/ Sports Revamped Tennis Squad Has A Different Look

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/ Sports
Budget Request Being Considered
Tuesday, September 11, 1979
DOB Holds Hearings
Revamped Tennis Squad Has A Different Look
by Paul Schwartz
Turn your attention, if you will, to
the Albany State men's tennis team
of a year ago. Remember the 11-2
fall and spring record, the second
place finish in the SUNYAC, and
the triumph over the powerful
Division 1 Massachusetts. Fond
memories, all.
Now, return to the present, to the
1979 Albany tennis squad. Look at
all the new players. See that only
three of them ore back from last
year's' team. Cringe when you hear
that four of the Danes top five
players arc among the missing.
Be surprised when you realize that
this year's squad might do as well as
last years.
It's true. Despite the changes,
Albany could again have another
strong tennis team. And there arc a
great deal of changes that will be
evident when the Danes open up
their fall season at Onconta
tomorrow.
At the top of the list is Bob Lewis,
the Danes long-time coach. Today,
Lewis will undergo an operation on
a ruptured disc in his lower back,
and will be laid up for a substantial
period of time. In his absence, the
tennis team will be coached by
John Lieberman, a senior who last
year was the manager of the squad.
As far as personnel goes, the
Danes lost a bundle. Foremost is
Paul Fcldman, who was the main
man on the Albany tennis scene for
the past four years. As a player, he
had a lock on the top spot in the
lineup, and as a leader, he always
could call on his superlative play to
serve as an example.
Graduation also claimed Albany's
four and five singles players, Mike
Fcrtig and Andy Antosyk, but
perhaps the loss that will hurt the
most is the departure of Lane
Lcrner. As a freshman a year ago,
Lerner teamed with Fcldman to
form the Dane's number-one
doubles team, and Lcrner also had
an outstanding rookie season as the
third singles player. However,
Lcrner chose to transfer to the
University of Pennsylvania, where
the level of tennis competition is at
the Division I level.
So instead, the revamped Danes
will feature one established star
performer, one upstart freshman
louded with talent, and a supporting
cast that could possibly represent
more depth than the 1978 squad.
"Individually, we don't have as
many stars, like Fcldman and
Lcrner, as we had last year," said
new coach Lieberman. "But our
depth is belter. Last year, we lost
some matches because we didn't
have the depth."
seemed to gain confidence, and tied
The star that should shine the
the match with a 6-4 decision. The
brightest for Albany this season is
third set was all Lcvine. Spraying
Larry Linett. After an exceptional
winning shots to all areas of the
campaign at number-two singles a
court, Lcvine dominated the final set
year ago, Linett assumes the top
and took the match, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2.
position that he would have
"There was not much pressure on
occupied on most other teams. This
me," Levine said. "I knew Larry was
seemed to be the most obvious of
a senior, and that the pressure would
moves until a newcomer emerged to
be on him. 1 just went out and hoped
challenge Linett.
for the best."
Barry Lcvine, a freshman from
Despite the results of the match,
Roslyn Heights, joined the Danes
Lieberman stated that Linett would
with impressive credentials. He was
play number-one singles. The two
the number-one singles player on his
will team up to play first doubles
high school team for two years, won
Playing third singles will be
the New York State Doubles title,
Freshman Fred Oabcr, who,
and most recently, captured first
according to Lieberman, "is right
place in the Hempstead Lake Open,
around Levine's level — there's not
a tournament made up chiefly of
men older than Lcvine. Upon too much separating them."
arriving at Albany, Levine was Another first-year Albany player,
slated for the number-two spot Lawrence Eichcn, holds down the
fourth singles spot. Experience is
behind Linett.
present at number five, where junior
However, Levine has been so
Dcrrlttrf"Ruben figures to be, and
impressive in pre-season play that he
rounding out the top players arc two
proved a formidable opponent for
more freshmen, Dave Lcrner and
Linett. The battle for first singles
reached a climax of sorts yesterday, local product Joel Conklin.
"I think the key to the season will
when the two squared off to
determine who should hold the top be our doubles play," commented
position. Linett jumped all over his Lieberman. "We really have to work
younger teammate in the first set of (in doubles, because we don't have
their match, and won, 6-3. As an . those three guaranteed doubles wins
even second set progressed, Levine that we had last year."
•r
Budget official Harold Brink said the DOB will make adjustments.
$55 million dollars for SUNYA during 1980S!
Photo: Bob Uonard
Albany State men's tennis team. Linett was the Dane's number two singles player last year, and
Is expected to step into the top spot in the Albany line-up. (Photo: Karl Chan)
Netters Begin Season Tomorrow
Denenmark Remains Top Player
The Albany State women's tennis
team lost a large number of players,
including their nuniber-two singles
player, from last yeur's fine squad.
But with their best player returning,
and aided by strong additions to the
lineup, the prospects seem bright for
another winning season.
Last year, the netters performed
well enough to hold an 8-3 record for
the fall season, then slipped a bit,
and recorded a 3-2 mark in the fall.
One of the players gone from that
team is Jane Maloy, the second
singles player and a member of the
first doubles team.
H o w e v e r , buck is Lisa
Denenmark, who women's tennis
coach Peggy Mann calls "my
number one player, because nobody
Amy Icinberg and Sandie Borrelle
has beaten her." A year ago,
are coach Mann's talented young
Denenmark teamed \sith Maloy to
win the consolation match in trio.
I he team scrimmages Siena
doubles of the Mid-Atlantic States
Collegiate Tournament. On this tomorrow, and Mann said she plans
year's squad, Denenmark has a firm to "try everybody out" in an attempt
to arrange some sort of lineup hefore
hold on the first singles spot.
The remaining positions remain Friday's opening match at
undecided at this stage of the season. Itinghamlon.
"It's too bad we have to play
There are eight returning players,
including last year's most improved Binghamton first," Mann said.
player, Anne Newman. Other "They should be our toughest
veterans arc Michelle Guss, Jessica mutch. I feel we have a better team
Lee, Cathy Thaler, Manila than last year's, but all the colleges
Wcrtheimcr, Sue Bard and Huidec have improved teams. Our schedule
is harder than last year's, because we
Lecmetz,
dropped all the teams that we beat
In addition, Mann feels she hus an
easily."
ace in the hold with three
•-Paul Schwartz
"outstanding freshmen that give us
great possibilities," Elise Solomon,
Vol. LXVI No. 30
"This area reflects inflationary
trends such as increases in minimum
wage, utilities, telephone, and
gasoline rates," Brink said. "Funds
needed for library acquisitions and
academic programs, as well us the
salaries of six new faculty and six
new support staff positions, added
$1,000,000 to the budget."
According to Brink, the DOB
does not approve 95 to 100 percent
of the programmatic issues in the
budget.
"Only those programs given top
priority arc approved by the DOB,"
he said. "If a program does not get
approved, it dies."
Because of New York State's
fiscal environment, SUNYA has not
been expanding programs and has
had to eliminate some positions and
programs. Brink, however,
considers SUNYA fortunate to have
received support from a few selective
positions and programs.
Top priority programs for 1980continued on page ten
September 14, 1979
Campus Apt. Complex Possible
Depends On $5M HUD Loan
the large number of students who
12th Federal Register, concerning
"eligible housing and related dining are "inadequately housed."
"The definition of 'inadequately
facilities to alleviate a current severe
housed' was based on many factors,"
housing shortage."
Kirchner was relieved of many of said Kirchner. "Perhaps the most
his duties for several weeks, so'thnl objective is the response to an Off
lie could devote full time to Campus Housing Office questionpreparing a loan proposal that will naire last year. There were questions
be acceptable to SUN Y Central and like 'do you think that you arc
would place SUNYA in a favorable presently living in an apartment that
I is in violation of the City of Albany
position for receipt of the loan,
campus. They then request HUD to ' housing code?'"
Others considered "inadequately
receipt of the loan.
Brown and Kirchner demon- housed" include those living in
strated the severity of SUNYA's increased occupancy rooms on
housing situation by documenting campus, in temporary facilities
(lounges, RA suiterooms, or
temporarily staying with friends off
campus), and in certain Albany
neighborhoods.
"By not very objective criteria
we've determined some areas of the
city arc less desirable than others,"
said Kirchner.
Also included in the group arc
students who live in areas which
require them to commute long
distances to reach SUNYA each
day.
"We have students who live in
Hudson. We have students living in
Cilens Falls," said Kirchner. "Wc
also have students who live in
Schenectady and think that's far,
even though it's only 10 miles away.
With the energy situation and the
gas crunch, we've determined that 25
miles is a reasonable limit."
Prescription for nagging housing crunch: One federal agency plus $5 million.
Build * two -story buildings, stir in 440 students and mix well.
Photo: Boh Leonard
Lisa Denenmark returns for the Albany State women's tennis team as tl,
number one singles player. (Photo: Karl Chan)
fixed costs ($2,570,000) and
program increases ($1,000,000).
Fixed costs include such areas as
automatic salary adjustments and
price increases.
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
by Aron Smith
An on campus apartment
complex may be fully constructed,
ready for 40 SUNYA undergraduate and graduate students to move
into by the fall of 1981.
It all depends on a loan from the
federal Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD).
According to Dean for Student
Affairs Neil Brown, SUNYA has
applied for a $5 million College
Housing Program loan in an
attempt to ease the student housing
shortage that occurs each fall.
HUD's offer appeared in the July
Barry Lcvine (left) and Larry Linett follow through during their infra-squad match yesterday
afternoon. Levine, a freshman, has heen challenging Linett for the first singles position on the
by Laura Fiorentino
SUNYA's $55 million dollar
budget request for 1980-81 has been
sent to the State Division of Budget
(DOB) for consideration, according
to SUNYA budget official Harold
Brink.
"The DOB will hold hearings in
October with all SONY officials to
make adjustments in the requests
according to available funds," he
said.
The $ 5 5 , 1 4 0 , 0 0 0 request
represents an increase of $3,570,500
over last year. The largest area of
increase falls into two categories
Brown and Kirchner determined
that nearly 2000 SUNYA students
are inadequately housed, and that
1,300 of these would apply for new
housing if it were available on
campus. They then requested HUD.
deal with one-third of these, arriving
at the 440 occupancy figure.
There will be considerable
competition for the loans, as HUD is
making available a total of only $95
A Solution To Vandalism
Neil C. Brown lias a pplied for federal loans <» build on campus garden apis.
A serious attempt to ease the annual housing crunch,
Photo: Boh
million. Brown said he knows of two
other SUNY schools, SUNY/Binghamton and SUC Purchase, which
have applied for the loans.
"There have been considerable
negotiations as to what sort of
h o u s i n g deficit wc could
demonstrate, an absolutely provable
deficit," said Assistant Dean for
Student Affairs Henry Kirchner.
The most important question by
HUD concerns whether SUNYA
will need increased student housing
facilities in the future.
"We will continue in the future to
house a large portion of our student
population,"said Kirchner. "It's not
a momentary fluke, a quirk of
enrollment. It's a constant thing we
can demonstrate on a 10 year basis."
In demonstrating long-term
needs, Brown and Kirchner used
1978 as a base year, while reaching
back to enrollment statistics for
1972.
"They wanted to know the total
State UnlnnHy ol New York at Albany
&
Leonard
full-lime enrollment," said
Kirchner. "I think they believe partlime students tend to be local people
who live at home."
By 1981, Kirchner expects to
house 55% of SUNYA's full-time
enrollment. This represents an
increase of 1% to 2% over recent
years. He expects this moderating
trend to continue throughout the
eighties.
Brown and Kirchner explained
the proposed housing project as
consisting of 8 garden apartmentstyle buildings of 2 floors each. Each
building would contain 55 bed
spaces.
"As wc discussed this with the
Residents Office, with the Off
Campus Housing Office, with (Vice
President for University Affairs
Lewis P.) Welch, wc came up with
this concept."
Both Brown and Kirchner utilized
the Off Campus Housing Office's
continued on page ten
SD#
lirtfcr U*m*i MudM m— Cwponllen
P. 3
Strauss ended a four-day mission to the two countries and A
being berated by inmates. The inmates lectured the youths,
flew from Tel Aviv to Cairo to pick up some members of his
using vile street language, about prison life. Under the
Lifers program, which has been duplicated in several states, delegation before flying home to Washington. Maintaining
the youths were treated as prisoners and were told of prison the upbeat tone that characterized his public statements in
violence and homosexuality in an effort to scare the juveniles both countries, Strauss told an airport news conference in
into a "straight" life. Jim Landano, president of the Lifers, Tel Aviv that he had graduated from a feeling of "hope and
said the parents signed consent forms which told them the optimism" to one of "certainty and inevitability that our
children would be subjected to the harsh'realities of prison search for peace will be successful. "I leave with a spirit of
WASHINGTON (AP) The House rejected an attempt life. "The kids can't get throught the front door without that renewed confidence and determination," he said. "I will
Wednesday to require 18-year-old men to register for the slip from their parents," he said,
report to President Carter that Egypt and Israel are
military draft, something they haven't iiad to do since 1975.
continuing their efforts in a positive and constructive
By a vote of 252-163, House members turned down a plea
manner." Strauss visited the two Mideast peace partners to
^^
Uj,llliii.l. u u a u j . ..
,.a>.»« ..... :.. . . .1
: - ,I I . . : c . , I
1 I.M
by Rep, G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery, D-Miss., to require all
Hurricane
KnOCks
(jUt
P o w e r
hear a report on the summit meeting in Haifa, Israel last
18-year-old men in the country to register beginning on Jan.
"
week between Egyptian'President Anwar Sadat and Israeli
2, 1981. The House voted 259-155 to take the draftPrime Minister Menachcm Begin.
registration measure out of a $42.1 billion weapons Hi'! and MOBILE, Ala.(AP) Hurricane Frederic, paralleling the
instead directed President Carter to conduct a stud; n tl« path of Hurricane David Camillc a decade ago pushed onto
matter. No young man has been required to registi
land Wednesday night darkening two-thirds of this
military since March 31,1975. The last draftee was indu^. d Alabama port city and threatening it with towering tides,
in June 1973. The proposal, which the House rejected
torm, which packed 130 mph winds near its center,
Wednesday, to renew draft registration, but not the draft
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Two Hell's Angels were given
c(] , o r n a d o e s a | o n g l h e G u | f C o a s l a s „ k n o c k c d o u ,
maximum sentences on first-degree robbery convictions at
itself, had been approved in May be the House ArmedI
;„ i n Mobile. Other power
a m ) s o m c ,cl
honc
the Albany County Cou. t house on Eagle Street Wednesday.
Services Committee. Carter has opposed renewing draft o
^
> ^
^
^
^
J
f
A rumored onslaught of Hell's Angels Motorcycle Club
registration. James T. Mclntyrc. director of Carter s Office
rf
c ^ , l o n n . r e | a | e d jnjurjcs A b o u [
m
m
nju
members at the courthouse never came about.
of Management and Budget, had told House leaders: It is people from four coastal states were evacuated. National
Judge John J. Clync handed out a sentence of I21/; to 25
not necessary to impose this burden on our nation and its Guardsmen were alerted in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana
years in prison to Charles "Grumpy" Lanier, Jr.. 28, while
youth."
and Mississippi. About 15,000 of the Mobile metropolitan
his co-defendant, Thomas Alaxanian. 26, got a sentence of
area's 300,000 residents were crowded into 20 Red Cross
shelters. Thousands more left low-lying areas, but some 8/, to 25 years. The Troy men were both convicted on Aug. 3
byan Albany Countyjury of robbing a Berne man last year.
decided to stay at their homes and ride out the storm's
Police informants had said the sentencing would be
battering, Forecaster Miles Lawrence at the National
HACKENSACK,N.J.(AP) "Scared Straight," the Emmy Hurricane Center in Miami said the center of the storm
disrupted by Hell's Angels hoping lo.show support for their
Award-winning documentary about a prison program to would most likely sweep ashore shortly after midnight
fellow club members. But only a handful of bikers were in
discourage youngsters from crime, has resulted in a $10 Wednesday. But he warned thai because of the way a
court lor the sentencing, and no motorcycles were visible
million lawsuit charging that the film's producers misled hurricane whirls, iis most deadly winds are just east of the
near the courthouse.
juveniles into participating. Maurice Frager, a Jersey City storm's center. At least one tornado leaped out of the storm
County sheriff's deputies guarded every exit in the
attorney representing nine children who took part in the and touched down in the Baldwin County community of
courthouse and seven uniformed deputies were stationed in
documentary and their parents, filed the suit Wednesday l.otti, near Bay Mincite, across Mobile Bay from here.
the courthouse itself. Everyone entering lhe courtroom was
against producer Arnold Shapiro; his company. Gold West
searched for weapons.
Broadcasters; narrator-actor Peter Falk; WNEW-TV. the
Alaxanian faces other court charges, including secondNew York station thai broadcast the documentary; and
degree murder in the fatal shooting of another Hell's Angel
Ridgefield Park Police Sgt. Charles Martini. The film
last December. A Rensselaer County Court trial has been
depicted a session of the lifers Group of Rahway Slate
scheduled for October.
Prison in which the youngsters, all of whom had minor
brushes with the law. were berated by inmates serving life i TEL AVIV, Israeli AIM America's Mideast envoy Robert
Strauss said today he will tell President Carter that Egypt
terms in prison. The suit alleged that some of the scenes were
V staged for the show and that several youths became ill after and Israel are working in a "positive and constructive
manner" toward an agreement on Palestinian automony. _
ft(World jSTewg
Briefs)
House Rejects Draft Attempt
Hell's Angels Cooled
Program May Reduce Vandalism
Funds Allotted To Quads
by Vicki Zunitch
In an attempt to reduce vandalism
in SUNYA residence halls, the
Office of Residences has initiated a
pilot program through which funds
will be allocated to each quad to
improve the physical environment,
according to Assistant Director of
Residences John Murphy.
As staled in the guidelines of the
Residence Facilities Improvement
Program, sections may be granted
up to $50 for lounge improvements,
while $500 will be available to each
quad to improve conditions of
public areas such as tower elevators,
flagrooms, and hall lobbies.
Under a phase of the program
called "Quality of Life," an
additional $8,800 will be available
SUNYA Rated As Most
Selective Public School
Documentary Faces Lawsuit
Autonomy Discussed
"Eet Ees Balloon!"
Up in the sky! It's a bird! It's a plane! It's . . , a hot air
balloon? Yep, and it wasa gimmick used by the United Way
of Northeastern New York to kickoli its annual fund raising
campaign. Serving Saratoga, Albany, and Southern
Rensselaer Counties. United Way will attempt to raise over
three million dollars for 57 human service agencies, such as
the Red Cross and the Salvation Army. A volunteer
balloonist Hew the balloon for three hours in order to create
publicity for the campaign.
Students Can Go Home
by Amy Kantor
The price of contract meal service
available in SUNYA's quadrangle
dining halls has increased by 8
percent this semester, according to
University Auxiliary Services
(UAS)General Manager E. Norbert
Zahm.
Zahm has also announced price
increases of as much as ten percent
breeze On Refrigerators
The Art Of Buchwald
STUDENT
PRESS
on food served in Campus Center
dining facilities, including the
Ralhskellar, Snack Bar, Delicatessen, and Patroon Room.
"We do 9 million dollars worth of
business a year, but we haven't
raised our prices to keep up with the
market," he said. "We had to catch
up."
Meat, especially hamburger and
years have seen a 30 percent increase
in the minimum wage of UAS
employees, SUNYA students arc
still charged the lowest board rate in
the SUNY system, he said.
A contract meal plan including 20
meals per week cost $730 last spring;
this semester the same meal card is
costing students $788, representing
an increase of nearly $60. Zahm
roast beef, has suffered the greatest
rise in price. The price of a roast beef
submarine sandwich served in the
Ralhskellar has climbed 50 cents
from $1.45 last spring to $1.90 this
fall.
Zahm attributed the price
increases to the cost of both food
and labor, citing a $90,000 loss to
UAS in 1978-79. While the last two
claims that increases 3 to 4 percent
greater have been levied al other
SUNY schools.
The commuter lunch plan has not
been spared UAS increases cither.
Under the program, commuters eat
lunch weekdays at any of the quad
dining halls, or receive food valued
at up to $1.50 from Campus Center
dining facilities. The price of the
commuter lunch has increased by
$35, from $170 last spring to $205
this fall.
Zahm said he does not expect any
further price increases through the
spring, maintaining that UAS food
prices remain comparatively lower
than those at local fast food
restaurants such as McDonald'sand
continued on page five
Committee Reviews Applications
pf those ideals and values on which this country was
founded.
The Achievement Program, sponsored by the
Bicentennial Council of the Thirteen Original States Inc.,
was created three years ago to give citizens an understanding
of the origin and evolution of the republic. The effort
culminates after thirteen years (1989) with the 200th
anniversary of the ratification of the Constitution.
Along with Buchwald. other speakers include noted
journalist Garry Wills, CBS news correspondent Douglas
Edwards. General William C, Westmoreland, Chief Justice
Howard 1 Markey. U.S. Court of Customs and Patent
Appeals. Frank J. DeSienii. president of the American
legion's Boys Slate Nation. Judith Davidson Movers.
CommUsionct lot the International Year of the Child.
Senator Charles Minimi*. Jr..and Senator William V. Roth.
Jr.
Buchwald is scheduled to appear in the Empire State
I'liua on Sunday night. Sept. 16 at 8;3l). 1 he ASP has 300
free tickets (valued at $7.50) which we will distribute to
anyone Interested in attending Come to CC 334 today and
r$uiayu News Briefs
ALBANY
Office ot Rwldencn has initiated » program to help reduce vandnlltm.
An allempi to combat a wave of destruction. photos,
Roanm
Kulakoff
Fifth Vice President Joins Soon
Syndicated columnist Art Buchwald will he one ol iInula n> notables attending the third annual confctci.e ol I he
tomorrow while supply lasts
Great American Achievements Program Ihli weekend in
Albany.
lhe theme for the 1979 conference is "Of. By, and I 01
lhe People." which, the program leaders hope, will be a
motto to keep before the American public the vital meaning
PAGE TWO
All proposals for the "Quality of
Life" program must be submitted to
the quad by October 29. A
committee, comprised of Power
Plant Director Jim Hallinback,
Director of Residences John Welty,
and five students will review the
prospective projects.
P o s s i b l e projects include
furniture repair or construction,
wall decorations such as murals, and
facility modification. The funds
cannot be used for on-going repair
projects or to purchase recreational
equipment for section lounges.
Prices of Contract Meal Service Increased
Prices In Contracted Meal Program Increased
In its first meeting of the semester, the University Senate
unanimously approved a resolution requesting professors
not to penalize students, who go home for the Jewish High
Holy Days, for missing classes on Friday, September 21.
lhe resolution, introduced by Student Association
Controller Craig Wcinstock. recognized that classes are not
suspended until A p.m. on September 21. thus making it
difficult for a large number of Jewish students, who wish to
go home lot the holidays, to reach home by sundown.
