D Foul In Last Event Drops Trackmen T o Third

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Women's
Second
(
It's Gonna be a Run-off!
D
Track
Page 19
The offices of SA President and Vice-President
will be decided in a run-off
election next Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
Less than 2000 voters
came out to vote this week
with 1,926 voting for the
president and 1,822 for
vice-president.
For a complete list of
winners in all elections see
page two.
April 29, 1980!
Foul In Last Event Drops Trackmen T o Third
by Bob Bellafiore
It could've been worse — Saturday's quadrangular track and field
meet at Binghamton, that Is. Cortland won it handily with 78 points,
and Buffalo State was way behind
the pack (18 points). In between,
Albany and Binghamton literally
shoved for second, but the Colonials wound up on top, 52'A
points to the Danes' 48'A.
"1 can't say we got screwed,
because we didn't," commented
Albany track and field head coach
Bob Munscy. What happened was
Albany mile-relay anchorman Tony
Ferretti (lane one) got the stick and
a twelve to fifteen yard lead over
the Binghamton runner (lane two).
When the latter began to gain on
Fcrrctti's right side, doing what
Munscy termed " w h a t his
(Ferrctti's) instinct told him," the
Dane elbowed his adversary, veering into the third lane, a clear infraction of the rules. The rule states
that a runner must pursue a straight
path coming out of the final turn. A
Albany runners scored 40 of the Danes' 48Vi total points in Saturday's
meet at Binghamton. (Photo: Marc Henschel)
meet official disqualified the
Albany relay team giving Binghamton the five points, which was just
enough to grab second place for the
meet.
"I was astounded at the referee's
call," continued Munsey, "because
it (the foul) just isn't called, but it
was a gut call." Munsey went on to
note, "It's hardly ever called, but
that doesn't mean it isn't wrong. I
can't blame Ferretti for it."
Despite this, Munsey felt that
there were several "bright spots"
for Albany, the brightest of which
was Mike Sayer's performance in
the 10,000 meter run. In the event
for the first time this season, the
Dane junior won it in 31 minutes
11.7 seconds, almost one and onehalf minutes ahead of his nearest
challenger. More importantly, his
time was 3.3 seconds under the
mark necessary to qualify for the ;
NCAA championships. He joins
Albany sprinter Howie Williams
(who qualified in the 200 meter
dash), as Dane representatives in
the meet to be held in late May in Illinois.
In that race, Sayers lapped the
field twice except for second place
finisher Cliff Bills (Binghamton),
who was only passed once. "We're
just tickled to death about that,"
related Munsey about Sayers' run.
"If the competition had been better, he could've knocked thirty to
forty seconds off," he continued,
noting that Sayers had four laps (of
the 24 lap race) that were two or
more seconds over his 75 second
average. Munsey feels that those
thirty or forty seconds will come
"without any trouble."
Bruce Shapiro also provided a
bright spot for Albany with his second place finish in the 1500 meter
run. Clocked at 3:58.9, he achieved
his personal best. Also, Shapiro
notched third in the 800 meters in
1:57.4, 1.2 seconds off the winning
pace.
Another smile-providing performance for Munsey was had by Jim
Cunningham (55.8 seconds — a
personal best) and was fourth in the
110 meter hurdles (16.3 seconds).
Paul Eichelberg also hit a personal
best in the 400 meter hurdles, as he
was fourth in 58.2 seconds.
Williams was a double-winner,
taking both the 100 and 200 meter
dashes in 10.9 seconds and 22.4
seconds, respectively. Albany's
Curt Denton was second in the 200
(23.0 seconds), with Bill McCartin
in fourth (23.5 seconds). Dave Jeff
Knight tied for third in the 100 with
Cortland's George McKenzie in
11.5 seconds.
The 440 yard relay (one of only
two events not measured metrically
in the meet) saw the Albany quartet
of McCartin, Ferretti, Knight and
continued on page seventeen
three runs came around to score.
"Whenever you play on the road, The Raiders picked up their fifth
and you come back with a split, run moments later.
The difference between trailing
there's no reason to be overly concerned." This was coach Rick 1-0 and 5-0 became painfully obSkeel's feelings about his Albany vious to the Danes in the top of the
State baseball squad's 5-0 loss and seventh. After Bob Arcario flied
10-5 win against Colgate on Satur- ' out, Bob Rhodes walked, Rich Cardillo (five-for-six for the twinbitl)
day.
But, the split could have, and doubled, and Mike Fiorito singled
probably should have, been a to load the bases.
sweep.
Not that Colgate didn't deserve
their shutout victory. The Danes
managed just six hits, and they left
seven men stranded on the bases.
Albany also committed two errors
— and one of those miscues — in
the sixth inning of the opener — did_
the Danes in.
At the start of that inning, Colgate was clinging to a 1-0 lead, as
Albany pitcher Mike Esposito was
effectively holding the Raider batters in check. Esposito got into a bit
of trouble, though, when Colgate
loaded up the bases. But after two
outs, Esposito seemed to get
himself and the Danes out of the
jam by forcing the Colgate hitter to
connect on a fly ball to leflfield.
"That's when the dam broke,"
said Skeel.
Freshman outfielder Jim Lynch
came in a little, camped under the
falling baseball, and made the catch
— almost. The ball popped out of
Lynch's glove, and with the runners
moving on the two-out fly ball, all
"If we had gone into that inning
one run down, their pitcher
definitely would have felt some
pressure," Skcel said. "After we
loaded up the bases, there's no way
we don't score runs if we're only
down 1-0."
As it turned out, Albany came up
empty. Tony Moschella struck out
and Frank Rivera hit into a fielders'
choice for the final out.
Brian Levy
ll'hmo: IHili Leunatdl
Senate Unanimously
Approves SUNY $22.3M
May 2, 1980
Vol. LXVII No.23
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W***
i
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The Albany men's track and field learn beat Buffalo Saturday, but lost to
Binghamton and Cortland. (Photo: Alan Calcm)
Costly Error Turns Sweep Into Split For Batmen
by Paul Schwartz
Gary Schatsky — 676
Despite Colgate's Division I
The Danes got into the scoring
status, Skeel was confident his column with four runs in the first
squad would come back to take the inning of the nightcap, and they
second game. "1 was not happy posted an 8-0 lead before Colgate
after the first game," Skcel explain- picked up five runs in the sixth inned, "but I knew we were going to ing. Albany's four-run first frame
win the second game. They were began with a Rivera double, followlucky to win the first one — if we ed by Matt Antalek's single and
had held on to that third out, we Rowland's two-run double. After
would have beaten Ihcm. I expected Lynch reached first on an error, Arto win the second game."
cario drove in a pair of runs with a
single.
While the Danes were busy piling
up runs, Albany hurler Jim Bittker
was no-hitting Colgate for fivc-andtwo-thirds innings, before tiring in
the sixth.and giving way to Rich
Woods. The solid pitching, combined with Albany's ten runs (and 15
hits) were enough to even the
Dane's spring record to 6-6, and
provide Albany with the only nonlosing record in the Capital District.
One member of that local group,
Siena, is Albany's opposition
tonight, when the Danes play a rare
night contest at downtown Bleeker
Stadium. Albany has faced the Indians earlier in the spring, and came
away with a 7-6 victory. Yet Skeel is
not overconfident for tonight's
matchup:
Hurt by a eustly error, the Albany State baseball team dropped the first game of a doubleheader to Colgate on Saturday, but the Danes won the nightcap, 10-5, (Photo: Dave Asher)
"We must be able to hold them
at bay in the first few innings," said
Skcel. "Otherwise it could be a
steamroller. And the fact that it is a
night game is going to help them.
We haven't played a game at night
this season, but Siena has."
Feud Over Election Methods
Causes Tabulation
by Susan Milllgan
A "lack of communication" between SA President Lisa Newmark
and Election Commissioner Ron
Joseph resulted in a feud involving
strong language, punches thrown,
and job threats, according to
Joseph.
i Newmark and Joseph were in apparent disagreement regarding the
relaying of election results. Joseph
planned to announce alt of the winners in a "press conference" in the
Fireside Lounge at 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Newmark wanted to
have the results posted in the SA
Office as the individual quad
returns were reported.
"I've been a cahdidalc and I
know what (election night) is like,"
said Newmark. "It can really hurt a
candidate's feelings if he or she
finds out in public that he or she
lost."
According to Joseph, Newmark's
plan, which has been standard procedure in the past, would create
chaos.
Delays
"1 didn't Intend to post the
results and say "everybody
charge," Joseph said.
Section Vl-C of SA's Election
Regulations charter states "...the
commission will post in the Campus
Center as soon as possible after vote
tabulations the results of elections." However, Joseph noted the
rules "did not say I couldn't hold a
press conference."
According to Newmark, it was
clear on Wednesday afternoon that
the returns procedure would be
handled traditionally. "I had mude
a decision," said Newmark. "I
think since I appointed Ron as
Commissioner, 1 have jurisdiction
over him. We discussed it in the
afternoon, and he walked away. I
assumed we were doing it the way I
wished."
Joseph also assumed his plan was
to be implemented. "1 saw
(Newmark) Wednesday," he said,
"and she said 'How are we going to
do this?' I told her I was going
through with (my plan), and she hit
Election Commissioner Ron Joseph
" / didn 'I intend lo post the results and say everybody charge."
me. I walked away."
The apparent nature of the
misunderstanding
surfaced
Wednesday evening at Joseph's
suite, the site of the ballot tabulations. According to Joseph.
Newmark, SA members Mike
Williamson, and Jim Mitchell arrived at his suite around 10 p.m.
"kicking the door, yelling, and
demanding to come in." Although
Newmark is technically a member
of the Election Commission by virtue of her position as President,
continued on page five
Carey Plans to Sign
by l.uurii Florentine!
The battle over lite budget is
finally over. SUNY's $22.3 million
appropriations bill has passed both
the New York Slate Assembly and
Senate unanimously and yesterday
Clover nor Carey announced his
plans in sign the bill,
Carey made Iris approval of the
bill known al a press conference at
ihe Capitol yesterday after both the
Assembly and Senate had passed
the hill unanimously earlier in the
week.
The bill besides restoring $22.3
million to lire SUNY budget also
contains a section thai says SJ1NY
"is hereby directed lo continue to
maintain the current level of institutional and program offerings."
According lo United University
Professors (UUP), this section is intended lo establish a legal prohibition on impoundment of SUNY
funds by lite Division of Budget
While Carey vetoed the Initial
SUNY budget appropriations less
than a month ago, SASU represenlalivc Bruce Cronin feels he agreed
to sign this bill because thi
Legislature had "overwhelmingly
approved it."
After months of organizing lob
bies and strikes, Cronin happily
proclaimed the budget approval as
a "tremendous victory."
Credit is due to the thousand:
throughout the SUNY system who
fought for the budget, Cronin said
For the first time in SUNY
history, the budget cuts were
defeated, "We've put a stop to the
trend since '73 which has cut our
budget every year; we've set a
precedent," he added.
But, according to Cronin, "the
most gratifying thing is beating
Governor Carey."
Senate Elections May Be Invalid
by Eric Koli
Due to a possible violation of
election procedures by the SA Central Council, this week's University
Senate elections may be invalidated.
The alledgcd violations were the
result of SA Central Council's decision which prohibited students
wilhout tax cards from voting for
University Senators.
This decision was in direct violation of election regulations which
allow all students to vote for
University Senators whether or not
they have a.tax card.
According to University Senators
and Central Council members, the
only way the regulations could be
changed is if a specific bill regarding
the University Senate Election Procedures is passed by a 2/3 vote in
the Central Council, according to
Senate members Mark Borkowski,
Ira Somach, and Mark Lafayette.
However, no such bill was ever
introduced into the Central Council, voted upon, or passed,- according to Central Council members
Frank Baitman, Ed Klein, and
Mark Lafayette.
"If a bill did not pass then It was
illegal lo prevent a person without a
tax card lo vote for the Senate,"
said Senate member Borkowski,
who is SA's former Legislative
Coordinator,
"To my knowledge it was never
passed. Wc haven't passed anything
like il since 1 was there," said Baitman.
"As far as I know there were no
bills regarding University Senate
voting procedure ever brought up,"
said Klein.
Both Baitman and Klein claim
thai Ihcy.'ve attended every Central
Council meeting in which election
procedures were discussed.
Central Council decided lo lei only students with tax cards vote so
that they would have a control
syslem. The tax cards were punched
on .the voting line to prevent
students from voting iwice, according lo Central Council Chair Mike
Levy and SA Elections Commissioner Ron-Joseph.
"Foremost in everyone's mind
was getting a system that would
work," said Levy who fell that
')Slme Unlvcrally <'l Nt" York m Altmn,
V^ ^ B
would work," said Levy who fell
thai using lax cards was the only
"foolproof control."
Levy said that SA had the
authority to change the election
procedure and require all voters to
have tax cards "if that was the only
means of conlrol available."
Levy, who was conlacled before
the University Senate and Council
members were reached, was unable
to be contacted in response lo theii
statements.
At least one senatorial candidate
feels thai Central Council's actions
cost her the election. Irene
Bleiweiss, who lost the election on
Dutch Quad by two voles, claims
that two of her friends were not
allowed to vote because they didn'i
have tax cards. Bleiweiss claims thai
had her two friends been allowed lo
continued on page Jive
^ ^
JB___
1910 bj Albany Scutltnl Prcu Corporation/
May 2, 1980
i m H i H t n i i i u m i
Col. Cancels Rescue
W O R U CAPSUIES
t
» . m i ^ m m i » i u » u m
Congress to Restrict
T»
»T."
T
Nukes
WASHINGTON (AP) House-Senate conferees reached
agreement late Thursday on a compromise bill setting new
licensing standards for nuclear power plants and "raising by
tenfold the penalties for the violation of safety rules. The
legislation, prompted by the Three Mile Island accident 13
months ago, now goes back to both chambers for final approval. Under the measure, the Nuclear Regujatory Commission would have to certify the adequacy of state
emergency evacuation plans before licensing new nuclear
power plants. This was a compromise between a Senatepassed bill, flatly prohibiting nuclear plants in the absence
of state evacuation plans, and a House bill without any
such restrictions. The legislation would also: (1) Raise civil
. penalties from $5,000 to $100,000 for each violation of an
. NRC order and make it a federal crime to violate NRC
orders and regulations during the construction of a nuclear
plant. (2) Require the NRC to consider the possibility of a
reactor core meltdown when deciding how far away from a
town or city a plant can be safely located. (3) Add 146 new
resident inspectors to the NRC's program. (4) Require the
NRC to notify governors when nuclear shipments are to be
transported through their states. (5) Direct the NRC to
issue new standards for state emergency plans that lake into
account the Three Mile Island experience. The new rule for
nuclear plants is part of a bill authorizing programs for the
NRC for the remainder of fiscal 1980, which ends next
Sept. 30. It contains far fewer restrictions than nuclear
critics in Congress originally had hoped. Earlier attempts in
both the House and Senate to attach a moratorium on new
plant construction to the bill were rejected by wide margins.
Attempt
WASHINGTON (AP) Col. Charles Beckwith, the toughtalking Army commando leader, said Thursday he
unhesitatingly recommended cancellation of last week's
hostage rescue raid in Iran because the breakdown of three
helicopters made it too risky. Surfacing for the first time
since the mission was scrubbed, Beckwith made clear he
had no' doubts that his recommendation was correct,
although he obviously was disappointed that long months
of preparation were wasted. The 51-ycar-old commander of
the 90-man Army-Marine commando strike force bristled
when asked about reports he wanted to proceed with the
mission even though he had only five usable helicopters,
one below what planners had fixed as a safe minimum.
"I'm not about to be a party to a half-assed leading of a
bunch of aircraft and going up and murdering a bunch of
fine soldiers," Beckwith told Pentagon reporters. "I'm not
that kind of a man."
Arabs Free British
Hostage
LONDON (AP) Arab gunmen holding the Iranian Embassy in London freed one of their British hostages today
and let two death deadlines pass for their dozen or more
Iranian captives. They gave no immediate indication of
their next step in (he tense showdown with Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini's regime. The three Arab-Iranians had
threatened to blow up the embassy, themselves, and the Iranian hostages unless Iran freed 91 Arabs imprisoned in
Khuzestan, Iran's oil province on the Iraqi border, by noon
today — 7:00 a.m. EDT. The gunmen have promised not to
harm non-Iranian hostages. At least three non-Iranians
were reported among the total of 19 hostages.
Official Campus Election Results
President
Vice President
S A S U Delegates
Gold — 735
Schatsky — 676
Sidoti — 291
Carlson — 166
Castro-Blanco — 58
Levy — 693
Bait man — 669
Lafayette— 317
B e t z — 143
Jason Wertheim
Tony Giardina
Council and Senate Results - Winners Only
Indian Council
Dutch Council
Colonial Council
P. Weinstock — 133
Stern — 125
Adelman — 112
Topal — 148
Fabian — 114
Turkewitz — 89
Banks — 234
Serpe — 143
P e p p e — 126
Indian Senate
Dutch Senate
Colonial Senate
i
Dunn — 120
P . Weinstock — 115
Somach — 86
Rich — 86 (run-off)
Kotik — 130
F i n k — 112
Rothbaum — 91
Weprin — 2 1 5
Gclfand — 179
Banks — 168
State Council
Alumni Council
Alumni Board '80
Gray — 97
Saunders — 90
Lawson — 83
Country — 84
Berkewitz — 77
Priebe — 62
Flick — 111
Borkowski — 109
Faber — 101
Rosenstock — 76
Weinstock — 68
State Senate
Alumni Senate
University Council
Bloom — 134
Stenard — 103
Klein — 96
Duke — 66
Priebe — 62
Pelikur — 52
Sue Gold
Off-Campus Council
Off-Campus
v
Feldman — 164
Kastell — 160
Maxant — 153
Weglarz — 149
Schatz — 147
Forman ---*133
R o t h m a n — 130
Wenzka — 122
S h o r e — 117
Senate
Lafayette — 168
Silverman — 155
Firestone — 154
Wechster — 147
Gordan — 127
Maxant — 119
Coleman — 116
'82 Council
Shore — 294
Greenbaum — 235
Korony — 232
Topal — 211
Weschler — 194
Gelfand— 184
Horowitz — 163
Rothman — 156
Kastell — 149
Kemondino — 137
AROUNCI CAMPUS
, .
. .
t
L .
Vandals Hit Gymnasium -$800 Damage
[•^••••'
Spring to Life
Equipment
Join in the celebration of spring on Alumni Quad tins
Saturday. Springfest '80, the biggest party of the year, will
be held in Alumni's Courtyard with live bands, plenly ol
beer, food, and munchies. For only two bucks with tax card
and $2.50 without, you can get into the spirit of this great
season all day long.
_,
And afterward, a beach party in Brubacher Hall
guaranteed to sober you up! Those in beach attire 25 cents,
and without $1.00. So get into the spring thing!
Boogie
Down
Does it take two to Tango? Come to Saylcs Hal! on
Alumni Quad Saturday night for its annual "Last Tango"
gala fest and find out.
In the Tango Tradition, the semi-formal dance wll
feature a 7-piece jazz/rock/disco band, wine, punch, beer
hors d'ocuvrcs, and other goodies. So come, bid farewell tt
all your friends with a farewell party to remember!
Tickets on sale on dinner lines. For just a mere pittano
of $3.00 with Sayles Hall activity card, and $3.50 without,
you can gel down and boogie!
EOP Students
Honored
Congratulations to the SUNY EOP students honored a
yesterday's Fifth Annual Awards Dinner in the C(
Ballroom.
The Committee of State University Special Program
honored State University Special Programs seniors In
outstanding academic achievements.
All recipients of the award were chosen on a highcsi tun
basis starting from 3.0. Among them was ASUDA Prcs
dent Leandcr Hardaway who was a featured speaker at ih
dinner.
The theme of the program, "Outstanding Academli
Achievements of Senior Special Program Students," is ac
ccntuated by the fact that this year more than 28,00!
academically and fiscally disadvantaged students are in
volved.
According to SUNY Central Special Programs representative David Als, SUNYA was chosen between all the
SUNY schools to house the dinner because it was the most
"centrally located" and the "legislators who helped us arc
here."
Als added that all students chosen for the LOP program
in general must maintain a 2.0 cum and continually show
progress.
Students,
Ticket
Thy selves
The SUNYA Security Department is considering a plut
for this fall to involve students in issuing parking tickets on
campus.
Assistant Security Director John Henighan said that a
plan is being considered which would allow work study program students to help SUNYA Police issue parking tickets.
According to Henighan, this would provide added flexibility in assigning regular officers around campus.
Henighan pointed out that the City of Albany employs
meter maids to enforce parking regulations, freeing police
officers for other duties. The system is also used on a
number of other campuses.
When asked about the potential' complications with
students policing other students, Henighan seemed confident that there would be no problems. He doesn't believe
that there would be a "conflict of interest" among students
giving tickets to friends and people they know. "We've
dealt with students before in this situation in the student
patrol and our experience is that that just doesn't enter into
it. People just aren't like that," Henighan said.
j
State Quad Board
Election Results
President'
President
Vice" President
Vice President
Secretary
(Run-off
next week)
DATEIINE:
MAyl, 1980
"Mark Nacllcr (611
Adam Lefton (39)
Ed Yule(49)
Don Terracciano (4-1)
Cathy Agan (33)
Julie Peloso (34)
Rob Saunders (32)
Page Three
Albany Student Press
Athletic Director Bob Ford
No money to replace equipment.
by Bob Bellaflore
Approximately $800 worth of
athletic equipment was irreparably
damaged last weekend at iTic
University Gym, according to
Physical Education Equipment
Manager Bennie Siegel.
Sometime between Friday evening and early Saturday morning a
pair of vertical pole vault standards
(used to measure heights), two
lacrosse goals, and three lacrosse
nets were . subject to damage
amounting to approximately
$750-800, said Siegel.
Maintenance men arriving Saturday mjrninc rcoortcd that the slan-
Can Not Be
dards (which were mounted on the
infield portion of the University
Field) had been bent out of shape
and that the goals and nets (located
on the practice fields just southeast
of University Gym) were totally
destroyed.
Siegel noted that the eight-year
old goals cost approximately $125
to $150 each and cannot be
repaired. He also stated that the
standards, purchased 11 years ago
would cost somewhere in the vicinity of $500 to replace, but that there
will still be an attempt to repair
them.
"We don't have the money to
Repaired
buy another pair," said Siegel.
Citing a $2,800 equipment line for
large items on the athletic budget
for the next fiscal year, Athletic
Director Robert Ford was unsure as
to how the money would be
allocated to replace the vandalized
cquipiii ni. According to Ford,
there art already plans to recondition the wrestling mats and have the
high jump and pole vault pits
redone, which arc all necessary
operations.
" I n intercollegiate athletics,
we're funded by the Student
Association, and we obviously
don't Iry to put things (like goals,
standards, or goal posts, for example) in the budget," said Ford. "We
hope for them (the equipment) to
last the lifetime of the program,"
he continued. Ford feels that the
source of the necessary funds is the
major concern. "No question that
that will be the problem. We'll just
have to scrounge around," said
Ford, referring to the money.
Siegel stated that bringing the
equipment in nightly as a preventive
measure would be impossible due to
the size and weight of the equipment and the manpower needed for
such an operation. If new ones are
continued on page five
Con Man: Weed of Crime Bears Bitter Sweet
by Whitney Gould
When an eighteen-year-old high
school dropout who admits he can't
stand the sight of blood becomes
the chief pediatric resident at an
Atlanta, Georgia hospital) you start
lo wonder who is conning who.
Frank Abagnale is probably the
world's youngest, greatest con man
and self-made millionaire. He has
forged, conned and counterfeited
his way to possessing two million
dollars by the age of 21 and along
the way became wanted by the FBI,
50 states and 27 countries.
Abagnalc has been named the
youngest Master Forger by die FBI
— a title he won by a margin of 25
years.
Abagnalc boasts an impressive
record: he has passed himself off as
a lawyer, doctor, sociology professor and airline pilot, possesses a
150 IQ and a photographic memory
and was the real life subject of the
TV series It Takes A Thief. Sponsored by Speakers F o r u m ,
Abagnalc spoke last Tuesday night
of his adventures, along with what
was a loosely translated message of
"Crime Pays."
Indeed, Abagnale's crime did
pay. At the age of 16, he ran away
from his broken home to New York
City. He acquired a Pan Am pilot's
suit and under the disguise of a
traveling airline pilot visited 86 physical." After a year as Dr.
countries and stayed at hotels all Frank Williams, Abagnale seemed
over the world all paid for unknow- lo have an attack of conscience and
ingly, of course, by different fell he should leave the medical proairlines. Abagnale also had a talent fession for good.
for cashing bogus checks and an
Nexl came Ihe Louisiana liar Exability to look and act more am and as pseudo Hob Conrad,
distinguished than a sixteen-year- Abagnale got a job as a lawyer on
old runaway.
the Attorney General's Staff. Then
After two years as a traveling Ihe Imposter tried his hand as a
pilot, Abagnale moved lo Atlanta, sociology professor ai Brlgham
Georgia to change his lifestyle. He Young University. Perhaps his most
became established as a pediatrician daring and ultimate con thai led to
after simply writing that as his occupation on an apartment house application. When a chief pediatrician
at the local hospital was needed,
Abagnale, known as Dr. Frank
Williams, was asked lo accept the
position. Not one lo pass up a
challenge, ihe Great Imposter read
up on the latest developments in the
Mayo Clinic and passed a verbal exam enabling him lo practice h\ Beth Caminarata
medicine in that state. Dr. Frank
As a result of the student credit
Williams, 18 years old, "became
union's high earnings in Ihe past
the most respected resident. I was year, interest rates will increase, acthe only doctor who ever allowed cording lo Credit Union Board of
the interns to do anything."
