Document 14065305

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Anderson Brings Show To Town
by Susan Milligan
Eight months ago, the mention of
the name John Anderson in conversation most often provoked a
"John who?" from all but the most
politically aware. But the Illinois
Congressman's name was obviously
familiar to the some 4,000 students
who came to hear him speak on the
podium yesterday.
I N€VK f GflUtte
Anderson tried to amass support al SUNYA yesterday.
His appeal was based on the "irrelevance ' of the parly system.
photo by Steve Essen
Whether highly interested in or
simply well-briefed on student
issues, Anderson discussed his opposition to a peacetime draft, his
support of increased financial aid to
students, and his disbelief in "the
ivinnability of a nuclear war," all of
which were well-received by the audience. Anderson said he wanted to
"welcome students back to the
political process.
"Your generation probably has not solely student-oriented, Andermore at stake in this election of son's statements to the press
1980 than any other group," he ad- centered on his financial aid plan
for higher education. Emphasizing
ded.
Although the Congressman's late higher education as "an important
arrival, a poor sound system, apd investment," Anderson outlined a
an unexpected upsurge of the financial aid proposal that included
podium fountain somewhat marred increased Basic Educational Opporhis speech technically, the crowd tunity Grant (BEOG) allocations, a
seemed interested in what Anderson "rational, equitable, and widely
had 10 say; his comment that available", loan program for
"Ronald Reagan is irrelevant" middle-income families, and a
Merit Scholarship program."
brought cheers from the students.
Alluding to past cutbacks to the
SUNYA was the third stop of a
series of colleges at which Anderson SUNY and CUNY systemsfAnderis campaigning. Yet he denied at a son stated that "an Anderson adlater press conference at the South ministration is committed to reversMall that his campaign is geared ing the decade-long decline in support for higher education."
mainly toward students.
"1 would hope that my comments • Anderson professed to be
at the colleges would be reported "progressive to changes that have
and read by others," he said. "But taken place in our society." CerI certainly will not be speaking ex- tainly his own issue positions have
not always been consistent. Some
clusively to student audiences."
continued on page nine
If insisting that his campaign is
September 9, 1980J
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SUNYA Bus Service Reduced
Wellington and Trailways Route Cut
hy Susun Milligan
The loss of two SUNYA bus
drivers, due to University budget
cuts, has resulted In the changing of
both Alumni and Wellington bus
schedules, according 10 Physical
Plant Director Dennis Stevens.
W e l l i n g t o n b u s e s , which
previously traveled from the Administration Circle all the way to
the Trailways bus terminal, now
leaves from Draper Hall only, encircling the South Mall but not
stopping at the Trailways station.
Alumni buses will no longer stop at
undesignated stops on request, as
was mandated last year by the
P r e s i d e n t ' s Task Force on
Women's Safety.
Although Stevens feels the
schedule changes arc necessary to
give students the best bus service
possible in light of the staff cuts,
SA president Sue Gold and several
of the bus drivers expressed
dissatisfaction with the new
schedule.
"Dennis Stevens met with Brian
(SA vice-president Levy) and me
concerning the schedules last
month, said Gold, "but we didn't
SUNYA A d i n g R c j d j l e j i e ^ ^
T^w^sTulctelrZ^^
have any say in it at all — he just
showed it to us and basically said
'what do you think — it's going into print tomorrow.' We had no input at all."
According to Stevens, riders on
Alumni buses "increased by 20 percent last year" and more Alumni
buses were needed to give students
adequate service. Since the Plant
Department lost two bus drivers,
the gap was filled by decreasing the
Wellington service to one shuttle
bus that completes its trip in one
half hour.
"I don't like the loss of the positions either," said Stevens. "Thai's
80 hours less service. But we needed
to bolster the Alumni schedule with
increased frequency."
Gold feels that the greatest problem concerning the less frequent
Wellington bus service is women's
safety.
"Draper Hall is not located in a
good section of town," she said,
"and many women will be waiting
there at night for possibly as long as
one half hour waiting for a connection between an Alumni and a Wellngton bus. Especially considering
T^n^
Mke
-
photo by Mike h'arrel
the recent problem of the Pine Hills
'Molester', that's just not safe."
Stevens said he recognizes the
problem, but added that "the
longest wail anyone will have is 25
minutes" and that "students can
wail for the bus inside Draper."
"It will eventually become clear
to students which bus they should
take to catch a particular Wellington bus," Stevens said.
The change most angering
students seems to be the elimination
of the Trailways terminal stop.
Students going home for a weekend
or for the holidays must now either
walk down Slate Street or find
alternate transportation.
According lo Stevens, the
continued on pane nine
Bus service to Trailways has now been eliminated.
.S71 President Sue Cold is concerned for the safety of women.
photo by Bob Leonard
Dorm Rates Increase
by Bruce W. Fox
Room rates will rise more than
$600 over the next few years if the
SUNY Board of Trustees goes
ahead with a plan to cut off all subsidies lo dormitories.
The new plan was originally
unveiled by Chancellor Clifton
Wharton at a closed meeting of the
trustees in May. Wharton's proposal for an initial $150 rate hike
this year was both introduced for
the first lime and approved at that
meeting.
As a result of the initial hike,
students who paid $800 last year for
normal occupancy will now pay
$950, or approximately $119 per
month.
SUNY Vice Chancellor lor
Finance and Business Harold
Spindler cites inflation and lack of
slate support as chid reasons for
the hike. According lo Spindler, the
SUNY system was running on a $60
million deficit in May, despite the
$22.3 million rcapproprialed by the
legislature in April.
Spindler said he supports rate
hikes since SUNY is "the only major stale university without selfsufficient dormitories" and since a
dorm hike "affects only one-third
of all SUNY students." The only
alternative, said Spindler, is cutting
faculty.
State subsidies for dormitories
last year amounted lo $20 million,
or $400 per bed, he said.
According lo SASU Communications Director Pam Snook, Wharton's dorm hike proposal "caught
everyone off guard."
"Wharton slapped down a proposal at the May trustee meeting
that no one had heard of before,"
said Snook. "His methods were
secretive and unethical. He was
clearly trying to avoid student
pressure."
SUNYA Acting Director of
Residences Paul Doyle said he was
"shocked" when he heard about
$150
the rate hike. He said he had been
given no prior knowledge of the
hike, and was first made aware of it
after ihe May trustee meeting.
According to Vice Chancellor
Spindler, however, plans for the
hike have been publicly discussed
"since January."
Residence Director Doyle said he
would have preferred that an announcement about the initial hike
had been made prior to May so that
a proper list of room prices could
have been published. A letter was
sent out this summer informing oncampus students of the hike and offering open release from housing
contracts. Only 120 out of 6400
took advantage of the release,
Doyle said.
Vice Chancellor Spindler said
that, In retrospect, an announcement prior lo May might have been
possible. He added, however, thai
ihe situation with state subsidies
was "unpredictable" at the time.
September 9, 1980
Would CApsuUs
Reach Out To Middle Earth
Academic hassles, test anxieties, ness program," he said.
He said the program is tentatively
dealing with roommates, forming
new relationships, home sickness slated to begin within the next two
and bureaucracies are a few pro- weeks and will run once a week for
blems Middle Earth hopes to help a six week period. Each two-hour
students with this semester with a session will be offered in the early
evening and the facilitators will be
new program being offered.
This semester, as part of Its students themselves. "This entitles
Outreach services, the Middle Earth group members an opportunity to
Counseling and Crisis Center will speak with a person who knows
offer a program designed specifical- first hand the problems one enly for freshmen and first semester counters during his or her first
transfer students, according to Ed year," he said.
The facilitators have been
Burke, Middle Earth staff member
specially trained and will be superand developer of the program.
"Our focus will be on addressing vised by a psychologist, he added.
"The aim of the program is to
the particular difficulties most
often encountered by new students enable students to develop effective
within the context of an assertive- social and coping skills in an en-
vironment that is comfortable, accepting and non-threatening," he
said. "Many times new students are
reluctant to use Middle Earth services because they feel their problems aren't serious enough or
because they're afraid someone will
find out about it."
He stressed that the program js
strictly intended to help students
become more confident and that all
Middle Earth Services are completely confidential.
Interested students may contact
Ed Burke at Middle Earth
(457-7800) on weekdays, 9-12 a.m.
or weekends, 24 hours a day.
SUNYA Parking Fines Increased
John Williams.
by Beth Sexer
The fine increases were also inSUNYA parking fines will be
,-aised from $3.0Qto $5.00 and tow- stated to "cover the cost of ading fees from $10.00 to $25.00 as or ministering the program," Williams
September 20, according to Traffic said. Fine and fee revenues are used
to pay collectors, clerks, computer
Division Director Lloyd Herbert.
The line arid fee increases were costs, and hundreds of parking
imposed to decrease the number of signs that cost about $75.00 each.
parking violations on the part of
Last year, a p p r o x i m a t e l y
faculty and staff as well as students. $100,000 in revenues was collected
"The $3.00 fee wasn't much of a from non-registered vehicle owners
deterrent," said Security Director and parking violators, according" to
Williams.
However, Williams expressed
uncertainty as to whether the increases will deter violators.
"Human beings being what they
are, if there's a place to put a car,
they'll put it there," he said.
Current vehicle registrations expire on September I; the deadline
for re-registering vehicles Is
September 19, at a cost of $3.00.
First Freshmen Picnic Popular
Over 1000 freshmen attended the
Frosh picnic Saturday at Mohawk
Campus, sponsored by S.A., UAS
and the University, according to
Central Council Chair Peter
Weinstock.
"Everything went off on time
and we were pleased that half the
freshmen class attended," he said.
While the freshmen were entertained by Dean Brown and his jazz
band, they ate hamburgers, hot
dogs, cotton candy and popcorn.
No alcoholic beverages were served,
but those attending the 5-hour picnic enjoyed- lemonade and soda.
Other activities included swimming,
canoeing, frisbec throwing and sunbathing, Weinstock said.
Admission for the picnic was
twenty-five cents per person and
UAS, S.A. and the University ad-
ministration paid for the rest.
Weinstock said the cost for the picnic totaled over $6,000.
Weinstock added that S.A. hopes
to continue having similar picnics in
ihe future.
Other events scheduled by S.A.
for the freshmen this year include a
mini-orientation near the end of
September or early October,
Weinstock said.
WCDB Alterations
WCDB's antenna has just been moved from Indian
Quad's Mohawk Tower to State Quad's Eastman Tower,
according to WCDB General Manager Jim Diamond.
The move, which occured August 29, is "in anticipation
of going to 100 watts," Diamond said.
In addition, he said they were afraid the former location
might interfere with future atmospheric science researeli on
Mohawk's roof. "We wanted to alleviate any potential problems," he explained.
Diamond added that they arc still awaiting action from
the FCC on their lOO-vatl construction application. He
said, however, that there is a good chance they will hear
from the FCC by the end of the semester.
Check Cashing
As of June 1, 1980, UAS stopped cashing personal
checks. However, check-cashing will remain open Monday
through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. to cash nonpersonal checks, at a service charge of 25 cents per check.
Categories of non-personal checks are: money orders,
travelers checks, all paychecks, certified checks, cashier
checks, government checks, E.O.P. checks, work-study
checks, U.A.S. paychecks (cashed at no charge), research
foundation checks, and stale and government lax refund
checks.
"Paper and Prints" At Gallery
"Handmade Paper and Prints" is the title of an exhibit at State University of
New York's Plaza Gallery, State Street and Broadway, to be on view from
September 10 through 29.
The exhibition presents 40 works by 30 New York State artists, using a variety
of images and techniques executed on handcrafted paper. Paper casting, pulp
painting, and prints in handmade specialty papers will be featured. A video
presentation on the paper making process and a small sampler of specialty papers
will also be exhibited.
The Plaza Gallery's hours are 8a.m. to 6p.m., Monday through Friday. The
public js invited to the free exhibit, and State University Plaza is equipped to accommodate the handicapped.
Poles Strike On
WARSAW, Poland (AP) More scattered strikes across
Poland brought a warning from Warsaw Radio that the
new rights promised the workers may be held up if the
walkouts continue. The government radio said continuing
labor unrest was "alarming, especially in the light of our
difficult economic situation. Any further demands,
however justified, even urgent and necessary, may place a
question mark of the implementation of the undertakings
already given." Polish television reported strikes at a cotton mill in Blalystok, an agricultural machinery plant in
Olecko, and a construction firm in Elk, all In the northeast,
and by transport workers in Tarnow and clothing plant
employees in Kamienna Gora, in the south. Dissident
sources reported strikes by sulphur miners in Tarnow and
Tarnobrzeg, transport and construction workers in Sicdlcc
and workers in plants in the major industrial cities of Lodz,
Krakow and Plock. Apparently local grievances were the
causes. However, the official PAP news agency reported an
end to walkouts in Bielsko Biala and Jclcnia Gora in the
south, and in Suwalki in the northeast.
Congress Questions Carter
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress is publicly questioning top
administration officials about President Carter's new
economic plan in hearings expected to take on a tinge of
partisan politics. Republican members of the House-Budget
Committee were expected to use jhe hearings, which were
beginning today, to tout GOP nominee Ronald Reagan's
economic proposals as better medicine than Carter's for the
nation's economic ills. The first witnesses on tap were
Budget Director James T. Mclntyre and Charles L.
Schultz, chairman of the president's Council of EconomicAdvisors. Treasury Secretary G. William Miller is to appear
Tuesday and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul A.
Volckcr will follow Wednesday.
Albany Plane Hijacked
ALBANY, New York (AP) Most of the 90 or so passengers
who boarded an Eastern Airlines plane here Monday that
was later hijacked to Cuba apparently got off in New York
City, according to an airline spokeswoman. Paula Musto in
New York City said about 95 persons boarded Flight 161,
which was scheduled to leave Albany at 7:18 a.m. for a stop
at Kennedy Airport before continuing to Florida. Of the
Albany passengers, she said, about seven were booked
through to Tampa and about 13 to Sarasota, Fla. Ms.
Musto said that it was airline policy not to release names of
passengers except in the case of crashes. The Boeing 727
was hijacked to Cuba by a Spanish-speaking man with a
bottle of liquid with him, the airline said. Upon arrival in
Havana just before noon, the hijacker was taken into
custody by Cuban authorities. It was expected the
passengers would be returned to Florida. Steve Morello, a
spokesman for Gov. Hugh Carey, said it was not believed
any employees of his office were aboard the plane.
Reading Days Revised
To comply with the reading day policy approved by the University Senate on
April 21, the academic calendar has been revised to provide one reading day for
Fall 1980 and two reading days for Spring 1981.
'For Fall 1980, classes will end December 12 at |0:05p.m.; second quarter
classes and classes which meet once a week will continue through December 15.
Reading day will be December 15 and final examinations arc scheduled
December 16-23.
Spring 1981 reading days will be May 11-12 and final exams will be May 13-20,
according to Leonard Laplnskl, Coordinator of Undergraduate Academic
Policies.
^ ^
^
Three
Housing Situation is Poor
by Amy Kantor
The housing situation is even
tighter this year than last year, according to Acting Director of
Residences Paul Doyle. Rooms on
all five quads are crowded with extra students, he said.
This year the on-campus population climbed from 6,054 to 6,400.
According to the Acting Director,
the increased housing breakdown
ranges from 65 extra beds on Alumni Quad, 56 on State, 50 on Colonial to 32 at Indian and II on
Dutch Quad.
"We tried to sptead the triples
out over all the quads," said Doyle,
former Associate Director of
Residences, now replacing John
Welty. Temporary and increased
occupancy rose from approximately
180 students last.year to 350 this
semester. This accounts for the current 214 students In increased housing and the 135 temporary quarters.
"Some doubles have been made
into triples and three-person rooms
are now accommodating four
students," Doyle said. "Also, there
arc students housed temporarily in
rooms usually reserved for the
foreign e x c h a n g e p r o g r a m .
Students in temporary residency
will use these rooms until October."
He explained the differences between increased and temporary
housing. "In increased places,
students can remain in a triple for
as long as a semester." The
Residence Office- plans to move
students in temporary locations
within two to three weeks. This
situation applies to approximately
75 students now living in RA
s u i t c r o o m s uptown and an
estimated 10 to 20 people living in
each of the Alumni Quad barrackstyle areas.
"We saw an extra heavy demand
for on-campus housing last April,"
Doyle explained. There are also 5.3
percent more freshmen attending
the university than last September,
estimating the total class this year at
almost 2,150.
Several students interviewed
reported that they were managing
as they try to survive in the
"cramped" triple rooms. In Colonial Q u a d ' s Clinton Hall,
freshmen Sabrina Crowley and
Carmen Miller describes! their circumstances as "nothing you can't
handle." They said they were first
notified about the terms of their living conditions during the summer
and received a reduced housing fee.
Not all of Doyle's customers arc
this satisfied, and overcrowding is
likely to remain until beds for unaccounted students, no-shows — and
those opting for last-minute offcampus housing — can be reassigned.
Some rooms are accomodating as many as four students.
Students should be moved into permanent housing within 2- 3 weeks,
photo by Steve Essen
UCB Spends $400 of Profits on Dinner
«
&
*
University Concert Board
Fire In Port of Albany
ALBANY, New York (AP) Firemen doused, slight new
blazes Monday at the Port of Albany, where a fire at an oil
storage depot injured 10 persons and caused the evacuation
of 1,000 persons Sunday. Officials said there was no serious
problem with the new "flareups," which occurred at least
four times between 10:30 p.m. Sunday and 8:00 a.m. Monday. Meanwhile, invcstiglors sought the case of the fire
which caused two major explosions and sent a column of
black smoke hundreds of feet into the air. All available fire
units in the city of Albany, and those from a dozen suburban units, were called to the scene. Robert Weincr, a
spokesman for the Mobil Oil Corporation in ^caisdale,
New York, said the fire apparently started about 10 a.m.,
when Mobil employees, using a vacuum-equipped truck,
started to empty one tank to clean it. The tanks had a
capacity of 1.8 million gallons, but the fuel inside them was
only 2 or 3 feet deep, he said.
AJbany
by Patricia Bruuley
The current Chair and Vice-Chair
of University Concert Board (UCB)
have admitted to using over $400 in
profits
for
a
12-person
"celebration" dinner last May at
the exclusive 21 Club in Albany
Chairperson Dave Montanaro
said, "I attended this dinner but
had nothing to do with the planning
of it. It did occur to me that funds
were being misused, but I did not
question it to the point where I did
not attend."
"When I look back on it now, it
was a very stupid thing to do. It will
never happen again," said Montanaro.
Vice Chairperson Peter Lev said
that "Evan Gold, the previous UCB
Chair planned and paid for the dinner. 1 was told to come to the din-
Ramada Inn Workers Strike
Demand Higher Wages, Better Working
by Andrew Carroll
Those pickcters across from
SUNYA's main entrance are
members of the Hotel, Motel, and
Restaurant Employees Union, local
no. 471, now in their eighteenth day
of their strike for higher wages and
belter working conditions at the
Ramada Inn.
Union representatives and hotel
management have failed on six occasions to agree to terms of a contract for the more than thirty striking workers. Because of the
failures, the Union lias moved to
file suit against management with
the National Labor Relations Board
(Nl.RIJ), claiming Ihe hotel owner
has failed to negotiate "in good
faith."
Union representative for the
workers, Bob Bclanger, walks with
other strikers who carry placards
and distribute leaflets urging the
public to avoid patronizing the
Ramada Inn.
"Our intent is not to punish the
hotel, but rather to push for more
productive talks," says Belanger.
The union's NLRB suit is aimed at
hotel manager David Quadrini,
who is seen by the uniorl as a hindrance to those "productive" talks.