Sundown marks the beginning ol the High Holy Days.
lhe Senate also decided to postpone consideration of
proposed amendments, made last spring, to the Guidelines
for Promotion and Continuing Appointment,
An exorbitant increase in demand, coupled with a late
contract between SUNYA and a new leasing company, has
exhausted the supply of large refrigerators available for rent
on campus.
According to Central Council Vice Chairman Brian Levy,
demand for the large refrigerators went up twenty times over
last year, and neither the council nor the Residence Office
was prepared for such an increase.
Using statistics from last year's inventory, both groups
ordered only 250 large refrigerators, along with 1350 small
ones from Creative Conveniences, Inc. Contract problems
with the new company also caused the iceboxes to be
ordered otoliths late.
The Council suggested that any student with a deposit
slip or problem to call them at 7-H0K1).
A National research institute has rated SUNYA as being the most '
selective public university in the United States.
The Higher Education Research Institute, based in l.os Angeles,
reached its findings based on SAT und ACT scores of incoming
students in colleges and universities throughout the country.
The University of Virginia was ranked second in the survey, followed
by the University of California at Santa Cruz.
SUNYA Director ol Admissions Rodney A. Hart said that although
SUNYA is probably "within the top two percent" of public universities
with regard to selectivity, the validity of claiming SUNYA to be
"number one" is doubtful.
Hart added that he has reason to believe that the data which the
survey relied on is dated, perhaps as much as six years.
According to Hart, the average SAT scores of freshmen entering
SUNYA in 1978 were approximately 523 for verbal and 583 for math.
—B.W. Fox
on a competitive basis for quad
projects aiming at the reduction of
vandalism and improving
appearances. If the program results
in a 30 percent reduction in
vandalism, additional money will be
given to the quads in the spring.
The program will be funded
through a reallocation of university
and r e s i d e n c e hall m o n i e s .
According to Murphy, students may
be involved in less destruction if they
"are actively involved in taking
responsibility for the environment in
which they live."
Program guidelines state that
projects submitted for consideration
should be creative, attractive, and
have potential for campus-wide
adaptability. Plans for section
lounges must be approved by twothirds of the residents of that section
and be submitted by October 15.
Student residents and staff members
must submit ideas to individual
quads by September 30, in order to
be eligible for the early fall allotme'.il
of $500.
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
J Fr-derlck Vulkweln heads» committee searching for a fifth vice-president.
Coordinating ami directing campus planning resource mamgement^
w y
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
by Michelle Mackrell
A fifth vice president will soon
join SUNYA's administration. J.
Frederick I Volkwcin, Assistant to
SUNYA President Vincent O'Lcary,
is a member of a search committee
which reviewed applications
throughout the summer for the
newly-created post of Vice President
for Planning and Resource
Management.
According to Volkwcin, the
position, upproved by both O'Leary
and the SUNY central administration last spring, will involve
coordinating and directing campus
planning resource management,
information systems, special studies
and analysis.
The new vice president will have
control over the Computer Center,
institutional research, Educational
C o m m u n i c a t i o n C e n t e r and
BANY STUDENT
Admissions and Records.
The position will involve assessing
SUNYA's goals and matching them
with present abilities and future
possibilities.
In the admissions area, this would
come about as the vice president
shapes admissions policy and
recruitment to bring goals in that
area and the day-to-day operation of
the university into coexistence.
"We need a vice president to pull
together all the various planning
activities on c a m p u s . " said
Volkwcin..
The search committee narrowed
the applicant pool of 100 to 15
finalists last month. Of these, three
or four candidates will be chosen
later this month to come to SUNYA
for interviews. A final decision is
planned for November.
Specific criteria have been set' up
PRESS
to guide the search committee in its
selection process. Among the
qualities desired are a doctoral
degree; an extensive background in
administration,
including
experience in planning, resource
allocation and analytical studies;
familiarity with a variety of research
tools and techniques; faculty
experience and strong interpersonal
and'managerial skills, i
A c c o r d i n g to V o l k w e i n ,
the minimum starting salary for the
position has been set at $32,341 per
year. The "central control point" is
at $44,000 anqiilly. Volkwein
explained this figure as the salary
beyond which the candidate must be
subject to "external review" by
SUNY central administrators.
"They look at the quality of the
candidate as well as the salary that's
needed to bring them here," he said.
[PAGE THREE
Hijacker Demands Humane World
Holds 119 Hostage
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B O N N , West Germany ( A P ) A
young m a n hijacked u West G e r m a n
jetliner in flight, held out in a daylong standoff at the Bonn airport
insisting that the nation hear his
d e m a n d s for "a h u m a n e w o r l d , "
then surrendered Wednesday night.
The hijacker freed the 119 other
passsengers and four of the eight
crew m e m b e r s u n h a r m e d seven
hours after the Lufthansa Boeing
727 l a n d e d at
Bonn-Cologne
Airport, but had kept four crew
members
aboard
the plane,
d e m a n d i n g to talk to Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt and a television
news crew.
tions began with the crew radioing
the
hijacker's
demands
to
Wischncwski in the tower.
H a m radio operators w h o listened
in on c o m m u n i c a t i o n s between the
cockpit a n d airport tower said the
man read a 20-minutc political
The
m a n , who was not
immediately identified, surrendered
at 5:20 p.m. E D T .
Lufthansa s p o k e s m a n Fran/.
Cesars said no o n e was injured, and
the weapon the m a n brandished
d u r i n g the hijacking turnedout t o be
a toy pistol.
Cesar/, said
Hans
Juergen
Wischncwski, Schmidt's t o p aide,
talked t o the hijacker "with great
e n d u r a n c e and a lot of intelligence,"
persuading him to release the four
crew members and surrender.
" T h e entire action
ended
h a p p i l y , " Cesar/, told reporters at
the a i r p o r t m i n u t e s after t h e
surrender.
T h e llight originated in Paris,
stopped in Frankfurt a n d was on its
way t o B o n n - C o l o g n e w h e n it was
hijacked.
After the plane taxied to the
p a r k i n g area, d r a w n - o u t negotia-
A I . B A N Y . N . Y . ( A P ) Doctors at the
Albany
Medical Center
were
wailing t o see S u n d a y w h e t h e r an
11-hour o p e r a t i o n t o reattach a
man's severed left leg would prove
successful,
D o n a l d S t o n e , 24, of the S a r a t o g a
C o u n t y town of Wilton, remained in
serious c o n d i t i o n S u n d a y .
A team of 12 d o c t o r s worked on
S t o n e from a b o u t K a.m. t o a b o u t 7
p.m. Friday, reattaching a leg that
was severed just below (he knee
when the motorcycle S t o n e was
riding collided with a n a u t o m o b i l e
nearby C o h o e s .
A l t h o u g h t h e leg h a s b e e n
restored, a hospital s p o k e s m a n said
S u n d a y it would be at least a day or
so before it is k n o w n whether the
replant was successful.
The
spokesman,
R ichard
Kidgeway, said blood How must be
established a n d maintained for the
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^FIS;KER
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513 €*» P'ER H O ' V T H '
'Alt
mtnsm
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•
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.,
• ILICTRICAL CONTRACTORS
HERM UNG6RMAN
•
H»'£.f»t.::i:f
•
.1 .
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.
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No matter what you're looking for, chances are that you'll find
it on the Avenue. It's all here in the heart of Albany, everything
. i>.Si>
from autos to zippers. And with close proximity to downtown
. .
.
,,
rtfftwiif, Ininwi
• • i ti m ituu um
students.
.iiwtu witt nn •
. ..;. tawani iini
'
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Check the list we've Included here, and then come to Central
# i l u u « i . A^wi T n u r . " I
lUjn-Vpn. " l u e . V J « . i-i
VltiUHi
linn.
:<:ru ':.UUMi<i. H.IHm**.
EH ntrntTB IAUE, Bfi BBI . ' C I . « » > M « .
Avenue - we've got it all.
• ^ P ' I listen to us
tC:C:E^' ' r . :
I l - . U ' l v . v.i m ..„
Htoftuuai
MUll »,^-'•
,
„
SOME l i t MS 0OMOS«N0 DEALERS
J«2 RAJ3«a«ECICS*<H .A.VTTTIES L1MJTEB,
j^^MwiKUjv
SC, i - y ft....-, ,!ite..r-,.-,
*
>
•
*
•
A W PEL TON C O
IIERNARH JEWELERS
HAROLD f INKLE YOUR JEWELER
KELLY'S JEWEI RY
ORANGE BLOSSON JEWELERS
LEATHIR PRODUCTS
CUSTOM LEATHER OF ALBANY
LIQUOR BTORfft
01 NUZZO LIQUOR 5 Rfi
LOANS
PROTECTIVE LOAN CORP
OPTICIANS
G U E N A U S 0PTICIAN5
P A I N T RETAIL
AMERICAN SEAL MFG
BAOER PAINT S WALLPAPER
MILLER PAINT
* PLUMBING FIXTURES ft flUPPLIIS
SECURITY SUPPLY
* PR1NTIN0
COMMERCIAL MAIL & PRINTING
* R A D I O S , S U P P L I E S ft P A R T S '
SEIDEN SOUND INC
- RECORD S H O P S
BLUE NOTE SHOP
JUST-A-SQNG MUSIC SHOP
• R E L I O I O U B ARTICLES
RELIGIOUS ART 5 H 0 P
• RESTAURANTB
CHARCOAL PIT RESTAURANT
GATEWAY DINER
JOHNNY'S HOT DOGS
Lt.CS SNACK BAH
LOU'S I T A l - A M E R RESTAURANT
MAYFLOWER RESTAURANT
McOONALO'a
MENDEL'S RESTAURANT
• SHOE STORES
c o n i i A T ' B SHOES
YOUND SHOES
a 1PORTIN0 0OOD8
TAYLOR R V A D N E Y INC
* S U R Q I C A L ft S I C K R O O M S U B V L M S
ALBANY SURGICAL CENTER
* TIRES-RETAIL
FIRESTONE STORE
GOODYEAR TIRE
* TYPEWRITERS
M S . STERN TYPEWRITER SALES
* UPHOLSTERY
RELIABLE UPHOLSTERY
• VARIETY STORES
WO0LW0RTH
• WHOLESALE/RETAIL BALIS
CAPITAL CITY MDSE CO
• YARN SHOPS
A STITCH IN TIME
business people and practices; and plenty of unique restaurants.
rr&u L o*ck6 51G r c o
*"m Tipii: ^iim:uiTtwtnt tr hit nptv irt::i.
• JftUMLHV
friendiy service; individual attention; established and reliable
KAOCM DCMCUIMI r»mrui. ! w*
dHtgi win SH (J- magnn (n n « n "
•
JOHN B M A I II
USED FURNITURE OUTIET
• H A R D W A R I BTOREB
CENTRAL VARIETY HARDWARE
A PHILLIPS HARDWARE
• HfATIMQOIL
FRANK G U I N H A R U I HEATING O l t
McENANEY OIL CORP.
8TAR COMFORT CORP
• H O M I REPAIR
DUALITY EXTERIOR COUP
•IMRURAMCI
FRANK G COBURN INC
Besides a variety of services and products, we also offer you
M
• ireiwltimni
mn»i *tTTwrri. «i n inin.i
|WMIiini,.n,
:
•
*;r»c."iii nntti t u a j D W U l l
:
.
• , rrai •
f'niuwmm. i •• .'
Uf*n '•',,,t
." miifui.- w H
.
ILICTROUBIB
ALICE BAKER
FLORISTS
CENTRAL FL0RIBT8
GULLEY'B FLOWER GARDEN
FLORIST
• PUMIRALHOMIB
ZWACK & S O N S FUNERAL
SERVICE
• FUN B A L I S B BTORADI
IDEAL FUR FACTORY
•
• fURNITURI BTORIB
dorms and the SUNYA bus line, we're conveniently located for
Ml."* U J U I
iir.m-.u
•
; i ; m r m : i u j i jawwinwe iiipi wa;i
JsticirtiriH:' IKW':: Mflti P* paw-v- HdUCO
W. AttUCiMI livrr>;
•
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Maanatii ariitnsi in •
UCWttSm Bl > i " : KWBttS M
•
QuncfMU ium% I W I i
QtMNQBl
i •
M.M I [IK
. 11 m • •
ARMORY OARAGE
JOHN D WENDELL. INC
• (1ABY P U R N I T U R t ft C L O T H I N 0
BABY LAND
• DAKtRlIB
PHIL'B PABTRY SHOP
• BANK!
BANKERS TRUST CO
CENTRAL SAVINGS & LOAN A 5 S N
HOME SAVINGS BANK
NATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK
STATE BANK OF ALBANY
• APPLIANCIB
DOMESTIC APPLIANCE
K A Y S E n n f A U t Y SUPPLY
MERLE N O R M A N COSMETIC
STUDIO
• D R A F T I N O ft ART B U P P L I I B
W.L COUGHTRY CO
stem itvcmfxnst 4:
:
• ANTtOUH
ALUANV TIME SHOP
• A U T O M O a U l PAHTB * B U P P L I I S
J M f i t C l N H A n r , INC
LEE AUTO SUPPLY
PFEIFFEfl'S AUTO SUPPLIES. INC
WATKINS SPHINO CO
• A U T O M O H I L i R I P A i n i M O C UUC.
MODEHN R A 0 I 0 SHOP
• AUTOMOWLI BALI!
• COftMITICB
i-iiii-.tiit-Liii Hot Bm rtniw <
I I
i
luwn
Carson
insists he h a s b e e n
w o r k i n g u n d e r a 1972 Contract that
expired in April because California
law forbids p e r s o n a l services
nuiMta
/ / #
contracts of longer than seven years'
duration,
NHC responded that C a r s o n , who
has been " T h e Tonight S h o w " star
for 17 years, would be expected to
h o n o r his contract (hat runs through
the spring of l')K|. Lawyers look
over from there.
C a r s o n , w h o reportedly is paid S3
million annually by NHC, said last
spring that he'd had enough after 17
years as host.
ABC reportedly is interested in
luring C a r s o n , a n d is willing t o pay
him $5 million a year.
R a t i n g s - t r o u b l e d N HC w a s
shaken last spring when C a r s o n
a n n o u n c e d he wanted out of his
duties as host of the late-night talk
show at the end of (he year.
.' in :-**.
SALE $ 2 2 9
All three m e n are also professors
of surgery a t (he Albany Medical
School.
L O S A N G E L E S ( A P ) After m o n t h s
of negotiation, NIK and its biggest
star, J o h n n y C a r s o n , have agreed to
let a judge decide when Carson's
contract as " T h e Tongiht S h o w "
host actually expires.
. ttel.
8 1 9 9 ^ FEE MONTH*
CHitii'tit] i^«» ;:*inwiiiii
T" 7 "'' J
Ifeum
About six years a g o , he said,
d o c t o r s reattached the loot of a
Colonic
boy involved
in a
lawnmover mishap in what was o n e
of the first o p e r a t i o n s of its kind in
the world.
In J a n u a r y of this year, a replant
team set u p a l t e r that first operation
successfully reattached the leg of a
Hallstnn S p a m a n involved in a snow
plow accident.
surgeon,
Judges Decide On Contract
.IIXSI.>
' .JtV.i.U
..
H«0 TW.KZJZ-3H.»*
•'There are a lot of unpredictable
f a c t o r s , " K i d g e w a y said. If a
constant supply of blood cannot be
maintained, Kidgeway said (he leg
would have to be removed.
T w o successful major replant
o p e r a t i o n s have been performed al
the Albany medical ('enter in Ihe
past, Kidgeway said,
Albany Medical Center's replant i
learn is headed by Dr. Richard
J a c o b s , an orthopedic surgeon; Dr.
Kehmi D e n t o n , a v a s c u l a r s u r g e a o n ;
and D r . Richard M c S h a n e . a plastic
s - ; But nijn inntonmnai i
SALE $49-9
•!?:".-!.5JS*
iBXBaOMEEK
-
replant to he considered a success.
S o m e t i m e s , though, he said the
connected arteries carrying hlood
can collapse a n d block the How.
TRENDSETTERS
• CABH B i a i B T I B B
HENRY KASS INC
• CLOTHINB BTOHIB
CENTRAL SHOPS
CLASSIC SHOP
FINKS BIG M E N S STORE
FOX SHOP
MYJAX STORES
NEXT TO N E W SHOP
RDSENa DEPT STORE
SPECTOR'S MENS CLOTHING
P»n»scr»c
«ni a>**f m a t
FUBSfBI Mi tbi
Team Of 12 Work To Reattach
;Htsne).
i*
:::i-_»a<:
Man With Severed Leg In Serious Condition
• BARBIRftBIAUTY OHOPO
i 1!' RHMBi
.:-'
f BE WCTHEEI nCBBSi
-
ABBMSI
;SAU$m
**iii_m
Wischncwski told
reporters
preparations h a d been made t o end
LO'UiD SPEAKERS
i sr "r.h^-ia tana
KB
IzU
(99
SIS
CH.aRiErt iiH):::tiu
the hijacking by o t h e r m e a n s if t h e .
talks failed. H e did n o t e l a b o r a t e .
It was n o t k n o w n where the
hijacker b o a r d e d t h e flight.
Lufthansa officials said b o t h t h e
passengers
who boarded
in
Frankfurt a n d the few c o n t i n u i n g o n
to Bonn-Cologne from
Paris
underwent security checks.
Cesarz said t h e m a n went t o the
front
toilet c a r r y i n g a b l a c k
briefcase a n d a n airsickness bag, a n d
from there entered the cockpit.
Passengers told reporters t h e m a n
had faked illness a n d at his request
was seated u p front.
" T h e crew is free. I only have a toy
pistol," Cesar/, q u o t e d the hijacker
as replying . Wischncwski then
agreed t o meet the hijacker a b o a r d
the plane.
Value
variety &
convenience.
It's all right here on
Central Avenue.
CAR ST1RI0
-<•
manifesto d e m a n d i n g a West
G e r m a n referendum on nuclear
power, improved child care a n d
abolition of the a r m e d forces,
"All I want is a h u m a n e world in
which it is worthwhile t o live," he
was q u o t e d
as saying. He
c o m p l a i n e d that ex-convicts a r e
m a r k e d for life because of certain
e n t r i e s in t h e i r
identification
d o c u m e n t s . After reading his
statement, he freed the 123 hostages.
In negotiations that followed,
Wischncwski asked the m a n " t o be
h u m a n e himself" a n d release the rest
of the crew, Cesar/, said.
J
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Central Avenue
Civic & Merchants Association
Albany, New York
PAGE FIVE
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RUDY'S
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W i l l i . Rhlnthordt
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guitof a n d vocals
x*^' o ^
Rury Ruff
percussion, vocals
and Irumpci
Arnold Ruff
Irumpel a n d vocals
6
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In the Ruff German - American Music
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Staging - profit - jfcfjunfeeln - prosit - bnnring
A COMPLETE LINE OF YOUR FAVORITE
MIXED DRINKS A N D IMPORTED BOTTLED BEERS
ALL VOUH FAVORITE WINES
DISPENSED FROM OUR DECORATIVE
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against t h e Nukes
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255 New Karner Road (RT. 155)
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t i c k e t s available Wednesday,
Sept. 1».
™
Beer Night
Free Beer from 9 pm til 3 am
-FRIDAY
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For more information, contact
L AlSO'S J
NYPIRG 457-4623 CC 38£
UL
SA funded
Wash
UAS General Manager E. Norbert Zahm (above) announced an 8% increase In meal costs.
Prices are still cheaper than McDonalds or Burger King.
Ave. bxil '
Rd
]* SUMY
\
Fatso's is available (or private parties also. Phone 4F»G-9BlJ0 tor details.
WEA
ATTENTION!!!
all SA Groups
FUIIIM
I
}mffixw&v<mG maim
Friday (& Saturday
Sept. 14 (ffi, IS
&
Happy Hour 9-10 pm
ol ll)t J)ub
Lecture Center 18
•WEDNESDAY
New York City Nite
is coming Sept. 19th
• THURSDA Y
3foin uti for tfjia ®ttat Celebration Wttkenti
i
TUESDAY-
Rock 'n Roll Nitc
2 for 1 Drinks 9-12 pm
SOFT PRETZELS
{Efjurtfbap, September 13
6 p.m.— 12:30 a.m.
Jfrfoap, September 14
6 p.m. — V.30 a.m.
rationing bill.
The panel was named last month
to resolve differences between
versions of the legislation previously
passed by each chamber. The
compromise bill the panel produces
will go back to both the full House
and Senate for final approval.
Basically, the conference panel
went along with the House approach
to give the president rationing
authority during a 20 percent or
greater fuel shortage that lasts, or
..cemed likely to last, for 30 days.
Either house af CongrcS' would
have 15 days to block implementation of rationing after the president
announced his intention to impose
it.
FATSO FOGARTY'S
Volunteer staff needed.
BAVARIAN SPECIALTIES
KNOCKWURST • BRATWURST • HOT FLEISCH KASE • SAUERBRATEN
GERMAN POTATO SALAD • BAVARIAN R E D C A B B A f i E • SAUERKRAUT
MARBLE ROLLS • HOT A N D C O L D SANDWICHES
BAVARIAN PASTRIES
WASHINGTON (AP) Although
ready to grant the president standby
powers to ration gasoline during a
shortage, Congress isn't about to
deal itself out of the decision on how
coupons would be distributed.
House-Senate energy conferences
were returning to the bargaining
table today to decide whether
. Congress or the president should
have the final say on details of a
coupon rationing plan.
The session follows agreement
Wednesday -n a compromise
formula for determining when
rationing could be imposed. Leaders
called the agreement a major
breakthrough in their attempt to
forge a compromise standby
continued from page three
Burger King.
"I think that we wailed too long lo
increase prices," said Food Service
Office representative Peter Haley.
"It was mandated; We were unable
to go lour or five years without price
increases. It would have been a lot
less drastic if we had done it sooner,
increasing prices by one or two
percent, rather than all at once."
< % $ > * *
H *
Congress Decides Who
Should Have Final Say
Prices In
Contract
Meal
Program
Increase
RECORDS
LED ZEPPELIN
hrouqh Ihn Out D
VAN MORRISON
NEIL YOUNG
^u.;t Novor Sleeps
Came
<* TAPES
RANDY NTWMAN
"Born Ay.-nn
7:30 and 9:30
$1.50 w/out
You must file
organization and
I
SS/:
Q/ncL
signature cards
; * . ! * MW.
rite,
#
Contact
Craig Weinstock
or
LOUISE GClFFIN
'Kid Blno"
UOlG
THE RECORDS
SALE ENDS SEPTEMBER 22
Rita Levine
,, ALBANY 434-0085
446 BROADWAY, SARATOGA 584-8884
457-8088
funded by SA
SEPTEMBER 14. t»™
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
I'Atifc SEVEN
Poly Sci
Students Unite!