Director's Vice President Tom
Williams got away with his abuse Schilling.
of authority by becoming known as
In addition, "Students can leave
Ihc relaxed hospital supervisor with their money in their present credit
a reputation for being a joker. "I union accounts, or they can put a
was always chasing the can- minimum of $200 in a savings cerdystripers — they were my age." If tificate and keep it in a summer
someone needed a physical, Ihe lime account from May 2-Sepl. 2,
World's Greatest Con Artist would earning a minumum of 7 percent inpass the job off to someone else terest," he said,
unless the patient was an attractive
"There will be a person at the
girl: "Then I gave her a complete credit union over the summer lo
devastating experience in a French
prison "llial made Midnight Express look like a Holiday Inn," and
a six-month slay in a Swedish jail,
Abagnalc was deported lo the U.S.
Eventually Abagnale received a
Iwclvc-year sentence in a Federal
prison but was officially parolled
after 2 years. Government administrators rightly felt thai ihe
Skyway Man was better suited to
leach crime p r e v e n t i o n lo
continued on paw five
Credit Union Interest Rate Up
Computer
SUNYA Praised for Access
Disabled Have Good Accommodations
by Leah Kraklnowskl
SUNYA has been named a
"model for access" for the disabled
in a recent report submitted to the
Higher Education Committee by
Assemblyman Mark Siegel.
According to the report, SUNYA
is one of two SUNY schools in the
SUNY system that meets full compliance
with
Section
504-Rehabilition Act of 1973 which
states that "no otherwise qualified
disabled individual shall, solely by
reason of his disability, be excluded
from participation in, be denied
benefits of, or be subjected to
discrimination under any activity
receiving federal
financial
assistance."
An inquiry into the status of accessibility for the disabled revealed
that 26 out of the 28 SUNY colleges
have failed to comply with the
his capture was as a bogus Pan Am
employee traveling around Europe
willi eight young women he hired as
"stewardesses",
After avoiding law officials in
Europe and Ihc U.S. for years,
Abagnalc was apprehended in
Southern France at Ihe age of 22.
Wauled by 26 countries for fraud,
forgery and counterfeiting, the Imposter was lo be dealt with separately by each government in consecutive sentences. After a
Fruit
federal regulations of Section 504,
and will be in violation as of June 1,
1980. Only SUNY Binghamton and
SUNY Albany have fulfilled 504 requirements.
A self-evaluation of accessibility
on campus shows that SUNYA has
been working towards both architectural and academic accessibility as far back as May 1965.
Major architectural modifications
such as access ramps to nearly all
buildings on the uptown campus
and living accommodations for the
disabled on State Quad which include elevators to the dining room
and bathroom/shower facilities
have been fully completed and are
working effectively to provide accessibility to those disabled
students.
In order to ensure continued Improvements of implementation of
Section 504, a university-wide task
force, the 504 Concerns Committee, was established three years ago.
This committee, co-chaircd by Bill
Roth and Gloria DcSolc of Affirmative Action, is a multi-faceted
organization that acts as a Mason
between its disabled students and
the university while providing faculty education for the handicapped as
well as continuous self-evaluation
of its accessibility.
The report released by the Committee on Higher Education commends Albany's successful efforts
towards complete accessibility for
the disabled, stressing the importance of SUNYA as a model for
other SUNY campuses to emulate.
As 504 Concerns Committee cochair Bill Roth stressed, "what
SUNYA has accomplished is an excont'mued on page five
System
To Be Used
open new accounts and handle ex- percent on accounts of $500-999,
isting accounts. The credit union and 6 3/4 percent on accounts of
will be open for Iwo hours at the more than $1000."
beginning of each of the seven
Schilling explained, "The reason
orientation sessions," according to Ihc credit union can give more lhan
board member Andy Skurowilz.
6 percent interest is that it's not
"Interest rates on all accounts arc governed by the same regulations as
being increased as of May 1," commcricial and savings banks.
Schilling said. "Basically, ihc credit They give a maximum of 5.5 perunion's funds are invested in three- cent per year on regular passbook
month U.S. treasury securities. accounts. By law, the credit union is
Over the past year, interest rales allowed to give a maximum of 12
paid on these have rscn dramatical- percent."
ly from 12 percent lo about 15 or 16
"We hope lo be able lo open stupercent," he said. "We're just pass- dent checking accounts in Ihe near
ing the increase on to our future," Skurowitz said. "As more
depositors. With the higher interest people open up credit union acrates the credit union pays; counts and our assets build," this
depositors can earn more money will become feasible, he said.
than in a savings or commercial
To facilitate more efficient combank," he said.
putation of balances and interest,
According to Skurowilz, "The "the credit union is going on a comcredit union has tipped interest rates puterization system," Schilling
1/2 percent across the board. The said. "Right now, all figures are
new rates arc as follows: 6 percent hand computed. This lakes up a lot
on accounts of less than $500, 6 1/4
continued on page five
Handicapped Access Symbol
SUNYA cited as "model" for
accomodations.
May 2, 1980
THE HULLABALOO MUSIC
CLUB
presents This SAT. MA Y 3rd
Saratoga Springs. New York 12866
SPAC Day
at
SUNYA
Newmark-Joseph
WHEN: Wednesday, May 7 — 12:00-4:00 p.m.
ONE NIGHT ONLY
AACHEL SWEET
WHERE: SUNYA Performing Arts Center
WHY:
To Order Your Tickets for the 1980 Summer
at SPAC
Tickets now on sale at Just A Song,Midland
Records, Colonie and Schenectady
General Admission only $6.00 and
reserved seats available for $1.00 extra
MAY DATES
• SPAC SPECIALS
• THE NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL
• THE NEW YORK CITY BALLET
• THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA
• THE ACTING COMPANY
• TWYLA THARP DANCE FOUNDATION
• ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER
• THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
• THE EMPIRE STATE YOUTH THEATRE
every THURS. 50's night, 50's music with $.50 mixed
drinks all night.
FRI. 2nd-Shaboo Alstars featuring Mat Murphy from
the Blues Bros, with Dry Jack
SAT. 3rd-Rachel Sweet
WED. 7fh-Gentle Giant- from England
WED. 74f/)-Winters Brother's Band
SAT. 77(/i-Zachariah
Closing Weekend A special Video Party
Wed. 27s(-Root Boy Slim and The Sex Change Band
FRI. 23rd +S4T.24f/).Fountaln Head
For more info Call 436-1640
Tickets for oil of these events can be ordered with your Master Charge, VISA,
American Express or personal check (with proper ID).
THE FIRST 1980 SEASON SCHEDULE WILL BE AVAILABLE
Prennt.d ir. cooperation with SUNYA't PERFORMING ARTS CENTER and tha
SARATOGA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER.
<&&L&£0&-- 7IIQAJ.MJ%L XA&bL- AfOcLcdli.
MARSHALL TUCKEC VMV
"TENTH"
WASHER
fcRoV
4.69
HOME, I.E.
"ON
Te>
P'E
GENES i s
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ATCO
i
3.99
4.69
AMBROSIA
"ONE. £IC,HTY'
UJA.KNEK ftROS.
399
I Ithjcf C m , I , S . i n t i r r a
f*mes GUCPO SAXDOCU
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WARNER "BROS.
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3
Open
10-9 Weekdays
10-6 Saturdays
12-5 Sundays
99
Candidate Name Mix- Up In SA Election
by Susan Milligan
Problems with SA voting
machines continued this week as
one candidate received conflicting
reports on his victory, and another
candidate was left off the ballot entirely.
Off-Campus University Senate
candidate Gary Silverman was informed Wednesday night he had
won a seat in University Senate.
However, when he looked at the official winning candidates posted in
'SARATOGA PERFORMING
ARTS CENTER
W'tRHER &Rr&.
a.B9
TtTE ToiONSHENt
"EMPT't <HAtt"
ATCO
I
4.69
Lir*t>A ROHSTAl>T
" MAfc LOVE"
ELEiCTKA/ASYl.U'A
4.69
Give the gift
of music.
Page Five
Albany Student Press
the SA office, he didn't see his
name written.
•*'l was a little surprised," said
Silverman. "I went into the SA office Thursday all confident that I
had won, and 1 saw that maybe I
hadn't."
Election Commissioner Ron
Joseph said that "there was a
mistake (in name transferral) and
Silverman is a winner."
The winning names were apparently miscopicd from Joseph's
Election
continued from from page
Joseph refused to let her in because
"she was actively supporting a
presidential candidate."
Assistant Commissioner Suzanne
Koren claimed Ncwmark angrily
yelled, "I'm f—ing SA President,
you've got to let me in; I'm on the
commission, let me in — you guys
won'l get paid.'
Ncwmark admitted she was
"annoyed and upset at the way
(she) was treated," but denied
shouting obscenities.
"I had a right to be in there,"
said Ncwmark. "I was expecting a
call at about 8 p.m. giving some
election results, and I didn't gel
one. I was there (at Joseph's)
because I wauled to know what was
going on procedurally. The election
was still my responsibility."
Joseph said Newmark "just
wanted to be there...to find out the
results."
Eventually, Assistant Commissioner Mickey Tarpinian, feeling
that Newmark and Mitchell were
"creating a disturbance" and
hindering the ballot-counting, called Dulch Quad dorm director Pat
Dowse. At this point, Tarpinian
said, Williamson had left.
"I checked out the disturbance
call, and was greeted by Lisa and
some other guy screaming," said
Dowse. "Lisa was saying 'You're
not doing this the right way...I have
to talk to you...You're going to be
fired — I'm not going to pay you.'
Eventually, 1 quieted them down
and told Lisa she probably wasn't
going to get in."
Tarpinian said that Newmark
then attempted to enter the suite
while a resident of the suite walked
in. Tarpinian said when he moved
to stop her, Ncwmark began punching him in the chest. Dowse confirmed Tarpinian's statement.
"I wanted to know what was going on,"Dowse said. "I thought
maybe she had a right to be upset. I
talked to Ron, who said he had to
finish the ballot counting. Ron said
to Lisa, 'Don't you want a fair election?' and she said, 'No, I want to
have it my way.'"
Tarpinian confirmed this, adding
thai he then asked, "You mean you
don't want a fair election?" Tarpinian said Mitchell's response was
"there's more than one way lo have
a fair election."
Ncwmark feels she was treated
badly as SA President and was
angry thai she was "denied her
rights as a member of Ihe commission."
"All 1 wanted was to have it done
the way il was done in Ihe past — I
didn't want to see the results," she
said.
Mitchell, a candidate und not a
member of the commission, said he
went to Joseph's suite because he
"didn't want Lisa lo walk over
alone." Mitchell said he made no
attempl lo enter the room where Ihe
ballots were, but feels Newmark
Feud
should have been allowed inside.
"Slit knocked for 15 minutes and
they wouldn't let her in...she got
progr Islvcly louder. Hul I don'l
blame her (for her behavior) a
damn bit. I thought it was
disgusting the way Ron was treating
her. He doesn't make policy, he
follows il," Mitchell said. .
Soon after Dowse left the scene,
SA candidates Craig Weinslock and
Ira Somach arrived. When informed of the situation, neither tried lo
gain entrance, Joseph said.
Eventually, Wclnstock, Mitchell,
Ncwmark, and Joseph conferred in
Joseph's suiteroom, during which
lime the ballots were locked in other
rooms. He conceded lo calling in lo
Ihe SA Office the presidential
results. Joseph posted the rest of
the results in the SA Office and informed a wailing crowd of about
200 in the Fireside Lounge of the
site of ihe election returns. The
result, Joseph said, was a stampede
toward the office.
Both Joseph and Ncwmark
stressed thai no tampering of voles
or ballots occurred.
Joseph is angry at Ncwmark and
apologclic to those who waited
nearly an extra hour for the election
results, he said.
A c c o r d i n g to W e i n s l o c k ,
Newmark " w a s not being
unreasonable."
"The SA President has always
worked as a messenger of the
results. Lisa had every right lo be in
that room."
Somach said he feels "there were
better ways to deal with the situation than the way Lisa handled
it...most people would probably
agree with Ron."
Somuch added that "SA elections have not been the fairest in the
past. Lisa wanted to make it fair,
and Ron wanted to make it fair.
Both people went to extremes."
list to the SA list. Joseph said all
person involved with Ihe mix-up
have been notified of their actual
states.
"1 don'l know who made the
mistake and it doesn't matter,"said
Joseph. " I l was an honest
mistake."
A mistake was also made in the
omission of Jim Caslro-Blanco's
name in the Campus Center
machine University Council.
Joseph noticed the discrepancy
after voting was completed. Joseph
said he added the votes of the other
candidates from the Campus Center
machine and found that if they were
awarded to Castro-Blanco, he could
have conceivably won the election.
Joseph said he and Assistant
Commissioners prescnl when the
mistake was discovered voted to call
Castro-Blanco and offer him a revote for University Council.
Castro-Blanco,
however,
"graciously refused," Joseph said.
Court Members No-Show
For AMIA Sports Hearing
by Andrew Carroll
^
An SA Supreme Court hearing was postponed last night when only
two of the Court's seven members showed up.
In ihe three previous meetings of the Court ibis year, no more than
foui judges have appeared at one lime.
Chief Justice Brad Rolhbaum and Justice Pally Clang were ihe two
who appeared last night to hear ihe case between Albany Men's Intramural Athletics and the Dirty Nellie's basketball game.
Rothbaum began Ihe aborted meeting wilh an apology lor the
absence of the other five justices and an explanation of a recent Central Council ruling which calls for a minimum of foui justices to
legally try a case. He questioned the constitutionality of thai ruling
and said he'd be willing to hear the case, if AMIA and Dirty Nellie's
concurred. Feeling the losing side would surely appeal Ihe decision,
bolh agreed to postpone the meeling.
The hearing involves an appeal by AMIA of an April 9 court decision on the eligibility of one of Dirty Nellie's players. Before the intramural basketball season began AMIA President John DcMarlini
granted John Dinkclman, ex-Colgate University varsity basketball
player, permission lo play on Dirly Nellie's. After Nellie's won their
first play-off game, their opponcnl, TBD's, petitioned AMIA lhal
the game be played over without Dinkclman. Their council agreed,a
nd Nellie's losl the replay, urging them to bring Iheir case before Ihe
Supreme Court.
Alleged
Violations Mar Senate
"I wasn't going to contest an
election in which I only won 52
votes," said Castro-Blanco.
The reason for the mishap is
unknown, but Castro-Blanco »^ems
to feci there were underlying personal factors involved.
"Ron (Joseph) told me Lisa
(Newmark) was the one who wrote
the names on the Campus Center
machine," said Castro-Blanco.
"My name was left off. You figure
it out."
ASP Apology
The ASP apologizes to Jim
Caslro-Blanco for any hardship he
may have suffered due to Tuesday's
Judicial Board article. While we
had no desire to damage his
character, we seem lo have been led
somewhat maliciously by our
"sources." A more complete version will be printed in a follow-up
this week.
Vandals at Gym
continued from page three
purchased, Siegel said, they will be
of a lighter construction so they
can be moved if so desired.
As a result of the vandalism of
Albany's standards, Union Collegewas forced to bring theirs lo a track
and field meet at Albany last Tuesday, and the lacrosse team must
now use alternate equipment for
p racIi ce.
SUNYA
Elections
brought up before the SA Supreme
continued from front page
vole, she would have won the elec- Court.
The University Senate election
tion. Bleiweiss says that she is takwas different from other elections
ing steps to contest the election and
says she will lake it to the SA this week in thai Ihe Senate is a
separate organization completely
Supreme Court if necessary.
In order for the election to be in- removed from SA. SA, however,
validated now, according to ' was put in charge of handling the
Somach. ?o-r.eone-wiil have to Senator elections. Tax cards were
required to vote in all SA elections
move for the election to be invalidated. Then, a hearing is con- because they are proof of SA
membership. However, the election
ducted before the election commisregulations stale "membership in
sion. If the hearing commission
refuses lo invalidate it, il can still be Student Association is not required
lo vote in this (University Senate)
election."
Central Council specified they
wanted Senate candidates' names
on the voting machines with the SA
candidates, according to Joseph.
The tax cards were used as a control
because there were "no other viable
alternatives" according to Joseph.
Since all full-time students were
issued lax cards, Joseph felt that
this was a fair system.
The Weed Of Crime Bears Bitter-Sweet
continued front page three
businesses than let him waste away
in a prison cell.
The 21-ycar-old one time
millionaire is at it again. Today
Frank Abagnale Associates is one
of the largest consulting firms in the
U.S. and is worth ten million
dollars. The imposler visits 280
cities a years on business and tours
the college lecture circuit. Next year
his lifestyle will be made into a motion picture starring Dustin Hoffman. You can even catch him next
month as a gucsl host on the
"Tonight Show."
Abagnale, one of Ihe greatest con
artisls ever, lived a life most can on-
Fruit
ly sec in the likes of a James Bond
movie. Yet when asked if he would
do il again, Abagnale's answer was
a sound "No. Too many people got
hurl this way."
87 countries by the age of 21,
sports cars, beautiful women, and a
million dollars all for free?
I woi.Jer.
Credit Union Interest Rates Increase—7%
SA President l.isu Newmark
Annoyed and upset at treatment.
continued from page three
of time, since the credit union has
over 1,000 depositors. The system
will probably be ready next
September," he said.
"The crcdil union is entirely student run," Schilling said. According lo former board member Brian
Furlong, "It Is one of only two student run credit union in the country, The other is al the University of
Massachusetts. It's more secure
than any bank, because its money is
invested in U.S. government
securities. Bunk money is often lent
Praised
continued from pane three
cedent model for other colleges in
the SUNY system — Section 504 is
a wide-reaching law, defining civil
rights lor the disabled and making a
significant breakthrough for handicapped in this decade."
lo businesses. If a business goes
under, a bunk can lose a lot of
money.
"The crcdil union can lend up to
$200 by law lo its members in Ihe
form of personal loans. These can
be taken out for up to six months al
15 percent interest. This is a much
lower interest rate than those
available al any bank," said
Furlong.
"The credit union was only
begun (wo years ago," Schilling
said. "Il is entering its third year of
operation, and has already more
Minimum
than doubled its original number of
depositors.
"Although Ihe amount fluctuates
during Ihe year, its current assets
are
approximately
$100,000-150,000," Furlong said.
"Assets peaked this spring at
$250,000," he said.
"The credit union board is
elected by Its members, who are all
students, former students, and
employees of Ihe credit union,"
Furlong said. "It is nationally
chartered and governed by the
laws of the U.S. Congress."
tyqtf> Wztkmti
• • SENIORS • •
New Zukes
itfKUet
Now that "fast food" items have
grown from a simple burger and
fries to onion rings, chicken, pies,
corn on the cob, fried mushrooms,
eggs and sausages and steak and
fish sandwiches, yet another exotic
food is on the test market agenda:
zucchini.
*
%
Campus
Ctnltr
•-^'
ADRIESNtSNETHEN
KEVIN SMITH
u
S< OF [ DILDINE
MARK DALE
| in t h e Contact Office
DENZII SHOWERS
There is no longer a discount
for dues-paying seniors
* -:
;
ZODIAC N
book for pre-publication review
after it had already gone to press,
and after galley copies had been
sent out to book reviewers.
The Agency, in demanding the
Nation's Restaurant News right to review the book, invoked a
reports thai several McDonald's secrecy agreement which Eveland
outlets near the Oak Brook says he never saw. Eveland says, in
(Illinois) area arc experimenting fact, that he never actually joined
with deep-fried zucchini as a side the C.l.A., and cannot recall ever
dish.
signing any promise to submit his
The 3-ounce portions of fried writings to the Agency.
zucchini have been on the menu on
Eveland says he wrote the book
Ronald's home turf near the super- because he thought "The American
chain's world headquarters for people needed to be reminded of
about three months.
the mistakes (American foreign)
The "McZukcs" go for a test Policy has made in the past and
market price of 85 cents.
continues to make today."
Dr. Dennis Clayson of Mount
Union College in Ohio says that the
students in his experiments were
given tests both for their
handedness and for their abilities to
think creatively.
Tube Tied
Americans are watching more
and more television these days. The
Television Bureau of Advertising
reporls that T-V viewing by the
average American household reached a record in February of seven
hours and 22 minutes per day.
That's two minutes more per day
than Ihc level of about a year ago,
the bureau says.
first lightless light bulb.
Instead of being called "light
bulbs," the new invention by the
Bart brothers is dubbed "the dark
bulb."
How does it work? Well, to be
the blahs of the morning after.
honest, it doesn't: the filaments inThe company cites a recent Jour- side the dark bulb have been disconnal of Southwestern
Medicine nected, and the bulb itself has been
report which found that boozers covered with a black enamel.
who drank whiskey that had been
So what's it for? A1 booklet that
filtered through charcoal had far comes with the dark bulb suggests
fewer and less intense hangovers it's perfect for watching television
than did drinkers who consumed because it never creates a reflection
unfilitered whiskey.
across the screen. This latest version
The Reque company says that of the pet rock should also cut
charcoal pill taken immediately down on energy bills too.
after a night of hard drinking would
probably absorb most of the
headache-causing ingredients from
the drinker's system, thereby making the morning after a lot easier to
handle.
Patty%
Something to Hide?
TIONOI MM. WIM -
oe*« v - i o IROM « H
UCCCHMTIW H
All
OF V X H
MIM D
Publication of a book about the
Central Intelligence Agency's involvement in the Middle East'during the 1950's has been delayed
after the C.l.A. insisted on reviewing portions of and possibly even
censoring the book.
The book, which was scheduled
for release next month, is titled
Ropes of Sand-America's failure in
the Middle East. It was written by
Wilbur Eveland who claims he served as the late C.l.A. director Allen
Dullcs's principal representative in
the Middle East in the 1950's.
The C.l.A. suddenly demanded the
NOl K POPI I \K H H W > « Of H U H n i l Al I
O S U P H I - A I I I I I IM
Of IMF-OHtlDHOT [ | | [ i B I I H HI > r HI I I I K II 4V.OKH)
l*OI>( OHN
2tK & I I *
311 (This 12'ctbrnb 31 iErjr. flub
(Tfjursbap, iHap I
6 p.m. -12:30 a.m.
JTribap & featurbap, fflap 2 & 3
6 p.m. -1:30 a.m.
Senior Week Schedules
are available at CC Info. Desk
Page Seven
Albany Student Press
at :!-;
Senior Week
tickets
continue t o be on
Monday N a y 5Fritfay
Hay 9
May 2, 1980
Beurrntr aonliirr * t r c : : n #paniort6
Wtfl*:;'.-•;IMMf)
REFRIGERATOR PICK-UP
fffPfeofte Read Ca*4u%»!
ih
Hand over Hangover
Left Handed Handy
An Ohio college professor says
that tests on volunteer students indicate that left-handed people are
more creative than their righthanded counterparts.
A chemical firm says it may soon
come out with an anti-hangover pill
-- a pill consisting mainly of activated charcoal.
Bogus Bulb
The Reque Manufacturing Company — a firm which markets acThree Phoenix, Arizona,
tivated charcoal in capsules for internal use -- suggests thai charcoal brothers have announced plans lo
produce and sell the world's
just the
avoid mass
njillss may
may be
be jus
tne thing
in ng to
igayoio
—•
X
the
man
with
the
stomach
*>/
To Everyone Who Voted For
Frank
Baitman
THANK YOU!!
Together, we can make the Vice Presidency a more
important position for students. Please remeber to vote in
the run-off election next week.
paid for by the supporters of Frank Baitman
faTtlTIMTTTTIIITiriTIITTTITinmYt
You've passed the S A T . . .
Pick-up of all refrigerators will take place
on the following days and times!
Now, why not pass the SAQ?
Wtay 5 -
&00 - 3:30
Summer at
Queensborough
Mui 6 -
9:00 - 3:30
THE CAMPUS IN THE CITY
Way 7 -
9:00 - 3:30
Colonial:
Dutch:
State:
Alumni:
tKmj 8 -
9:00 - 3:30
Way 9 -
8:30 - 2:00
Wellino,ton:
f% 9 - 2:00 - 4:00
Attention To All Students:
All refrigerators must be returned Cleaned, Defrosted 0
F o , ,
2deposit
^ " money!!
T t 0 d ° S ° w l 1 1 f e s u , t j " Q Eduction of
Tlfdwfe pu, S, Ifauc a ws, bmmd
Sample Question:
QUEENSBOROUGH COMMUNITY COLLEGE OFFERS:
a) TRANSFERABLE COURSES IN NEARLY EVERY FIELQ
b) INTENSIVE FIVE-WEEK PROGRAMS (starting late June)
c) SMALL CLASSES... FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE
d) TENNIS COURTS, POOL, TRACK, GYM
e) LOW TUITION—$35 a credit
f) ALL OF THE ABOVE
Answer:
If you selected "all of the above,"
THEN SELECT QUEENSBOROUGH THIS SUMMER.
FOR INFORMATION AND APPLICATIONS:
OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR
QUEENSBOROUGH COMMUNITY COLLEGE
BAYSIDE, NEWYORK 11364 TELEPHONE: 212/631-6212
„
.
5*9
columns
\y
1'
The Road To Change
Can Only Start With
Dreams
Kevin Qulnn
The politics of change, of revolution, has
been one of the most trying topics of discussion for some of the world's greatest minds:
Karl Marx, V.I. Lenin, Mao Tse-Tung, Leon
Trotsky, etc. Revolutionaries have fought
amongst themselves over the correct means
upon which to accomplish an agreed end.
Questions of tactics have often caused huge
rifts among revolutionaries with similar objectives. This conflict still exists today, in the
political left and especially in the studenl
movement as well.
