Danes Top Fordham, 17-14, For Comeback Win

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'October 7, 1980
Danes Top Fordham, 17-14, For Comeback Win
Intensity The Key To Victory
Coffey Field in the Bronx.
"I guess the big difference was
intensity," said Dane defensive captain Steve Shoen. "This week, the
defense was fired up. We didn't
want what happened last year
(when Albany lost to the Rams in
the final minutes)."
This time, it was the Danes' turn
to come back in a sce-saw battle
thai pitted Fordham's size and
strength against Albany's speed and
quickness, with the latter having the
edge.
With the Rams ahead 14-9, and
almost nine minutes remaining in
the game, Albany took the ball on
their own 24 yard line. What ensued
was a 76 yard, 16 play inarch that
resulted in a Chuck Priore two yard
leap over left tackle for a
touchdown.
The drive began with an incomplete Mike Fiorito to Bruce Dey
pass. Fullback John Durant got
three yards up the middle, and a
Ram offsides gave Albany a third
down and two on their own 34.
Priore ran off tackle for just
enough, and the first of five first
Dane halfback Jack Burger played Saturday despite a pulled hamstring, downs in the drive. A Fiorito keeper
and netted 52 yards in 11 carries. (I'lxilii: Steve Ksscn)
and a Durant run netted four more.
The Dane quarterback then hit split
by Bob Bellafiore
NEW YORK — It's as if you've lost
your car keys, and you know you
can't go anywhere until you find
them.
Intensity is the athletic equivalent
of the car key. Without it, a team
3) L « * • <•
Tent City Today
may have all the tools needed to win
and still not. In the close ballgamcs,
the lack of intensity will show, and
that team will come out short.
The Albany football team won a
close one on Saturday, 17-14,
against Fordham University at Jack
12 SUNY Schools Expected
^
Albany's defense gang tackled In stop Fordham's running attack In Saturday's 17-14 Dane victory. (Photo: Steve Essen)
end Tim Votraw on the left sideline
for eight yards and a first down.
Jack Burger ran the right side for
one, and halfback Bob Ncaring got
14 yards on a counter play to put
Albany on the Fordham 38. The
Danes lost five on an illegal motion
penally, but regained that and then
some on a three yard Burger run
and Duranl's 18 yard blast through
the middle. After two plays gained
nine yards, Ncaring look a pilch
from Fiorito (whose inside fake to
Priore fooled the defense) down to
the Ram two. Priore scored on the
next play. The Danes were successful in their two point conversion, took the lead for good, and
gave the ball back to Fordham with
3:19 to go.
"It was definitely a must win,"
said-Ncaring, whose 82 yards in 12
carries in his first varsity start (for a
6.8 yards per carry average) merited
him the game's Most Valuable
continued on page IS
by Whitney Gould
Protesters from SUNYA and 12
other state schools will pilch their
tents on the lawn of SUNY Central
today, without the blessings or permission of Chancellor Clifton
Wharton.
SASU, organizer of "Tent City", was rebutted in its efforts to
gain administration authorization
for the event, but according to
SASU President Jim Stern, participating in the even! "should not
gel anyone arrested."
"Tent City" is a result of student
opposition lo a $150 board rate increase for schools in the SUNY
system. Students al SUNY colleges
at Potsdam, New Paltz and
Brockport have already held overnight protests in front of their
school's administration buildings.
In response to SASU's application for a permit lo stage the event,
University Counsel Sanford H.
Levinc notified Ihe organizers lhat
"no temporary structures, lenls or
portable sanitary facilities" will be
allowed at the site. Chancellor
Wharton's office instead granted
permission for an "orderly protest"
between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. confined lo the headquarter's
sidewalk.
"Tlic University gave us a permit
for something we can do wilhoul
their permission." said Stern.
"They seem to care more about the
grass then they do about students."
Stern expects between 100 and
400 protesters from 10 to 12 state
colleges and universities. He says it
will be unlikely that Wharton will
have students arrested, but that
SUNY's statements were a tactic to
keep students away. According to
SASU executive Vice President
Danes Outplayed; Still Win 2-1
Sergovich wide open. The Dane
halfback passed the ball to
Sergovich, who pushed it into the
goal to clirjth the victory for the
Danes.
"This is one of (he few times we
were dominated throughout a soccer game and won. We simply made
the key plays," said Schieffelin.