SA Used
Widely Used Valium Addictive
Book Exchange
Not Prescribed For Stress
$ will be returning cash J
The Political Science
Association will hold an
important meeting for all majors.
Topics that will be discussed
include: Practical political
participation; a Poly Sci advisea-thon; speakers and debates;
student participation on faculty
committees and many other
subjects. Become involved in
your major and join us.
Date: Monday, September 17
Time: 7:30 P.M.
Place: LC- 19
Sunsold b o o k s t o donators^
J
^
{
WASHINGTON (AP) A psychiatrist who has treated celebrities for
alcohol and drug abuse told a Senate
health subcommittee Monday that
the most widely used drug in
America - Valium — is addictive and
should not be prescribed for
everyday stress.
Dr. Joseph Purscli, head of the
Alcohol Rehabilitation Service at
the Navy's Long Beach Regional
Medical Center in California, said
alcoholism and the overuse of
tranquilizers represent the nation's
No. I health problem.
"Classically today, if a woman
walks into her doctor's office and
says, 'I'm nervous, my husband
drinks loo much,' the doctor will
a u t o m a t i c a l l y give her a
tranquilizer," said the Navy
psychiatrist, whose patients have
included Billy Carter, the president's
brother; Mrs. Betty Ford, the
former president's wife: and Sen.
Herman Talmage, D-Ga.
More than 44.6 million Valium
prescriptions were filled in 1978.
And, Pursch said, many doctors
don't realize that patients can get'
Ultimate Frisbee
Tournament
Monday September 17
Tuesday September 18
S
16 team ultimate frisbee tournament!
Teams accepted on a first-come, first-served basis.
Team representatives will participate in finalizing
tournament details. Form a team (co-ed, 8 player
minimum) and call Greg at 449-7662 after 6. Entry
deadline is Friday, September 21.
Wednesday September 19
hooked on Valium, Librium and
other mild tranquilizers.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the
subcommittee chairman, asked if
Valium alone is a problem in society,
Pursch replied he has seen people
who have become addicted to the
tranquilizer in only six weeks.
"None of these drugs, Valium and
Librium, solve our problems," said
Purch. "They make people feel
better because Ihey make you feel
dull and insensitive. But they don't
solve anything."
But Robert B. Clark, president of
Hoffmann-La Roche Inc., the
m a n u f a c t u r e r s of V a l i u m ,
maintained it is a safe and effective
drug when properly used. He said
•addiction is "extremely rare" at
recommended dosage levels, and
added that Valium docs not appear
to be more addictive than any other
mild tranquilizer.
The vast majority of patients on
Valium use it for only a short time
and follow t h e i r d o c t o r ' s
instructions, Clark said, having no
problem with the drug.
He added, however, that Roche
will begin a new program to make
certain information on the risks and
benefits of Valium is included in
each container for the patient to
read.
Clark said the effort may hurt
Roche comu-titlvely, but "we arc
committed to strengthening our
programs and activities to further
enhance the appropriate utilization
of our products . . . We will
Albert's Hosiery
29 N. Pearl S i
(1 block off State St.)
We carry a full fine of Danskin.
10% Discount writh SUMVA ID.
from 11:00 AM to 2:00PM
\
\
\
in the Campus Center Ballroom i
S
SA FUNDED \
is coming
&
Search For
Student Ends
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) A
much-publicized search for a
missing student who may have
disappeared while acting out a
medieval fantasy game has fizzled
out. Michigan Slate University
police said Tuesday. C'apt. Freman
Badgley said no more daily news
briefings would be conducted
without further developments in the
hunt for James Dallas Egbert 111.
The 16-year-old computer science
whiz from Dayton, Ohio, was last
seen Aug. 15. at his dormitory
dining hall. The search, which took
police and private investigators
through a ma/e ot hot underground
steam tunnels, through the strange
and complex rules of the game and
to a Kenosha. Wis. convention ot
the game's players, has aimed up no
solid e v i d e n c e o 1' E g b e r t ' s
i whereabouts. The Kenosha angle is
still being checked, said Budglcy,
adding thai, unlike other
investigators, he things Egbert is still
jilive.
World Record Musical
Chairs Game
Fall Fest Carnival
K
continue to act in a socially
responsible manner."
Kennedy, who said Valium and
Librium have p r o d u c e d "a
nightmare of dependence" for many
people, also heard from Dr.
Theodore Clark, a Pinchurst, N.C.
psychiatrist who fought a personal
battle against "hard liquor and soft
drugs" for several years.
The North Carolina psychiatrist,
who is counseling at a drug and
alcohol abuse clinic, said he was a
"one-man testing station" for the
free samples of drugs that often are
mailed to physicians. He said he
mostly took Librium.
"It got to the point where 1
wouldn't see a patient until the
mailman showed up," he said.
"Where other doctors read their
mail, I was ca'ing mine."
They're there
to help:
C C . Info: 7-8390
Middle Earth 7-7800
Five Quad - 7-8633
7-8622
SUPERMEAL
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'jwiini)
Colonic
72 Wolf Road
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459-9485
Schenectady
1614 State Street
\
Monday at 6:30 In CC 116
382-8730
Latham
Latham Corner Shopping.
Center
V
785-8957
Contact Jim Castro-Blanco or Brian Levy 457-8088
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE NINE
enrollments arc noted and from this
is determined what SUNY Albany's
figures should look like."
Each January, after the DOB has
compiled the lengthy budgets of
lions with those of other SUNY each SUNY school into small
summaries, they are included in the
branches.
total state budget.
"Complex formulas' arc used to
Then it's on the state legislature
determine a school's budgetary
needs," said Hartigan. "The DOB for still further adjustment, and
compares each campus with a eventually passage. The budge,t goes
university of comparable status. into effect with the signature of the
Increases in faculty members, rank governor.
d i s t r i b u t i o n s , and student
New Budget Talks Begin
continued from page one
81 include the budget savings
requirement and tuition waiver
support for teaching assistants and
graduate students. "We hope the
DOB will approve the needed relief
in these top priority areas," Brink
said.
"It's very tough to get additional
dollars for education," said SUN YA
President Vincent O'Lcary. "But
usually some of our top priority
programs are supported by the
DOB."
According to Vice President for
Finance and Business John
Hartigan, the process of compiling
the preliminary budget begins in the
early fall. Each academic
department makes up its own
budget requisition based on the
official guidelines and goals of that
department. O'l.cary, the four vice
presidents and deans of each
academic school then review these
budgets until they arc satisfied with
the appropriations. Finally, the
preliminary budget is sent to SUNY
Central along with the budget's of
other SUNY schools. SUNY
Central administrators suggest
adjuslmcnts on largcl goals.
In the final budget requesl these
adjustments arc taken into
consideration and new appropria-
Proposed Project Awaits Funding
continued from page one
(OCHO) questionnaire's and
OCHO Director Frank Greene's
knowledge to determine the greatest
needs of SUNYA students. On this
basis, they plan to construct three
types of apartments: one-bedroom,
two-bedroom and efficiencies.
The twenty proposed efficiency
units arc designed for single
occupancy and will contain 350 sq.
ft. of space. One room in these units
will he used as living room, dining
room and bedroom, perhaps
containing a folding bed/sofa. They
will also contain a kitchen, full bath,
a closet and 5 sq. ft. of storage space.
Fifty proposed single-bedroom
apartments are designed for double
occupancy, with the units
proportionally larger (a total of 515
sq. ft. of space, or 257.5 sq.
ft./person). In addition to the
bedroom, these units will contain a
combined living room/dining room,
kitchen, full bath, and 32 sq. ft. of
closet space (four closets: bedroom,
linen, coat and storage).
Eighty proposed double-bedroom
apartments arc designed quad
occupancy, with a total of 740 sq. ft.
of space (185 sq. ft./person). The
four occupants will share in addition
to the bedrooms, a combined living
room/dining room, kitchen, 1 1/2
baths, and 46 sq. ft. of closet and
storage space.
Plans for bedrooms in each of the
units specified that they be
"conducive to sleep and relaxation
while being flexible enough for use
as supplementary studying and
socializing space."
Tentative guidelines for the
various rooms of the complex's
apartments arc quite specific,
including details concerning locks,
electrical outlets, telephone
hookups, bicycle storage and even
living room windows "with
attractive views, if possible."
While semesterly and yearly rents
for the apartments will not be
determined unless the HUD loan is
approved, Brown said that they
must be acceptable lo SUNY
Central us well
students.
H
Payable b
"It won't do us any good tohav
th«e built, then have , h c m j , |
out of the student m arkcl ,» P |
al
Kirchncr.
The logical q„es,i„„ a , ni , jn .
where can we fit stU(Jcn(
apartments on campus?" „ „ '
insists that there is p| n u y of n
Although he stresses that l o c L
has not as ofyct been seriously j„d
systematically studied, Urow"
suggests as possibilities'"
•the area near the lake behind
Indian Quad
•the northwest corner of campus
between Washington Ave. and Stale
Quad
•along Fuller Rd.
All thai remains now is towailto
hear from the Buffalo rcgionalolfis
of HUD. Brown and Kirchncr
expect a decision sometime next
month.
"I think it's something we standi
really good chance Ira." u„|
Kirchncr. "It's nm a curc-all.butilii
a step."
loi ne i
Chinese Atmosphere
Muzak-that background music
featured in supermarkets, office
buildings and factories-is invading
the People's Republic of China.
The Western Regional Director
of the Muzak Corporation, Bert
Mitchell, has told Pacific News
Service, that a Muzak salesperson
has just returned from a very
successful sales trip to the Chinese
mainland. According to Mitchell—in
his words—"He spent a whole month
there, selling our systems. The
Chinese were crazy about them."
Muzak is reportedly already in
use in the Soviet Union us well as in
every European country.
Muzak officials admit that they
carefully tailor their music to be
unobtrusive—almost "invisible"—
while helping to increase worker
productivity. During traditional
slow times during the working day in
offices, the number of beats in
Muzak songs is subtly increased
from 100 to 150 per minute to spur
the employees on to work harder,
Rotting in the Rain
So-called "acid rains" arc turning
into a serious worldwide problem.
According to the Washington
Star, an increasing number of
scientific studies on both sides of the
Atlantic arc finding evidence that
rainfall polluted with acidic
chemicals is damaging vegetation
and wildlife. Fish in remote
mountain lakes and streams are
reportedly dying in record numbers,
the victims of poisonous rainfall.
Acid rains are caused by the
constant releases of vehicle exhaust
fumes and other pollutants into the
atmosphere, where they combine
with water droplets and eventually
return to earth.
One major problem with such
forms of pollution is that they travel
long distances before they fall to
earth. One study found that D-D-T
sprayed in the Pacific Northwest
was discovered in rainfall in New
York State. And pollutants
originating in Europe have been
found in Alaskan rainwater.
The Star says that polluted
Think HAS is Bad?
The Tucson unified schooldistrict
in Arizona has been handed a hot
problem to solve quickly.
The school district was ordered
(his week by Pima County Superior
Court Judge Jack Arnold to bury
immediately $316,000 dollars worth
of foodstuffs contaminated by
tritium radiation al an area landfill.
Judge Arnold's ruling came in a
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September is a
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a typical
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Z
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899 Western Avenue
(just south of campus)
COMING SOON:* MoneyMatic Machine
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BANK
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ALBANY
STUDENT
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during the month of September, you can use a coupon
every time you make a cash
sale, student ID required.
Plus 65 more across New York State
I
Ihrf not good on an items & services expires9/so/79
not so typical!
'ponding npprovfil 0| bonking iiulhontios
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INSTRUCTOR
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PAGE TEN
"Everyone has times when he (or
she) needs the personal touch to give
him (or her) reassurance, a feeling of
being appreciated. The Hug Station
is there to All the need."
Evers says the only time the
station was ever used for "ulterior
motives" was when the former
Indianapolis Racers hockey team
visited the center and were invited by
female members of the staff to try
the Hug Station.
Most of the hockey team
members, Evers said, were willing to
give it a try.
cp
Full half pound of juicy
Chopped Beefsteak,
served with vegetable
and whipped potatoes.
NEW YORK (AP) Comedians Dan
Aykroyd and John llclushi of NBCTV's "Saturday Night Live" will not
perform on the show this season, a
spokesman for the weekly comedy
series said Wednesday.
Aykroyd and Bclushi were quoted
in the Oct. 4 edition of "Rolling I
.S'rone" Magazine as saying l/iey will "
noi be pan of the "Saturday Night
Uve"cast when itreturnsfor its fifth'
season Oct. 13th,
A spokesman for the show.
George Hoover, said the report is
true and an official statement would
be forthcoming.
According to the magazine
irticle, both performers, in their 30's
were still under contract to NBC.
Belushi and Aykroyd are
Wearing in Steven Spielberg's
•incoming film "1941" due lor
release around Christmas. They
have also been working on a "Blues
Brothers" movie in Chicago, a
follow-up to an album they made.
I
Ring A-Hug
How would you like to be able to
ring a bell and have someone hug
you anytime you want?
Well, patients, staff and visitorsat
the Gallahuc Mental Health Center
in Indianapolis, Indiana, have
available to them just such a "Hug
Station."
Anyone may go lo the "Hug
Station" and ring a little bell, and an
experienced hugger answers.
Gallahuc staff people say the station
has been in operation for about two
years and is a "great morale
booster."
Says Fred Evers, Director of
Activities Therapy at the Center,
Save big with our
September specials!
Show Loses
Best Actors
i
rainfall is causing some diplomatic
problems between the United States
and Canada: Canada which receives
about three times as much sulfur
dioxide from the United States as it
sends back, is demanding that the
U.S. negotiate an "Air Pollution
Treaty."
suit brought by the state's largest
school district whose central kitchen
has been closed since June when it
was discovered that radioactive
tritium which was being emitted
from the nearby American Atomics
Corporation Plant had contaminated the food. The plant is still
emitting tritium and is being
closed down.
However, while Judge Arnold
ordered the school district to bury
the contaminated goodies, he did
not specify in what landfill it should
be buried. The problem is that
neither the city of Tucson nor Pima
County wants the foodstuffs to be
buried at its landfills.
The contaminated foodstuffs
reportedly contain over the 20,000
pico-curies of tritium per liter of
water which is regarded safe.
Judge Arnold, however, has said
w h i l e the f o o d s t u f f s are
contaminated, they are not
hazardous to the public health. He
has ordered the Tucson Unified
School District to consult with its
health officers and immediately find
a burial site for the "hot" or
contaminated cafeteria fare.
PRESS
ARTIIT INATERIAEI
Fuller Rd.
4S1-SSSI
PAGE ELEVEN
MM
>48&<
viewpoint
columns
Pi In The Eye
On The
To the Editor:
' M r . Taglione complains about the 'iecrecy'
of the admissions policy of the Phi Beta
Kappa Honor Society. Are they really so
secret? As with many "secret" societies
throughout history, their principles (as well as
their existence) have been " i n v i s i b b " t o those
his
family
is
no
longer
opposed
to
his
seeking
by Charles S. Beiner
who were unprepared to comprehend them.
the
nomination.
While
this
was
far
Irom
a
President Carter is clearly in political
Vet they have been readily accessible to (hose
declaration
of
his
candidacy,
many
feel
that
trouble. The latest polls show him trailing
with the requisite character. Is the problem
this
is
his
first
positive
indication
that
he
is
almost every major Republican presidential
.really that the Society has withheld
hopeful. The economy is in ruins - inflation is seriously considering a challenge to Carter.
information about their admission policies?
The importance of his statements need not
running at record levels with no immediate
But Phi Beta Kappa is not a lure secret
relief in sight. The President's energy program he exaggerated. It is wjdely-known, because
society. It is an honor society. What is it
is still mired in Congressional committcesand of the assassinations of his two brothers, that
intended to honor? Is it to reward those who
his S A L T I I Treaty has received a punishing family considerations are an important ( i f not
already have achieved worldly honor? Is it for
the) determinant in any Kennedy decision to
blow with the recent disclosure of Soviet
the person who seeks high grades in high
combat troops in Cuba. Things arc so bad for run. Now that his family has given him the goschool in order to get into a prestigious
the President that even four-legged, furry ahead. Kennedy is much closer to running for
college, in order to get into a prestigious
creatures known more for their carrot-eating 1'resident than he has ever been before.
graduate school, in order to get a high paying
than for their political views have launched
job, in order to own an expensive house, and
attacks on him.
car. ..in order, ultimately, to be "respected?"
As i f the country's woes aren't enough of a
Does this person need additional rewards,
headache for President Carter, should the
such as an honor society, to motivate him?
foreign and domestic difficulties remain, he
Or should an honor society be for the
may soon be faced with a challenge for his
person whom society does not sufficiently
own parly's presidential nomination - usually
reward, the person who devotes his life to the
unheard of for a sitting incumbent. The
welfare of society? This would seem to be part
p o t e n t i a l challenges come f r o m t w o
of it. Perhaps it should also be for the person
individuals; one is not given a serious chance
for whom good grades are incidental to a real
by most in the Carter camp; the oilier is
love o f a subject. One might expect that
almost universally feared by Carter advisors.
honesty, integrity' and humility should also be
The first is Governor Broun ol California.
considered (does that sound corny?). What
The second, and mure serious potential
good would it do to tell a person that
challenger is. ol course. Senator Edward
admissions is based in part upon "good
Kennedy.
character?" Would a person strive to be
In spite of Jerry Brawn's series ol laic
honest, etc.. or would he merely tr\ to appear
primary victories against Cartel in 1976, most
to have those qualities.' I he values which Phi
Carter loyalists look uupon hint simplj .is a
iieta Kappa should seek to promote are less
nuisance. Blown is perceived as too eccentric,
tangible than gradesand wealth. And ilsjob is
too politically unstable, and just loo damn
all the more important in a period when
opportunistic by many democrats. (His thppeople's vision is turned downward upon
llop on Proposition 13 is cited as .1 classic
material values.
example of his flippancy I While Brown.,
I hope M r . Taglione will not take these
especially in the carl) primaries, may garner
comments personally. I sympathize with his
some anti-Carter votes. Carter's people feci
that he is unelectable against a Republican
and his challenge to Carter is not taken
It appears that Kennedy's strategy is to wail
Rather than risk a politically divisive struggle
seriously.
and see whether Carter's political fortunes for the nomination. Kennedy would rather
Kennedy Syndrome
A much more formidable challenge may be
mounted Senator Kennedy. Polls have
consistently indicated that more democrats
prefer Kennedy as the party's nominee than
Carter. "Draft Kennedy" movements have
been formed in many states, and many leading
democrats have either come D M in favor of a
Kennedy candidacy, or have indicated their
uphappiness with Carter. Just last week.
Kennedy fanned the flames which drive his
many supporters by letting it be known that
improve. While New r'Ork Stale Senator wait for Carter to back down, or for Carter to
Moynihan has urged Kennedy to declare his be in such poor shape that he is practically
candidacy by Thanksgiving, others feel that abandoned by the democralice party (a course
he can bide his time until Christmas or even which Senator McGovcrn predicts.)
until the first primaries, wailing for Carter to
Time is currently in Senator Kennedy's
falter.
corner. He need be in no rush to declare his
Kennedy need not step in now; Carter is at a candidacy. As an "undeclared"candidate, his
very weak point politically. Almost all of his fund-raising apparatus need not operate
constituencies are lukewarm toward him at under the stringent guidelines set forth by the
best. However, as Kennedy certainly knows, Federal Elections Commission. He would
political fortunes can change overnight. prefer to wait until Carter is so weakened.
trVST
60
wi>_ paarep
ovr
r t^our
tW
TIV6-
Of Nukes
To the Editor:
I write in response to a letter which
appeared in last Friday's A S P . The author
maintained that nuclear power is necessar)
because it is the lesser of two evils - the other
evil being oil and coal electrical plants. I his is
a short-sighted argument in two major
respects. First of all, there are many more
potential dangers emanating Irom nuele.ii
power besides a major accident. Secondly,
there is a viable technologically alternative lo
oil, coal, and njclear.
The nuclear power plant is but one small
part of the nuclear power industry. The
substance which fuels these plants is uranium,
a naturally occurring radioactive element
Uranium miners arc exposed to radioactive
radon gas which has caused man\ eases ol
cancer among miners. The uranium must first
be milled (chemically separated (and enriched
before it can be used to luel nuclear plants
Therefore, there are milling and enrichment
plants which expose more workers and local
inhabitants to radioactive health hazards
After it is nulled and enriched, the uratl •.:
is trueked over to the nuclear power plant It is
a well-known fact that nuclear power plants
that Kenned) is left littlechoicebuttoseek the
nomination or give the White House to .1
Republican in I9K0.
What Kennedy has done wilh his rccenl
pronouncements is to subtlety encourage the
" D r a f t K e n n e d y " movements without
formally breaking with his oft-stated (albiet
unenthusiastic) support for Carter. Senatoi
Kennedy is clearly in the driver's seat - M
Carter veers too sharply off the road, you can
be assured that Kennedy and his followers will
be ready lo lurn on the engines.
AU,
r retr
emoe\c.
—
enemas.
»tmtemte—.7-i
ccwer±
The Flukes
WORKED
IM TOOCM
WITH MV
1 ten
plight since I. too, have been excluded fron
Phi Beta Kappa's ethereal circle. In my case
this was due not to mere oversight, but to such
good reasons as my constant imolcrance of
the imperfections of others, my unbounded
hubris, and my chronic laziness. And for such
flawed characters as wc there is an alternative!
it is known as the Pi Beta Kappa (Pi, as in
apple) Humor Society. I f i t isanyconsolation,
I shall nominate M r . Taglione for the office uf
Honorary Assistant Vice-President. For this
singular honor, the fee shall be no greater than
that our loyal opposition charges for mere
membership: $25. (Paul: check should be
made payable to "Cash").
The President of the Underground Pi Beta
Kappa Humor Society.
Uttf
ptr HBU> i m m w M a w
TUORSPAY X
RA5<?
FRIPAY r F6LT
•S&^.PITY
TCU. H£,
uJHrrfO
wm r:
wve?
Asoecls
ftweao.
Applications are now being
accepted for tutors by the
Educational Opportunity
Program (EOP). Apply now in
the University
Library Basement (94).
A s - a l room, vnalls ikied with blue
r . s j ; : - i : JE - j a on the Hoar, low frosted
r if v glass ctimg g k » - n g under neon bulbs.
