five ounce
bottle. M

| want to put an end to this sort of cronyism,
corruption, .and intimidation—these are some of the
reasons why I’m running for mayor.

On the positive side | know that | can provide the
leadership to rebuild this city. We need to rebuild our
neighborhoods through rehabilitation and new infill
housing. This will improve housing conditions and
alleviate the shortage of good rental apartments. By
ending waste, we can stabilize taxes and rents in
Albany.

During the past 30 years Albany has lost more thar
80,000 people—more than a quarter of its population
Even Mayor Corning doesn't live in Albany anymore

With the growth of schools, college students now
account for one fifth of the adults living here. It is
good for Albany as well as its student community that
Students can now vote where they live most of the
year.

Students have so much to offer to this community.
In the Community Service Program alone, over a
thousand students each year contribute their time to
more than 200 community organizations.

We need to Use all of our human resources to make
Albany a better place to live. As the leader of a new
city administration, and with your help, | know we can
make it happen.

IT’S TIME FOR A NEW GENERATION OF LEADERS
Vote! Tuesday, November 3

About Charles Touhey

the United States Peace Corps, and worked as

States Departmen ind Urbs
a teacher in Micronesia in the Pacific Ea eoweee anyon

Development

Charles taught at St. Anthony's School in
Albany's South End, and since 1972 has been
the Director of Capital Housing of Albany, a
nationally recognized (non-profit) housing
tehabllitation and home ownership program,
Which has provided homes for over 200

Charles js a consultant to the United Tenants
of Albany, and a board member of the
Voluntary Action Center which coordir
Work of volunteers in Albany's non-profit a
charity organizations, He has served as trustee

of WMHT, Channel 17.

ates the

families in Albany—at no cost to taxpayers and
‘ without government subsidy. In recognition of rg the founder and editor of Our Albany
his achievements rehabilitating and restoring rlmes, a citywide newspaper about Albany's

heritage and history. Charles also produces a
public affairs program which airs locally on
Channel 16.

neighborhoods, Charles was chosen for t
Distinguished Service Award by the Albany
dunior Chamber of Commerce

In 1976, Charles was elected to a five-year
{erm on the Albany Board of Education. He

has served as the 28th Congressional District
Tepresentalive in a national coalition of schoo!

joard members which promotes education
Programs at the federal level,

Charles and his wife live at 53 Ramsey Place
with their two children

In 1975, as a member of the Mayor's
Advisory Council, Charles helped set priorities
for Albany's Community Development
Program.

Charles Touhey is a native of Albany, He
attended Vincentian Institute and graduated
from Princeton University in 1968. He joined

He is the author of The Capital Answer, a
publication on housing rehabilitation, and is
editing another publication for the United

Sponsored by the Student Faculty Committee for CHARLES TOUHEY. for Mayor

October 23, 1981

tube trip

Within a few years, when you sit
down to watch the TV, the TV
could be watching back. That
‘Orwellian situation is almost a reali-
ty in some medium-sized American.
towns, where marketing specialists
are testing a system to monitor what
individual consumers buy, then
beam them individualized commer-
cials on cable TV. The customers

know what's happening, for a fee
they allow the experts to “'scan'?
their supermarket purchases, with.
the understanding that the commer-
cials they sce may be different than
their neighbor's. And those tests are
just the beginning — the real ad-
vances will come when consumers
begin ordering products via two-
way cable hookups. Then adver-
tisers will have an instant record of
Who buys what, and be able (0 use
the same cable systems to devise a
Specific ad campaign for each
customer

and beer for sale.

Entertaining your Parents
Tomorrow Night??

What: Parents’ Weekend Pizza Party
(free admission)
When: Saturday, October 24
9:30 pm-midnight
Where: Campus Center Cafeteria

Featuring a Swing Band. Pizza, soda,

Office of the Dean for Student Affairs.

name game

You may think today’s trendy
designers are willing to pul their
Hames on just about anything —
but apparently even they have their
limits, Bill Blass, for example, has
absolutely refused to put his name
on a line of designer orthodontic
braces. He also didn't go for the
idea of designer coffins, Geoffrey
Beane said nix to puppy perfume,
and Nino Gerruti wisely turned
down a request by the Jate Shah of
Iran to update his country’s
military uniforms.

wages of virtue

Despite the changes in the tax
code, it's still cheaper to live in sin
than be married, Under new IRS
rules, a married couple with a com:

bined income of 35,000 dollars
year will pay about 2,500 dollars
more in taxes than they would
separately. Still, that’s about 1,500
dollars better than the current tax
rate — in the words of represen+
tative Millicent Fenwick, a ‘little
bow!" towards equal rights for mar-
ried people.

heavenly kingdom?

‘Trouble in the Magic Kingdom:
the folks who dress up as Goofy,
Mickey and other cartoon
characters to greet visitors at
Florida's Disney World are not
happy ‘And in an unauthorized in-
terview with the New York Times,
eight of them have gone public with
8 list of gripes, including low pay,
Tack of job security and hot, un-
comfortable and sometimes bug-
infested costumes. Disney
spokesman Charles Ridgeway says

MEAGHER FLORIST
1144 Western Ave.
(1 block east of Shoprite)

FLOWERS SENT WORLD WIDE,
Remember your loved oni

(DAILY CASH AND CARRY SPECIALS}
}| Bouquet of fresh flowers $3.98
—____FTD Tichler $8.50 _|
°

482-8696

The Ticker b Here.

at home

Sponsored by the

better

there are no bugs in the costumes
and designers have been working to
make them more comfortable, As
for the Wages — four-ten to five-
twenty an hour — he says, “It's a.
non-professional job,!’ The high
turnover, he adds, is because “after,
4 while they lose their nerve — they
get burned) out.” Back to you,
Mickey.

in the money

The Social Security Administra
tion says there's hope for your
children to grow, up to be
millionaires, All the kid will have to,
do, actording (0 government

oe eccec ceccccccccccccocccces

ANNOUNCING

University Auxiliary Services

Membership Meeting October 28, 1981
CC 375

TULLY PRINTING

Raffle Tickets
Special Occasion Tickets
Membership Cards

Reasonable Rates-Fast Service
449-5468

economists, is live a normal lifespan
in. an economy experiencing just
four percent annual’ inflation, At
that rate, by the middle of the next
century, the average American in-
come will be just over three-
quatiers of a million dollars a year,

THESE SONGS MADE A REPUTATION.
WOW, THEY'LL MAKE A STAR.

GARUAND JEFFREYS RECORDED LIVE
IH THE U.S.A. AND EUROPE.

With ‘cause the liquor's already in it

Ly

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KAAS I

WILD IN THE STREETS
L WAY NOT BE YOUR KIND
MATADOR
3$ MILLIMETER DREARS
R @ © K.
COOL DOWN BOY
9 6 7 FW NeS§
BOUND TO GET AHEAD SOMEDAY
LIVE ON EPIC RECORDS. .

trademark of CBS Inc. © 1981 CBS Inc

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repre ny Feral isle P

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was

Column

Letters,

Student Life Concerns *
Questions

To Ponder

Andrew Brooks

Today we must look at the most impor-
tant news of the day; our SUNYA ex-
Istences, Let's begin by first accepting the
fact that we are students, which contrary 10
what many of us seem to believe, is a full
time occupation, like being a doctor or an
engineer,

Now I'm suire that most of you people

reading this have got your basic act
together: going to classes, (aking exams, Iy-
ing in the sun, drinking beer, ogling massive
quantities of persons of the opposite sex.
Let's face it, that’s basically ii, but 1 have
come up with a short lisi of things to
ponder and perhaps act on which concern
your student life, The items are not in order
‘of Importance,
Talk to tial professor that you never
boihered to speak to before, He may be
much more interesting on a one 10 one level
than he is during those tedious lectures,
Besides, one day lie might write you a nive
fecommendation,

*Siop worrying so much abou! urades.
Did you know that only 80 years auo, AE
grading didn't even exisi? Work hard, bul
keop things in perspe

Talk to lonely people in your dor
mitory, Every dorm has that outcast" that
people shy away from without really know-
ing why. Reach out and give and you shall
receive,

*Break the clique habhi, Be bold and sit
with a new group al dinner. You just might
expand your circle of friends

*Find out who your Quad's University
Senate representatives are and what they
are dal k to them about issues of
University policy thal concern you.

‘There is much unexpressed potential ly-
ing dormant on campus, Take an initiative
and start your own clubs.

Make a date to study for the final exam
with an attractive member of the opposite
sex who Is in your class and with whom you
have heretofore not had (he necessary nerve
to speak with

“Find out what the SA is doing and who
the officers are, Vote in SA elections.

*Yoie in Albany in the upcoming clec-
tions, Don't vote for the anti-student Corn-

ing machine, or for Fred Dusenberry who
Opposes the State bond issue 10 build more
prisons (unless you cnjoy being assaulted by
riminals who have no jails (0 go (0!)
Have your dorm throw a party and per-
sonally invite the people from another

dorm! Z
Fight for student power! Did you know

that in 1970, students were chanting
50-50," meaning $0 percent representa
tion on the University Senate? In days of
old, students al the Universily of Bologna
in Ilaly hired and fired their own professor!
At this school, suidents were only give
fepresentation on the University Senate
because the Administration had feared stu
dent violence,

SJunlors and Senior, teach your
freshmen well! Think of all the hard
Knowledge about college existence that you
Jearned the hard ways classes oF professors,
dorm sections that you should have
avoided, Make sure to share this knowledge
With all thie freshmen you can:

*Question repressive actions by school
aulhioritics, Did you know that if a poster
that you buy and put on your door happens
{ “offend!? someone in your dorm, and
they complain to the dorm director about
ii, that the dorm director hay the right to
fake it down and throw it in the garbage
Without even telling you beforehand?

*Write a loiter to the ASP. Letters (0 the
Editor are probably the most interesti
things aboul the paper, heeause it iy there
tha myriad of
Uhings dealing with university life,

Show this column 10 5 people today.

*Take action on sume of tliese ideas (o-
‘lay,

Make up your own list and Send jt to the
ASP, or to ine, or tank it on the wall in
your section,

Perhaps tomorrow you will look at
yourself in the mirror and say “+1 am a stu
dent and 1am proud of it or “I'm mad as.
hell and f'm not going 16.4
OF something alone those fines, But
Femembet
H individual takes, the helter off we all

students sound off ab au

the more positive action that |

are.

AWACs Analysed

aitor:
| by Louis Trotia appeared in last

Tuesday's ASP claiming that studenis

eaten

:

“Winve no trie Halt (0 vote In this come
munity." The reasons he gives for this
helicf have all been heard before, and
Justifiably, remain anpersuading.

First, Mr, Trotia
be single-issue voters, The *'singl

issue’ hi

A PICTURE'S WORTH.

fears (hat students will

speaks of {s the attempted AWACS sale to
Saudi Arabia. This Is interesting since it is
at least the fourth ‘single-issue’” that
students will be voting on. We have been
accused of voting for or against candidates
solely on their stands on the Anti-grouper
law, and for their stands on the security
ordinance, and their stands on allowing the
Rugby game to be played, The possibility,
thal voters will vole according to a single
‘issue always exists, witness the Right to Life
Party, Such a possibility, however, is no
reason to deny anybody the right (0 vote.

‘The second reason, and the one most
offen cited, is that we have no ties to the
community. Ruiph Martin, a columnist for
the Knickerbocker News, claims thal our
“grass roots don't extend beyond (He local
bar.’ The facts are that we pay sales taxes,
we provide a huge market for focal com-
merce, we are counted in the Census as
Albany residents, and we use city services.
In all these cases we either add money to
the local treasury or use resources that
directly affect us. In both instances we have
a right (0 help decide how the money is to
be spent

The last, and perhaps most important
issue ralsed by Mr. Trott denis?
current ignorance of the
their political stances. In this instance he is
correct. In an effort to overcome this is-
norance, however, SA and the Committ
for Fair Student Representation is sponsor-
ing a debate between the Mayoral can-
didates, At 12:00 on Tuesday, October 27,
Charles Touhey, Erastus Corning and Fred
Dusenbury will debate in the Campus
Cenicr Ballroom,

We urge all students (o attend the debate,
Through it students can, as Mr, Trotta said,
“actually know the names, faces, and
policies of the local politicians."

Vote!

— Dayid Pologe
SA President

Give Ron A Chance

To the Editor:
{ think it is important that a college stu-
dent should be exposed to variety of
political ideas. This is why 1 am upset over
the constant theme of your editorials a
unfortunately an occasional article, This
theme, the constant criticism of our govern:
ment, is upsetting In that the Reagan Ad-
ministration has been given a mandate from
ia legitimate majority, For the progressive
policies of President Reagan to work we
WW expect less

=

must haye confidence
monetarily from the government
In your Ostober 20 editorial, you

Eretetertetetaten

Soviet Yvon

=

Tey

>>

innje

Bat
AWACS, Nimrods, Lil get my spyplanes “7 the long run

/

SSS More institutional supports to tell him or

criticize tax credits as fiscally irresponsible,

yet you obviously would like to implement
more taxes for more spending resulting in
more deficits,

Social programs have continually proved
to be inefficient and have only resulted in
dependency and the prevention of social
mobility, The myth about the growth of the
defense budget is also not in our best in-
terests to promote. If you examine growth
after inflation you will see it is under 7 per-
cent: hardly unreasonable.

On the question of bread and bombs we
must ask ourselves if the purpose of our
government is to maintain our liberty or in-
sure our financial equality

—Edward Reires

Giant Response

To the Editor:

fh response to the Giant fan who is not
ready to come out of the closet, 1 suggest
that he give up his anonymity, and stand up
to be proud of his team, People like him
make life awfully difficult for those of iy
who are not afraid to verbalize our
preference for the Giants.

1, 100, have spent about 400 hours in the
past decade watching the Giants. 1 can’t
recal] going through “the frusiration of
Watching the Giants blow another one” this
season, In their seven games thus far,
they've won four games, three of them by
blowouts, The Giants played respectably in
fosing to the Dallas Cowboys and
Philadelphia Eagles, and the game against
en Bay Is the only one in which the
Giants looked bad

During this past Sunday's game at Seattle
(won, of course, by the Giants 32-0), Roger
Staubach did mention that the Giants might
be a playoff contender. He is correct
Although the victories have been against
four of the weaker teams in the league, the
nls won all four games by convincing
Scores, Realizing that the Giants aren't yet
at the caliber of teams like Philadelphia and
San Diego, I feel that they are good enough
fo make a run at one of the wild-card berths
in the National Conference, The competi
{fon fs not as intense as it is in the American
Conference, and a 9-7 record might be
enough to qualify for post-season competi

tion. That is a feasible target to aim for
beeatise the schedule seems to be on the
Giants side, They should be able to win fiv
OP their last nine games; meaning that th
Giants should be considered a playoff eon
tender,

J dont
Hever locked myself into
proud to be a Giants fan, andl 1 always i
tend to be. Thank you,

lave to come out of the closet; 1
Twas alway

—Jon Berger

Absurd Points?