"Our guys showed a lot of
character."
Despite not playing a superb
game, there were still some good
performances for the Danes.
Leading scorer Nezaj played
another unselfish game. "Afrim is a
hard worker. He is undoubtedly an
all-stale player. In the last few
games, the pressure for him to score
goals has subsided and he has
become an even belter player,"
commented the coach.
Sergovich also played a good
game. In spite of being one of the
slower runners on the Danes, he has
been an asset.
Schicffelin noted that the team is
very balanced and he doesn't expect
any egos to get in the way of the
team's cohesiveness.
In the latest ranking, Albany was
placed second in New York State
and twelfth in the nation in Division
111 soccer.
The Danes have two crucial matches approaching on their schedule.
Tomorrow afternoon they will
travel lo Schenectady to face Union
College, and October 18 they will
lake on SUNYAC rival Binghamton,
"If we can beat Binghamton, we
will be in very good shape in our
division," commented Schicffelin
Schieffelin thinks thai ihe Danes
continued on page 17
Jason Wertheim, the Tent City Protest will be an "organized and effective" one. Wertheim said he was
not worried aboul possible repercussions.
The board rate increase was
decided upon in a session last May
after students left school for the
Urges Student Participation In Politics
by Susan Milligan
Repeatedly citing his pasl record
and placing little emphasis on
future plans, Senator Jacob Javils'
speech lo SUNYA students
Wednesday sounded more like a
£
Senator Jacob Javits campaigns at SUNYA Wednesday
"I urge students, without regard lo party or candidate, to participate in politics.
Phololl Siini SIclnliBmp
Students Win
Right to Vote in
College Districts
Courtesy of the Albany Times-Union
A Federal Court Thursday
ordered the Election Committee of
Albany County lo allow II slate
university students lo register and
vole in the county on November 4.
The decision, a preliminary injunction handed down in Ulica by
U.S. District Court Judge Neal McCurn, allows college students lo
vole in the college communities
where they attend school. His wrilten opinion said Ihe students were
qualified to vote in Albany County
and implied thai those others so
qualified should he allowed lo
register as well.
But ii slops short of selling a
clear precedent for the whole idea
of registration of college students in
towns where they choose to attend
school.
In his opinion, McCurn noted
hill a series of similar student
registration cases "provide strong
support" for registering students
who can prove residency in the
community where they attend
school.
The II students had filed suit in
U.S. District Court of the Northern
Dislricl of New York lasl May
challenging election law, which
prevents students from voting in
communities where they live while
attending school,
In Albany, college students account for more than 20,(XX) potential new voters.
Lasl Februaryi SASU began an
aggressive drive to encourage
students to register to vole in the
Albany City Board of Elections,
Both SASU and SUNYA's Student Association filed Ihe suit in
May on behalf of the II students
lhat won their preliminary injunction.
summer. SUNY administration
argued that the board increase was
necessary to achieve self-sufficiency
in housing, but SASU and SA have
filed suit against the board of
Trustees, calling the circumstances
of the board increase decision
unlawful.
Senator Javits Speaks To SUNYA
Good Fortune Leads Men Booters To Victory
by Michael Carmen
When a team can be totally
dominated for ninety minutes of a
soccer match and still be victorious,
it's the sign of a quality ball club.
Brockport was the victim of
Albany's good fortune as the Danes hit a shot into a Brockport fullback.
soccer game. They are definitely the ritory. Here he drew two defenders
defeated their opponents 2-1, in The ball deflected off the defender
best 0-5-2 soccer team in the United and saw Jerry Isaacs open on the
overtime, Saturday afternoon.
and found its way into the goal, and
States," Schieffclin said.
opposite side. Rakas knocked a
The main character in Albany's the score was lied, 1-1.
In the 10 minute overtime period, long pass over to Isaacs, who dribvictory was goalie Alberto GiorAfter the regulation ninety
Albany did what they had to do to bled the ball towards the oppodano. The Dane tender was at the minutes, the score was still tied.
win. Gus Rakas at halfback nent's goal. A lone defender ran to
end o! 44 Brockport shots and had "Brockport played a whale of a
brought the ball into enemy ter- cover Isaacs, which left Vlado
to come up with tremendous saves
on eight occasions.