The parlies have now met six
times, says Belanger, and each time
Ihe management has "not been
prepared," in llieir words, to
discuss the employees' grievances,
which include a $.65 per hour pay
increase from- $3.10 to $3.75, a
seniority system for overtime
privileges, a guaranteed paid vacation and job protection. The union
even proposed the intervention of a
state or federal labor mediator, a
proposal denied by Quadrini.
Support has begun to grow for
the hotel workers, according to
Belanger. "Fifteen bus drivers marched with us this week, and we're
being joined on ihe picket line by
other unions including Ihe
longshoremen and Ihe CSEA."
Bclanger said the lines have
discouraged business, including a
group thai moved its convention
and sixty occupancies to the nearby
Thruway House.
Bclanger does not know how long
Conditions
the talks will continue. He
recognizes the hardships on the
workers in this wage bracket, "but
if this takes six months, we'll be
here for six monihs. We're just
wailing for the management to talk
wilh us in good faith."
For students concerned wilh
lodgings for the upcoming Parents
Weekend, Bclanger said he
understands the intimidation of
crossing a picket line, and said that
the workers will provide patrons
with oplional lodging in Ihe Albany
ncr. I ate, did not see a check, and
left, Evan Gold was such a
domineering guy that I did not
think about where the monc) was
coming from. We were going out to
celebrate the graduations of some
of our members."
Lev udded that, "Gold was so
domineering that he assumed control over everyone. He did
everyone's job and I doubt the
treasurer even knew what was going
on."
Current and past UCB Treasurer
Mike Stcnard, however, could not
be reached for continent.
"The dinner was paid for in
cash," Lev said. "The budget for
UCB did noi reflect a withdrawal
for the dinner." He added that, "A
check from UCB would have 10
have been cashed by either the
chairperson or ihe treasurer."
UCB is an SA funded group and
is accountable lo the Association.
Presenlly UCB is working with a
$60,000 budget. SA Controller Ira
Somach said, "The money will be
handled more effectively now that
the domineering Evan Gold is
gone." He said, "I believe Slenard
is capable of doing the job and now
he will be allowed to do his j o b . "
Evan Gold is now in Florida and
could not be reached for comment.
SA President Sue Gold said, "I
heard allegations about Ihe misuse
of UCB funds about three weeks
ago from SA Controller Ira
Somach. We both decided the best
thing to do was lo appoint an Executive Committee to investigate
the matter."
That committee includes Central
Council Chair Peter Weinstock, Internal Affairs Chair Mary_ Betli
Lorich and Budget Committee
Assistant Chair Steve Welch, she
said.
"I will make no decision on Ihe
matter until (he committee gives its
report and I know more details,"
Gold said. "But I will say thai I
confronted UCB Chair Montanaro
and he did not deny Ihe allegations,"
SA Controller Ira Somach said:
"1 have decided to implement an
old policy because I feel the need to
keep tighter control on UCB
tickets.
"The reinstatement of a more stringent policy means all tickets will
come from the SA office. Tickcls
will have to be signed in and out, all
complimentary tickets will be
recorded, and all used and unused
tickets will be returned and
counted," Somach said.
Concert Board and WCDB
Deny Promotion of Party
Hotel Workers have been striking for eighteen days.
Union moves lo file suit.
photo by Bob Leonard
by Frank Gil
The University Concert Board
(UCB) and WCDB were cited by
the Times-Union as being cosponsors, along with Rensselaer's
Hulla-Balloo, Inc., of a would-be
rock "festival this past summer.
SUNYA's Mohawk campus was
said to be the proposed site of the
festival, canceled after public outcry.
UCB, however, denies that they,
or WCDB, were promoters.
According to the Times-Union
report, former UCB cluiir Evan
Gold and Hulla-Balloo representative John Lasek considered the
Mohawk campus as a possible site
last spring. Gold also acted as a
contact between Lasek and University Auxiliary Services (UAS) John
Laccy. Scheduled acts would have
included Rootboy Slim, Fountainhead, Tallis, 805, and the Units.
Current UCB chair Dave Montanaro, however, denies UCB's or
WCDB's participation. "We were
not promoters of the event," said
Montanaro. "The Hulla-Balloo
was the main sponsor."
The concert was eventually
canceled due lo what Montanaro
termed "bad publicity," including
the news of a hit and run car accident at a similar concert held in
Massachusetts, in which two people
ATre killed.
Plans for the "Drink and Drown.
Party," as labelled by promoters,
were also hurt when Hulla-Balloo
lost its liquor license for the event.
September 9, 1980
Albany Student Press
Four
September 9, 1980
Page Five
Albany Student Press
Albany Molester Continues Through Summer
On August 27 the Mayor said,
The break-ins and sexual assaults "There have been 53 attacks in two
in the Pine Hills Area have con- years. I'm not sure if that's enough
tinued to occur throughout most of to warrant the ordinance."
the summer. In response to the atCorning also said that, "What
tacks, a local group in Albany'has you have here is a case where one
been formed to force landlords lo man has committed two-thirds of
protect tenants' homes from break- the attacks. What I want is the
ins.
man."
Gelb asserts that this statement is
Lieutenant Detective John
Damino of the Albany Police "simply untrue. Only 20 of all the
Department said that in the time attacks have the same modus
period of May 2 to August 6, there operandi. It's going to take a lot
'lave been 18 complaints of sexual more than catching that 'one man'
assaults or attempted sexual to make the city safe for women."
assaults in the Pine Hills Area and
At Ihe August 27 meeting the
Madison Avenue. Damino also said Mayor also said that tenants whose
that there have been such com- landlords refuse to install proper
plaints outside the Pine Hills Area locks should contact Corning
as well.
directly.
by Terianne Falcone
The modus operandi of Ihe 18
In a phone interview, Mayor Corcomplaints have been similar, with ning said he has problems with the
"probably ten of them" committed ordinance because il "would force
by ihe man called the Pine Hills landlords lo spend hundreds of
Molester, Damino said.
dollars."
In response to the large number
of attacks this past spring, the
Albany Alliance for Safely (AAS)
drafted a proposal for a city ordinance which would mandate a
fine of $200 or up to 30 days in jail
for landlords who fail lo have
stronger doors, belter locks, and
brighter lighting for their tenants'
homes.
Gelb asserted that the cost would
be minimal. 'For 13 dollars a
landlord could buy a really good
lock," she said.
"If the cost is less than twenty
dollars, they (tenants) ought to do il
themselves," the Mayor stated.
Corning also said that some
landlords have raised questions
about the constitutionality of such
an ordinance.
"You can't legislate for people lo
lock their doors and windows," he
said.
To that Gelb responded,
"Women can't use locks thai aren't
there."
Detective Lieutenant Damino
emphasized the need for Albany
women to become more "security
conscious."
Last Thursday, September 4, the
Mayor presented the ordinance lo
the Common Council. The ordinance was placed in the Council's
Housing and Urban Renewal Committee where, according to 6th ward
Alderman Joseph Bucchs, it could
"stay in committee indefinitely."
"Apparently, women's safety is
not a priority with Mayor Corning," Gelb said. "When I went
door-to-door on Hudson Avenue to
tell people thai the Mayor was coming, aboul 75 percent of the
residents said that someone had
entered or attempted to enter their
homes."
SA Lawyer Jack Lester said that
if the security ordinance fails lo
pass the Albany Common Council,
there are other possibilities that the
AAS can lake.
Lester pointed out that there is a
state statute of the Real Property
Law called the "warranty of
habltabillty," The laws mandate
that landlords maintain a "safe
home" for their lenants.
"In Albany, we have apartments
that violate that stale law. I urge
tenants to withhold rent if they |i vc
in an apartment with unsafe locks
due to landlords' negligence in nol
securing doors and windows properly."
Lester then outlined what he
thinks tenants in such a situation
should.do. He said tenants should
first write a letter to their landlord
requesting repairs of unsafe windows and doors. If no repairs are
made, they should contact Ihe City
Code Enforcement Bureau to
record properly the unsafe situation.
"If repairs arc still not made, the
tenant should withhold rem until
such repairs are made. At that time
they should also come see me,"
Lester said.
Lester stated that he thinks Ihe
security ordinance should be passed
because the state statute is loo ambiguous.
The Albany Police Department
Crime Prevenlion Unit served an
advisory role in the drafting of this
proposal.
The AAS, which includes groups
such as Albany Women Against
Rape (AWAR), the Council of
Albany Neighborhood Associations
(CANA), United lenauts of
Albany anil the SUNYA OffCampus Association (OCA), met
with Albany Mayor Corning on Inly 10 to discuss the ordinance.
OCA Coordinator Mark Dunlca
said Aal Corning supported the
proposal except that he insisted that
the C ode Enforcement Bureau,
rather than the API) Crime Prevenlion Unit, should enforce the ordinance. Dunlca said that at the July 10 meeting Corning promised lo
present the proposal for a vote'at
one of the next two Common
Council meetings.
Coming, however, now claims
that he never made such a commitment.
When no action seemed lo be
taking place on Ihe ordinance, AAS
called Corning, who said Ihe proposal was being studied by ihe Corporation Counsel, Jack Roe. Shortly thereafter, Roe told reporters at
the Knickerbocker News that he did
not believe in mandatory ordinances.
"A 'voluntary' ordinance would
do nothing," Dunlca commented.
SUNYA student Jackie Gelb,
who is active in AAS, said that Roctold AAS that he was having difficulty in writing the ordinance in
legalistic terms.
To solve that problem, on August
27 Gelb and other members of the
AAS arranged to show Mayor Corning several houses on Hudson
Avenue that AAS and the tenants
felt had por locks and easy entrances.
The first house the Mayor was
shown had been broken into three
times before the landlord "pinned"
the windows. The second house had
a needle and eye lock on the back
door. A woman had been attacked
in this second house.
"At this meeting the Mayor
seemed to have backed off from his
commitment to the security ordinance," said Dunlea.
Students Win One Year On Senate
by Susan Milligan
Although the May 9 assemblage
of the University Senate defeated
the proposed 4-year extension of
student representation on the
Senate, students won a temporary
concession of one-year representation on the University's policymaking body at an emergency
meeting of the Senate less than a
week later.
Yet student organizations such as
Ihe Student Union (SU) and Student Association (SA) are uneasy
about the temporary nature of their
victory and have begun work to
secure more permanent representation for students.
At the last meeting of the Senate,
a motion was passed which included
the formation of a committee to
review the question of student
representation on Senate. The corninitlec has composed Ihe following
proposal to be presented at ll
University meeting tomorrow:
— that the Senate Study Committee hold a series of meetings on
Ihe Senate alternatives so that all Interested individuals and groups
have an opportunity to respond;
— that, following the hearings,
the Committee develop two or three
alternative proposals and submit
them to an advisory referendum of
the voting faculty;
— that the committee, on the
basis of the hearings and the advisory referendum, prepare a single
proposal in the form of one or more
amendments to the By-Laws for
submission to a general faculty
meeting lo be called early in the spring semester of 1981.
According to SA member Mark
Lafayette, SU and SA hope fo convince the Senate to agree lo the appointment of two students on the
Study Committee, and also to allow
for the presentation of more than
"a single proposal" in the spring.
The Committee has come up with
seven possible alternatives to date
concerning student representation
on Senate:
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
— to increase the current proportion of students on Senate by
either increasing the number of student scats or decreasing the number
of faculty seats;
SASU President Jim Slew: certification delayed.
Amendment lo Ihe by law had nol been approved by Student Assembly.
photo by Mark Halek
— to maintain the current composition of the Senate, which allows
for 33 student seats;
— to maintain current Senate,
but restrict agenda. Under this
alternative, the Senate structure
would remain basically unchanged,
but only members of the teaching
faculty would vote on matters dealing with academic standards
(admissions, grading, honors, etc.)
and currlcular and degree requirements;
— to maintain current Senate,
but create a faculty forum. This
body could consist either of
teaching faculty on the Senate or a
Trustees Delay
by I'utrlclu Branley
The certification of two SUNY
Student Assembly Officers, President Jim Stern and Vice President
for Campus Affairs Janice Fine,
has been completed after a delay by
the SUNY Board of Trustees, according lo Vice Chancellor for
Educational Services Dr. James
Smool.
The Student Assembly is Ihe official governance group representing student governments of all
SUNY campuses. This student body
serves as a consultant to the Board
of Trustees on matters of students'
interests. The president of ihe Student Assembly serves on the Board
of Trustees and has regular voting
privileges.
"The reason for the delay in the
certification of tine and Stem was
the implementation of a by-law
which, as proposed, had not been
fully advanced lo ihe Board of
Trustees," said Smool.
. "An amendment lo the by-law
had not at the lime been approved
ROTC May Be Implemented
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by Susan Milligan
SUNYA may be the site of a new
ROTC program, possibly as early as
next fall, the ASP learned yesterday. The source, who asked to remain unidentified, said thai
negotiations were underway concerning an "extension center agreement," which would result in
ROTC courses being taught on the
SUNYA campus.
Currently, the University offers
"cross-enrollment," a program in
which students may earn credit for
military science courses taken at
other schools. According to the
source, a straw poll was taken early
this
year
which
revealed
"significant interest" in the formation of an ROTC program at
SUNYA. He added that he didn't
know who was polled, but that 385
students had expressed interest as of
February. Negotiations, he said,
have been going on since April.
An extension center agreement
would provide the U.S. Army assets
to be on campus, he said.
According to SA Controller Ira
Somach, the proposal must go
through several channels before it is
approved.
"The proposal must first go lo the
curricula! committee of the
Undergraduate Academic Council
(UAC), and course suggestions will
be made," said Somach. "It will
then go to the University Senate,
who will make a recommendation
to the president. President O'Leary
ultimately decides on the proposal."
However, Somach noted that
since Ihe president has the power to
change academic policy, he could
conceivably allow the extension
center agreement without the consultation of University Senate.
Somach said he had no
knowledge of a straw poll.
SUNYA Prcsidenl Vinceni
O'Leary said he is aware of the proposal, but "nothing has been decided yet.
"The proposal must go through
the Educational Policy Committee
of the Senate," he said.
Since students are currently able
to receive credit for ROTC courses
taken on other campuses, the actual
courses have already been approved
by the University Senate.
"It's a question of where the
courses will be taught," O'Leary
said. "We want to do what's most
convenient lo students."
O'Leary added thut he knew
nothing about a straw poll being
taken, and that he has not formed
an opinion concerning ROTC on
campus.
"I have to look at the issue as a
whole," he said.
According to Student Association of the Stale University (SASU)
Organizing Director Bruce Cronin,
ihe proposed ROTC program will
be met with much opposition front
separately elected faculty, and
would review academic matters
referred to them by the President or
initiated by the faculty;
— to reduce the current proportion of students on Senate by either
reducing the number of student
scats or removing all but two
graduate student scats and convert
them to teaching faculty seats
(retaining the current number of 22
undergraduate scats);
— to convert the Senate t > a
purely faculty governing body;
— to abolish the Senate and its
councils and reconstruct the entire
campus governance structure.
Certifications
by Ihe S t u d e n t
Assembly.
Therefore, Slcrn and Fine could nol
be certified," Smool continued.
"The amended by-law which had
been proposed in 1977 slates that
Student Assembly delegates could,
be appointed by their student
governments rather than be elected
by their student body," said Student Assembly Executive Vice
President Jason Wertheim.
Werthelm was elected when he
ran on a combined Student Association of the Slate University of New
York, Inc. (SASU), and SUNY Studeni Assembly ballot,
"Both Fine and Stern were appointed to the Student Assembly.
All three officers were elected to
SASU and hold Ihe same positions
as they do in the Student
Assembly," said Wertheim.
"The difference between the
organization is that SASU Is a
private group for student advocacy
and Ihe Student Assembly is a
SUNY advisory group," Wertheim
added.
at SUNYA
SASU and Student Union.
"SASU voted against ROTC on
State University campuses last
December," he said. "An attempt
was made to insiatc the program at
Gcnesco, and the students fought it
and won. The same sort of action
According to SA President Sue
Gold, student input on the Study
Committee is imperative.
"Not only should students be on
Senate, but they should certainly be
involved in the process of developing an effective University governance structure," she said.
Student Union chair Jim Tierney
said that SU members share his
outrage that students have been
given only temporary representation.
"We think it's ridiculous in a
University community that
students, being intelligent human
beings, won't have any say in decisions which affect their academic
and social lives," said Tierney. "In
the name of any semblance of
democracy, students must be fairly
represented on Senate."
'
can be expected if the proposal is to
be initiated at SUNYA."
' According to Cronin, an ROTC
program has already been instated
at Frcdonia, and the program is
currently under discussion at
Brockport.
"The Board of Trustees resolved
to accept the amended by-law early
in July. Both Stern and Fine were
certified," Wertheim said.
Carey Vetoes
Alumni Bill
by Andrew Carroll
Governor Hugh Carey has again
angered supporters of the SUNY
system, this time with a veto of a
bill that would insure alumni
representation on the SUNY Board
of Trustees.
The Governor rejected a bill that
passed u n a n i m o u s l y in the
Assembly lasi March calling for at
least three members of the
16-member board to be SUNY
alumni. Carey claimed ihe bill
would have restricted his abilily to
appoint Ihe most highly qualified
individuals lo the Board.
"Governor Carey's veto of the
alumni bill will push the Slate
University backwards," said Student Association of the State
University (SASU) President Jim
Stern.
The Governor's veto came as a
shock to SASU members and other
supporters of the bill who had seen
Carey set a precedent earlier this
year when he appointed three alumni lo the Board. This action brought
Alumni representation to the Board
for the first time since SUNY's
creation in 1948.
SASU points to the traditions of
other institutions, both public and
private, when railing against the
Governor's veto. SASU cites
CUNY's Board of Trustees governing statutes as providing for alumni
representation. The SUNY Board
of Trustees, however, has seen the
appointment of 55 trustees, 43 of
whom graduated from private colleges, and 18 from Ivy League
schools.
"There must be board members
who understand the needs of public
higher education," said Stern. "In
these times of budget cuts and
restrictions, we need insight into the
politics and goals of our campuses."
SASU finds fault in Carey's contention of "constricted hiring
abilities," Stern said. "Of the
1,000,000 graduates of SUNY, he
must be able to find three highly
qualified individuals."
Stern says SASU and other lobbying organizations will continue to
aim for the bill's passage in
January, when Ihe bill will be reintroduced ' el'ore the legislature.
Six
September 9,
Albany Student Press
100, consists of 1/3 faculty, 1/3 ad- run in the September one
ministration, and 1/3 students. However, according to Gold, one
However, 11 of the student seals are "of the seven elected last Spring
reserved for graduate students, of transferred, and several candidates
which only 2 or 3 actually are filled, who lost previously are no longer
according lo Gold. This leaves only interested in serving on the Senate.
There will also be a replacement
22 seals for undergraduates, of
which seven are off-campus election for one student representative from Alumni Quad, Gold
rcprescniatives.
If when the Senate meets for the said.
first lime on September 15 without
those seven students, "We'd be
under-represented," Gold said.
Rich,
This would mean "an inequity to
students."
Gold has appointed those
students who won last Spring's elecHappy Birthday
tion as temporary off-campus
Senate rcpresentalives.
Off-Campus Election Invalid
Morgenstern contended that
by Beth Sexer
The SA Supreme Court declared because the Election Commission
the Spring 1980 off-campus Univer- mandated that students present
sity Senate election invalid, accor- their tax-cards before voting, many
ding to Chief Justice Brad potential voters were turned away.
Rothbaum. The four Justices ruled
However, although SA conducts
on May 11 that the SA Election the student elections, the University
Commission acted in violation of Senate is not an SA body, and
the SA Constitution which states, therefore, tax-cards are not reaccording to Rothbaum's report, quired for Senate elections.
that "no tax-card be required of
The Court, in agreement with the
students who wish to vote for c a n - '' plainjiff Morgenstern, declared the
didat'es" for the Senate.
off-campus Senate election invalid.