I h n c was a huge sign o n the ceiling, printed in
black o n « h i * oak tag. ft read, " I f you car.
read r h s s i g n . you're i ) thewrong posit ion. " A
smaH r o o m , h o i , 96, end thick with the salty
;.:;-•; -•: sweat, -heofetactoryechoes of grunts,
; r . - i - 5 i - c ; :i-s:>r: ..c •<,. A sign on the wall
- ; x ' ~ V - T K : - . A '•',;••.- ' " A n d on the •j.ali
:ccos K ' i i . - f jLign read. "Pain Builds
C h a r a a e r * underlined n three colors, red,
r tjc, and r ,:<L--.
ATTENTION
A l l Revved Up
Pain Builds
Character
Do you have at least a
3.0 GPA and need a job?
T-*-, I^J r i s 1 , =.:•--*• ."•' ~i~ -:j5 ;:
n_~.: r-c — .-•— :Si -..•; - t - i . ~ _ : - - at riw nape of the neck and dark under the
arms a n d d o w n the back, they start Xmiia'na
-P T a h s r c f ;-. i i •
: , . : : .
rev* ess : • • ; • ; . - - . '.'j:r; - L - O E ? r > : ~ *
* r a » ? . « : SETC-HS j ,
1 _-•.•£-» r. G . — .
saeaimg s t e p and e".'. r-c *~t irsp .~r D J •Kadis
* - : e J : . - - j ; . . - i - c - t : - t i - - j ;<-\
QtfkMen a n d the b b o d p o - r d s n then
iTi^ C,*LS
T r v s -••?- o_s. — -t • ,-K :r res: s —as.*
r r a : o _ s .-•.<; r - n _ i t s - t ' ^ t r i r e r: r_i
' - i ' T ' ' - ."."-'•i- > « ~ . - . . M b e c . e e — t
~--o? n x r - o s n i . - » - - c —jazh. " - • ;
seconds before the third secorpin, the merciless slap of the refers: s •
the hard mat, the whistle, the appU
cheers coming f r o m the other t>~ nc The coach enters the room. He's afc •
w i t h arms that c o u l d crack a mar s
bear hug and eyes that c o u l d pet
innermost clouds o f pride that hide
and guilt, and worst of a!!, oefes - 1^
the eyes, shows through It sme s
the room like rotten eggs, mo
individual u n t i l he sags Hke : : : : : •
miested w i t h deieai. A n d i n f a t r ; - s
.•par, the rest, spreading cieiea: - • .
~-e, a",J ' . - . ' » :. >- : '-«•, " -'-- :~f. :•
aeieat, a n c c s c i - i : > * the niected
E The coach - . = - : , • , - .-• . : , .
and destroying d be lore it spreads
The tea.- ssse—: es ~ t ; ; • i . . , .
p-rancersi R no more r h e j are : - K
a « : • : . - • : pa.— c: i . • h j . - , : t
r»c-r - A r c :~e\ -•-<-: : 5
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.-^ i "*:^" Driend
- € C C T £ J because —e
*faan Bka zs C-^racser
led
People all ouerthecountryspenttimedoing
it this summer. It ranked right up there with
tennis, the beach, and jogging. But this was
one pasttime nobody chose. It wasn't begun,
much less completed with asmile. Whether we'
were "lucky" enough to have our own car, or
had the "privilege" of using Dad's, the car
needed gas, and, naturally, we needed the car.
Robin Goldberg
Oh, but the prices we had to pay to be
mobile! In the first three wee ksofthe vacation
season, the cost of gas in some neighborhoods
climbed from high in the 80< range to well
above $1.00 a gallon. Yet there's more to life
than those greenbacks. What about the price
of waking at 5:30 a.m. to be the 58th car on a
line — a line leading toastation (you prayed it
led to the station. You couldn't tell because by
the lime you arrived it had turned 16comers,
climbed three hills, and was broken by two
lights) — thai station whose proprietor had
made clear he was first awaiting a delivery that
might not materialize until 11:00 at the
earliest. What do you do?
.
^
1
^
reading|
,
•
^
^
a n d ma|(
Do you go home and let the car sit (or two (riends
months without use? D o you wait and hope
The alternatives left us just a little less
he gas w,ll arrive? O r waste the "precious" baffled than the regulations for buying this
fuel in the tank looking for a shorter line, or sacred item
guaranteed gas? The choices. Most of us
There were mornings I'd wake up, half
wailed on the line, passing the time by expecting to find a sign reading this way:
Pumping gas, odd plains on/y — between 8-9
a.m.,and3tp.m.
locarswilh
lesslhanhalfa
lank needing lielween $ 5 $ 7 0 / regular gas
ONLY!
Then I'd look up and thank those stars
above that I didn't work from 7-4, have even
plates, a threequarters full lOgallon lank and
a car that legally could only take the unleaded
gas.
The laws the government enacted helped us
only a little. The prices were not lowered; in
(act they were barely stabilized. The odd-even
system succeeded in cutting the lines in half,
.
i he I imersiu Student Judicial Committee will ha\e
i interest meeting .md will be accepting applications on
ia\ September 17 at 6:00 pm in LC-20.
S QUESTION OF PRIORITIES.
T h e lines g o t longer, t h e gas
got scarcer, the news got
drearier,
tempers
got
shorter, the sun got hotter,
and our Big Luxury Liner
Cars
got
heavier,
and
heavier, a n d heavier . . .
Worship on Sunday
at Chapel House
X
The Holy Communion
11:00 a.m.
Evening Prayer
6:30 p.,m.
J£L
* • • • - « •
i*B UMh&rmi Campus
489-351':
Ministry
Degree Candidates
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and
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Career Planning and Placement
457-S251
Administration 112
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and gave the morning radio DJssomelhingto
remind us about along w i t h the allernaleside
o( the street parking rules. The $5-$7
minimum (replacing llx- $ 5 $ 7 maximum)
also chopped the lines
hul frustrated those
Jimmy Carter b n d
drivers w h o tried to plan ahead.
oSeCflkrise ,
In spite of tlie new laws, the saying "rules
were made to be broken" was still held true.
After all, what's a rule without an exception?
Drivers came up with new ideas every day to
"beat the system". Syphoning was a popular
method. Whether the gas was being stolen in
the heat of a deep dark summer night, or a
multi-car family was simply transferring fuel
for their o w n purposes syphoning gas was as humanely gave her presidence on line. There|
popular as il is dangerous. Most homemade was a man at a Long Island station who filled
equipment required suet ion by m o u l h tostart | the tank of a brand new Lincoln Continental
the flow of gasoline between tubes. Many and drove away without paying. We read
syphoners disregard this danger, creating a reports of friendships growing and sometimes
number of serious medical cises.
an unexpected surge of commaradarie.
A less dangerous method of beating the
In Queens, a station owner's wife had her
system was switching license plates. Although legs injured when a car was inadvertently
thisseems likeapracticallyfoolproofmethod, thrust into reverse. She was sandwiched
it had one drawback. If for some obscure between the t w o vehicles, and when her
reason your were stopped by a cop on the way husband rushed to her side, his patrons were
to or from a station with plates that didn't angered that they couldn't make their
match your registration the law was not on purchases. Nonetheless, this didn't slop them,
your side. This left a hefty fine facing you.
Thai owner reported a great loss that day.
Ausder
Iraum,
Amerikb
Many people would keep a supply of fuel in
their yards. Okay, this was a safe one if you
were absolutely 100% sure your property was
completely danger-free of fire. Even worse
than that were those who kept a few extra
gallons in their car. This insane kind of
ignorance is what hurt, and unfortunately
killed too many people this summer.
A n d then we read about the Brooklyn
station that unfortunately was the site of a
fatal shooting — killing a man in his midtwenties, leaving his newly pregnant wife
alone. This young widow is now suing the
owner of the station onchargesofnegligence
She'll never forget the gas crunch of 1979.
W i l l any of us ever forget? Does a crisis like
The endless lines proved to be newsworthy
at the leasl. While they were at their height of
popularity, the daily papers carried stories
everyday depicting the lines' activities.
Besides the run-of-the-mill people on line
with the wrong plates, those getting 78« worth
of gas, and the bizarre reasons for exemptions
— there were a lot more reports.
Do you remember the one about the lady
who cut the line with an ailing puppy in the
back seat o f ' her car? The other patrons
this strike a country as large — as powerful
and as selfishly demanding as ours, and be
forgotten quickly? We wonder if the gasoline
prices will ever go down. If they do, will they
skyrocket again? We fret over how our
vacations will be next summer, existent at all,
or planned by calendars and laws again. The
thought of lines, endless lines filling our
streets returns to us. A n d we live in fear of
whether the day will come mat our luel supply
will eventually just be dry.
•
enponera
- ^"Opa
. ..-.-:: ..
America's most unfavorable
pasttime — Gas Lining. W e
waited and steamed while
our
cars
thirsted, and
President Carter (with the
gas n o z z l e
to his head)
sweated.
r".
No gas in my car?
I'll stay home today.
Can I walk that far?
Questions. Answers?
And more questions. And still no gas.
Sports:
Standing in the semi-darkness of asidewalk
at five o'clock in the morning, with the fuzzy
glow o f street lamps marching into points
beyond the horizon, and a few stalwart stars
hanging in there over the inky morning mulch
in the sky, and the rumblings of garbage
t r u c k s s t a l k i n g prey a r o u n d some
indiscemable corner, your feet seem far away
from the rest of your body when you bend
over to grab them and you clasp air instead.
' A i r is beautiful though, you remember,
streaming into the nostrils and flowing
through the body, ah, well, later on, now
A.
Stuart Matranga
Mornings. Wake-up. The head is filled with
steep-stuff, the syrup, salt, and butter gucking
the floor of your dream theater. You blow
your nose and wash out your mouth, but the
arms, like baas of mud on a wire, (lop around
heavily Ant? your legs! You know they're
yours because you recognize the pajamas, but
they seem misplaced. They would have made
better throw pillows on somebody's sofa than
your legs. But they are yours and you take
responsibility for them. Ten fingers, each
working independently and in spite of each
other manage to slip one sneaker on each foot
and tie the laces. New sneakers, blue Nikes,
with a mean white stripe on the sides. Arch
supports and built with the precision
engineering that put a man on the moon. Your
feet have found a home. The head nods and
the hand slaps the chest like a baby's behind.
Swi
The Glorious
gut, no right. A cramp. You place your hand
on it, but It only gets worse. You feel it
growing like it's going to take over your whole
body. Images of convulsing in the street haunt
you, but you keep running, because you read
once in Sports Illustrated that athletes had a
saying. It might have been a football player or
something, who said, "Winners. . . " a n d the
cramps tighten like a grip vise on your lower
torso, "Winners never . . . ," and spears of
pure cold pain shoot up your calf bones, your
feet are sore, your head spins, "Winners
never quit." You stop. And walk back without
throwing up, afterall.
But you don't quit. Not you. Too much is at
stake here. Every morning Perimeter Road
begins tc look like the Boston Marathon, and
everywhere you look, anytime of day or night,
the streets are bouncing with runners,
joggers, men and women in short shorts and
U-shirts running without chasing a bus or
fleeing a cop. Running because they want to.
Not even because it's fun. It's beyond fun. It's
almost a philosophical must. I run therefore I
am. I am because f run. To live is to run.
"Everywhere you look
the streets are bouncing
with runners, men and women in short
shorts and V-shirts running without
chasing a bus or fleeing a cop."
1955. Seeing Mickey Mantle step up to the
plate after his knees had become useless
became painful. Joe Namath became a
parody o l himself. Even Muhammed Ali, great
as. he was, looked old and tired, with his
sagging pouch and slower steps, in his last few
fights.
Running is believing. You hadn't really
thought about it before but now as the air gets
nippier and the first days of school are ending,
you begin to see that this may not be another
Hip cool-withil-thing-to-do fad. Jt entails
something more critical. It smacks of
sociological implications!
Aware"now, alert in fact, after days and
weeks of running, a lit tie longer each day. You
feel in tune, and more, you feel part of things.
The pain is stil1 there, but it's bearable
The athletes of the new sports don'l have to
face this problem. They don'l have to worry
about Time trampling over them because
they keep their own pace and they don'l have
bloodthirsty linemen breathing fury in their
laces. True, they never achieve the mass
glory that Ihe old sports people, only the
minority of Ihe best, sometimes experience.
But then, they have Ihe Wall. Despite egos
and million dollar contracts, lor anyone to
play football (or a living and risk cracking their
skulls at every game, there has to be
something grand, some sublime feeling,
which comes from Ihe comradery, the team
spirit (as corny as it sounds - all sports are
ultimately, indulgently, sentimental), and that
unexplainable high that comes from catching
a touchdown pass (or hitting a homerun). In
new sports you don't get that.
" At every basketball court in New York
City there is a resident Wiz.
New sports people explain their highs as
"aerobic," coming (rom the exhiliaralion of
oxygen, ah, air, through their systems. The
fanatics spurn all the sugarcoaled goodies
and fast food munchies that made America
strong. Their diets are strict, health foods —
seeds, nuts, berries, Ihey eat like squirrels.
But they're healthy. No smoking, drinking, or
other intoxicating, and for the most
dedicated, no, or limited, sex. Psychiatrists
A dude who can stuff, triple pump, fade,
slide, deal, fake, spin, whirl, dance,
prance, and run Dr. J. out of his ProKedsfand you breathe your first life-charged hit of
air. Air.
W i t h each bounce, each attempt at landing
a finger on the smooth surface of the Nike,
you get closer, and when you touch it, you
remember why you came out here.
Fact: Fat has appeared on you. You don't
know where it came from or how it got there,
but it has appeared on the belly, the thighs,
and it don't look good.
Fact: You decide to brave thestairs to get to
your French class on the third floor of
Humanities, and half-way up you realized you
weren't breathing.
Fact: You can't finish one damn page of
The Scarlett Letter without beginning to nod
off. Your concentration span lasts five
minutes on good days.
Fact: Your mother just informed you that
your forty-three year old uncle who never did
anything more strenuous in his life than taking
a shower just had a near fatal heart attack.
Fact: Your old •oommate from freshman
year who had about as much success with
The Other Sex as you'd have playing poker
with Amarillo Slim, took up jogging, got in
grade A shape, and now is simply
unreachable on weekend nights.
Determination is written across your face
in Day-Glo pride and you take off. Right leg
pulled up, landing on the sidewalk with ihe
balls of the foot, the spring goes up through
the ankle, calf, knee, thigh, buttocks, gut, and
then left leg up, and down, reverberating'
through the body in shock waves, vibrations,
gyrations, the gears are going, the engine
moves. You're off and running. Running.
A block. T w o . Three, four, more. Trees,
cars, buse6, front porches with the yellow bug,
repellant light o n , cops drinking coffee in the
windows of diners, the air rolling through you
and you rolling through it. Fluid. A n d then, a
pain. Yes, p a n regfrtenj unmistakenly. Left
because you feel attached to the elements of blending of mind, spirit, and body; a coalition
nature and to the thousands, maybe millions, of all the elements of being is the unstated
of other pain-bearing runners. That thought goal.
comforts. You run alone, yet there is a
These are the new sports; one part
relationship to all other runners. You fee! like athletic, one part social, one part religious.
a musician playing his own instrument in the The old sports, football, baseball, hocky,
largest symphonic orchestra in the Universe. basketball, seem primtive and violent, based
Running becomes more than an early on competition, instead of attaining grace;
morning exercise. You think about it, read cumbersome with equipment and uniforms,
about it, talk about it, study it, take it with you i n s t e a d of s t r e a m l i n e d a n d s u p p l e ;
all the time. It becomes a religion. And you are complicated with intricate rules, instead of
a Torchbearer, a new member of this athletic simple and free form; and emphasizing team,
church. You begin to understand that there instead of individual, play.
are other sects. The Tennis Players. The
And running most of all. Running alone with
Handball Players. The Bicyclists. The Skiers. the Universe. Running out of one state of
The Swimmers. The Weightliflers. A n d the
reality, away from the Harrisburgs and Skylab
fringe cults, the Frisbee Throwers, the fallout, into another, more eternal, reality —
Rollerskaters, and the Skateboarders. Each an expanding horizon extending beyond all
with a separate discipline, an individual known limits.
catechism, toward attaining true
There is, in the discipline of running, a point
enlightenment; a path leading to the perfect that separates the elite from the pedestrian. It
is a test of endurance, a challenge that lures
every runner further and further down
endless miles. After being tired, way beyond •
exhaustion and pain, in the fuzzy area when
the Mentality is no longer conscience of the
Physical Machine, and all the sharply acute
sensations felt while in perpetual motion fade
away, on the other side of a wall that few ever
break through because all faculties seem
about to collapse just before reaching it,
there, in that dark place, is something so precious and awe6ome that it can be compared
to nothing else. Maybe Moses looking into the
burning bush knew something of it. It comes
upon the runner unawares. Y o u are
wringingly drained of all power, and then, the
break through. It's like the sudden calm on a
beach when all the ocean's water is drawn
back for hundreds of yards before a tidal wave
hits shore. It's like a tidal wave. An enormous
surge of energy floods the body and all senses
become one. The sensation of running is
replaced by one of gliding, of being airborn
Flight. One is the wind.
O n the other side of the Wall the air is sweet
and the wind is fast. One loses human identity
and accepts another way of being. The
individual transcends body and mind,
physical and mental experiences are left
behind, and the spirit soars into other
dimensions. It lasts one second, and then the
Wall reappears. But that second of
transcendence is w o r t h every day of pain, you
say.
But you didn't really latch on to ihe
metaphysical end of sweating until you got in
to the late seventies, the tail end of the
generation that spore designer jeans and
disco. The popularity of disco parallels the
rise of the new sports. Both are usually
performed alone among masses and don't
require a partner. The goal in each it
individual perfection of style. And both inspire
fierce loyalties, and practicioners of eat h an
singularly devout to then discipline.
Old sports, like football, contain nopaui n.
o l ego, as can be seen afler a touchdown it
scored and the runner or receiver goes
through his own ritualistic victory dance.
You'd never see that happen on a team
coached by Knute Rockne or Pops Warner.
In those days there was the idea of "manly"
sports. Gentlemen wrote books on the
proper behavior of athletes based on the
chivalric code. In reality professional athletes
were as rowdy then as they are now. The
infamous revelries of Babe Ruth, among
others, are now legendary. They were
tolerated because they were terrific at their
games. Pros have always been given special
treatment, especially great ones. Fans tend to
idolize them beyond proportion and the
athletes usually have trouble handling the
freedom they get. Any man who hits baseballs
for a living can't have totally gotten out of
puberty, or so the thinking goes, but a kid
always has somebody looking over him, a pro
athlete doesn't off the field. Like rock stars,
they never grow up, and tragically, their
professional careers are usually brief.
The tragedy of life is thai no one stay
forever young, no matter how hard they In
Usually it's better to burn out in a euphoria of
glory than to fade away. There are few things
as sad as a once great athlete past his prime,
and refusing to accept it. If a kid has played
basketball forever what does he do when he
gets older and doesn't make the N.B.A.? The
streets of New York probably have a million
basketball courts. At each one there is a
resident Wiz. A dude who can stuff, triplepump, fade, slide, deal, fake, spin, whirl,
dance, prance, and run Dr. J. out of his ProKeds. These guys do nothing but hoop. It's
like they were born dribbling and the
basketball is a floating part of their bodies. It's
what they're about. School's great because
they get pick-up games, and afterwards they
hang out til it gels too dark to see the rim,
working on their fade-away jumpshots, and
putting their own signature on dynamite layups. They blow everyone else off the court,
and if they ever play on teams Ihey make
every shot and nobody minds because they're
the Wiz, and the Wiz gets the ball. According
to pro-scouts, out of those million highsteppers maybe one makes Ihe N.B.A.
Maybe. Competition (or the pros in almost
every sport makes Med-School look like Ihe
Boy Scouts. Whal do Ihe 999,999 other
Wizes do afler they're Iwenty-five and are too
old to get a chance on the Knicks or Nets, and
too old to gel into games with high schoolers,
or worse, get replaced by younger Wizes.
Some <et jobs in recreation programs,
bragginj on how Ihey nearly made the cut,
others gel jobs at Ihe Hess station, and (or
some there's always a lillle red pill to kill Ihe
pain and keep Ihe dream running.
And even professionals have to face that
inevitable, damnable day when Ihey just can't
jump as high, or throw so hard, or run as fast.
Johnny Unilas, in his last fleeting days, was
pathetic, nol because he performed poorly,
but because he wasn't the Johnny Unilas of
are concluding that the more active an
exerciser is Ihe more his sexual appetite will
be satisfied by exercising. Alright you won't
want to go hunting al Ihe Lamp Post, but
you'll never see a tubby ring around your
belly, your concentration will be as sharp as a
blade, you'll fly up flights of stairs, no sweat.
You probably won't get a heart attack either,
but you do run the risk of getting shin splints,
or tennis elbow, jogger's heel, or swimmer's
knee, all painful and potentially disabling
injuries. They are avoidable by buying the
proper footwear, and listening lo your brain
immediately if it reports any trouble
anywhere. II you know a thigh muscle is
hurling, It's much smarter 10 pull over and
stretch it, or smooth II by massaging II, than
to run through it and risk learingahamstring.
The new athletes arc narcissislicly obsessive
ol their bodies. They twitch, stretch, pull, and
commit other forms ol isometric contortions
while in line or sitting in a classroom, or just
hanging out anytime. They become models of
physiological paranoia, extending every
quivering nerve into muscular atrophy, every
headache inlo anemia, and every upset
stomach into angina. They live in constant
fear of incapacitation for not to run, not loget
that "aerobic high," is a thought too terrible to
take.
New sports are, of course, the oldest
sports. Recently they have been popularly
rediscovered, so a more accurate term would
be "Renaissance" sports. All sports have
always been popular in various forms, and
have often been connected to religious
ceremonies. The American Indians depended
for survival on their physical skills and
endurance, The first Olympiads in Greece
were a celebration ol Ihe gods. The greatesl
hero In history, Hercules, was an athlete par
exccllance. The Greek philosophers, and
later Nietzche, urged Ihe development ol the
body to be as important as that of the mind.
A n d today it's a (act, that no matter how good
you are, or sk'tllM, or intelligent, it's usually
Ihe best looking person who has the best shot
al the job. There has always been a bit of
narcissism in all sport, and a feeling of
superiority
in athletes over
non-athletes.
After you break ten seconds in the hundred
yard dash, or four minules in the mile, you
begin lo think in lerms of world records and
Olympic medals. The egos of afhlefes rival
those of any other high inlensily performers.
Even if there aren't huge roaring crowds to
oogle you, you still have to salisly Ihe inner
demands made on yourself, which is why afler
you are totally burnt-out you say to yourself,
"just to Ihe corner, just to Ihe corner." What
makes all these sports, new and old, so
attractive to most people is lhal besides being
a release of energy, an escape valve (or the
lalenl aggressive potencies buried under
layers of imposed social restrictions, and even
besides, for men, asserting their masculinity,
or for women, asserting their societyo p p r e s s e d a b i l i t i e s , b e s i d e s all t h e
psychological and sociological motivations is
Ihe beautiful feeling of being connected to all
o l nature and Ihe Universe through all of time.