"Alberto didn't play a good
game, he played an exceptional
one," commented Albany soccer
coach Bill Schieffclin. Giordano
was also the recipient of some good
luck. Two Brockport shots hit the
cross bar, which could have easily
been two goals.
Ironically, the team's only major
mistake was caused by Giordano.
At 25:00 in the first half, a
Brockport player chipped the ball
into the penalty area. Giordano
came out for the ball, but didn't call
for it. Keith Falconer, not hearing
anything from the goaltender, tried
to head the ball wide of the goal. II
ended up in the goal, and the Eagles
led, 1-0.
The score remained that way as
the half ended, Schicffelin calmly
told the team at the halftimc
meeting what most probably knew
— they must take the action into
the Brockport end.
The Danes didn't take long to
heed the advice of their coach, at
0:47 of the final half, Albany got on
the scoreboard. Falconer brought The Albany Stale varsity soccer team was dominated by Brockport on Saturday but still managed lo work out a
the ball downficld and hit Afrim
2-1 overtime win. Tomorrow the hooters lake on Union In a crucial match, (Photo: Mark Nadler)
Nezaj on a pass. Nezaj turned and
'Pholo: WW Vurnin
Student Union Organizer Dave Prater
Hundreds of protestors expected to pitch tents.
Jack Lester, lawyer for the two
groups, argued thai students are
denied the right lo vole In Albany
County even though they reully
have no place to call home
anymore.
He filed court papers in U.S.
District Court of the Northern
District of New York naming the
Albany County and the Stale Board
of Elections. He filed the names of
the II studcnls because they
specifically were denied the riglu to
vote.
Students wishing to vote in this
year's Albany elections
must
register as a resitlcnl of the city by
tomorrow (Saturday, October llj,
in the Albany Court Building basement on Ihe corner of Eagle and
Columbia Streets. Registration will
be conducted here on an in-person
basis only.
NEWS FEATURE
farewell than a campaign plea. The
Republican Senator centered on his
accomplishments In higher education and the "quality of life" for
New Yorkers in his address to a
meager crowd of about 350.
Javils noted thai he has served in
Ihe Senate longer lhan any other
N.Y. Senator — "enough of an
honor for anyone" — and that he is
cuncnlly senior member of the
Senate sub-committee on education.
Javils enumerated in detail the
progression of such educational
programs as Supplemental Educational Opportunity Giants (SEOG),
aid lo urban universities, and the
"Student Incentive Grant Program." Javits added that "the
latest educational bill increased the
amounl available in loans by $7,500
for undergraduates and $15,000 for
graduate students."
The Senator commenled on his
involvement with programs for
New York State, noting that he is
the author of CETA, an employment program which mandates "a
certain quotient, of public jobs."
Javits also discussed social security
and pension programs, alluding to a
1975 law that guarantees pension
payment by the federal government,
"It's difficult to live only on
social security," he said, " . . . we
have a long way to go in private
pension plans to take the pressure
off social security."
Javils proposed lo "make it
possible for a family lo save $1,000
per year to invest in a private pension plan."
The Senator also expressed his
support of a national health plan,
adding thai "some urgencies may
precede (the plan), including the
need to supply the necessary personnel and lo help hospitals in
highly depressed areas."
Javits said finally that he hoped
the students "wouldn't turn their
backs on politics.
"I urge students without regard
to parly or candidate to participate
in politics for two reasons," he continued. "Firstly, it's fun. You meet
the most interesting people through
politics. Secondly, because of
responsibility. As we get to the
more complex, politics becomes an
essential clement."
Although Ihe press has been
predicting that due to a lack of both
money and parly support Javits will
eventually drop out of ihe race, the
Senator maintained that he is not
giving up the fight,
"My problem is money and I
have a real problem," he said.
"After all these years, I shouldn't
have to run a campaign by catching
rides on the Thruway." The
Senator asked, however, "to watch
H o l t z m a n (the D e m o c r a t i c
nominee) and myself." Javils added lhat he feels his advantage is in
that lie "is Ihe incumbent and has
an extraordinary record.
"The problem is that I am not on
the ballot of a major party," he
said.