The case wa's brought to the However, according to SA PresiSupreme Court by SUNYA student dent Sue Gold, the replacement
Jeff Morgcnstern, who was election will take place on
defeated in his bid for an off- September 29, 30, and October 1 in
campus seat on the Senate. Accor- concurrence with the Court ruling
ding to Rothbaum's report, that the new election be held "no
later than the last week of
September."
Until the replacement election is
held, Rothbaum said that Sue Cold
has a "free hand" in appointing
seven temporary off-campus student Senate representatives. He said
that Gold is in the position to appoint those who could "best serve
the students' interests" until a new
election is held.
The Court was concerned,
Rothbaum said-, thai sludenl seals
in the Senate not be vacant until the
Only ihose students who ran for
new election. The Senate, which has
a membership of approximately office in the original election can
September 9, 1980
SUNYA Grad Jailed; Lifted 1000 Library Books
by Bruce Levy
A SUNYA graduate is serving a
one-year sentence in the Albany
County Jail after pleading guilty to
the criminal possession of over
1,000 books stolen from the
SUNYA library valued at approximately $25,000, according to a
Times-Union article.
The former student, Hugh W.
Thomas, 23, of Rochester, original-
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ly pleaded innocent to a first degree
charge of criminal possession of
stolen property. However, when the
charge was dropped to seconddegree possession; Thomas switched to a guilty plea.
The books, marked with SUNYA
identifications, were discovered in
Thomas' possession on October 5
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Albany Student Press
back room she had rented to him in '
an apartment at 46A West Street,
Albany. Reportedly, Thomas had
left the apartment on September 30
because of a dispute with Garrow.
- Although the police were notified
of the incident in October, they did
not arrest Thomas until May, due
to a backlog of 12,000 warrants
be served in Rochester, where he
then resided. An additional 150
books were discovered in Thomas'
Rochester home at the time of his
arrest.
•
Thomas, who graduated from
SUNYA In August 1979 with a BA
in A f r o - A m e r i c a n
studies,
tor Rick Tastor. "It is a deterrent
system." However, in the future
librarians will be watching the front
entrance, especially at peak hours,
should the alarm be set off. Also,
more books will be lined with the
metal stripping.
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reportedly collected mostly books
on economics and political science.
The stolen books were taken out
through the front entrance of the
library. Thomas expressed surprise
that the detectors were not set off
by the thefts.
The library uses the Knogo
system of theft detection. Books are
lined up with special metal strips
set off an alarm if books are taken
out of the library front entrance unchecked. However, not all of the
library books contain these metal
strips.
"The system is not foolproof,"
said SUNYA library assistant direc-
to a participating McDonald's, purchase any
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Albany Student Press
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continued from page one
University is under no obligation to
provide service down to the
Trailways station, and the time and
gas wasted as well as wear and tear
on the buses were factors in the
decision to end the Trailways service.
"The trip up and down the State
Street hill was very bad for the
:
brakes and transmission,'
'l
Stevens. "It was just too cosuj."
Gold said she is working on eventually securing service to the
Trailways station on Fridays and
holidays.
Stevens said he "would like to be
able to do It, but there just aren't
enough drivers."
Stevens mentioned also that the
Division of Budget (DOB) mandated a ten percent decrease in total
mileage of University vehicles, and
the shortened Wellington route
helped to fulfill that requirement.
Since the decision to change the
bus routes was made over the summer, many students returning to
sch-ol via Trailways or Greyhound
buses were unaware of the elimination of bus service from those stations. However, Stevens countered
lb he sent 5000 flyers to both stations io notify students of the
change.
According to ^Stevens, last year's
policy of stopping at requested corners after 6p.m. in the interest of
women's safety was creating more
problems than it solved.
"When a bus driver had to make
an extra stop, the schedule was
thrown off. Consequently, other
women were waiting alone for buses
that came late; I have a whole pile
of complaints from women saying
the buses didn't arrive at the
scheduled times," he said.
Gold said that after discussion,
Stevens agreed to add a stop at
Western Ave. and Ontario. According to Gold, with this added stop,
the Pine Hills area is pretty well
covered.
"It was a compromise, but I
don't think we had a choice," she
said.
Gold mentioned also that she anticipates Stevens wlil eventually
phase out all Wellington service.
Stevens said he "doesn't know" if
this will occur, but that it was contingent on the number of students
requiring transportaion from the
Wellington Hotel.
Several bus drivers, all of whom
wished to remain anonymous, expressed, dissatisfaction with the
changed schedule.
"The students are not going to
like having to walk up State Street
with their suitcases," said one
driver. "And it's going to create a
bad relationship between the drivers
and the students. They'll get angry
with us, then we'll get angry with
them."
Another driver said that "(the
drivers) didn't have anything to say
about it. We tried to tell (Stevens) it
wouldn't work . . . we're just going
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Vitamins, razor blades, shampoo - whatever you just ran out
of. we're here with all the little things you need.
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Please take a moment and fill out this check cashing
ipplication, drop it off at your nearest I'rice Chopper and
we'll process it quickly, So next time you run in we'll take
(be grind out ol i.i.iliiu); a cheek.
When you ask good
friends for a favor, you know
what they're going to say. So
you lell them you're moving
again and then wait for tlie
groans to slop. They may not
like the idea, but you know
they're going Io he there,
When you're finished, these
people are going Io deserve
something special. Tonight,
lei it he Lowenbi'ilu,
^
Lowenbrau.Here's to good Mends.
Anderson
continued from page one^
may still remember Anderson's attempt in 1960 to name Christianity
the national religion. A campaign
aid of the Congressman confirmed
this, but noted in defense that
"Anderson was new to Congress,
and very conservative. He has
already apologized for that action."
Anderson himself said he finds it
difficult to believe "anyone in the
Carter campaign who had the
audacity to suggest" that his position changed too often when "the
Carter administration has proposed
seven economic programs in 43
months and 3 budgets in eight months.
While the Congressman's campaign theme is "the Anderson Unity Campaign," the latest polls,
claiming close and nearly equal
numbers of state victories for
Carter and Reagan and none for
Anderson, are hardly indicative of
such unity. Some have theorized
that Anderson's candidacy was a
deliberate attempt on the part of the
Republican party or the Tri-Lateral
Commission to keep Carter from
being re-elected. Anderson seemed
slightly angry at the suggestion that
he is serving simply as a "spoiler."
"Consider the source," he said.
"Jimmy Carter could be called a
spoiler. That person (making the
accusation) is making a political
assessment for obvious political advantage of a particular candidate.
The early polls could be meaningless . . . we have a chance to bring out millions who might otherwise not vote."
An Anderson campaign aid insists that the Congressman's support is nearly equally divided between Democrats, Republicans, and
Independents, and that his supporters arc also diverse in age.
If Anderson does indeed have the
support of any or all political affiliations, religious affiliations, or
any other groups one might put
voters into, one can't help wondering if his opportunities are equal to
those of the Democratic and
Republican nominees. Individual
states have separate laws and requirements to get an Independent
nominee even listed on the ballot,
and the regulations for the most
part do not favor the Independent
candidate — especially if that candidate attempted nomination by a
political parly. Those who voted for
"Anderson in the Republican
primary in New York State cannot
sign a petition to list Anderson on
the ballot as an Independent, according to an Anderson campaign
coordinator. Fund-raising has
always been a problem for Independent candidates. Anderson supporters have raised about 6 million
of the 15 million Anderson expects
he will need to conduct an adequate
campaign through November.
Anderson just recently won a
Federal Election Commission ruling
that would qualify him for retroactive federal funds after the election.
Anderson is now negotiating for
loans, borrowed against the federal
aid, but declined to name which
banks he was considering. Anderson said he was seeking "as much as
he can get," adding that " a fair
amount would be 29.4 million —
just like Carter and Reagan."
Despite a veritable deck of cards
stacked against the Independent
candidate, his campaign coordinators seem optimistic.
"We have already had a couple
of good breaks," said one. "We
have received a great amount of
contributions, and the Federal Election Commission has ruled in our
favor. With his bi-partisan support,
Anderson will sweep the election."
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September 9, 19
September 9, 1980
M','. s1 .,,',,. Is ',
Aspects on Tuesday
Page 13
Rescue Attempt
ingln
On Horror
In
sjs Just about any theater manager
/ / can tell you (except for those who
• ^ T T i i / e r e booking The Empire Strikes
• " ^ I Back or'Airplane!!, the summer ol
1980 was a come-down from past summers of
recent years. Despite a bumper crop of bigbudget commercial films glutted with stars like
Robert Redford, Burt Reynolds, John
Travolta, and Clint Eastwood, the audiences
were staying home and watching reruns and
HBO. An odd exception which appeared early in the summer was a low-budget horror film
railed Friday the 13th. The critics lined up to
Jim Dixon
pan it almost as quickly as audiences lined up
to see it On a starvation budget of six hundred
thousand dollars. Friday the 13lh grossed
some thirty million.
Horror sells.
The reason why people arc so eager to
hand over their money to be scared is as
elusive as it is undeniable. Why, do they slow
down to see the remains of auto accidents? I'm
as guihy as the rest. But fear tends to bring
them in. and lately, it seems, the movies tend
•oward the same formula
This summer, there was some variety. The
mo si offbeat, and the biggest flop, was
Michael Ritchie's The Island. Ritchie, who at
his best produces good social satire along the
l:nes qf The Bad Xeus Bears and Smile, and
at his worst produces bad social satire along
the hr.es of Semt-Tough, has this rime produced what appears to be a seH-satire by the
author of Jaws, Peter Benchley. In a nearly
unique mow, Benchley dismembered hts
own novel. While The Wand is undeniably his
weakest stony, it certainly wasn't as bad as
Benchley'5 screenplay, for which he receives
sole credit, and therefore sole blame.
Horror, which ts best defined as an overwhelming, almost painful feelmg^caused by
something shocking, cannot be created suc] cessfuBy by violence alone While violence
1 and the impiied threat of violence are
I necessary to create suspense, they are in
! themselves inadequate. The audience needs a
- fy with and worry about.
Characters must be more than oneiimensicmaj cutouts Ob* --.. unaware A
Benchley
u ripped what l
chars::-:: :y
ry out of::
and direction con
Ritchie isn't <
-.ng actors
'•'. chael Came, who had
j Ben. • •., I *'-.-.... •.. pirates are, thefifax
have been fun if it had been better written As
it is. Ritchie inexplicably insists on taking it all
too seriously. fiUing the threadbare pan
with Grand1 GwgnoS violence which serves no
purpose other than to cater to an audience's
baser instincts The resufe is a mc •
merely grim, rather than
suspenseful. We aren't even afldwed
lapses into intentional black comedy which
saved many a bad horror film from total oblivion.
More ambcrious. and fortunatery more ;.:cessiul (at least
Kubrick** adaptation ol Stephen K
bestseller. The Shining King, who is now
pract3ca2y a trademark, wrote a draft of the
^h Kubrick quae
predictably threw our. H:s own draft, written m
• radon •*•""• i
This summer's movies left the producers smiling
hasn't pleased all of King's rabid fans, but docs from the start. We never worry about her And
preserve the events of Ihe novel reasonably •is the psycho actually has an understandable
reason for killing the victims (even if helsoverwell, and strips away some <J( King's more li
reai ling just a bit) w<*'re not apt to hate him
win Allenish touches.
Though slow-paced for the tastes of most enough, Cart of the reason that Night of the
horror movie fans, The Shining is Inevitably Llulng Dead. Jaws, Halloween, and Alien are
frightening. Through a "careful mixture of frightening is thai we never do understand the
suspense and shock, Kubrick moves Ihe film killer
through a classic pattern. liuffs of the genre
To compound matters. Prom Night steals
should recognise the prevalence of slow. from too many other films and doesn't even
tracking shots down long corridors, building do it well. The entire prom night setting is too
up fear of corners and what might be around obviously similar to Carrie. Too many of the
them. Kubrick uses a low-angled camera to characters are poor man's Carrie imitations
follow his young psychic hero as he peddles a Too many of the shots and situations smack
tricycle through deserted corridors. The speed too heavily of Halloween. Add hokey
of the tricycle is accentuated by the child's-eye dialogue (Leslie Nielsen spouts one-liners
view, and the turning of corners becomes ex- straight from his part in Airplane! where at
cruciating as we wait and wait and wait for least they were supposed to be funny) and an
something to happen
inept supporting cast, and we're left with a film
Jack Nicholson, too long absent from the only a genius and a thorough rewrite could
vrreen. has a field day with the part of a man save. While the direction and technical credits
dnven mad by forces he doesn't understand are all competent, they aren't enough. Like
{and which, incidentally, are never fully ex- most films of this genre, the violence borders
plained to the audience either). Kubricks on the pristine Not even sadism is gratified.
refc-rttes allow him a certain black humor King
/^\nginality*is not a must for a honor film.
missed Battering through a locked bathroom
door with an ax in an attempt to murder his L*/though, as Brian DePalma."director of
wife (Shelley Duval!}, he loudly quips. Carrie and the current Dressed To KHI has
"Honey. I'm Home'." Also darkly funny is his proven consistently over the years. DePalma
self-introduction of "Here's Johnny.'" as he has been influenced, to say the least, by the
films of Alfred Hitchcock, Dressed To Kill is
crashes through.
Kubrick, to whom the film apparently nothing more or less than an erotic remake of
represented an exercise in the mechanics of Psycho.
What elevates Dressed To Kill from the bulk
horror more than anything else, seems more
aware than most directors of the close relation- of horror films is first and foremost. DePalma's
ship between horror and humor. These are. style and technique. DePalma. to use perhaps
after ail. the only film genres in which the syn- a trite description, is a film maker's film maker.
thesis of one emotion outweighs all other con- His combination of camerawork and editing
make Dressed To Kill the best-directed
siderations, regardless of plot or theme.
While The Shining is intentionally funny at American film of 1980 so far.
as Is Bnan DePalma's new him. Dressed
As was the case with Psycho, the top-billed
To Ki\\. the truly ineptly written or d
female star of the film is actually a victim who
hone: - ..
isly
Barring cases disappears less than halfway through. Angie
-• The Island, when even this small saving Dickinson, playing a sexually frustrated
enled
p-•••••• ', - : a current housewife, parallels Janet Leigh from Hit
• "" •->-" must
• -,g the same chcock's classic. DePalma in fact teases the
sahre-m;nded audier es •- '•
-Aho in audience with a shower scene in the film's
• to be a opening, where instead of being murdered,
V; hi. a low-budget Canadian the housewife fantasies about being anally
- md slits its raped while her husband shaves with a straight
throat more effect;.*.
- : - like the one Ms. Dickinson is even•
i film.
tually murdered with. The film's true heroine is
"Not even sadism is
• to worcy
about a character :n trw-ilpi The heroine in
:r..s cise .i played by Jamie Lee Curtis, uho
-ed by another knife-wielding maniac
in Hailoireen — the progenitor of the current
iash'em-stab'ems The problem is
that a hckey prologue sets up the psycho's
i the movie's rnyria
(As young children, the adolescent murderees
ol Prom .NVghr vw>re accident.,
reived
the death of the murderer's twin sisier I Both
• • : I -ere the younger siblir..;
y.fco -as in no way involved. Thus, she's safe
gratified."
'
'•
- Nancy
ft en who p!aSs Ihe high-class call girl that
ses Ms Dickinson's murder.
The plot is familiar, and not In any way profound. The characters are thin In (act most ol
the criticisms and plaudits applicable to Psycho
* e applicable to Dressed To Kill. However
the fact of the matter is that Dressed To Kill Is a
superior dim. It's tighter, and has ,, b,,t,'r
sense of the black hum,,, as well as the horroi
horror is to be fun. it can't take Itsall loo
•-•', Hitchcock always claimed thai
ftyeho was actually a comedy - ,, !,„-, „ ll)sl
ohttaudiences neve, noticed. Yet Ihe original
Robert Bloch novel which started all ll
has a sense of humor. The shower
the novel ends on a distinct
"In a moment the knife cut oft her
— and her head. "
DePalma fills his film with visual i
of Bloch's halloween punchline- A"
Nancy Allen pursued through [he
New York by irate blacks who think si
been trying to pui the make on Ihei
stumbles right into the straight raz, :
transvestile she saw murder Ang:-. I
It's frightening in much the same u I
have someone in a fright wig jump i
in an amusement park haunted hous*
Dressed To Kill will eventually star,.:
one of the great films of the decade F I "
moment, it may annoy some people .'.
think it's obvious debt to Bloch and Httcl
is a liability, rather than a sign of exubera- •
a director who is too talented in his owi
to be justifiably considered nothing mor
a Hitchcock imitator. (Visually, Def i
doesn't use all that many of Hitchcock's
Foul Play looked more like a HitchcoLr I i
than most of DePalma's movies.)
In some regards. Halloween may ever.'. s
be seen as one of the most influential rr
of the seventies. Scores of imitators 51
Fnday the 13th. When A Stranger C:
Prom Night continue to appear and mak,
money, when more fantasy orientee.
films like The Shining and Dracula have rui
into trouble. What this might mean durii
upcoming month of October, when a flurr. 1
horror releases, both Halloween rip-, ffs 11
old fashioned fantasy like The A. .•••
(which is said to pit Charlton Hestor, ..
reanimated mummy), remains to be -• •
it seems lhat horror fans are more :• .
to sacrifice cinematic and literary valui
situations thai strike them as more be: •
Pressed To Kill. Prom Night. Frid .. thi
Halloween
and
the rest
slash'em-stab'ems all featurt
boogiemen. Even though many of thi
lions in them are not inherently plausil
Island, which doesn't feature one su|
element, is completely anbelii
diences will bel eve 11 - •
laws of physics stand up un
(The cynical critic might
knives ,ii- I .
eapproj
effects are expi - ..
A final thought wl
that horror mi
nngraphy are relatively mn
criticism There is an Immensi -. I 1
market composed of people .it
find some 1
decapitations Perhaps II -•
Iradiction In terms lo .:• al ivil thi
in print Bui 11 seems 10 me lhal il
are going to continue lo be so per.
50 influential, it becomes unreason
nore them
Film! like The Shining .md Dress
made by serious directors Interest!
si',ties people, are apl lo bet 1 n
mon Perhaps it's time in 11 1 •
diences also gave thought lo wl
scare us |, might lust be Ihe | 1
aftei ,.11
Stones Summer. Steadfast And True
Get up, Get out, Get Into something ne\
"Down In the Hole" Is sung wllh all kinds of
f >^™»hls is a line from the first song blues. The song contains a bluesy beat. New
I
. / "Dance" on the Rolling Stones' York City street performer Sugar Blue plays a
/ new album, Emotional Rescue, fine harmonica. The vocals are sure to make
• ^ ^ " ^ Good advice from a great band. It's you sad as Jagger reveals the struggle of life lo
also advice that the Stones should listen to. be necessary since everything, even cigarettes,
Doing "something new" has been a trademark are down in the hole which Is life.
of Ihe Stones
The title cut, "Emotional Rescue", was
The sounds they
thought to be the theme of the whole album.
have produced
Instead, only this song touches on that theme.
over their 1
Our poor misguided subject Is a girl who is
year period of
married lo a man for his money and is now,
rock supremacy
according lo Jagger, sexually deprived. Mick,
have
varied!
•on his white horse, comes to her rescue.
greally wilh ' ' " ' B r J M S M f l H . ' ^ V _
changing
at n M H l B f f f l l H [ a % ^
liludes and influences of the members.
However, their record is a departure from the
norm in that the Stones have produced an
album lhat could easily be confused wllh their
previous album Some Girls. This is not to lake
away from either album; both measure up well
to all standards of rock 'n' roll. It's jusl lhal
after waiting two years, for Emotional Rescue
one has the right to expect more out of the
Stones.