Student politicians today consist mainly of
"Utopian revolutionaries" (as I shall refer to
them). These people believe that if people
were only educated as to what the issues
were, how these issues are e :ploiiing them,
etc., the people will see the faults in the
system, become politically active, and change
those faults. These Utopian revolutionaries
want change to occur through the democratic
process, as numerous examples will explain:
public outcry to force Congress 10 eliminate
the use of nuclear power, pressuring Carter
to abolish the draft proposals by massive
demonstrations against Ihe draft, elc. I can
understand Ihe Utopian revolutionaries and
their philosophy because, until recently, I
was one of them. Utopian revolutionaries
have all the right goals. No nuclear power 01
weapons, equal righls for all people, freedom
of choice for women, a redistribution of
society's resources, anti-draft, anti-big
business, elc.
The Utopian revolutionaries do noi have
the power to change society democratically,
for we do not live in a democracy and the
Utopian revolutionaries assume we do. We do
not live in a democracy because of a variety
of reasons including ihe fact ihal the political
power and mones of the special interest
groups negate the vote of any individual or
group of individuals. Thus the individual
vole is useless. All campaigns are financed by
contributions which enable the campaign to
work and gel the people 10 sole. The money
thai keeps politicians in political races is prosided mainly by groups wilh a specific purpose in mind: protecting iheir own interest.
These special interest groups invest [heir
money on American politicians in order 10
influence ihe coarse and direction of
American economic and political policies.
The result is that studeni demonstrations full
on deaf ears. The politicians are no longer
dependent upon Ihe people, but on Ihe
special interest groups.
The only way a revolution can occur in this
country is through a series of well coordinated actions Ihal involve direct action and
will acl to restructure the present society in
an effort lo create, by necessity if need be, a
new society. The man who first envisioned
this reasoning was V.I. Lenin. Lenin saw ihal
Ihe masses were being exploited and evolved
a philosophy ihal included what actions were
needed lo be taken in order to actually accomplish a revolution, noi jusl envision
one.
A vanguard parly, such as one envisioned
by Lenin, could presently be created in ihe
siudeni movemenl. There exists some Irue
revolutionaries and enough dissatisfied Utopian revolutionaries lo create ihis vanguard
party thai if formed, would radically reshape
the siudeni movement. The need for a more
realistic tactical approach musl be installed
inio the students' minds. Revolutionary activity musl be directed, forceful and effeclive, Nothing is accomplished when you petition your Congresspersou or the President
(as ihe American Olympic athletes will attest
lo). Let's occupy more nuclear sites and lei's
blockade the .shipments of nuclear wastes.
These actions will show ihe intense concern
on the part of America's youih and may even
increase the costs of operating such facilities
under the threat of student action, thai it
might become economical for firms and
agencies to change policies. Only by direct
action will our goals be obtained.
The forces of reaction are growing stronger
every day. Unlike Karl Marx, I do not feel
that the masses will be able lo reach a point
upon which they refuse to be further exploited and revolt in mass. Every day we wait
for a natural, spontaneous revolution, in the
Marxian sense, we sink deeper inio repression. One can publicize the gains being made
by the repressors: oil prices rising so high and
so fast ihal one cannot accurately predict Ihe
i ale, corporate profit margins at record highs
while the nation enters a "recession," the
percent change in earnings increasing 106
percent for Texaco. 68 percent for Gulf Oil,
and 108 percent for Exxon as we consumers
are told to accept the high price for gasoline.
Reactionary government pumping money inio the arms industry and threaiening war in
various parts of the world where special
trading interests are threatened. Is this
America the Beautiful?
grVrf/A)
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uewNL
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viewpoint
longer is able to maintain its housing re
quirements, therefore, we are forced inio ler.
initiating our charter.
Whai will never be lost, though, are the
To Ihe Editor:
Well, it's about that time when someone numerous community service projects perfrom UAS complains about some of its formed by this group, including sponsoring
customers rather than some of them com- blood drives for the American Red Cross
plaining about UAS. Thus, I'd like to ad- fund raising for the American Cancer Sociedress this letter to the Dutch Quad dining ty, sponsoring parties for a local school for
community (you other quads might want to the retarded, and other social functions for
listen up, too) on behalf of myself and my the entire university. Although the past few
years have shown a sharp decline in the atfellow cafeteria workers . . .
There are many things that I can handle, titudes of the students and adniinisiralors
such as your remarks concerning some of the alike toward the organization, many of these
meals we serve and even some of your excuses adverse feelings have been left unsubstanwhen you "forget" your mealcards. But tiated. No group at any level of authority can
expect to be able to restrict the actions of all
there are more things that I cannot handle.
First, there's the mess in the dining room. its members. There are times when InIf you're ever around at Ihe end of a meal dividuals arc responsible for an acl of disturyou can't help but notice all the garbage left bance, but there can be no rectitude in puton the tables and especially ihe floor — ting the burden on the entire fraternity,
napkins, newspapers, dishes, glasses, silverRecently, I have learned of the tremendous
ware . . . and food. It's not pretty to sec and popularity of fraternity life on ihis campus
it's a lot less pretty lo have to pick up half- during Ihe sixties and early seventies, I only
eaien lambchops, chicken legs, rolls and wish that I could have been pari of ihis and
melted ice cream. When you "drop" that this type of college life still continued
something (I should hope you didn't throw here at Albany. Since I have spent jusl one
ii), please pick it up and keep il on your tray year as pari of Sigma Tau Beta, ihis year lias
— that's whal il's for. Also, for those of you shown me so many good limes that I can only
who lease us your trays — thanks, but no be sad that ihis son of brotherhood is on Its
thanks! Remember, the conveyor bell is a last leg.
mere len paces from the stairs. Oh! And for
Although ihis fraternity won't be around
those of you on Kosher, there's also a gar- after this semester, I can say that il was Ihe
bage can there where you can deposit your single most helpful influence thai I have enpaper goods.
countered while in college and 1 only regret
Second, the way some of you Ireat those of that more students could noi give ii a chance
us behind the serving line needs improve- and feel what fraternity life is really like.
- Mark c isU'tnino
ment. Sorry, bul we cannot read minds, so it
is up to you to tell us whal you want — i.e.,
rcasurer,
no grasy before we pour il. We'd also apSlgmi Ian Beta
preciate il if you would bring back your
ira-so
plates when coming for seconds and thirds.
Dishcrew does not need to worry about three
plates per tray — or five glasses for that matter (ever wonder why the dining room constantly runs shori on glasses?). Oh yes, and To the Editor:
This Idler is meant to clarify Ihe views I
please try not to stuff them with four
napkins, mashed potatoes and an ice cream tried to set forth in my article published
under the title "Why We Must Figlu" in Ihe
cone,
April 12 Aspects. The article underwent
These grievances and others generally only
various changes between the author's
apply to a minority of you Dutch diners and
typewriter and the printed page. One of these
you know who you arc (so do we, but we're
was being shortened lo better fit the assigned
often too busy to play cafeteria monitor —
space — something well within the ediior's
besides, it shouldn't be necessary). Yes, 1
rights. However, this was not all. Besides givknow this is an age of individuality, but coning this rather misleading title to an anllwai
forming in Ihis one insiance to cleanliness
piece, the editors of Aspects took u on
and consideration wouldn't hurl. In fact, it
themselves to tinker with the political content
would make dining and working on Dutch
of the article.
(and other quads) much nicer.
When I agreed to write the article I was
— Barbara Renger
given lo understand that I was free to express
the viewpoint of the Young Socialist
Alliance, the organization to which I belong.
But when the article appeared in print, I
To the Editor:
found thai the last two paragraphs expressed
This past spring semester here at Albany a quite different point of view. In place ol Ihe
has witnessed the loss of a fourteen year arguments I presented in favor ol socialist
tradition of brotherhood. Lost only in the candidates, we read the bare fact Ihal the
^enseihai Sigma Tau Beia Fraternity no Socialist Workers Parly is "again" running
Dutch Slobs
Read and Let Read
Sigma Tau Bow-out
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NOTES FROM THE
UNDERGROUND
Two houRs of IMPORTS, doMEsricly
UNKNOWN S I N Q U S , RARE O R Q I N A I
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ A _ * _ wholE_loTMORE_
vote
REIEASECI
MAIEMAI
COMOMd §®©M8 THE 1980 EDITION OF
THE WCDB T-SHIRT!!
ONLY A LIMITED NUMBER AVAILABLE!!
-For Aggressive, Outspoken Leadership
-For a more open, responsive Student Association
SUE COLD
for
SA President
SA
Contents.
May 2, 1980
The
Student
Notebook:
It's
Shirley and Conchita's
swan song this week
as the two bozos from
Queens share beers
and tears, refusing to
get nostalgic. From
chainsmoking in men's
bathrooms to snuggling on the IRT, the
two have been inseparable. Till now.
Pick the last one from
Column A on page
The
Student
Notebook:
This
week's
student
notebook spotlights a
guest columnist from
our esteemed Department Anglias. They
say a word to the wise
should be sufficient, so
listen up! For the first
— and only — time
ever, It's how to make
friends w i t h your
teachers. Get our your
notebooks, the prof's
on page 4 a .
4a.
MANDATORY MEETING
for
NEW OFFICERS (Fall 1980)
of SA FUNDED GROUPS
May 6 7:30 pm Ballroom
May 7 7:30 pmPatroon
Lounge
B.E.G.I.N. sponsored by
Office of Student/University Activities
and Campus Center and Student Assoc.
(If new officers have not been elected,
any potential officer is invited!)
University Auxiliary Services
Membership Meeting
May 13 at 3:30
AD 253
Feature: Thirty-five
years ago, the gates of
Auschwitz slammed
shut forever. But the
fact Is, history does
repeat. We- can't just
shrug our soldiers,
walk silently away,
and try to forget about
the Holocaust. It's a
scar never to heal, and
the story's on page
5a.
Sound and Vision:
to approve the budget
Israel's Simon and Garfunkel
presents
The Parvarim
The Editor's Aspect
Preaching and praying, singing and saving, a reborn Dylan
mounted the Palace
stage last weekend.
For two nights the prophet of the sixties
praised the Lord while
the fans passed the
joints — or tried to, In
spite of new smoking
restrictions.
Say
amen, and turn to
page 8 - 9 a .
The graduate looked in the mirror. "Are you happy?"
he asked the face in a frame of steam.
He finished getting dressed. The sweat dampened,
black gown draped across the fresh white sheets of his
bed. He clasped closed the packed bag. It was time to go,
after all. It was good he traveled light, he thought, closing
the lights of his room — undressed walls, sudden fur
niture without piles of paper clips and theater stubs, buttons and gum wrappers. All the clutter of the world. All
the clutter of the mind.
On the bus the graduate realized he forgot something
"Are you happy?" he thought he heard the busdriver
ask. And he looked in the rear view mirror until steel grey
eyes under a black cap peered back and turned away.
"Are you happy?" Did that crippled woman say that,
did that old man?
"Are you sad?" his mother asked while the TV showed
again and again soldiers blowing smoke and snaps into a
bunch of people, Bill-like people. In a state called Kent
and in a country called Germany. Oh yea. Oh yea. Burning flesh. Bones. Bones. Bones. Oh. There is a lot of
death in life. He remembered black draped coffins. But
God.
He turned his face away from the steady passing of
trees and houses. Yet he couldn't stop the constant flow
of movement.
"Are you happy?" A chorus begged an answer. A
chorus.
"Is anyone?" he asked silently to that crippled woman,
that-old man, that blind busdriver. "Are any of you happy?"
On the bus the graduate realized he forgot something,
something left behind, something he would miss. Oh, he
would soon forget he had it, forget it ever existed, and
then it would cease to be.
The bus never seemed to stop. It kept on, never in
creasing speed, never slowing down. He felt the motor
churning ceaselessly, churning his bones. Bones, and the
sound of bullets ripping through hearts.
"Get happy," he said, "I must get happy." But where
—- how, and then he knew that what he left behind, back
there, before the bus got this far away, that thing, that
was how to get happy. And he left it behind.
Suddenly lost, without the . . . Suddenly lost and so
alone.
The bus took him farther away.
C e n t e r f o l d : Ten
years
ago (ou
students
were;
murdered by the Na
tlonal
Guard. A
SUNYA professor, Dr
Phillip Tomkins, was
there, and he relives
some of those painful
memories, with Rich
Behar. What they had
there was a failure to
communicate. Page
6a.
mtiiu***^
D i v e r s i o n s : Some
like It hot and some
don't like It at all. It's
Friday and the Fountains are on. Divert
yourself no further (or
.movies, c o n c e r n s ,
logic, c r o s s w o r d s ,
theater, trivia, and
something fantastic
await on pge 1 1 a .
A Death in the Family
Sir Alfred Hitchcock died last Tuesday. He was 80. The master of
suspense directed many classic films Including The Lady Vanishes,
Rear Window, Psycho, The Birds, North by Northwest and Family
Plot. To Hitch we dedicate this final cameo.
Photograph of the Week
PhotofaySuna Steinkamp
r
Get Happy
&U^~-*Uood evening.
^--^
Spiritual Graffiti
"What a drag it i s growing old."
— Mick Jagger
Sound of Silence...
Scarborough Fair...
Bridge Over Troubled Water...
Saturday,May 3
9:30 p.m.
Indian cafeteria
Thurs. & Fri.
Editors
Stuart Matranga
Bob O'Brian
Farrah Fawcett
in
Associate Editor
Rob Edalstain
SUNBURN
Cie.atlve Arts Editor
Sua Gerfcer
All Movies
7:30 & 10:00
LC 7
SA Funded
JSC-Hillel and U.C.B.
Q2L§££C/$
Sat. May 3
Advance Ticket Prices
$2.00 JSC
$3.00 tax card
$4.00 other
add 50 cents at door
Today In CC lobby
May 1 & 2
$ .75 w/tec card
$1.25 w/out
Design and Layout
Ron Levy
Sound & Vision Editor
Cliff Sloan
StaffwrtUrs: Al Baca, Bob Blau, Edith Bcioison, Tom Bonfiglla.
Rube Cinque, Lisa Dencnmark, Andrea DlGregorlo, Jin; Dixon, Dave
Gaynsler, Cindy Greisdorf, Beth Kaye, Larry Kinsman, Thomas
Martello, Steve Oster, Mark Rossicr. Gary Silverman, Laurel
Solomon, Audrey Spechl, Bruce Wulkan, Greg Zarider
Graphic*: Sue Benjamin, Evan Garber, Martv Qatanl
D i v e r s i o n s : Vinnle Alello
Concept: My Cards Ltd.
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Conchita Rodriguez and Shirlejlggr
One From Column A
The Last One From Column A
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survivor of ihe Holocaust.
T h e words are not resentful nor bitter. T h e message
is optimistic; it conveys a
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T h e GU€St Observer
J u d y Barlow
Learning To Love Your Professor
T h e Holocaust, however, is not merely the
story of the extermination of six million Jews,
a m o n g w h o m over or. i million were children,
a n d t h e death of five million other benevolent
n o n - J e w s . It is a tragic story in which the
murderers were a m o n g
world's most
culturally a n d technologically a d v a n c e d , a
story In which "civilized" m e n watched as
others murdered. T h e Holocaust Is a reflection
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on t s i s
.
lead t o another genocide. It Is m o r e likely t o
occur than the people on this c a m p u s a s well
as at other college campuses realize."
Eddie a d d e d , "Most people in other ?reas
have never seen a J e w . Wherever I've lived
I've been in contact with Jewish people a n d
because of that I've been m a d e aware of t h e
special problems facing t h e m . I would p r o bably have a m o r e ' w h o cares' attitude on t h e
This emotional issue h a s not been settled a n d
the TV airing of the movie has been postponed.
T h e Holocaust Survivors Memorial Foundation is a group that wishes t o r e m e m b e r t h e
events, record t h e m , a n d educate people
universally on the lopic, for the Holocaust is a
universal issue. Jack P . Eisner, President a n d
Founder of the organization, said, " w e must
educate t h e young and point a warning finger
at the world in order to Improve the h u m a n
capacity to coexist . . . N o w is the time to
o p e n our hearts and w o u n d s . To take our experiences with us as w e pass from this earth
would be a disservice to mankind a n d to o u r
children."
T h e organization h a s developed a National
Oral History Project which wishes to document, through accounts of survivors of the
Holocaust, the events which occurred before,
during, a n d after the persecution in order to
complete the historical record of what actually
h a p p e n e d . A conference w a s held last
February in New York City at which efforts
were m a d e to establish a dialogue between the
survivors and people in t h e media arts, so that
authentic works might be m a d e on the subject.
Last April a similar conference was held.
T h e G r a d u a t e Center of the City University
of New York established the first Institute of
Holocaust Studies in 1 9 7 9 . This institute is Initiating programs such as a research a n d
scholarship center for Holocaust-related projects, a public school teacher training program, a n d lectures. T h e Foundation h o p e s to
establish more of these institutes throughout
the world.
SUNYA offers several courses dealing with
issues a n d attitudes concerning the Holocaust,
to understand a lot of the ambivalence that
surrounds u s . "
A n d r e a , a junior, Is a second generation
child. Her father was in Auschwitz from 1 9 4 1
until 1 9 4 5 , when they were liberated. S h e
said, "My father's not that emotional about it
a n y m o r e , although h e used to b e . H e lectures
in high schools now. H e does not want this
generation to forget, although h e doesn't want
to dwell on t h e past."
Several SUNYA students felt that people
should be educated on the events surrounding
the Holocaust. Eddie, a freshman, commented,"I'm not tired of hearing it at all
because It really h a p p e n e d a n d I don't want to
see it h a p p e n again. Through people's
awareness of that possibility it hopefully won't
h a p p e n again. I'm not Jewish a n d I'm not well
informed o n the subject but I would like to
k n o w h o w p e o p l e could actually d o
something like that to other people for no valid
reason."
Andrea a d d e d , "Most people say 'Big deal.
It's the past.' History doesn't repeat itself. It's
the people who let it repeat itself. You should
educate people o n the facts, but also tell them
personal accounts, or else it doesn't seem real.
It doesn't sound personal when you just hear
statistics."
S o m e students expressed the feeling that
living in the New York metropolitan area
m a d e them more aware of the topic than they
would otherwise have b e e n . Steve, a junior,
remarked, "It may not b e in t h e area where I
live but in areas In the Midwestern United
States, m a n y people don't know what a J e w
or a Black Is, a n d have h a n d e d d o w n to them
the stereotypical prejudices Inherited from
their family. T h e s e prejudices could n o doubt
subject if 1 lived elsewhere.
A G e r m a n e x c h a n g e student o n c e admitted;
to m e that the G e r m a n s d o not like to talk;
about their recent past, for they feel a s h a m e d .
However the schools In G e r m a n y are gradual
ly beginning to teach exactly what went on at
the time.
Translations of m a n y relevant works on t h e
Holocaust a r e being m a d e available to the
public in the English language. A children's
memorial will be built in Y a d V a s h e m
Jerusalem to pay tribute to the m o r e than o n e
million children w h o were victims of the
Holocaust. And April 1 3 , 1 9 8 0 was Yom H a
S h o a h , Holocaust Memorial Day. At SUNYA,
JSC-Hillel sponsored a Holocaust r e m e m
brance event on (hat day, In Israel o n e minute
is set aside for this purpose. During that
minute a siren blows; all daily activity c o m e s to
Debbie Loeb
& c f - • read
•
-
and also courses which delve into t h e nature
of prejudice. Robin, a s o p h o m o r e , took a
course dealing with the events leading u p to
the Holocaust a n d remarked, "It was an Interesting class. I think it's Important for people
of our generation especially to take a course of
that nature. It is important for us t o realize that
that era had a direct effect on o u r ancestors
and having insight into the subject can help us
' •
sex : — pd md
•
.
Fenelon,- w h o survived the concentration
c a m p Auschwitz d u e to her talent as a singer
and pianist. (She played in a band at the c a m p
whose purpose was to create a deceptive atmosphere of calm). Vanessa Redgrave, a supporter of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, played the role of f e n e l o n In the movie,
and a controversy arose a s to whether
Redgrave should have played the part or not.
future of mankind.
Thirty-five years a g o last m o n t h , o n April
2 9 , 1945, the Russians invaded G e r m a n y and
subsequently s u c c e e d e d in closing that
chapter of history which we term the
Holocaust. "Holocaust" is a word derived
from Greek which m e a n s "a great or complete
devastation or destruction, especially by fire."
During World War II Nazi Germany, under the
direction of Adolf Hitler, carried out a
holocaust a n d attempted to annihilate the
J e w s of the world.
/ i enjy natural to WTtre ab
re-is
:-.* i ^ p ^ a c r - ; ^._r =p.
J
Dark V i c t o r y
"A new spirit is growing out of the darkness of
the memory of concentration camps and ghettos; a spirit of life and a better future for a better mankind. This is our purpose•, . . as a living witness to the Holocaust, and our duty, to
remember and to warn"
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Page 5a
Feature
Holocaust Remembered
"Nscc a r m . " "Cerv^r: ^ -
s.-T-=---e C€h;."d
Aspects
Mlha • • .1 .
•
•
. ..
• ,.2:
of mankind; a foreshadowing of t h e time
when man's achievements may lead to his
destruction. What h a p p e n e d in Nazi G e r m a n y
could h a p p e n again, almost a n y w h e r e , a n d
not only to J e w s .
T h e recent public awareness of exposing the
events leading up to a n d during the Holocaust
Is a start towards awakening future generations everywhere a n d a warning of what m a y
h a p p e n when people a r e blindly u n a w a r e of a
potential danger or d e n y it totally.
T h e recent airings of "The Holocaust" o n
national television a r e evidence to the fact that
the horrors which occurred over a generation
ago .are just n o w being exposed. There a r e ,
however, some controversial issues involved
in bringing the topic to the media.
Anothei movie was produced based on t h e
e x p e r i e n c e s of t h e strong-willed
Fanya
BMHM
a halt a n d the people stop to remember the
tragedy that occurrffi
Feelings are optimistic. Last year I viewed a
program on WABC-TV called "Directions
A v e n u e of the J u s t , " which dealt with the n o
ble Christians w h o risked their lives to helpj
save the J e w s during the Holocaust. O n the,
program Otto Frank, father of the famous
A n n e Frank, said; "My goal is to show to the
y o u n g people of the world that w e should aim
towards the positive from this experience, and
that we must help *;top prejudice and hatred."
My mother is also a survivor of the
Holocaust. S h e was in hiding during the time
a n d much of h e r family was lost. S h e
presses h e r feelings: "I cannot hate the Ger-j
m a n s . For If I did that, I would be doing to)
t h e m exactly what they did to u s . "
Increasing educational projects a n d presen
tatlons o n t h e media of something as
devastiMlngly real as the Holocaust a r e steps
towards relieving all forms of persecution such
as racism, classlsm, and sexism. T h e existence
of groups today such as the Ku Klux Klan and
the neo-Nazis, however, are evidence that this
goal will be difficult to acl leve, Even now
s o m e people refuse to believe that the
Holocaust ever h a p p e n e d . But In the words of
Eisner, his goal Is to educate not only the
children, but all "the general public t o b e c o m e
a m o r e compassionate, more enlightened
world."
T f c « t r o a b l c • * * * « oUmr t r a t r a t f o i la
that thsy rrad ti*> much. Its Ilk* thcyrt
trying to live their omn fantasias out."
e c o n o m y homed o n n w . « * • * " * # • «H»
It? Ths System.
_SDS
•Vet them arret! me. I *«•>« « « M«« • " •
you don't smash an Idem by putting It In
Jail. Instead, you focus more attention a n
L e t ( h e lasmmhtam march Into Ota-Mem.
War. spaed, racism, hunger. Ignorance.
It; bring It to more
people."
T h e only direction In Insurrection,
ly solution Is revolution!"
the on-
(continued from front cover)
. . .even though he was there; it was as if watching something on a screen instead of being
physically part of it. But one thing was char:
the war being waged in Vietnam was being
fought as well at Kent State. Perhaps the surrealism comprised both battles . . . ft also
bothered Phil that his students were losing interest in their classes — but he couldn't blame
them — the wail separating the academic fantasia from the international reality was eroding
~>
Rich Behar
The phone rang just as he was shuffling the
notes into a pile, the message came as no real
shock. Trouble at t h e C a m p u s . Not much
news, he thought, trouble had been breuing
for days. Let us see what fate has bestowed on
Kent . . .
Driving along on the boulevard
toward
campus, his mind centered on the schools administration — or absence of it. He was still
upset that the president had hired an outside
firm to conclude that there w-ere "serious communication problems" — he could have told
them that, as well as many m the communicator
department.
But what difference did it
make? — they hadn't done a thing about it
anyway.
Phil was temporarily jolted when
OB tbe Plgl
_ Ma.k R««l, KSU
- Weaihemwn, 1970
"W« mart
H*V. P*««y uuggy
sidesuept
monopoly on communication.
"Very strange
indeed."
A tense and disturbed David
BrinUey
reported the facts on NBC News that evening.
Four students had been killed in a thirteen second burst of Guardsmen gunfire. Nine others
were
wounded.