Javits remarked about Alfonse
D'Amato, his Republican opponent
who defeated him in the primary
election, that "D'Amato may be a
continued on page seven
Slulc University i»l New Ynrk at Album
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1980 in •Ui...m Minimi I'rtu {•iu|i..ii.hl.li
Holtzman Accused of Libel
HEAVY
Would
STUFF
Sadistic Killer In Buffalo
(AP) The mutilated body of a black man whose heart
had been cut out was found near the Niagara River on
Thursday, police said. He was the second black man
slain in the same manner in two days and the sixth black
man murdered in the area in less than a month. Edward
C. Cosgrove, Erie County district attorney, said the
latest body was found near the Niagara River in
Tonawanda. Meanwhile, State University of Buffalo
psychology professor Norman Solkoff said the latest
slayings showed a sadist tendency not apparent in the
earlier shootings. " I t would be rare, indeed, if only one
person were behind these killings," he said. "The
suspect in both groups of killings apparently operates
differently, and the possibility is strong that the murders
were done by more than one person." Solkoff said he
felt sure the mutilation slayer was white because of "an
obviously strong connection between racial feelings and
the murder" and male because it was rare for women to
commit sadistic crimes.
Rep. Murphy To Sue NBC
(AP) Facing Abscam bribery-conspiracv charges and a
tough re-election battle, Rtp. John Murphy of Stalen
Island says he plans to file several libel suits before Election Day in addition to a $10-million one he just filed
against the National Broadcasting Co. The suit against
NBC executives, reporter Brian Ross and anchorwoman
Jessica Savitch, alleges malicious lies were televised
about him during the network's coverage of the FBI's
Abscam investigation into political corruption. Filed
late Tuesday in State Supreme Court in Statcn Island,
the suit names NBC President Fred Silverman, NBC
News President William Small, in addition to Ross and
Miss Savitch. An NBC spokesman would only say: "We
do not comment on matters of pending litigation." At a
news conference Wednesday, Murphy, accused of
bribery and conspiracy for allegedly sharing in a $50,000
payoff, also reiterated that he "committed no crime and
did nothing unethical."
(AP) Republican Senate candidate Alfonse D'Amato
accused his Democratic opponent on Thursday of being
the moving force behind an article accusing him of
wrongdoing in office. The three Senate candidates,
D'Amato, Democratic Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman and
the incumbent, Sen. Jacob Javits, met in a debate sponsored by Newsday. The current edition of the weekly
Village Voice said that D'Amato, as presiding supervisor
of Hempstead, took kickbacks from contractors and
deposited Town of Hempstead funds in non-interest accounts in a bank that later gave his Senate campaign a*
low-interest $80,000 loan. D'Amato asserted that Ms.
Holtzman "was part and parcel of putting that article
out" and that the wife of one of the newspaper's libel
lawyers has been involved in the Holtzman campaign.
Milosz Wins Nobel Prize
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) The 1980 Nobel Prize in
literature was awarded Thursday to Czeslaw Milosz, an
exile poet, novelist, and anti-Soviet dissident from
Poland who became an American citizen 10 years ago.
Milosz, 69, professor of Slavic language at the University of California at Berkeley, was cited by the Swedish
Academy of Letters as a writer of "uncompromising
clearsightedness." He was honored for his extensive
poetical works in the Polish language as well as for his
prose. This was the second time in three years that the
academy chose a writer with roots in Poland. The 1978
literature prize went to Polish-born Isaac Bashcvis
Singer, a master story teller writing in Yiddish in New
York, many of whose works arc set in Poland.
USSR-Syria Sign Treaty
(AP) President Leonid 1. Brezhnev signed a treaty that is
said to give Syria, the longtime foe of Iraq, the status of
virtual membership in the Warsaw Pact. But Brezhnev
said the Soviet Union is not going to intervene in the
Iran-Iraq war and warned the West to stay out also.
Brezhnev signed a treaty of friendship and cooperation
with Syrian President Hafez Assad on Wednesday.
s n n n n i a i a a 3 E » 3 ] i-A)-Bau»-a=wa»M)-4MM)-4i
ShoRT CAMPUS STUFF
GMRecalls 25,000 Cars
—i-?i—>—1—>—i—i—i—i—)—)—>—i—i—»—^>«?i—»—^—i—v-i—i—i
(AP) General Motors plans to recall some 25,000 models
of 1981 autos to fix a defect in the power steering hose,
it was learned Thursday. Radio station WGY said Jim
Williams, a spokesman for GM in Detroit, said the action would be announced later in the day. The move involves Citations, Phoenixes, Omegas and Skylarks. All
have 2.6-liter, V-6 Engines with power steering,
Williams said. He said there have been complaints that
the hose is too close to the manifold, raising fears it
could come apart and leak fluid, causing fire or smoke.