Cold". It could have been on any other Stones "Creativity came from within Ihe group.
Now, Watts raises sheepdogs In Wales,
album, but being on this one, It takes on a
stronger quality. Richards' and Wood's mixing :Wyman gets artsy with jazz and 95 year old arand soloing their guitar styles keep this tune tists In France, Jagger practices seclusion with
rolling. Jagger goes from singer to screamer, his neighbor John Lennon, Richards conand the song has a dangerously infectious tinues to try to prove his theory of heroin as a
beat. "She's So Cold" Is made for moving too. cure for the common cold. Wood bubbles
"All About You" features Richards on through the excitement of It all.
They are so unique when apart, so well
vocals, which Is always different.' Richards'
whine carries more bite and Is a good break matched when together. Still, the Stones are
some of the best musicians in the world.
from Jagger's vocal control over the album.
It has been 18 years since Ihe conception of Usually what they put down on vinyl Is worth
Ihe Rolling Stones. Il has been a long and il- listening lo for talent alone. Emotional Rescue
lustrious career. Members have come and Is no exception, even If you think you've
Ed Pinka
The first song, "Dance", isralher reminiscent of "Miss You", which Is quite a shame.
"Dance" carried the on-paper potential for being a truly hot lune. This Is due to Its funky
heat and the back-up vocals of prima reggae
crooner, Max Romeo — lead singer of the
Upsetters. However, the beal has been heard
before and Romeo's desperately needed
vocals are nearly nonexistent, with the exception of what can only be interpreted as bird
calls. With a title like "Dance", the song could
stand a little more upbeat to really gel your
feet moving.
"Summer Romance" is a perfect example of
a song the Stones could have done before.
This fast-paced number is about a sponging
lover whose main interests are hedonistic.
Aside from the fact that it resembles
"Respectable" in Its basic tune, the song is
generally about the topics of sex and money
— the prevailinu themes in many a Stones
song.
Now thai Mick and Keith reside in N.Y.C.
Ihey have given ihe album a true City sound.
There are obvious references to streets like
Sixth Avenue in the song "Dance", but more
(overwhelming Is the use of ihe music now
heard more than ever before on the streets of
N.Y. — reggae.
Reggae, with heavy bass and Caribbean
roots is nothing new lo Jagger. Mick helped
Peter Tosh on vocals on Tosh's hit "Don'l
Look Back". Reggae Is Ihe Stones only attempt at trying something new on this album
and "Send It to Me" with its light Jamaican
sound is one of the besl songs on Ihe album.
Wyman's bass line and Jagger's accented
vocals act perfectly to keep you listening to
Mick's diplomatic plea for the world lo send
him a qlrl.
"Lei Me Go" is your basic Slones' rocker.
Familiar guitars coupled with different beats
make Ihis song calchy as Jagger now pleads
for his lover to let him alone — I wish he'd
make up his mind.
The Stones rarely deal wllh politics and this
unfamillarity doesn'l help In the song "Indian
Girl". It comes across as a'Central American
political lesson that is thrown between the
album's love stories. Complete with latin
horns, percussion and strings, Jagger refers to
Che, the wages of war, death and famine, and
the hardships of Ihe Indian girl who loses her
parents in the struggle.
Next is "Where Ihe Boys Go". If you Ignore
its resemblance to "When Ihe Whip Comes
Down" II can be viewed as another up-tempo
song for the ladies of the listening audience, as
Jagger reveals where and why Ihe boys go
wherever they go.
Hard to believe, but Ihe Stones once played
top-rale blues songs. Upbeat blues was their
strong point In their early years. This beat hit
home with the mods and gave ihe Slones an
early following. Their Invasion of America,
came when soul and molown were getting
popular and Mersey-beal bands, like Gerry
and Ihe Pacemakers, had made It big, Enter
the Slones and back to the blues.
Wyman and Watts are the standouts on this
song, providing a heavy tight bottom, and
with Bobby Keys playing an interesting sax the
song lakes on a haunting quality. The falsettos
are also a good touch, but they resemble the
vocals heard on "Fool to Cry" (Ihose rumors
about Jagger imitating the Bee Gees were
jokes — right?)
The hottest lune on this album is "She's So
gone (Jones and Taylor), catastrophes and jail
sentences averted, and lifestyles have remained separate. This is important — lifestyles. In
many cases lifestyles dictate music and, with
Ihis group, a lack of changing lifestyle can lead
to stagnation.
Earlier albums, like Exile on Main Street,
and Satanic Majesties came out when the
band was living much more the rock star life.
Blotto, f he Transfer
A n d The A l b a n y Sounds
^-vock, punk, jazz, swing, comedy,
^ A r ^ b l u e s , Carolyrf Mas, The Pretenders,
<—' ^ Buddy Rich, Manhattan Transfer,
Blotto, Jorma, The associations are unmlstakeable; their contributions to music are
often its foundations and Its pinnacles; names
lhal you had only heard on late-night radio
may suddenly be at the top of the charts. And
In any given year there is an excellent chance
for you lo catch these acts at a club'that Itself
has jusl begun its acceleration — J.B. Scotts.
For many years there existed only two
auditoriums in Albany' thai could attract the
larger acts. The Palace Theater, downtown
near the river, still stands as Ihe largest Indoor
concert facility In town. Its stage Is awaiting
the'return of Bruce and his band, and the
perennial Kinks. Scheduled loo for this year Is
Marshall Tucker on September 23.
The other elder stage Is owned by SUNYA
at Page Hall. It Is a smaller, more personal
auditorium, but It is conventional In the sense
that Ihe audience sits in fixed-back seats, affor-
ding minimal participation. Tickets are
reasonable, the prices being underwritten by
University Concert Board. You can see from
anywhere in the house, and most performers
do seem to enjoy playing lo college audiences.
Manhattan Transfer opened up the
semester at J.B. Scott's on Thursday night to a
packed house of mostly SUNYA'ns. From the
stage to the most distant seat is perhaps sixty
feet; there Is a bar running Ihe length of the
room, and Big Dom's owns the sandwich concession In Ihe back. In every sense It Is like
having a show In your own living room.
The Transfer's style Is a new wave resurrection of 50's swing. In front of the session musicians are four performers who have rehearsed
themselves down lo each finger snap In a
ninety minute show. The choreography and
costuming are at least as good as their sound.
Having given new life lo the famous
"Birdland", and placing their pop hit "Twilight
£one" on Ihe major charts, their performance
heard it before.
The Stones have reached a pinnacle. They
are not just survivors, but one of the best survivors. What other bands say is great, the
Stones can only accept as satisfactory. These
are guidelines you must set and follow when
you are trying to prove yourself the best. After
18 years, maybe the Slones have nothing to
prove.
was nothing short of sterling.
On Saturday night, J.B.'s guesl was Blotto
a band that may own the category of comedy
rock. Hailing from points all around New
York, the band's originators met at Albany
Stale in Ihe early 70's. Once dubbed The Star
Spangled Washboard Band, remaining
founders Broadway, Bowlie, and Sergeant
Blotto pushed the evolution to where they are
today.
Where are Ihey today?
A number of New York City and Buffalo
stations have begun lo play their EP (even
though they are unsigned), and this summer
Ihey were Ihe attractions at clubs like Hurrah's,
Trax, and My Father's Place. "I Wanna Be A
Lifeguard" was voted the number two song ol
the summer by WNEW-FM listeners — first
was "Emotional Rescue", with,two more
votes.
Deserving special mention are Blotto's
cheerleaders, who will be providing the spirit
for the band's Softball game with WQBK's Pink
Flamingos on campus, September 21.
The calendar at J.B. Scott's Is a busy one
with four or five bands playing on a given
week. Prices and limes vary, but schedules will
appear for all area performances in Friday's
Aspects. Stay Tuned!
_
gon1 Levy §
September 9, 1980
Military Shame
Welcomes SUNYA
§
At the State
I'nlvi
l/ou i n
ono d o u n u iS,COO.
F*a/ilauo<t i n Hit
imaue/
Hedeemt>d hy wj# Suit/
5 u * r - i i f W iitf WJa /July .s'/il
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tO I . M W Jldfl (if
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HOUH
tntmrtMitt
Whora y o u r free i n / . i m i / l j
Where y o u r p r . i y p r « *fnl p r e
Whore y o u r potvntl.il
for «
Committee introductory
Wednesday, Sept. 17
Join
ua for
worship
Sunday mornings
at
lliOOl
rampua
Hinintiu
meetings: New Members Invited.
Monday.Sept. 15
7:00 Students for Israel
F\\m-America,l Love You free!!!
9:00 Spirit-Newsletter
Tuesday, Sept. 16
Thursday, Sept. 18
back!!!
7:00 World Jewry
9:00 Culture
7:00 Social Action
9:00 Social
7:00Chai-UJA
9:00Chavurah
All Members Welcome
Campus Center 361
Campus Center 370
Campus Center 373
Campus Center 373
for more info call 7-7508
SA funded
The U.S. Defense Department is
spending $200,000 to design what is
described as "the most efficent war
room money can buy."
The British publication New
Scientist reports that a Pentagon
contract has been awarded to a
British consulting firm for the
design of a communications center
that would be fully capable of directing World War Three.
The British firm working on this
project is an enterprise called Communications Studies and Planning.
The firm is reportedly conducting
studies in which four people simulating the President of the
United States and three top Pentagon generals - talk over war
Fifteen
Albany Student Press
use is responsible for this kind of
dialect because - in his words- " t h e
user believes that another reality exists that is different from the sober
world."
ZODIAC N
strategy over a closed-circuit T.V. of being identified as the one person
network.
with a different view.
New Scientist magazine says that
a special feature in the projected
Like, ya know
war room will enable each of the
generals to communicate with the
A language researcher at the
president anonymously. The reason* University of Illinois is out with a
for this "anonymous feature" is new argument against the legalizathai, during a time of extreme tion of marijuana.
crisis, a general might be reluctant
Bruce Hayman, a doctoral canto disagree with his colleagues or didate in English, claim* thai the
with the president face-to-face. widespread use of pot is having a
However, by being able to use ruinous effect on the English
special channels In- disagree language.
anonymously, the general would be
Hayman says that a drug-related,
able to speak his mind without fear subculture speech ' pattern has
29 North Pearl
10% Discount with
Student I.D.
developed among teenagers and college students in recent years - a
language that repeatedly uses such
phrases as "you know" and "like."
Hayman gives the following example: "So, you know, like Keith
orders this sandwich, and it's like
huge. And so, you know, we're sitting there, and he's holding it like
with both hands and eating it. So I
go, 'That's no sandwich; that's a
football.' And he goes, you know,
with his mouth full: 'Back off, will
ya? I'm getting in shape for dinner.'
It was really funny."
Hayman claims that marijuana
Planned Parenthood
returns to the SUNYA Campus
for the new semester.
MfifTS
482*9797
Wednesday 9-10
"group therapy"
thursday, friday,
saturday"spring fever"
TASTE THE BEER THAT OUTSELLS
MOLSON GOLDEN IN CANADA:
LABATTS.
Main Center 259 Lark St., Albany
Good news!
Labatt's, Canada's No. I selling beer, is now imported to the U. S
So, now it's easier to compare the taste of our Labatt's with the
brew of our friendly competitor
See what you think
We, like most other Canadians, prefer a bottle of Labatt's Beer
over a Golden.
If we didn't, we'd likely be drinking Molson® instead—and we
certainly wouldn't be running this ad
CAPITAL
BOOK STORE
THINK OF CANADA'
THINK OF LABATTS
<v/T
—-^A^Hl*—.
d?
Hayman says that people who
believe language is one of our major
accomplishments should be out
crusading against the legalization of
pot.
Dopey Law
For your gynecological health care needs we will be at
the SUNYA Health Center on Thursdays from 6-10p.m.
Appointments and Information call 434-2182
Open 9:30-5:00 Monday-Friday
10:00-4:00 Saturday
"like NVovT
Some legislators apparently don't
know exactly what they're voting
on.
The P e n n s y l v a n i a S e n a t e
Judiciary Committee was just abr ut
' to vole on a bill outlawing drug
p a r a p h e r n a l i a when , Senator
Michael Schacfcr pointed out that
no one knew what they were talking
about. The Senator was referring to
the words "bong" and "chillum".
Schaefcr asked his fellow
legislators if any of them could tell
him what a bong or a chillum was
and reportedly got a dopey
response.
Said Schacfcr, "I don't think we
should outlaw something if we
don't know what it is."
The legislators subsequently
voted to outlaw the sale of bongs
and chillums after finding out what
they were. A bong incidentally is a
water pipe and a chillum is a coneshaped smoking device.
I
Reagan in 'Space'
#
A group of nobcl laureates has
written a formal letter lo Ronald
Reagan, asking the GOP presidential candidate:- "Do you really
believe in astrology?"
The five Nobel Prize-winners, in
the letter drafted by the Federation
of American Scientists, say they are
"gravely disturbed" at recent
newspaper reports to the effect that
Reagan consults his horoscope
chart before making any major
decisions.
The letter alleges that there is no
scientific basis for astrological
beliefs, and adds - in its words "we would welcome any information you could send us that would
dispel the notion that your
presidential decision-making would
be biased by these or other superstitions."
$
Books^Old^Used»Bought•Sold
History-FictionPhilosophy-Art-ScienceLanguage-ReligionMagazines-Paperbacks
402 Broadway
434-4f.{7
ASP
Interest
Meeting
Buy one Specialty
Sandwich', get a
second of the same
kind,Free.
• BURGER
Wednesday
KING
September 17
8:00 LC 2
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Please present this coupon
belore ordering. Limit one
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where prohibited by law
This offer expires 9-30-80
Good only at
1047 Central Ave.
The Reagan-Bush campaign, in
response, has this to say: "Mr.
Reagan has a casual interest in
astrology, nothing heavy. He simply, like most people, checks the
astrology in the paper."
POP QUIZ-QiuudiMJ
A Brand New SA With Some New Ideas
by-Sue Gold, SA President
and Brian Levy, SA Vice-President
disabled students.
A perennial concern of students is the student health services. This past year the
Health Services Sub-Committee of the
University Senate began the task of identifying problems within the service via a questionnaire. This year, the work must continue
with a more intensive look at student perceptions of the quality of health care and begin
to develop solutions to the recurring problems.
During the past elections a major issue was
the interaction between SA and its funded
groups. Many felt that SA had traditionally
ignored groups and their problems. The
realization that a gap exists is a big step in
solving the problem, but to follow through
needs a real determination to make the relationship work. This 'summer, plans were
drawn up for a programming board. A Programming Board will allow groups to communicate more freely with other groups and
Welcome back. We hope you've settled in
and are ready to begin the upcoming
semester. We've been here all summer, along
w:th Controller Ira Somach and Central
Council Chair Peter Wcinstock, and have
been working on some issues and projects to
make significant changes for students.
We'd like to involve you In some of the
major issues facing students this year. The
most imminent problem facing students is
that some faculty members are attempting to
force us off the University Senate. As you
may know, last year, after many years of participation, the faculty body at their annual
meeting voted to discontinue student
representation. At a special meeting held a
few days later, the same body voted lo extend
our scats for a year with a faculty study
group formed to propose alternative Senate
structures and to report back at a fall faculty
meeting. This meeting is tomorrow. There
will be a resolution for the study group to
continue their work and eventually propose
one Senate structure. Some faculty feel that
students have no place on this committee.
by Peter Wcinstock, C.C. Chair
However, it is vital that students be allowed
lo participate in the process of creating a
and Artie Banks, C.C. Vice-Chair
viable university governance structure. SA
For those who don't know Central Counand Student Union Members have been
working relentlessly to insure student cil, it is the legislative branch of the student
representation. Until resolved, this issue will government. In Ihe past, Central Council has
be a major, if not the most important, priori- been maligned as a group of pre-law students
whose only consideration has been to further
ty this year.
SUNY Central has all but ignored student their own interests vis a vis their resume. This
input on major issues. This year the room has caused Council lo become engaged in
rent was increased 150 dollars (after students long-winded debate that sometimes overhad sacrified living in off-campus apartments shadowed the much larger concern of the stuto live in the subsidized dormitories). This dent's interests.
This year's legislative body, although sharhappened in closed door sessions of the
ing the name of Central Council, is. very difDoard of Trustees.
This is not the only area where the student ferent from its predecessors. Nol only is litis
voice was not heard. Student Association was Council pro-active, taking the lead on many
shown a copy of this year's new and extreme- issues, ii is also ebullient—reaching out to all
ly difficult bus routes after the decision had its constituents. Central Council is comprised
been made. Surely this was decided not at the of committees that initiate action as well as
last moment, and a decision like this, which answer to the voice of the students.
affects the daily routines of thousands of
students, should have been made with stuThe Academics Committee makes changes
dent input from the very beginning. Any in academic policy-improving advisement,
decision which affects students should have creating an accounting section just for nonstudent input — the logic is obvious.
majors, the ACT, etc. Currently, steps are
The problems that affect minorities arc being taken to make this November's prcanother area bf our concern. To better
registration the first one where peer advisors
understand this issue we are setting up a arc present. Also, this committee is working
minority affairs task force, which will ex- on a proposal for a pilot program of peer adamine the problems of minorities on this visors living on the quads.
campus as well as how SA fits into the picture. The task force will also appoint a
The Student Services Committee works on
minority affairs director. This year an Affir- projects like Cable TV, improving Health
mative Action policy will be brought to Cen- Services, working to gel an ice-skating rink,
tral Council — minorities, women and bicycle rental service, etc. Another event that
SA Leadership training and program
development will be one of the goals of the
board.
The issue of women's safety is a major
concern of women on and off campus. Offcampus women live in constant fear. There,
have been over fifty incidents in the Pine
Hills area and the Pine Hills molester has not
been caught. Due to the problems of
women's safety downtown, there has been a
heightened awareness of women's safety oncampus. Unfortunately, many people still
have a raise sense of security. The safety of
women is threatened both on and off campus. It is important that the university continue to take responsibility for the safety of
all students. We would like to continue raising the issue of women's safety — in conjunction with the President's Task Force on
Women's Safety.
Safety is not the only issue of which
students should be wary. Recently many
questions have been raised about the consistency and fairness of the judicial process
on this campus. Although judicial and administrative decisions concerning smdcni
conduct are not easy decisions, it is important that our judicial system is found lo be
fair rather than arbitrary. SA will continue lo
be working to end CIA-like tendencies concerning the incidence report form (ICF).
Every time an alleged problem occurs on
campus, an incident report is filed with Ihe
student names on it. These report forms were
originally intended to simply provide
statistics on incidents on quads. Unfortunately, they have taken on new meaning
and are used improperly and often abused.
The year is just beginning and we need
your help. There arc problems with this campus and there are very serious issues which
concern students. Student activism, however,
is not dead.
. . . And Council Expands Committees
kW WISH
TO 0eikY3
SUIT ~
AGAWST
W £
WIR5,
MR.
MARgA6e7 is A VIOtATlO)
astern®-"0**
fell into the Service Committee's realm was
the Firsl Annual Frosh Picnic, which we
hope gave the freshman a warm welcome to
SUNYA.
The Student Action Committee educates
students on issues and events outside of the
University that affect them. The committee
was formed this year to give SA needed
organization in the sphere of issues that include: safer conditions for off-campus
students, registering students to vote,
leaching students how to lobby and fight
against budget cuts and tuition increases.