"1 then realized that the Guardsmen hod. m
a sense, gone berserk, "
auditoriums, absentee teachers, and standarcLzed programs, courses, and exams. To him
the rat race for the buck was the rat race for
the good grade Soon he began to realize that
ice are victims of middle-class America, the
beginning of a personal and a social revolution
k
ent State was o n e of the more conservative universities in the country,"
n May 4th, 1970. shots fired by t h e
says Phil. "But the republican, midOhio National Guard at Kent State
Western, quiet students were outraged by a
University snuffed the lives of four
previous incident in which they felt doublestudents a n d scarred nine others In the days crossed by the administration — t h e student
that followed, an uproar spread from coast to conduct c o d e . "
coast a s this nation stumbled to the edge of a
The c o d e , which insisted on formal hearings
precipice. S o m e 7 6 0 colleges and universities oefore a student could be suspended, a p either shut down or came close to doing s o
peared to be violated in April of 1970 when
Students spoke openly of a violent and major
SDS (Students for a Democratic Society)
uprising, conservatives a n d Kent townsfolk
members were arrested, suspended, a n d had
pleaded for m o r e college blood . - . "That's their charter revoked. Though it caused a
what this country really n e e d s " . . . and others vocal outcry a m o n g both students a n d some
d e m a n d e d a Grand Jury investigation But
faculty, the administration refused to redress
n o n e of this was the final result, instead there the problem.
was a de-escalation of emotion a n d hostility a s
T h e door to a closed disciplinary hearing for
people of all ages regained their senses. A two of t h e students was smashed in by
dreadful confrontation was avoided.
demonstrators demanding an open investigaOnly those w h o were close to the scene, in tion. The students were convicted of assault
contact with all the different factions, a p - and battery and inciting a riot, n o o p e n hearpreciated just how dangerously close this ing was granted.
country c a m e to collapsing in those critical
But students a n d faculty continued to prodays
test the administration's handling of the
O
look
t o t h e university Urn
6fifl.^MlHBflnnHHHBfeBG
from behind by another vehicle and cursed
under his breath. A quick smile when he spotted the dnver to be his colleague 3nd future
spouse, Blaine Anderson.
"Two students and two Guardsmen
were
killed," she had said, and he was never to
forget her voice. There was also no way to get
onto the campus as all entrance roads were
closed by the Kent Police. So they drove to a
friends place on the outskirts of town and
waited together for more
information.
"At first 1 was outraged.
What have the
crazy, goddamn students done? Why are they
shooting at Guardsmen?"
The local radio station and afternoon
Record Courier confirmed the killings but the
rumors proved
wrong. Both medias
were
owned by the Chairman of KSU Board of
Trustees, and Richard Due was not one to
sympathize
with college demonstrators.
A
A n y way!"
CntrsXll DtH
"I picked up m tear gmm caanlster end threw
it back, it almost g o t t o b e m Joke. Tkm
guards mem mere laughing,
it mm* Jumt a
**•»*•
- B» Plica. KSU
*5 moid term Hwrt chasing
a studs nt up
Teyior HUi. They csmgkt kim and 2 s o l d i e r s
PhUip Tompkins, present
rrnan of
the R C O Deportment at SUNYA. w a s a faculty member at Kent during this period. A p pointed by President Robert White to chair a
Task Force o n t h e situation, Phil concluded
that a serious breakdown in communications,
coupled with administrative absence and incompetency, led to the fatal tragedy of May
4th.
T2,
he typical student of the 1960 era
began questioning the system and his
o a place in tt. He saw the school as betown
ter than the eight hour day, two martinis
before dinner existence of his parents. He
began to reject nvddle-class values and experimented with new hfe styles. And he viewed the university as a bureaucratic maze of
horrors, a carbon copy of the corporate way of
life,
dehumanized
by large
lecture
beat him mitk m billy dub. Thm other
sman fired tear gas at him point
Scremmlmg, the student ram off."
guard'
blank.
Some of my m e n were k n o c k e d d o w n with
rocks bat Immmdlmtmty s c r a m b l e d up.
TF THESE G O D D A M N KIDS CAM THROW
ROCKS, I CAN, TOO."
Things kept surprisingly quiet until Thursday, May 1, when U . S . President Richard
Nixon addressed t h e nation o n his decision to
invade C a m b o d i a without the knowledge of
Congress.
That afternoon, Phil h a d h a d lunch with a
prominent Kent businessman, His friend expressed his distaste for the war and his deep
concern with t h e invasion. Furthermore, he
feared serious reaction on college campuses if
Nixon's speech did n o t adequately justify the
Administration's previous "peace policy "
"Well, I listened t o the s p e e c h , " recalls Phil,
"and It was not g o o d . "
They buried a copy of the Constitution the
next day. It was a h a p p y occasion for the halfserious g r o u p of 4 0 0 - 5 0 0 rallying on the
grassy C o m m o n s . They said they buried It
because Nixon h a d killed it. They felt that the
President had s h o w n his true colors when he
was caught contrasting the soldiers in Vietnam
with the " b u m s w h o are burning college campuses."
r e c e i v e s o u r c h i l d r e n . la It prepared t o
deal with t h e c h a l l e n g e o f t h e n o n democratic left? O n e m o d e s t s u g g e s t i o n
for my friends In ( h e a c a d e m i c c o m m u n i t y :
t h s next t i m e a J o b o f s t u d e n t s , waving
their non-nerjotlable d e m a n d s , uteris pit-
ching bricks a n d r o c k s at t h e S t u d e n t In the building when urn burn It down."
Union - Just Imagine they are w e a r i n g
- Siudann lo ROTC Cap! Don P«t«r»
brown shirts o r white s h e e t s and a c t a c - "If a n y b o d y g e t s near that fire truck, I have
cordingly".
_SplroAgnew
o r d e r s t o put a little r o u n d b o l e m him."
— Deputy Sheriff, Kent
"Be mure you come back tonltc. mo you'll b e
"Ladles and g e n t l e m e n , p l e a s e g o b a c k t o
events Polls showed that even though a sinal
number (5 percent) of the university agreed
with SDS goals, more than half felt the Conduct Code was indeed violated.
"Channels of communication have always
been o p e n . " insisted President White, even
after hired consultants from Columbus found
difficulties in this area.
White began a newsletter to (he faculty (For
Your Information)
— but t h e alienation still
seemed to exist as there were n o means
available for reciprocal communication.
"The president wouldn't talk to a n y o n e , "
complains Phil, " a n d h e wouldn't delegate
any decision-making power If you're going to
make decisions that affect m e , I want to see
you."
But Kent didn't have much of a president al
the time. ".
we had a cunningly sculptured
piece of s p a m . "
On the c a m p u s itself, t h e Army K ' - I t
building, a m o n g others, "had been heavily
vandalized.
Concluding that the city could no! cope with
all the protestors a n d the rumored violence,
with the lack of cooperation between the cam
p u s and city police, t h e newly elected mayoi
called in the National Guard. The campus was
not notified of this — at the time there was lit
tie communication between the two
And Kent State w as having its nil rit
crisis — o n e administrator cited the pr<
"inability to make a decision dunn | a a
the reason for the emergency situations Wi
were a driverless car going downhill without
any brakes."
"The University organization kind
disintegrated during this whole thing, I ;
notes. "The mayor w as slapping curfews on
the University a n d asking the National Guai I
"Vme may force that's n e c e s s a r y e v e n l o the
p o i n t of s h o o t i n g . We don't want t o flet Int o that b n t t h s law s a y s that w e c a n If
necessary."
_ i k e i l DuCone
After being housed in a cell, overnight, a student
who inquired about his rights was told through (fit-*
bars not to 'worry about that crap' by a jailer who
threw cups of water on the students in the over-
Ito
n c
mmtt
In H
Hp
d i d n ' t have
hauo a
nnw
I n talk
tall/ to
In
o m e in.
e didn't
y on n oe to
— the president was out of town and forgot to
tell people h e was going."
T h e mayor himself had Issued a 1:00 a.m.
curfew o n t h e c a m p u s but another poor
system of c o m m u n i c a t i o n s resulted in various
attempting
a
ttemDtlna
onto
tto
o fforce
o r c e rresponsibility
esnnnsihlltu n
n t n the
thp
Governor a n d the G u a r d . The National Guard
has n o interest in running t h e school — just
the peacekeeping — a n d they were already
considering withdrawing until they were asked
to stay o n .
Black students were searching for their own
rights a n d freedoms later that afternoon, when
4 0 0 of them gathered.
But KSU President White was confident that
the situations presented no danger, and he left
for the weekend t o visit his sister and to attend
a convention in Iowa.
The evening, Friday, May 1 . . .
The first real warm night of spring and the
city of Kent w as swarming. Bars and clubs
here were always known for attracting large
crowds of y o u n g people from all over the
region.
It was a typical evening until 11:00 p m
when t h e C h o s e n F e w motorcycle gang, led
by Corky, began performing bike stunts and
tricks to the marvel of street crowds. Youth
jeered and pelted a few police cru:^'"
more cops were called in.
Windows were smashed, firecracker ig
nited, and spray paint was rampant. Bonfires
lit u p the main streets.
At 12:30, Mayor LeRoy Satrom declared a
State of Civil Emergency a n d ordered thi
closed.
But this may have aggravated the situation
as hordes of bewildered drinkers were forced
into the streets; they joined the crowd ' Ahich
numbered close t o 4 0 0 .
The city police (numbering a
dozen) tried moving the mob toward tl i
of campus a n d here the first majot
munications breakdown occurred Thej had
expected assistance from c a m p u s police
the KSU force w a s busy guarding buildings
This chaos helped crumble the alrea ly |
P relationship between Kent and the Unl\
a
Fifteen arrests w e r e m a d e that evening in I
a over $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 in d a m a g e s was d o n e
"Up to that point* 1 tended to think of the universities as the only
sane places in the country."
-pfaii Tompkins
-
You gotta go « o i »
OlnkOInk
Bang Bang
y o u r d o r m i t o r i e s . If y o u r e m a i n o u t s i d e ,
y o u will b e a r r e s t e d . W e d o n o t w a n t t o arrest y o u . "
"Alright, g e t t h e s t u d e n t s I n s i d e . I don't
care hour y o u d o It. T h r o u g h t h e d o o r s !
T h r o u g h t h e g l a s s ! Through t h e walla!
The Day The W< r i d Went Crazy
Kent State
. . and quickly.
a
rumors a s to the correct time and p r o c e d u r e s .
60-70 arrests were m a d e Saturday evening,
most for curfew violations. These included the
entire cast of a play, a n d students attending a
film festival.
T h e R O T C building was burned d o w n between eight a n d nine that night and when t h e
fire trucks arrived they were b o m b a r d e d with
rocks. Hoses were sliced a n d the fireman fled. T h e c a m p u s police h a d failed to provide
protection for the city firemen; a provision that
was m a d e in the past. W h e n they finally showed u p they were s h r o u d e d In riot gear; t h e
m o b was dispersed by tear gas.
And much to everyone's surprise, t h e National Guard c a m e marching onto University
grounds at 9 : 3 0 . T h e y also cleared the campus with tear gas, even though many students
were still u n a w a r e of the curfew. KSU security
was n o w in their h a n d s .
Governor R h o d e s flew down o n S u n d a y
morning a n d called for a news conference. H e
was loaded with rhetoric, calling the Kent
disturbances, "the most vicious form of
campus-oriented violence yet perpetrated in
Ohio."
"They're t h e worst type of people that w e
harbor in America a n d we're going to
eradicate t h e problem — we're not going to
treat the s y m p t o m s . "
"I can remember getting u p to g o buy a
Sunday paper — to d o that I h a d to drive by
the c a m p u s — a n d I couldn't believe it! Per*
sonel carriers, soldiers in uniforms, helmets,
rifles, blocking every entrance to t h e c a m p u s
. . . I read the paper trying io make sense out
of what all this was — as i( you were entering a
battle zone. Very few people knew that these
guys were carrying loaded w e a p o n s a r o u n d .
S o m e administrators knew but they didn't
bother to tell u s . "
By 8 p . m . , a large crowd h a d a m a s s e d o n
c a m p u s and its size was growing steadily. The
Guard was concerned a n d ordered a 9 p . m .
curfew. When the crowd failed to disperse, the
soldiers promptly gassed t h e m . T h e students
were Incorrectly informed that t h e Mayor and
". . , any a n d every m e a n s possible to stop President White were coming to meet them
and they grew hostile and angry. They cursed
it."
H e refused t o close KSU down deeming the G u a r d s m e n a n d police, chucking rocks at
that this would play into the hands of the S D S . both. More tear gas.
A few G u a r d s m e n were Injured from rocks
" T h e governor w as running for Senate
nomination for t h e Republican party a n d h e that evening, s o m e students were bayonetted.
was losing," explains Phil. " S o h e m a d e t h e Over 5 0 were arrested a n d placed in county
c a m p u s unrest a political Issue. He called the jails, cells which were straining to support all
demonstrators communists a n d brownshlrts."
the youth they h o u s e d for the past few days.
President White finally returned from his
On Monday morning, May 4th, university
weekend outing a n d wandered onto c a m p u s . administrators met with the Mayor and the NaT h e governor's only message to him w as llonal Guard behind closed doors. Until Phil's
"Keep It o p e n . "
study was released, II was unclear as to what
White then reasoned that the events were exactly took place at this crucial gathering.
"out of o u r h a n d s , " but Phil thought It was a
"The Guard offered to let the students have
cop-out, T h e university, it seemed to him, was their tally scheduled for n o o n ~ t h e ad"Fix bayonet*,
Kent State student
after placing tear gat
cannlster
an receptionist's
deek - "Here,
give this to your governor, I'm one of thoae
ttudentm w h o wants a n education, but you
can't d o that with thing* ***' thle being
thrown at you."
2 3 faculty members Issued a statement
deploring t h e G u a r d ' s presence a n d the
Governor's remarks. 6 0 of Phil's colleagues
requested a full faculty meeting but White
declined. Only the S e n a t e , he said, could call
such a meeting.
"We wanted to b e informed as to what was
going o n , " remarks Phil, "and t h e president
refused to meet with the faculty about this
matter. S o we were totally ignored. T h e faculty met in a church in Akron, O h i o , the following day a n d the president failed to attend."
gam mamka,
loadt"
"The Guard turned toward urn. We were expecting tear gam.
We got aomethlng
elae."
"All of a mudden everything Jumt blew up."
"Everything happened
eofamtt It warn like a
car wreck."
"U mounded tike the Fourth of Julys"
m
l n k t r a t l n n e-»lrt
i m n l tyou
i r m \n
Lr,>;,l< it
tt
ministration
said *nn
' n o ' , u.o
w e iwant
to break
"all bureaucratic rules a n d regulations were
thrown out t h e w i n d o w . , . an orgy of flexibility a n d h u m a n e n e s s . "
Students met With faculty in bars, c h u r c h e s ,
their h o m e s ; others communicated via letters
a n d t e l e p h o n e In o r d e r t o c o m p l e t e
assignments and take e x a m s . But there were
some problems . . .
"We'd call their h o m e s a n d s o m e parents
would say 'we haven't seen him — If you find
him sir, please let u s know'; s o m e said 'I'm
sorry, you can't interview her, she's In a men
W h e n the Guard o p e n e d fire o n the crowd
tal hospital' — nervous b r e a k d o w n s , a n d so
of students, the president w a s eating lunch
on."
with several of his vice-presidents o n the outskirts of Kent.
Phil Tompkin's Task Force investigation
revealed a complete breakdown In com" H e didn't even go to the rally which he told
munication, an absence of p l a n n e d emergen
the G u a r d to break u p . "
cy systems, an "invisible" president, a n d
T h e second-in-command of KSU (a vicebroken promises.
president} was ill a n d uninformed, another
two were in California, one in Europe. T h e reH e pute much of the blame on President
maining d e a n s received no official word about
White for failing to a p p e a r at t h e rally, falling
the critical issues.
to legitimize the G u a r d ' s orders or presence
When the Guard o p e n e d fire, most of the a n d for turning a "peaceful, almost playful ral
ly Into a fatal confrontation."
students w h o came to school that afternoon
"1 think It was absurd t o order the Natlona'
were also ignorant ol t h e facts. Many were
Guard to g o out a n d break u p a rally. With
crossing through the 'battleground area' In
what p u r p o s e ? T o what e n d ? They h a d no
order to reach their dormitories, classes, or
cafeteria. S o m e of these students were authority t o d o It. T h e y chased t h e m halfwa
around c a m p u s — firing tear g a s . Thei
w o u n d e d or killed.
[students] burned buildings . . . but that's ni
"After firing, they still weren't satisfied.
reason tor shooting a n y b o d y . "
W h e n t h e students realized that some of their
up.' "
"No o n e believed this at t h e time, the administration kept saying t h e y w e r e n ' t
culpable."
They never considered that It w a s only a
question of time before t h e young Guardsmen, worn out from long days keeping order
in a previous Cleveland wildcat strike, worn
out by student shouts a n d missiles, would
crack,
peers h a d been killed they were distraught,
weeping, crying, clutching each other, and the
G u a r d s m e n told them to break it u p , get off
c a m p u s , disperse or else they would shoot,
again."
Phil (eels the administration also floi n d e i e u
by not realizing the relative ineffectiveness ol
written communication a n d the n e e d lor
r e d u n d a n c y in critical matters. He also h a s a
few words for the National G u a r d .
" N o w imagine 2 1 , 0 0 0 students, a n d faculty, a n d all w h o worked there told to get off
c a m p u s simultaneously.
"The police set u p a baricade around cam
pus, so In order to get off you had to go
through a roadblock a n d get out of t h e car,
They'd search the car to catch as much contraband a s possible. T h e next week the district attorney a n d local police went through all the
dormitories looking for marijuana, guns,
knives, anti-war a n d protest literature, and
they h a d a huge display of it for the press to
prove that the students were bad people. T h e
police h a d n o search warrant."
" U p to that point, 1 t e n d e d to think of the
universities as t h e only sane places in the
country — that w e were permitted t o dissent
a n d protest. And then the administration In a
sense collaborated with the Guard to try a n d
prohibit it. T o this d a y they [administration]
share the responsibility of the problem — thai
doesn't m e a n 1 can forgive for o n e moment
the G u a r d s m e n — these crazy, amateur
soldiers w h o were In charge — their violations
of Pentagon orders about locked a n d loaded
w e a p o n s — there's plenty of blame to go
around.
"I have learned, t h o u g h , to be wary of the
te*£
" S o m e students had n o place to go when
ordered to disperse. O n e chairman described
h o w h e h a d seen s o m e 'walking along the
highway carrying bags, dragging clothes, a n d
weeping.' "
Phil thinks it a miracle that n o o n e was killed
during the nightmarish e x o d u s .
Two weeks later, the (acuity was allowed
back on c a m p u s — they gained access to computers In order to correspond with students
finishing the semester.
"That w as the only good thing that came
out of the whole 'experience,' a period where
National G u a r d . W h e n e v e r they're called in,
there's going to b e trouble . . . 1 would urge
everyone to stay as far away as possible —
unless they want to get killed."
T h o u g h he was openly o p p o s e d to the war,
his responsibilities as a professor forced Phil t o
play a small role a s far a s activism was concerned, H e says h e attended s o m e speeches
a n d rallies, but remained low-keyed.
"I thought that only blank rounda were being fired and I thought
that until the
bultetm started kicking up dumt at my feet."
"One m o m e n t I w a s taking plcturem. The
next I warn eating dirt."
.l.'ity Sioklai, pltoloflraph"!
"Something
hit me In the amm. f t h o u g h t It
was a rock, and then I put my hand
back
there and felt the blood."
"They mumt be firing blanka, thome can't be
real bulletal"
- Al Thompwn, repojiBi
"CEASE FIRE! CEASE FIRE! CEASE FIRE!"
"I warn laughing, f thought thoae Jerka are
firing a machine
gun over
everyone's
head."
— General Jnnut
One student u/tis hit in the chest. Blood flowed
through his shirt. As he twisted, head bowed, the
student had a look of "titter disbelief" on his face.
But like many at the time, h e felt that Kent
may have been just a beginning — that a solid
revolution could have been a result.
(continued on page 10a)
"One s t u d e n t Jerked
tike
a puppet,
twleted,
and fell like he got broken
Into
pieces."
"HELP VS"
AMM
Aspects
Sound & Vision
ge8a
Sound & Vision
The Ballad
9 Robert Zimmerman
A View From A Fan
He Acts
wasn't the least bit upset because Dylan
became religious, or because he gave up
the old songs, but because he gave up the
old attitude — an altitude which may no
longer do anything (or him, but used lo do
wonders for me.
I
Quincy Nessig
You see, Dylan used to be religious In a
very different way. He worshipped love, his
women, and placed his faith In the sun rising
and watching ,lhe moon on a night like this.
He'd cross Ihe lights against him for love; he'd
turn back home for Isis, or Sara, and religiously, he paraded through the twentieth century
world with the guidelines of his poetry and the
law of love on his own terms. Dylan's old
religion was all on his own terms, and on no
book's or savior's. He created his own set of
rules, broke standard ones if It was right for
him, and, coincidental^, enlightened generations who heard him and related.
But as I said earlier, I have nothing against
Dylan's conversion. I only seek the reasons
why a man would discard a past for a
philosophically different present, and why
with such venom. So even though I still loved
the music, and the lyrics, and his voice, and
seeing h i m , I just couldn't relate to something
like this: "/ ain't going to hell for
nobody."
Even though Dylan was always rather selfish
and never would before, there was always the
feeling that for the right woman, he certainly
might. That blanket statement contradicted
something totally opposite he once sung,
something thai used to make Dylan a god
himself, Jesus' brother, not slave.
For wasn't It Dylan himself who actually had
to go to hell for Isis and would do It once
I
Like We Never N e t
more, gladly, to wed her again? And wasn't
Dylan once great just because of the fact that
in his system of love, going lo hell for someone would be like Ihem asking you to go to
Ihe corner market?
In the old days, Dylan couldn't really be
othered with religion, or any constraints. It
,vas existence on a shoe-string, surviving on
[images of love that were more human than
human, tales of far away places, and stories as
teal as Bill Shakespeare's. When the new
Dylan says "I don't want to miss nobody, don't
nant to be missed," 1 Just can't buy It withoul
at least a sharp pain resounding through my
ody.
Wasn't 1 the guy that sent Dylan a thank^rou telegram when he showed us how lo miss
omeone with grace In "If You See Her Say
dello;" a guy that worshipped Dylan because
realized how great missing someone and
|>elng missed is; a guy that related to Robert
Zimmerman because everything the guy said
turned to gold In my heart and forced me to
do more than agree. It forced me to believe?
I'm a sinner and I love It. 1 used to love
Dylan because for him, sinning and loving and
ignoring all rules, whether religious or otherwise, was a way of life.
What the hell happened?
It's funny. The last song on side two of
Desire Is "Sara," It's a direct love song. It's
Bob's ode to his wife, the woman whom he
married. The man wrote all that stuff about
love's womanly perfection and what he found.
I never realized the utter Importance of Sara
before, but maybe Bob didn't either.
Well, ever since thai Desire album, and
"Sara," Dylan has been suffering. His wife left
him suddenly after Its release, and after the
praise In "Sara," one's got to say thai either
Dylan was severely deluded or suffered some
terrible blow In his relationship after writing It.
Another New Plan?
The Neutral Ground
"You either got faith or you got non-belief, pitiful, sorry, or Idealistic. You can call him
Zimmy, but there's one thing you can't do and
there ain't no neutral ground,"
- Bob Dylan, 1979 that's believe him.
The best way to approach Dylanls on the
neutral ground, which he claims doesn't exist
Ike David Bowie, Bob Dylan is an am- because it is there, on the narrow field betbiguous concept. He stands still long ween failh and non-belief, that one enJl enough to record an album or two and counters the Truth of the Self. In his heart ol
he moves on. Stylistlcly, he has gone from hearts, Dylan doesn't want that. Thai's why
country to social protest to rhylhm and blues he's constantly changing, picking up one
to country and blues to urban blues to blues to philosophy then bringing It to a new-found
rock to jazz to electric rock, and now, to mode of expression and creating for hlmsell
gospel. His voice can grate like "sand and the Illusion of belief. Dylan Is an Illusion. He's
glue" or it can glide wilh precisioned grace. not some wise prophet who has all the
Dylan's craftsman, a musical magician who's answers and occasionally, when he feels likeappeared and disappeared out of puffs of It, leaks out a few cryptic clues In his lyrics.
smoke.
Rather, he's as confused and frustrated as any
of us about his role In the Universe. Because
he's groping in Ihe darkness for some sort of
truth to cling lo be II demonic or divine, I have
His messages that he conveys in one phase faith In him. I have faith In him because he's a
are often contradictory to a previous phase. human being wilh problems who has the guts
Sometimes he's highly symbolic as In "Captain lo realize that life Is an uncertain thing al best,
Ahab," or "The Ballad of a Thin Man." and no truth can remain true very long. So, 1
Sometimes he's allegorical as In "Isis," or even don't believe any of Dylan's messages are
"Tangled Up In Blue." He's direct and self- Anything more than temporary points ol
confessional in "Sara" and "Changing of the teference. Yet I have faith that he believes In
Guard." Sometimes he's cynical, sometimes whatever his current Inspiration of truth haphe's romantic. You can call him bitter, sar- pens to be. I'm on the neutral ground with
castic, prodding, joking, faking, sympathetic, Bobby.
I
Stuart Matranga
Dylan's latest phase Is Christ-consciousness
and Ihls has created controversy because,
though everyone loves Jesus Christ Superstar,
not many are willing to believe that their
perception of what Dylanis can ever really be
born again Into Christianity, the most
common-place and, therefore, least cool of all
religions.
I'm not sure If Dylan really has been born
again or if this Is just another role which he
plays so enthusiastically thai me makes hlmsell
believe it. During the show last Sunday night
he looked unsure, doubling. Bui then I, too,
am subject lo self-delusion. I wondered If the
whole act with the gospel singers and the
Damnation speil was really a comment on
Christianity and American ethics. But I
dismissed Ihls because I do have that failh,
based on my heart, that Dylan does believe
he's following Jesus. No faith, as Dylan
knows, Is iiir.liakc.ilill'
If Dylan didn't believe in Christian belief he
would be a hypocrite. Some believe this.
(During the show Dylan warned against the
teachings of "organized religions." Believing In
Jesus and doubling Ihe Church are not
mutually exclusive.) But anyone who can
make a two thousand year old message sound
new and refreshing must believe In It, This Is
my faith in Dylan and this is what makes Dylan
M
Matthew Grode
I arrived at the Palace Theater equipped
1th my 35mm camera al six o'clock, two full
hours before showtime. My mission: to meet
the prophet, or Is It profit (al $15.50 a ticket, I
wasn't sure).