To the Edito

This reply is directed to the unnamed stu:
dent who recently wrote to the ASP
(October 20, 1981) with a “career com
plaint."* This reply is a personal one and i
Ih no way necessarily reflective of the
Himents of other staff members at
Caréer Planning and Placement Office

The student felt that the orientation to
Career services and job finding in general
was “dazeling and confusing," The woman
in charge blew him-her away by introducing
concepis like career planning, career sear
ching, and cateer counseling. The stuctent
Was displeased at hearing such
uphemistic jargon." What he-she wanted
Was a “goddamned job!" Afiet all, he-she
Was so close to graduating that he-she could
smell the onion skin,

The absurdity of the student's position
ams patently obvious to me. He or she
seems to believe that there should be a
direct link from the University to the world
Of work, and that a placement office should
function {0 carefully find graduating
Students just the Job they really want,

Well it might be dazzling and confusing
to this siudent to realize that when one is
Actually in the job market there aren't any

. Se ie
ta :
)) #

Tomorrow is Community-University Day, a time for ad-
i ministrators to introduce parents to the campus, and for kids to rein-
troduce themselves to their parents. It’s also a time for the University
i to tighten its bond with the Albany area, a relationship that has
i seemed tenuous at best over the years, Which raises a point; adver-
? tised as a festival of friendship and culture, why has the University
insisted in advertising the event with those hideous black signs?
There must be incentive and competent artists on campus; why do
i they continue to use those stiff black androids year after year as
poster people? Straight off an international sign language chart, the
happy family of rhomboids does little to dispel the notion of the
school as impersonal, What could be worse than a faceless
spokesman?
It would be fine if that obliviousness to detail was an isolated
event. But the greying walls are testimony to a campus contagion.
The buildings have a natural grace about them, and need not be so
alienating if the right attention to
detail was given. That includes‘
) banner hung here, a sculpture
() placed there, a painting hung on
| a blank white wall, The Empire
|
|
|
|
|

Plaza {s an example in the right
direction. More monolithic even
than SUNYA, the harsh lines of
the Mall are softened by the work
of international as well as local ar:
tists. It would be worthwhile for

! SUNYA to look into a similar re-

| beautification, or at the very least

i hire the Contheads as our C-U
Day representatives.

he

3a

“World Report” Is Just that, “Quiet
Games” Is about those, and Sebas-
lan ponders the question, “Is
perfection enough?” See Perapec-
tives.

Centerfold

Two years in the planning, one day
In the making, but they're finally
. An Aspects homage to the
Boys on the Bus on 4a and 5a.

6a

Merle Haggard and Elvis Costello
mentioned in the same breath,
review of the new Police L.P., and
dancer who really knows the ropes,
See Sound.

7a

Would you plop down $100 fora
lottery ticket? What If the pric wasa
$115,000 saloon? And yes, we do
have a tribute to William Faulkner on
the fifty-second anniversary of The
Sound and the Fury. Somehow on
the Vision page.

8a

“Zhe Pudz" explained — barely
Plus a cartoon feature by children's
artist Walter Tripp, WCDB's Top
Twenty, and SPECTRUM, of course.
Fun and games in Diversions.

|

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Bi s

f meres SPM IML LIMO STA,

\
@ and gi FM) present
‘ The Jerry Garcia
Band

Wednesday, November 4th 8pm
at the Palace Theatre

Pi $7.50 w/tax card (1/tax card - 6/person)
$9.50 w/out

Contact Office
Palace Box Office
dust-a-song
IAA EA A Ab Lhd de dee dedididde MOOT ewww es es aww eee:

Verte ODI OLLI MMII IIE I A OS TO

Sebastian Caldwell
Spalding iif

Dear Mr. Spalding,

Our records indicate that you are
currently @ senior and have not yet
declared a major

Please note that you must follow one of
the structured majors as outlined in the
University Guideline

Kindly complete the enclosed form by
filling in your major subject, having the
department chairman sign the form, and
signing the bottom of the form yourself.
Then return the form to AD B-5.

Your prompt attention to this matter will
be appreciated,

Blast! What next?! Isn't it enough that 1
have to put up with inferior professors who
toke out the frustration of being underpaid
on me? Why Is it so bloody important to
place a label on what I'm doing here? {
have written them countless letters stating
my Intentions of majoring in “Perfection.”
Why do those dolis refuse to accept \t?

Last Spring | even took the time to plead
my cases before the Interdisciplinary
Studies Board, being told that this would
be the only way I could get an approved
major of my own design

“Mr. Spalding, we appreciate the fact
that you are taking an exceptional load of
courses and that your average Is one of the
highest in the student body. However,
your choice of the major ‘Perfection’ is
simply not a tangible, academic discipline,”
chairwoman

* 1 began, “Look at all the support
courses I've taken: Economics,
Classics, Russian, French, Spanish,—

God, even Chinese. Do you know how
hard it js to learn Chinese? | have taken
twenty-four credits in various departmental

Finance

independant study programs. 1 have won
awards for Physics and Chemical researc! |
aven write for the student newspaper (I'm
sure they were impressed by that one)

Mr. Spalding, itis not a question of

‘aking a vast number of courses, It is a

question of focusing your knowledge into a

jpecialized field of endeavor,”
“And | have, your honor, | have

ning a perfect specimen

specialized In be
of man. Well:versed, good looking, a
onnolsseur of the fineries of life. By
yranting my choke
itrike a blow against all those who believe

of a major you will

hat you cannot find anything worthwhile
rere at this schoo!
Mr, Spalding, the ruling is final, No.”

And so, dear reader.tt looks as {1am
screwed. Not even Dad's money could get
ne into Harvard, 1982, They wouldn't go
‘or the idea of a major devoted to
‘hedonistic excesses of the ego and
‘eckless disregard for the basic ethic
iniversity education.” Well, go to he
{arvard, and Cornell too, who just
‘esponded to my request for a transfer of
credits by saying, "We educate people who
are naturally snobbish; we need not have

one study to become It

But, I ask you all, could any one of their
jraduates order Coquille Si with
Mornay sauce in the Palace or Four
Seasons and know which wine to order?
Dr, for that matter, what color the wine
thould be? I sincerely doubt it

{At this rate | will probably lose my fight
for educational independence. What |
might be able {o do Is plead for some
phony major such as International
Finance, seeing as the designer jean
ausiness Is going so well and I have many

Jacque

low paid plebelan can so swiftly deny me
my right to self fulfilment and excellence

Speaking of the Jean business, [ have
Just gotten off the phone with Mylacki
Uball, South East Asian distributor of
Sebastian Caldwell Jeans, He sald that we
have “big tlouble, boss, you come quick,"
It seems as though my fine, skinny friend
forgot to bribe the stevedore down at the
docks and {wo-hundred and fifty gross
denims and corduroys are being thrown
ut thanks to some /gnorant “union:men"”
Who put my jeans under a load of paint
thinner and toxic waste scheduled for
dumping off the coast of Santa Barbara.

Now I have to fly off and personally see
fo an order being delivered by air-frelght
for chrissakes,

And you think you have problems.C]

Quiet Games

The
Vision
Rob Edelstein

She was a vision — a vision beyond all
compare. With long dark brown curls and
the huge green eyes of a beautiful
newborn, she represented, for me, the
quintessential angel, It was not that she
Was so distinct, However, through my
eyes (which sought her like an overanxious
telescope), she was the only conceivable
object for my stares. Looking at her made
me not want to think, but rather to dream.

So | would follow her. I'd dance softly
behind her on curves in the podium,
watching the material shift on the back. of
her beige down cot, Not to scare her,
mind you. Scaring comes into play only
with friends and lovers — those whom
you've spoken with or who you've known:
in past encounters, This is a vision and,

therefore, the rules are the same as with all
Visions, Whether on a pedestal or simply
on the podium, they remain untouched

Damp it, I didn't make up the rules! I'd)

never make up rules that put such pressure
on those who can't contain the agony of
romance, thursting for a smile, an interlude
(much too much to hope for) or even a:
stare back, I remain much more fortunate
an most. My only problem lies In the
daydreams in classes and the reality of the
unattainable becoming even morose.
Because in the back of the mind of t
dreamer-romantic remains the hope of a

reality thai will set the dream free. But
rules are rules and so 1 sit back

Ilived on Indian Quad for two years
Looking back today, | Keep getting the
impression that one of the major events of
this period, for me, was the first Quad,
party, Asa freshman on a not-so-freshman
quad, I marvelled at the array of interesti
characters present, each so similar yet
somehow different, Then, out from behind
the tower, a shadow appears, Then a
shape and form outlined from behind by
bright lights. Then a smile. She didn't walk
like a child yet she seemed too Innocent
for the blacks and whites, all dull and
weathered with age. It was almost as if she
had left her high’schoo! prom early,
removed her gown and had entered the
World in the light | now pictured her. The
“untouched” quality remained,

October 23, 1981/page 3a

Of course it didn't for long. It couldn't,
But the purpose of visions, for both man
and woman, for both boy and gitl, is not
what the person becomes, but what the
person js. When your second grade
teacher comes back to school after a two
week honeymoon, your eyes stil shine and
your smile still sparkles,

Still I will admit that realities can dull the
Vision. When | saw her fingers interlocking
with the fingers of another, a plece of this
dream died within me, But only for a time.
The mind can work in beautiful ways, It
can protect you from pain and lock you
Joosely in the world of your own thoughts
again and again, This case was no
exception

At the start of each new semester 1
Would look for her, knowing full well that
while the absence of the vision makes the
dream grow fonder, the picture is apt.to
fade with time. For five semesters 1 would
walt — two weeks, sometimes four,
sometimes more — until such time as the
memory could refresh itself, hoping that it
could. A transfer ot a graduation would be
like throwing a stone into a placid brook —
the vision would become someone whom
the mind would dress up in a broad smile
and a white gown, brought to light on
infrequent occasions for the next fifty
years.

But someliow she'd always be there —
found once again. Lost neither to another
school nor the real world. For herself, a life
to live and build Just like myself, For me, a
dream to live and build just like so many of

Now I celebrate the final stage of my
four-year tour. The fact that the vision
remains is pleasant, The further fact that
her house is close to mine is an added
bonus, {can study even closer, Not s0
much her as myself, I leave my light on til
4.a.m., hard at work in perfection of
procrastination, hoping for an opportune
glance through the bamboo shades. I
smoke cigarettes and try to be "cool",
much like the behavior I exhibited in fourth
grade for the vision of that year, Anything
fo get a stare back, a smile, an encounter.
But what would { do? Nothing, probably
The vision is beautiful from afar and like all
visions this one must also follow the rules
pecially the one of anonimity. For over
ears I've looked, sometimes
worshipped, mostly admired, always
dreamed without even knowing more than,
a smile, Not a trait, not a habit, not a
preference, And most Importantly — for
she remains a vision to me — not a

World Report

Call To
Youth

[Hubert:Kenneth Dickey|

Be independent, not servile; progressive,
not conservative; aggressive, not retiring
Ch’en Tuhsiu

With the sun, the soul also rises, The:

eye of the storm passes over head and we
reside in the house of the Lord.

A honey like dew clings to the branches.
and leaves, The birds gather in thelr early;
morning dance of hunger. Pea soup clouds
hang over the earth causing commuters
havoc. i

Traffic cops sleepwalk their way through
thelr work intl that first cup of coffee,
Pollee court has its usual array of passers

A call comes via the telephone informing
me that I'm two hours late for work, My
immediate reaction fs retrained by
economic necessity,

Children often “take-after” thelr parents,
At what point do we stop being ourselves?
Are there not moments when we all yield
our “freedom?” Or are we constantly
fighting for the turf that Is oura?

With the usual disregard for the status
QUO, reallly jumps my senses with word of
Sadat’s death. 1 fall prey to thoughts of
“what the hell is going on?” Of course
Barbara Walters and Dan Rather have
already thought of the answers fo the
questions running around in my mind,

Nixon, Ford and Carier are back at the
White House and for a brief moment |
wonder who Is President, Those Muslim
fanatics are at it again, reminding all of us
that guns are more powerful than G.N.P,

Instant karma didn't do John much good
and | wonder if Camp David will fare any
better. The time has come to put all the
children to bed, The children of lies and
deceit

It's too late to ery but sill too early to
die, Task why and my conscience answers
why not? The world is falling apart and the
thelorie s more warlike, with each passing
day

Now's the time'to die for one's country
before the country asks you to die for tt,
Yes, Virginia, there Is a real world. A
World that’s not too hot on the idea of you
and me.

‘Wall Street talks of M-IB adjusted, fiscal
policy and Inflation. No one ever mentions

the fact that a consumer based economy
[which is what we are) can't grow by.
creating “industrial Incentives,”

Facts cloud our eyes as we foolishly run
after a buck. Uncertainty grows in our
minds, while the children of the world
watch and wait for Its (the world)
destruction.

Shock troopers march into our homes,
with orders from the master. All must now
enter the rat race or pay the ultimate price
We can't afford to wait for tomorow, too
much Is at “steak.”

Reaching for the stars will have to be put
on hold. We've got to get this economy
back in shape, So It goes, s0 it goes or we
will have to foreclose,

Places everyone, the show musi go on.
The death of the star is noticed but there Is
war in the alr. You know, those commies
don't fight fair

‘The Cubans are in Angola and we don't
want them there, The price of gold is more
important than our Immortal souls, We've
got no cholce, itis this or the dole
Sell that technology, give it to those who
treat us to all that they wear, Be it king or
general, we don't care, Just don't let it be
Fidel or his bunch of squ

We hold these lies to be necessary. Love
it oF leave your conscience at the front
door, America is beautiful and God don’t
like no ugly, What does all that mean?
More than what I'm telling you, that much
{s for sure

Ron is in the White Houise and Jimmy is
back on the farm, The free lunch has
‘ended and in lis stead there be Milton and
the Fed

Chipmunks are gathering thelr food for
Winter, Bears are taking up their places of
rest, while, bulls are running madly after
lower interest rates,

Our hearts are made to be broken, Our
Jove Is meant to be taken, Our tears must
fall just the same as the rain must come.
Nous pouons toutes trover de l'espolr

j remfermer en dedans quand nous
regardons — les fleurs epanouissent dans:
{les plus obscures cabinets.

Sn Ba Naha 8, Bl Me TOL IN

NOT Pea sO,

It’s World Series week, and time to honor and cheer
for heroes of our own: those Men and Women in Blue
who move those Beasts in Green.

by

Andrew Carroll
Michael Brandes

photographs by Sherry Cohen

Bill “Smiley”

3 original drivers
golfer, bowler and
ys he's been ma

ied “too muct
rom Dallas, Texas

"Never leave a s
dent stranded.

H Mike Vartuli

| Years wit
| Route: Ate

lumni — Da;
JOYS reading,

Toe Sarline

Aye: 37
n Years with SUNY:
* Route: Varies Hi au wf

drove a tractor trailer before cor

sports: foot-

fe eo, soltball and golf

ball, basketball, so!
He lives in Albany.

Age: Ei
S
Year! aa
as been On *
ongest 9

Age: 28
Years with SUNYA: 3
Route: Mostly Alumni —
Varies

Bill loves to hunt and fish. He's
married, and lives in Troy

t.