This year's Central Council will he a higlll)
visible body on campus, for nol only are we
making pro-active changes, we arc also a
vehicle for students to get involved in Student
Association and its funded groups. Main
outreach programs arc and will be in piouk'ss
throughout the year. Some of these will lake
The committee that evaluates and makes place on the quads, where we ar•: taking pan
rulings on SA policies is Internal Affairs. in a massive voter registration drive I hill will
This year, however, the Internal Affairs continue into the fall. We will also be visiting
Committee will go even further. The commit- Quad Board meetings and eatin t on the
tee will be responsible for setting up referen- quads. Council representatives will I. taking,
dums lo guage student opinion on if and how opinion polls on the Quads in order lo insure
SA should act on controversial issues, i.e. the better representation. This will also help
draft. Inlernal Affairs also works on election serve the dual purpose of educating students
finance policy so that sludeni elections do on SA activities. We hope, however, thai we
not become thousand dollar bonanzas.
don't have to "come lo you", but rather that
many of you will slcp into the office and gel
Albany N.C.A.A. sports programs are involved.
overseen by the Athletic Finance Committee.
There are many areas and committees foi
In addition, the committee for the first time you to become pari of. Run for election ot
has created a sub-commlttcc to encourage just join the group of your choice. Either way
"spirit and excitement" for Ihe homecoming the impetus is on you. Central Council is now
and entire sports program.
more open and productive, bul once again we
need your feedback to keep us that way. CM. I
Lastly, Finance Committee can, at their INVOLVED...You arc not an Innocenl
discretion, recommend to Central Council an Bystander.
IWRIA66 |5 A VltXATOfJ
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additional appropriation to one of the eighty
funded student groups or the financing ol a
new group or event. This year's committee
will reach out to help groups so thai they will
be able to function more effectively and efficiently,
A N S W E R ^ 0 SAVE YOU HONEY!
CHARLIE
DflMlEL-S
SANTANA
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DEVADIP CARtOS SANTANA
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BEATIN' THE ODDS
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Let your boredom work for you
IVe need students
positions:
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Homecoming
Nice to be back.
Golden tans and summer smiles swim across the campus. Frolic and frisbees. And
everyone looks so damn healthy. Welcome back. Or hello — if you're just arriving.
And now — the abused question: So how was your summer? It seems to be the
most popular topic on campus these last few days. Saw someone on the podium
yesterday with a T-shirt that read, "Don't ask, it was fine." That seemed to sum it
up well enough.
Yes, welcome back indeed.
It's the time of year we seem to cherish most —- and cry to preserve — before the
Albany chill and eternal booking attempt.to rob us.of ihe seasonal magic.
Anyone notice the brand new sighs around the campus — in the student center,
even in the library. Real neat.
And the downtown dorm even has a new carpet. Love to run my naked toes over it
(why not?).
Funny how such little changes can catch the eye of a returning student.
We're pretty happy up here too. A few brand new typewriters, new writers (who
can't type), clean floors, fresh machines . . . atarpet! . . . what more can a journalist want out of life.
Bizarre how everyone rags about this place all year yet September brings us all
back in a flurry. And you new students may likely adapt as such. It's a 'vicious circle'. Only not so vicious.
Are we wrong or do students seem more politically active and aware this fall. We
can spot the energy — it showed its face when Anderson rode into town yesterday.
What an impressive crowd.
Perhaps this is due to the approaching presidential election. Or perhaps thij past
summer's draft registration freaked us out a tit. Or maybe a newly-elected student
government, a hyperactive assortment of groups such as SASU, Student Union, and
NYPIRG. Maybe because students may be losing a voice on the University Senate —
positions we held for twelve full years. Could be the sudden build-up of our defense
budget — nuclear weapons — the world situation. Perhaps a combination of all or
some of these.
Guess we'll have to look into it deeper. You can too.
As students at this university, we are changing the very face of it. Whether it be
our personal metamorphosis as we stride through a few years, or through our power
to affect change here — we can be certain of one thing and one thing only — that
when we leave, both ourselves and the university will be considerably changed —
each as a result of the interaction.
.
_
.
A dynamic process . . . if you take part. Follow your tune here at SUNYA and see
where it leads you. Grab the campus by its foundation and squeeze the energy onto
you. It's here for the taking. It's here for you.
Create. Do. Join. Experiment. Scream a little. Get loaded. Ace a class. Flunk one
too. Start writing that book. Fall in love. Get laid. Be celibate.
Interact with the environment and don't be concerned with what others (even your
roomie) may think.
You have an obligation to your heart. Be you.
And welcome home.
Students Must Be On Senate
O n c e again the question o f student representation o n the University Senate is here
— and w e strongly urge President O'Leary and all faculty members t o support it.
For the first time in twelve years, students had been voted o f f the Senate last spring by a count o f 114-112.
Students w o n a temporary victory when they were granted a one-year representation, but the structure is shaky.
many
UAS Membership Board
UAS Board of Directors
Bus Advisory Committee
SA Communications Department
SA Services Director
SA Affirmative Action Director
University Senate Committees
SASU Committee
Legal Services Search Committee
SA Teaching and Advising Awards
Committee
3
Bookstore Committee
Student Voice Staff
ACF Committe
Central Council Committees:
Academic Affairs
Athletic Finance
Finance
Internal Affairs
Student Action
Student Services
Student Association
We can't do it without you.
Rick up application SA Office, CC 116 457-8087
Anger of an Off-Campus Woman
To the Editor:
I keep a brick by my bed, a whistle under
my pillow. I lock my bedroom door, shul the
window and can't breathe. And still, 1 don't
feel really safe. The Pine Hills Molester(s) is
(are) still about.
It makes me angry not to be able to feel
comfortable walking in the streets or lounging in my home. It makes me angry that this
attacker would tie a woman to her bed and
proceed to molest her (August '80 on South
Allen St.) And my anger is only magnified
when 1 sec Mayor Comings attitude on the
entire situation.
Fifty-three attacks is not reason enough to
pass a city ordinance mandating that
landlords have good secure locks on their
tenants' buildings, or so the Mayor says.
What kind of shit is that? 53 attacks - and
those arc the reported ones. A case that has
been bewildering the Albany Police Dcpl. for
1-2 years and that's not "reason enough"?
Women go to sleep with bowie knives by
their beds, have whistles clutched in their
hands and are frightened to be in their homes
alone and that's not reason enough? You see,
just because you pay rent doesn't mean your
apartment has to be well secured.
Contrary to general belief, not all the
women who were attacked left their doors
open. Many entrances by the attacker came
about because of insecure locks on windows
and doors.
So be sure you lock up. However, if you
aren't satisfied with the locks on your doors
and/or windows, call Mayor Corning
(462-8600) and pressure him lo call your
landlord to rectify the situation.
Don't just get frustrated. Get mad. Our
collective anger will help force the city to lake
a role in making our home safe.
Terianne Falcone
ASP Letter Policy
Letters lo Ihe Editor should be kepi brief
and are subject to condensation. They must
l.i' typewritten and Include Ihe writer's name
and phone number, as well as affiliation indicating any special Interest in a subject,
when appropriate. Anon .vinous letters are
not printed, but names may be withheld upon
request. Drop Ihem off In CC 329 by Friday
for a Tuesday Issue and by Tuesday for a Friday issue. To submit columns, contact Ihe
Editorial Pages Editor ut 438-4262 or the
Edilor-ln-Clilef, ASP Offices, 457-3322 or
457-3389.
-
One has to wonder wliat students did to deserve this tally. It couldn't be apathy;
student senators show up at three times as many meetings as their faculty counterparts. It couldn't be lack of accomplishments; student senators have generally been
effective in gauging student opinion and translating it into coherent voices on the
floor.
It could be that some faculty members are tired"of having to deal with such competence. The University Senate is SUNYA's system of governance; it creates policy
which effects all the factions of the university. There is no question faculty members
deserve to be on the Senate. They work here. Students go to classes and live here,
and they too should have a voice in decisions which affect them. It's pure and simple
logic.
That argument alone is so powerful that all excuses by faculty opponents fade in
comparison. One gets the feeling that students are being punished for being well- .
organized and competent. Or perhaps for shortcomings of the faculty.
We urge President O'Leary, who has repeatedly pledged support for student participation, to join our struggle when meeting with the faculty on Wednesday. To the
112tnembers who voted for students, here is a heartfelt word of thanks. Let's hope
that many of these other faculty members care enough about this university to show
up Wednesday and work towards reversing this regrettable decision.
ROTC- Not With the Educated
"By 1984, given the involvement of such a large proportion of our young people with
military service, the military will have become a major instrument for youth socialization —
assuming a large portion of the role once dominated by the family, the church, the school, and
the civilian work setting.'.'
_
„
_. , . „ .
'.
- Thomas Can, Director ol Defense Education, Office of the Secretary of Defense
That's only four years from now. Is SUNYA on the way?
Perhaps it may be, if certain recruiters get their way, in the hopes of establishing
an ROTC office right here on campus. A University Senate Committee will soon address the issue, but President O'Leary would have to give approval.
Why the interest in ROTC? Well, it is claimed (by a recruiter who asked not to be
identified for some peculiar reason) that a SUNYA poll showed well over 300
students favoring and requesting the office. Neither the ASP, SA, SASU, nor the
Student Union heard of such a survey, and we'd all be most interested in when and
how it was carried out.
Why such an alarm?
Well,.a major goal of ROTC has been to increase student receptiveness and indoctrinization into the military.
Their techniques are astounding.
In 1978 for instances, a $70 million recruitment advertising campaign was spent
on school newspapers; sport schedules, magazines, posters, etc., exposing students
to an average of 9 to 10 military ads per month.
We must ask ourselves, is it appropriate for the military to use SUNYA as a
primary recruiting ground? Is it also justified for the Army to keep files on every
potential ROTC enlistee by obtaining names from schools, national testing
organizations, honor societies, and youth groups, as they do now?
And if plans arc in the making for an ROTC, why weren't parents and professors
consulted about how much military influence should be allowed on campus?
SASU voted last December againsl the establishment of ROTC offices on SUNY
campuses. Yet while some campuses have fought to keep them off (and won), others
now have established centers.
Perhaps activist Glcnda Poole, a mother of two sons, said it best:
"If we are to survive as a civilization we must not learn war any more. "
Wc ask President O'Leary and the Senate to deeply consider this sensitive and imperative issue.
Established In 1916
Rib Harber. Edilor In-Chief
Rob E. Grubman, Managing Editor
"7
N c w i Editors
Sylvia Saunders
Associate News Edltora
Susan Milligan. Belli Sexer
A S P e d a Editors
Rob Edelsteln. Ron Levy
Associate ASPecta Edltora
Joanne Weiner
Sports Editor
Bob Bellaflore
Associate Sports Editor
Marc Haspel, Larry Kahn
Editorial Pages Editor
Steven A. Greenberg
Staffwrlters: Patricia Branley, Beth Cammarata, Andrew Carroll, Bruce Fox. Maureen George,
Frank J. Gil Jr., Eric Gruber, Michele Israel. Amy Kantor, Debbie Kopf, Jeff Schadoff, Paul
Schwartz Zodiac & Preview Edltora: Abbie Hoffman, Barry Fried
Debbie, Kopf, Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Billing Accountant
Assistant Accountants
Composition Manager
•
Janet Dreifuss
Bernle Braun, Miriam Raspler
Bejinle Brown
Hayden Carruth
Salea: Steve Gortler, Robert Katz Classified Manager: Steve Robbins Composition: Fran
Glueckert, Hunk's Chick Advertising Production Manager: Sue Hausman Advertising
Production: Marie Anne Colavlto, Tammy Gelger, Dianne Glacola, Michele Israel, Susan Kaplan,
Mara Mendelsohn, Laurie Schwallberg, Carolyn Sedgwick Office Staff: Bonnie StevenG
Ellssa Beck, Hayden Carruth Production Managers
Joy Friedman, Bobby J. Benolt Associate Production Managers
Vertical Camera
Typiat Extraordinaire
Phil O6ophy
Hunk's Chick
Paste-up: Sue Benjamin, Dean Belz, Marie Itallano, Robin Lamstein. Dave Tannhauser,
Typlatal Rosemary Ferrara, Marie Garbarino, September Klein, Debbie Loeb, Debbie Schiller,
Laurie Walters, Chauffeur: Baker Kopf
Photography, Supplied principally by University Photo Service
Photographers; Roanne Kulakoff, Bob Leonard, Allen Calem, Karl Chan, Sieve Fsscn, Mike
Farrell, Mark Halek, Marc Henschel. Dave Machson, Sieve Nlgro, Carolyn Sedgwick, Suna
Slelnkarnp, Sue Taylor, Tony Tnssarotti, Will Yurman
Tile Albany Student Press Is published every Tuesday and Friday during the school year by the
Albany Student Press Corporation, an Independent notfoi .profit corporation. Editorials are written
by Ihe Edltor-ln-Chlef; policy Is subject to review by the Editorial Board. Mailing Address:
Albany Student Press, CC 329, 1400 Washington Ave., NY 12222
(5181 457-8892
•
.. •
-
1
September 9, 1980
Albany Student Press
Twenty-Two
Classified
Models Wanted
Photographer (API) needs models
for part-time work (Individual &
group) poster, gallery, & commercial — mostly figure — nude, semi
and silhouette — studio and locaPilco/Word — 10 cents
tion — mostly outdoor. Long hair
Price/Bold Word — 20 cents
(neat) & dance/yoga exp., helpful
Minimum Charge — $1.00
but not required. Write for rates and
Daadlines — 4:30 p . m . the release requirements to M.R., Box
preceding Friday for a Tuesday 22794, SUNYA Station, Albany, NY
Issue and 4:30 p.m. the preceding 12222.
Tuesday lor a Friday issue.
Where to Submit Personals — ASP
(CC332) until Sept. 15; S.A. Contact
0;llce (In main lobby of Campus
Center) after Sept. 14
Info
J
F o r Sol*?
Counselors 4 Creative People! Earn
up to $300 plus per week! 449-7409!
BABYSITTER wanted for 20 mo. old
ir I, my h o m e 9 a m - n o o n ,
ues/Wed/Thurs convenient to Ontario Busline — Ideal for downtown
dormperson or off campus student.
Call 482-7679 1-7 pm.
Earn $8.00$20.00 an hour teaching
needlecraft! Call Lisa 489-5038.
?
j u d o Gl's For Sale. Large & Medium
$25.00 482-0144 after 11 pm.
For Sale: 71 Chevy Impala, All
Power, 4 Door, Runs Well, 20 mpg
highway, Must Sell. $600.00 Call
David 482-0814.
For Sale: Like New Lange
'Phantom' Ski Boots. $80 or best offer. Call 434-0436.
Magazines I will beal any student
price. Call Rick 438-0474.
cflRLfflf'S
STUDfflTCOUPGri
APT d DPflf Tina SUPPUK
20%STUDff1T CASH COUPOn
(Service*
TVPING — 3 qualltled typists
located near campus. S1.«WPBge.
Call BEFORE 9 p.m. 438-8147,
8697149.
Wanted: Female grad student or
faculty (staff) who commutes and
needs a place a few days a week only. Own room In beautiful 2 bedroom
townhouse apt. across Washington
park. $120 per month. Feminist
preferred 436-0273. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Personals
Roger and Mark,
Looking forward to Later.
Marie and Sept.
Hey...
Not as much as I missed Y 0 U S e | t h
O K. gang, here's looking for a Ianmstlc finale on Hudson Avenue
w i t h g o o d l i m e s a n d g o o d Pfegrot to Inform you that I really
neighbors.
have nothing to say because you
know It all.
Elvse Sherl & Laura
,
It's great being back with a I of you! Looking forward to the good times,
Marie
Let's make our last year at SUNYA
the best yet!
n-hw=
Love always, Debbie
Carol,
To the girl who has her Initials on
he side of my red truck (and you
thought It stood for Sex Maniac):
thoughts are longer
Welcome to Albany. Best of luck
this semester. I'm really glad you re
here. I LOVE YOU.
than miles...
Love, The Initials on the other door
Tom S. - I still miss you very much
and will see you this fall.
Love, Lisa S. (In Albany)
To the first person whoTeaiizes the
grammatical error in the Just-ASong ad, goes a free 7.98 list album
of their choice.
rvijc
When to the heart of man
Was it ever less than a treason
lo bow and accept the end
of a love or a seaspn?
Welcome to Albany!
Love Always, Your persistent little
bugger
BT and Cab,
Like It's been swell and thanks tor
everything. It's gonna' be a long
year but there's always the dishes.
We no longer live on Dutch,
Amazon
That's true.
But yes, we still do hate you,
TO ALL MEMBERS AND NONJAPS.
MEMBERS OF THE PEP BAND
WHO PLAYED MONDAY AT THE
Classified Ads may be handed in at
ANDERSON RALLY:
No, we haven't forgot you and we the ASP during business hours (in
want YOU to come to the party. Call room 332) until September 15 (after
September 15, submit them to the
458-2139 for Info about It.
Dave Q. Contact Office). Classified Ads cost
o n l y 10 c e n t s / w o r d a n d 20
Bleecker; Blast Beyond Let's all cents/bold word. Minimum charge
have a dynamite year.
Is $1.00.
Chuck'S Janel So why not submit a classified ad?
NOW AUDITIONINGSalaried sing- They're cheap and they get the
ing positions available for tenors message across!
and basses In the Cathedral Choir
HELEN!
of Men and Boys. For information,
(Sorry, I couldn't resist, you ole
call 465-1342.
" H e l " raiser!)
Dearrat Little Baloncyho-ad,
Selth,
Sorry, NO WATCHING on Ihis visit
I really missed you all summer.
and I always get control.
Love, Pony
P.S. The rates are $50 a night.
'
always,
All you Newsfolk,
future Editors,
Creative Writers,
Production Whizzes ,
and then some:
The long awaited AlbanyStudent Press Interest Meeting is upon us.
Rib
Happy Birthday-
Wednesday September 1 7 8:00 PM LC 2
Frank Baitman!
MMM
— Deb and all
LOST NOTEBOOK
SUNY 3-subject tan
consisting of poetry,
songs, and writings
Very valuable to me!
Reward offered.
Drop off at
Campus Center
Info Desk or call-
Howard Johnson's
Back to School Specials
curs
PERMS
COLORING
7 6 5 - 2 0 7 5 or 4 5 6 - 3 3 9 1
Melissa
L
IF
WHHJ0PB
JOHN-SUE-JAN.
KITTY
4 Central
Ave.
Albany
Call
463-7593
DON'S TAXI
489-6220
Arlene's
Artist
Materials
Four Pieces of
Fried Chicken
Potato Salad
Bread and Butter
$2.95
O*
'
Grilled Ham Steak
Topped with Pineapple
Whipped Potatoes
Vegetable, Bread and Butter
$2.95
Stuyvesant Plaza
O p e n 2 4 Hours a Day
DOWNTOWN JEANS
%
2 4 llOUR SERVJCE
•
,sy'
" W o R k i N q HARd TO MAliE
I
TAkiNq A TAXI
AFFORDABLE"
S E R V I N q Y O U R T A X I NEEcls IN
Skateboarding /
Rollerskating
• INDOOR/OUTDOOR FEATURES
• REASONABLE SESSION RATES
• FULLY-EQUIPPED PRO SHOP
COIONIE, LATIIAM,
CuildERUwd.
Check OUR pRICES IN ThE STudENT
dlRECTORY OR JUST CALL
DON'S
• stiff jeans*pre.-wash jeans*
• flannel shirts*
• Western shirts*skirts*
• jackets*vests*Ms. Lees*
* corduroy*
TAXI.
212 Western Avenue
Albany, N. Y. 12203
next door to
"The Lamp Post" '
(518)449-8566
Club S k a t i n g Available
Form a club at your school and skate at reduced rates!
IF pOSSlblE plEASE CALL ArlEAd ANd
RESERVE A CAD. C A D pOollNq
Directions: 1-90 to Everett Road Exit and continue tour
blocks past "Quality Inn"
ENcouRAqed.
* B o n j o u r jeans & c o r d s *
* corduroy skirts*
* i ;rgio Valentes*
* clown v e s t s *
SHARINq A CAD SAVES MONEY.