After about an hour the band arrived, but
the big guy had yel to show. Eveiy ten
minutes, Ihe Hitler youth, or rather the Palace
Security, would peek out the stage door to
check out the growing mob, a mob made up
of six persons; two girls, Iwo druggies, myself
and a companion. During one of these brief
appearances I learned that there was "no way
In hell" that my camera was going Into the
theater. I was truly dismayed but still determined to snap some shots of the great one,
As his car pulled up Ihe street (North Pearl)
one of Ihe Titan brutes (Palace Security) Informed me that If I dared to shool a picture of
Dylan, he would "Rip Ihe fuckln' film out of
my camera," Is this against the law? Still a bel-
ter question: why Is Dylan afraid lo gel close lo
his audience? is he afraid that his (ace will
crack my lens, or will 1 sell my photos of him
and earn huge sums of money? This man is
preaching the word of Jesus. Why doesn't he
practice what he preaches? There Is no mention in the Bible of Jesus ever running from his
people!
Dylan's car arrives and out pops Billy
Graham? No, it's Bob Dylan at a distance of
about six feet (I dared get no closer for fear
that one of Dylan's Apostles, The Palace
Security, would strike me down for this act of
hybrls). There lie was, the man who Influenced ihe Beatles and the music Industiy In
general, that fifteen year veteran of music! I lis
reaction to us, his six faithful fans — not even
a nod. A.i he walked by us, he slowed his pace
slightly, looked In our direction, and continued walking, Ignoring our shouts of encouragement.
Now II was my turn lo make a grand entrance Into Ihe Theater. My companion and I
decided that we should surrender my Cfirnera
without a struggle. But his camera, atelephoto
pocket camera, was quickly hidden In his
genital area, and In we went.
We took our seats, the lights dimmed, and a
figure look the stage. As the lights went up I
could clearly see that this was not Dylan. It
a pathetic hero. He has nothing. He is lonely
and empty until he finds something, In this
case Christianity, which can Inspire him. His
Inspiration had been his love for his wife, Sara,
or the plight of Hurricane Carter. It had been
the corruption of society and moral principle.
Il had been adolescent Insecurity. It had been
the counter-culture and the beats. Now It Is
Jesus Christ. Maybe this loo shall pass; a temporary way-station until he falls In love again.
But maybe he's In love now. As he said In
concert, "Well, If you need a lover, Jesus will
do that, l o o . " I don't know and that's the
point. Dylan doesn't want us to know, not for
sure, because he doesn't, nobody does, not
even Christ knew until the end.
Perhaps Dylan and Jesus are a perfect pair.
Both were made Into prophets against their
will. Both were, at times, ridiculed and praised
by their societies. Both were mysterious
figures of ambiguous Intent. Both Inspired
failh In man — that without knowing, man
could believe In an unknown force, the force
thai attracted all men, that guided their lives,
while keeping them' In Ihe dark.
Dylan is experimenting with life. Maybe he's
found a solution. Maybe not. He thought he
had found it before, but he didn't. To Ihose
who shut him out because Ihey won't believe
In him — "When you gonna wake up?" »
A Simple T w i s t Of F a i t h
i there's no doubt about It. Dylan's
' been re-born. Las) Sunday's show at
the Palace Theatre featured a rehallzed, re-energized Bob Dylan, sounding
fetter than in any live performances he's given
I the last five years.
Job O'Brian
t Sitting, standing, clapping, and chanting —
K j u s t shy of full-capacity crowd listened with
Bumble patience while five gospel singers
H a r m e d things up. After five or six Inspired
•songs, He entered, wearing a thin black
-.leather Jacket, a white shirt, looking like a
H p s s (!) between the post-Nashville skyline
Brooner and Ihe pre-Rolllng Thunder Revue
, /
'Vi'il
1
\
was a charming !l<'spel singer, telling us of her
troubles on a train, and how Jesus had helped
her and all now was fine. This woman was
Joined by five others and Ihe theater was Jumping. In fact, 1 found myself Praising Ihe Lord,
Where was Dylan? I paid a hefty $15.50 for
my ticket lo see " A n Evening With Bob
Dylan." If Ihe ticket said an evening with six
gospel singers I would not have fell deceived,
though fifteen dollars Is a hit much lo pul In a
passing dish.
Finally Dylan walks on stage. He Is clad In
For the marriage did end, in an ugly divorce
suit, with a Hollywood-type settlement creeping Into the millions. Dylan hated the publicity,
but it was apparently nothing compared to the
agony he was feeling over Sara's loss,
A newly-divorced (or separated) Dylan at
The Band's Last Waltz was tired, bedraggled,
and forlorn looking. His lyrics and musical
style took radical courses away from the
steadiness they'd had (or fifteen years. Call me
a reactionary, but that's a steadiness 1 would
have selfishly chosen to keep. I relied on
Dylan.
Street Legal was off-balance. It was good at
times, even great, but no one can argue that
there was something unsettling about It, some
twist In philosophical character that was just
different. The Las Vegas type tour of 1978
didn't do much to settle the matter, only confuse It. One could see how changed Dylan
was, how altered.
Dylan began concentrating on his music
suddenly, for one thing. Whether it Is Dylan or
his poetry 1 once idolized, it all seemed coincidental, because it was so real and so human.
But suddenly he gets hurt real bad and the
grand troubador of all time gets scared right
out of the field, avoids love like it's a sin; and
after a year and a half of rambling through
Street Legal, ihe forced out Budokan live
album, Jerusalem, and bad reviews, he came
up with Jesus and the Slow Train Coming.
So I don't really even mind Dylan slopping
his show halfway through to talk turkey about
Jesus and the Bible. Yet before, when It was
just love and living up life, he never had to.
The words and the iunes were quite sufficient.
So religion has a little pretension about It, and
Dylan's succumbed to It, at the cost of his love.
Y o u know, I Just can't conceive of Bob
Dylan spending the rest of his life placing his
brilliant faith In a smart book. I've always
dreamed that he would fly off somewhere with
the one he loved and wave bye-bye with an
evil smirk on his face. It's not that I'm against
all of this religious stuff for him, but after those
other twenty-five albums I've been weaned
on, 1 feel as If a battle has been lost.
So all of those words are no longer his
possession, because he's willingly given them
up. He doesn't Include a single old song In his
set, and even some of those (i.e. "Shelter!
from the Storm") are congruous with his new|
feelings. But he can't even do that, for his
painful block against love has stored all that
stuff away forever.
In the end, I feel a little emptier. I'm glad I
saw him, because he's Dylan, but every time
he said something, without thinking, I'd instinctively think about how Bobby Dylan and
his old love ethic would be able to argue It
down with a single verse. There's Just too
many songs lo mention a specific one, but just
pick one out and It'll do.
So I'm not mad at Dylan (I have absolutely
no right to be), I'm just sad. He gave up Sara
(or Jesus, and I've given up Dylan but there's
no replacement. Not Jesus, not Bruce S. and
certainly not Zimmy. He said he didn't want to
be missed, but I miss him anyway. Tough shit.
If he could say "You're gonna make me\
lonesome when you go," then so can 1. •
Review of the Man
Troopers
ITT
Shelter From The Storm
onday April 28 was a chilly, rainy, and
interesting evening. 1 had Intended to
have an enjoyable night seeing Mr.
Dylan In concert. What I got was harassment,
hypocrisy, Gospel hype, and finally Bob
Dylan.
Page 9a
Aspects
black and opens wilh "Serve Somebody." He
sounded quite good. The only breaks In the
music were when Bobby began preaching
"Don't believe any of them organized
religions," he yelled. Was he giving up his
religious kick? No such luck. He went on lo
say that Jesus Is what counts: "When you
finish taking your drugs, and drinking your liquor, and you've had all the girls you could
handle, Jesus will still be there!" Praise the
Lord,
If the old proverb "Music soothes Ihe savage
beast" Is true, then Dylan logically would have
started singing. He didn't. He offered Ihe audience a choice: "Which one of these women
would you like to hear sing?" The audience
responded "Bob Dylan." One of the sirens
took the stage, Dylan left, and the audience
went to Ihe bathroom.
Mr. Zimmerman finally returned. He sang a
few more gospel oriented songs and said
goodnight. He did return for Iwo one-song encores and then came Ihe final goodnight.
Over all the music was good and Dylan
sounded In lop form. The only Ihlng that was
negative about the evening was the absence of
- his old songs. I realize that Ihe commercials for
the concert advertised a new Bob Dylan, but
even Jesus would probably do some of Ills old
Stuff! »
crusader — a Utile chubby In the face and
needing a shave. Whatever your religious persuasion, "Serve Somebody," "When You
Gonna Wake U p , " and "1 Believe In Y o u " got
the place rockln' and refleclin'. Two new
songs followed, lilting l o Ihe effect that Mr.
Dylan was going to Hell for No one ("Not
brother, not sister, not father, not mother")
because He'd been "down thai road before."
I thought I delected a tear in Zlmmy's face
during "I believe In Y o u " and tears must've
been flowing for the legion of Jesus enthusiasts In the audience who waved their
arms back and forth with palms up In divine
ecstasy. Though Ihe thin man performed none
of his older material — only songs from Slow
Train Coming and a forthcoming album — It
must've been heaven (or the old hippies In the
audience who were reborn years ago, maybe
in the early 70s after a rip-off or a bummer on
bad acid or something. "At last, He's seen the
light, too, I knew he w o u l d , " Ihey mlghl've
said, remembering when they themselves
traded In their denim and long, dirty tresses for
Christ's No-fault salvation plan.
"I'd like lo say Hello lo some old friends
from Woodstock — does II still exist?" Intoned
Dylan with one of his hazy and unsettling
smiles. He looked almost drunk, but we knew
belter. His voice was superb and It broke In all
Ihe right places. The band was hot and enthusiastic, featuring on bass Tim Drummond,
noted for his work with Nell Y o u n g , and Jim
Keltner of Bangla-Desh fame on drums.
"When Jesus walked Into Jerusalem . . .
Ihey all broke branches off the trees, proclaiming him their King," Dylan preached, and his
mouth and eyebrows contorted into a
"Mark-my-words" kind of countenance, "the
same people crucified him — so, you never
know."
Y o u never know, Indeed. What did Dylan
mean by that parable? Was It an analogy to his
own once-faithful (lock? Dylan has been an
unstable character the last few years, both personally and artistically. With every album
released, he Is accompanied by a different
troupe of musicians, seemingly motivated by
something completely different each lime.
Dylan could very well be flirting with Christianity merely as a form and abandon It within
the next Iwo years. Nothing at Ihe Palace
Theatre last Sunday night, however, gave any
Indication that Dylan would desert the Lord,
ever. His songs In the latter part of the evening
were even more laden with praise to Jesus.
Where Slow Train was rather subtle In its
direction, I.e., Its piety, the new never-heardbefore-anywhere songs sounded like pure
Mississippi Delta gospel, particularly when
Dylan look to the piano. His harmonica solo
at the end was — well — beautiful. "Inspired"
might be a better word.
Upwards of 500 complimentary tickets were
given out to members of various Christian
groups In Ihe Capilal District (or Sunday
night's show. Dylan also played the Palace
Monday night and slept — apocryphally — at
the Wellington Hotel. Wherever he spent the
night, Dylan never seemed happier, Inviting
everyone to "come back tomorrow night,
don't be afraid." Question: If Jesus - the one
from Nazareth — had made an appearance
last Sunday night, would Dylan have allowed
himself to be upstaged? Who can say what a
simple twist of fate has wrought? Most likely,
In whatever direction, he'll go his way . . . and
I'll go mine. •
Page 10a
Fiction
Aspects
Concert Corner
impressions
TRIVIA TIME "CONCERT CORNER •CROSSWORCNLOQIC P U U U
suopssajduip
MOVIE TiMETAbU*FANTASTIC FOUP• W C D B • PAC
May 2 , 1 9 8 0
Movie Timetable
people buzzing by
so many faces
so many minds . .
guitars strumming,
singing
a smile from a friend
a smile
from a stranger
My Eunice A t
The Play
warm, wonderful
endless sky!
cool, blue water
tingling your toes
Damyanti
Al-Abawi
a crowd gathering
unified
watching, waiting
anticipating
the fountain festival
surge of water
higher, higher
frisbees flying
people laughing .
"Where am I? 1m thle a battlefield?
nightmare?
le thle a campua?
l e thlm a
le thlm
With him, at the play,
(saw the magic that was him,
looking at the world
with six year old eyes —
eyes wide and wondering
at the magic that was him;)
I thought
(how was it to be him,
feel with those hands,
see with those eyes and
think with that mind?)
how oddly the lights shine on
(reflecting on those pictures
and words that made him him:
a charming boy; a man.)
all the different players.
America?
le thle a war? Who le
fighting?
Who le the enemy? Who won?"
- Jpwph C.ntt'i KSU
"I couldn't believe It. Mvflret thought
I'm getting out of the Ouard. I'm a
clentloue
objector,
babyl"
"Wc feel we have accomplished our purpose. The crowd le dispersed at thle
point."
- Osiwfll Cflnlerbury
"The hide have five minutes to clear out.
"It le really eomethlng,
when you eee a girl
lying on a etretcher,
her face
contorted
and awollen,
and then, you know,
they
pick up thle eheet and elowly lay It over
her."
Then, we're coming out again."
T h e y ' r e going to have io find out what law
wae,
cone-
— Sfnji'niu Prtlf Anlram
Albany State Cinema
Allen
Tower Eaet Cinema
Main Event
IFG
Nolorlous
Goodbye Mr. Chips
Cine 1 2 3 4 5 6
Little Darlings
Coalmlner's Daughter
Lady and the T r a m p
Kramer vs. Kramer
Chapter T w o
Being There
Rocky Horror Picture S h o w
Fo< Colonic
All That Jazz
Serial
Madison
Apocalypse N o w
Mohawk Mall
Being There
Foxes
Kramer vs. Kramer
UA Hellman
Where The Buffalo Roam
Cine 7
Breaking Away
7:30, 10:00
7:30, 10:00
7:30, 10:00
7:30, 10:00
7:00,9:00
7:15,9:40
7:00. H : «
7:20,9:30
6:40,9:10
6:30, 9:00
12:00
7:00,9:15
7:00, 9:00
The Day The World Went C r a z y
(continued from
centerfold)
"In Ohio of all places, a second Iront had
been opened up against the Nixon A d ministration . . . Nixon very clearly sympathized more with the National Guard than he did
with the students-"
White resigned the following year; on closed circuit television he explained his fault, as
his wife often had — he was a lousy communicator.
"The next president appointed was Nixon's
ambassador to the U N . He had a strong
recommendation from the White House and
promised good access to It — he'd make sure
that there would be a Federal Grand Jury Investigation . . . But, there was no response
from the White House, he failed to keep his
promise."
" H o w do you make sense out of this? When
we defeated the Germans, we Insisted upon
the war crimes trial in Nuremburg. In this case,
we did not want to sit In Judgment of our own
soldiers at Kent State. The FBI recommended
a Grand Jury Investigation, the Civil Rights
Division recommended It — Nixon did not
want it . . . college students were 'bums.' "
point to a single thing."
The next year, the university was more
bureaucratic and conservative as ever, "most
people want to forget about It as quickly as
jossible."
One unusual conclusion of Phil's was that
there were no heroes here. "Such a big case
— so many people Involved — in which there
were no heroes."
". . . n o , not a pretty time at a l l . " .
©IMwartl . J u l i u s
"By the time they gol around to It, too many
people couldn't remember and too much
evidence was gone."
Like many others at the time, Phil wanted
an Investigation performed. Instead, several
students and teachers were Indicted . . .
"When, my g o d , no students or faculty
members shot anybody."
This week TRIVIA TIME decides
to glance over Ihe Sunday funnies
Here Is your choice to test your
knowledge of the comic strips o( past
and present. Good Luck!
and order la all about."
- Chaplain Simon*
"The more I talked, the madder I gat. The madder 1
got. the more I drank. There was no reason for
what happened. It should never have
happened."
"Why did y o u d o that?
"Yeah.
Why do people
Why did you kill?"
kill?"
"Thoee National Gnardemen are not
monatare, they are huebands. Bona, and
fathers, neighbors of youra."
"f m e a n t the Guard's actlone
being, and ae an American,
ae a human
f think Del
51
ACROSS
52
1 Family name in "The
53
Grapes of Wrath"
5 Incursion
9 Swimming exercise
54
13 College In Los
55
Gatos, California
57
14 Raison d'
59
15 Radiates
17 Herbicide's target 60
18 Now's partner
19
point (center 62
63
of attraction)
64
20 Fantastically
overdecorated
65
22 Magazine Item
24 Grampus
66
25 Coffee maker
26 Oriental truth
67
27 Chihuahua cheer
68
28 Comedian Louis
29 Furiously (3 wds.)
31 Tennis call
32 City in West
1
Germany
2
34 Some hardhats
3
36 Nervous speaker
4
39 Woody, flower5
bearing vine
6
42 Echo was one
7
46 Currently popular
0
47 Mack of the sllents
50 Author Levin
by Vincent Alello
He stayed on to teach at Kent for another
year, leaving in the spring of 1971 for
SUNYA. He had found II difficult to teach
students after the incident due to their
disinterest in learning and the prevalent
rumors of FBI plants throughout the
classrooms.
"Nothing good so far as I can see has ever
come out of the Kent State Incident. I can't
— Ganvial Cftnlaibuiy
C o H e g i f l t a CW79-16
Coreo
s h o u l d be
Jailed."
"Ae far as I'm concerned, you guys can
sura go back t o Kant and kill some mora
students, that's what tba country neadal"
I'd like to know who the boys were who shot my
daughter. I'd like to meet them. They're young, immature guys who joined the National Ouard to stay
out oj Vietnam. They W got a miserable job to da."
"All I know Is that my daughter Is dead! I'm not on "A lima to weep, a time to mourn, thle le
anybody's side. We were so glad to have two the tlma."
daughters so they could stay out oj Vietnam. Now
Why didn't you tall ma It wae going to be a
she's dead. What a wastel What a horrible wastel
praceeeton?
Goodbye."
by Howard P. Alvir, Ph.D.
In A MARRIED WOMAN, she gol ovet her shock ind
anger. She found herself enough slrength to walk oul ot
perfect lover who offered her no more lhan her husband
had: cooking chores, sexual serfdom, and whispered
nothings thai added up Io YOU can'l leave me.
3. A few of the following pictures are tiylng to break Ihe
current 1979 mold of the I'VE GOITA BE ME, SELFOBSESSION FILMS In which Iwo strangers talk, each only
of himself or of herself.
in COMING HOME, she loved a crippled man
In STARTING OVER (which really should haw been sub
titled either A MARRIED MAN oi A MARRIED WOMAN.
PART 2). he was gentle ami Intellectual, He was nervous
about leaching lor the first time and aboul kissing her for Ihe
fit si lime. Wow, in divorce, lie had really discovered himself.
In THE SEDUCTION OF JOE TYNAN, he wank
keep his marriage. She wauled to keep hei career. In the late
1970s, romance meant BE ME.
In KRAMER VS. KRAMER, he wanted Io keep his son.
who was really a stranger. She wanted to llnd herself.
In ROCKY 2. he actually proposed to his girl friend Willi
"Would you mind maitylng mf too much?" Il was romantic,
hut he didn't know her enough to guess YES.
In HEAVEN CAN WAIT, sweet moments drowned out
the ME FIRST theme In most of Ihe above late 1970 vintage
romances.
<l. Thirty-live years ago, Katluyn Hepburn and Speticet
Tracy played strong men and stiong women who wen' at
traded to each oilier.
TO BE CONTINUE/' NF.XT WEEK
T r i v i a Time
Phil and Elaine Anderson (now his wife)
released the study entitled
Communication
Crisis at Kent Slate. Thougli II was received
with praise from similar authors and commissions, it's content shocked the KSU administration.
"Even If you are directly Involved In such a horror,
tile hat a wlerd way of going on, at // nothing happened.
Aspects
THE LOGIC PUZZLE
1. In "The Katzenjammer Kids"
what relation Is the Captain to
Mama?
2. What did Billy Batson have to
say to become Captain Marvel?
A n s w e r s t o last w e e k
3. Mickey Mouse has how many
1. Remembering Y o u
fingers on each hand?
4. What kind of animal was lg- 2. Diablo
3. Broderick Crawford
natz?
4 . Medic
5. What color sapped Green
5. Motorcycle
Lantern's power?
6. Richard Kimble
6. What relation Is Snuffy Smith tu
7. J o h n Chancellor
Jughald?
8. Raymond Massey
7. Name the female In the Popeye
9. The Alan Brady S h o w
strip who had fur over her body.
10. Car 5 4 , Where Are You?
8. What Is the maiden name of
Mrs. Dick Tracy?
Write your answers dowtr and br9. What high school does Archie
ing them to CC 334 by 5:00 p . m .
Andrews attend?
10. Ming, emperor of Mongo, was Monday. All winners will receive a
free personal In the ASP.
a villain who opposed what hero?
J o r m a Kaukonen
Pousette-Dart Band
Blood, Sweat and Tears
Blotto
T o d d Hobin
James Montgomery
Manhattan Transfer
Buddy Rich
May 9
May 13
May 14
May 15
May 16
May 18
May 22
Gleno Fall* C C
May 8
May 15
Debbie Loeb
towers pasted against
a clear blue sky
cold, callous cement
turned soft,
. smooth
"I have ween thim all before. In the mervlce,
during the war, o n a b e a c h In the South
Pacific. Now I h a v e to mee It again?
Here?"
- Eaisl Nclklih
J.B. Scott'*
May 6
Grateful Dead
Cheap Trick
Aspects Top Ten
Places T o E a t A t F i v e A M
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Denny's
Howard Johnson's
McDonald's
IHOP
Inga's Diner
6. Jerry's
7. Dunkin' Donuts
8. Gateway Diner
9. White Tower
10. Steak-n-Eggs Kitchen
5 things t o eat at 5 a.m. w h e n you're t h e only o n e
up, y o u h a v e n o car. there's practically n o t h i n g in
the fridge, a n d you're d e s p e r a t e :
1. Macaroni and clicusu dinner
(without milk and margarine).
2. A cheese and jelly sandwlilch.
3. The banana remaining on the in-
QsOD
"Cross-Reference" — Music from
the Third World, Sunday, 2-7
p.m.
"Blast from the Past" — 8-11 p.m.
"Notes from tiie Underground" —
11 p . m . - l a . m .
UIBD
New — Jazz on the Weekends —
Saturday and Sunday, 5-8 p . m .
"Front How Center" — Live —
Jack Bruce. Saturday, 8;00 p.m.
Harem room
Long Island or
Puget (abbr.)
Most common written
word
Miss Field, for
short
Breakfast favorite
Nonconformist
Dutch painter Jan
Ex-governor of
Alaska
Ethereal
9 Liberal (3 wds.)
10 Mine: Fr.
11 Brian of "Brian's
Song"
12 Lemon of a car
16 Comes down Ice
21 Perfect embodiment
of something
23
Johnson,
decathlon champ
30 "Pumping Iron"
figure
33 Id
Prefix: spiral
Adjust the soundtrack, for short
Peter, P a u l , and
Mary, e . g .
Word i n Guy Lombardo's theme song
"Peter Pan" p i r a t e
Prayer word
35 Take to c o u r t
DOWN
Mandible
Mrs.
cow
Imposes a f i n e
Pedestal p a r t
Typewriter key
Pallas
Dander
Adulterate, in a
way
side of the peel.
4. A plastic cup,
5, Matzoh and peiunit butter.
PAC Events
o
»
<A
©
37 Rocky Balboa's
domain
L.
38 Lunkheaded
39 Wind-tunnel sound
40 Derivatives of a
halogen
41 Regal
May 2, 7 : 0 0 p . m . , Recital Hall SCENES FROM MUSICALS,
Evening
wilh Leonard Bernstein
May 2 & 3 , 7:00 p . m . , Main Theatre
-- S U N Y A " F o o t w o r k "
May 6 , 8 : 3 0 p . m . , Main Theatre University Community Symphony Orchestra
May 7 - 1 1 , 8:00 p.m., Arena Theatre
- Killing Time
For ticket Information, call Performing
Arts Center B o x Office al 457-8606,
43 Use the wrong
word
44 Dog or schooner
45 Calm
48 Natural gas
component
49 From t h a t time o r
place
56 Chow
58 " . . . I could
horse!"
61 Jack LaLanne's
domain
The Fantastic Four
ROBIN, scorr, AND CHARLIE EASILY THE COLD RELEASES HIM FROM
AVOID THE FREEZING BLAST D I - THE EFFECTS OF COI/£ff C-IfiL'S
flS
RECTED AT THm, BY THE STRANGE "TRMOITUER" AbBVWIHLY
HE tot. PARALYZES BY IT.
OLD "ICf.
HAG:..
IAL£
( i f i n 6ooi) tii/wc, iii/'Al-'ivvi nn
HAC-!
m i n t ! OTHERS
COULD
^-xlTHF
omens com
o II M « moyt
- i \ « r our OF THEK « I I * "
'
^jv/'r in
TIME!
"DONT THAHk Ml
YOU YOUth:
Willi h ^lU.'Pk.h'.
i W! ii' sr >r ot
blHCA \Otk W)K'(>
raui TOKU
Wf'ftf HILL
a rr/Ais . i , ,
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NO'. Lit M M
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nrtfj our'i
OHCl - .' ' fcOAl '
^
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• A6A1H'
fowlSic'i AKJP 5£V£tJ B1LLIOH IVTAH^ AGO,
YWR FOkF FATHERS BF0U6HT F0R1H IN THIS AU'.l >U0h
10 M f SlWCJLOUi|
GALAXY A NEVI SOFT 0KINK, CONCEIVED . '.ME NEW!> FOR *nu, Hf. HAOlfHIS SOLAI: ( VFLL, THAI ••>t£5 ^
I N INFAMY WHICH KILLED MOST OF THE
CIVILIZATION OF •1
^ ^ . AGO.' MTMJ
« 'HI ""(.3, \CAKt or „*r.