Mike “The Colonel”
Koch

Age: 25
Years with SUNYA: 1/2
Route: Varies

One of the younger drivers
Mike's been driving since college
because “it's the easiest way tc
make .money.” He used to
manage a K-Mart, and is still as
fire-fighter in Rensselaer, where 4
he resides

Married, Mike like
photography and “dabbles” in
lying:

Melba “Toast” Buffa

5:
rs with SUNYA: 2 weeks
Route: Varies

This mother of 6 has been driv-
ears, Originally
, LiL, she lives

is in the SUNY

ing buses for 12
from Stony Broo}
in Slingerlands
One of her sons
system — at Plattsbur:
terests include crafts of all kinds.

Norm is married and lives ing

huck Williman

gars with SUNYA: 14
Wellington — Dai
For many, Chuck is SUNYA

ames “Donuts”

jages to balance an interst in
atre, music, and all the arts
enthusiasm

‘ears with SUNYA: 1
joute: Varies — Day
A newcomer
Donuts" drove for 8 weeks last
emester and now works tem

le
land birds.” He’s been known to +
e up before dawn in search of §
feathered friends

§ Originally from Delmar, Chuck
es in Troy. And yes, girls, he’s

to the buse

He too is married,
lbany, and likes fishing, bowl
1g, and cooking

Bob Klapp

3 41

ears with SUNYA: 3
‘oute: Wellington — Day,
Bob lives in New Salem at the
foot of the Heldeberg mountains

“God's country,
is hobbies include fishing, hun
ing, woodworking, and
unmentionable

ears with SUNYA: 4 Wanna:
ute: Alumni — Day

Tank was a coach bus driver #
to years and a tract

' Years with SUNYA: 5
| Route: Wellington — Day
Walt claims Coke pays him to
wear his signature red and whit
ives in Pleasantdale
and likes all sports — especiall

, Frank enjoys swirr

and skiing, and
een motorcycling for 30 years
ypically a weekend driver
aie is married and lives ir

Walt is married

SS

page 6a/Ociober 23, 1981

tJ amen pi new Claw ore = src ape oe MO Bie ne

<=

SOUN

Newman Stays A Step Ahead —

ancer-choreographer Rosalind
D Newman hates o be pigeon-holed.

But now, thanks fo & bout with
farynaltis, must listen in mock horror as two
of her dancers do just that.

"We told him you were a Post-Modernist,
heavily influenced by Cunningham, and that
jou totally rely on props.”

Andrew Carroll

mows when the
members of her troupe are kidding, but if
any doubis remain she'll hope to dispel them.
In performance tonight and tomorrow night,
Guests of the Student Dance Council, the
troupe will endeavor to prove why
Newman's work has been described as
iprodigiously inventive," “Intriguingly off-
beat,” and “escaping definition.”

Despite a growing reputation, including an
exuberant press and an encouraging dance
community, Newman still feels she must
stress Individuality of her volce and vision.
The comparisons with Merce Cunningham
are to be expected: Newman studied with
the famed choreographer after graduating
from the University of Wisconsin and before
forming her own company in 1974. But
members of the troupe feel she has gone

beyond the work of Cunningham and that of
Martha Graham and Twyla Tharp (under
whom she also studied), “What she does |s

he old saying "Go West, Young

Man! has proven to be quite a pro-

phetic statement here In the
1980's, though maybe not the way it was in-
tended when Hank Williams Sr. and Jimmie
Rodgers. began writing country music
decades ogo. Ronald Reagan rules our
country, froma ranch as much as from the
White House. Willie Nelson Is a hot new
movie star and sex symbol, and Brooklyn
born tough guys can be seen on Friday
nights In cowboy boots and ten gallon hals:
On your AM radios Eddie Rabbit and Kenny
rogers can be heard all too frequently

Craig Marks

Country, music has had many classic
figures, and Merle Haggard {s certainly one
of the greatest, In nineteen years as a recor
ding artist, Haggard has won nineteen
Country Music Association awards, has
recorded twenty-seven number one records,
has achieved four gold records, and in May
‘of 1980, he became the first country artist to
be featured on the cover of Downbeat

magazine — Haggard is a living legend
dedicated to the quality and style of country
music, and his new album, Big City is a fine
example of the pride and core that Haggard
takes in himself and his product

The material on Big City Is, for the most

The Times and The Voice have sung the praises of Rosalind Newman and Dancers, per:
forming tonight and tomorrow at the PAC, +

what she does,” is how the Newman ap-
proach Is described by Kristin Ellasberg, who
has been with the company for three years,

What Newman does is blend conventional
technique with a highly unconventional wit
and freshness, In "Pole Piece” and In her
critically acclaimed “Rope Works," the props
are utilized to expand on the “pure” techni-
ques. In “Rope Works” the cords are
variously ralsed, lowered and criss-crossed,
creating ever more Intriguing spaces within
which the dancers work,

“Rope Work” also underlines the inherent
playfulness company members say is in all of
Newman's dances. Rick Merril, also a three-

year veteran of the company, Joins dance
critics in likening her approach to the games
of children, "Roz begins with movement in
a pure way, and then likes to shuffle the
deck.”

In master classes all this week, both with
experienced and neophyte dancers,
Newman exhibited her approach to
choreography, At the outset she gave the
dancers an idea or phrase, and encouraged
them {o do as they wished with It, Only later
did she Intervene with suggestions designed
to open thelr eyes to something new.

According to Merrill and Ellasberg, that is
the only way to characterize Newman: an ac-

Best Western

pert, new Hoggard compositions, with the
exceptions of the classic “Stop the World
(and Let Me Off)”, writen back in 1957, and
‘an old Haggard tune, “You Don't Have
Very Far To Go" (done beautifully on Ro-
seanne Cash's most recent LP), The songs
‘are southern in thelr roots, and Haggard’s
sensible yet winsome style reflects country
music as it originally was Intended: sad tales
about love and heartache, performed simply
and passtonately.

‘As with most artists whose forte is emotion
and real love songs, the ballads are what
stand out and hold up the best here, “My
Favorite Memory,” about the many
memories shared by two people in fove, and
“You Don't Have Very Far to Go! are both
beautiful, touching songs that, because of
their starkness, haunt you long after they're
heard. Haggard’s band, The Strangers, pro-
vides excellent support throughout the
album, and the understated arrangements
strike a perfect balance with Hoggard’s
understated voice.

Merle’s singing is in fine form on Big City,
and the effortless vocals are what carves the
record along so smoothly, He never seems
{o strain for any notes, and his plain, sultry
style 1s a beautiful foll compared to the
whiney, country sound we're all used to
hearing.Classic artists such as Haggard and
country Legend George Jones are American

music greats that should not be overlooked
by any music lover, despite the possible
aversion to any country music, More and
more, contemporary non-country artisis are
rediscovering this music, and using its fine
sense of tragedy effectively in their own:
The most recent and notable artist to

A New Beat For The Police

hat, an English title? Must be a
change in store for us. And there
{s, but to anyone who has followed

the development of The Police through their
last three albums, this is no surprise, Ghosts
ip the Machine really seems to be the next
Togical step for a band whose previous L,P,'s
developed and expanded musically from
‘one another.

David Bock

‘ops will early the point
With the first album, Outlands d'Amour,
we heard only bass player Sting’s voice and
very basic raw rock back-up from Andy
Summers on guitar and Stewart Copeland
‘on drums, 1979's Regatta de Blanc featured
more elaboraie drumwork on “Message In A
Bottle,” Summer's voice on “On Any Other

Day," and his big flanged guitar sound on
“Walking on the Moon,”

Zenyatta Mondatta was the commercial
breakthrough ablum due mostly to the suc:
cess of the Top 40 hits "De Doo Doo Doo,
De Da Da Da” and “Don't Stand So Close to
Me." Both had the typically slick Police
mouse cholr chorus, but the raw sound was
dropped In favor of more elaborate elec-
tronics than had appeared on any of the
others.

Ghosts In the Machine is the logical suc-
cessor to those albums, The dyed-blonde trio
has managed to keep their reggae influence
while dealing with musically complex har-
monic structures. They've added some per-
sonnel for the album: Jean Roussel’s
presence is felt most on the Top 40 target
sonig,"Every Little Thing She Does is !4agic,”

His playing on the album has helped the
band to achieve a remarkable orchestral and
dynamic sound.

Ghosts Is also new in that it Is a concept
album —~ if the vague “Problems of the
Modern World” can be considered a con-
cept. “Rehumanize Yourself” sings the la~
ment of Marxian alienation, while “Third
World” reveals the influence of The Police's
extensive and unusual world touring: "I's a
subject we rarely mention . . . pretending
there are different worlds from me/I shelf my
responsiblity..."

Ghosts In The Machine {s The Police's
most complex work to date from Sting and
company, and gives us two hopes for the
future: One, that any future albums are as
ertas And two, that The Police tour soon '
‘and stop in Albany, oO

VIVRE E LOIRE ITO

He's a little bit country, and he's a litle bit rock’n roll: Merle Haggard and Elvis Costello are

ANN Wa canes senaeen

cessible artist who gives conventional ideas
an unpredictable twist, The result is dance
that 1s highly readable, hardly literal, and
totally enjoyable.

Tickets for Rosalind Newman and Dancers
are $6,00 general, $4.00 students and,
senior citizens, and $3.00 with a tax card,
avallable at the PAC Box Office. The shows
start at eight.

This Is the tenth year for Dance Council,
which provides an outlet for dancers in lieu
of @ major In the field, The group brings a
company like Newman's to SUNYA at least
once a semester, and 's trying to organize
master classes with some of the professionals
In the Capital District, according to President
Liz Mallon, The dancers keep busy all year
with jazz, modern and ballet clubs, and get
together In March for Footworks, an all-
student production.

The appearance of the Paul Taylor Dance
Company tonight and tomorrow at the Egg
ig unfortunate scheduling (or fortunate if you
plan on an all dance weekend), Taylor has
appeared in over 200 American cities,
represented the U.S in festivals worldwide,
and has been featured on PBS, The current
tour will take the dancers through nineteen
cities, including Washington, Seattle,
Boston, New York, — and East Greenbush,
we suppose, if they take route 90, a

“crossover” Is none other than Elvis
Costello, Although considered by the
general public to be a punk or new wave ar
tist, Costello has always freely confessed his
love for country music in general, and
George Jones and Gram Parsons in par-
ticular. Elvis has decided to do somewhat of
a tribute album to the many country greats
he admires, and a new LP entitled Almost
Blue should be in the stores in the next cou-
ple of weeks.

"A Good Year For the Roses" is the pre-
released single from the forthcoming album,
and itis a perfect vehicle for Elvis’ vocal pro-
Wess, Never before has Elvis sounded so
good and so grand, and the lush string ar-
Tangements and wonderful stee! guitar com:
plement Elvis perfectly. Costello has always
Written about the fine line between true love
and selfish manipulation, and country music
seems to be an exceptionally apt vehi-
cle for him. Elvis wrote one of the songs on
the upcoming LP; instead he chose to record
@ sampling of the first country and western
sons ever written, including compositions by
Jones, Billy Sherrill (who also produces
Almost Blue), Hank Williams, Gram Par-
sons, and Merle Haggard himself. Hopefully
thes¢ two records, one from a true country,
hero, the other from a true Innovator, will
help to spearhead an artistic resurgence of a |
type of music that, with its newfound com-|
mercial popularity has nowhere to go but

NO HLA 29.98

October 23, 1981/poge 73.

‘VISION

Yoknapatawphul

981 Is the 52nd anniversary of the
publication of William Faulkner's
The Sound and the Fury, To com:
memmorate this event, our hard working
reporters at the ASP have unearthed a docu:
vital, historic importance. The

Mark Rossier

following Is a copy of the very jirst review of
the book ever to appear in print and
Faulkner's response to it. The review was
printed Oct, 23, 1929 in the Tupelo Honey
— the literary agricultural magazine. Without
further ado — Bayard Johnson's review of
The Sound and The Fury:

They say there is,no firm rule for judging
the worth of a book, Well, | disagree — |
have one firm rule that never lets me down
= never read a book whose title comes from
the line of a poem. Usually the title has
nothing to do with the plot of the book and
all the author is trying to do is show
everybody how smart he is. A perfect exam:
ple lies in the latest book by Tupelo’s boy
wonder Bill Faulkner. I'm embarrassed to
admit this guy comes from our town and The
Sound and the Fury Is a perfect example

why,

This novel has the dumbest storyline I ever
ead, I's so stupid even Bill can't figure It
out. I mean there's this character named
Quentin — well, sometimes Bill calls it a he
and sometimes he calls it a she. Sometimes
Bill says he is dead and other times he is
alive, Now c'mon Billy boy, the least you
could do Is pay enough attention to
remember the most basic facts about this
Quentin person.

I think part of Bill's problem is that he's too
intent on having an arisy point of view. In
the first part of the book the narratot sounds
like some dumb litle kid and in the second
he's full of that intellectual gibberish about
time and God and other philosophical stuff.
Atfirst thought the litle Kid grew up, but the
second chapter takes place before the first, |
know, — it doesn't make sense, but nothing
In this book does. Like — if the guy in the
2nd part is so smart how come he breaks a
perfectly good watch? If Bill were less wor
ried about this stupid point of view he pro:
bably could have remembered which
characters were dead

I'm trying to think of something good to
say about this book, After all, Bill is a

hometown boy, but there Just isn't anything
to recommend about it, ! mean does anyone
‘out there honestly want to read a book In
which the narrator says over and over and
over again that somebody smells like trees?

Well, there you have it, the first published
response to Faulkner's The Sound and the
Fury, Almost as Interesting as Johnson's
review Is Faulkner's rebuttal published in a
letter to the editor the following week, He

sald "Look Bayard, | know it doesn't make

famous uiller Willam Faulkner

sense and so do you but those rites in the
North — they'll buy anything, Put any kind
of nonsense down and they'll pretend they
know what it means and tell you what a great
"artist" you are, Sure Its a bunch of erap, but
its makin’ me a rich guy — why don’t you
give Ita try Bayard? By the way, that’s a
‘great name — maybe [can use it sometime,.!
‘As we all know — Bayard Johnson
never took up Bills offer, but several others
did and thus the Southern Literary

Oo

Renalssance was born.

A Chance Of A Lifetime

here may be a rather unusual raffle

| item at the Broadalbin Knights of

Columbus meeting this November

19 — a nightclub with a market value of
$115,000.

The nightclub, High Chaparral, is
located just outside the small village of
Broadalbin, Just 20 miles west of Saratoga
Springs, Broadalbin’s population of 1,200
nearly doubles in the summer with vaca
tioners from nearby Great Sacandaga Lake:

Wayne Peereboom

The raffle idea was born one day last April
when Stan Watrobski, owner of the country
and western night club, picked up a copy of
Time magazine and read how a Chicago
man had raffled his $100,000 house

Watrobski had been trying to sell the High
Chaparral for the past year and a half
Without luck. Many people were willing 1o
buy the place but were unable to secure a
bank loan, he sald one afternoon from
behind the bar.