* Jordache jeans & c o r d s *
* Pea-Coats*
•A-Calvin Klein l e a n s *
* sweaters *
IHiM»lftiftia:M^ll:n{iyaBSggB2l
T h i a C o u p o n G o o d for O n e D o l l a r O f f R e g u l a r '
S k a t e Fees at Sonic W a v e S k a t e P a r k
Offer Expires October 5, 1 'J80
Limit One Per Customer
)!VE discouNT FOR shARiNq A CAR.
* DESIGNER
JEANS*
* Sasson jeans & c o r d s *
* Smith's carps and overalls*
•MHamMMJHP***"
MASSES
Roman
Catholic Community
Saturday - 6:30 PM
Chapel House
Sunday -10:30 A M Brubacher Lounge
Sunday - 12:30 PM
Daily- 11:15AM
Chapel House
Room 358
Campus Center
Did you ever want to be in
jthe mcMes?Now you can by joiningj
Albany State Cinema!
For info on our interest meeting
call 7-8520
FIVEdPAD
Volunteer Aittbwlanee
Service
Interest Meeting
and First Aid C o u r s e Info
What makes Tech Hif i
the best place to buy stereo?
Sept 8&9 at 7:00 PM in IC 2
COME SEE WHAT WE'RE All ABOUT !
THE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
is hiring PUBLIC ENFORCMENT AIDES
for the 1980-81 academic year.
POSITIONS
Senior Parking Enforcement Aide(1)
Approximately 15 hour week. Some supervisory responsibilities. $3.50 per hour.
Parking Enforcement Aides (6)
12-14 hour week. Will write and issue parking violation
tickets in campus parking area. Individual will work during the day, Monday through Friday. $3.00
Any one interested please contact Assistant Director
Henighan at 457-7770 or Associate Director Herbert at
457-8627.
Appliance stores
and department stores
are not the best places
to buy quality stereo.
You'll do much butter at
a stereo store.
The problem is,
which stereo store" You're about
to read why over 2 million music
lovers have decided to buy from
Tech inn.
It's OK
to pick our brains.
(We know our stereo).
Internship Positions Available
Student Legal Services
Contact Jack Lester at 457-7911
or in Campus Center Room 116
The salespeople at Tech Hli'i
knew what they're talking about.
They work at Tech because they
love stereo, not because they
love selling.
Our people keep up with all
the latest equipment, and can tell
you the differences among the
leading brands.
You get to play
at Tech Hifi, not just look.
Some stereo stores have
signs all over that tell you
"Don't Touch The Merchandise".
At Tech Hifi our signs say
"Come Play." We encourage you
to spin knobs, push buttons, toss
switches, and try out any of the
components in our soundroom.
If you take enough time to play
in a Tech 11 ill soundroom, you'll
gel a good idea of which
equipment sounds best in your
price range.
The buying power of the
65 Tech Hifi stores.
The reason why no store has
better prices than Tech Hifi is no
dealer buys quality components
in such a Huge volume as the (15
Tech Hifi stores.
You'll find OUT prices are as
good as anybody's, and often
better on some brands.
You might expect to pay
extra at Tech for all the-extra
things we offer. But you won't.
At Tech Hifi w e back
what you buy.
When you make any big
investment like quality hifi,
make sure you're getting sound
guarantees.
Tech Hifi gives you guarantees most stores don't.
And we'll give them to
you in writing, right on
your sales slip.
Our guarantees
include a 7-day
moneyback
guarantee
(no quest ions
asked),
30-day price guarantee.
00-day defective
exchange. 3-month
full-credit swap (for
any reason), and a
1-year loudspeaker
trial.
Our guarantees are backed
by the Tech Hifi Service Centers.
If the equipment you buy from
us ever needs service, we have
trained professionals who will
make things right. Fast.
Our back-to-school sale
This is a good time to buy at
Tech Hifi, because we're having
our annual back-to-school sale.
You'll find complete systems
on sale right now for as little as
$189. and lots of name-brand
turntables, receivers, loudspeakers, and cassette decks are
on sale as individual
components.
Come in this week
and listen to what
your money can
buy at Tech Hifi.
The best place
to buy stereo
Vhtu $1HB systvm ilolivem good sound nt :i low pric
The nmuivuv is n TDC 11500 with T Look tuning Hint ollmlnntos FM
drill. Tlw Itiutlspunliors mv compact, wido-riuigu Studio Design (fi's and
HIP UmitHlilu is n inultiplu-phiy Col lam (251 with n Philips eiirtndgo.
tech hifi
V/SA'
Quality components at the right price.
Three credits offered thru sociology
L
Interviews conducted until the last of add/drop.
1529 Central Avenue, Colonie 869-0930
Stores also throughout New York, New Jersey, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
Connecticut,
Michigan and Ohio.
.......„_....._ . ...
Organizational Meeting for the
DISTURBED?
WORRIED?
CONCERNED?
If you served before,
we want you.
SUNYA
Big BrotherBig Sister
Program
A b o u t a Friend o r Relative
W h o Is Drinking T o o Mnch?
AL-ANON Can Help
Everyone is Welcome!!!
Monday, September 15th
in L C 6 a t 7 pm.
Meets Mondays
7:30 p.m.
Chapel House, SUNYA
489-8573
obligation for lust coming to llnd out about usl
There's no
If you were in the Service belore, enlisting tn the Army
Reserve could provide many benefits,
To start. you may get your old rarw back if you've been
out less than 3 0 months
Pay is up Staff sergeants with six years service get
over Vi-lOOayear (before deductions).
Maybe you didn't complete the job training you wanted
last time. Maybe you'd like to acquire a new skill. Both
good reasons to join
It you qualify, you can enlist for a minimum of one year.
Check openings today.
JSC Hillel presents:
SASHA NANUS
Call Army Reserve
Opportunities
Toni,
463-1173
A Mime Presentation
Happy 22nd.
former appearances:
The Guiding Light.Saturday Night,
Woody Aliens 'Untitled',
Formerly of The Claude Kipnes
Mime Company
LC25
TLBS. Sept. 9
JSC 50*
I.D. $1.00
Others $1.50
Part of What You Earn is Pride.
Love y o u ,
Steve
SA Funded
For More Into 7-7508
MEN-WOMEN
WELCOME BACK
9I£R)
&we
Get quick cash from home.
When your parents make a deposit to
yoi.jp account before 1 p.m., the money's
available the very next day through
MoneyMatic.
Get Ttartedl
Tell It To The Marine.
Tonite!!!!
LC1
We put 2 MoneyMatic
Day and Night Banks
on campus so you can
bank anytime.
All you need is CashCard. It's the banking
card that's yours for the asking when you
check or save at the Marine. And as long
as you're a SUNT Albany student, you'll
have a no-charge checking account.
WE LET MUSIC BREATHE...
Don't Forget!!!!
'There is no way to peace.
-A.J. Must
Peace is the way.
Get cash, from your checking
or savings.
Sports
News
and
a whole lot more!
/®
•Military training is for military jobs. Fred Shirley of the U.S. Army Public Affairs Office said that 53 percent of Army jobs are unpopular combat jobs offering no skills in civilian life.,
•Unemployment among young veterans is 1-1/2 times that of the same age group.
•Racism continues in the military. Blacks make up 27 percent of the armed forces but only about 4 percent
of the officers corps. Nearly half of the military prison population is black. Blacks receive twice as many
less than honorable discharges as whites.
•Most military women end up in low-slalus jobs. Aboul 70 percent of all Army women work in traditional
career fields — as secretaries, clerks, and medical aids.
•The current mililary dcscrlion rale (one out of every eight recruits) is Ihe worst in history.
•The recruiter canirt)! guarantee job placement.
•The mililary can change Ihe lerms of your contract after you enlist.
•Any disobedience-can bring criminal punishment — without Ihe right lo legal help or a trial.
•Your right lo free speech, expression, and grooming will be restricted.
•Are you prepared lo fight in any war this government may decide is needed?
•If you are dissatisfied after enlisting, do you know how hard it is lo get out?
To find out more about what recruiters aren't telling you, contact.'
Veterans For Drafl Resistance
P.O. Box 40755
San Francisco, CA 94140
or the
Albany Student Union Peace Project
Campus Center Room 348
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the Center's open.
TO THE VERY BEST IN
Rock
Jazz
Third World
The Recruitment Put-on
or
How we'll pay you $288 a month
to learn to kill.
General Interest
Meeting
8:00 p.m.
Ask for your account
and CashCard at our
Marine branch just
off campus at 899
Western Avenue.
M A R I N E
IN/1IDL.AIMD
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L a t e n i g h t typist for
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SA funded
Call Marilyn - 4 5 8 - 2 1 3 9
WftWSS
f
State University of New York at Albany
The
Music Department
I
invites the
|
participation of
students, staff and |
the community
in the...
• UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA
Nathan Gottschalk, Director
PAC21B 457-7514
THE SUNYA
GAY & LESBIAN
ALLIANCE
welcomes all its friends and
members back
for the 1980-81 school vear.
1st Meeting tonight
9 PN CC 373
| and every Tuesday night same time and place.
• SUNYA JAZZ EMSEMBLE
Ray Retllg, Director
PAC B-07 474-8007 or 872-2505
j
IUNIVERSITY CHORALE
AND UNIVERSITY SINGERS
|
Don Haines Guidotti, Director
PAC B-04 457-8280
• SYMPHONIC CONCERT BAND
Henry Carr, Director
PAC B-26 454-1830 or 439-5146
Meeting to
welcome new members and to
discuss years activities.
A u d i t i o n s — A c a d e m i c c r e d i t available
S e p t e m b e r 3rd t h r o u g h S e p t e m b e r 10th, 1980
Qubactivity Section - G and L Alliance,
9PM, CC- 373, opening Welcome Meeting
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
SPEAKERS FORUM
September 9, 1980
Recruiting Rampage Gives Batmen New Look
Lineup Shuffle Bolsters Talent
by Marc Hnspel
1980 team has the talent and depth
A mostly revamped Albany varsi- to win.
ty baseball learn opens its fall
Winning did not come easily last
season September 13 against Utica. season as the Danes finished with a
After going on a "recruiting ram- 12-19 record. Fifteen of those
page" during the ol'fseason, Albany games, however, were decided by
head coach Rick Skeel feels that his one or two runs. Nonetheless, Skeel
was not happy with the team's
resuTtS and sought to rebuild his
squad for 1980.
"I'm never satisfied with a losing
season. I'm not too sure that wc
were a whole 'ot h iter t' in how we
did," said
Subsequent!/, after heavily
recruiting prospects, this year's ball
club has strong playei
seemingly
every position. Said Skeel, "We
have quality people where we need
them."
One weak area of last year's
squad was pitching. Perhaps it was
due to a harsh schedule consisting
mainly of doublcheaders, but rarely
TQprt IJ0
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8 :00 PM in LC 1
MARUSZCZAK
IVlon.-Wed.-Thurs.,
Organizational
Meeting
Tuesday, September 9
CC. 370
ALL
v~V
ARE
WELCOME!!
9:00 P.M.
>JMNMMmMM0:
If you have any talent (or lack
of it), can play anything from a
cowbell to a sousaphone, and
want to meet new people,
travel to exotic SUNY schools,
or just get in free to football
and basketball games...
The Albany State
Pep Band Needs You!
< 55 Colvin Ave., Albany
438-6066
489-0191
438-6066
Sportshoes
S h o e s for All Sports
If MB...
then the world's going era w1
Come check it out and play
with the hottest group on
Campus. Rehearsal tonight at
7:15 in PAC B-28. All are
welcome.
UNISEX SALON
We've move
Ave., corner
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It happened to ;ccr;tarles first. Then lawyers, bookkeepers, waitresses
cabbies, housewives and businessmen succumbed to the beauty or our
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pens. But s it really so crazy to love a Pilot Razor Point pen that writes wIth
a sharp smooth line ,ind costs a mere 79C? Is It nuts to flip ovei its unique
i!ttlemPe.al collar thai smartly helps to keep its point from going squish?
If It is craiv It's going to surpnse a whole lot of people. In fact, we
understand that Pilot Razor Point even has what It takes to score extra
points with football players.
< italsocomesiooui attent.-..
coaches are fans of the Pilot Flnellno1
Along with all the other Razor
Point features, the 69C
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that holds the ine-uke a pilot..jpy^ fmeNne marker pens
Mom mnn lusi lomuthino lowiite with,
store at 1182 Western
. 200 yards east of the
entrance.
Addidas, Nike, Puma
Converse, Pony, Brooks,
New Balance, Etonic and
other brands
'..
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i
]
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olden
days
Tues.-Thurs.-Fri..evenings by appnt.
j
there is a new first baseman,
Oneonta transfer L'ou Capozzi.
Skeel is really high on his double
play combo of Tortorello and
Rivera. Tortorello, the best addition to the diamond is, in Skeel's
eyes, tjie best shortstop around.
"He's got major league moves,"
Skeel said.
Behind the plate, Skeel has three
big catchers all capable of filling
that position. The leading candidate
is all conference player Rich Cardillo, but he is hurting and Skeel
may look to newcomer Jerry Rosen
and Bob Brunncr, both of whom
can change the complexion of the
game with the crack of the bat, according to Skeel.
Speedsters Tom Verde, an arrival
from Brockport St. and Matt Antalek, one of the top-rated outfielders In the conference plus
heavy-hitting Tom Matejka will
comprise the Dane's outfield.
Offensively as well as defensively,
the 1980 leant seems to be very
strong. Now, it's a matter of blending this team of strong individuals
into a winning unit,
"We've got to get used to each
other. It has to be a together thing.
The quality individuals have to play
together," Skeel commented.
'They're accepting every challenge.
Wc don't want to lose. We'll be
putting on a new look. We're a very
improved ballclub."
>
DEE
R6BERT M A « U « C Z A K
The Pep Band N e e d s You!
First
did a pitcher stay in for more than
five innings. Yet this season Skeel is
counting on three main starters who
he feels can do the job — Mike
Esposito, a mainstay from last
year's staff pitched very well as a
starter and in relief. Campbell is a
strong throwing lefthander out of
Syracuse and Vaughn is a righty
with an excellent fastball.
"I have confidence in Jimmy. All
he's got to do is the job expected of
him," remarked Skeel.
The Danes will feature an excellent infield this season with
Bruce Rowlands, formerly the
team's second baseman moving
over to third. Bob Tortorello, a
recruit from Rockland Community
College, is at shortstop. Frank
Rivera now tends second base and
COMMUNITY SERVICE
$10.00-shampoo, cut
$30.00-perms, inc. cut
withl.D. and preferably appnt.
-9
Twenty-Nine
Albany Student Press
- f o r - ••
Running, Soccer,
Basketball, Tennis,
Raquetball, Softball
*nd other sports
Mon.-Frl. 12 noon-8 p a Sat. 10 aav4 pi
438-6066
. _
^ Missing
Jewel
(AP) Eight times he has tried, and
eight limes he has failed. The U.S.
Open championship remains the
most prominent jewel that is missing from tennis king Bjorn Borg's
crown.
Borg, the five-time Wimbledon
and French Open champion, was
denied his first U.S. Open title by
John McEnroe 7-6, 6-1, 6-7, 5-7,
6-4 fn a four-hour, 10-minute
thriller Sunday. But the disappointment did nol end then.
"The next day when you wake up
you still think of the match," Borg
said Monday during one of a series
of endorsements and appearances
that have been lined up before he
and and his wife Mariana return to
their Monte Carlo home on
Wednesday. "You'd like 10 forget
about it, to wipe it from your mind,
but people keep reminding you
about it wherever you go. But the
tournamcnl is' over. You can only,
look ahead."
And what does Borg sec?
"I will be back," he promised. "I
will keep trying. I have many years
still on,the circuit. As long as I still
have goals and can give all l can into tennis, winning the U.S. Open
will be my biggest goal."
After losing the five-set thriller
and seeing his Grand Slam hopes
fade into the New York night for
.the third consecutive year, Borg
went out to a late dinner with
Mariana and his coach, Lennart
Bcrgelin. "We didn't speak too
much about the match," he said. "I
tried to put it out of my mind."
But clearly, coming so close to his
first Open title, yet falling short,
was very much on his mind,-even as
he spoke with newsmen after receiving a $10,000 check as the 1979 winner of a computer-based evaluation
of all tennis events played during
the year.
September 9, 1980
Thirty-One
Albany Student Press
White Leads Cowboys Over Washington,
(AP) Danny While, quarterbacking
Dallas with the aplomb of a Roger
Staubach, directed touchdown
drives capped by runs of 6 drives by
Tony Dorset! and 4 yards by Ron
Springs Monday night as the
Cowboys beat the Washington Redskins 17-3.
Although it was the defense that
throttled the Redskins and handed
them their first defeat in nine Mon-
University Concert Board
Cowboys got the ball.
He drove them 80 yards in 12
plays, chewing up 6:39 of the clock
in the process. He passed four
times, completing three for 38 yards
The six-year pro, who spent one before Dorsctt stutter-stepped in
year as a siarter with Memphis in the final 6 with 2:15 to go in the
the World Football League and the first period.
next four as Staubach's rarely used
It was the only score the two-andunderstudy, put Dallas on the a-half point underdog Cowboys
scoreboard the second time the needed to win their 16th consecutive
JSC HILLEL LEAGUE STARTS
AGAIN!!!
BAWD
wOi Spcid Gtofc TH£ FABUCOUS THUKD8RB9RD8
Tuesday, September 23 at the Palace Theatre 8:00 PM
Tickets : $9.00
day night home games it was the imperturbable White who shouldered
the pressure, stepping as he dkl into
the shoes of a mere legend.
17-3
Interest meeting: Wed. Sept. 17 at 9pm,Campus
Center 373.
Bowling League will run on Tuesday nights from Sept
through" March! Forming 16 co-ed teams!!
New members invited-All are welcome.
More info, call
Neil
449-3327
or
7-7508
National Football League season Washington 9.
opener.
Mark Moseley, who had missed
But White, who completed a con- on Washington field goal attempts
servative 10 of 18 passes for 107 of 45 yards in the second period and
yards and was intercepted twice, 29 in the third, finally got the Redwasn't finished. In the second skins their only three points with a
quarter, he guided the Cowboys 55 45-yard line drive on the first play
yards in seven plays before Rafael of the fourth period.
Septien kicked a 19-yard field goal.
The big play was a 37-yard bomb to
Then the Cowboys nailed the cofTony Hill that put the ball on the fin shut, consuming 8:28 of that
final period on route to Springs'
4-yard scoring run at the end of
another 12-play journey, this one
covering 59 yards.
By this time, Dorset! was out of
T-Shirt Art
a
the game with leg cramps. But he
offers
",
had done his job. He carried the
Student
Special
•
ball 17 limes for 66 yards.
When he was gone, Springs and
|
20 y,
S i
5
rookie James Jones shouldered the
• Discount on ALL our fashionable T-Shlrts,
|
burden, Springs tacking on 50 yards
£ , M I M M ^iij,S«fi'iw^!ffil{£iiJ^ffiffi-i—-I-TH 4
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Also volume discounts to TEAMS, CLUBS, FRATS
yards on 10.
While White went to the air only
You Name It! • We Print It
when Coach Tom Landry wanted
him to, Washington quarterbek Joe
813 Madison Ave
434-1005
Thelsmann threw primarily because
(between Quail and Ontario)
he had to. He let the ball loose 33
Custom Screen Printing
times and completed 18 for 181
yards. He was intercepted once.
unrnteiiD
for students
COSIMO'S Inc.
$ 1 1.00 for the general public
ITALIAN-AMERICAN
RESTAURANT
|SA FUNDED
Catering to BanquetsAir Conditioned
First Capital District Health
Fair Coming Soon!!