Space and time merge when Ihe individual is
in Ihe throes of athletic enthusiasm. And also
there is a sense of creation. Weightlifters talk
about sculpting their bodies. There is a
subdued feeling thai the athlete is sculpting
the soul — not just carving away al the fal to
get to the well-shaped body beneath, but
carving away at all the layers of bad karma, or
whatever you call the wicked demons that
twist our thoughts and cripple our highest
aspirations and intentions with cynicism and
contempt.
When you're running the world is yours.
Rigorous athletics assert the soul, you (eel il
like a wind.moving through you, and Ihe proof
is Ihe physical attributes you create in
yourself. Through sports you can gel Ihe
same kind of enlighlenment achieved
occasionally In poetry or music or art. Sports
are Beauty in motion. Despite the pain,
because of Ihe pain, because o l the Wind as
much as the win, vigorous athletics can
remove you from the physical world ol pain,
pain of Ihe emotions, and once you're beyond
Ihe Wall, ihe body's pain. You can move into
a special realm of truth and beauty and
possibility. It doesn't happen all the time, nol
eveti most of the time, but it does happen.
Aspects
Aspects-
Page 7a
Page 6a
No Nukes I n
ordially invites you to this year's 1st annual
Craig Zarider
meeting
to be held this Monday niqht at 8pm
in the Patroon Lounge
on the first floor of Campus Center
All invited
this way, but the back of the jacket just seems
to have an essence of the Beatles, including
lead guitarist Berton Averre's John Lennonlike pose at the mike (legs spread apart and
slightly bent). Averre even seems to resemble
Lennon, though he's closer to a cross between
Lennon and an early Pete Townshend.
Forget the record jacket similarities, the
influence of the Beatles on the musk of the
Knack is even more obvious. First of all, most
of the songs on the albumend on a finalchord,
The album cover has a photo of the four
rather than a fade out, just like most of the
band members, as did "Meet the Beatles." The
early Beatles songs. Many songs contain
back cover is a photo of the group in an Ed
Beatleish sounds or techniques. Forexample,
Sullivan-like T . V . concert. They are all
"Maybe Tonight" contains the same hi-hatidentically dressed — the drummer, and the
sounding accented hissing as is heard o n
bassist, the rhythm and lead guitarists — all
"Strawberry Fields Forever". Also, the sexy
wearing the same conservative black pants,
rocker, "Good Girls D o n ' t " , has a harmonica
black shoes, white shirts, and even thin black
opening like many early Beatles songs and a
ties! Perhaps only a Beatlemaniac would feel
The first thing that struck me about the
Knack's debut album was that the jacket
reminded me of the Beatles. Onexamining the
front and back covers of the record in the
store, I found many similarities to the early
Beatles.
/
please join us
INFO: call 7-7508
Our Knack
^
^^m
^ ^ ^
very Beatlclike, repetitious ending. O n side
two, the song "Heartbeat" opens with, and
repeats a phrase, that sounds uncannily like
the cascading beginning of "Eight Days A
Week". It also contains a bass bridge like that
found in "Please Please M e " . There is even a
song "The Monkey and M e " (as in " M e and
M y Monkey"), at the end of which is heard a
group of people laughing.
As for the lyrics, aside from being
somewhat dirty, there is nothing extremely
original. The girl-torment boy theme (as in
Billy Joel's "Stiletto") is presented In the songs
"Lucinda", "That's What the LittleGirls D o " ,
"Frustrated", and "(She's So) Selfish".
"Lucinda" and "That's What the Little Girls
D o " are two of the album's best tunes, with
' variety and catchy melodies in both. The hit
^singles o n the album are " M y Sharona", a
! jerky rocker with a superb guitar solo by
Averre, and
"Good Girls D o n ! " . Most of the album's
twelve songs are credited to the song-writing
team of Averre and rhythm guitarist Doug
Feiger, and Feiger also has four solo
compositions. The musicianship on the album
is excellent throughout. The thundering bass
of Prescott Niles is reminiscent o f
McCartney's. D r u m m e r Bruce Gary
completes the foursome with steady and
interesting beats.
Overall, this is a (inely-crafled album filled
with fun, powerful rock and roll, the kind
which hasn't been heard often enough since
the nd of the Beatlemania era. The Knack
even harmonizes well, just like you know who.
It is doubtlul that the Knack will grow and
change as radically as the Beatles d i d , but if
they continue to produce rock and roll of this
caliber, they will prove to be popular,
successful, and one of my favorite groups.
T h e F a b F o u r S t r i k e K n a c k . A r e they f o r real o r j u s t a n i n c r e d i b l e
S e x , Drugs A n d The M.F.L.
Attention!!
Ryckman Runs
Rampant!!!
Friday, Sept. 14
9 pm
D u t c h Quad U-Lounge
Everyone Welcome!
Annie Golden of The Shirts: Treading water o n the new wave.
Ring A r o u n d
The Collar
The Shirts, a brooklyn-based band lead by
singer Annie Golden, have been together (or
approximately five years. What they have
been doing for those five years, however, is
rather questionable. If you happen to bear a
few tracks from their newalbum "Street Light
Shine", you may have been wondering what
they've been doing, since they have obviously
not been playing much music.
Simone deNu
The SUNYA Gay and Lesbian
Alliance is having a party!
Tuesday, Sept. 18,
9 p.m. CC 375
Please join us for Food and Wine
ond Good Company!
"Street Light Shine" Is lacking depth and
substance, and in the end fails to capture the
listener's interest. The Shirts, w h o have been
enjoying mild success in the past year or so,
have managed to throw together some poor
c o m p o s i t i o n s , loo3e h a r m o n i e s , d u l l
instrumentals, and othct; qualities typical of
your local high school bands.
First, there are the tunes themselves. They
are simply not good. Tliey sound like simple
rehashings of popular rock tunes we have all
heard dozens of times. The Cars and Blondic
can get away with it but not the Shirts.
The arrangements on tunes such as
"Kessingfon Gardens" and "Triangulum" are
over done. Poor use of electronics and a
monotonous flow make the music so beautiful
you feel like you're right there in your dentist's
office.
The harmonies on " / Feel So Nervous" do
not jive and are anything but pleasant. O n
"Can't Cry Anymore", Annie sings In the style
of Diana Ross . . . ten years ago. If that's
what you would like to hear, however, maybe
you should pick up one of Ross's albums
instead. "Starts With a Handshake" is one of
those tunes with a repeating baseline that goes
nowhere fast. "Out On The Ropes", another
tune on "Street Light Shine", sounds like it
should have been on a Blondie album instead.
A l l in all, most of the songs on the album have
little going for them, if that much.
There are two songs with some redeeming
value. "Outside the Cathedral Door" is one of
(lie few tunes o n the record where the Shirts
have the right idea. Involved in the tune is
some interesting synthesizer work and a fair
instrumental, all culminating In a grand,
majestic build up. But even o n one of their
better works, some'hing is missing.
Tile only tune that this reviewer deems truly
" g o o d " song is "Milton at the Savoy". This is
ihc only point where any kind of creative
record producing is seen. It is a tune about an
old time jazz musician w h o revisits the Savoy,
where lie used to play. A woodwind section
adds '.mix' fiootl old time jazzy flavor to the
song. Muted trumpets and clarinets stir
thoughts of that jazz era,
Also, AnnleGolden must Iw given credit lor
her emotional and sensitive voice, as best
displayed on "Triutvjulum",
Her talent
certainly'puts her in a class above the rest of
Hie musicians on the album. Maybe she'll
realize this, and either change bands, or
change the rest of the Shirts.
"Street Light Shine" is not an attempt at
anything new. Their sound has been heard
before. Instead of stopping tlie listener in his
or tier tracks, the Shirts are content to rehash
the 'ame old songs in the same old way.
After seeing N o r t h Dallas-Forty,
you'll
never be able to watch a Monday Night
Football game in quite the same way. O n T.V.
with miles, both literally and figuratively,
separating us from the act ion, the pa in is fairly
abstract; we know when someone is hurt, but
the realization is more intellectual than
emotional. But this film puts us right on the
field and we see those faceless, macho heroes
wincing in pain. Therein lies N o r t h Dallas
Forty's strong point, everything is seen from
the field, not the stands and the people behind
it are not worshipping fans but critical
commentators. Admittedldy this is an expose •
w i t h all the problems of the genre (i.e.
overstatement, melodrama, exaggeration,
,;
and a general interest in the lurid details) but
what distinguishes it from Tlie Oscar, The
, Choirboys,
and similar works is its
intelligence and, for the most part, good taste.
lark Rossier
The ads make this look like Ihe Semi-Tough
frevisited — and to a degree it is, at least in
Sattitude, if not plot. It has the same kind of
[ ' r o l l i c k i n g " study humor, the fun-loving,
f players, and the asshole coaches and owners
f who take it all loo seriously. But, what this
1 film does that Semi-Tough and countless
:
others before it failed to, is delve beneath that
seemingly shallow surface !o reveal the
insecure, frightened, even paranoid men who
are still playing childish games for a living.
That is not as much as my attitude as it is the
film's, the players are always being treated like
children and they are more than willing to act
the part. This feeling is partly responsible (or
the film's psychological depth; tlie men (eel
safe being treated like kids, it removes the
responsibilities, yel at the same lime they
resent it, The management plays on this
duality by applying carefully orchestrated
pressure so the men's fury reaches a peak the
day of the game. Not every player is simple
enough to get psyched just by looking at a
picture o( the opposing learn, most of the men
have to be lorn apart inside belore they'll gel
on that field to gel torn apart on the outside.
We're never told Ihis directly, but the
filmmakers make it clear that something other
than money and glory motivates these men.
Director Ted Kotcheff and screenwriters
Kolcheff, Frank Yablana and Peter Gent
(who wrote the novel) go out of their way to
"North Dallas Forty
delves beneath that
seemingly shallow
surface to reveal
paranoid men who
still play childish games
for a living."
"After seeing
North Dallas Forty,
you'll never be able to
watch a Monday
Night Football game
in quite the
same way.
show us the excessive use of drugs by the
players, use condoned by the team. They are,
however, a tittle excessive lliemselves; this is
not some vital new discovery, people have
known about it a long time and tlie film is so
saturated with pot, pills, and everything else
conceiveable that they almost lose their
effectiveness. Instead of a thoroughly
distasteful parly scene at the beginning and a
mindlessly simple episode were the two heroes
(Nick Nolle and Mac Davis) have a beer and
pills breakfast, Kolcheff and C o , would have
been better off just slaying with a devastating!
scene in which Nolle and another player get
shot up before a game, il says more Ihan all tlie
others put logellier.
Nolle had long dreamed of filming tlie
novel and this adaptation is unusually
faithful, though I wish the loveslory had been
more developed; it's still touching, but il kind
of lays there jusl on the fringes. It's
unfortunate because as Charlotte, Dayle
Haddon displays charm and intelligence and
if given ihe chance I think she could have
turned In a very good performance. The rcsl o(
the cast is given more than jusl a chance, and
few of them react as well as Miss I larldon.
Don't get me wrong, everyone Is adequate, but
except for Steve Forrest (who seems to be
haying a great deal o( (unspoolinghiscurrenl
Image) no one seems particularly inspired.
The same can t * said (or Mac Davis who is
only slighlly better showing his glamour-boy
quarterback character, as really being
a r r o g a n t , p a r a n o i d , ass-kissing, a n d
interested only in himself, However, tlie
weaknesses of the rest of the cast are made up
for by Nolle w h o turns in an absolutely
brilliant performance, Elliot's sense of
frustration and tonfusion and the eventual
resolution of those feelings is beautifully
realized, Nolle now takes over as (/ie man to
beat In the A p r i l Oscar balloting, Director
Kotcheff is always competent, sometimes
quite good, and in one Instance (tile
previously mentioned "shooting up scene")
magnificent. He isabletokeepatight reign on
the easily exploitable script and only
occasionally do things get out of hand. But no
matter what (laws it may have, North Dallas
Forty is eloquent in its consideration of Ihe
motives and madness behind a distinctly
' l l . i w i l i n ' F u n F r o l i c k i n g N i c k N o l t c f r o m N o r t h Dallas F o r t y c a t c h e s
B o o z i n ' Br;
i hall, H e l l , a n d leads t h e league in best shot at t h e O s c a r s ,
American "sport"
Concert C o r n e r
J.B. Scotts
Sept 18
Jr. Wells/Eddie Shaw Blues Band
Sept! 20'
Sept, 24
Sept. 27
Sept. 28
Oc 1.1
Oct. 10
Oct. II
NRBQ
Rick Danko/Paul Butterfield Band
a a
P P John Creach
David Johansen
Pousette Dart Band
Hall and Oates
R°y Buchanen
RPI
Sept. 22
Sept. 28
Oct. 20
Page
Cine I 2 3 4 5 6
Movie T i m e t a b l e
On Campus
. 7:30, 10:00
. . . 7:30,9:30
. . 7:30, 9:30
. 7:30, 9:30
O f f Campus
Fox Colonie
Rust Never Sleeps .
7:15, 9:15, 11:15
Crossword
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
111
jig
/ / 1
28
31
•I
29
32
35
12
13
14
39j
|*4,|
33
'
••
47
49
50
b3 b4
25
30
40
43
^n
ho
36
38
Rocky II
7 ; 0 0 i 9:20,11:40
45
r• 1
37
42
48
1
• ••
55
59
26
f
61
7.2Q
VT
9.30
[ym
Valiey Of The Ullra-Vixens ! ' . ! ' . ! ! ' . ! 6:30,' 8 :30,10:30
Rocky Horror Picture Show
UA Hellman
Seduction of Joe Tynan
7:30, 9:30
Cine 7
Breaking Away .
7:30, 9:30
Mohawk Mall
Wile Mistress..
Muppel Movie.
Last Wave
7:30, 9:30
. . 7:15,9:15
7:45, 9:45
Old TV show, "G.E.
ACROSS
1I6
Il5 1 1
—
'
7 : 3 0 i 9.30
' 6 ' . 4 5 i g.| P i || : 30
£LTrU*
'Albany State Cinema
California Suite
12 13
7:00,9:00,11:00
Meatballs
Hot Stuff
The innocent
Tower East Cinema
Richard Pryor
IFG
The Graduate
Easy Rider
52
•
Aspects
8a
11
Oregon
Dale Gonyea
Robin Williamson
Bowl"
What fools do
1 Oedipus' mother
(2 wds.)
and wife
48 Stage name of Arthur
8 Actor Bergerac
Stanley Jefferson
15 Jettisoned
49 Kazan of movies
16 »™__ of preven51 Body snatchers of
tion..."
film
17 Wrestling maneuver
52 Steered clear of
(2 wds.)
18 Hanolete was one 55 CB radio, for one
19 Lanchester of film 59 C6H6
60 Police alert
20 Preston and York
(2 wds.)
(abbr.)
61 Obtains by threat
21 Word in name of
62 Full of knots
Lfndy's plane
24 Belabor the point
DOWN
28 Far Cast temples
30 TV cop
31
for one's money 1 Enemy of the sharks
32 Sphere of influence 2 Spanish eye
Dee* s predecessor
31 Actor Bruce
Styx tributary
35 Tennessee power
Unemotional
complex (abbr,"
Communications
36 Defunct sports
satellite
league (abbr.)
Egyptian sfclnk
37 Dog in 1962 movie
Holds a jazz
title
session
38 Wallet inventory
One word from
10 Emulates the Tower
another
of Pisa
Kind of pin
42 flippers
Suppressed
43 Made laws
12 Sturm
drang
13 Keyneslan reading,
for short
11 To be: Sp.
21 Frying pan mishap
22 Upstart
23 Five-foot lizards
25 Artist's studio
26 Word associated
with Ripley
27 Good-wishes gift
29 Stitched
30 Mel or Mont
33 "So there!"
39 Light, playful
musical passage
40 Rod-sparing
41 Tennis pro
Harold
42 Disconcert
44 Venetian blind
attachment
46 Foppish
50 Lemon, lime, and
orange
51 "
'S Bad Boy"
52 Honest man
53 Annoy
54 Suffix for differ
or defer
56 Rocky hill
57 Compass point
58 Famous Barber
Friday
Afternoon
Diversion
(Please refer to TRIVIA T I M E first)
" Y o u read In the left corner of this
page TRIVIA TIME. A simple little
column that could appear In any
student newspaper In the country.
Yqu are about to encounter ten
questions that deal with a place I
know very well. At college it is said
that knowledge is king, but you are
about to (ind out that a good
memory o l the past will aid you in
the future. So good luck on the
questions and a n other thing I forgot
to mention. If anything strange or
bizarre happens to you today, you
should be prepared. Because when
you picked up today's copy of the
ASP, you ended up reading it
in T H E T W I L I G H T Z O N E . "
c
ril
Jul US
C )110|
lati
u p a h e a d , it is
THE
T W I L I G H T ZONE.
TRIVIA TIME has decided to go
back to the golden age of television
and give you some questions on a
good T V show, namely T H E
T W I L I G H T ZONE. (Please look al
Friday Afternoon Diversion column
now)
1. In one episode, Dick York is able
to hear what people are thinking.
What did he do to acheive this
power?
2. In T H E MONSTERS ARE DUE
O N M A P L E STREET, what did the
aliens d o to destroy the street?
3. Russell Johnson(the professor on
G I L L I G A N ' S ISLAND) goes back
in time to the day of Lincoln's
assassination. What happens to him
to prevent it?
4. In TERROR A T 20,000 FEET,
William Shatner sees a monster on
lha wing of the plane he is traveling
on. H o w does he gel the monger oil
And what of nuclear waste? The half-life of
lutonium (one of the radioactive waste
lements) is 24,300 years; in everyday terms,
hat means the plutonium will continue to be
dioactivc for a quarter to one-half million
ears. In 1973, at a waste storage facility in
anford, Washington, radioactive waste
aked f r o m its container. It seeps into the soil
ncl eventually becomes a part of the food
ain. Scientists cannot assure us of a
rthcoming " c u r e " for the radioactive waste
oblein. Should not we be concerned with
turc generations? We cannot guarantee that
uture governments will take the proper
recauiions necessary to store safely
adioactivc wastes, especially when we do
t know what those proper precautions arc.
T h e r e is a t e c h n o l o g i c a l l y feasible
Iternalive.
R a t h e r than r e l y i n g on
on-renewable sources of energy, i.e. oil,
coal, uranium, (alter all, there is only a finite
amount in the earth), we should look to the
renewable sources of energy, e.g. solar wind,
biomass. The assertion that these alternatives
are not technologically feasible is an
uninformed one. Solar and wind technology is
a highly developed field. Extensive literature
has been written on the subject. Small-scale
pilot plants exist around the country.
Solar/wind technology is not very economical
as of yet because p r i v . l c and public monies
are not being poured in as they have been into
nuclear power. And why haven't they? Con
Edison can't own the sun as it can own Indian
To the Editor:
We were most disturbed to sec our
organization's name inadvertantly omitted
from Viewpoints in theSA-Recogni/cd group
listing. We are the S U N Y A
Pre-Law
Association, and not only do we exist, but we
arc a g r o w i n g , vibrant, and dynamic
organization.
Nuclear
Power
Station.
The
The assertion that nuclear power is safer
than oil or coal fired plants is not bescd on a
thorough knowledge o f the nuclear power
industry just as the frivolity often attributed to
renewable sources of energy (solar/wind,
biomass) points out ignorance of the extent of
alternative energy technology.
Tcrianne Falcone
CW711-2
Drat That Rat!
the wing?
5. Who does Robert Redford
portray when he visits an elderly
woman who is afraid of dying?
6. In ONE-ARMED B A N D I T , what
eventually happens to the obsessed
gambler w h o plays the slot
machine?
7. In one episode, Jack Klugman
plays Jonathan Winters for the
championship of what sport?
8. In H O C U S , P O C U S A N D
FRISBEE, what does Andy Devine
use to escape from the aliens?
9. In a Christmas show, Art Carney
plays a street corner Santa Claus.
What happens to him by the end of
the story?
10. In a war episode, when the main
character looks into the faces of his
fellow officers he sees a light shining
on their faces. What does this light
mean?
To the Editor:
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Write down your answers and bring
them to CC334 by S p.m. on
Monday. All winners will receive a
free personal in the ASP.
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The Honorable
Schoolboys
As S U N Y A does not offer a bona fide
"Pre-Law" major, there is a speeial need for a
group which caters to the informative,
participatory, and intellectual needs of PreLaw students. We feci that the S U N Y A PreLaw Association fulfills these needs and does
much, much more.
This year, we are proud to announce the
sponsorship of the 1st Annual Capital District
Pre-Law Lair. On Saturday, October 20,
SUNYA
a l o n g w i t h several o t h e r
neighboring schools, will play host of Law
School representatives, advisors from area
universities, representatives from L S A T Prep
courses, and members of the universities* PreLaw organizations. In addition, a wealth of
information will be available at the Lair for
the student considering the study of law. Best
of all, this all-day Lair will be held in our own
Campus Center.
Other services to be offered by the Pre-Law
Association include new I'reshman/sophmure
peer advisement, films, guest speakers
lectures, etc. The first General Membership
meeting will be held during the first week of
October. We will also have a table on Student
Activities Day.
Yes, we do exist, and we have a lot to offer.
Give us a chance if your interest is the law.
Sincerely,
Brad Rothbaum, President
S U N Y A Pre-Law Association
Charles IJiener, Chair
Pre-Law Lair
Put Your Eyes Here NOW!!!!!!!!
Let it be k n o w n t h a t the 18-21 year o l d age g r o u p o f today's society consumes m o r e
l i q u o r a n d intakes m o r e illegal drugs t h a n a n y o t h e r g r o u p i n a n y o t h e r age.
L e t it be k n o w n t h a t never before i n U . S . h i s t o r y has the p o p u l a t i o n o f the n a t i o n
had so little f a i t h i n c o u n t r y a n d g o v e r n m e n t as at this t i m e .
Let it be k n o w n that the w o r l d is r u n n i n g o u t o f o i l fast, a n d i n f l a t i o n i n A m e r i c a is
rising faster t h a n the S S T .
Let it be k n o w n that the precious a i r s u r r o u n d i n g the planet is s t i l l being p o l l u t e d at
the quickest rate yet seen, a n d let it be k n o w n t h a t this very d a y , the l o v e l y G u l f o f
M e x i c o is being d e s t r o y e d ; p o l l u t e d , a n d i r o n i c a l l y so by m i l l i o n s o f gallons o f o i l f r o m
a r u n a w a y w e l l : A h u m a n error.