HOME WCM.O.
- ^
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Class of 1 9 8 2
Election Winners
The Technicians
1980
Podium Tour
begins Friday,
May 2 at the
Chem bldg.
(9:00 pm)
Mandatory Meeting for all new and old
council members
Sunday, May 4 at 9 pm
in CC 358
All others are welcome.
Refreshments will be served.
New council members must call Dave at 7-7870 by Friday
Be There Or Don't
If You Wish!
night.
' Bill Staines
T rones TO coumny (yui*os,
P>ILL'*> R4P€KTOlRe IS OUT-
1 would like to congratulate our
newest members Into Slgnum
Laudis:
Spring 1980 Inductees
Fratres in Facilitate
Dr.Shi'llttnUiuili
Dr. Shirley HN.WII
Dr. Itlihiiril HelmhiTH
Dr. John Lewi*
Dr. Murinnni' Milium
Dr. I'mrirk OlHfNiHin
Dr. John Pipkin
Dr. Hubert Itikmriihiiiirl
Ms. Pi.i IdiKiTh
>
Dr Willi
Hhi'i'him
Chrmlhlry Ih'pt.
I'syrliolojo Di'pl,
I's>(h.,l..«\ |)i>p|
C«mj?utvr Science Drpi
Anthrupultifi) llcpl.
Chcmlmry t)cp(,
fl?iif<rujih>
Dcpl.
Illuilifty Di-pl
Phyhlrnl (Munition Dcpl.
UunlncHH Dcpl.
^^TlOfV/AL VoT)eUN(b CHAM?.).
hali 2nd fjc»,
With continued success,
75*
w
Steven Cohn
/ + s « ox-d PO(I^ _-<I.ZS Q«n*rfl/ ^ / / < .
MAYFEST '80
Food and Beer Ticket
Advance Sale Schedule
Dinner Lines 4pm-6pm
Saturday May 3 Alumni
Sunday May 4 Colonial
Monday May 5 Indian
Tuesday May 6 Dutch
Wednesday May 7 State
Also on sale Mon-Fri May 5-9 in the
Contact Office
Price: Advance $2 with tax card
$4 without
Day of show $3 with tax card
$5 without
Also glass Mayfest'80 Mugs $2
Signum Laudis President
ELIGIBLE STUDENTS
INTERESTED IN BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION AND
ACCOUNTING
Eligible students intending to apply to
the undergraduate Business
Administration or Accounting Program
for the Spring 1981 semester must
submit an application for admission to
the School of Business by Friday,
June 6, 1980.
Applications for admission to the
Undergraduate Program in the School
of Business are now available in BA
361A and the Center for Undergraduate
Education.
APPLICATIONS MUST BE
SUBMITTED IN PERSON
N O LATE APPLICATIONS
WILL BE ACCEPTED
comment
Andrew Pulley for Presideni. Not only did
the editors discriminate against his running
mate Matilde Zimmermann in this, but even
a simple check would have told them that the
SWP has never run Pulley for President
before. Any mention of Patricia Mayberry,
our local Congressional candidate, was
eliminated.
We were further told that a big vote for
Pulley "might indicate popular disillusionment" with the imperialists' war drive, "but
it probably will not persuade them away from
aggression." But no one has ever claimed
that a simple vote for SWP candidates would
persuade the rulers to abandon their class interests in pursuing war.
What I had tried to explain was how this
vote could be part of the ongoing struggle
against war. Instead, in the censored version,
the reader was given the student skeptic's
view of the socialist candidate as a political
Don Quixote.
Finally, we arc told that "coming months
will tell" who runs America the warmakcrs
or "the people tired of war, selfishness and
misunderstanding." This sentence is a typical
expression of liberal confusion, What is really unfortunate is thai it had to be lacked onto
an article whose main purpose was to show
thai the current war drive has deep economic
and social roots, rather than some abstract
"selfishness and misunderstanding."
It is not my purpose here to speculate on
the various personal or political motives
which led Aspects' editors to doctor up my
article, censoring it in the process. But one
observation can be made, which is that
SUNYA has not enjoyed a very healthy
climate for free expression recently. For example, we sec the efforts to eliminate
Tangent magazine because it dared to
become, in the words of one studcnl
bureaucrat, a "feminist publication".
This climate of intolerance is not unrelated
to the war drive itself. The first task of a
regime wanting to drag its subjects into a war
against their interests is to turn public opinion against any current — feminist, Black
nationalist, Leninist — that question its
prerogatives. At SUNYA litis effort has
scored some modest successes. >To bend to its
results is lo further encourage the forces
behind it. Democratic discussion of the issues
in the world crisis can only strengthen the
struggle against war. Censorship does the opposite.
Mark Chalk ley
Muckraking?
To the Editor:
1 was looking through the April 29, 1980
ASP and what did I see on the third page? I
saw a story with the heading "Caslro-Blanco
called by J-Board. Firecracker had injured
student." Well this sounds pretty serious to
me. When did it happen? 1 read on to find
out. It happened in October — October! And
now due to the fine investigative and up to
dale reporting the ASP has finally let. us
know about this incident. Lucky for us they
primed the slory right during the SA eleclions In which James Castro-Blanco is a
presidential candidate. Whal kind of
muckraking is litis? I realize information
about candidates good or bad should be
printed to help us decide on the correct
choice, but why not print the story before the
elections so Castro-Blanco could reply, since
the incident happened so long ago. I have
seen inconsistency in the ASP's liming of
slorics before, but this is the first one that infuriales me enough lo right a letter.
[
3
editorial
ing an election why don't you do it for all the
candidates. Now, 1 don't know James
Castro-Blanco. I don't know if I would want
to know him, and I am not sure as to his
qualifications lo be a SA President. But, (he
Lack of communication and a crisis of authority between the SA President and the Election
timing of this-story annoys me to the limitl
Commissioner raised some serious questions that must be resolved.
Andrew S. Paul
While the SA President is a member of the election commission by way of title, and no constitutional by-law bars her from interfering with its procedures, it would only seem ethical and
moral for her to maintain a low-keyed position in this area — especially after showing support
for a certain candidate.
Problems of involvement and conflicts of interests have arisen before when previous SA
To the Editor:
Presidents were known to count ballots, even after publicly announcing their endorsement of
The Student Faculty Basketball game took a nominee.
place on February 28th in University Gym to
Central Council should meel and seriously consider the issue for in the Gold/Schatsky runbenefit Telethon '80. During the course or off, it is crucial thai the tabulations be handled by a neutral Commissioner and able assistants.
the game 15 blue and white alumni jerseys
The Commissioner and present SA President must work out their difficulties way in adlent us by the Athletic Department were vance of the voting's onset.
stolen from a box in the gym. We appealed to
It must also be made certain that no position hopeful is within throwing distance of the
Ihose who had the shins to return them, no ballots under any circumstances.
questions asked. Only iwo shins have been
returned as of ihis writing. We are surprised
at the lack of consideration shown by those
involved. If these shins are not returned to
the Student Association office, Telethon will
Like many Americans these days, we often sil on the fence and depend on the lawyer, the
have lo pay more than $150 lo replace litem.
This money will come from funds that are go- clergyman, and the government to do whatever should be done. Getting lost in life's complexing lo the Albany State Chapter of die Big ifies, we oflcn feel too small lo make a difference. Bui apathy can never be a part of our
Brother/Big Sister Program and the makeups anymore. Apathy is what caused "Kcnl Stale."
Sunday is the lOih anniversary of Ihe Iragedy in which National Guardmen gunned down
Wildwood School for the Developmental^
thirteen demonstrating students, killing four. Give it a minute of thought, utter a prayer for
Handicapped.
We hope thai every time .someone sees one your dead peers, and say a heavier one for America.
of these jerseys he will remember where the
money that was used to replace the shin is
not going.
Sincerely,
On Wednesday, May 7th, student representation on the University Senate will be discussed
Sluarl Gruskin
and evaluated. If students as a majority have learned anything since the turbulent 60's it is thai
Marlene Michaelson
Co-chairpeople, Telethon '80 one must work within 'the syslcm' lo bring about change and progress. For twelve years,
students on ihe Senate have had a high attendance rate al meetings. The considerable number
of student-initiated proposals proved thai we have made a constructive and conscientious effort to improve life al SUNYA . Presideni O'Leary has come oul openly in supporting student
reps on Ihe body. On behalf of the university, we urge the Senate lo do Ihe same.
I ii the Editor:
I am writing this letter lo respond to the
allegations made against Budget Committee's
handling of Tangenl Magazine. Lei me start
by saying that Budget Committee is neither
We certainly hope that the four remaining SA hopefuls arc refraining from too much
power hungry nor unfeeling. We have lo
budget good programming thai will reach Ihe celebrating and congratulations. For (he real winner on Wednesday night was Abstain. Absmost people for the leasl money, so as to tain received 7,100 votes and is clearly the choice for our nexl SA Administration. Shame on
allow more good programming for the you SUNYA...just what will it lake lo get you to vote?
Bui, of course, you can'l answer this one — chances are you're nol even reading it.
students. The Budget Committee has already
funded over 70 groups al a cost of over
$466,000. The uninformed people who are
screaming mad about Tangenl have never
given thought thai the Committee has oilier
worthy groups lo fund, loo. When we fund
5-Quad and Middle Earlh for over $20,000,
no one said a word. When we funded OffEstablished In 1916
Campus Association to purchase scrcechers
Rich I. Behar, licUtor-in-Chief
Rob E. Grubman, Managing Editor
and door locks for women lo prolccl
Ncwa Edltora
Laura Florentine*, Sylvia Saunders
themselves, no one praised us. When we gave
Assoc.ute News Editors
Susan Milligan, Beth Sexer
WIKA (women's iniranmrals) twice as much
ASPects Edltora
Stuart Malranga, B o b O'Brian
money as last year, no one cheered us. When
Aaaoclale ASPecta Edltora
Rob Edelstein, R o n Levy
we funded "Athena" (the Feminist Alliance
Sports Editor
Paul Schwartz
Publication) for $ 1,000 no one culled us pro' Aaaoclale Sports Editor
B o b Bullafiore
feminist.
Editorial Pagea Editor
Steven Rolnlk
Power vs. Power
Play With Words
Remembering Kent
Keep Us On Senate
Budget Reply
Apathy Reigns. . .Again
If you talk lo anybody on Budgei Committee, (or anyone else within SA), they will
honestly icll you that ihey do not enjoy culling budgets. Do you really believe thai we
enjoy culling the budgets of Pierce Hall Day
Care Center, Middle Earth, or Tangenl.
When we finished wilh all Ihe groups, we
were some $15-20,000 over budget. More culs
had to be made. Budget Committee had lo
make those culs. II is impossible lo please
everyone, but ihe culs had to be made. If you
truly feel that Budget Committee is a sarcastic, quick-axed group of incompetents, I
ask that you come talk to any of us in person,
to get our side of the story, before you write
uninformed letters and derogatory editorials.
Finally, if anybody else feels that being on
I find it very hard to swallow thai the ASP the Committee gives you all the power, and
was unable to reach Jean Strclla for com- lets you "squelch enthusiasm", 1 suggest you
ment. What did she do? Move to Alaska? sit on nexl year's budgei hearings. I think
further, the ASP states that since Castro- you would be greatly surprised by what you
Blanco has not complied with the judicial would sec,
recommendation, he has "been rc-refcrred
Steven Welsh
for not sending . . . (a letter explaining whal
Member of the Budget Committee
happened) . . , lo the ASP," according to
one source. One source, you gol to be kidding. Was it just that Strclla. the source, and
David Jenkins, associate director of residence
programing couldn't be found before
Tucsduys ASP! The incident happened In
October,
If you plan on using these techniques dur-
Two Issues Left;
Send Letters
Copy Editor
A r o n Smith
S t a f f w r i t e r a : Pal Branley, Beth C a m m a r a t a , Ken Cantor, A n d r e w Carroll, H a r o l d D i a m o n d ,
Judie Efsenbcrg, Mark Fischetti, Bruce Fox, Maureen George, Jay Glssen, Ed G o o d m a n , Whitney
G o u l d , Eric Gruber, Marc Haspel, Mlchele Israel, Larry K a h n , A m y Kantor, Douglas K o h n , Debbie
Kopf, Rich Kraslow, Kathy Perllll, Jeff Schadoff, Marian Weisenfeld, Mike Williamson Z o d i a c &
P r e v i e w E d i t o r * : Carol V o l k , Jamie Klein
D e b b i e K o p f , Business
Advertising Manager
Billing Accountant
Aaalatant Accountanta
Composition Manager
Manager
'
Steve Goldstein
Lisa A p p l e b a u m
Bennie B r o w n , Miriam Raspler
Fran Glueckert
S a l e a ; Ricli Seligson, Steve Gortler C l a a a l f l e d M a n a g e r : Robbin Block C o m p o s i t i o n : Mike
M c D o n a l d , Marilyn Moskowltz A d v e r t i s i n g P r o d u c t i o n M a n a g e r : Sue Hausman A d v e r t i s i n g P r o d u c t i o n : Edith Bcrelson, Marie A n n e Colavlto, Janet Drelfuss, T a m m y Gclger, Joy
Goldstein, Penny Grecnsteln, Ruth Marsden, Mike M c D o n a l d , J o y Prefer, Steve Robins O f f l e a
S t a f f : Bonnie Stevens
V i n c e n t A l o l l o , E l l s s a B e c k Production
Managers
t l a a B o n g l o r n o , J o y F r i e d m a n Associate Production
Managers
Vertical Camera
Typist Extraordinaire
Dave B e n j a m i n
H u n k ' s Chick
P a a t a - u p : Sue B e n j a m i n , Marie Itallano, T y p i s t s : Rosemary Ferrara, Marie Garbarlno,
September Klein, Debbie L o c b , Debbie Schiller, Laurie Walters P r o o f r e a d e r s : Rachel C o h e n ,
Mitchell Greebel, Sue Llchtenstein, Robin L a m s t u l n , A r n o l d Reich C h a u f f e u r : Rich Russell
Photography, Supplied principally by University Photo Service
P h o t o g r a p h e r s : Roanne Kutnkoff, B o b L e o n a r d , Allen C a l e m , Karl C h a n , Sieve Essen, M i k e
Farrell, Mark Halek, Marc Henschel, Dave M a d i s o n , Steve N l g r o , Carolyn Sedgwick, Suna
Stelnkamp, Sue Taylor, T o n y Tassarottl, Will Y u r m a n
Page Ten
_ Albany Student Press _
Classified
Typing: D i s s e r t a t i o n s , theses,
shorter papers accepted, excellent
work guaranteed, call 463-1691
days, evenings before 9 pm.
Rush typing Jobs done by legal
secretary. 6 yrs. experience, minor
editing and spelling corrections,
neatness and accuracy count. Call
Theresa at 439-7809.
"One female subletter wanted for
apt. this summer, bay window In
bedroom, 1 block form park, 2nd
floor, secure, Dany, 7-1875.
Subletters wanted for 4-bdrm. apt.
on busline. Available June-Aug.
Near shopping laundry and bars.
Price n e g o t i a b l e . C a l l M l m l ,
482-5849.
Sublet four rooms In an apt. only 50
feet from the busline. Hudson - corner of Partridge. Call 7-8821.
One non-smoking female wanted to
complete 3-bdrm. apt. 1 block from
busline (near Albany High). Grad or
upperclasswoman preferred. Call
489-2047, Melody or Jill.
May 2, 1980
Midnight InThanks for making this year invaluable. I'm sorry for all the
arguments we will have until the
end of the semester, but that s from
pressure and my Instability. I hope
you work out your problem this
summer. Good luck. Happy birth-
Dear Andrea,
Best of luck tonight and tomorrow.
We'll be rooting for you.
Love, Linda, Carta, and Barbara
Passports and applications, $5 for 2
and 50 cents thereafter. Mon., May
5, 12-3, last time this yearll Questions: coll Bob or Suna at J-B867.
'
Love always, Memphis
P.S. During vacation, |ust maybe,
possibly, I might happen to drop by,
If you're lucky, but...
Donna,
HII Thanks for commlng up. I know
we're going to have a great time,
Lots iof love.
Love, Buck
Dear Time,
I always thought it would be so exciting to go skiing and fall in love
with an instructor. Well It Just occurred to me that that's exactly
what I did.
Love you, Debs
My little girl,
You're my blue sky.
You're my sunny day.
Lord, you know it makes me high.
When you turn your love my way.
Models Wanted
These 8 months nave been the best.
Photographer (API) needs models
Hudson Ave. apt. with backyard for I wish you good luck, happiness,
for part-time work (individual &
sublet, 3 rooms available for June, and peace of mind this year and
group) poster, gallery, & commerJuly, and Aug. Across the street forever.
cial - mostly figure - nude, semi, and
P. Lu P. smokes dope.
from busstop. Call 7-7B46.
Love, Potato Face
silhouette studio and location - Haircuts $4.75 S h a m p o o a n d
Oh my godl Is that why they call It
mostly outdoor. Long hair (neat) & blowdry extra. A l ' s Hairstyles, Male subletters wanted for a Andrea D.,
dope?
dance/yoga exp., helpful but not re- Ramada Inn, Western Ave., Albany. beautiful apt. o n Wash. Ave. from
past nine months have been
quired. Write for rates and release 482-8573. Mon., Wed., Fri„ 12-5; June 1 t o Sept. 1. Spacious These
happiest ever because you have My Guardian Angel,
requirements to M.R., Box 22794, Tues., Thur. till 7.
bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen, and my
been
there
to
brighten
every
day.
I
You're
a
great
roommate,
but you're
SUNYA Station, Albany, NY 12222.
bathroom. Newly painted, porch, love you more than mere words
color TV., HBO, on busline. Close to could ever describe. I think of you one hell of a terrific friend. Happy
20th.
>
Very creative artist wanted to draw
laundromat. Call Chuck, Bob, or Bill always. The time we spend together
Love, Your Petite
teeshlrt design for the Harlem
at 489-0016.
Is always very special. You will
Wizards comedy basketball team.
Heidi — the most Incredible RA
Also, possible future work. Call
Mature roommate to share nice two forever be my one true love.
Dave SUNYA will ever have had,
Todd, 434-2820. Needed by May 16. Tenor Sax — Vllo Noblet model, exbedroom apt. Glenwood St., Albany.
Happy birthday! Thanks for ail the
cellent cond. Asking $225. Contact
No tobacco. Carpeted, furnished ex- P.S. Good luck on all your finals.
help and for being a special friend
Camp Counselors
cept bedroom. $125/mo„ Includes REH • 2/20/80 was a very special day when I've needed one. t o o bad your
Attractive summer positions, Boy's Brad, 465-1990.
heat and hot water. Security, no In my life. Thanks so much for say- administrators don't appreciate
Camp (52nd year), Lenox, Mass. In Queen-size bed for sale: Boxspring,
lease. Available Immediately for- ing hello. I am trying hard to unders- what you've done but then again, no
swimming, sailing, (22 boat fleet), mattress and metal frame, all In exsummer or next year. Ken, 438-5677. tand your feelings, and I think I'm one will ever accuse them ofhavlng
sculling, skiing, tennis, (18 courts), c e l l e n t c o n d . C o n t a c t B e t h ,
baseball, basketball, street hockey. 436-9109 for details.
beginning to. You already know brains.
Wanted: One male to complete a mine. A lot of times when I do
Aslo, camp paper, weight training,
Love, Mark
3-bdrm. apt. on busline. Call Randy things for you, I do them because I P.S. You also make a great sister.
photography, ham radio, video- Electric guitar amplifier, Yamaha
at 449-1137 or 439-5191.
taping, archery, radio station. Send 100 watts RMS, 2 x 1 2 spkrs. Excepwant to be able to share myself and
tionally
clean
sound.
Solid
state.
The
"Last
Tango"
In
Sayles
Is this
detal'Is to: Joe Kruger, Camp MahApartment-mate wanted t o share my abilities with you, not because I
Kee-Nac, 20 Allen Court, South Asking $170, will negotiate. Evenbeautiful modern apt. In the Pine think you may not be capable of do- Saturday nlghTl Live band, beer,
Ings • 482-5857.
food
and
"Speedy"
In
a
dress!
Don't
Bush. 10 mln. from campus, car ing them. Then when you do things
Orange, NJ 07079.
'71 Chevy Impala, 4-dr., PS/PB,
nee, rent $150/mo. plus electric. for me it makes me feel so good miss It.
Women for outdoor photographic 71,000 mi., AM/FM cassette stereo,
Call Dave at 356-1700, ext. 242.
because It make me feel you care. Herkimer First Floor,
work. Experience not required Looking forward to 6/1/80.
The memories of the Sleepover and
should be relaxed In front of a body, engine, very good, many new
Wanted:
Responsible
up
parts,
482-5702,
$700.
Love, Carroll this past semester are great. Let's
camera. $8-12 hourly fee. For Interperclassman or graduate student to
do It again sometime!I
view, contact: The Jer Flynn Agen- Stereo compact, AM/FM receiver
complete 2-bdrm. apt. for June, Ju- Suites 303, 402, 403 Colonial,
Love ye, A Hamilton Friend
cy, P.O. Box 1423, Albany, NY cassette, turntable, headphones,
ly, and Aug. Rent negotiable. Call What a year!! The total parties,
12201.
microphones, excellent condition,
Steve at 463-2992, evenings.
flunking our test, folding of a fiat, Dear Rocco,
asking $250, 482-5702.
Subletters wantedl 5 bedrooms, GAC, PBR's, SLammers, The Rebels, Happy birthday to one of my
Young, working, disabled male In
people In the world. I miss
two porches, built-in bar, near the Bombers, the Arsenal, new favorite
need of part-time live-In attendant. For sale: One double bed and one
stereos, 2 love affairs, St. Patty's you and I love you.
single
bed,
mattress,
box
spring,
busline. Call Bob or Steve,'7-5040.
Days free, perfect for working perday,
W
h
o
c
o
n
c
e
r
t
s
,
Ell-phant,
Eileen
son or student. M/F, no experience and frame. Call 869-7100.
Females wanted to complete a alcoholics, the Blob, I.U., M.V., L.U.,
Claudia. Kathy, Lynn, and Jenny,
necessary; primary requisite,
spacious
4-bdrm.
apt.
right
on
Colgate,
Bones,
and
next
the
fest.
Sanyo TP 636 belt drive semi-auto
It would take an entire page of perdependability. Personal references
turntable with Audlo-Technlca cart. busline near corner o i Western and Let's finish with a bang.
sonals to tell you everything that
required. Pay: Room, board, plus
Kings oi GAC has been great about this year —
Great cond. Asking $75, will talk. N. Main. If you are neat, lively, funweekly stipend. (Near Central
ny, and want a great place to live, P.S. Next year the show moves to 8. B i r t h d a y s ,
Call 7-8781.
Linda,
HoJo's,
Towers) Begin May 24. Reply Imcall 438-0480 evenings.
Have a summer.
downtown, wall banging, backgammediately. Call 459-6422 days,
Zenith Allegro Stereo, Cheapl Call
mon,
bathroom
talks,
curlers,
danc489-7774 evenings and weekends.
Sublet 1 bdrm., Lelsurevllle In Dear Mar,
Bob at 489-0016.
Ask for Bill.
Latham. Pool, tennis courts, A/C, Have the Happiest 19th my little ing, psych to study, sick trays,
mono,
singles,
Brian,
Nell,
parties,
Sansul 771-40 w. receiver, Sansul
$227/mo. Available Immediately. kroll. We all love you, especially
Part-time, full-time i n d i v i d u a l s
turntable, Micro Acoustics 2002e Call 785-1756 (specily BIdg. 12, Apt. your little sheepdog. Have a great Oreos, Canasta, pigging out, matzoh, the mirror and scale, bagels.
available t o deal with attorneys In
cartridge, replacement stylus. Must
dayl!
13).
Ron, personalsand
your home town during the summer.
sell before graduation! $375. Call
All my love, Becker J a c k s ,
I'm a doctoral student looking lor
guysillCrying, laughing, loving, and
Excellent opportunity to learn about
482-2577 evenings.
•jpartmentmate to share beautiful Q I I K A S
living together. See you next year.
Attorney Support Services. No ex2-bdrm. apt. starting June 1. Loca- Have the Best day. I love you Love always to the sweet suite,
perience necessary. Please contact
tion: Westville Apts., Guilderland, 1 sweetie.
Alicia
Andra M. Maggard, Jr. Montenge &
Dukeless
Maggard Associates, 40 Steuben
3/4 ml. from SUNYA, swimming
St., Albany, NY 12207. 518-463-2426.
pool, tennis, basketball. $140/mo.
Mom.
Bruukenbaur,
and
Tarta,
the University Chorale,
includes heat. Call Bruce at To
Subletter wanted: 1 room to sublet
Well, we did It! Many hours of hard I can t wait till next year and all the
Part-time helper t o assist disabled
in a beautiful, 3-bdrm. apt. Furnish- 869-9388.
work and suffering were spent, but fun. Thanks for asking me In. With a
career woman In dressing, light
ed, washer and dryer, one-half block
One or two females needed to we proved to ourselves and others suite like ours — look out Colonial.
housekeeping, errands, Mon.-Fri.,
Till next year, Fellsha
from busline, $70/mo. Call Mary
sublet for summer. Near busline, t h a t t h e SUNYA C h o r a l e Is
7-8 a.m., one evening a week,
Ann,
7-5239.
$60/mo.
Call Edith or Kathy, something to be proud of. There's Roger,
medically related background
one more concert to go. Let's show If anything we've gotten closer this
preferred. Send inquiry to C. Marra,
WAnted: 1 female non-smoker to 436-9487.
this school that we are a performing past year. Thanks for listening, car62-5 Woodlake Rd. Albany, 12203.
complete beautiful 4-bdrm. apt. on Subletting this summer? Spacious, group of distinction.