MIDDLE EAiRTH PRESEWfSs
A PERSONAL GROWTH- SUPPORT CROUP
Date: Saturday, September 27, 1980
C.C. Ballroom
OPEN TO ALL
SUMY A STUDENTS
SOME OF THE ISSUES WE WILL BE EXPLORING:
-Love & Friendship
-Career Development
•SVective Communication -Time Managenwnt
THIS GROUP WILL MEET ONCE A WEEK DURING THE FALL
'80SEMSTIR BEGINNING THE WEEK OF SEPTEMBERS.
W8Q CROUP SIZE IS LIMITED.
FOR MORE INfORMATION
MIDDLE E A R T H a t 457-7SOO
ALL INQUIRES ARE STRICTLY QCNFDENTLAL
SHABBAT SERVICES
For Further Information Contact
Myles Kobren
457-7865
Ricki Steinberg 457-7685
Lavergne Andre
869-6194
ShuiE.
ROSH HASHANAH SERVICES
IJOUX
Icka ami f^Cin^i. Jjout
2 W ±ufifioxt fxom otbx xztuxnLnc) itucL-nhi
H
Telephone 489-7106
1164 Western Ave.
Albany N.Y. 12203
||||
Across from Shop Rite
Meet Admissions Officers from
schools of Medicine, Dentistry,
Optometry, Nursing,Podiatry, etc.
Adult Returning Students
Feeling lost?
every Friday evening:
6:30 Chavurah upstairs in Chapel House
6:30 Traditional downstairs
every Saturday evening:
-All invited9:30 Traditional
-Klddush followingChapel House
Liberal: Wed. Sept. 10 7:30 PM
in
Thur. Sept. 11 10:00 AM Campus Center
Fri. Sept. 12 10:00 AM Room 375
Traditional: Conservative
Temple Israel
438-7858
For more
OHAV SHALOM
489-4706
info, call
Orthodox
7-7508
Beth Abraham -Jacob 449-7813
I lome 1 lospitallly avallable,call Lyn at 459 8000 or 457 7508
,sc
Happy Hour:
Monday - Friday 4:30- 6:00
call Middle Earth 457-7800
Sign up for a S u p p o r t G l t H i p
^MtiliRetumingStudents
'I'^ii'l/l i H . ' q i y i K . ^
>,M,"_i Jl
II
I,I.
Bamboo slat blinds connote
"fresh", "cool" and "casual".
Their charm comes in part
, from the patterns of light
and shadow they create.
But they embody more, a yinyang ,of inside, outside—a
sense of mystery from objects
partially unseen—a sense of
space beyond the field of
vision. Perceptions not
lost on the ancient Chinese.
Clues to the origins of bamboo blinds exists in 2,000year old Chinese "books",
writings on bamboo slats
strung remarkably like our
blinds. Perhaps a calligrapher discovered the modern use
unfurling a scroll before the
morning sun. It's a perception as charming today as
during the Chou Dynasty.
The Journey: From the vast
bamboo thickets of Taipei,
craftsmen harvest, split and
j$,is-«*^ string the natural
J^^4*
blinds. Laded on
I V T B C Vf
steamers
out
of
'*«««•*
Keelung, they make
the passage west to Long
Beach. Clearing customs,
they move by rail to Pier 1.
Bamboo slat blinds:
,8B
3.99.
3x6' Reg.
5.99.
4x6' Reg.
7.99.
6x6' Reg.
8x6' Reg. 10.99.
10x6' Reg. 12.99. .10.88
Shop Monday/Saturday 10-9:30, Sunday 12-5
- 1 2 0 Wolf Road
459-5304
MIDDLE EARTH
457-7800
COUNSELING
A N D
CRISIS CENTER
Information and Referral
Hoc Line and Walk-In Services
Ongoing Counseling
Workshops and Groups
1Cia SCHUYLER HALL
DUTCH QUAD
vm
m
September 9, 1980
Albany Student Press
Thirty-Two
He's definitely got the ability as well pull off some surprises. Everybody
by Jeff Schadoff
is really giving 100 percent and
The Albany men's varsity cross as Todd — who has already been hanging tough. We'll be running
country team opens up their 1980 tested and shown he can carry the
100 miles easily this week. Righl
campaign — their 19th season l o a d , " commented Munsey.
now I'm pretty impressed but
overall — with a rather exorbitant Bradley said, "1 didn't run last year
basically we're in a rebuilding
task ahead of them. "We have a which makes it tough. There's some
year."
staggering schedule ahead of us," pretty big shoes to fill. I hope to do
Munsey is really depending on
well-maybe even win a few meets.
comments Albany coach Bob
This is a new experience for me but the younger guys to pull through.
Munsey.
I feel I'm adapting ralher well."
They will be the ones to figure very
The Harriers ended the 1979 year
Silva remarked on a pre-scason important in the end results.
with a rather disappointing 8-6
analysis saying, "We're a very Newcomers include freshmen Jim
record with the junior varsity team
Robertson and Ting Kwok along
finishing with an impressive 12-1-1. young learn. There are lots of
with Arlington High School's
This year the J. V. team was scratch- young guys that are looking good.
Realistically, we're gonna get beal "Blue Chip" indoor runner J.
ed from the budget.
Ibis year but it will do us a lot of Hotaling (credited with a 1:56.0
All the Dane distancemen arrived
good. Tim Bradley looks real good. half mile).
August 30th to begin their intense
Scott James and I arc really going
Returning seniors Matt Van
workouts of up to 15 miles per day.
to have to carry the team. We might
continued on page 33
Practices are held twice a day and
Munsey feels that "they have looked good. We're just hoping..."
The team is literally devastated
by losing their top five of the six
returning veterans. Junior Seott
James will undoubtedly have to
pick up a major portion of the slack
left behind by the missing.
269 dSBORNE RD.r. LOUDONVI.LLE
James, voted I979's "Most
Hungry Harrier" by the learn and
qualified for the Nationals last year
placing 641 h out of 240 competitors, figures lo sit on lop as the
Dane's number one runner. "Right
Furniture
now we're hurling bad," said
James. "There's a lot of potential,
Clothing
but it'll definitely be lowards Ihe
Fur Coats
end of the season when we'll pull
Bric-A-Brac
through. The guys arc young and
we're in dire need of some experience, but don't worry — we'll
pull some surprises."
Hauling ii out for the second spot
on ihc team will be Todd Sllva and
HOURS: 10-9 Daily, 10-e Saturday, 12-6 Sunday
Tim Bradley. "Tim is tougher than
hell. He looks absolutely great.
continued from page 32
Burert and Ken Carlstrom are being
counted on by Munsey to "fill sonic
of the gap left by the five 'missing
runners'." I'm looking forward to
my best year. We don't have much
depth so I'll be doing more for the
team this year than in the past. It's
going to be tough for u s , " said
Carlstrom.
The Albany State cross-country team lost five of Its top six runners
since last spring (Photo: Steve Essen)
YANKEE PEDDLER
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Open 24 Hours a Day
7 Days
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200 Lark St., Allwny N Y 12210 '13<1 1-182
Fri, 11 <im
6 pin. Sol.
TELETHON '81
USED BOOK
EXCHANGE
• Permanent Centers open dayi,
evenings and weekends.
• Low hourly cost, Dedicated fulltime staff,
Complete TEST-nTAPE'"laclllllej
for review ol class lessons and
supplementary materials.
Small classes lauglit by skilled
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It ••Join ul inw»
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Roumy iul l»yt fu>
ton.lort.
'
8.98
CC Ballroom
on
Sept 9,15-17
and
Sept 18-19 in CC 370
11*32"
•PORT SHIRTS
OKWMOK
taty «*»• bottvn/uoty Rutlon down
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watUJ oi oMlmwy "li*uk
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l y l M l # t i Wmngitr
money
and/or books to be
eturned in September
13"-17"
OHINO PANTS
CJ*itm. uW |>uipM« p«ntl ti|
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Huunr Mon.-Wed.-Thurt. »-9, TiMi.-Fri. 9-p Sot. 9-5
Want Easy Sex?
NO?
Wanna Write
Sports?
Yes?
We!!, come to the
ASP
Interest Meeting
• Opportunity to make up missed
lessons.
Voluminous home-study materials
constantly updated by researchers expert In their field.
Opportunity to transfer to and
continue study at any of our
over 80 cenlers.
by Bob Bellafiore
Welcome Bock!
The buildings are Ihe same. The lines certainly haven't changed. And
cafeteria life, well, that grumbles for itself. But Albany seems different
— newer this year. I'm in a new position with the ASP, and this column
is relatively new. And the Albany State sports scene is always changing.
Budgets get cut, and teams fold, but we try to do Ihe best we can with
what we've gol. Often, that's not too bad, either.
For example:
•The football team. Despite not having the great training facilities
and money that other college programs do, the Danes always seem to be
recognized as conlenders, and can often pull off that big win. But, as
'hings change, 1980 is another year. We'll have to wait and sec.
•The basketball team, coached by Dick Sauers, just relumed from a
trip to Sweden, where they won eight of ten games. They taised the cash
to go themselves, and it gave the players a chance to get a slight head
slarl on Ihe others. There's a score lo settle with Potsdam, you know.
•The men's cross-counlry team lost many top runners. But the
wisdom of head coach Bob Munsey will keep them competitive in their
rigorous season.
Thai just names a few. There are loads of other teams to watch: soccer, baseball, lacrosse, and, on Ihc women's side, Softball and soccer.
The talented people are here, and it's up to us lo stand behind Ihem.
So catch a football game on a weekend, or a baseball game on a Friday. Check 'cm out. Teams perform better when they know they're appreciated.
Take a walk through Ihe athletic offices and connect the faces lo the
names you hopefully will read Iwicc-a-weck.
If you're mure Ihe athletic type, inlramurals arc widespread on campus. Check 'cm out. They'll keep you in shape and maybe you'll run into sonic new people,
So relax anil enjoy the place like you never did before and, if you're
new, check it out. Apathy is something that can really make things drag.
Don't let it happen to you.
1980 Albany
State
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EDUCATIONAL CENTER
TEST PHCPARATION
SVCCIALISTSSINCE 1930
Football
Schedule
CallOayi fvc A Wrrk'fuli
Sept. 13 Ithaca - Home
Sept. 20 Southern Conn. - Home
IQI Inlurmilion About Oil*< Crn
0.,u.o> NT suit
CALL TOLL FREE. 800-223-1 782
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Sept. 27 Brockport - Away
Oct. 4 Fordham - Away
Oct. 11 Buffalo - Away
Oct. 18 z Cortland - Home
Oct. 25 Norwich - Away
Nov. 1 Alfred - Away
Nov. 8 Central Florida - Away
Nov. 15 Springfield - Home
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11 M\\ • <1 pm
Schaffer's
OOMFORTULE
I I I OVIIULU
Rounding out the list of returnees
are seniors Bob Sanchez and Dave
Fabian along with Nick Sullivan
who is coming off leg injuries.
The Harriers face Ihe always
lough Coast Guard Academy this
Saturday which proves to be a
"lough battle" says Munsey. Last
year's contest was won by Albany
_32-?4.. .In the series with Coast
Guard, Albany stands at 8-5.
Looking ahead, the Danes face
S y r a c u s e , A r m y , and East
Stroudsburg which proves lo be
more than enough competition,
Potential co-captain Scott James
feels thai "the competition is a little
too good. We have Ihe toughest
schedule of all Ihe Albany sports
litis year excluding maybe soccer.
The big meets are on our own home
course which will help us an awful
lot lowards our goal-national
qualifying."
Munsey feels that "if we beat
Coast Guard it'll be close. They
could really murder us. Right now
we don't have the capability to
murder them."
Looking into his crystal ball,
Munsey half jokingly insinuates
"last year was hopeless but this year
we've got a huge hole to fill.
Ultimately, we are looking towards
Ihc Nationals. Early meets are not
as important as the latter meels for
they are the meels that determine
our tickets to Ihc nationals or not.
These guys are work'ing hard but
I'm cautiously optimistic."
OTHER COURSES AVAILABLE
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HOODED
IWIATSHIRTI
Ihe learn so far, wc should be competitive. We work as a team," said
Stanton. Kane added, "I'm working extra hard trying to work
together towards a team effort. Wedo a lot more mileage here than at
MVCC. We'll be lired early but
towards the end we'll pull
through."
SATDATGRE
1232 Western Ave.
438-3332
T T T I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I i m i T J
THE
DAILY
GRIND
For Harriers
PREPARE FOR
Limit Two dozen per coupon.
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to the Daily Grind
Coming up from junior varsity
are Dave Goldberg and Chris Lant
who "both had super seasons last
year," said Munsey. Goldberg added, "There are a lot of kids who
aren't used to the long distances.
It's going to take a while to show
results — if at all. Since we started
practicing so late we'll come on
strong at the end. We'll peak just al
the right lime."
Two transfer students breaking
into the lineup are juniors Tim
Kane from Mohawk Valley Community College and Bill Stanton
from Farmingdale, who won the
Junior College Championships al
Ihe Albany Invitational one year
ago. "The workouts are twice as
hard asi Farmingdale's. Coach
Munsey really knows what he's doing. Considering what I've seen of
50- Off a Dozen
Oonuts with this ad
Thirty-Three
Albany Student Press.
Tough Campaign
Harriers Face Tough Campaign
Welcome Back
September 9, 1980
XXX
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To Ihe Summer '80 Crew:
Lorraine, Elizabeth, Jaime, Stu, Gary, Mark, Kathleen, Mohamed,
Caren, Mike, Lenny, Howard (Etc . . . ) —
S.I., Secrets, Haircuts, Pizza, Singles, Shopping, Good and Plenty,
Dip, Zlggy, Clothes Swap, Ballet, John & Charles, Zombie, Linda,
S.F.H., Wlrthless, Boautuous, Sleeping Over, Killer Whale Days,
Motorcycles, My Antenna, Library Visits, Platelets, Gin Rummy,
Kisses, F.W., Yankees, Clam Chowder, Guitars, Slow Dancing, Law
Section, Prepple, Popcorn, HoJo's, Brewskles, Funky, Teb Cans,
Dunkln Donuts, COLONIAL, Billy Joel, Brian, Fulminating, Melville
Piano, Clarkson, Fountains, Ralters, Lamppost, Jennifer, Thunder
Storms, SPC, Llzzz, Freshles, Cards, Lockups, Coffeehouse Young
Girl, Shining Star, Go All The Way, Could II Be.
It was REAL. It was NICE and IT WAS REAL NICE. Hope Everyone
has a great year.
Love, Alicia
Open Dally 10-9
Sal. 10-6.
eemw
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Where 1000's of quality used paperbacks
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The Book Rack
579 New Scotland Ave.
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Mon.-Frl.
w-7
Sat.
10-5
482-3221
Thirty-Four
•
September 9, 1980
Albany Student Press
-
Danes Face
1
0)
/
- increases in muscular size and strength
Improvements in running speed
vertical jump
cardkxascular endurance
coach Bill Schieffelin feels his team
will produce a fine winning season.
In 1979, the booters finished with
a 6-5-1 record and a third place in
its division as numerous injuries
took their toll. "Last year,
substitutes were subbing for the
first string substitutes," said two
year veteran Vas Serdscv.
Yet Schieffelin relt that the 1979
season was a frustrating one, considering that the Danes had finished
The Albany Stale men's varsity soccer teum, coached by Bill Schieffelin, has depth and boasts a strong
nucleus. A tough schedule brings on four Division 1 schools. (Photo: Mark Halek)
Diane-
Call now for a free trial workout
458-7144
Playing up front will be all-stater
Afrim Nezaj, Serdsev, Andy
Limcri, Billy Barnes, and Gus
. Rakas.
The Dane's offense, with youth
and talent, seems potent enough to
constantly apply pressure and score
goals.
With a vastly improving defense
and a steady offense, Schieffelin
describes his team as very well
balanced. "Our strength is that we
have no real strength, no total
domination in one single area,"
Schieffelin said.
The Danes feature, however, one
of the finest goalies in the slate,
Alberto Giordano. Not only an excellent goaltendcr with quickness
and good range, Giordano is also a
seasoned team leader. He believes
the team is playing more inspired
ball than last year. "There's been
improvement since the first scrimmages. Everyone's working very
hard. There's unity, cooperation
and a better attitude. Things are
looking better than last year,"
Giordano commented.
Yet, despite all the positive signs
thus far, a rough schedule lies
ahead for the Great Danes. Being
one of the hardest in the division,
the schedule includes four meetings
with Division I teams.
Barring injuries this season,
Schieffelin feels his team is ready to
battle for the top of the division
once again. "If we can keep our
team in shape, we'll be competitive
an,d an exciting team to watch,"
said Schieffelin.
Great Depth, Balance Key To Netmen Success
Dean
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on top in 1978.
"The 1979 season was a little
disappointing. Lacking good team
depth, we lost games last season by
one goal to teams like Hartwick,
Oneonta and St. Francis," said
Schierrelin.
But this season, a fine recruiting
campaign, along with many of last
year's returning players, has provided Schieffelin with the team
strength that he believes is necessary
in order to win.
Bench strength, however, is only
one area of the game and realistically Schieffelin feels that his team still
needs to work and progress. "It's
encouraging right now, but there's
a long way to go," noted Schieffelin.
Defensively, the team is blending
together despite the tentative loss of
defensive star Alex Pagano. Improving greatly as the season nears,
the team only lei up two goals in
three games in a r e c e n t
quadrangular exhibition against
Colgate, Williamstown, and
Casllcton here at Albany.
"We're still trying to find the
right combination on defense,"
Schieffelin remarked.
Schieffelin hopes that his two
regular fullbacks, Luis Arango at
swecperback and Keith Falconer at
stopperback, will be able to pull the
defense tightly together.
At mid field the Danes are strong,
led by Vlado Scrgovich, Gerry
Isaacs, and Lesley Severe, whose
moves and bullet kicks have dazzled
preseason opponents.
I Love You
Nautilus
a
by Marc Haspel
Team depth just may be the key
to a successful season for the 1980
edition of the Albany men's varsity
soccer team. Boasting a wellbalanced nucleus of talent, head
"They're the epitome of what
you want to strive for — what you
want to become," said Ford of the
national champs.
But Ford is the optimist—theconfident, positive thinker. "I
think we're going to do a helluva
job. If you stop down in the lockerroom Saturday morning and ask me
how we're going to do against
Ithaca — we're going to beat them.
There's no question in my mind —
we're going to beat them. That's the
attitude we'll go into this week
with, and we'll work like hell
toward that goal."
-A 45% decrease in bodyfat
5
Improving Defense Needs Unity
125
V
One example of the results of 3 months of proper Nautilus training:
3
Soccer Team Could Challenge For Top Spot
Ithaca is certainly a good football
team. They won their season opener
against Bloomsburg State, 58-3.
Bomber runningback Bob Fcrrigno
had three touchdowns and rushed
for 100 yards (he had five TDs and
140 yards versus Albany last year),
while Ithaca rolled up 306 yards
total offense and surrendured only
» * i
Thirty-Five
. Albany Student Press.
Ithaca
continued from back page
talent, person-by-person. I think in
order for us to beat them, we have
to beat them as a team," Ford
noted. "We have to work together
as a group better than they d o . "
Throughout the pre-season, the
focus.has been on Ithaca. "I know
it's been on my mind for the last
year," said the elder Shoen. When
comparisons are made, they arc
made with Ithaca. Ford continued:
"Where are we in terms of competion with Ithaca? I would say probably we've got some more-thanjust-small problems that we've got
to get squared away." But Ford felt
that the Danes are only small problems from being a good football
team.