Let it be k n o w n that o u r n a t i o n is, at this very m o m e n t , increasing the n u m b e r o f
nuclear p o w e r facilities, i n spite o f near disaster recently.
Increasing.
Let it be k n o w n that the level o f w o r l d s t a r v a t i o n is nauseating. N o t over l u n c h o r
dinner.
Let it be k n o w n that cancer, the devil's f o r m o n e a r t h , is f o r g i n g a n u n s t o p p a b l e
ocean o f tragedy d a i l y : T h e r e is still n o cure.
Let it be k n o w n that students i n today's A m e r i c a n colleges a n d universities have
been accused o f being u l t i m a t e l y self-centered, in fact, the most self-seeking, selfish
g r o u p i n h i s t o r y . T h e r e has been l i t t l e r e b u t t a l .
I f y o u ' v e just read the facts p r i n t e d a b o v e , and y o u d i d n ' t t w i t c h j u s t a l i t t l e b i t , o r
felt the slightest h i n t o f depression; o r i f y o u d i d n ' t get the least bit upset, a l i t t l e b i t sad,
a little bit c o n c e r n e d , t h e n there is s o m e t h i n g very w r o n g w i t h y o u .
I f y o u sum u p the facts above the t o t a l is 0: T h e w o r l d is at its w o r s t p o i n t i n h i s t o r y .
A n d no j o i n t o r Jack w i l l get y o u high e n o u g h t o not have to deal w i t h t h a t . W h e n H b o m b O n e falls, y o u can be h i g h as the sky, but y o u ' l l still be dead i n ten seconds.
Y o u m i g h t be in y o u r r o o m g e t t i n g s t o n e d . Y o u m i g h t be c u t t i n g y o u r class. Y o u
m i g h t be at F r a n k ' s L i v i n g R o o m o r y o u j u s t m i g h t be fast asleep at h o m e .
A s i n t r u d i n g and p o m p o u s as this may s o u n d , we tell y o u to evaluate y o u r self, y o u r
life, its d i r e c t i o n , the w o r l d y o u live i n , a n d y o u r f u t u r e . W e i g h the evidence; consider
the facts. We've given y o u a few facts a b o v e , j u s t a small p a r t o f the b i g p i c t u r e .
Evaluate y o u r p r i o r i t i e s , evaluate y o u r values. A n d see what y o u come u p w i t h .
W e are y o u t h , and y o u t h is t o m o r r o w ' s t o d a y , the fathers a n d mothers o f
t o m o r r o w ' s y o u t h . Energy, p o l l u t i o n , disease, c o n s u m p t i o n are m a n - m a d e hassles
h e a d i n g us t o w a r d s m a n - m a d e d e s t r u c t i o n . It's a n i n d i v i d u a l t r i p w i t h w o r l d - w i d e
i m p l i c a t i o n s . Interest, a t t i t u d e , and s m a l l sacrifices can and w i l l change us. W h e t h e r
it's l o o late o r not is a m o o t p o i n t : Awareness o f a p r o b l e m acts as half its cure.
— J.B.ti.
"All your children are poor unfortunate victims of systems
beyond their control. A plague upon your ignorance and the
gray despair of your ugly life."
• Frank Zappa. 1967
1
Jay B. Gissen, Editor-in-Chief
Ronald Levy, Richard Behar, Managing Editors
is ludicrous, or at best, naive.
T r i v i a Time
Ynu are traveling In
another dimension. A dimension
not only of sight and sound, but of
mind. Your next slop, ih.il signpost
record and provide tapes.
The majority do not want Oktoberfcst draft
replacing their usual favorites, only to see it
given away about a month later. Besides,
whoever heard of Oktoberfcst the second
week of September?
U.A.S. C A N T YOU D O A N Y T H I N G
RIGHT.'
A Former Employee
Point
62
5 Billja
periodically release a certain amount of
radiation. Some may think this amount to be
insignificant. However, there is no known safe
level of radiation exposure. Scientists have
not found a level of radiation which will not
do any biological damage.
Many nuclear physicists are proud that
accidents such as Three Mile Island have not
occurred very often (as far as the public
knows). However, commercial nuclear power
has only been around for about 25 years. A
mere drop in the bucket of time! As more
nuclear plants arc built, the probability of
major accidents - or even a meltdown increases dramatically.
government also has an interest in nuclear
power. T h i r t y or so years ago nuclear power
kvas not feasible. It became practicable
'because atomic (nuclear) technology was
'developed so that the U.S. might be able to
•have atomic bombs. Thus, to say that nuclear
power is not associated with nuclear weapons
60
61
editorial
comment
J>
I would like to address myself to the
University Community at large, but more
specifically
to the U. A . S. d i r e c t o r s
responsible for Rathskellar operations. Come
on guys when are you going to get your act
together? This is my fifth year at the school,
and I see you continue to bombard the
students with the same bullshit.
The level of the entertainment has been,
almost without exception, consistently poor.
This weekend is t y p i c a l . ' A r e " T h e
Deutchlandcrs" and a fading F M radio the
best you can do? Everyone knows that Paul
Arnold is the only person who could be
satisfied with such a situation. But that is the
heart of the problem: Who are you trying to
satisfy, yourself or the students?
The students do not want to see a German
hand, they want a quality hand that plays
contemporary music. They
do not want a
fuzzy, commercialized I'M sound. They
would love taped music and an adequate
casselte deck could he had foi almost nothing.
Most students can get access to a deck to
The Albany
Student Press
News Editor
Associate News Editor
ASPects Editor
Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Editorial Pages Editor
Aran Smith
Michele Israel
Stuart Matranga
Paul Schwartz
Mike Dunne
Eric Salzinger
Staff Writers: Charles Bell, Bob Blasenstein, Ed Goodman, Mark Rossier, Beth Sexer, Debby
Smith, Hy Stadlen, Vicky Zunitch
appreciates any
and all feedback
on its content
and on the
school.
See your
ideas in print.
Write the ASP.
Debbie Kopf, Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Billing Accountant
Composition Manager
Steve Goldstein
Lisa Applebaum
Amy Sours
Sales: Kathy Bosco, Rich Seligson Classified Advertising: Steve Mauer, September Klein
Composition: Fran Diamond Advertising Production: Randye Baer, Sue Hausman
Donna Reicher, Amy Sours Office: Evelyn Ellis
Robin Goldberg, Marty Vukovich, Production Managers
Mitchell Golding, Jordan Metzger, Associate Production Managers
Vertical Camera
Typist
Dave Benjamin
Marilyn 'Speedy Fingers' Moskowitz
Paste up: Vincent Aiello, Lisa Bongiorno Marie Italiano Typists: Andrea Bolender, Mindy
Gordon, Debbie Loeb,' Kathy Tyrie Proofreaders: Rachel Cohen, Sue Lichtenstein
Chauffeur: Andy Panzer
Photography, supplied principally by University Photo Service
Established 1916
The Albany Student Press is published every Tuesday and Friday during the school year by the
Albany Student Press Corporation, an independent, not-for-profit organization. Editorial policy
s determined by the Editor-in-Chief, and is subject to review by the Editorial Board, Mailing
Address: Albany Student Press, CC 329, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12222,
(518) 457-8892
J
Ryekman R u m Rampantl
• Friday, Sept. 14, S pm„ Dutch Quad
fU-Louno«, 41 - everyone welcome.
• Personals are a minimum of 75* and
• n o ads will be accepted with less
Imoney.
Free male kitten desperately needs a
home. Please call Sheryl. 436-1882.
Classified
CFor Sale ~T^Housing
•*"-•—
i r,
Tape deck for your carlll Clarion PE
828 Automatic Reverae cassette
player with locking fast forward and
rewind s w i t c h a n d Illuminated
direction arrows. For sale locally
from $135-150. Brand new out of box.
Never used. Asking $95. Call Tim at 7-
7863.
KZ9O0 - 9500 miles, new Contl tires,
gas tank, Stw. shocks, 4 into 1
exhaust, oil coooler, quartz light, Z 1
Limited seat plus much more. Just
tuned - runs strong. $2,000. Ask for
Andy 765-2184, 9 am. to 6 pm.
1971 Peugot 304,4 dr. sedan for sale,
less than 67,000 miles, original
owner. Better than 28/30 mpg.
AM/FM, call 462-1938 after 5 pm.
Save Money - Of course you want a
stereo, but why pay high retail rates
when your student representative,
James Schorr, offers all SUNVA
students the widest selection at low
wholesale prices. Call 438-4253 and
savelsavel
Welcome back sale - Discwasher
system $10. TDK SAC.90 $3. Call
James Schorr 438-4253 and save.
( Jobs
)
Help Wanted: Performers needed to
provide entertainment for OCA's
"Thursday afternoon specials". For
more information or an audition, call
KEn at 438-7933.
Camera Store Sales: Part-timers
needed for evenings and weekend
retail sales work. 12-16 hrs. per week.
Some knowledge of photography
necessary, retail experience helpful.
Apply In person at Berns Camera
Store, Colonie Center, upper level,
opp. Sears.
Men! Women) Jobsl
Crulseshlpsl Yachtst No experience.
Good pay! Europe! Australia! So.
Amer. W o r l d ! Send $4.95 lor
appllcatlon/lnto/relerrals to
Crutuworid 154, Box 60129, Sacto.
CA 95860.
rI Services
_
^
J
Freelance editing: 456-7146
evenings.
Resumes: Doc. grads - it's not too
early to prepare! Experienced
placement counselor will prepare
crisp, attractive resume. Printing,
interview tips included, reasonable
rates. Call Tuesday evenings, 434I796. D. Penney.
f Wanted
^
Models Wanted
Photographer (API) needs models
for part-time work (individual &
group) poster, gallery, & commercial
- mostly figure - nude, semi and
silhouette studio and location mostly outdoor. Long hair (neat) &
dance/yoga exp., helpful' but not
required. Write for rates and release
requirements to M.R., Box 22794,
SUNYA Station, Albany, NY 12222
Drummer looking for musicians
interested in jamming. Ed 7-5054.
Wanted: Part-time teacher for urban
youth program, 12 hrs./wk. including
planning time, $3/hr,, on busline.
Send resume by 9/17 to 4-H Albany
County Cooperative Extension,
Martin Road, Voorheesville, NY
12186orcall 765-2327
v Lost/Found;
<-ost: A Timex wristwatch in football
field vicinity. It has a green with gold
clock and brown vnetband. Please
call L>n at 7-7797 it tound.
One sword (Fencing foil to be
precise.) Lost last week near Dutch
Quad, of great personal value; once
owned by a dwarf with no arms. He
gave it to me after receiving a mortal
wound In a duel. Serluosly, If found
call Fouad 7-7825.
(Personals J
Val,
Happy birthday short slug.
P.S. Surprist
Surprise
Faber College wants T.E.L.A. and a
rule book.
To Jonathan Schneldei.
I admire you from afar. You're my
kind ot guy.
Love, B.8.
The dinner lines are back! Get your
ads now!
Models wanted, have a free fashion
haircut at Les Clseauv. 1S68 Central
Ave, call 456-4121.
Register now! Future party; science
fiction, science tact, trek convention j
Asimov, STurgon, NASA, canWiM.
movies, much mom. For inv> j * r i c
SASE to C. Bunt, Highland Will* BOS
£. Greenbush. NY 12061
Ryekman Runt Rampant!
Friday, Sept. 14 at 9 pm.. Dut.v'- Ot ad
U-Lounge $1 - everyone welcome'
I love you too, Tom.
Chris,
It's good to have you home.
Love.FD (alias LF)
Dear David,
I hope your birthday is as good to
your as you are to everyone you
know. You're the best ( I n every way)
and I treasure all our special
moments. Thanx for making me so
happy.
Love always, Gayle
P.S. Happy 6 months!
•
Brian,
It's great to be back in this fantasy
world with you. Thanks for making
my summer. Here's to a great
semester.
All my love, Joanne
Terry,
Another year of pleasant dreams, I
love you's, You're the best roomie
ever.
Joanne
Dear Boo Boo,
You're the best roommate and buddy
I'll ever have. You'll always be in my
heart. Remember my birthdayl
Grubby
Welcome home Henry Clark.
Love, Risa
Sweenzy & Swimmer,
Good luck with your new
housemates.
Bub.
B u b i n s k y , Bubber, Bean,
Schubby, Rob
We're still loyal forever In Ten Eyck!
Abby.
Have a super birthday. Really live it
up.
Love. Laura, Susan, Sue, Laurie,
Michelle
To Waterbury Southwest,
We know it won't be the same without
us, but try and have a great year from
you uptown outpost!
P.S. How ya' doin' Sue and Lori?
Mark,
To the best friend a guy could have.
You know you're in for it when the
whale jumpB on the jogger over a
simple handful of long awaited
ecstasy. It's time once again to get
stupid faced and suck some face. Hav
stupid faced and suck some face.
Have a groat 19th and hook someflsh
nooky!
,
Your disco dad B.P.
Anyone interested in forming a
Stratomatico baseball league, call Ed
or Marc at 7-7767.
my happiest ever
Love Rich
PAGE FOURTEEN
Dave 4 Paul,
So glad we're friends who found each
other - again. Thanks for being
lartha
UsTT
Save Tim Timberlake. Eat all of
Albany's Quaaludes belore he does.
Ludelest Is coming.
HAPPY
BIRTHDA Y
SKIP
Love
Alden Hall
"'^"«M»*»
Chlca
It's been the greatest 3 years of my
life.
Looking forward to faever. Steve
Dear Jim,
So you want p r o o f You've got it!
Watch out!
Love, Ginny - Adirondack
To our beloved R.A. of swinging 2nd
floor Adirondack: Where are you?
Dear Sheryl,
I think we should get together on the
dinner line.
Inconspicuous
Jolie,
You're still the b e g friend I have. I
missed you a lot.
Love you, Jefl
Dear Buck,
Looking forward to another assralsing year, and many good night
activities.
Buck
Dear Scott & Debbie W.,
Thanks for the birthday surprise
party. It was really thoughtful. Glad to
be your triend.
Alex
Engineering
Mooting
0/1777 p m . , C C 316
" B
N e ww—maiimmia^^m
s/Sporta Meeting,
9/17, 8'pm., CC 316.
Back t< College
Cathy,
It's not the same without you bongmg
with us. Come up and party.
Larry and Mike
thanks for making No.19
*'ot,
^^
< • '
To all my friends downtown,
6
)
" • • ^ • ^ ™
s>\ •'
WCDB
Monday
WCDB
Monday
WDCB Promotions
Meeting,
Jen,
Tuesday 9/18, 8:30 p m „ CC 316,
Words can never sum up what you
Holp Wanted: Responsible person to
feel Inside. May you have the run an on-campus operation. Public
happiest birthday ever.
relations and management
I ovn you, llohln ' experience necessary. If Interested
Doar Cheech,
Cindy.
,
u ...h I'd
contact: Ruth Rosenstock, 7-8089.
Surprlsel Here's your first personal ot You
YOU w
- it•• "•. ?° 1 £ ,
asked tor
the year.
3 a * ^ * ^ * * ^ * * ^ * ^ * * ^ H forgotten. Are you nuts? Wou
'mild I Get caught In the Mousetrap, Albany
forget?
cam you
vou noun.
soon Love, Robin , State's very
own wine and cheese
see
p | a c B )o(. a c h a n c e t 0 m e e | a n d t a | k
P S . How'd you like that one?
W C D B M u s i c / P r o g r a m m i n g . with your friends.
Dean.
Here's to the past 6monthsand many Meeting. Sunday 9/16, 7 pm. LC I B
Ryekman Run* Rampantll
to follow.
WCDB Production Meeting, Sunday Friday, Sept. 14, Dutch Quad UI love you. Pnm 9/16, S j Q p m . , LC 19
Lounge, 9 p m . $ 1 . Everyone
AVI:
welcomel
Thanks for erverythln.fill!
Janice,
Love. Me
You cannot win if you do not play
Personals s o l d o n d i n n e r lines.
Melissa.
Give it a try.
Ron
Happy birthday!! You're finally legal
which means you can be punished In
courts as an adult. Watch out! Having
you as my roomie will be nothing but
fun. Let's make sure ot It.
*„ I,,
"
•*
Two 3-bodroom apts. available close
to campus and city bus, living room,
dining room, backyard. Call 438-
3890.
To Hound Dog, S c u i , V.D., Beav, &
Yunk,
Good luck tomorrowl
See you there, Suite 303 - Bleecker
Dear W,
I know we'll be together forever thank you for the happiest 11 /2 years
ot my life.
I love you forever, Cream Soda Face
Anyone in'erest In joining new
s p e l u n k i n g c l u b and e x p l o r i n g
beautiful grottos, call Harvey or Max
at 7-8821,
New it the time to fix up your , im or apartment 'or the
coming year with material* from Can.oron.
Shelving, pegboards, bulletin boards, bedboards cut to
sire. Matontte, canvas stretchers, picture-frame fiouldirtgstorartists. Water-bed framing, hardwoods for carving
orturnHure.
F R E E LOCAL D E L I V E R Y
Customer Service — A Family Tradition tor Over 100 Yuan
E.M. CAMERON LUMBER CORP.
1101 CENTRAL AVE., ALBANY
JUST BEYOND R.R. UNDERPASS 4 5 9 - 3 4 4 1
M A ' ^ N T E T D A Y I ' V " LAYESHOWS FRI. & SAT1
A n e r o t i c ideal.,,jACKKROLi,M.w*w«ii
giANCARLOCjIANNINl
LAURACANTONELLI JENNIFER O'ISEIXL
%e
Innocent
V'iHctJtiti'N S'liHiml K|iir
(if n DitiMk'nl Murriiitf' ! x j I
CokxPrlnhbvMovielab
•*•*•!
ANALYSIS FILM RELEASING COHPORATKHi
A m m n amnavr ton cammm
r
L
Telethon
Teleton HO Interest meeting. General Telethon
information and committee sign-ups. LC 7. Tuesday,
September 18 9:00 p.m.
Telethon '80 Walk-a-thon. Lace up your Nikes —
Walk-a-thon is coming.
Telethon "11(1, SA Used Book Exchange Anyone who
sold books to the exchange, pick up your money or
your books. CC Ballroom, Mon. 9/17, Tues. 9/18,
Wed. 9/ 19.
invited to the Library at 50 North Lark Street to meet
other romance readers from 2:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Monday, September 17. The program will include an
Harleguin romances book exchange. The program is
free and open to the public.
Annual American Film Festival A pot pourri from the
21 st AAFF will be shown free to the publicat 2:00 and
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 18, in Albany Public
Library, 161 Washington Avenue. Different films
drawn from Blue Ribbon Circuit number 2 will be
included in the matinee and evening programs. They
cover a variety of subjects from women's boxing to
politics.
PreviewJ
Telethon S.A. Book Exchange Buy your book for less
at the SA Book Exchange. CC. Ballroom, Sept. 7-14
10:00-3:00.
j
Sectual
JS( -llillcl Shabbat Services. Liberal Shabbat
Services in Education Building Lounge (335) Friday.
night at 7:30 p.m.
JSC-Hillel Tradtional Shabbat Services. Friday
Everning at 7 p.m. Saturday morning at 9:30 a.m.
(Luncheon follows), at the Chapel House.
The Lutheran Campus Ministry The Holy
Communion, I 1:00 a.m. Evening Prayer, 6:30 p.m.
Sundays at Chapel House. Join us! 489-8573.
Lectures
Delta Sigma Pi Professional Event. School of.
Business faculty members will discuss various careers
in business and how to start preparing for those
careers today. Join the faculty guests for wine and
cheese following the presentation. Humanities 354,
Mon. Sept. 17, 8:00 p.m.
c
flints
Charlottes Web, the animated musical based on E.B.
White's classic story, will be shown free to public at
2:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 19. The film, about a
resourceful spider and a terrific pig, is shown with both
captioned and spoken dialogue.
Romance is in the air at the Arbor Hill Branch of
Albany Public Library. Readers of romances are
Come on down to the pool and root for
Albany Waterpolo
Dear Cindy (my R.A.),
I love you. I hope we work great
together. Good luck and I'll always be
your friend.
Gene
Dear Lisa Cornish,
Looking forward to a great year of
disasters, (only kidding)
Love from your giant (Puerto Rican
*
nut)
Dear Bilbo,
I wish you were here with us for moro
than one weekend. The showers here
seem pretty dry. Whally say3 hi too.
Miss ya' bunches!
Love, Jo
Dear Sunshine,
You are the sunshine of my life. Hope
you have a great weekend in Albany.
From Albany to Binghamton with
love, Gene
S a t u r d a y S e p t e m b e r 15
Get
Miscellany
Preview is a free service
of the ASP.
Deadlines are
5:00 Tuesday for a
Friday issue,
5:00 Friday for a
Tuesday issue.
Bring to the SA
Contact Office or
Campus Center 334.
Caught in the Mousetrap
enow*.
S c r i m m a g e a g a i n s t Cobleskill
Friday Oct.5 & Saturday Oct.6
SA F U N D E D l
To my sultees, Bonnie, Robin, Etta,
Nancy & Tara,
You are the best!
Love, Diane
Debs,
The personal thai never was, right?
Thanks pal for everything you've
done and been, including my friend
Practice that typing.
Love, Robin
Jan,
As I Bit here at this ungodly hour,
lost in the chaos of this ungodly
newspapor, I can think of just ono
thing. I'm glad we met.
Love, Rich
CINE1-2-3-4-5-6
NOFirilWAV M A l l
. COIONIE
SEPTEMBER 14, 197
j
Community Self Reliance Festival Sept. 15 and 16,
from 10:00 to 6:00, at the New Scotland Ave. Armary
and the Capital District Psychiatric Center. There will
be over one hundred exhibits and dozens of films and
workshops on alternate energy, health care, food,
education, transportation, environment, community
development and alternative social organizations.
There will also be crafts, music, food and beer. For
more info, call the Albany Environment Center at 4729760.
, ^ _ _
12-2
The unholy four in Schuyler Hall
welcome normal people to the TXOTKE sponsered party on Saturday
night, Sept. 15, We are not members
of the (rati
ALBANY STUDENT .PRESS
Delta Sigma Pi Chapter in Action. Let us show you
how we work. —CC. Fireside Lounge. Wed, Sept. 19;
8:30 p.m.
International Film Group Meeting General Member
Meeting Fri, Sept, 14 at 7:00 in LCI. Anyone
interested in joining is invited to attend.
TXO-TKE Fraternity Interest Meeting. All interested
SUNYA males are welcomed. Schuyler Hall, Dutch
Quad. Sept. 18, 9:00.
Speakers Forum Speakers Forum meetings Monday
nights — 8:00 p.m. CC. 364. Who do you want to
speak at SUNYA?
\
Outing Club Meetings Every Wednesday. LC 21, 7:30
p.m.