CAREERS
Hamilton St. Call 7-5146 and ask for
clean, 3-bdrm. apt. available on With love and dedication, the 2nd ing, and standing by me. This place
would be hell without your friendJudy or 5-5147 and ask for Renee.
Hudson Ave. 1 block from busline.
A c c o u n t i n g , Data Processing,
sop. section leader, Linda Cohen ship. I love you. Next year could be
Call Ron, 7-5145.
Engineering, Marketing, Personnel.
Subletters needed this summer for
Interesting.
Dear
Secret
Admirer,
Fortune 500 Client Companies. H.Q.
4-bdrm. apt. on Hamilton St. close
4 subletters needed for posh Park To the girl who left the note to me at
Love, Alicia
and Divisional. North-East locato busline, $60 a mo. plus utilities.
Ave. Penthouse, $60/mo. includes 2 Tappan 302, let me have a clue as to
tions. Highly competitive salaries. Call 7-5147 and ask for Renee or
Birthright, Inc., 350 Central Ave.,
porches, 2 living rooms, great who you are.
Please Include home address and
Albany: Free pregnancy tests;
Judy, 7-5146,
neighborhood. Call 482-5788.
Steve counseling service for anyone facphone with resume. Reply: College
P.S. Reply In the next Issue of the ed with a problem pregnancy.
Recruiter, Executive Register, 34 Two subletters needed for beautiful
carpeted furnished apt. right on
ASP II you can.
Mill Plain Rd., Danbury, Ct. 06810.
24-hour hotline; office hours: 10
buslinel Price negotiable. Call Barb,
Search
and
Recruitment
Happy birthday to a true friend am.-1 pm. Monday through Friday.
7-4770.
Specialists. All fees assumed by
Tuesday
evening by appointment.
Marlene and my crazy roommate
com' -any.
Subletters wanted for beautiful apt.
Suzy! Both of you have a terrific bir- 463-2183.
on Western Ave. between Ontario
Ride wanted from Boston and/or thday — we're all here to help you Margie, Pam, Camllle and Lin• ^
and Quail, $65, 463-5404.
Westchester to Albany Mayfest
celebrate! I love you both!!
J f u l u r e roc; -tate and already
weekend. Call Danny, 7-1875.
Joaner friend,
t w o subletters needed on Hudson
near Quail. Available May 21. Call
Ride needed to Syracuse any day
Dear Deb, Amy, Susan, Jay, Neal, I can't say enough for last weekend.
(Even tho you weren't there, Pam, I
(Sunday-Thursday). Gladly share
Richie, Rona, and Scott,
Old CSI 203 Final Exams. Call Nell, 455-6756 or Steve, 465-0177.
"
Thank you all for a terrific birthday. heard your voice many times).
Call 438-1176.
455-6756.
Subletters. Three-room apt. 175 c o t l s . Car
Friends like the four of you make
I
never
thought
I'd
be
saying
this
Ride needed to Stanley Kaplan
One person to complete 4-bdrm. Quail across from Frank's. Busstop,
about a disco, but I had a great S U N Y A m o r e b e a r a b l e . F o r
course on Saturday mornings. Call
apt., Park and Quail, $120/mo. In- laundrymat, cheap. Call Sharon at
understanding me Thurs. nlte, Frl.
time.
The
night
was
perfect
and
I
7-8821.
cludes everything. Willing to keep 7-4921.
nlte, and then on Sat., please add t o
really appreciate everything.
late hours, 436-0014, Steve, Adam, Subletter needed. Located between
With love and thanks, Linda my growing pile of debts: Camllle, a
Paul.
Sutter's and Ramada. Call 489-1414.
P.S. Lauren and Mary, wish you trip to HoJo's; Margie, a walk or
two; and Linda, a new bike tire.
could have been there.
Guitarist who sings in Frnncli. Call Summer sublet, only $60,available
Love, Robin
Hal at 7-5010.
May 13, spacious apt. Front porch
No. 17,
Conductor Wanted:
Pep Band
and backyard, nice bedroom. Near
Hope
there
a r e n o m o r e Dear Lulse,
Now Auditioning lor September, Price Chopper, Bogart's, buses, and needs energetic, enthusiastic permisunderstandings. Looking for- Happy birthday sulteel It's been
Salaried signing positions available more. Call Carol, 489-6386.
son to lead The band next year. Fun
ward to evening up the score!
great living with you, and I know
In the fall for tenors and basses, In
and a great experience. Call Dave at
Me next year'lfbe greater.
the cathedral Choir of Men and Subletter wanted for spacious 7-5261.
Dear Eric,
Stacy
B o y s . F o r I n f o r m a t i o n , c a l l 3-person apt. on corner of Quail and
Consumer Protection Agoncy openWestern, right on busline. Rent
465-1342.
Our friendship Is one that will never To the Popular Graffiti Staff,
ing for C o m m u n i t y
Service
negotiable. Call 7-8969.
end. Thanks for always being there. Congratulations o n a fantastic
Subletters: 5-bdrm.; 3-story house;
Students. Telephone referral work.
Happy birthday! I love you.
Issue.
bedrooms 2nd and 3rd floors; fully One female subletter needed for 457-8347, ULB 66.
Lisa
furnished; washer-dryer; 3 baths; nice upstairs apt. 1 1/2 blocks from
A Friendly Collator
K. M a ,
spacious; near shopping; busline; Partridge busstop. Call Donna,
Bruce,
Diamond Face,
park; 482-3925. 11 Manning Square
I
learn
more
about
you
uach
rare
436-7818, Kathleen, 462-3758,
A belated thanks for "driving me t o
A souvenir from our wild weekend in
the Turf Inn." Seriously, I had the time that we talk to each other. This Beansvllle — Mass. Ave, Bagel
Two subletters needed to fill furtime, though, I found that I also lik• ^
nished apt. for June, July, Aug,: N. beet time. Thanks also for my birth- ed the person I was talking to. I've Nosh, Fannlel Hall, Flaruccl, High
day celebration (22 Isn't that old, Is
Allen near busline, rent negotiable.
Society, Newbury Saloon, The T
It?) and for putting up with a manic- still got thinking to do and will call
Call Bruce at 455-6889 or Mike at
d e p r e s s i v e ! Moat I m p o r t a n t l y , In a few days for my next appoint- Lodge, Rich' car, SPTI, Dell Haus,
455-6906,
and especially being with you. ILY.
Paasport-Appllcatlon Photos $5 for
thank you for all your friendship, ment.
_ H
two; $.50 each thereafter. Mon. Beautiful apt. - need 2 subletters to
love, and understanding.
C.S.
12:30-2:30, University Photo Service, complete for summer. Partridge and
Dear Linda.
All my love, Nancy Dear Monica,
CC 305, 7-8867, ask for Bob, Wostern - on busline. $60 per mo.
I know you didn't think you'd ever Here's wishing the eldest member
1 Kent Street and Elball,
Roannu, or Suna.
Call 7-5254.
of Bleecker 203 a terrific B-Dayl
Dear Friends — Thanks for taking get a personal but how could I not Hopefully by next year, with a year
Typing Servlco • IBM Seloctrlc - Bar ; Summer sublet, furnished apt. on N.
give
you one on your 20th birthday?
me out for my birthday. I enjoyed
In the real world, you'll be as mature
bara Hale, 445-1575, days; 273-7218, Allen, right o n busline, Includes
the midnight se'renade, the pie, Happy B'day, honey. I love you.
as we are.
nights, weekends.
utllltle8,$65/mo, Call Rich, 482-5857,
D i c k ' s t o a s t s , t h e beer, b u t
Jerry Once again with love, Carole, Ruth,
especially being with the best
" N o F r i l l s " S t u d e n t Teacher Female subletters wanted for 2nd
and Ellen
friends anyone could ask for; I lovo The Sound of Silence, Scarborough
Flights, Global Travel, 621 Fifth floor apt. Just off busline. Rent
Fair, Bridga Over T r o u b l o d
you all.
Avenue,
N Y , NY
10017. reasonable. For more Info call
Water...The Parvarlm tomorrow
continued on page 13
My love always, Nancy night.
212-379-3532.
7-5058.
xr
sr-zz
ForSale
May 2, 1980
Page Eleven
Albany Student Press
Miscellany
Delta Sigma PI Presents: "Wliai You Need to Know About the
CPA Exam" — Tuesday, May 6, 8:00 p.m., LC 21.
Center fur Undergraduate Education Will the pcrson(s) who borrowed "Visiting Student Program" catalogs from the C.U.E.
Resource Room please return them so that oilier students can use
them.
Class of '82 Meeting for all NEW and old councilpeoplc. Sec our
ad. Sunday, 9:00, CC 358.
Opera Workshop — On the Town with Leonard Bernstein Scenes
from "Candide," "Trouble in Tahiti," "West Side Story," with
SUNYA's Percussion and Brass Ensembles. PAC Recital Hall,
Friday May 2, Free, 7:00 p.m.
PAC Presents: Play It Again, Sam Last chance to see Woody
Allen's smash hit. Directed by Albert Asermely. Tickets available
at PAC Box Office, 7-8606, CBO 458-7530. Friday and Saturday,
May 2, 3, 8:00 p.m.
JSC-Hlllel and UCB Present: The Parvarlm The best in Israeli folk
Preview
JSC-Hlllel Shiilihui Services Traditional (at Chapel House): Friday
nights at 6:30, Kiddush following and Saturday mornings at 9:30
with luncheon following. Senior Chapel Shabbat Is May 10.
Liberal: Chavurah meets Friday nights at 7:30 in HU 354.
BfAuriful
music. Known to all as the Israeli Simon & Oarfunkel. This Saturday night, May 3, 9:30 p.m. In the Indian Quad Cafeteria. Advance ticket sales all week in CC lobby at — JSC $2, tax card $3,
general $4. Add 50 cents at door.
Office of International Programs — Study In Sweden Courses
conducted in English. Ai 3:00 p.m., Friday, May 2 in LC I I , the
director and assistant director of the International Swedish
University Programs at Lund University will present a slide and
film program on university life in Sweden, Swedish painting,
dance, and folk music. Tiiey would like to meet all interested
students and faculty to answer questions about study opportunities
in Sweden for cither the summer or the spring semester.
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The Annual Dance ProductionTickets: $4.00 General Public
May 2&3
$3 .00WlthS.U.N.YA!
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Tickets available at RA.C. Box Office: 457-8606
May 2.1980
Hollhan,
continued from page 10
u3m Dad! and Beth,
M
° ' welcome to SUNYA.
Love, Robbie
pS. Happy (almost) birthday.
Things "may be ending but I hope
our friendship does not end. You
are too special to lose.
81
"Like Chair", Deborah
RonlorFighting Cooks" fame)You're too skinny? Maybe, but probably not. I'm fickle? Maybe, but
highly doubtful.
A Debator
p.S. You're not listed.
TV M.,
just letting you know that I still
« ^ e c u t e '
XOXPrep
rm sorry I f--ked up your paper. The
record wasn't that good either. Now
will you get me a Job. (And cut the
s„t with (he paper punch.)
Your friend and mine
Being across campus next year
won't make any difference to
me I'll still be able to hear your
voice Thanx for being such a good
friend. Have a happy birthday and
happiness always.
Love always, Carole (Diamond
Face)
mm
v
wa»vpN-'~' ,_
American Express
won't penalize you for graduating
during a credit crisis.
American Express hasn't changed its application qualifications for graduating students during the current credit crisis.
That's because the American Express" Card isn't a credit
card. It's a charge card. There's no revolving, open-end credit.
You are expected to pay your bill in full every month. So with the
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You'll have new responsibilities after graduation. The
American Express Card will help you manage them.
To apply for a Card, just pick up an application
at one of the displays on campus. Or you can call the tollfree number 800-528-8000,and ask for a special student application.
The American Express Card. Don't leave school without it.
Dear Roger,
Happy birthday cutle. These 7 months nave been the best In my life
and I have you to thank for It. I hope
I'll be with you for all of your birthdays to come, to try to make you
as happy as you make me.
I love you, Really, Noreen
Cash for your silver colnsl Halt
dollars before 1970. Quarters,
dimes, and dollars before 1965.
Highest prices paid. 7-8781.
Dear Dale,
Happy 21st. Hope you had a great
birthday.
Love, Joel
P.S. I'm still having foot problems.
I Just want to say that as a roommate and a friend, you're the
greatest! (Conastota love you tool)
Next year will be wild In Zenger, I
can't waltl
Love ya, Julie
Linda Baby,
'
Happy birthday to an employee I
can really relate to.
Love, T. Martoto
Marlene (m.M.S.S.T.B.D.S.4 M )
Happy birthday! I Sorry this Is late,
but from one last minute person to
another, I knew you'd understand.
Hope It was the best ever.
Love ya lots, Julie
Freddy,
Beware the fork of the two dry rivers
— Dave's territory Includes the
water hole.
C. Lodge
Lamb,
Without you and your smile, this
year wouldn't have been the same
— and regardless of what, I promise
that. The only thing coming between us next year is the podluml I
hope your 19th birthday Is the happiest ever. You're a great sultemate
and friend.
Love ya much, Betty
This Is III Last chance for
Passport/Application Photos. Monday, May 5,12-3, CC 305, $5 lor two.
$.50 each therealter. University
Photo Service.
the Parvarlm —
The Parvarlm
The Parvarlm
Dean Hamm,
You said "Go for It". We went lor It
and got It!
Thanks, the SUNYA Chorale
Dear Mary Lamb,
May your 19th be the best! I hope
this day Is what you want It to be
because you deserve It. I love you.
Love, Trlcia
The Israeli Simon and Garlunkel:
The Parvarlm tomorrow night, 9:30,
Indian Cafeteria.
MCAT
DAT
_ Albany Student Press
___
Page Thirteen
_
Hunk,
You must assist me In slopping this
madness.
Hunk's Chick
Thanks to all who helped make
Dorm Party Nile a success on Indian Quad. Special thanks to Mitch
& Tom from Seneca and Tusc, Debbie from Montauk, Mike & Tom
from Mahlcan, Fran from O & O, and
Dawn &. Mike from Adlruga, and
especially Joe Squlcclarlne. We
couldn't have done It without you.
Indian Quad Executive Board
Sue, Anee, Carole, and Jill
Hey Dukes,
"t's a good time to let you know how
much we love you. Happy birthday
cutle!
Love, J.B. and Hollhan
Mary,
Happy birthday to my favorite lamb
who brings happiness and laughter
to those who know and love her —
which seems to be everybody on
campus!
Love always, Your Pumpkin, Elyse
"Take Back the Night" Sat., May 3
at 7 pm. In front ol boathouse In
Wash. Park.
Happy birthday to the Numero U 10
Xerox Kid.
Love, The Xerox Kids
Krolface,
When I first met you, I thought you
were 'Off the Wall'; now I'm definitely sure of It! I But I love you anyway.
Sorry I won't be around to help you
celebrate your birthday, but my
thoughts will be with you.
Love, Speedy Chatty
Maryo,
Have a fantastic birthday, roomie:
you deserve It! I'm glad you and I
tend our plumes and Dedalus and
BooBoo) will be together again —
I'd miss you "mucho" If notl Happy
19th!
Love ya, "Headache Woman"
I am
a Rock,
Homeward
Bound...The Parvarlm, tomorrow
night on Indian.
You're a great guy and we're glad
you're a dorm-matl! Get ready to
share those homeworks.
The Rumatl Sisters
Stickmen Look For Answers
continued from back page
does Mr. Motta get John Nelson
and his offense, Richie Heimerle
and his midfield, and Tom Scarpi nato and his defense to put it all
together all at the same time? If the
potential is there, and the Danes
certainly feel it is, then who's
responsible for the fact that it's not
jelling? Can it jell by Saturday?
Attackman Mark Waterstram
thinks it will.
"We've got to be ready on Saturday, and we should do better there.
We've got to. We're a lot slower
than we used to be, and we seemed
to win before by speed, so we've go)
to run faster."
Remarked a wistful Heimerle,
"We had high hopes for this
season. Our only loss should've
been to Cortland. No team's been
much better than us other than
them."
"We've got a good team, but we
SUNYACs Next For Trackmen
continued from back page
get third. If we got any higher than
that, I'd go berserk," related
Munsey.
The Dane coaching stall' feels
thai the only legitimate favorite that
Albany possesses is sprinter
Williams in the 100 and 200 meter
dashes. "No one has even been
close to him in either the 100 or the
200," said Albany sprinter coach
Kevin Callaghan. Noting that
Williams won the 200 meter dash ai
last year's SUNYACs, Callaghan
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Batmen
Dropped
By
Middlebury
continual from page fifteen
ai ihird. Gary McCarthy then got
Ihe Danes on the board wilh a triple
into right center, scoring Cardillo.
McCarthy came across moments
later on Gallo's wild pitch.
Continuing to chip away at the
Middlebury lead, Albany picked up
their final two runs in the ninth, as
Cardillo cracked his second double
of ihe game, a Iwo RBI shot to left.
But Gallo completed his victory by
forcing McCarlhy lo fly out to
right.
"It was a real good win for us,"
said Harrison. "We were not doing
all that well this season, but the pitching did ihe job, and we got hits
wilh men on base. Bui we were fortunate that we got those early ,
runs."
And while Harrison was thinking
of the contest as fortunate, the
Danes had lo be thinking of another
word — frustrating.
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went on to comment, "He's much
stronger this year and much more
mature than he was at this point last
year. He has to be the one that people are shooting for."
Munsey feels thai the team title
will go to I-'redonia "going away,"
and thai Cortland should be second, with the Danes and Binghamlon a toss-up for third. But the
Albany mentor continued to say
that Fredonia's arsenal of weight
men and throwers could break Cortland's hold on second, and that the
Danes could possibly sneak in were
that lo occur.
To MonFou
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can't pull it together," said
Magrame. "Saturday we'll pull it
all together. We had some breaks
and we weren't in the right place at
the right time, but we will pull it
together."
With only four games to go in the
season, they must do so quickly.
Usually a team that starts off slow
and finishes with fury, a reversal of
that wouldn't do any good at all. So
the Danes know what's needed of
them and they know that Hartwick
wasn't supposed to be. They know
that they haven't been playing well,
and they know they've got to improve. They know they've got talent
and they know they're not using it
to full potential.
The Albany State lacrosse team
knows a lot. But In light of yesterday's demolition and Tuesday's
scare, the words of attackman Mike
Slocum seemed all too appropriate:
"1 just don't know . . ."
.
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M u . t P . e . e n . c o u p o n . G o o d Ihru May 9 , 1 9 - 0 .
M70 WESTERN, AV. • ALBANY
with hugs
a n d roses
!
|
_
j
Love,
Sioux B.
May 2, 1980
Page Fourteen
Albany Student Press
Errors Plague 18-10 Softball Win
by Marc Haspel
The Albany State women's softball team defeated the New Paltz
Hawks, 18-10, Wednesday afternoon in a game whose innings were
prolonged mainly by erroneous
fielding and erratic pitching.
Although this victory may not have
been the most artistic one for the
9-3 Danes, it was a win nonetheless.
In fact, this game provided
Albany Softball coach Lee Rhenish
with an opportunity to utilize all her
troops in order to give them all
some playing time. "I used a lot of
people to gain experience," said
Rhenish.
Ideally, this game might have
been the best one for gaining.experience. Mistakes were more the
rule than the exception. The play in
the first inning seemed to be indicative of the play of the entire
game.
In the top of the first, New Paltz
handily jumped out to a three-run
lead on pitcher Cathy Briggs' five
walks and two wild pitches. So,
coming to bat for the first time,
down by three, Albany needed to
get some runs back. And that's exactly what they did.
Nancy I lalloran's single and consecutive steals of second and third
bases sparked an eight run rally
which put Albany ahead to stay.
But pitching difficulties persisted, prompting Rhenish to pull
Briggs in the top of the second and
replaced her with shortstop Lois
Ferrari, who did not have her best
stuff and gave up five runs over the
next four innings. Following Ferrari, the best stint of the day was
lurned in by Albany's third reliever
Anne Solomon, who, despite giving
up two runs in the top of Ihe fifth,
settled clown to pitch two scoreless
innings.
The early pitching problems were
hardly felt as Albany's lead
mounted. Unlike New Paltz, the
squad was able to successfully
capitalize on their opponents' errors and mental mistakes almost
every time. Timely hitting, or
perhaps timely contact on Albany's
part, was enough to bring in most
of the runs.
While it was a contest marked by
less than spectacular defense, two
infielders for Albany certainly
secured the diamond. Immediately
upon being moved over to third
base in the top of the second,
Halloran converted a tough ground
ball, with runners on first and second, into a double play by stepping on third and gunning it over to
first to get the other force out. But
the inning was not over until second
baseman and captain Kalhy
Curatolo picked up another hard way through the game. But, the segrounder by the outfield grass in cond game was more of a battle as
between first and second base to Albany was tied with Sage at 11
runs apiece In the fifth before
squash the New Paltz threat.
It might not have been Albany's breaking it open with six more to
best win but after the game, win the game.
Rhenish commented on (he twin
Rhenish remained very satisfied
with her team's brand of play. victories over Russell Sage. "We ex"The team gets along well together pected them to be stronger, but we
and that's i m p o r t a n t , " said hit real well."
Rhenish.
Boasting a 9-3 record and a high
Concerning her team's sluggish
defensive exhibition, Rhenish add- seed in the upcoming state tournaed, "We hadn't played since Satur- ment to be held this weekend in
day, but things always look better Albany, Rhenish is very optimistic
about her team's chances. "This is
when you win."
Things did not look so bad on the best team I've coached since
Saturday either as the Danes swept I've been coaching here. We've met
Russell Sage in a doubleheader, our goal of making it to the stale
13-5, and 17-11. The first game was tournament. We're in good shape,
dominated entirely by Albany as and 1 am looking for us to do real
they jumped out to a 13-0 lead mid- well," said Rhenish.
May 2, 1980
Winning Record Elusive As Batmen Lose, 7-4
Jayvees Split With Dartmouth
by Anthony Iovelll
A very enthusiastic and spirited
Albany State JV baseball learn split
a doubleheader Saturday with Division I foe Dartmouth at Albany.
The split brought Albany's season
record to 2-4. The day before Ihe
Jayvees earned their first victory
when pitcher Mike Gatto mowed
down the Engineers of RPI, 6-1.
Gatto collected nine strikeouts in
going the distance.
The doubleheader Saturday saw
the Albany batmen take the final
game in dramatic fashion, 10-9.
After Dartmouth jumped off to a
quick 1-0 lead in the first inning, the
Albany offense scored four runs in
each of the'first two innings, to lead
8-1. The big blows of the innings
were a bases clearing triple by
centerfielder Mark McDonald in
the first and a run scoring double by
Willie Guerra in the 2nd.
Dartmouth closed the gap in
awesome fashion in the fifth. After
loading the bases, 1st baseman Tim
Wall smacked a grand slam on a 1-1
pitch. Albany scored a run in their
half of the fifth and after a scoreless
sixth Albany led, 9-6.
Jim Vauhn, who pitched well for
three innings after relieving starting
pitcher Jim Demitrou, was reached
for three runs in the top of the
seventh before Rich Dwyer retired
the side. The stage was now set for a
little Albany magic.
Pete Stuto led off with a walk
and was sacrificed to second by Joe
Hcnkcl. Dartmouth intentionally
walk'id Valosa to set up a double
play possibility, It almost worked as
Guerra hit a sharp grounder to the
third baseman, who stepped on
third for the force but threw wildly
to first, advancing runners to second and third. Ronnie Massaroni
was intentionally passed to set up a
force at any base. The move
backfired as Ihe batter was Jerry
Rosen, the leading batter on the
Dane squad, hitting well over .500.
He lined a I -1 pilch over the centerfielders head to give Albany a 10-9
victory. Rich Dwycr picked up the
"W".
Albany was sporting a modest
two game winning streak after the
win. But that streak did not reach
three, as Dartmouth came back to
heal Albany 12-4.
Mike Gariman started the 2nd
game for Albany but just didn't
have it as he was reached for six
runs In 3 and 2/3rds innings of
work. Dwycr relieved him but ran
out of gas in Ihe sixth as Dartmouth
scored six more times lo pul the
game out of reach.
Offensively Ihe Danes hit iwo
homers in the game. Ken Glassman
has a solo shot in Ihe firsi and Ron The Albany State women's Softball team defeated New Paltz, 18-10, on
Massaroni had a two run clout in
Wednesday to up their record to 9-3. (Photo: Dave Asher)
the fifth.
So far Ihe slory wilh Ihe Jack
Siedlccki coached JV learn has been
errors! Too many of them. In the
field Ihe Danes were shaky, as they
committed numerous miscu s in
their early losses to Hudson Valley
and Cobleskill. They played well In
another loss to West point.
Offensively, the Danes are set as
they average seven runs a game.
Glassman and Jerry Rosen lead the
attack for Albany,
Do You Want To Come Back To School With A
Job Next Year?
The Hullabaloo Music Club is now accepting trainees for next
season. Needed: Bartenders,
Barmaids and Waitresses. Have fun
and earn money in the music scene. Call 436-1640 for more info, or
come to the Hullabaloo...
LAST PROOF
COLLECTION
Seniors must hand
in all proofs o r be
charged f o r t h e m .
No late proofs will be placed
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N A Y 5 Ipm-Spm
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Orders for pictures will be taken.
ATTENTION:
VNDERORADSl!
If you plan to withdraw from the University
either before finals or upon completing this
semester, please stop by or call the Student
Affairs Office, AD 129, 457-4932.
May 12 is the last day voluntary
withdrawal
can be initiated if you do not intend to
complete this semester. If you plan to
transfer, take a leave of absence, or "take
time off" next semester, it is important to
file the appropriated form before you leave
campus so that unnecessary billings or
other administrative action can be avoided.