The vehicles recalled will have the hose re-routed or
replaced, Williams said. It was not known how many of
the cars have been sold, or how many are still at dealers.
Telethon Takes A Walk
$6.4 MIn Paintings Stolen
(AP) Thieves stole 19 paintings, including works by
Renoir, Picasso, Modigliani and Utrillo, valued at a
total of $6.4 million, from a luxurious duplex in a
Riviera resort and police today charged the butler as an
accomplice. Ronald Headford, a 49-year-old Briton, occupied the 30-room apartment where he was butler to
the late Sir Charles Clore, who died one year ago after
moving his private collection here. After Clore's death,
ownership of the paintings and apartment was kept in
his family. Police said they grew suspicious of Headford after the butler made several contradictions in his
description of the theft, which occurred Sunday.
U.S. Accused Of Apathy
(AP) Iranian Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Rajai today accused the United States of being indifferent to the
fate of the 52 American hostages in Iran, Teheran Radio
said. "It is not important to the United States if all the
hostages arc killed because the United States is always
after its own interests and is using the hostages as an excuse to be able to do anything it likes," Rajai was
quoted as saying in an interview with Japanese television. A text of a portion of the interview was read on
Teheran radio, monitored in Beirut. The radio said Rajai asserted that the U.S. government's indifference to
the hostages, held captive by militants since Nov. 4,
"was proven in its military attack on Tabas" —a
reference to the abortive U.S. rescue mission last April.
"We saw that the United States, to keep its interests,
was prepared to endanger the lives of the hostages," it
quoted Rajai as saying. "So whenever the United States
mentions the release of the hostages the first victims will
be Ihe hostages themselves."
Pound the pavement with Telethon '81 as llity head
down Western Avenue in their annual 10 mile
Walkathon-Jogalhon.
. The cvcnl will begin at 11:30 a.m. at the gym,
Participants will walk until Washington Park where
there will be entertainment and refreshments. After a
brief break, they will continue the walk up Washington
Avenue until Stale Quad, where a parly will be held for
all participants.
Sponsor sheets arc still available al the Campus
Center information desk.
All Walkathon proceeds will be donated to the
Parkhurst Children's Center and the N . 7 . Special
Olympics Area 10.
Vista Alumni Sought
The Peace Corps and VISTA (Volunteers In Service
To America) have launched a major campaign aimed al
contacting former volunteers in the two programs who
now live in upstate New York. More than 8,000 New
Yorkers have served in the two volunteer programs.
Tom Verhulst, area manager for upstate, says contact
is being sought with the former volunteers "to keep
them abreast of what Peace Corps and VISTA arc doing
now, to provide them an opportunity to meet with each
other and to get them involved as a group with their own
communities."
Former Peace Corps or Vista volunteers now living in
New York should call Verhulst toll-free at
1-800-462-4243 for further information, or write the
Peace Corps/VISTA Recruiting Office, 317 Federal
Bldg., Rochester, NY, 14614.
Syrian sources said it committed the Kremlin to defend
the Arab state from foreign attack. In a dinner speech
only hours after signing the treaty, Brezhnev said the
Persian Gulf is the affair of the Persian Gulf states and
"no one has a right to meddle from outside in their affairs." Brezhnev clearly referred _to President Carter's
declaration that the United States will protect the vital
Persian Gulf oil routes if they are threatened by the
18-day-old rift between the oil giants at the head of the
gulf. Without naming the United States or Carter, he accused "imperialists" of "militaristic machinal/on" in
the conflict and said they hoped to use the war to
"reestablish their domination in Iran."
Gulf War Reports Continue
(AP) Iranian warplanes bombed the outskirts of
Baghdad, and Tehran claimed that Iraqi invaders
threatening Ahwaz, the capital of oil-rich Khuzistan
Province, had been thrown back 13 miles. Iraq claimed
its forces "continued to destroy enemy installations and
to strike at military and economic targets deep in Iranian
territory, inflicting heavy losses in life and equipment."
But there was no word on the progress of its key offensive to complete the conquest of the Iranian port of
Khorramshahr and move on to the neighboring refinery
city of Abadan. King Hussein of Jordan, brushing aside
American and British warnings following his declaration
of support for Iraq, said he would send Jordanian
troops to fight alongside the Iraqis if they were needed.