J.S.C.-Hlllcl Membership Drive. Attracting students
toJSC.C.C. Lobby, Mon-Fri, Sept. 10-14. 10a.m. to
p.m.
nternational Folkdancing Every Monday evening,
cginncr 6-8, intermediate 8-10, All welcome, free,
nd floor gym, PE Building. Call 482-4674 for info.
ternational Film Group General Membership
'eeting, Fri Sept. 14 at 7:00 in LCI. Anyone
tercstcd in joining is invited to attend.
hinese Club Welcome party for new students,
rubachcr Hall, 8:00 p.m. September 14.
" O-TKE Fraternity "Oktoberfest — Dutch Style"
ring your mug and have a toast with us. 75c
dmission. Schuyler Hall, Dutch Quad, Sept. 15, 9:30
p.m.
1:45,4:00.7:00,9:20,11:40
Happy birthday deviant. I've heard
that becoming legal can really be the
"pitts."
Your deviant suitemate, Rachel
Michelle,
I know it's a ratten deal, bul there's
nothing we can really do, right? A
whole life's wailing ahead tor us.
We'll make It through. Somehow.
Besides, we've got eachother.
Love, Robin
j
C l u b HTew§
presents
Operation Thunderbolt
movie depicting Entebbe rescue
University
Cinematography
Association
refreshments following
Saturday, Sept. 15
9 p.m. LC 2
members , 5 0
First General Meeting
Networks Disagree On "The Cup"
By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP Sports Writer
"Warning: The Surgeon General
Has Determined That Cigarette
Smoking Is Dangerous To Your
Health."
One television network also has
determined that calling a certain
horse race by its brand name could
be dangerous to its health.
For the past five years, CBS had
given the Marlboro Cup the younggirl s m o k i n g - i n - t h e - b a t h r o o m
treatment. Instead of calling the race
by its given name, CBS called it
"The Cup" - except for announcer
Jack Whitakcr who slipped twice
last y e a r a n d b l a s p h e m e d
"Marlboro Cup."
7:30 PM
FA 126
CBS may have once considered
changing its policy on the Marlboro
Cup, but last September - after the
run-in with the FCC - was certainly
not the right time.
"CBS took an extraordinarily
conservative position which was not
founded, in our opinion, in law,"
said Alan B. Kaufman, NBC's
director of Compliances and
Practices. "There have been no
reported cases in court or before the
FCC which would prohibit, the
mention of a cigarette company in
an established sports event.
"The Marlboro Cup has always
been the Marlboro Cup."
Kaufman says NBC's general
policy is to control gratuitous
[
isten to the Great Danes
battle Hobart.
Saturday at 1:45 p.m.
on WCDB
sum
FACTORY
OUTLETS
T u e s d a y S e p t e m b e r 18th
SUNYA ID . 7 5
others $1.25
The Federal Communications
Commission, which regulates the
broadcasting industry, took the
Marlboro Man and all the other
cigarette hawkers off the air in 1968.
The FCC felt television shoudn't be
the medium for launching another
generation of smokers.
CBS feels the horse race with the
cigarette name comes under the
FCC's restrictions. NBC feels
otherwise, and got its chance
Saturday because the New York
Racing Authority, NYRA, had
moved up the date of the Marlboro
Cup. That caused a conflict with the
CBS U.S. Open tennis coverage and
forced CBS to pass on its option to
televise the race.
commercials. Even though it called from Belmont."
the Marlboro Cup by its given name,
And at a meeting before the race,
NBC wanted to make certain that Kaufman asked the NYRA what
Phillip Morris, the cigarette, other exposure possibilities could
company sponsoring the race, didn't exist for Marlboro during the
gcttoomuchofa free ride. The FCC broadcast. The NYRA said a flag
and NBC's paying customers with the Marlboro logo - which the
wouldn't like that.
cameras wouldn't be able to sec - a nd
He told the producers to limit free plugs on the grooms'jackets and
visual references to Marlboro Cup the horses' saddle cloths. But the
in the telecast. When NBC broke NYRA said jackets and saddle
away from the race buildup, the cloths wouldn't be needed if the
visuals said coming up was " more weather was cool.
thoroughbred racing" or "racing
LAOIES PRIM!, DOWN
V E S T S REG s.1.1
s 0 t
NEW!
V E S T
CATHY'S WAFFLE STORE
H((. s ) )
;oi
for more information, call Gayle 7-7743
All Natural Innretlienls
whole wheat waffles
topped with lots of
LUNCH
savory* sweet sauces B R U N C H
Soups
Salads
Delicious homemade cakes .
9o
Learn all a s p e c t s
CENTURY II MALL
of film p r o d u c t i o n
Mon.-Frl. 10-8
Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5
DELTA SIGMA PI
Every Monday 8:30 p.m.
Campus Center Room 361
UrnvoMity Concert Board
present
Steve
Forbert
SA Funded
IS SEEKING MEN AND WOMEN INTERESTED
IN ENHANCING THEIR CAREERS IN BUSINESS
Jobs available
CALENDAR 01- UPCOMING EVENTS
with special guest
at Page Hall
Tickets:
$4.00 with I.D.
$6.00 General Public
Tickets available on Monday September 17 from 8:00 am to 2:00
pm, and Tuesday September 18 from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm in the
back of the Campus Center Main Lounge
New Members Welcome
ALBANY
Need
Money?
The
Professional
Business
Fraternity
UgJssgi •-' 91IR
Thursday, Oct. 4
for 2 shows: 7:30 & 10:30
Comediennes, politicians. . .
Who do YOU want to hear?
292 LARK ST.
Hovrs: Tuis.-Fri. 11-2:30; Sat. i Sun. 10 2
900 CENTRAL AVE., ALBANY • 459-8580
SA FUNDED
SA funded
Speakers
Forum
Open Fri. Nites
6-10 pm
MLN S DOWN
$19.90
TWO COLORED. W f . S I t H N Y O K l
REVERSIBLi
M U N I t WAHMI R
KIDNEY WARMER N A V Y / P O W D I H ' • ! ' P O C K E T S A S S 1
ORS
U R O W N / B E I G E . BL A C K / G R E Y
I II I H U R R Y 1 O N L Y
8 UNITS PI R
S T Y L E 706?
H T Y I F K631
Slichot services follow at midnight
JUST SWEET T i r i ^
Monday, Sept. 17
Professional Even!
School of Business faculty members will discuss
various careers in business and how lo start preparing for those careers today. Join the faculty guests
for wine and cheese following the presentation.
Humanities 354 (3rd floor lounge,, 8:00p.m.
Wednesday, Sept, 19
Chapter in Action
Let us show you how we work.
Campus Center Fireside Lounge, 8:30p.m.
w o r k i n g crews f o r
Fall Fest Carnival
Oct. 4 - 7
Applications
available
In Student
Activities office
Campus Center HO
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen Smayda 489-1361
DELTA SIGMA PI
A p p l y Now
The Professional Alternative
IA TIK UTMMTVrtr ADW1Y
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
FACE SEVENTEEN
^tfMMM
MMMMH.
^^SfRSw'^^^
Interested in Sports?
Need an on Campus job?
Why not apply to be a
student assistant ?
For the Women's
Intramurals
Men's Intramurals
Recreation
SOFTBALL OFFICIALS MEETING
Tuesday, September 18th
Association (WIRA)
CC361 at 7:30
Anyone interested can contact D. ELKIN in CC130.
Albany Great Dane Varsity football
JCDJ
fcp
9151)
giffo
Listen to the play-by-play action from
Hobart College
Tune in to 91 I R ) at 1:45 Saturday
sa funded
is t h e time to
make seme
changes
E X I C O C I T Y (AP) Italy's Pietro
ennea beat a world record and
merica's frustrated track and field
ihlelcs beat themselves out of an
Imost-surc gold medal on today's
i n d - u p o f the l o t h W o r l d
nivcrsity Games.
"Medals arc hard to come by."
id a disappointed James Sc^rcst.
. American track and field coach,
osc charges have won only two
Id medals in 26 events.
Applications available in CC 355
Deadline for all applications is Friday, September 21.
Threatened by the
Opening Day live Coverage of
US. Finds World Games Tough
Hear
Two SUNYA Alumni,
Sharon Weintraub and V l d d Y g j j - M - " *
speak of their recent visit with s o v i e i
Dissidents
And it won't be any easier on
'ay's closing program. The United
tcs heavily favored 400-meter
y team didn't even qualify for the
I. The baton was dropped on an
hangc and the A m e r i c a n s
shed last in t h e i r 4 - t c a m
i fying heat.
But the United States men's
basketball team had an easy time of
it-a surprisingly easy time-in a fronlr u n n i n g , 88-70 v i c t o r y over
Yugoslavia in the gold medal gome
late Wednesday night.
The Yugoslavs had beaten the
U.S. 79-7.1 earlier in the Camus, but
they were no match for the
defending champions this time. The
Americans led by Andrew Toney's
20 points, built a 12-point halftimc
lead and weren't challenged after
that.
"The difference is that we were
mentally tougher," U.S. Coach Ken
Anderson said. "The other go me, we
let d o w n . "
The victory completed a
haskcthall sweep fur the United
O p e n 7 D a y s A W e e k Til
The W e e Hours.
CC375
More info, call 7-7508
After your weekend pleasures
treat yourself to a slice of one of
our 29 pie varieties.
jst*nllil
Indiana Swimming Coach
To Try English Channel
D O V K K , Kngland (AP) Dr. James
" D o c " C o it ns i I mn M, f a m e d
s w i m m i n g coach at I n d i a n a
University, is now expected to
attempt his bid to become the oldest
person to swim across the English
Channel on I'riday.
Coiinsilman. 58, irainer of many
ol ihe United Stales' Olympic
swimmers, including Mark S p i l / .
had been set to swim from Dover
beach I htirsdiiy. his first attempt at
will be ditribuled by your Central Council Reps:
Dinner Lines
Colonial Sepl. 18-19
Indian Sepl. 20 21
Alumni Sepl. 24-2!)
Slale Sepl. 26-27
Dutch O c l , 2-3
and in I lie Off Campus Lounge
each of the above days 11 am-3 pm
FEATURING HOMEMADE SOUPS
AND QUICHE
Sunday at 12:30,
is proud to present
The Ohio Ballet
Athletic Planning Board
Bus Liason Committee
SA Affirmative Action Coordinator
Stop by the SA Office in the Campus Center, CC 116
ar call 457-8087.
GET I N V O L V E D
We can't do I t
without youtttm!!!
Performances:
Monday, September 17
Tuesday, September 18
at 8:00 P.M.
^
iniiilh iriftii AIKKINI iiiffi'ffiK
FRIDAY.SATURDAY
OCTOBER 13,14
I X - 7 7-30 ^ 10:00 PM.
$.75 w/t.e.c.caid
Youcantakothelirst
courses as a freshman or
sophomore w i t h o u t obligation. Advanced coursos, In
y o u r j u n l o r a n d senior years,
lead to a p o s i t i o n of responsibility as an officer In the
active Army, Reserves, or
Army National Guard.
Don't wait u n t i l after college to get practical management experience. Add leadership to your c l a s s schedule
now.
,
Mainstage, Performing Arts
WHH*ilSl..
AMERICAN
CANCER SOCIETY
College military science
courses are courses in leadership development. You learn
techniques Involved in the
management o l resources.
Techniques that are applicable lo any management job.
Another important leadership
characteristic is interpersonalrelationships. Things are
a c c o m p l i s h e d by people and
Ihe kind of relationship established goes a long way In
determining your success as
a leader. Whether you intend
to becomo a manager In a
military or civilian career,
Army ROTC can give you a
competitive edge.
VIUHIKHII Rixim*nv« siilzus thii BCroon with
hur vibrant jHirformnnoa,
mWUHJHIlHiVjfltl.n.iAlHni/lllHI^MlNl
JANUHNOA VANESSA HIllOHAVf
.11111A
CSS^JASQN KOBAROS IIAlllOiBKOOK
UAXIMIIJAN I.CHI 11
M ^ HOSt WXWm,,
IS THIS
WHAT YOUR
KISSES
TASTE LIKE?
Management Experience?
Add It To Your Schedule.
Inson Kolmrds BIVHS one of
ihi: yonr'a must memorable
performances,"
Jiiiio Fonda givus an
ImpoBslonotli complex and
almost .ii'Miii/iiii'.lv dedicated
liiirfonnancH.
" I f weather conditions permit. I
then hope to make the crossing in
about 12 hours." Coiinsilman said.
Ned Harnic of Scotland, who did
ii ill 1951 when he was 55. is the
oldest swimmer ever to have swum
the Channel.
What Do You Want
From College?
Dance Council of 79-80
There are many positions which need to be filled:
University Senate
SASU Internships
Supreme Court
Off-Campus Housing Projects
UAS Membership Board
UAS Board of Directors
SA Communication Office
SA Services Director
Student Dwellings Board of Directors
Legal Services Coordinator
Central Council Committees
Health Services Review Committee
. . . and many more!!!!!
the feat. However, forecasts of
strong winds in the treacherous 2 1 mile Channel forced h i m to
postpone
his a t t e m p t
on
Wednesday.
Discount Books
will be g i v e n o u l w i l h l a x c a r d s as of S e p l . 2 4 . If y o u
gel y o u r l a x c a r d b e f o r e t h e n , p r e s e n t it l a t e r at t h e
O f f C a m p u s . I . o u n g e l o r e c e i v e y o u r n e w c o p y of the
book.
SA FUNDED
lUwif on a true ttory
Stadium,
" I always wanted to be the
fastest," Mennea said, but added: " I
kept looking at the results during the
awards ceremony because I still
couldn't believe it."
Tax Cards
tMHBW
SERVING LUNCH & DINNERS
Free Brunch
Slates, whose women team won Ihe
gold medal the night before.
The U.S. water polo team
provided another gold with till K-d
decision over Russia in the final
game of t h e i r
round-robin
t o u r n a m e n t . The
Americans
finished the last round with a 3-0
murk and the Soviets were second at
2-1,
'The two victories helped set the
American medals count at 19 gold
and A') total, well behind the overall
defending champion Russians who
have compiled a .12-72 count in Ihe
biennial, multiple-spoil competition thai drew college-age athletes
from 95. nations Romania is next at
12-28. followed In I asi Cleriliunv at
d-14.
Mennea, 27. set the only world
record of the Games w i t h a
spectacular clocking of 19.72 in the
200-meter dash, wiping from the
books the ll-year-old standard of
19.83 set by American Tommic
S m i t h in the same O l y m p i c
Tix: $6.50 General Admission
$5.50 ID
$4.50 Tax
Masterclasses in Ballet:
Wed. Sept. 19, Dance sStudio in Gym
ARMY ROTC
LEARN WHAT
IT TAKES TO LEAD
Masterclasses in BalletWed., Sept. 19, Dance Studio in Gym.
9:30-11:00-intermediate-advanced class
ll:00-12:00-beginner-intermediate class
for M o t f Information Contact:
Capt. Glenn W. Perkins
at (518) 270-6254
or drop by the RPI office
on 15th St. in Troy.
S1.25 w/out
KMEMBER 14, 1979
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
I»A<;E NINETEEN
...........uiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiinuiiiHaaHmiiiiiiiii
mil
mum
me
niiiiuiiiniiniiii IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"««,II"III,I1"",,"",H""""
The Office of Student/University Activities & the
Campus Center
I
Syracuse Tests Loyalty
With 11 Road Contests
come to the
announces an opportunity to
4?
Earn
Extra
Money
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
Syracuse University will have a
chance to test the loyalty of its
alumni Saturday or at least a test of
Ihe New York-New Jersey chapter.
The Orangemen play all 11 of
their football games on the road this
eason while a new 50,000-scat
'nmccl s t a d i u m is u n d e r
(instruction on the site of the
ecently razed Archibold Stadium.
Two of the five designated
home" games are at Giants
tadium, the first Saturday against
est Virginia. The Orangemen
~turn Oct. 20 against arch-rival
enn State.
"You know, I never thought I'd
;.iss playing at Syracuse. Not with
the weather they have up there
sometimes," said Quarterback Bill
Hurley.
BE But it gets awfully lonely playing
before hostile and small crowds fora
full schedule.
&. "We heard in the middle of last
year they were going to start
building the new stadium, but we
•didn't know where," Hurley said.
"We didn't know it was going to be
where Archibold used to be. We
figured it would be inconvenient for'
us, but not for 11 games."
FIRST
J>*
X
get-together of
*»
THE CLASS OF 83
campus center ballroom
Thursday, September 20
i
as a Student Activities Assistant
for Campus Events
7:30 pm
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED
election of officers will be discussed
Job Responsibilities:
Crowd Control
Set up, breakdown & cleanup of events
Moderate to heavy lifiting as stage crew
plus others
*A11 Students Invited to Apply
*Returning Staff Must Submit New
Address & Telephone Numbers
Syracuse opened last Saturday at
Ohio State, dropping a 31-8
decision.
Hurley, a legitimate Hcisman
Trophy candidate, was granted a
fifth year at Syracuse after suffering
broken ribs in last year's opening
game. He was able to play in just one
game the rest of the year.
Hurley directs what is a
potentially explosive offense with
Joe Morris, a 1,000-yard runner asa
freshman last year and senior Art
Monk io the hackficld. That's why
'
l«
Batmen
ThedSP
is your paper.
You read it.,
You can be a
part of it.
J.V. Gridders
Scrimmage
Today
Questions?? Call Dave Weintraub
•>
i
•itiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii
l\ J
I What Do You Want
From College?
urn
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM
[jvg_Tower EasiCinema J
$&&SfopmiJl M»nti
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ ???
^ J
\
Filmed
LIVE IN
CONCERT
i Add It To Your Schedule.
If any of this interests you
There's nothing wrong with
check out Army ROTC. And
a little materialism.
even if you enroll for the
We'll admit It. One of the
money, you'll graduate with
selling features of Army
something worth a lot more
ROTC is just plain cold cash
... gold bars of an Army offi
... nearly $2500 during your
junior and senior years of col- cer.
lege. There's also the opportunity for a full-tuition scholarship. And a competitive salary
as an Army officer when you
graduate.
' But we've got other good
things to offer you, too. College courses which challenge
LEARN WHAT
you both mentally and physiIT
TAKES TO LEAD
cally. Management training
For More Information Contact;
and experience you'll find valThe Siena Program
uable in civilian as well as in
military jobs. And Instant lead783-2536
ership responsibility In your
first job after college.
ARMY ROTC
WARNING: This Picture Contains
Harsh And Very Vulgar Language
And May Be Considered Shocking
And Offensive. No Explicit Sex
Or Violence Is Shown.
RelMMKt by SPECIAL EVENT ENTERTAINMENT
[ COWCEniALHUMAVAJLADLEONWAnNEHlJIIOS IUCOIIOS AND TAHtS ]
Friday and Saturday
Sept. 14 (& 15
LC 7
7:30 and 10:00 pm
admission $1.25
WCDB 91 FM will broadcast
omorrow's Albany-Hobart football
ame. Announcers Rick Bensignor
nd Bruce Scheinhaus will provide
he play-by-play and color
commentary. The pre-game show
begins at 1:45 p.m., followed by the
name at 2:00.
Dantley Traded
For Haywood
1
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-The Utah
Jazz announced Thursday they have
traded forward Spencer Haywood
to the Los Angeles Lakers in
exchange for forward Adrian
Dantley.
Dantley, a three-year National
lluskctball Association veteran from
Notre Dame, came to Ihe Lakers as
part of a fourplayer trade with
Buffalo, where he was NBA Rookie
of the Year in 1976-77.
Haywood, a 10-year NBA player,
was acquired from the New York
Knicks by the then-New Orleans
Jazz last January in exchange for
center Joe Meriweuther.
Dantley is 2.1, Haywood 31.
ASP classifieds sell
PAGE TWENTY-ONE
continued from page 24
The slack, he maintains, will be
picked up by defense and the big
bats of Rowlands, Cardillo,
Moschella, Arcario, McCarthy, and
punch-hitter Antalek.
"When someone has a superior
score," Skcel said, "they will be the
better team. We won't'give anything
away. People will know that Albany
State is here."
by Will Grimsley
any more bones, should fill Chuck
AP Special Correspondent
Fusina's QB shoes nicely.
When you sit down to a fancy
Southern California 42, Oregon
meal, normally you whet your State 12: The Trojans could make a
appetite with something delicate- creditable showing in the NFL.
like fresh shrimp or cold consommeNebraska 45, Utah State 14:
and pick over a nice salad dripping Kenny Brown and Junior Miller had
with French dressing.
53 catches between them in 1978.
Not Notre Dame. The Fighting Hipp, hipp, hooray.
Irish, opening the college football
Georgia 33, Wake Forest 7: The
season, have chosen to leap right Bulldogs arc getting better ratings
into the beefsteak taking on down South than their former
Michigan, Purdue and Michigan governor, JimmyCarter.
State in that order. Then it's plop,
Texas A&M 19, Baylor 14:
plop, fizz, fizz.
Stunned by Brigham Young, the
The Irish should chew their way Aggcs settle a ;/ear-old score with
through the bone and gristle of their Baylor.
first course, beating the Wovlerines
Oklahoma 47, Iowa 7: How can
in Saturday's TV feature. It gets you drop the Sooncrs from title
tougher after that.
contention as long as Billy Sims
Last week's tally: 30-12, .714. 1,762 yards is loose?
Taking a day out of the week's
North Carolina State 30, Virginia
vacation, here goes another spin:
12: This is the Wolfpack team that
Notre Dame 25, Michigan 17. The beat Pitt in the Tangerine BowlIrish, with Rusty Lisch directing, bigger 'n better.
avenge last year's setback against a
Missouri 38, Illinois 7: Phil
rebuilding power.
Bradley's arm and Jim Wilder's legs
UCLA 27, Purdue 20. An upset. should allbw the Tigers to roll like
The highly rated Boilermakers, OT Man River.
Washington 30, Utah 10: The
preseason Big Ten favorite, will be
Huskies, getting off to a better start
looking ahead to the Irish game.
Penn State 35, Rutgers 10: Dayle than in 78, should be a definite bowl
Tate, if he can keep from breaking contender.
You kept them up late last night didn't you? And
now they don't feel so good.
You should put them into a pair of Rockports.
Rockports are your feet's idea of a good shoe. Comfortable. Very, very comfortable. Because we don't make
men's and women's shoes tofitcertain price ranges. We
make them tofitfeet. We're funny that way.
For example, our shoes are stitched by hand. Because even the best machines can't stitch as well as people.
And the sole isn't one big hunk of crepe.
It's at least eight separate layers. This makes our
sole softer. Moreflexible.Easier on your feet.
Slip your feet into a pair.^of Rockports. And let
them know what
: feels like to
be loved.