The stocky nightclub owner recalled that

/ Br) bucks a shot

he immediately liked the idea and got on the a raffle. The Knights of Columbus liked the

phone to find if there were any legal road {di

blocks to raffling the High Chaparral. After

jea and the raffle became a reality,
Watrobski and the Knights began selling

getting the green light from state officials, he tickets at $100 a piece. A minimum of 1,000
contacted a couple of local non-profit groups. tickets must be sold in order for the raffle to
to see if anyone was interested in sponsoring take place and no more than 1,200 will be

Poster Art.
these lithographs often transcended the

The current shc

‘Above are two of some 60 pharmaceutical posters created
» on display at the New York State Museum as “Medicine and Pharmacy: 100 Years of

Primarily intended as advertisements or fund-raisers, the aesthetic quality off
‘commercial, and the medical poster flourished as
‘an art form in France, England, and the U.S.

marks the hundredth anniversary
lege, the Albany College at Union. It runs through January 3.

Figure & Charm

between 1880 and 1905 and

of New York's oldest pharmacy col-|

sold, The drawing had been originally
scheduled for August 16 but with the plenic
Jess than a week away and only 700 tickets
sold, Watrobski postponed the drawing until
the November date. He ‘s confident the
necessary tickets will be sold by that time.

Watrobski has not lost any enthusiasm
about his idea. “This way the place will be
pald for free and clear — no banks, no mér-
tgdges. It will be great if the thing goes
through. Everybody benefits.”

He sald the Knights of Columbus will
benefit because they will get 15 percent of
the ticket sales; he will benefit with the sale of
his bar and the winner will benefit by winning
a $115,000 door prize for only $100,

Watrobski said the winner will get free anc
clear title to the bullding which includes a
four bedroom apartment upstairs. "Whoever
Wins this place doesn't have to buy a house.
They could live right here,” he noted

Included in the parcel are 10 acres of land,
bar and kitchen equipment as well as 0
$10,000 stereo system among other things.

Watrobski, a man In his 30s, has owned
the bar for the past 12 years, Formerly called
Stan's Tavern, the place underwent a name
change and remodeling a year and a half age
when he introduced a country and western
format following a brief bout with disco.
“Disco never really got off the ground her
but country music Js kind of going crazy,
Watrobski sald during a brief demonstration
of the music system,

At the High Chaparral, full swinging
western style doors open to a spacious In-
terlor with red and white checkered table

cloths, rough-cut lumber, a dance floor and
@ spot for country bands on weekends,
Watrobski said the club usually attracts a
mixed crowd,

The raffle {s not the first time something a
liile Unusual has taken place at Stan's; Inthe
past the place has featured such things as
mud wrestling and live radio broadcasts,

‘Appropriately, Watrobski said) the raffle
has become the “talk of the town," with half
‘of the tickets being sold locally. "People
come In and fantasize about what they are
going to do when they win,” he sald, “It got
to the point where people ask me the pro-
cedure in getting a liquor license or whether
T'll work for them once they take over."

Asked if he would accept an offer of
$120,000 for the place, Watrobsk! replied,
“couldn't take It. They (the ticket holders)
Would string me up,”

One does not have to have $100 to have
‘8 shot at owning at least part of the High
Chaparral, Watrobski sald that while the ma-
jority of tickets have been sold to Individuals,
many people have pooled their money to
buy one. In one state office, he said, people
pooled as litle as five dollars apiece for a
chance, “I don't know how they'll divide It
up if they win,” Watrobski sald

On the other harid, he sald that sonte peo:
pla have bought as many as five tickets
apiece to Increase chances of winning.

The winner will have a number of options,
Watrobski pointed out. A flyer advertising
the raffle reads: “You can run It, rentit, sel it
or live there," He sald a number of people
have offered to buy the nightclub from the

winner, A Troy woman has said she will offer
the winner $50,000,

Only a few signs show that this is different
from an ordinary raffle, The yellow raffle
tickets are not unlike those the local litle
league would sell for a case of beer at the
supermarket, However, a closer Inspection
reveals that double signatures are required
for both the seller and buyer, Further, law re~
quires a special stamp on each ticket sold,

If the necessary tickets are not sold by
November 29, Watrobsk! sald the money will
be refunded

Ih that case, what will happen to Stan
Watrobski?

“if it doesn't go through, 1! regroup and
go from there, I'l probably do prety much
the same thing (running the business)
because {t's going well. The only money I'd
Jose is what | spent on advertising,”

‘And what lf the raifle does go through?

After owning the bar for 12 years, Watrob-
ski sald he has had enough of the late hours
and would like to live a “more family-like ex: |
Istenee." [a]
!

page 8a/October 23, 1981)
===

SPECTRUM
Movies

Hellman,
‘True Confessions Fri; Sat
Hellman Colonie 1 & 2
French Lieutenant's Woman Fri, Sat
All the Marbles
Madison
Victory’ Fri, Sat 7:00, 9:15
Fox Colonie 1 & 2
Rich and Famous Fri, Sat
Lili Marlean Pri, Sat:

‘3rd Street Theatre
Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears
Fri, Sat, Sun 7:00, 9:45

Cine 1-6
Only When I Laugh
Carbon Copy
Gallipoli
Carbon Copy
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Mommie Dearest

Fri, Sat, Sun

International Film Group LC 1
King of Hearts Fri, 7:30, 10:00

Music

" ‘LB. Scotts
The Units Fri
‘The Usstafarians ¢ Sat
Bogarts
| Tepes Fri, Sat
| Eighth Step Coffeehouse
The Tubes (lop) and Dzvo (bottom) are helping to celebrate the fitieth anniversary ofthe All Day Folkfest Sun
Palace Theatre. Devo performs tonightat 8, Tickels ae $10.60, And Blotiojoinsthe Tubes |
Sunday at 8. Both are J.B; Scott's Productions. area hecike cae
Lark Tavern
Cambridge Kate and the
Battenkill Boys Fri, Sat
Gemini Jazz Cafe
Fats Jefferson Fri, Sat
Yesterdays
Sox Thurs, Fri, Sat
Albany State Cinema LC 18 DANCE
Concert for Bangledesh ‘Thurs, Fri Justin McNelt's
7:30, 10:00 Performing Arts Center Walter Donaruma Fri
Flash Gordon Sat Rosalind Newman and Dancers Fri, Sat
EMD) 8:00 The Palace Theatre
Devo Fri 8:00
Performing Arts Tybes with Blotto Sun 8:00

Tower East Cinema LC 7

cD
5]

1, Marianne Faithful Dangerous

Acquaintances
2,02 October
3. King Crimson Discipline
4, Rolling Stones Tatioo You
5, Bob Dylan Shor OfLave

Private Benjamin ‘Thurs, Fri, Sat Paul Taylor Dance Company Fri, Sat Eighth Step Coffeehouse
7:30, 10:00 8:00 ATP — Pieces of Pinter
6, Tom Verlaine Dreamtime
7, Genesis Abacab
8. Prince Controversy A flash in the pan
9. Mink Deville Dreamtime

10, Jo Jo Zep and The Falcons Step Lively
11, G0-G0's Beauty And The Beat
12, Marshall Crenshaw “Somethings Gonna
Happen

13, Garland Jeffreys Rock and Roll Adult
14, Polyrock Changing Hearts
15, Billy Idol ““Mony Mony””

16, Bob Marley Chances Are

17, AD's Alone Again,
18, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the
Dark “Souvenir”

19, Adam and the Anis
20, The Jam,

“Prince Charming’
"Absolute Beginners

Zaneo HN “er MO 4 “pOOR YONI 1G poy
tees Bm Kids age nod Umaind Ag pepo,

ARE
Ne Ltni soln

errant

[&_An ZENO Freon

Semumtons PUB ELAN

* er ae <
iy evouin ream prinmmricn REPLcTOS
Wrereveuse ce ancnericn quan.

ZEN
ae
|
baal |
- Msi a7 Ly
: siais
ree
Hees 6
ee tg
ey

3 1]
er (3)

5} im
le

Tdvand Jultus, 1076 — Collegiate

acres) 48 NU Ve queens for 10 driter Mavoh
thor 1 In the wee hours
1US:A, (anor) 46 Fencing sword 12 Soppent tn
iol ical name a1 Clean sett
ry 2 0 Vote par i
14 Gone Sf howling $3 falls excessively
i | 15 Sirgie ertormices $3 lr order:

17 See who breaks, in 58 Koran chap!

Next Week:

And Jill Came Tumbling After -

Childrens’ Books And Sexual Roles

2 Prettn for: teeta)

60 Bette Davis movie,

pool
18 Seputcher

the

61 *1 smelt —

&2 fet igtous tnage
Aas

20 Pathology suffix
21 Pangs: ue

OSs

2 ReLch the public 6) Adventure
24 Indtan huts 64 Cats an Tcercream
2% cone
65 Physics untt 39 Appear.
a 4 ori stony
[al own Ki oded
7 44 Foe) tndtgnant
} List
2 Famous
C) 3 ohne a
S Sudtea
5 Lung at men

A mire! ot Uist
B aR Bealls state
rhe int

en

(SOU ES eA sSNA eyiia

int, Comment

a

Soar Cort

_ Editorial

her where to go. Job search is a process in
Which the individual must take responsit
ly in direction and managing their own
life, It is for this reason that the Carer
Planning and Placement Office teaches
lifetime skills in methods of job finding and
self-management. 1 believe it follows the
well-known truism, ‘give a mana fish, and
he has food for a day. Teach a man to fish,
and he has food for a lifetime.” 1 assuine
the phrase should have been stated
“person”? rather than ‘“man,!? and my
apologies for any sexist overtones,

If this student! or any others have prac-
tical suggestions for improving planning
and placement services, or their presenta-
tion, 1 would be more than happy to.
with you, If you choose 10 call or write
please have the personal responsibility and
integrity to associate your name with your
beliefs. Big brother really isn’t watching.

— Barry Berthaume,
Graduate Assistant,
Career Planning and Placement Office

Recycling Help

To the Edito
Ih response to Debra McGinniss’ letter in
the 10:16 ASP, 1 would like to inform the
Albany community that at least one group
of people is concerned enough about recycl-
ing project. We are collecting newspapers,
magazines, aluminum cans and bottles,
yelers, In
this way we can raise some money while do:
ing some good for the
Other groups on
undertake such a project. All that is needed

Which we will then sell to local r

vironment

ampus could also

isa place to store the materials (0 be recycl-
ed until there are enough to take to a
recycler, and a little bit of enthusiasm to get
the project going and continuing. 1 en:
courage other groups, especially dorm
units, to begin similar projects. If anyone
‘wishes more specific information on what
we are doing, they may call me at 457-8280
or 438-2855,

—David Janower, Department of Music

Top Ten Rebuttal

To the Editor:

Regarding the letter about the “ASP Top
Ten," we would like to give a few facts 13
the person who withheld his or her name.
As members of WCDB Sports staff, we
Work closely with the people you are referr

ing to.
The “Talian’* that you spoke of |
To have as much football Knowled,

other student on campus, Not only does he
Write for the ASP, but he is alsoa writer for
another area newspaper
The “two editors"
work as hard as anybody 10 produce the
quality sports seetion in every issue.

that you mention,

Question: Do you know who Biff is?
Answer: Obviously from what you wrote,
you don't. How ean you make fun of Biff
when you don’t know him? He happens (0
be the statistician for the football team, and
serves as Coach Dick Sauers right hand man
for the basketball team. You will not find a
more dedicated person who does his job as
Well as Biff does, As far as Biff"s football
knowledge is concerned, do you know that
he does research on every team? Biff even
predicted to us personally that Clemson
would defeat Georgia earlier this year
These four people may not be Red Smith
‘or Dave Anderson, but they certainly have

the qualifications to make up the “ASP
Top Ten."
—Howard Strudler,

Assistant Sports Director
Philip Pivnick,

Sports Director WCDB Radio

Study Abroa

Studying abroad is a rewarding x
perience, We feel that many students are
unaware of the opportunities available for
international study, Last semester we chose
to study in Copenhagen, Denmark through
the Danish International Study Program.

This program is Unique in that it enables
students to study in a foreign country
without prior knowledge of the language.
All classes are taught in English. In add
tion, there are elementary Danish language
courses available 10 those who wish 10 fur-
ther their insight to Danish culture.

Enrollment is composed of students from
all over the United States, Cananda and
Australia, Due to the comparatively small
number of participants (275-300), each stu-
dent is given personalized and individual at-
tention. There are various fields of study
from which to choose. One can choose 10
study architecture, business or liberal arts,
Furthermore, the curriculum exposes the
student to in depth field study, directly
applicable to classroom instruction,

We hope that all who are interested will
lake advantage of this wonderful oppor
tunity available to them. For further infor-
mation please inquire at the Office of In
national Programs, For those students in-
terested in applying for the Spring semest
82, the application deadline is November
1, 1981

Hilarie Lyons
—Margaret Pedersen

_ Apathy Explained —

To the Editor:

How many students are truly apathetic?
Haw many sit in the cafeteria and vacantly
stare into space, nol complaining about the
food? Then, how many students will be
ing a hamburger, not noticing a bug
ng on if, and eat the bug 100? How

many?

The non-complainers are the apathetics
These people don't care that the secretary in
the German Department has a new streak in
hier bouffant. ‘The people who eat the bus
probably don't know there's a German
Depariment, These people are the ip:
norants, The ignorant people are the ones
who don't know what's going on, only
because they're uninformed, Student caus
seekers should learn to distinguish between
apathetics and ignorants, so that they may
Work on the ignorants, We apathetics are a
lost cause.

Wiiy a
forall of you who wi
don’ care, for one
average day in the life of

we apathetic? 1 can answer that
{ 10 pet involved, We
Give me the
an average
apathetic, and I'll show you someone who
doesn't give a shit, The apathetic wakes up.
in time for a class, takes a shower (Notes if
the water is freezing cold, the apathetic is
Hol concerned; he showers anyway ), goes
woes back (0

son.

to @ class, takes no note
Wherever he lives (usually on-campus), goes
{o another glass, then lunch (it could be he
goes (0 lunch first and then a class, it
doesn't really matter), then more classes
and then back {0 his habitat, where he goes.

into vegetable oblivion for the rest of the

evening

When you're apathetic, it really is an ade
Vantage, You don't feel guilty if you don't
study, cut classes, and don't care if so:

meone calls you an apathetic

The reason J personally don't get inyoly
ed (in case anyone was Wondering; | know
you student-vigilantes are: you care about
everything ) is because I get in trouble when
[try to stand up for any cause, Like, 1 used
io hear people say to each other, *Dijew go
{othe *Post Saturday night?" or “Dijew go
to MSI Tuesday?” 1 would get so mad!
Then I'd go up to these bigots and say, “1
know a lot of nice Jewish people. How dare
you make fun of them!?* Then I'd kick their
shins, Unfortunately, they'd kick back.

Other times, 1 would do something con:
structive like hanging posters, or passing
Ou notices. Well, 1 got in trouble for taping
posters to the Money-Matie machines? but=
fons (I thought they would be noticeable
there ). And, when 1 was carried away by.
getting people to take my notices, | inadver=
tantly followed someane into the men’s
room. Forget good causes — 1 want my.
chocolate chip cookies and Nestles too,

Anyway, most apathetics won't even
id this letter

Beth Goldstein |

Beat the Clock -

Old laws never die,

They just get changed around a lot,

That's the funny thing about laws. They change, constantly, And although
change is what makes the world go ‘round, it’s not always easy to keep up. Laws
not only change, bua law that works on your street might not work two blocks
away. But there's one obvious fact about laws — they're supposed to be follow-
ed and obeyed, no matter where you are.