But he said that was not imminent yet.
Penthouse Sued For $4M
(AP) A State Supreme Court judge says he will decide
Friday whether lo block distribution of November issues
of Penthouse magazine. A lawyer for Penthouse's "Pel
of the Year" claims distribution will ruin his client's life.
Isabel Lanza, 28, sued Penthouse for $4 million, saying
she never agreed to be Pet of the Year. Her lawyer, A.
Richard Golub, told Justice Michael Dontzin, "She's
not the Pet of the Year, and if that epithet is attached In
her, it's going lo ruin her life." Miss Lanza renounced
Ihe title at at Penthouse reception last week and declared
she "would not have signed that release lo be Pel of ihe
Year if I knew what it meant."
October 10, 1980
Woman Seized Near Draper
throat. After forcing the woman into her car, the attacker entered the
by Beth Sexer
rear seat of the vehicle and ordered
A young woman from out of her to drive.
The woman drove around the city
state was abducted al knifepoint
and sexually abused last Tuesday at until the attacker told her to slop in
about 9 p.m. near SUNYA's front of a white building, which
Draper campus as she was entering police believe is located at 137 Lark
her car in the Robin Slrecl parkii.g Street.
Police said he then ordered her
lot between Washington and
Western Avenues, according to an into the back scat and sodomized
her.
Albany police report.
In addition, he stole $15 from her
Police said an unknown black
male allegedly grabbed the woman during Ihc attack, according to the
from behind and put a knife to her police.
Pres. Debate At Thruway
The economic platforms of the three Presidential candidates will be debated at a special Albany Rotary Cluh
luncheon meeting on Thursday, Oct. 16 al Ihe Thruway
House, Albany, beginning al 12:45 p.m., according n>
Rotary Publicity Chair Arthur J. Singer. Mayor Eraslus
Corning will represent President Jimmy Carter; Congressman Gerald Solomon will represent Governor
Ronald Reagan; and Retired U.S. Ambassador J. Owen
Zurhcllen, Jr. will represent Congressman John Anderson. Each will make a 10-12 minute presentation to be
followed by a 2-3 minute rebuttal. The program is
designed to help resolve the question of who will get
your vote.
Nominations, Please!
SUNYA President Vincent O'Leary has announced
that the Chancellor's Awards will again honor persons
demonstrating excellence in teaching, librarianship, and
professional service. In addition, SUNYA will continue
a campus award presentation to recognize excellence in
support services, and is establishing a new award for excellence in advising.
Nominations for excellence in teaching, advising and
librarianship should be forwarded to the Office of
University Affairs (AD 201), professional service
nominations to the Office of University Affairs (AD
231), and support service nominations to the Office of
Finance and Business (AD 326).
The deadline for presenting nominations is October
24.
>
After the attack, the report
stated, the man drove the car to 75
State Street while the woman remained inside. He then reportedly
fled from the scene.
The woman called the police immediately after Ihe incident at 10:23
p.m.
Police describe the attacker as an
unknown black male, 5 ft., 9 inches
to 5 ft., 10 inches, of thin build and
with a medium afro.
He is wanted by police on first
degree charges of kidnapping,
sodomy, robbery and sexual abuse.
Downtown Patrol Discontinued
by Sue Smith
Due lo increased budget cuts,
SUNYA campus police have been
forced to d i s c o n t i n u e the
downtown patrol program this
semester, according to Public Safety Director Jim Williams.
However, Alumni Quad Director, Liz Radko, insists that there is
a definite need for the program lo
be reinstated.
The downtown patrol program
had originally consisted of four
squad members who patrolled the
area from Ihe afternoon until 2:00
a.m. In addition to outside
surveillance, they walked through
the dorms floor by floor watching
for strangers, vandcls, voyeurs
Tampon Warning Issued
Government studies show that tampons are associated
with an increased risk of Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS).
This is a newly discovered disease thai affects mainly
women who use tampons during their periods. Symptoms include vomiting, diarrhea and a high fever (102
degrees).
TSS can be very serious and is believed to be responsible for a number of deaths. Some recent studies Indicate
that Rely tampons were apparently involved with TSS lo
a greater extent than other brands.