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE
PRESENTS
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Knickerbocker News
IN THE ARENA THEATRE
Friday & Saturday May 2 & 3 8 pm
TICKETS & INFORMATION
457-8606
Mon.thru Frl. 10 am-4 pm
& 1 hr. before curtain
.
Page Fifteen
Albany Student Press
Designated hitter Tony Moschellu swings and misses during the Damcs' 7-4
loss lo Middlcbury yesterday m Albany. (Photo: Bob Leonard)
by Paul Schwartz
For a learn that is battling to keep
their heads above water, it was not
the most encouraging of efforts.
Considering thai Middlcbury came
inlo yesterday's game posting a 2-6
record, it seemed to be an excellent
opportunity for the Albany State
baseball team to finally crack the
standard mark of a quality squad —
a winning record.
Bui at the conclusion of yesterday's contest at Albany, thai winning record was even more elusive
than ever. The Danes dropped a 7-4
decision to the Panthers of Middlcbury, a loss thai pushed
Albany's spring record down lo 6-7.
Despite being out-hit 9-8, Middlcbury did enough damage early in
the game lo quickly chase Dane
Marling pitcher Mike Clnbeaux,
After picking up one run in the first
inning (on a walk, stolen base, and
single lo left), the Panthers exploded for five big runs in the third.
Tom Ostler led off with an infield
single, Jim Loveys was hit by a
pilch, and Pete Price singled to load
the bases. A slroke inlo left by Ed
Ounther brought across Middlcbury's second run.
The game-winning blast then
came off Clabcaux. Cleanup hitter
Frank Harrison smashed a grand
slam — a towering drive that carried over the fence in left centerfield, providing the Panthers with a
6-0 lead and also providing
Clabcaux with an early exit, as
reliever Rich Woods came on to
retire the side.
"It was a high fastball," said
Harrison of his round-tripper.
"Most places we play in don't have
fences — 1 hit it well, but I think it
might have been caught if there was
no fence. It's funny, I thought he
(Clabeaux) was good. He threw
harder than the other guy' they
brought in, but I couldn't touch the
second guy."
Not only did Harrison have problems wilh Woods, but his Middlcbury teammates also had difficulty with Woods and his sidewinding delivery. Keeping the ball
low In the strike zone, Woods
allowed the Panthers just one run
(in the fourth) and only lour hits in
his seven innings.
Dul If Middlcbury was quiet at
the plate, the Danes were close to
silent. The usually potent Albany
bats could not gel untracked against
Pain her hurlcr Bob Gallo, as the
righthander kepi the Danes off
balance with a sharp-breaking
curvcball. And when Albany did
manage lo gel something going, ihe
outcome was nothing but frustration. In the second inning, Bob Arcario became Albany's first
baserunner with a line single. Rich
Cardillo followed with a long double to center, but Arcario was forced to delay on the bases because the
centerfielder came close to corraling
the drive. When the ball dropped,
Arcario went from first to third,
and with Albany coach Rick Skeel
waving him on, Arcario came
charging to the plate, only to be
thrown out to stifle the scoring
chance.
There was more frustration for
the Danes. In the third, a slow roller
by d e s i g n a t e d h i t t e r Tony
Moschcila and two walks loaded the
bases for Albany with one out.
Bruce Rowlands then hit a hard
grounder up the middle — right at
the waiting Middlcbury shortstop,
who turned an inning-ending double play.
The Danes finally broke through
off Gallo in Ihe eighth, when Jim
Lynch led off with a hard single to
left. After a fielders' choice sent
pinch runner Mike Esposito lo second, Cardillo's grounder to short
forced an Albany running mistake.
Esposito attempted to advance on
the play, but was easily lagged oul
continued on page thirteen
Netmen Beat RPI But Drop Three In Last Week
by Larry Kahn
The Albany State men's tennis
learn capped off a rougli week with
a 7-2 victory over a weak RPI team
on Tuesday. The win followed a
loss to Division I Colgate on Monday, a rare defeat in the SUNY
Center Tournament over the
weekend, and a loss to Amherst las'
Thursday.
Tuesday's win at RPI was expected because, as Albany men's
tennis coach Bob Lewis said, "RPI
is just not a good team. We didn'l
play particularly well, but we knew
they weren't really that good so we
gave a lot of guys a chance to
play."
Lewis shook-up his lineup for the
match, with Larry Linett, Randy
Young, and Andy Diamond silting
out and Kevin I.aurilliard, Dave
Avergun and Sieve Kaplan making
rare appearances. The match also
marked the return of Lawrence
Eichen after a len day layoff.
In singles action Harry Levinc
moved up to the number one spot
for Albany and easily defeated
RPl's Bill Smith, 6-1, 6-1. "Levine
played very well," commented
Lewis. In second singles Eichen
struggled a little in the first set, but
came through in the end, handing
Rich Brown a loss in straight sets,
7-6, 6-3.
Dave Lcrncr "played a good
match," according to Lewis, as he
manhandled Sieve Angle, 6-1, 6-2.
Laurilliard lost in straight sets in
First Place In Tri-Meet
For Women's Track Squad
by Kathy Perilli
The Albany State women's track
team took first place in a home
meet Wednesday, with 79 points to
Siena's 37 and Russell Sage's nine.
"We didn't run all the events
because the other teams didn't have
people for them," said Albany
track coach Barb Palm.
Barb Hill, Winnie Weston, Sue
Stern and Kim Bloomer took first
place in the 880 meter relay and the
440 meter relay, "coming in a full
five seconds ahead of the second
Place team," Palm said. She continued, "They also just missed the
Qualifying lime for the regionals by
two-tenths of a second."
Sue Kallcd took first place in
both Ihe 100 meter hurdles and the
400 meter hurdles with a time of
W.4I seconds, lowering her own
school record. Freshman Julie
Sljiyth followed Kallcd in the 400
Willi a 71.1 second time. Weston
Placed firsi in the 100 meter dash
Hid Claire Bielejcc look third in
M|
at event. Hill was first in the 200
"litter and Bielejcc captured another
'bird place. In other running events,
Diane Plackis and Suc-Slern ran lo
"wild and third place finishes;
Larissa Lcnihan placed second In
Ihe 800 meter run, and first and se-
cond wcnl lo Chris Gardner and
Plackis in the 1500 meter.
In field events, Liz Kirk look first
place in both shot pul and discus
and Michelle Rotyliano placed third
and fourth, respectively. Joan
McDade jumped four feet, six inches lo a first place win in the high
jump and Pat Beecher was second
in Ihe long jump.
This weekend, Gardner and Kallcd will travel to Ihe University of
Pittsburgh for the EA1AW (Eastern
Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics for Women) Track and
Field championships.
Tuesday is Ihe last home meel of
Ihe season, wilh Albany hosting
Oswego, Pittsburgh and Williams
and Saturday, May 10, some learn
members will travel to Fredonla for
the stale championship meet,
"We've qualified in all four relays,
shol put, discus, javelin, long jump,
hurdles, and the 100, 200,400, half
mile, mile, and iwo and three mile
runs," said Palm.
"I've been really pleased wilh the
improvement In Ihe relay learns,"
Palm remarked. She added, "I'm
also pleased al Ihe way the whole
learn is working. They've gol good
spirit and team effort."
fourth singles, 6-2, 6-2, as did
Avergun in the fifth slot, 7-6, 6-4.
Albany's slim 3-2 lead appeared lo
be in jeopardy as Sieve Kaplan
squared off against RPl's Jon Witter in his "first-ever match" for
Albany, but he sluged an impressive
two set win, 6-0, 6-1, to carry the
lead inlo doubles.
Albany then pul the icing on the
cake, sweeping Ihe doubles competition with only one team that
had ever played together before.
Eichen and Levinc learned up for
the firsi lime in first doubles and
easily defeated RPl's top team, 6-2,
6-1. The l.aurilliard-Avcrgun combination played as well in second
doubles as they usually do in the
more familiar third slot, outclassing
RPI, 6-1, 6-4. The team of Lerner
and Kaplan found ihe right formula
in their debul performance to finish
out the day, 6-2, 6-1.
"We played adequately," Lewis
concluded. "We played them in the
fall and beat them, 8-1. We knew
their strengths in advance and wc
were ready for them."
In Monday's match the Danes
were outclassed by Division I
powerhouse Colgate. The match
was played indoors because of the
weather and was mercifully slopped
after singles when Colgate clinched
It, 5-1.
"Colgate has one of the best
teams in the cast," noted Lewis.
"Wc have never beaten a Colgate
team." Thc'only win for Albany
came in first singles when Linett
pulled out a hard-fought three set
victory over Chris Winkle. Winkle
edged him in the first set, 6-7, but
Linett battled back to win the next
two, 6-3, 6-2. "It was a very good
win for Linett," said Lewis.
In second singles Levine put on a
good show for three sets, but came
away on the short side of the 6-7,
6-2, 6-4 score. "Levine played well
for u s , " Lewis noted. "But the rest
of the team was beaten by better
players. Colgate has an excellent
team."
The SUNY Center Tournament
was held last weekend in Buffalo
and for the first time in three years
Albany didn't win it. This year
Binghamton walked away with the
crown wilh 14 points. Albany placed second with 11 points, and Buffalo's presence was not obvious
witli only two points.
The Albany Slate women's truck (cum won a trl-mcct on Wednesday over
Siena unci Russell Sage. (Photo: Alun C'nlem)
Linelt and Levinc excelled for
Albany, each winning both of their
matches. Linett upstaged Binghamton's top man, Mark Lifschitz, in a
very strong effort, 8-2 (pro set). He
was equally as impressive in his 8-6
victory over Buffalo's Todd Miller,
the runner up in the SUNYACs last
fall. Levine won two hard fought
matches against Binghamton's Neil
Roher, 8-6, and Bill Kaiser of Buffalo, 8-5.
. The rest of the ladder fared well
against Buffalo, but couldn't
muster up a win against a well
balanced Binghamton squad.
Young, Diamond, Lerner, and
Avergun all split their two matches.
The only major upset of note
came in the Albany-Binghamton
first doubles match. Lifschitz and
Roher avenged their earlier losses to
Linett and Levinc by upsetting them
in a tiebreaker in what Lewis said
was "a very good doubles match."
Lewis felt that the absence of
Albany's number three man,
Lawrence Eichen, could have been
a deciding factor. "If Eichen was
there wc could have won," he said.
"Wc were right in it up until the end
— it was a real dogfight. We really
played very well. If Eichen was
there it probably would have been
decided by one point either way."
Eichen's absence also hurt
Albany last Thursday when they fell
to Amhcrsl, 7-2. "We were really
hurt without having Eichen in
there," said Lewis. "1 think wc
would have beaten them if he was
there." The effect of losing a player
high on Ihe ladder is not limited to
just one match. When Eichen, the
third man on ihe ladder, is out, four
players have lo move up and face
stiffer competition than they would
normally have been up against.
This el'leel becomes obvious
when you look at the results.
Although Linen was upset in first
singles, Levine won in the second
spot, but none of the players who
had been forced to move up"a notch
could come up with a victory. The
only other Albany win against
Amherst came in first doubles with
Linen and Levinc teaming up to
take it.
e
It's Gonna be a Run-off!r
Batmen Fall To 6-7
Page 15
„
• For Vice-President
May 2, 1980 \
Inconsistent* 4*5 Stickmen Look For
by Jay Glssen
If a single word can describe it,
it's inconsistency. If there's a look
that says it all, snap a picture of
coach Motta. If you're looking for
a sentence, then Mark Waterstram
said it best: "Just about everything
is going wrong."
Well, almost everything. The
Albany State lacrosse team lost
badly yesterday, but they did grab a
triple overtime victory on Tuesday
afternoon, bringing their current
record to 4-5. But despite the
scores, despite the standings,
despite talent, youth, and experience, despite everything except
reality, theDancs have been playing
poor lacrosse lately, and no one exactly knows why.
It was a mediocre Hartwick
squad that came all too close to victory on Tuesday, sending what
should have been a fairly easy
Albany win into a tension-filled, triple overtime close call, as Richie
Heimerlc finally had enough and
put in the winning sudden death
goal unassisted. The final score was
8-7 but it could have easily been the
other way around, and the Danes
know it.
"We should have done much belter against Hartwlck," said midfielder Glen Magraue, "they just
weren't that good. We played down
to their level."
Maybe so, but Albany oulshol
Hartwick (41-24), had more
groundballs (52-36), and cleared
better. But despite that, the Danes
just couldn't keep possession of the
ball lhat much, and a 40 percent
face-off success added to the dilemma.
Said Hcimerle, "We were hurt
bad on the face-offs. We were losing sixty percent of them, so we just
didn't have the ball."
And when they did have it, they
weren't quick enough, so they
couldn't generate any fast breaks,
any quickly set up shots, few goals.
By the time the shots came, a stable
Hartwick defense was set up, and
Albany became the victim of 20
Hartwick saves as compared to
their own nine.
Yesterday, similar offensive pror
blems slopped an already hurting
Albany squad dead in its slow moving path. Siena (7-2) marched
brazenly onto the Dutch Quad
field, moved quick, passed well,
and met with a listless Albany
defense thai gave up 15 goals to
Albany's six. All around, it was
probably Albany's worst effort ail
season/
Albany handled the groundballs
adequately, but Siena picked up a
lol more. Siena got off a lot more
shots', I hough, especially in lhat
fateful fourth quarter when ihey
oulscored the Danes 5-1. And even
ihough the face-offs were more
even than against Hartwick, the
Danes were shaky with the ball.
"We're not settling down when
we gel the b a l l , " remarked
Heimerlc, who came up with (wo
goals and an assist, "We're giving
up too many fast breaks and we're
nol able to get many. There's a
general lack of hustle, a lack of
thinking. They just weren't thai
much better than us. There was no
reason to get blown off the field."
Perhaps not, but that's the way
the Dane cookie crumbled, and
Motta has exactly a day to put it
back together again, when Albany
plays Brockport tomorrow in what
should be a fairly easy Victory if
there arc some positive changes in
outlook and form.
For example, in yesterday's
game, Albany not only didn't lake
advantage of the man-ups they had,
but they gave up goals instead.
With an extra player on the field
during opposition penalties —
usually the fast break time for any
offense — Albany was just as sluggish as ever, and Siena, responding
to their disadvantage with vigor and
quickness, turned ii around and
came up with several man-down
scores.
Said team captain I leiinerle,'
"Our man-up is hurling us more
than it's helping'-us. We gave up
four man-up goals and that's
ridiculous. Sooner or later, our
man-up plays have to work."
Defensively, the vigor thai seemed so promising in the early pari of
the season seems lo be falling apart
these days as Albany is becoming
easy prey lo the fast breaks of their
faster, more responsive opponents.
Siena opened up yesterday's game
with a spurt of four unanswered
first quarter goals, and pegged two
more in the second quarter before
Albany was able lo put one in.
Said defeuseman Vic Emanucllo,
"When a leant gels ahead 6-0,
there's something' wrong. We gave
Answers
Gary Schnisky — 676
The rains went lo Williams, so
Albany and Union came lo University Field. Downpours Monday
night forced the shift from the
scheduled triangular meet between
(hose schools at Williams to a dual
meet confrontation of the two
Capital District rivals. It wasn't
much of a confrontation, though,
as the Danes literally ran all over the
Dutchmen, winning 103-51. The
meet was the last dual-meel of the
season for Albany, who al 5-4, now
go into the SUNYAC championships al Brockport.
On Tuesday, the Albany State men's track team defeated Union, 103-51, In
a dual meet at the Danes' home field. (Photo: Mark Halek)
"Really all wc were doing was
getting the meet in and getting them
(the team) some work," commented Albany head track and field
coach Bob Munsey, feeling lhat the
meet was basically a tunc-up for
tomorrow.
Munsey was upset over the fact
that Williams, whose dirt and
cinder three lap-lo-lhc-miie track
was unusable due lo the rain,
cancelled out of the meet. "I prayed
for rain because I just didn't want
to run there," said Munsey. "I'm
glad we didn't run there," The
coach also didn't apprccialc the fact
that "Union left some of their top
runners home. "Union was not
represented as they should have
been," 'continued Munsey, noting
that the. Dutchmen held back
several men that would have meant,
according to Munsey, about 32
points, which wouldn't have won
the meet for Union, but "would've
made it closer."
The Danes truly dominated their
Brian Levy — 693
ALBANY^
STUDENT
PRESS c< ;
m&
May 2, 1980
Vol. LXVII No.23
The Albany Slate lacrosse team went down to a 15-6 defeat to Siena after
beating Hartwick, 8-7, on Tuesday. (Photo: Karl Chan)
up some garbage goals and we
didn't play very well,"
Heimerlc thinks differently. "1
don't consider it a defensive problem. The whole team's got to settle
itself down."
And that's where the inconsistency problem enters in. On the
groundballs, what Motta called the
key problem last week, there was
improvement. But the defense
plummeted. In the goalie's net, Ken
Tirman has been coming up with
some clutch saves. But the offense
died. In the penalty situation,
Albany has gotten less than any opponent this year. But the man-ups
have been doing virtually nothing.
So what is a coach to do? How
continued on page thirteen
Trackmen Go To SUNYACs With Win Over Union
by Bob llellafiore
The offices of SA President and Vice-President
will be decided in a run-off
election next Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
Less than 2000 voters
came out to vote this week
with 1,926 voting for the
president and 1,822 for
vice-president.
For a complete list of
winners in all elections see
page two.
opponents, winning 13 of the 18
events. Of the five lhat Albany lost,
three were field events. Union's
Brad Kilne took the hammer throw
(119 feel, 10 inches), but Dane Al
Bokscr was second (108 feel, one
inch). The Dutchmen look the top
two spots in both the pole vault and
the shot put, with Albany men Paul
Eichelberger and Don Cordell gelling thirds, respectively.
The other two Union wins came
in the 5000 meter run (where Ed Arnheiter was first in 15:33.4, 15.6
seconds faster than Dane Todd
Silva), and in the 400 meter dash. In
the latter, Matt Guilfoyle's time of
50.9 seconds (a track record) was
just enough lo beat Albany's Curt
Denton (51.2 seconds) and Tony
Ferrctli (51.5 seconds).
The two relay races were taken by
Albany combinations. Bill McCarlin, Ferretti, Jeff Knight, and
Howie Williams put together a time
of 44.8 seconds in the 400 meter
relay to take that one, while the
quartet of Jim Cunningham, Steve
Erb, Ferretti, and Denton won the
mile relqy in three minutes, 28
seconds,
Williams won both, the 100 and
200 meter dashes, in' 1 T.03 seconds
and 22.3 seconds, respectively.
Albany swept all three scoring spots
in those races.
The 110 meter high hurdles saw
Dane Mitch Harvard win in 16.3
seconds, with Cunningham getting
second. A 57.8 second time by Cunningham in the 400 meter intermediate hurdles was good
enough to beat teammate Pete
Passidomo (61.3 seconds).
Two more track records fell to
Albany runners. Scott James broke
the old mark in the 1500 meter run
with his time of four minutes, five
seconds. Bruce Shapiro broke the
tape of Ihe 800 meter run in one
minute, 58.2 seconds, also putting
him in the record books.
Field
events
weren't
a
catastrophe for the Danes for once,
as they won five of eight. Bill Condon took the long jump with a leap
of 5.87 meters (19 feet, VA inches).
He also won the triple jump (12.46
melcrs — 40 feel, 10'/; inches). In
the javelin throw, Gradin Avery's
fling of 47.47 meters (155 feel, eight
inches) took first. Avery was also
third in the long jump. Cordell won
the discus event, hurling it 35.81
meters (123 feet, four inches), and
in the high jump, the Albany duo of
Ned Miller and Tim Gunthcr tied
for the lead at five feci, eight inches, but Miller had less misses at
thai height and was awarded first
place.
Looking to this Weekend's
SUNYAC championships, Munsey
feels lhat the ever-present problem
of lack of weight men will be
magnified, and will squelch any
hopes for an Albany viclory.
Thinking back to the season's
beginning, Munsey noted that "I
really thought we were going to
have some help" in lite weight
category, and was pointing for a second or third place finish in the
SUNYAC. But now, his attitude
has changed. "I'd be very happy to
continued on page thirteen
Feud Over Election Methods
Causes Tabulation
by Susan Milligan
A "lack of communication" between SA President Lisa Newmark
and Election Commissioner Ron
Joseph resulted in a feud involving
strong language, punches thrown,
and job threats, according to
Joseph.
Newmark and Joseph were in apparent disagreement regarding the
relaying of election results. Joseph
planned to announce all of the winners in a "press conference" in the
Fireside Lounge at 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Newmark wanted to
have the results posted in the SA
Office as the individual quad
returns were reported.
"I've been a candidate and I
know what (election night) is like,"
said Newmark. "It can really hurt a
candidate's feelings if he or she
finds out in public that he or she
lost."
According lo Joseph, Newmark's
plan, which has been standard procedure in the past, would create
chaos.
Delays
"I didn't intend to post the
results and say "everybody
charge," Joseph said.
Section Vl-C of SA's Election
Regulations charter stales "...the
commission will post in the Campus
Center as soon as possible after vole
tabulations the results of elections. " However, Joseph noted the
rules "did not say 1 couldn't hold a
press conference."
According lo Newmark, it was
clear on Wednesday afternoon lhat
the rclurns procedure would be
handled traditionally. "I had made
a decision," said Newmark. "I
think since 1 appointed Ron as
Commissioner, I have jurisdiction
over him. Wc discussed it in the
afternoon, and he walked away. I
assumed wc were doing it Ihe way I
wished."
Joseph also assumed his plan was
to be implemented. " I saw
(Newmark) Wednesday," he said,
"and she said 'How are we going to
do this?' 1 told her 1 was going
through with (my plan), and she hit
Election Commissioner Ron Joseph
" / didn't Intend to post the results and say everybody charge.
me. I walked away."
The apparent nature of the
misunderstanding
surfaced
Wednesday evening at Joseph's
suite, the site of Ihe ballot tabulations. According to Joseph,
Newmark, SA members Mike
Williamson, and Jim Mitchell arrived at his suite around 10 p.m.
"kicking the door, yelling, and
demanding lo come in." Although
Newmark is technically a member
of the Election Commission by virtue of her position as President,
continued on page five
Senate Unanimously
Approves SUNY $22.3M
Carey Plans lo Sign
by Laura Kiorentino
The battle over Ihe budget is
finally over. SUNY's $22.3 million
ippropriaiions bill has passed both
the New York Stale Assembly and
Senate unanimously and yesterday
Governor Carey announced his
plans lo sign the bill.
Carey made his approval of the
bill known at a press conference al
the Capilol yesterday alter both Ihe
Assembly and Senate had passed
Ihe bill unanimously earlier in the
week.
The bill besides restoring $22.3
million to the SUNY budget also
contains a section that says SUNY
"is hereby directed lo continue lo
maintain Ihe current level of inslilutional and program offerings."
According to United University
Professors (UUP), this section is intended lo establish a legal prohibilion on impoundment of SUNY
funds by the Division of Budget
While Carey veloed Ihe inilial
SUNY budget appropriations less
than a month ago, SASU represen
lalivc Bruce Cronin feels he agreed
to sign this bill because the
Legislature had "overwhelmingly
approved it,"
After months of organizing lobbies and strikes, Cronin happily
proclaimed the budget approval as
a "tremendous victory
Credit is due lo the thousands
throughout Ihe SUNY system who
'fought for the budget, Cronin said
For the First time in SUNY
history, the budget cms were
defeated, "We've put a slop to the
trend since '73 which has cul our
budget every year; we've set a
precedent," he added,
But, according lo Cronin, "Ihe
mosl gratifying thing is healing
Governor Carey
J
Senate Elections May Be Invalid
by Eric Koll
Due to a possible violation of
election procedures by the SA Central Council, this week's University
Senate elections may be invalidated.
The alledged violations were the
result of SA Central Council's decision which prohibited sludenls
without tax cards from voting lor
University Senators.
This decision was in direct violation of election regulations which
allow all students to vote for
University Senators whether or not
they have a tax card.
According to University Senators
and Central Council members, the
only wuy the regulations could be
changed is if a specific bill regarding
Ihe University Senate Election Procedures is passed by a 2/3 vole in
Ihe Central Council, according to
Senate members Mark Borkowski,
Iru Somach, and Mark Lafayette.
However, no such bill was ever
introduced into the Central Council, voted upon, or passed,, according to Central Council members
Frank Baitman, Ed Klein, and
Mark Lafayette.
"If a bill did not pass then it was
illegal to prevent a person without a
tax card lo vote for the Senate,"
said Senate member Borkowski,
who is SA's former Legislative
Coordinator.
"To my knowledge It was never
passed. Wc haven't passed anything
like it since 1 was there," said Baitman.
"As far as I know there were no
bills regarding University Senate
voting procedure ever brought u p , "
said Klein.
Both Baitman and Klein claim
that they've attended every Central
Council meeting In which election
procedures were discussed.
Central Council decided to let only sludenls with lax curds vole so
lhat they would have a control
system. The tax cards were punched
on the voting line to prevent
students from voting twice, according to Central Council Chair Mike
Levy and SA Elections Commissioner RonJoseph.
"Foremost in everyone's mind
was gelling a system thai would
work," said Levy who felt that
would work," said Levy who felt
thai using lax cards was the only
"foolproof control."
Levy said that SA had the
authority to change the election
procedure and require all voleis to
have tax cards "if thai was the only
means of control available."
Levy, who was contacted before
the University Senate and Council
members were reached, was unable
to be contacted in response to their
statements.
At least one senatorial candidate
feels lhat Central Council's actions
cost her the election. Irene
Bleiwciss, who lost the election on
Dutch Quad by two votes, claims
that two of iter friends were not
allowed to vote because ihey didn't
have lax cards. Bleiwciss claims thai
had her two friends been allowed to
continued on page five
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