Now there's this one law which happens to pertain to every county along the
strip of Main Street, U.S.A,, called the Freedom of Information Act. This law
provides the right of access to records which reflect goyernment decisions. To
the layman, it means you have a'right to know how your government operates,
Sounds pretty nice,

Now here's the caich.

The Reagan administration (who else?) is trying to put us into a “Beat the
Clock" situation, It's the kind of deal where you're told that you must "place
the egg ina garbage pail,” Then you find out you must roll the egg on the floor
With your nose first, {

According to new proposals, now in a Congressional Committee, the
Freedom of Information Aci may be undergoing a change, A tightening as our
President puts it, [Pall goes through, you may have (o roll an egg with your nose
all the way to Washington in order to get information on how the government
works

One of the more important restrictions in this proposal involves the amount
Of information you can receive from the CIA, It’s quite a tightening. It would
Wine oul 1wo freedoms; the right to get information about the CIA and the right
to get CIA information about yourself,

Another restriction involyes the maximum amount of time that a federal
agency has to provide requested information, The proposed increase is from 10
days {0 ‘a more reasonable time period." Sorry guys. We've got a deadline,

And, of course, there's got to be another alarming proposed ret triction, Peo-
ple may be allowed {o submit information, marked ‘Personal,"* ty the federal
government, and haye it preserved secretly for about 20 years, Of course you
could go {0 court and try {0 get a release, But with many interpretations of the
law, and the delicate subject matter of the material, this process could take
years, Get those caas ready,

Thus ends our tale of the poor, sad aw and the Administration which is rea
dying some manacles, Actually, thus begins our tale, The proposal sits in com-
mittee now and only time and Congress will tell as to its outcome, Lets just

hope they see things our way this time, 1f not, it may just be another example of
that old saying: the government giveth and the government taketh away,

Wait a minute, That's not the saying, is it? Oh yeah right. Sometimes you
just can't keep up with those damn proposals

ASPECTS

In 1018

and ily cxntive nagazine

Entebii

Robert €. Grubmi

Edelstein, Senior Editor

Buean Millan
“Judie Eisenberg, Wayne Peareboom
‘Andow Catrall
Mich

Copy Editor Brvce J, Lieber
lait wllers: Bo Bollaliore,Oavid Brooks, Ken Cantor, Hubert Konnath Dickey, Michael Dinowitz, Jim Dixon,
Math Fischell, Math Gesner, Debbie Judge, Kathy Kiasane, Eric Kol ll Langela, Bruce J. Levy, Cralg Mé
Usa Mirabella; John Moran, Barbara Schindler, Both Soxer, Susan ‘Sinith, Jonsicn Treadway, Spectrum and
Evanls Editor; Golay Camis, Zodiac and Preview Ealor: Mavle Garbarino

Bonnie Stevens, Manager
Janel Oralune, Advertising Manager

Hoy Broder, Judy B, Santo, Karen Sardott
sooucssnaseese Atlone Kallowte
Septombor Kiel

David Bock

Dianne
tt: Jeo

Biting Account

Payroll Supervisor
ci

el Orelfuss, David Nell Yapko Advertaing Production Manegers: Sue
Glacola Advertising Production: Michelle Horowitz, Mare Mendelsohn, Melissa Wassarman Ottice Sta
hilt Bloch, Ellen Epstein, Anne Fried, Jessien Trachior

Produetion Manager
Production Manager

Dave Thanhaus
David Boch

Carol Bury
fi

i
21i| Sian) Chautfeur: Marina Hainer

Photography, Supplied principally 6) Univeraty Photo Service,
CChial Photographer: Maro Menache!

UPS Stal: Dave Ashor, Alan Calom, Car Ch
tabon| Sue Mingich, Mark Naser, Mark Neb

sherry Cohey
3n, Suna Steinkamp, Will Yurman

The Albany Sludent Presa ix published every Tuesdi ‘choo! your by the Albany Student
Press Corporation, an independent novtor prot on zion Chie with

‘embers of the Edlterat Boa’d; poley Ia subject to review by tho Edioria) Board. Advertising policy does 01
iv tolect editorial polly,

ie. Student Press:

- (Classified):

GServiees >)

ersonals )

Reus ie_typing, fit
Yeates done experiy

n
Ena inexpensively. call Larry,
‘483-60: iB

Bi
Bama 1nd shop. By eppolntment

PassportApoliation, Photos $6 for
ee tore ach 2 theroal

fice, Campus Genter

ite the fact that you drl
"and you stil perk It I

(alot in the back lot, And des;
ee Tar ved Tnink youioeh
when you can't, And. deoplt
fact that you play your musi
‘oud at night that i keepe Marie up
= Well, HAPPY BIRTHDA
anyway!

Only a Hrecracker awa

voy and Sept.
‘erhe Incredible Bulk” does It ey
Here's you personal, and thank you
80 much for being such a nice per:
son,

Re-elect Jennifer Butler for Clase of
1983 President.

‘equipment wholesa prices.
Gal esa eree ion aco ‘component,

Pa ort a black % white or

Golor, 60 dents off with thie Aet

‘One Studio, 434-3093 for appoint:

ments

Dear Cara,

Twant to wish you a very happy bir
day, yuca luck, happiness and

Thanks (o.all the Dany
uti itt Hut ea

D,, Ken, Freedy, Slev
‘Joey an all tne chee!

Guys)

"Get them there Electro-luxes In a
circle! There's Tupperware on tt
ridgel!" By

‘ks for coming to visit. | love,

Forever yours, Melanie
Toddies,
PR EHECIE it to six months, let's

ears, | love you.
(90 for sixy ee

——

Pi with Sure am gon-
Fb i el hl his weekend. Have a

tio (ove always, AMS

good time.

Yeuldon't Know hew eat, itis...to
love you. Happy one year annivers
sary. The first of many together

Serg,
Our friendship means everything to
me and | love you very much,

Pookie,
Tam yours now and forever. Happy,
‘year.

Love, Bear

State Quad Box 1399)
You must be hard u

to advertise for guys. What was.
last specie of animal you tia

State 601

nd real sows

Professional: Typing Sorvice, 18M
Selectric Typewriter. Call
‘evenings, weok-ends

For Sale )

Dance, Dance, Dance:

Glam Tavera, specie) $i asidoren a
's, 4-8 p,m, Wednesdays and

$ cooking? chieken. Wanna

Electronic Earrlng and Pin—Hot,
‘od Love Lite comes complete with
4 Mini-batfery, Guaranteed to'ite.u

ourite life, Sand $8

Ploneor OTF2T21 caesotia Tape
player/recorder, $80.
automalle record. 0

lo, Ste

rfo@ on a pepo

Stuff cae: a per hundred.
Immediate earnings. Send. self.
dressed, stamped envelope and
Bins 10 P.O. Box 7142, Paducah,
f

Rani
Give’ Newtonsiohn's new. song,
Cat's gat physiaal, | want to heat

your body talk."
‘Your angel (haha)

Pumpking, Big, bright and bord
Gampus Center Lobby selling Mon:
day October 28 through Friday Oc:

ara. Sponsored by

Psi Gamma Sororl

Fe-elect Jennifer Butler for Class of
President.

Are you Into wine and cheese, good
musio and a great time? Come 10
The Mout

Dear Barrie,

Here's your personal, You're worth
hese few words as well aa the elght
fa million (aw, gee whiz). Thank
jou for not killing me.

Love, Rob

The Rowan Featuring. fine
entertainment, wines, cheeses and
Imported beers. Patroon Room, Fri:
dap ane! Saturday might

Plano player, drummer and other
musicians desperately needed for
Golonial, Quad's production of
Damn. Yankees. More Info, call
Rona, 7-7741 of Tamml, 7-8987.

fever, Catch itl Danger:
Rahs" Outs 1: How aweot itis!
jodney

Mabey first anniversary (tomorrow)
to Hey first fue ove atta: | rove

Bs SH

Dearest Bear,
Thank you for the most wonderful

year of my life. Here's to many
more, | love you.
Pookie

tsa
Here's to the best of luck and the
best of times on your birthday. |
eat ollave you've finally made it
int! Happy 181

Love always, Dor

Happy f0th Lauren! Happy birinday
(PPP Yondertul aultemete,,toam-
mate, and friend,

Love always, “Joan P-~
‘To Mike and Timin Manican,
Vim glad that | was your first ...
person to send you a personal) En:
joy!

Dear Judy
Happy Birthday from the two best
guyson 18,

sdiblo offer, Upto tan off
prices on perfumes and col-

plus other popular fragrances, For
‘ordere of Info call 434-4896,

Zen dane number 1
ay Wat War'your birthday. Ar, Al
Ar, nineteen:ha, Shut up your face,

and have a happy one.
Yayne number 2

(AR Advent ayater

$900, Jon, 462-6150,

Overaens | Jobe,

foun

ala“alitleles: 880031260 month:

Sightseoing, Free Into. Write Iu
x 52:NY+1, Corona Del Mar, CA.

Need etident to help s

With ol
Bioane soli'309-4826, Schonectagy:

Mm available January 1, 1981 tor
semester. Close to busine,

Allan Hy
Fae aa on
than

everything! This
tha best of my ilfe and
causa of you. | love you.
iniversary.

Dearest Banana Lover,
1 hope your birthday thoes everything
you want tte bo and more, beoauao
u deserve everything In life that’s
jeauttful, Together forever,
Love Always, Your Banana

Morty christmi
Colonial U:Lounge, where do you

Get your vacuum bage?
no-cone

Mr Joey 2.,
Master of the Villderbeest,
dedicated lover of Book. Happy
Birthday.

Nickoll, Ski, Grim Reaper

(( Wanted _))

Free trang ration to and from
Ne lor weekend once or
n to travel with elght

Drummer Swanted for rock/blues
pane ey corm. parties: ‘etc, We're fo
In It for musio, not. money. Ro!
483-5638, Pot Geta if

Models for top Te
men and women. Les Clseaux Li

to
way, shara driving and
Gall Gar, 456-0407, 7.6470,

Found: blue windbreaker on
softball field, Call Stevo, 7-77

FeTect Jennifer Butler for Clase of
ident.

Vote Anne Thai ft, Freshman,
class councll ‘Ootober 21-23, Quad
la vot

Poe ern thet iove you. Thanks for
a groat year. Happy Anniversary!

uly Captivated, Ken
PS. Black Is peautiul

ihre 8 that you enjoyed your bith
Hani gent tobe. love you.

Hebpy Birthday.
a x4 Bucwheat

Dance Marathon's /
Sarah, aaa

Okay, thanks.
ia en Guys
f

would be proud of us. No one Is go:
Ing to stop us now!
Signed, Mr. D.

Th times of Joy ot, depression I'm
always here for you to turn to,

Happy 21at Biehl

Love, and Grel
P.8, When ere you takley us to cit:
ner?

The Mousotrap, Open Friday,
November 6. Blan Gold on plano,

featuring mellow rock,

“GAMIES”

THE ORIGINAL VIDEO GAME DISCO TEQUE

Combine the sounds of one of the hottest
D.J.’s in the Capitol District along with the
latest in video games and you've got
“Games” Disco

The Place to Play Around

Jane,

What time? Sam? But | have an ear-

y Glass Let's go running. Happy
y

To the old man in Zenger
"Elephant Shoes.”

iF

Eliza

Sarah,
Sorry about the cat, eh? Blowed up
Teal good though:
Tho Canadions
PS. Like, wanna be our toplo, oh?

Doug,
Yes you, the RA on Dutch, ''Hello,””
From the girl you moved second
base on,

October 23, 1981-

Thanke or” being such special
rien

Love always, Me
P.S. This not Is for your ‘onl
To Shella, the woman | love,
I'm so grateful for having you In my
life. It's been'@ wonderful month, 80
(on welll go day by day.

John
Nombert Squire
We must conquer the cube. It's a
matter of pride,
's Biggest Fan
Tothe guys in oan Who play the
1812 Overture,
Fear Me Leat |.

Have @ Wieker Pariyl: Free alfts,
host eclale, quality mera
Excellent Chrietmas gifts, Cal
Certain, 768-8508,

Dear Russ,

Thank you for f,belng a friend, my

Love, Carolyn
nd she has brown halr, too!”

PS.
Ww,

Othello, made a mistake. | hope |
Won't, I'll love you wisely, well and
forever.

eval eternal servant, HBP

Happy Bithday to a real sweetie!
You're a great roommate and an
even better friend. Love ya honey.

if you like amaretto sours, holding
hands in the rain, I! you like sending
Alowers and} the, tenis of char
pagne, Then you're the loves that
welva Jooked for, Contest ue and

es
Box 129, Dutch Uno ne gener
nly please!)

fe Quad Box 1999,

The Supor Freak Suite e (ul of real
men! And we love pretty kinky girls,
the: kind we don't take home t
mother. Gall 7:5197,
Aileen,

Are you on a shi list today?
Bonnie and Steve,
Thanks for you help. You two avo
the best! Come and visit!

Lov

Class of

Re-elect Jennifer Buti
1983 President.

5, 38
thank you my frlend. thank you @
thousand times.

m.

All our friends had better be at 149
Western Friday or else no) more

Conoly? ps ion? Write
Mike,'an available SUNYA Pre-Law
student, Indian 2667 ANYTIMEL

Tove you Michael, (See now it’s In
print.) Happy birthday sweetheart,
Love, Barbara

Title,

Sorry about the pussy,
HE

Cofte for sale. When it comes to
Campus Tiving, space i8'« precious
commodity, A loft can greatly In:
crease tha living area of any room.
Wo sell high quailty tolls made to

‘our specifications.

9091 ‘or Brian, 7-4604 and wo Will
‘show you a lott In u

Dry heaves puke oats,

Scmathing you always wanted to
know, right?
8.

Boware,..Halloween...The
‘Gwange.

Open Tuesday - Saturday

sCO

1228 Western Avenue
Located just across from the

SUNYA in the lower level of the

Missing — 5 1/2 foot Boa Constric-
tor, “Taken from. the Blolo
Bullding Was personal pet. §
reward for any Information leading
to safe return, 785-4047 or 7:3340,
Holly Jani
Hoy; the beers were swoll and so
are you.
__Love ya, Marlo

Te{ways thought that frlends were
around to underatand when your
angry, hurt, of uj
thought that we wore frends, And)
always will.

ilove you

Ramada Inn

Dotober 23, 1981

Preview

jommunity Service — If you work for the Assembly, see
Barie Buckley at Legislative Office Building 829 A-Empire
fa(e Plaza, October 27 or 28 between 9-5, For more informa:

jon, call 455-4704,

ommunity Service Registration — November 2-5, between 10
id 4 in LC 3-4, There [s limited enrollment, s0 be there early,

jallowcen Swingtime Masquerade — For a hauntingly good
this Halloween night, eatch Doc Scanion’s Rhythm Boys
the DeWitt Clinton Hotel, Crystal Ballroom, corner of State
id Eagle Streets, Tickets are $4.00 each and are available at

¢ door.

ernailonal Film Group — presents Romeo and Juliet on Oc-
Bher 24 in LOI at 7:30 and 10:00. .75 with tax card, $1.50
he alternative film experience since 1954,

ithout, TFC

Debate

yntinued from front page
Dusenbury noted the difference
ween habitability laws and a
curity ordinance, which requires
ndlords to install secure locks. He

so Stressed the need for
ighborhood team policing

All three candidates supported
ludents voting rights in Albany
jounty. However, while Corning
Haimed he thought it had been a
pod idea for the last “three or four

fears,” Dusenbury attacked the
Corning Machine" which he
Hiaimed kept students from having

Bic right to vote here. Dusenbury

rmed this "a political obscenity."
Additionally, Touhey complain.
id of high tax rates, saying the city
Bf Albany has the fifth-highest rates

fi tlie state, beating even New York

ity. He blamed this on Corning,

Ind attacked the mayor for
Mounicipal buying practices saying,
Fhe (Corning) likes 10 deal with his,
political friends

Dusenbury called for more hous
Ing for low-income people, an

ssessment of Albany's crime pro-

biem, and public-owned utilities.