1VCDB Sports T o
I Broadcast Danes
I
Preview
Notre Dame Faces Tough
Michigan In First Game
Good morning*
How's your feeu
Albany State's J.V. Football
squad will hold their final tune up
. f o r the regular season this
afternoon.
The griddcrs will meet Siena
College in a scrimmage on
University Field at 4:00 p.m.
It will be the coaching staffs last
chance to evaluate talent before
their season opene, at Union
j College on Monday (3:00 p.m.).
sponsored by the class of 1980
Apply in C a m p u s C e n t e r , Room 1 3 0 , 9 am-4 p m , M o n d a y - F r i d a y
he decided to come back for a fifth
year.
"1 wanted to play this year. We
have a lot of talent and a chance to
be a good team. Once we get on the
field, we just block out the crowd,"
Hurley said.
Syracuse Coach Frank Maloncy
laments the extra travel, but also
realizes what the Northeast's first
domed stadium will do for his
program.
"Traveling can wear you down
after a while," Maloncy said. "It can
really get to you, even if it'sjust two
or three consecutive games on the
road. So you can image what it's like
for all II."
A crowd of 15,000 to 20,000 is
expected.
Feet have feelings, too. [BRockport
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For your nearest dealer wnte Rockport Company. Mailboro, MA 01752.
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
FSE-awi
Derrick Rubin had what
Lieberman tabbed "an off day,"and
was trounched by Dan Arnold, 6-4,
6-0. The only other Dane to meet up
with success was Dave Lerncr, who
at fifth singles, edged Jay Fcrtig 7-6,
6-4.
Doubles was the Danes downfall.
Albany was swept in three straight,
and with the final two doubles
matches going to three sets, Albany
was frustratingly close to the victory
over the Dragons.
"Those two doubles matches were
extremely close," said Lieberman.
"We should have won both of them.
I think it wasthe lack of playing time
with each other, since they were
together for the first time."
Inexperienced Netmen
Defeated By Oneonta
decision to Oneonta's Rich Karpf.
by Paul Schwartz
"Karpf is a very hard server, and
With freshmen in the top three
singles spots, the Albany State men's he was getting his first serve in,"said
tennis squad certainly was not long Albany coach John Lieberman.
on experience in yesterday's first "Lcvine's serve was off, and that
match at Oneonta. Two of the three caused him some problems. Barry
managed victories in their singles, couldn't break him."
The Danes also had first-year
but the Danes could not come up
with many more successes, and lost performers at second and third
singles, and both came through with
to Oneonta, 6-3.
wins for Albany. Lawrence Eichcn
Albany's top player, Larry Linelt,
defeated Steve Cohen, 7-6, 6-4, and
was unable to attend the match, and
Fred Gaber followed his teammate's
that left Barry Levine in the first
lead and whipped the Dragon's Jay
singles slot. After showing
Starr, 6-3, 6-3. "They both came
impressive talent in pre-season play,
through for us," said Lieberman,
Levine faltered in his first collegiate
"but I expected them both to win."
contest, and dropped a 6-2, 6-3
Hobart
can be beat!
Ann Meyers Dropped By Pacers
I N D I A N A P O L I S ( A P ) Ann
Meyers convinced Indiana Pacers
Coach Bobby Leonard she knew the
fundamentals of basketball well
enough to play in the National
Basketball Association. But,
Leonard said her size just wasn't
right.
"If she was six inches bigger and
40 pounds heavier, it would have
been a different story," Leonard said
Wednesday after he told the 5-foot9, 140-pound Meyers that she had
failed in her bid to become the first
woman to play in the NBA.
"1 personally feel Ann did a great
job from the fundamental
standpoint of knowing the game of
basketball," Leonard said. "\ wish
some guys out there tonight were as
fundamentally sound as her,"
Meyers, an All-American
women's player at UCLA and an
U.S. Olympic star in Montreal who
will remain with the club in some
capacity, took the news calmly.
"I'm happy with myself,"shesaid.
"I did the best 1 could. The players
were super to mc. Slick Leonard and
his assistants showed me a lot of
things that 1 did wrong."
Sam Nassi, the club's owner who
IMPRESS
T SHIRT ART
848 Madison Ave.,
by Mike Dunne
Now that all the pre-season
practices and scrimmages are
history, the Albany soccer team is
ready to open their season
tomorrow in Plattsburgh.
Sunday afternoon they will play
host to Southhampton University of
England in an International
exhibition match.
Based on past performances the
Danes should have a pleasant trip
north. They have defeated this
SUNYAC rival in each of their last
nine meetings, including a 3-2
decision here a year ago.
Coach Bill Schieffclin feels
Plattsburgh has an improved team
over last year, and was still confident
enough to state that, "we should be
able to beat them."
Southhampton, on the other hand
is a strong club and will provide
stiff competition. Schicffelin
analyzed their style of play, "They
play a good brand of aggressive
soccer. They hit a lot of long balls
and do a lot of running," The
Booters who will be forced to play
on consecutive days will try and slow
down the tempo of the game.
The match will begin at 2 p.m. on
Sunday. Schicffelin hopes lor a
large turnout both to sec the Danes
for the first lime this season and to
witness a rare area appearance by a
European collegiate team.
Harriers Open With Coast Guard
-o\.
7
4
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-
by Harold Diamond
The season opener for the Albany
State men's varsity cross country
team will take place tomorrow
against Coast Ouurd. The harriers
arc the twentieth ranked Division 111
team in the nation, and they have
made the NCAA's championship
meet nine out of 15 years. Taking a
seven game winning streak in to this
season, Albany's chances of a
successful season are excellent.
The team will be led by Scott
James and Bruce Shapiro. Albany
cross country coach Bob Munscy
calls them the "dipper brigade."
Both sophomores, these two runners
have made a great deal of progress
in one year, and their improvement
could be due to a gamble by M unscy
thai paid off. Starling them on the
varsity team ignited the spark thai
made last years squad go 8-3.
.lames came into his own at the
Binghamton meet of it year ago. lie
responded with a pressure 4:22 mile
in his hometown, ami Inter added a
fifth-place finish in the Nationals in
Illinois.
Shapiro excelled in SUNYAC
competition. He placed sixth with a
l:5H half-mile. Shapiro's assets arc
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Pliait allow 1 6 witki lor dtli.n,
natural 'speed;-endurance and
toughness. In addition, he placed
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run around Perimeter Road last
Friday.
The Danes will be hurt by the loss
of four of their top five runners from
last years squad. Scan Riley
transferred to the University of
Pennsylvania, Ed Von Buren, John
Little and Mark Laven all
graduated.
This leaves the fourth-ranked
runner Jack Russo", and he's not a
speedster. It's hisdetcrminationthat.
enables him lo break out of the
middle of the pact to a roaring
finish.
Cross country fans ask themselves
about Bill Malhis. He had run a 4:14
mile and a 1:56 half-mile two years
ago as a sophomore. Although
learn captain last year, he responded
with a subpur season.
This was due to a lack of training
on Malhis' part, lie ran only .100
miles last summer compared lo the
')()() miles he ran this summer.
Malhis is now in excellent shape,
anil his per' irmance could be the
key for any Albany success.
Rounding out the varsity squad
Now O p e n Sundays
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Write Sports
for the ASP.
Be a part.
Call Paul,
at 7-3322
decided to give Meyers her
opportunity, said no definite
decision had been reached
concerning a future role with the
team.
Booters Host English
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PAGE TWENTY-TWO'
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
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of quality
(on SUNYA bus route)
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Across from Western Ave. SUNYA entrance
behind Dunkin Donuts
Monday - Friday
SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
12-8
are Mike Alfano, Matt Van Buren,
Kenny Carlstrom, lsmael Cruz, Bob
Johnson, Mike Sayers and Todd
Silva. Munsey says that all have
looked impressive, but Silva may be
the dark horse. Last year he was the
last man on the squad. Now that he's
a sophomore, he may surprise a lot
of people with his speed.
The harriers are at a disadvantage
due to the fact that the first four
teams they face are tough. After
Coast Guard tomorrow, the Danes
have a triple meet against West
Point, Syracuse, and East
Stroudsburg at Army on Sept. 21.
Fifteen of 27 junior varsity team
members are freshmen. Four of the
brightest prospects arc John Cordi,
Nick Sullivan, Chris Lant, and Strvc
Kushelowltz.
The Danes lost to Coast Guard
14-21 last year, but their two best
runners. Oliver and Halmgren,
graduated.
Golf
Tourney
Begins Today
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - It's an
unofficial slop on the Ladies
Professional Golf Association tour,
and no one will expect more than
$7,500.
Ilul don't expect many of the lop
manes in women's golf lo be missing
when Ihc LPGA team championship
begins Friday on the par-75 d.OHK
yard Portland Golf Club course.
Four of the lop five money
winners on this year's tour are
among Ihc 74 women set to compete
in one of the few team events in
professional golf.
"I don't think the money has
anything lo do with it," snid Nancy
Lope/, the four's lending winner thin
year, wiih $174,252 in 16
lournn munis.
Lope/ will learn wilh .loAnn
Wilsham in this week's competition.
"It's mostly a mailer of whether
yntt'ic rested enough to playand you
have a partner you want to pay
wilh." she said. 'II s a tun
tournament. It's a change from the
everyday routine of the tour."
Ihc l.opc/.-Wusham duo finished
seventh last year.
Last year's champions, veterans
Donna C'aponi Young and Kathy
Whitworth, return lo defend their
title.
"I'm playing very poorly,"
Whitworth said as she began a
practice round. "Bui Donna is
playing very well. She's gonna have
a lot of weight on her shoulders with
. me as her partner.
Get your free tickets]
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ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE TWENTY-THREE
i \m
Friday, September 14, 1979
Two Or Three Day Delay
Danes Look To Break Losing Trend In Opener
Vol. LXV1 No. 31
Strong Running, Weak Passing Hobart
Squad To Challenge Albany Tomorrow
by Paul Schwartz
Opening games and the Danes
have not been the kindest of friends.
For the past three seasons, the
Albany State football team has
gained nothing but frustration in
losing their first game each time. So
when the Danes travel to, Geneva,
to face Hobart tomorrow, they will
have one goal—to finally start off
the season right.
"For us, this is kind of a crucial
game," said Albany Stale head
football coach Bob Ford. "We Ihink
we have the makings of a pretty
decent football team, and after
losing our first game the past few
ycurs, we then made a run at the
playoffs this year, the opening game
is critical. It starts you off up in the
ratings, and it sort of sets the tempo
for the rest of the season."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m-—^^^mi^^^-^
The Albany Stale football squad at practice before their opening game at
Hobart tomorrow afternoon. (Photo: Bob Leonard)
The Dane's first game losses in
recent years came against powerful
teams, an excuse that will not hold
up tomorrow. Actually, Hobart is
more of a mystery than anything
else. The Albany coaches have not
scouted them, and basing an opinion
on last season's Statesman squad
would be fruitless. Hobart struggled
through a 2-6 campaign, completely
decimated by injuries. In all, the
Statesman lost nine players with
broken bones, and do not have
m i i n y returnees back from lust year's
debacle.
An area where Hobart docs have
quality and experience is at fullback.
Senior Ed Cooncy (6-1,215) has
amassed over 2000 yards in his
career, and is unquestionably the
Statesman's strongest offensive
weapon. "He's a great one,"
commented Albany defensive
coordinator Jack Sicdlicki. "He's
definitely one of the best backs we'll
face this season. Even when they
haven't had good teams. Cooncy has
run well,"
A lew ycurs ago, Hobart set an
NCAA record fewest passes thrown
in a season—12. A potent ground
uttack has been a Statesman
tradition, and this year's squad is no
exception. Their gnmcplan calls for
Cooney to carry the ball over 20
limes an outing, and if he is not
rushing, someone else will be.
Passing is simply not u major factor
in the Hobart offense.
Junior Pal Tumucri (5-11, 180)
directs the Statesman's powcr-I
triple option attack, and as
quarterback, prefers running to
throwing. "He is a good runner, but,
just an average passer," Sicdlicki
said. "They don't throw very much,
and when they do, it's mostly sprint
passes.
"We know they are going to try
and establish the run. "But if we
September 18, 1979
SVNY Fined $5000 h
Sex Discrimination Case
slam their running game, they've got
to throw. That's what we want.
They're the kind of team we want to
play early in the Season. They use the
option, and that's what our defense
faces every day in practice. In fact,
that's probably the best thing we
do—defense the triple option."
Little is known about the Hobart
defensive team, except that only
three players arc back from a year
ago. One of them, noscguard Brian
Whayleh (6-1,215) is a quality
performer. The statesman set up in a
4-4 defense, the same type the Danes
use, and Whnylcn is the key. "He is
their best defensive player," said
Mike Motia, Albany's offensive
coordinator. "We saw him on Rims,
and he just destroyed people."
Legal Proceedings Continue
but overall depth will be tested.
Conditioning will be a factor over
a schedule such as this, but Skeel is
not concerned or worried about the
physical fitness of his team. "Ask the
players," Skccl said. "When we take
the field, there will be no opponent
in better shape than us." The old
line that baseball players arc the
worst conditioned athletes evidently
docs not apply at Albany State this
season.
Skcel maintains that losses due to
graduation is not a factor in this
Fall's Danes. He's attempting to
educate the team, and he feels that
they have more baseball knowledge
than before. They've been extremely
responsive, according to Skcel, and
the coach is very satisfied with their
progress, and also the squad's
willingness to work hard in practice.
If there is to be a leader on this
team, it is probably catcher Willie
Gurra. "What Willie lacks in
finesse," says Skeel, " he makes up •
for in hustle." Tabbed by the coach
as a "Pete Rose type player," Gurra
has emerged as a gradc-A
competitor never giving up, eager
to learn, and eager to improve
himself as a ballplayer. When the
team is down, look for Gurra to lead
the charge out.
Other returning veterans are
tackle Kyle Palmer and end Frank
Vcith. After that, the rest are
n e w c o m e r s . H o w e v e r , the
Statesman defense did put together
fine p e r f o r m a n c e s in two
scrimmages, losing to powerhouse
Ithaca 14-0 and tying Canisus 14-14.
For the Danes, three positions
that were up in the air now have been
filled. At fullback. John Durant has
won u sturling spot, Mike Arcuri
will handle the job at center, and the
kick-off and field goal chores belong
to Dario Arungo.
A key facet of any baseball team is
how they stack up defensively in the
middle: the catcher, shortstop,
second baseman, and ccntcrfield
positions. Skeel feels that the Danes
are stronger here than in the past.
Although Gurra seems the frontrunner for the catching pos(, he is
getting strong competition from
hard hitting Rich Cardillo. Nojob is
nailed down as of yet. Before
tomorrow's home opener against
Utica, here is the rundown.
At short, sophomore Bruce
Rowlands is the leading candidate,
but speedy freshman Francis
Riviera is hot on his heels. At second
will be senior Mitch Chusid,
followed by Dave Silverman. Center
has Mark McDonald, a newcomer
from the football team, and
freshman Carl Wilson. Skcel is very
confident about his depth and
defense in these four spots, as well as
with the rest of the diamond. •
First base will be tended by Boh
Rhodes and Gary McCarthy; and
the hot corner(third base) will be
commanded by two juniors, Bob
Arcario and Andy Dym. In right is
Mike Turner and Matt Antalckjarid
in left, rounding out the defense, will
be Eliot Dikoik und Tony
Moschella, who has been bothered
by u nagging shoulder injury.
On the whole, Skeel feels
confident, except for his pitching.
Led by ace rigluy Mike Clabcaux,
Ihe stuff is only adequate, and lacks
depth. There is a toss-up for the
number-two spot between Gary
LaConture and Mike Esposito. A
bright spot for the future is Pete
Dclmonice who, after arm trouble,
is being brought on slowly. He will
he an asset when at full strength.
Pitching has been said to be 85
percent of a ballclub, but Skeel says,
with this squad, it's only 65 percent. The Albany State baseball squad opens their aeaaon tomorrow with
continued on pjge 21
,
a doubleheader against Utlca College. (Photo: Dare Machson) A
enmeshed in a complex series of_
legal proceedings stemming from
incidents occurring during her service on the faculty of SUNYA's
Comparative Literature Department.
The subsequently-retrenched
department was chaired by Joseph
Szoverffy, who is named individually as defendant in at least
one of the Leibowitz cases.
This suit, Leibowitz v. Szoverffy,
was filed in New York State
Suprome Court and later dismissed.
Supreme Court Justice John Pennock based his decision on plaintiff's failure to state a cause of action and the lack of "tryablc issues
of fact."
The case will be appealed by
Leibowitz within the next two
weeks, according to Leibowitz
spokesman and former SUNYA
Political Science Professor Clifford
Brown.
"There is a good chance on the
appeal," said Brown.
But Leibowitz presented her
grievances against Szoverffy most
ctearly in the Human Rights Commission suit, in which SUNY was
held responsible for Szoverffy's
allegedly discriminating acts. State
HUman Rights Commissioner
Werner II. Kramarsky concluded
that Szoverffy:
• was antagonistic toward female
faculty members, that he harassed
and mocked such members,
threatened, and exhibited explosive
behavior toward them, other female
employees and students.
• humiliated, threatened, verbally
abused and physically manhandled
the complainant (Leibowitz)
• used sexist remarks denigrating to
complainant and stated in conversations with her and others that comPhoto: Sass plainant is "evil," "dangerous,"
by Debby Smith
Sex discrimination was the charge
when New York State's Human
Rights Commission recently
ordered SUNY to pay $5000 in
damages to former SUNYA Professor Judith Leibowitz.
"It's the largest amount of compensatory damages given in the
history of the State Human Rights
Commission," said Division of
Human Rights Assistant Counsel
Robert Goodstein.
The decision, in part, ordered
SUNY to "cease and desist from
mistreating its employees because
of sex."
While SUNY is currently appealing the ruling, Leibowitz remains
Fundamentals + Execution = Batmen Success
by Bob Bellaflore
The 1979 Albany State varsity
baseball team, according to new
head coach Rick Skccl, can "hit.
Held, and throw with anyone." But
not overstocked with great talent,
Skecl feels that this fall's batmen will
have to "scratch and dent" in order
to be successful.
"1 have two basic goals this
season," Skcel said. "I want to find
out who we are as a ballclub, and
what we can become." His long
range goal, and that of the team, is
to win the NCAA division III World
Scries. Skeel insists that this is a
realistic goal. "I've seen the teams
there," he added, "and 1 know we
can be one of them."
The Danes who have been
practicirg once, sometimes twice
daily, have had fundamental i
baseball drilled into them. 'Ihe new
coach philosophises that no team
can be successful if they can't
perform the basics and perform
them well. Skecl has admittedly left
no stone unturned in this respect.
Skcel has only two question
marks on this squad. "Can we
execute what we've learned?" Skcel
wonders, "and is our pitching staff
deep enough to handle the
schedule?"' Indeed, the Danes must
pluy 17 games in less than a month.
Seven double-headers are slated, j
with three in nine days in I
September, and three more in seven '
days in October. Both stretches
include one single game each. The
longest rest between games is only
Oirec days. Not only pitching depth I
, Possible For Directory
STUDENT
PRESS
Rights Comm. to Suriy: Pay Leibowitz $5000 In sex case.
Same old game: Leibowitz and Szoverffy still at it.
"We're shooting for October 19"
P. 3
and "a threat."
"The facts as produced in this
case do not support a finding of
liability against the University,"
suid SUNY Counsel Sanrord
Lcvine. "We feel the University is
not liable, even if the fads arc
true."
Brown called Levinc's appeal
defective in that it was not filed in a
"timely fashion." In fact, he said, a
proper appeal was never filed at all.
According to Brown, the document filed by SUNY was merely an
"intent to appeal."
"It was sloppiness on the part of
SUNY," he said. "The appeal will
probably not be dismissed."
"It's a case of great injustice,"
said Szoverffy attorney Melvin L.
Wolf. "We tried to get into it, so we
could win, and weren't allowed to
intervene."
Wolf added that he is "as smart
as he (Wolf) is because he was
brought up in Troy High School,
the best secondary school in the nation."
Wolf feels confident that
Leibowitz' case directly against
Szoverffy will prove fruitless and a
waste of time and money. Szoverffy, he said, feels vindicated of all
charges.
"He's been carrying a heavy
burden of baseless allegation," said
Wolf. He was represented by local
ineffective counsel in Albany who
kept gettin him in deeper and
deeper
until he got effective
counsel, namely me. He was the victim of a vengeful teacher, who having failed to get tenure through
regular steps in the University,persecuted him. He was innocent."
Leibowitz' most recent legal action was a motion to obtain confidential documents in SUNYA's
possession. The move came Friday
in a further attempt to prove unfair
denial of tenure.
The long list of papers sought by
Leibowitz includes teaching evaluations, in which Szoverffy allegedly
falsified a statistical analysis.
Although assailed in a 1975
presidential committee report as
possessing "the temperamental and
administrative incapacity" to chuir
his department, Szoverffy was
solicited for the position of German
Department last year.
A search committee formed to
recommend a German chair,
"side-stepped the issue and made a
moot recommendation," stated
College of Humanities and Fine
Arts Dean John Shumaker. "The
committee said many people in the
department would be delighted to
continued on page seven
Former SA President Feldman Overspends
SA Setback $14,000
by Bob Blascnstcin
Former Student Association (SA)
President Paul Feldman overextended last year's $70000 SA budget
by $14000.
According to SA Controller
Craig Weinstock, "someone who
used to be in Tito's (Martinez) posit i o n , " apparently referring to
former SA Vice President Fred
Brewington, deposited $14000
SA Controller Weinstock.
-Heshould^to"?*™,™
Kulakoff
into the wrong account in the fall of
1978. Feldman spent the extra
money before the error was
discovered this summer by former
SA Controller Debbie Raskin.
SA President Lisa Newmark said
that a mistake "like this is very
rare" and that it is difficult to pinpoint who made the error.
Weinstock explained that the error was traced during the spring
semester but was not corrected by
the University Auxiliary SerivYces(UAS)'comPuler service
"All deposits that arc made arc
recorded and every expenditure is
approved. This time the error
wasn't caught," said Weinstock.
"Paul should have been aware."
Newmark explained cutbacks will
have to be made to makd up for the
loss of funds. "SA was used to being rich. Now we'll just have to cut
back. It's just not realistic to try
fundraising in this situation."
Weinstock said that steps have
already been taken to reduce spending, such as the removal of three
telephones in Ihe SA office, and a
reduction in xeroxing costs. There is
also a possibility that there will be a
raise in the Student Activity fee.
He added that he plans to chec
computer defects and "to use more
prudent controls over expenditures" in order to avoid a similar
-iroblem this year.
Buchwald Stops Here
P. 9
Feldman finds fourteen grand in phoney funds.
Simple subtraction sets SA back.
Photo: Bob Leonard
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