S
September 9, 1980
Custom
and most sensUe aproach to reach your goak
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Stuyvesant Plaza
r
by Larry Kahn
For the last few years Albany
Stale's men's tennis team has had a
few excellent top line players, but
has not been able to win the crucial
matches at the bottom of the ladder
with any kind of consistency. This
season, one highlighted by the loss
of mainstay Larry Linett, could be
different.
"We have one thing this year that
we haven't had for the last four
years — depth," said Albany tennis
coach Bob Lewis. "We will win
points at five and six with more
consistency than in the past. That
takes some pressure off the guys at
the top of the ladder. We don't
have any All-Americans this year,
but we have excellent depth."
With Linett lost to graduation it
would appear that a gaping hole is
left in (he Albany lineup. Linett
won 45 matches while losing only 13
in his three year slay at Albany
which was lopped off by a first
round victory in the NCAA National Tournament last spring.
Nevertheless, Vewis feels thai the
team will be able to compensate.
"Larry has been a fine player for
us for the last three years. Anytime
you lose your number one player
it's a big loss," said Lewis. But he is
quick to add, "It's nothing we can't
handle. We have a young learn —
willing to work and eager to play.
I'm looking forward to working
with all of them."
One of the reasons for his optimism is the return of Barry Levine
(18-6 last year) who was also
selected to play in the Nationals. He
won his first round match and
along with Llnetj led Albany to a
ninth place tie in a field of thirty
three teams. Last year Levinc and
Linett locked horns in a friendly but
very competitive battle for Ihc
number one spot on the team with
Levine winning Ihc honor in the
fall, but Linett cam back strongly 111
the spring to claim the title for
himself.
This year Levinc is much improved and will slep nicely into the
leadership role vacated by Linett.
"Barry has improved his second
serve greatly from last year and his
all around game has improved,"
Lewis noted. 'He's a good influence
on the team as well — loves to play
tennis, works very hard, and has a
very good attitude."
Yet according to Lewis, Levine
will by no means have a lock on
number one this year: "The loss of
Linett won't effect Barry too much.
He'll still be pressured from guys
like Fred Gaber, He'll be facing
good competition from other
guys." Gaber. who was 10-1 last
fall, including winning the
SUNYAC championship In the
number four slot, is slated to start
number two this year. Lewis feels
that Gaber's return after missing
the spring season "should help the
team a lot."
One face missing from the courts
this fall will be Lawrence Eichen
who sprained his ankle during practice on Thursday. Eichen was 8-8
last year and probably would have
made the lop Ihrce. "Lawrence's
loss hurts us a little bit, but we can
recover," said Lewis. "We have
very good balance on this team. The
new kids coming in will help."
The team hasn't had time for a
lot of playoffs yet this season, but
so far it looks like three freshmen
will be in the three, four, and five
positions on the ladder. Leading the
way is Rob Karen who has been a
pleasant surprise so far. "Rob has
been playing really well," Lewis
noted, "I'm very impressed with his
play — he should fill in nicely."
Following Karen arc Russell Kasow
and David Ulrccht who should provide the squad with the depth that
has been chiding them for years.
The sixth singles spot is the only
one still pretty much up for grabs.
The leading contenders for the job
are transfer student Rob Fritz, and
veterans Dave Lerner and Andy
Diamond.
The doubles pairings have tentatively been set with Levine and
Gaber teaming up as the first pair
and Karen and Ulrccht in the second spot. The third doubles team
has not been determined at this
lime.
The team starts their season on
Wednesday against Oneonta at 1:00
on the Indian Quad Courts.
The schedule should be a lough
one this season facing such teams as
Vassar and Vermont and an excellent field in the Great Dane Tennis Classic. "Our goals this year are
to do well as host in the Great Dane
Classic and to win SUNYAC's
which we won last year with four
freshmen," Lewis noted. "This
year we should face some very stiff
competition from Binghampton."
The nctters figure to be a lot
tougher and more balanced than
last year when they finished with
nine wins and nine losses — their
worst record in eight years,
although they did win SUNYACs.
"We're definitely stronger than last
Lewis. "A year's experience and an
year — we have more depth," said
influx of four really good players
have to make us stronger."
Despite the graduation of Larry Linett (above), the Dane netmen
have an unuiual commodity — depth. (Photo: UPS)
Bus
Special Preview Issue
September 9, 1980
Great Dane Gridders Need To Find Solutions
Face Supreme
Challenge;
Nat'l Champ Ithaca
Invades
source of Ford's hopes. ~~
by Bob Bellafiore
The biggest problem, though, lies
It's like taking the final of your
toughest course only three weeks in- in filling Walsh's shoes, which is the
task of senior Mike Fiorito. Calling
to the semester.
It's like worrying that the lasl Walsh a different commodity that
cuts for your school play are tomor- had the ability to put points on the
row, and you're not too sure of board although not always doing it
your lines, but you know that if you within the rigid structure of
had only a little more time, you'd Albany's wishbone attack, Ford
said, "Michael doesn't have some
easily get the part.
It's like playing Ithaca College, of Terry's gifts. Therefore, he can1979 Division III National Cham- not afford to beat himself at all."
pions, in the opening football game Sophomore Tom Pratt, the backup,
of the season, and there arc still is a better runner and thrower than
questions to be answered and gaps Fiorito, according to Ford, but
lacks the experience necessary lo
to be filled.
Memories of last year's contest run the wishbone.
Here's how the resi of the offense
between Albany and the Bombers
are the kind that make Great Dane shapes up:
THE LINE:
fans cringe — a 40 point difference
Only one starter from '79 lost
and the worst loss in Albany football history. Ithaca, with three here. Center Mike Arcuri, at 6-2.
times as much total offensive yar- 215 pounds, comes- off a solid
dage than the Danes, squashed any junior year but, according to Ford,
hopes that Albany might have had must continue to improve. The left
for post-season competition and side will be tended by guard Glen
started them on a three game losing Magrane and senior tackle Jim
streak. So when the Bombers march Esposito. Over on the other side,
into University Field on Saturday at three returning lettcrmen are vying
1:30, the Danes will have a lot to for the two available spots (juniors
George Brodeur, Tom Clarke and
i think about.
I Replacements — that's been the Brian Bennett). At light end, last
biggest problem for Albany head year's starter Bruce Dey is back. A
coach Bob Ford and his staff. Gone solid blocker and n good short pass
from the 6-3 team of a year ago are receiver, according to Ford, Dey
quarterback, field general, and will be backed up by a constantly
leading rusher Terry Walsh, Capital improving Mike McGuire. Al split
District Player of the Year and end, Tim Votraw and Craig
leading tackier Joe Rajczak, defen- Trcankler will try to fill the gap left
sive back Daryl Haynor, and defen- by the departure of last year's
sive tackle Larry Pearson, to name starter, speedster Scott Lusher.
Neither are burners, Ford noted,
a few.
but both have adequate speed and
"While we lost some good peoare good blockers.
ple, I think there's still enough of a
HALFBACKS:
nucleus to put together a decent
This area is often referred to by
football team," said Ford. Indeed,
returnees such as co-captains Steve Ford as "a stable". There arc three
Shoen (defensive tackle) and Jack reasons: Levi Louis, Sam Haliston,
Burger (halfback), defensive end and Burger. Haliston is Albany's
Eric Singletary (who Ford termed best all-purpose back, but is
as, "potentially, the best defensive presently sidelined with a broken
end we've ever had), and almost the leg, and might not return for a
entire offensive line provide the month. Louis has exceptional
V.
by Susan Mllligan
Close to ninety students met
Tuesday night with Plant Department Director Dennis Stevens to
discuss problems, causes, and possible solutions to bus service
"inadequacies."
Off-Campus Association Director Mark Dunlca and Student
Union Chair Jim Tierncy cited
women's safety and inconvenience
as two of the major problems caused by the change in bus schedules.
"The Pine Hills Molester has hit
over 50 times," said Tierncy, "and
now people are waiting at Draper
alone, sometimes for 25 minutes.
Also, the buses are not stopping at
requested corners after 6 o'clock as
they did last year."
Tierney and Dunlea also expressed discontent over bus overcrowding and the elimination of
direct Wellington routes and bus
runs to the Trailways station.
The students felt that the University was not upholding its responsibility to the students.
"If the University can't provide
adequate housing on campus, it
should at least provide adequate
bus service," said Dunlea.
One student remarked that "if
they're going to have a downtown
campus, they should provide the
facilities to run it correctly."
Stevens explained that "the
stale's commitment is to transport
students from the uptown to the
downtown c a m p u s and nol
necessarily to the Trailways station was the budget-mandated loss of
and the Wellington . . . I think it's two bus drivers, suggested that the
, ridiculous, but that is the state's Student Association pay for the adcommitment."
dition of two drivers, at a cost of
Many students complained about about $13,000 per driver.
the simultaneous increase in fees
Central Council member Rob
and decrease in services.
Rothman was in vehement opposi"We're paying more and getting tion to Stevens' idea, remarking
less," said one student. "I don't that " w e deserve a d e q u a t e
understand why there isn't better transportation, but the state should
bus service."
fund it."
Students also complained that as
"SA funding of the buses is
many as three buses in a row would ridiculous," he said. "Even the
pull into the circle, only to continue Alumni service is not adequate."
on to the garage. Stevens said he
Student Union, SA, and OCA
"would end the practice of bus members are currently discussing
drivers taking breaks during peak
means to improve the bus service.
periods."
However, no plans have been
Stevens, maintaining that a ma- solidified.
jor cause of the cut in bus service
Stevens said he "would advocate
petitions and dialogue between
students and administration."
Although Stevens maintains that
the bulk of the problem is due to
mandatory budget cuts, causing the
loss of two drivers, a source who
asked to remain unidentified in
name and position disagrees.
"They didn't lose two bus
drivers," the source said. "What
happened was two bus drivers quit
and three more were hired. Stevens
is just trying to prove his
'efficiency' to the state."
Several other persons close to the
situation corroborated this claim.
Rothman told students Tuesday
night that the decrease in the
number of bus drivers from 22 to 20
, continued on page five
Statt Unlnnlt, ol N*w York at Albany
Vol. LXVII No.27
ffV\ 0 #
September 19, 1980
ivmi by Albany tltMtoftf Praia C c o a r a i i u n
^
w
Rate Hike Provokes Anger
1
•:m-..^k'
^
Deciding Albany's quarterback this season has been no easy tusk. Mike Fiorito (right) will gel the nod
over sophomore Tom Pratt (left) when Ilhucu College marches into University Field Saturday at 1:30
••••^••JBl
(Photos: Steve
balance and great blocking ability. three-year starlet). Tabbed as first- ding lo the weak side. Behind them
Burger, an inspirational- leader, stringers in those two spots were is junior Bob Dunleavy who, said
possesses breakaway speed (4.5 junior Steve Dey (brother of Bruce) Ford, is dependable and rarely
seconds in the 40 yard dash), better and transfer Bobby Cohen. But, ac- makes a physical error.
THE SECONDARY
hands than his runningmates, and cording to Ford, Cohen hasn't realAt deep safety will be lightening
can throw the football. When all ly blossomed into Ihe player he can
three are healthy, they provide the be, and Dey is questionable for quick Bruce Collins, with Don
Danes with their strength. ,
Saturday's contest with Ithaca with Bowen and Mark Flanagan on
a sprained ankle. Sub Greg DiNoto cither side of him in Albany's threeFULLBACK:
Chuck Priore was a soph starter is also injured, and this might force deep pass coverage. Soph Dave
lasl year and has reclaimed that defensive end Mall Bruncalo to Hardy is number two behind Colpost this season. Although he ap- switch to linebacker. Ford is con- lins, and has Ihc size and speed to
pears too small lo be a wishbone cerned. "1 don'l know where the challenge for a spot.
THE KICKING GAME:
fullback, Priore is a compact hell we are there," be said about the
Punting will be Hardy, who
fireplug (5-9, 185 pounds) who can situation.
The rest of ihe defense is as needs lo gel some consistency acblock and get the yards inside. Hot
cording to Ford, but can do a
on his heels though, is senior John follows:
capable job. Handling kickoffs and
Duranl. Ford feels confident with
ENDS:
either.
Ben Franklin made a mistake. place kicks will be Dario Arango
The 1980 defensive unit has a Besides dcalh and laxes, you can (whose field goal beat Ithaca
tough act to follow. Until the also be sure of Eric Singletary, He's 1978) and Tom Lincoln. Ford calls
seventh game last season (Ithaca), big (6-1, 210 pounds), strong, fast, them "probably the best one-two
the Dane defenders were rated in he's got quickness, and can do Ihc combination in Division III football
the top five nationally. Besides Raj- job. "He is a complete football in that skill"
Depth is a problem. In most
czak and Pearson, Albany has lost player," said Ford. Normally, the
linebackers John Veruto (a four- other end would be Brancalo, but if cases, after the slarter, there is a big
year starter) and Don Hyde (a he goes to linebacker on Saturday, step down in talent. "We may not
junior Jeff Carone will gel Ihe nod. have depth, but we got a great first
TACKLES
learn," Shoen said. The key is
Only one spot is definitely filled health. Any extended injury to a
here. Shoen, at 6-1, 235 pounds, "is front line player could be terribly
probably the best defensive tackle costly to the Danes in 1980.
we've ever had here," noted Ford.
There are other big changes in the
He went on to say that the co- Albany defense for 1980. Three
captain "should be considered for coaches, including the defensive
post-season honors if he plays the coordinator, have moved on to
way he has been going throug pre- other schools. The coacliing turseason football." The Capital nover annually is great, but to case
District Player of the Year in 1977, the loss of those key staff members,
Shoen will bolster the interior line, former offensive coordinator Mike
On the other hand, filling the gap Motta has been moved to defense,
at the other tackle spot has not been
Intangibles — those arc the parts
so simple. There are four of a team that can't really be
possibilities, with Mike Scully and measured by numbers. You can on-.
Keith Lefevre leading ihe way, bin ly sense them. Maturity as a footnobody has a lock on it yet. Also in ball team is a big intangible. 11
the picture are transfer Jim comes from attitude-winning alHalloran, and Shocn's younger litudc, a necessity for success,
brother Mike, "One of them will
"If 1 had to evaluate it right now,
havulo jump in there and play some we do not have what I would
defensive tackle," commented describe as a winning attitude,"
Ford.
said Ford. "Now, that we can
CORNERBACKS:
mature and grow and develop as Ihe
"I think that's going to be a year unfolds, but we're not there
strength for us," Ford said. For ihe yel. Hell, we're a long way from
third year In a row, Ihe Danes are where I wain us lo be," he condeep al the comers. Returning tinned.
starter Jerry Wierzbecki will play
"Ithaca probably has superior
The Albany defense swarms u Mlddlebury runner (above). Similar thiii|(S must occur Sutunlay if the
the slong side, with Ed Ragulc tencontinued on page 14
I>»ne» mi- to withstand the force of Nationul Champion Ithaca' s offense. (Photo: Sieve Essen)
Students Interrupt Trustees' Luncheon
by Susan Mllligan
"We want to make il clear lo may have been discussed among
Members of SASU and Student SUNY and Ihc Board of Trustees
some SUNY-Central people or belUnion expressed their opposition to that we will nol accept any further
ween the Chancellor and myself,
the SUNY Board or Trustees' deci- increases . . . especially those apbul il was not discussed with the
sion to raise dormitory room rates proved in such a deceptive manTrustees until Ihe day before."
in a rally in Campus Cenler and a ner," Tierncy said.
According to Blinken, part of Ihc
"Donald Blinken call-in-day"
According lo SASU president slate's subsidy to SUNY has been
Wednesday.
Jim Stern, the rent increase was be- used in the past to offset ihc cosl of
SASU delegate Tony Giardina ing discussed in closed executive
reining a dormitory room. Blinken
said the students were protesting session as early as lasl April.
said the money can be used for
"nol only Ihe $150 rale increase,
"The increase was discussed for academics, ihus benefiting both onbin ihe capricious manner in which aboul 20 minutes and ihcn voted on
campus and off-campus students.
it was approved.
in May," Slern added. "II was nol
"The resulting rent increase
"The room rate increase decision on the agenda, and students had no
revenues of $9 million can be used
was made behind closed doors over prior warning."
for faculty and library books which
the summer, when students had
According lo Blinken, the issue might have been eliminated," said
nothing to say about it," he said.
"was nol under discussion for a Blinken. "The stale does not give us
The Board of Trustees voted on month.
Ihe money for ihe express purpose
the increase lasl May and informed
"We didn't even know Ihe of subsidizing room rates."
students over Ihe summer of Ihc budget unlil May," he said. "It
continued on page five
decision.
SASU anticipates the Board of
Trustees in planning lo increase
dormitory rales by $150 lor the next
three years as well, for a total increase of $600.
"SUNY has reneged on Iheir
commitment to give students lowcost public higher education," by Beth Sexer
policy, he did accept responsibility
Former SA Vice President Tito for its care, said last year's SA
Giardina said.
The students were demonstrating Martinez has been accused by presideni Lisa Newmark.
outside of Ihe room where "SUNY several SA officials of clocking apAccording lo Newmark, ihe van
Central Adminislralion members proximately 300 miles on the SA showed a "big discrepancy in
were lunching and discussing Ihe van while using il as his personal mileage" alter lasl Chrislmas vacaSUNY budget," according lo SU vehicle during lasl Christmas vaca- tion. As SA vice president, Martion. Although Martinez denied
chair Jim Tierney.
tinez was responsible for the van
SASU and SU have made three having used the van against SA and therefore obligated "to pay
demands to SUNY administrators:
Student Association somehow,"
— an immediate hall to the reNewmark said. However, although
maining phases of the room rem inMartinez admitted to the discrepancrease.
cy and told Newmark and ex— a commitment by SUNY and
controller Craig Weinstock he
the Trustees to give al least one
would forfeit approximately $120
month's public notice before any
(or 40 cents per mile) from his stidiscussion or vote on further inpend, SA controller Ira Somach
creases.
reported thai financial records
show that Martinez had withdrawn
— immediate enactment of plans
all of his $1500 stipend from the SA
to improve dorm conditions,
group voucher payroll.
specifically the phasing out of tripling in rooms designed to house two
"It was alleged lasl year thai Tilo
people.
Martinez . . . used the van . . . for
The students also held a "Donald
300 miles. While we do have slips
Blinken call-in day," a phone blitz
(i.e., receipts for gas) signed by Mr.
to express their anger at the rent in- Tito Martinez
Martinez, wecun't prove that he uscrease to the Board of Trustees Accepts van responsibility.
ed il illegally," said Somach.
Chair.
continued on page nine
Phuln: Hurhman
Their Own Squad Cut,
Men Try Women's Team
by Andrew Carroll
tie IX in defense of their position.
Citing the loss of their team as Title IX is Ihe federal ruling that rethe reason and Title IX as the quires equal athletic opportunities
justification, five members of last fpr botli men and women.
year's men's volleyball learn tried
The actions of the players, Gary
out for the women's team last week. Becker, Don Kilinski, Bob Alters,
They were rebuffed in Iheir at- Fred Askam and Tom Leahy, were
tempt, as arguments of reverse in protest of the cancellation of Ihe
discrimination failed lo sway Ihc men's varsity volleyball program,
alhlclic staff, who used the same Ti- an administrative decision made
late lasl year.
The decision was result of a
budget cut within Ihc athletic
department, which translated into a
loss of a position, according to
Athletic Director Bob Ford. And
because of the small number of
players involved, and volleyball's
unique position in regards to Title
IX, the volleyball team was considered Ihe most expendible intercollegiate sport, said Ford.
Garv Becker, a starter on last
year's team, said that Title IX holds
true for the men's efforts. "There's
an unfairness here," said Becker.
"If we're nol going to be able lo
play on a men's team, then we're
Dlames budget cuts.
continued on page five
Plmlu: Huh i .....-*• .i
Ex-Vice President Martinez
Accused of SA Van Misuse
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