‘Rolling Plan

‘ontinued from page three
1982-83 budget, which begins on

pri 1.""

Reaction at SUNYA has been

xed. SUNYA Vice President of
nance and Business, John Har
gan, said, ‘We find it a sensible,
Brcerly reorganization within the
BUNY system, It's giving us a vi
ion of five years from now."*

SA President Dave Pologe was
autious. “We want to be careful
bout any inter-campus changes
oming down from SUNY Central.
Biudents and faculty must be in-
‘olved in any major decision."*

SASU (Student Association of
fhe State University of New York),
President Dave Wysnewski express-

similar concern, **We sure don't
fant to specialize SUNY schools,
his is a liberal arts institution, and
hat’s the way it's going to stay, I'd
fight any drastic changes tooth and
nail”?

Classifieds

They Pay!!!

PROGRAMMERS /ANALYSTS
SOFTWARE ENGINEERS

If you have knowle

bad eteresttenes a de

e immedin
Is require

These openings
hy computer aclenc

sigorithms, and Information service

ume for Immediate consideration to: G, A, Meyer
lonnelley Marketing, 1515 Summer Street, Stamford, Connec-
Donnelley Marketing

The Dun & Bradstreet Corporation

Albany Student Press

Touro Law School — A representative of the school will be on
campus Tuesday, October 27th, from 9:30 until 3:00 in the
CUE Conference Room, Please call or stop in to CUE to sign
lip for an appointment, 457-8331,

Phobia Self-Help Groups — The Mental Health Association in
Albany County offers self-help groups for people suffering
from phobias, Groups meet weekly in the Albany and Colonie
‘reas. Professionally supervised, the groups offer assistance
nd support to people suffering from phobias or irrational
fears. For more information, call 462-5439,

Mathematics Colloquim — Nura D. Turner, a professor at
SUNYA, will be giving a colloquim on the Twenty-Second In-
ternational Mathematical Olympiad on Friday, October 23, ir
ES140 at 4:00 p.m. Coffee will be served in ES152 at 3:30.

Jawbone Reading Series —Frederick W, Bubbers, Kate
Winter, and Bill Burriess will read fiction and poetry in a
special session of the Jawbone Reading Series on October 24,
Saturday, from 1-3 p.m, in HU3S4, The reading is open to the
public,

Omicron Delia Epsilon — sponsors Malcolm Kerr to speak on
“Problems of Development in Arab Oil Countries"? on Mon-
day, October 26 from 3 to 5 p.m, in the CC Assembly hall,

‘Campos Crusade for Christ — Prime Time fs back again’ An
opportunity for fellowship, singing, fun and study, Meetings
fare 8 pam, Thursday nights in CC375, For more information,
call 438-7666,

Chapel House — The mass schedule is as follows: Sat, 6:30
p.m, and Sun, 12:30 p.m. in the Chapel House, Sun. 6:30 p.m.
and dally masses at are in CC361, There is
Lutheran/Protestant Holy Communion 11:00 a.m, on Sunday,
in the Chapel House,

Write a letter to the
Editor.
Let your voice be heard.

loping Interac-
FORTRAN / COBOL and advanced
elf starter who enjoys a challenging
you could

. A Bachelors degree, perferable

oli oeed

@ company of

Serving:
Lunch - 11:30 to 5
Dinner - § to 11; Late night menu till closing

400 Dratt Friday, Saturday, & Sunday

» Lark St. at Madison

Welcomes Back
THE 81 SUNYA CLASS

SUNYA Special

| NEVER KNEW.
TRIPLE SECS COULD
BE LIKETHIS/,

ZECS CAN BE MORE
FUN THAN A HOME

Yor & free recipe Dooket, write Hiram Walker Cordials, PO. Box R888, Parmington Hila, Mich, 48018,

HIRAM WALKER TRIPLE SEC

(© 1981 Vile See Lieut 69 pret, Hiram Wala & Sons, Ine San Francie, Cal

AND | THOUGHT SCORING A
TOUCHDOWN WAS etcrTNGrt

Ski

Park City, etc
dan. 12-19

ing.

For info, call Steve
or Skip at 482-3482
always dreamed of
Si

lub"?

Wecccceccccoccccsecooccoooesooosooool]g

Utah
Alta, Snowbird,

Stay at the Ramada Inn (pool,
sauna, etc.) in Salt Lake City and
ski all areas on one lift ticket,

$569.00 includes airfare, lodges,
lifts and hot breakfast every morn-

Ski the champagne powder you've

ROSALIND NEWMAN FRIDAY,
OCTOBER 23
AND DANCERS SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 24
“Dancing so stunning 8PM
piel ep feel te
ee
you're seeing” 21 anne
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, MAIN THEATRE 457-8606

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY pifteent

th and Genesis, the

Sexuality Resource Center

For information and sign-up, call or visit

Middle Earth 457-7588 Schuyler 102

Genesis, the Sexuality Resource Center
457-8015 Schuyler 105

HAD AN ABORTION?
Need to talk about it?

On campus Support Group for Post Abortion Women

HATLOWEEN FUN

ToBeneft
the Muscular Dystrophy Association

Sun, Oct.25 6:00p.m.-12;00a.m.
$5.00/person
Free wine, beer &hors doouvres

Door prizes and for costumes

OO I Oe Oe ee ae

Homecoming 8] and
Dutch Quaol Board

presents

the
Garay Danes

Sab.

SATURDAY Ocr 2tr
DUTCH QuAD U= LOUNGE

MUSIC by:

$h.oo w/ suet taxcara
41.76 wlotax card
Funoed By Youk SA MAAMATORY TAX

Ck TI PPIPAIPIPPPPP PAD Le hehe

ne

9:30— Zam

15+ w/feottall gare tetet stubs Jee

GRP MILL LIM MM LLL LID OM.

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\.

WINTER SPORTS
CAPTAIN’S MEETINGS

Floor
10-26 4:00pm
Basketball- Wednesday

Hockey-Monday

4:00pm 10-28
Volleyball & Waterpolo-
Tuesday 10-27 4:00pm

-All Meetings will be at a

site to be determined-

Applications for Head Officials for the
winter sports are now being accepted-
applications are available in PE B-69.

sii cage Fifteen

Spikers Continue Winning Ways

by Michael Dinowitz second in their pool and to earn a day. Although both schools played
“We should have played better,”” chance (0 play thé University of well. the Panes won both matches
is how Coach Pat Dwyer described Vermont in the semi-finals, in two eames ‘They clobbered
Albany State women’s volleyball Vermont, a division I school pro- North Adams 15-9, 15-2, and iced
team’s performance last Saturday, ved to be a very worthy opponent. Siena 15-10 and 15.11,
The Danes may not have played up The Danes, whohave had great sc- © The squad was lead by captains
o par but their performance was cess against Vermont in the past, Reba Miller and Elizabeth Austin,
not to be laughed at, did not meet up with lady luck this Other starters inclided Liz Rosen-
The squad's first match was time, The past caught up with the thal, Lisa Diehl, Donna Chalet, and
against Mercy College, a Division II team as Vermont defeated the Rosa Pricto, E
school, Albany beat their opponent Staters 1548, 13-15, 15-8, The Spikers had'a late matclfvith
in two straight games; 15-8, 15-12, The Albany women had a long Oneonta yesterday and meets up
The Danes then went on to lose to lockerroom talk after the tourney with New Paltz, Rutgers (Newark),
Springfield, a Division I school, and according to Dwyer, ‘‘hope {0 and Molloy College on Saturday,
11-15, 5-15, Albany's next oppo: have corrected the mistakes and According to Dwyer, ‘the team
nent was Sacred Heart College and solved many problems,’ Jooks real good,’” If this opinion is
‘The spikers split a pair of matches on they fell in two games as the Danes This proved true as Albany went correct the women won't have to
Doeletae NeriNAGataracat si Pe Monday. dettated them IS-11, 15-6, The on to defeat both North Adams sav “we should have played bet-

Women fared well enough to place State and Siena College on -Mon-
Go to séa -
and earn credit ou told her you have

i ri
git ee your own place.
have to tell your roommates.

foot schooner as part of Southampton
College's 1982 SEAmester’
ludy the coas
coral reels, lus ma
seaporis and poin\ re
fcereiled courses /n- cova
Eceloy,lhthylony,Nevigalion
tnd Seamanship, LAeratre ef |
the Sea, American Maritime }
History, Natural History,

Now you

Salling
April 4) 1982 to
Jung. 5; 1982

For mora Information, contact
SEAmester!™

Office of Continuing Education
Southampton as of LLU
Sounampien, New fork 1

PREPARE FOR
GRE

Dec, 12/Feb. 6

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open 24 hrs. daily ; %

PHONE 406-1270 happy about t Butaftera lie
BREAKFAST — LUNCH. = DINNER 7 Benth decided the double

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MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT IN GUILDERLAND
KEEP

KEN
RIDDETT
JUDGE

aa rms
QUALIFIED AND EXPERIENCED

*SUNY Albany Graduate
*Adjunct Professor of Law,
SUNY Albany
Hofstra University Law School
*Nassau County [Legal Aid
Society, Law Assistant
*Counsel, Senale Cities Committee
Local Law Practice

RE-ELECT

*Union College, Albany Law School

xperienced Trial Judge

*Private Practice of Law

+ Co-Founder Guilderland Community
Service Sentencing Program

‘Experienced Trial Attorney

CONCERNED AND INVOLVED

*Advisury Council - Guilderland
Community Center
*Viet Nam - Era Veteran

*Founded Nassau County Youth
Board Legal Education Program
*March of Dimes Executive Committee

VOTE ROW B

RE-ELECT JUDGE SIMON KEEP JUDGE RIDDETT

Paid for by the Commitiees for Steve Simon & Ken Riddett for Town Justice

Nay 6

COMING 81

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“| Spot U” Contest

SATURDAY

FOOTBALL GAME 1:30 PM
VICTORY PARTY IN DUTCH QUAD U-LOUNGE
9:30 - 2 AM
Funded by Student Association, Office of Dean of Student Affairs and U.AS.
(prizes donated by Barnes & Noble)

a

Women Nette

by Sharon Cole

The Albany State women’s tennis
team had beautiful weather and an
enjoyable time in their Wednesday
afternoon match at Amherst, but
the Danes came away losers, 7-2,

“We didn’t do very well,’ said
Albany coach Peggy Mann,
“Although it was a lot closer than
the score indicates.

“We really had a good time and
the weather was just perfect,’’ she
continued, ‘Amherst is a very
beautiful school.”

The Danes’ only two wins came
by way of the strokes of Pam
Duchin and Elise Solomon, who
will represent Albany in singles ac-
tion in the State championships at
Rochester this weekend,

Duchin won her match quite con-
Vincingly, 6-4, 6-0, after hitting lobs
for a good portion of the after-
noon,

Solomon's opponent hit very
hard balls which was just to her lik-
ing, and she kept the rallies going to
win 6-4, 6-4,

The biggest loss of the day was
Karen O'Connor, Besides losing her
match, 2-6, 0-6, she also fell and
reinjured her knee

Mann said she thought O'Connor
would have to default midway
through the match, ‘but she game-
ly finished out the play.*;’

Batmen Season
Ends in Oneonta
Twinbill Split

by Mark Hammond

The Albany State baseball team
rounded out the fall season last Fri
day by splitting a doubleheader
With Oneonta, winning the first
game 9-8 and dropping the nightcap
16.14,

Dave Van Osten had his first start
for the Great Danes and responded
With 6 innings of tough pitching,
“Dave's pitching was really
sound," said Albany Coach Vince
Carnevale, ‘We played some shab
by defense, Th

'§ why the score

was so high,"

Mike Gartman relieved in. the
sixth inning,

Albany seized an early lead with a
five-run first inning. Tony
Moschella was the hitting star as he
Tapped out two singles, two doubles
and a solo homer for three RBI's.

“Our offense is as strong ay any
ve see
“Hitting and ba
strongest points,

Dane pitching was at fault in the
second game as Oneonta scored in
every inning en route (0 a 16-14 vic
tor, “Again, the offense was
there,"* noted Carnevale. “Our
bullpen was really lame. We used
four pitchers.”

4 ryone's bat was hot. The 14
uns were a team effort,'* he con
tinued,

The Danes’ record was 6-6-1
Overall this fall, but 3-4-1 against
SUNYAC teams. Looking forward
to the spring season Carnevale
speculated, ‘I think we'll be a big
challenge, but we need to do a lot of
work with our pitchers.’”

“We've really been a terror on
the bases,"’ he continued. ‘Steve
Shucker has been outstanding, As
‘our leadoff man he gets on a lot and
his speed will advance him,"”

“I'm just getting to know the
players, The attitude has been very

commented Carnevale.

erunning are our

good. We can be very solid this j

Sarit
Homecoming Tonight

‘The injury will Keep O'Connor in
Albany this weekend, instead of
making the trip to Rochester,

Other singles losses were by Joan
Phillips, $-7, 1-6; Nancy Light, 6-4,
0-6, 1-6; and Anne Newman, 1-6,
7-6, 2-6, These three set matches
point to how close the competition
really was,

In doubles action, Nany Levine
and Cathy Comerford lost 0-6, 3-6
and Ellen Yun and Diana Marsnak
dropped a very close match, 6-7,
6-3, 3-6,

Sandra Borelle teamed up with
Lynn Ellenberg, who Mann just
brought up from the junior varsity
team, and lost 2-6, 3-6,

The singles matches were played
on clay, the first time the Danes had
ever played on this surface,

“But,” Mann said, “that isn't
any excuse. We should be able to
play on anything,’”

Mann had to make some change:
in her lineup for this weekend's ac:
tion at the States because of the
knee injury to O'Connor. She and
Borelle were to team up in doubles
Play, but now Solomon and Lauren
Isaacs will take the number two
spot for the Danes, Playing in the

Humber one spot will be Light and’
Phillips.

The singles competitions will re-
main the same. Cari Solomon is the
number one player, while Duchin
plays number two, |

‘The action takes place indoors al.)
Rochester and begins at 6:00 p.m,
Friday. The competition will be
rough as the Danes will be facing
Schools from Divisions 1 and II,
rather than those from their own
Division Il,

“The competition will be good
for us," said Mann, “And no mat-
ter what happens we're going to
haye a good time,"”

The Amherst match was the last
for the Danes} they end. the season
at the 4-4 mark, Mann was seeking
her 20th consecutive winning season
4s women’s tennis coach at Albany.

Mann said, ‘I didn’t get my first
losing season, which is nice, but it
isn't exactly a winning season
either,"

The season could have been a
winning one if Monday's match at
Oneonta had been played as
scheduled; as it happened the match
was called because of snow in

Oneonta,

Varsity,

Scott James finished in second
place in a field of 90 runners in the
SUNYAC
Fredonia, His
performance led the Dane harriers
to an unexpected third place show-
Ing, topping last year’s output by
two places, James clocked in with
A time of 25:41, 35 seconds behind
the leader, Bernie Trabucki of

Men's cross cout
Meet last week in.

Fredonia

Albany Student Press SPOFES October 23, er
rs Drop One; States

Begin Today

Intramurals
Bob Miller's tremendous home|
‘un in the bottom of the sixth cap-

Scored three runs and drove in two,

©\D.P.C. boosted their record to

playoff berth,
Sponiored by Budiey

“Weeds strength
wuz areal comfort
tous the nightt

blizzard hit!”

Pappy McCoy, Railroad Surveyor, Chicago & Ouray Railroad.

ee IOO Proof

Jeremiah Weed

Until you needed it,
Jeremiah’s strength wasn't
that obvious, But his spirit
and might were lal
there, ready to help dig a
friend out of whatever trou-
ble he was in. Just woe
betide the body who took
him lightly, >

Jeremiah Weed
than a legacy. It’
toa 100 proof r

s more
a tribute

key blow in C.D.P.C,'s dramatic,
12:11, come-from-behind victory if
Over the Merry Pranksters, Miller i

to help erase an 11-2 deficit.

4-0, virtually guaranteeing them af

= =
THERE IS STILL
4 TIME TO ORDER
> YOUR CLASS RING.
THE ART CARVED SALES
REPRESENTATIVE WILL
BE AT THE BOOKSTORE
ON SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 24th
FROM 11:00am - 5:00pm

.

THE ROSE MAN
DELIVERS

i
!
i
I
i
1
i
—}

GRADUATE STUDENTS

JSC-Hillel is sponsoring a monthly brunch-
discussion group called the JEWISH GRAD.

GROUP, Next brunch, Sunday, October 25th
T3pm. SUNYA Indian Quad private dining room.

Speaker: Dr. Steven Windmueller
The Economic Science and how it Affects

Job Opportunities for Jews.

ANTISEMITISM:
A UNIVERSITY CONCERN

Join us for a panel discussion and become

enlightened about this most important

issue at the JSC Hillel sponsered
Parents Reception: Saturday,

Oct 24th 3 P.M.
Assembly Hall

oo fb

Albany Student Press SPOFtS October 23, 1981

Page Nineteen

=
Women’s

by Bob Bellafiore

Like @ master architect, Amy
Kidder has built women’s soccer at
Albany State.

In 1978, a women's soccer club
was formed {0 complement an
already highly successful men's var-
sity program at the University, The
plan was, in compliance with Ni
tional Colegiate Athletic Asso.

ihe club level for the mandatory

& SPORTS FEATURE

ihiree years and then tuirn varsity.

Low on talent in that first season
of 1978, the team. went winless in six
games and scored a grand to1al of
wo goals,

But then came Kidder, Under her
guidance Albany won six games and
lost only three, with (wo ties. Last
season saw a 6-8 record — Iwo
games under .S00, but three losses
were in double overtime and one
other was by a single goal, And
now, in 1981 — thelr first campaign
asa varsity team, the Dane women
are 9-2, ranked in the top ten of the
Mid-Atlantic Women's Inter
collegiate Soccer Association

and
lon their way to bigger and better
things.

tion (NCAA) rules, fo compete on ly

Soccer —

coaching was nothing new to her
Neither were challenges. Soccer
was

So Kidder attended clinies and
Observed! and most of all learned.
“Basically 1 just watched the
coaches coach and listened to what
they said.” And in three years, she
has built a soccer team from
nothing 10 where it can now serious-

onsider post-season play
“If you would! have told me that
in three years there would be this
kind of turnaround,” Kidder said,
amazed, 1 would've had @ hard
time believing it."

When Amy Kidder talks about
her soccer team her eyes light up.
Her third wedding anniversary is
coming up next month, but you can
tell that the 28-year old coach is also

The Sport That Kidder Built

ing a sport should be fun first, Win-
ning comes later.

“She is very supportive, en-
thusiastic and optimistic,"” said
Senior Cherrice Buel, the only
player left from the pre-Kidder
days. ‘She cares more about the
team than about winning and that
helps us play better.’”

Her team has fun, They laugh at
the little humorous things that ean
happen in a practice and the coach
Jokes right along with them,

But Amy Kidder is the boss and
they know Th another drill
later on, Kidder senses that her
team is not quite going full till, This
is the day before a game and Kidder
Will not stand for lackadaisical play,
even in practice, So she reprimands
them, Before practice, Kidder held

When it comes to getting down
to business,” Kidder said, “they
know there's that line, I don't con-
sider myself an authoritarian and
Say ‘this is it’ and don't ask why,’
I've never put myself in a
caicgory.!*

Bul she is in one select category
= that of a winner. She put herself.
there with three years of patience
and organization, 1 shows in her
practices

Afier their meeting, the team ran
Out onto the field and immediately
began calisthentes under the dire
tion of co-capiains Sue Stern and
Lori'Briggs, They jumped from one
exercise to the next in complet
unison, They were organized, Even
the way they were clad gave the
pearance of a team: gold practice
Jerseys, gold hooded sweatshirts
with cither their Albany soccer
shorts or powder blue warm up
pants, The women looked organtz
ed like @ team should, And when
Kidder, in her Albany women's soc:
cer jacket with 'Coach'!
monogrammed on the frontwalked
onto the field, they knew it was time
for work

The practice was carefully plann
ed, lime-controlled and synchronir~
ed = everything meticulously man:
Ned Out so they could maximize the

@ present, but a future as well.

In the beginning of the season,
Albany started six freshmen — all
products of Kidder's off-season|
work. One, Anna Courtney, has|
already set the team record for
goals (10) and has baffled Kidder
with her skills, "She is just
magical,"” said Kidder,

But Kidder has also shown pa-|
tience, knowing that building a suc-
cessful program takes time, Last
year, despite the 6:8 record, the|
ch Was constantly optimistic
Wins did not come as easily as

There’s a
continuous
challenge.
Damn, I want
to go to the
State’s. These
guys want to go
to National’s,
Damn, they’re

crazy.

Funny, but before she came 102 Bm

Vote for an Albany Amy Kidder never even

4 {Wo hours they had, And everything
for a purpose:

played, never mind coached soccer. =

FRIDAY
DELIVERIES

Off Campus:

13.50  DOZ
7.00 %2DOZ

On Campus:

12,00 DOZ
6.00 % DOZ

FRESH CUT
FLOWERS

1 for 1.25
8 for 2.50
6 for 4.50

CAMPUS
CENTER
MON — FRI

SPONSORED BY THE ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB

Alderman that can
represent you

on the Albany City
Common Council

Some information about
Ken Stokem

Currently

SUNYA Master's degree student in RCO

Chairperson. Committee for Fair Student

Representation in Albany.

A coordinator of campus voter registration
drive :

Independent Democrat

Aldermatic Candidate nominated by In
dependent Albany Party and by Albany
County Republican and Liberal Parties

(A. Bi-Partisan Coalition)

HISTORY OF REPRESENTING

YOUR TIME, THAT'S WHAT IT TAKES TO
HELP IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD
THROUGH PEACE CORPS, TO PUT YOUR
EDUCATION TO WORK IN MEANINGFUL
‘WAYS, TO DEMONSTRATE IMPROVED
FARMING METHODS, TO TEACH, TO
UPGRADE HEALTH SERVICES, TO HELP
MEET DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS, IT'S
TWO YEARS THAT CAN MAKE A WORLD
OF DIFFERENCE. IT'S TIME WELL SPENT
-FOR YOU.

iNFORMATIONAL MEETING: October 26, a
«pm, in the Campus Center, Room 375. See a film,
talk to a former volunteer,
INTERVIEWS: October 27 & 29. Contact Career
Planning & Placement, Admin, Bldg. Room 123,
NOW, for an appointment

APPLY EARLY

STUDENTS AND COMMUNITY

Student Association

Chairperson, Central Council

Central Council representative from Alum
ni Quad. Dutch Quad, and Off-Campus

Chaired and served on many S.A. and

Committees and Councils.

University Government

University Senator, 3 years

Student Affairs Council

Chair and Vice-Chair University Com:
munity Council

Corporate Membership of Faculty Student
Association, Inc. (Now called U.A.S.)

SUNX (State wide) Governance

SUNYA Delegate to SASU, SASU Foun:
dation, and SUNY Student Assembly

Executive Committee, Member

Elect

KEN STOKEM

Your
Alderman
15th WARD
Vote Tuesday
November 3,
1981

Treasurer

SUNYA Campus Services and Programs
Coordinater

Albany Student Press

Writer and reporter

SUNYA Student Activities Office

and Campus Center

Graduate Student Advisor, 1980-81

United Way of Northeastern New

York

Allocations Panel, Member

Volunteer to help call: Ken at

Sponsored by SUNYA Students
for Stokem for Alderman

If you would
have told me
that in three
years there
would be this
kind of
turnaround, I
would have had
a hard time
believing it.

the classic example of on-the-job,

S
pick Up. skill-wis
“but coaching-wis
than people think
der, it was a ch
At 24, she
Women’s colle;

difficult game 10
* Kidder said
it’s a lot harder
For Amy Kid!
ke.

was coaching a
n (full of
players only two years her junior)

and prior to her appointment at
Albany she had been the womer
athletic director at Franklin Pic

tae

ih love with her players. Mention
Albany women's soccer and Kidder
looks as if sheds about to burst with
excitement She
cannot hold it back no matter how

and enthusiasm
fhard she tries, Just watching one of
her practices lets you know that
The lower practice fields of the
he ones closest to Western
are still plush and bright
om thie

campus
Ay

green — not yet suffering

Just how! conditions that overtake
© field that has been trampled on,
daily for over a month, It is the dayg

before a game and Kidder hay h

Work drill. While some coach
Would rather stand off to the side c
the field with their arms folded and
watch, Kidder participates. Here
the role of the
defender, An accomplished athlete
in her own right, Amy Kidder will
not stand around while her players
work. On the field, she is one of

them.
Somebody makes an) error and
she corrects it, “This should be
fun,!? she says so everybody can
hear
That is the thing that makes her
different from most coaches. Play

{cam working on a ball control ande

@ (eam meeting — something about
enforcement of team policies
© them some inner

“I just ga
feelings,*? Kidder said immediately

heeds to be
said Lisa

wh
(authoritarian) she is.”
France, a {wo-year player who is
out for the season with a leg injury
is serving as an assistant to Kid
der. "She's the best coach I've had:

in that respect. She
Is to be told

When a team nei

something.”

Shic has stacks of drills for any.

Situation,’? said France.
something is not working, she has.
something else to work on il, She's
prepared for everything, The work,
she puis into il is incredible.”

‘One of the incredible things Kid:
dor has done is bring talent to the
Great Danes, In the pre-Kidder
year, the ones that played Albany
women's soccer were not of the
realest skill. But through vigorous:
recruiting in the off-season, Kidder
has lured some Class A talent to

Albany giving the program not only

iliey did the season betore, but Kide
dor was looking ahead, working for

A great season,”’ Kidder

said
‘And 1981 may prove to be even
uroater. Albany has already beaten
Ivo Division I teams (LeMoyne
nd St, Lawrenice) and has dropped
only’ (wa games, both to. tedms
ranked aliead of them,
“Every walne at this point Is go>
in to be a (ough one," she said,
“Every game is key.?
Hut with every game comes
for Albany and

continuous
" Kidder said, “Damp, 1
want (0 go (0 the State's
(championships), These guys want
to go {0 the National's, Damn
they zy.)
Not really
and

They are just as en-
thelr

exclted a

thusiastic
coach

“1 don't think 1 had any
reat expectations — just to make
them competitive,’” she continued
“But now I'm’ getting some delu-
sions of grandeur, We
ep those delusions in

sure we
check,"

Delusions? Hardly
hound team with tale
{elligent coach like Amy Kidder
does nol get deluded, They just
zn,

Keollege in New Hampshire, 0

Intramural
Athlete of the
Week
Nominations from
Captains Due on
Monday Before
1:00P.M.
in CC329

J

or Marsha Bienvel

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COIFFURES | sti aisanv
OEAN PAUL! ni in) sn or 8
COPFURES | ore tien
EAN PAUL
COIFFURES:

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(818) 463-6691
15 per cent discount with student ID til
New Year's Eve except with Jean C. Paul

the only Genuine French

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used to in NYC Our stall is

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Need Blood?

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akties Pastas ee ee

Women Booters Beaten in Sudden Death, 2-1

by Mark Gesner

Although the women's varsity
soccer. team has dropped its past
two games, the squad abounds with
great pride and optimism. Perhaps
@ reason for this apparently unusual
altitude, is the fact that with a 9-2
record, the Danes are almost
assured ofa spot in the State Tour-

nament — a goal they set for
themselves at the beginning of the
season,

However, more importantly, it is
fa sense of dignity which enables the
women booters to be so “up,”
Coach Amy Kidder explains, ‘‘we
have had a real good season, We
Played well GEN We played hard —

EO)

‘The playoff bound Albany

wick, decided In a shootout, 2-1. (P

late women booters lost a close game (o F

fo: Will Yurman)

‘and We will continue to do s0,””

It would be difficult for any
coach to ask much more of her
players.

In spite of the great altitude, the
women did suffer some disappoint-
ment this past Tuesday, when they
lost at home against Hartwick, 2-1.
Calling the game ‘close"” is a in-
Justice, but it must suffice for now,

At the end of regulation play,
neither team had found the net
Following this intense scoreless bat:
tle, each squad recorded one goal in
the two 10 minute overtimes.
Freshman Anna Courtiey, who
leads the Danes in goals (11) and
assists (4), was the player to pul
Albany on the scoreboard.

As a result of the tie, the contest
had to be decided with penalty kicks
— a best of five situation, After
Laura Johnson and Sue Slagel both
scored, Albany was up 2-0 with on-
ly two players yet to go on either
team, But both Hartwick par-
ticipants scored, while neither of
the Dane women could find 5
belween the pasts — the game went
into sudden death overtime.

Goalkeeper Lori Briggs
Of the net to blast the first’ goal in
for the Danes. The Hartwick player
then decided to give Briggs some of
her own medicine, and the match
was tied once more, After a set of

ne oul

October 23, 1981

‘Sport Kidder
Built

Page 19

Va

‘Women's varsit;
‘Men's varsity c}
Women’s varsity’
Men's varsity football vs, Norwich

Men's varsity soccer vs. Vassar

e Saturday,

Saturday, 10/24 Homecoming Day game on University Field, 1:30

t
10/24 at Siena

Albany, 12:00
gers. Newark
‘New Paltz, 12:00

10/24 on field behind Dutch, 3:00, 0,

misses form both squads, Albany
erred again, while the opponent
made a successful conversion, Hart-
wick, who is ranked number 14 in
the nation, was the vicior,

Yes, the game was
“elose.'*

‘Adding to the Dane misery for
the day, was the loss of co-captain
fe Stern, who received a knee in-
jury and could be out for the re
mainder of the season. Stern, who
“made things happen’? according
to Kidder, will be greatly missed in

indeed

the midfield,

Now, with three games left in the
regular season, the women booters
are primarily playing for the all im-
portant seeding arrangement in the
State Tournament. The squad faces
Plattsburgh (8-2) at home today at

00, and Springfield away on Mon-
day

Kidder's outlook is, of course, an
optimistic one, She
‘We can and have risen to the occa-
sion, We will make a real good
showing in the States."

comments,

7

by Larry Kahn

Every time Albany and Norwich
have met on the football field it has
been a very physical game. Tomor-
row's Homecoming Day matchup
should be no different.

The two teams despise
other.

Jon both sides,” said Albany assis
tant coach Tony D'Errico.

& SCOUTING REPORT

ie Danes Tea
almost
dogfight.

the series 4

streak,
venges

but the Cadets
ice on their minds,

Dane attack, limiti

13-0,

Norwich led in the

dramatic touchdown play, 28-25,
Sti
flicted

was enough to

the last three games of the season.

pate on
sock’em game
. “It always is with Nor

notional team,"

Norwich also has momentum on
their side. Last week they nipped a
tough St. Lawrence squad, 19-16,

each

“10s pretty much a grudge match

every game has been a
year Albany charged expect from him,"
into Norwich with a four-game win head coach Bob Ford,
had
Their Albany record, in 19 attempts. He
formidable 4-4 defense stifled the guided the Danes to two fourth
ig them to 164 quarter touchdowns after
yards total offense, Norwich won

Two years ago the Danes gave
them the motive for revenge in one start from scratch on Saturday, but
lof the most physical battles ever he'll have to contend with the Nor-
waged on University Field, Both wich 4-4 defense that shut down the
squads had playoff aspirations, Albany offense last year. This
lal moments of though, the Cadets
the game, but Albany won on a three returning lettermen from that

a's the same type of game
aturday—a
said

very aggressive and

hhey've been a hot and cold
ballelub,"” noted D'Errico, who
scouted the Cadets, “They put it all
together against St. Lawrence and
Jooked like a championship team

The Danes, on the other hand,
have lost their early season mom
tum, Last Week they suffered their
Second selback of the season as a
fourth quarter surge was not
enough to overcome Cortland’s ear
ly lead, Sophomore quarterback
Tom Roth, filling in for the injured
Tom Pratt, was impressive

bul however, in the 20-14 defeat,

“Tom Roth did all that we could
sald All

Roih completed 10 passes, an

{fering
from poor field position for the
ater part of his first varsity start.
Roth will get another chance to

ar,

have only

defensive squad, Ford isn't too sure

the beating the Cadets in- that will make much of a dif-
end the
Danes’ playoff chances as they lost

ferei

“They sort of clone people up
there," he said, “They're all fairly
good sized, strong, tough and they
‘ome after you from the opening
aun to the final whistle,?*

The Cadets are strongest at the
tackles and linebackers, but last
week freshman safety Jerry

O'Connor was named co-ECAC
Rookie of the Week after coming
off the bench in the second quarter.

down a sure touchdown pass in the
end zone with two minutes left in
the game,

On offense the Danes will
edunter with a game plan similar to
the one they used against Buffalo,
whio also employs the 4-4 defense.
In that contest Albany displayed a
Very balanced attack, They mixed
up thelr plays well and passed short
to their backs as well as downfield
to the ends,

But last year the Danes also triew
every trick they knew against the

Cadets, and nothing worked,

“We're going to have to move

the ball better last

DIErrico noted,

than year,"

line can
tage

On offense Norwich sports a new
look this season with only three
returning lettermen and a new for-

mation, They ran the wishbone last
year, but opted for the ‘I? forma:
tion this year.

“They run basically the same

plays, just out off different forma-
tion,"’ D'Errico pointed out.

Quarterback Dave O'Neil calls
and is

the signals aut of the *
completing just over 40 percent of
his passes.

“But that’s misleading,"
tioned Norwich head coach Barry
Mynter, “We had some problems
early in the year because we're run-
ning a new offense.
dropped. He has the potenti
an excellent passe

ome balls were

Splitting the tailback duties are

Wilkinson and
Bill Kenney,

veteran Todd
freshman Jim Earl.

who has been the starting tight end

“One of the keys
to the game will be if our offensive
ile their defensive fron-

caus

tobe

Danes Set to Battle Norwich in Grudge Match

returning player, is the team's
leading receiver
On defense Albany has to

Tegroup afler their sub-par perfor~
mance against Cortland, The 20
points they gave up was twice their
previous high against Union, The
Danes will also be playing without
the services of veteran safety Bruce
Collins who separated his shoulder:
in the game

But Mynter isn’t going to let one
poor performance fool kim. He has
seen how brutal the Albany defense

an be.

“They play the 4-4 with reckless!
abandon,” he noted,

“The wishbone offense {s also
very physical by its nature,"
Mynter continued, ‘1 think it will
be a very physical gam

“After their performance against
St, Lawrence they're more than a
test for us," said D'Errico.

“They will haye no trouble get-
ting up for us," Ford agreed, “‘and
I feel that we will have no trouble
getting ready for them,"

‘The Danes will take on the Norwich Cadets tomorrow in the Homecom

reg trailing 16-7 ac the half to even O'Connor intercepted two passes, the last two years, is now the ee s
pein record’at gc aehin gallu aliorasand.valiea fultoasies aleve" Spatitar ancthier ig Day game on University Field,(Photo; Alan Calem)

by Steven Gosset

Many U.S. reporters have work-
ed the better part of the last (wo.
weeks in the Middle East, covering,
the assassination of Egyptian presi
dent Anwar Sadat and the death of
Israeli leader Moshe Dayan, But for
ABC News correspondent Barbara
Walters, covering the deaths was a
“personal assignment.’
As the first American to inter

View Sadat after he kicked the
E Soviet Union out of Egypt in 1972,

and considering Dayan a ‘close
personal friend," Walters focused
on the Middle East in her specch
Saturday night in the University,
Gym,

“That these two men died within
10 days of cach other is symbolic,
Ironic, telling, tragic. . . If Sadat

Newswoman Barbara Walters
Dayan most Imaginative thinker

‘was the most imaginative thinker in
Egypt, then Dayan was the most

imaginative thinker in Israel
Walters said,
Walters) called the Sadat

assassination a symbol of “much
wider discontent . . . It was very
organized, highly planned and
Highly trained,!”

When asked later if she thought
there had been any warning signals
before the assassination, Walters
replied, “1 believe there was (about
10 days before the actual assassina-
tion) although Sadat’s wife denied
ito me when I made a private con
dolence call,”

Wallers also spoke of religion as
the sole essence of unrest in. the
Middle East, as well as an integral
part of the peace process,

The Mid-East is the Focus of Walters

“So many people feel God is on
their side,'” she said: Sadat's
beliefs, she added, made him
unafraid of the ramifications of his
actions, Walters quoted Sadat’s
famous statement that, “God will

*not take me one minute before it is

time,

Walters called Egypl’s new presi-
deni, Hosni Mubarak, ‘temperate,
Sensitive, and intelligent.
However, she prefaced her asses
Ment with a note of caution,

“If Mubarak continues Sadat’s
Policies and he says he will, then he
Will face the same problems that
Sadat di

Walters also. discussed
Castro, Gilda Radner's ‘Baba
Wawa" imitation and the role of
Women in journalism

idel

She was impressed by Castro,
saying, ‘‘there are few people where
the force of a personality is so
strong,"

She was less pleased, however,
with Radner's rather ‘Savage imita-
tion of her.

“It pained me at first. . . what
amazed me was that she sits the way
1 sit Then I found out that the
woman who did the make-up on the
‘Today Show’ for about 10 years,
also did Gilda,’*

In regards to the growing number
Of women in journalism, Walters
said, “it gives me great pleasure,
It’s easier for (women) now,

“But you Won't fave the excite-
Ment of climbing over the moun-
tains that I have," she said,

State Universi

of New York at Albany

ALB,
STOBENT
PRESS

copyright © 1981 by Ti Ainasy Stupint Press Conroration

Tuesday

October 27, 1981

Volume LXVIIT

Two Groups Take NRC to Court a

by Elizabeth Reich:

Ina move unprecedented in U.S.
legal history, the New York Public
Interest Research Group (NYPIRG),
and the Union of Concerned Scien
tists (UCS) are suing the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) for
failing to provide ‘reasonable

have not been correcied."*

NYPIRG and UCS filed suit
against the NRC Osiober 9 in the
U.S. Second Circuit Court of Ap:
peal

The Federal En y Manage
ment Agency (FEMA) reviewed the
evacuation plins submitied for ap

assurance that adequate protective proval by the licensees of Ind

iN Point, the release stated, and fu

measures can and will be tak

nid
the event of a radiological emergen- deficiencies in the emergency
ey." at the Indian Point nuclear evacuation plans for the four coun
plants in Buchanan, N.Y. the Indian Point

. accor ties surroundiny

ding 10.4 NYPIRG press release, plants: Westchester, Rockland.
NYPIRG attorney Mel Goldberg Orange, and Putnam

said, “our basic charge is that the However, the NRC decided April
August 1981 revisions were at 24 10 allow Indian Poini’s con:

bitrary and were not in accordance sullants four moniliy 10 resolve

NRC's) own niles and
because plans in fact

Protesters Will Stage Rally
at Nestle on Halloween

with (the thelr prsblems.

statutes Afier the four months, the NRC

by Barbara Schindler plained
A Halloween rally at Nestles Sommer furth
headquarters in White Plains is Halloween was chosen for the rally

‘cause Nestles candy sales are at a

planned to draw public attention 10,

claims that the peak on that day, “We

company iy want to
Uinethically, marketing infant for show the world that Nesties gives
mula in third world countries, eaus- tricks, not treats,”

ing death to millions of babies, ae Sommer charges that Nestle

Which controls $0 percent of the
market, is the biggest offender,
Caroline Campion, Communica:
Nesiles,
disagreed, "The accusations of IN:
FACT are unfounded
have spent

cording to organizer Scot Sommer
The rally is co-sponsored by Peo:
SUNYA's hunger
awareness group, and Infant For
mula Action Coalition (INFACT),
Nestles gives free samples of the

ple and Food,

tions Director for
They are a
formula to new mothers in third lie, We millions of
dollars on infant nutrition research:
1am not saying that some of the
other 25 companies selling formula
don’t use unethical marketing prac
tices, but Nestles does not and never
Campion added
Ybviously Caroline
has never been in a third world
esponded INFACT Na:

world countries, telling them it will
help make thei
strong like American children, said
INFACT National Rally coor
dinator Sommer, These mothers,

babie

Wanting to do what is best for their ha

babies, proceed to give the formula Campion
to. their

knowledge of sterilizat

infants. without proper

joh methods, country,"

Furthermore, Sommer said, most tional Chair Douglas Johnson:
of these women cannot afford the “She never seen a baby dic
proper amount of formula and so from malnuttition — 1 have and 1
dilute it to make it last longer fecl very passionately because of
By the time they realize their it
baby is dying of malnutrition and “Our critics fove to say how
infection, their own breast milk is we're only in it for the money,"
dried up. As a result, their said Campion. “But that doesn't
die a painful and unnecessary death 1 ense, How could we make
— “Boitle Baby Disease," he ex- money off of people who have

ies in commu
p
emergency unis

Furthermore, the

agreed the deficiencies were
‘resolved satisfactorily,’ But
NYPIRG contends that most Of the

serious problems were nol corrected:

by the new plans.

Aning the deficiencies NYPIRG.
cited in its peti ion are the shortayes
and

adequacies of equipment for
monitoring ‘
Also char

tive cmisbio

Hons procediires,
in respect 19 mobile
but including ih
oramency relay of information
NYPIRG and UCS claim, that

Hicularly

moyt sirens for the general public

stalled and untested:

Slate, the revised plans have similar
continued on page thirteen

een HE anion OO]

me

ae
nai

Roca

Viturally no money?"
“Even if Nestles sells one ci

someone who will use it for three
weeks," Johnson explained, “it's

to their economic advantage
because they are in largely
populated areas with a lol of

children.””

Campion said “about 85 percent
Of (Nestles) formula is sold in urban.
areas, Where it can be properly us-

Jobnson countered that “the
worst conditions in the world are in
the urban slums of the third
world,

INFACT bas offered 16 publical
ly debate the issue with Nestles but
in the past debates with us Nesiles

continued on puge five

contest
vironmental
(EnCon) issuance of permits to the
developers of the

papers det
vironmental per
Crossgates Co., developer of the
mall

Busi”
campy
Washingion Ave,, has been the sub-
ject
developers
groups

sought permits four years ago.

NYPIRG Vice-Chair Jodi DeVido
The evacuation route is

Tynwvorkables™ preparatio

Judge Delays Citizen’s Suit

horns Lol Maliabonl

Against Controversial Mall

by Mure Schwartz

Judsment in & suit filed by an
i community group seeking to
the Department of En:
Conservation’s

contioversial

Crossgates Mall way reserved three
weeks by @ state Supreme Court
jud

On Ootober 23, Supreme Court

judge Con Cholakis granted EnCon
@ three week slay soil may submit

nding {ls Issuance of en:
s to the Pyramid

The group bringing the suil, Con-

cerned Citizens Against Crossgates
(CCAS),
cedures used by EnCon in approv-
ing the
permits for
mall,

is challenging the pro-

necessary. environmental
construction of the

The mall, proposed for the “Pine
area west of the SUNYA
byetween Western Ave, and

of controversy between the
and environmental
since the developer first

In June, EnCon originally refus-
ed 10 grant the five environmental

permits because air quality. sai
dards would not be met by the traf
fie paticrn in the
spokesperson
Pyra

plans
ings and 17,000

of the developers

ma
posted,

Concerned
Crossgates said her group feels the
permit validation was illegal.
June 25, Commissioner (Robert)
Flack (of EnCon)
permits, This effect
hearings.
things into his own
alloy

rewrite the proposal

unusual
before they are valid. ‘It speeds the
whole process up,

‘area, EnCon’
John Moore said
nid Crossgates revised its
Following 80 days of hear-
es of transcript,
favor

I decision was made

The permits were issued Oct. $

With the condition that they not be
valid until the state Department of

ansportation reviewed traffic

plans for the proposed $85 million

and construction bonds
Rhonda Childs, President of the

Citizens Against

“On

not issue any
rely closed the
The commissioner 100k
hands and
(Crossgates) to
It's like fails
then being given the

id them

ing a test,

answers and being allowed to take
the test ov

again.’
Moore contends there is nothing
about. issuing permits

he said,

Metadata

Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Image for license or rights statement.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 24, 2018

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