Therefore, on September 22, Procter and Gamble announced it was suspending sales of Rely and thai il
would refund money lo consumers who had Rely In their
homes.
To obtain your refund, send your unused Rely tampons with your name and address to:
Rely
P.O. Box 500,
Maple Plain, Minnesota 55348.
You will receive a refund including the cost of mailing.
Page Three
Albany Student Press
and/or petty thieves,
Radko feels the program was efficient. "There were a high number
of incidents downtown but the safety patrol worked hard to change
that. .There was a rapid response
lime and follow-through on all
cases. The number of incidents have
gone up since the program has been
diseonlinucd. The difference is like
night and day."
Radko said thai students residing
in the downtown area feel penalized
because of the lack of patrol ihcrc.
"Students don't report many minor
thefts because they feel, 'What are
we going lo do about it.' I've heard
students saying they feel they're
forgotten entirely."
"The potential for incidents occurring downtown is far greater
(lhan uptown)," said Radko. "It is
less secure because Alumni Quad is
surrounded by a residential community. A uniformed policeman is
very much a deterrent to crime."
Williams insists, however, thai
the downtown area is structurally
safer than Ihe uplown area because
of the long hallways in Alumni
Quad dorms as opposed to the
isolated architecture uptown.
Williams said thai only len per
cent of his complain! reports are
from downtown, while ninely per
ccnl are from the uplown area.
Williams said he is aware thai
students had fell more secure wilh
the downtown patrol squad.
However, he said he did not know
how to respond to that because he
cannot take forty percent of his
squad to handle ten per ccnl of Ihe
reports downtown. He added thai
there are some patrol cars in the
downtown and Draper Hall area.
Williams feels SUNYA students
on Alumni Quad are protected
from the Pine Hills Molester
because of the presence of other
students and residence staff. "He is
Today is the lasl day to vole in SA elections. Voting booths will beset up in the Campus Center Lobby and on dinner lines. All students
who wish to vole must bring Ihclr tax cards and valid SUNYA l.D.
On-eampns students are lo vole on their respective quads, offcampus sludenls may vote in Ihe Campus Center Lobby.
not in our jurisdiction," Williams
said.
However, Radko said thai female
sludenls still live in fear. She said
one security problem is keeping
doors locked because so many people prop I hem open.
According lo Williams, two incidents occurred in ihc downtown
area within the past week. On October 4 a male was found in the
women's rest room in Alumni
Quad's Waterbury Hall, and lasl
Tuesday night at Draper campus, a
woman was abducted, sodomized
and robbed (see front page). .
When asked about Ihe possibility
of reinstating the safely patrol,
Williams stated that they have no
choice but to wait for additional
assaults to occur on Ihc downtown
campus.
Radko said, "If it is possible, 1
want lo lake a positive approach. 1
understand about manpower shortages but why wail until something
happens?"
Peer Advisement Initiated
Funding for the new center has
"The Peer Advisement Program is
not a substitution for CUE — but a been a problem, according to
supplement to CUE," he explained. Morganstcrn. However, boosts
Academics Committee Chair, have come from an $1,800 donation
PhiHh: Mil,. Farrrll
Lori Pcpe, helped develop the pro- by the SUNYA Alumni AssociaPublic Safely Director Jim Williams
gram. She appointed Debra Kurtz lion. The grant has been assigned to
Insists downtown dorms are safer than uptown.
and David Triczc, in addition lo Schwartz and will pay minimum
wage to student advisors. "We have
Morganstcrn, to direct Ihe group.
arranged with the College Work
The program, SA, consists of upThe Peer Advisemcnl program
perclass students in specific majors has also enlisted the help of CUE Sludy Program lo have litem pay
who arc trained by the Center for staff members Carol Fonda and the salaries in the future," said
Weinslock.
Undcrgraduale Education, to assist
Dick Cottier, and the advisor
The Student Association has also
freshmen and sophomores plan Stanley Schwartz.
courses of study in those respective
The Advisemcnl Program will kicked-in some funding for the Peer
areas.
help CUE advise more than 1,500 Advisement Center's advertising
The program was developed by SUNYA undergraduates, and bring costs," said Morganslern.
Previous programs of this kind
Senior Jeff Morganstcrn, who was the guidance " t o a more personal
hy Andrew Carroll
Hotel Workers during last spring's commissioned by SA last year. level," said Morganslern.
have been run through various
, Demonstrating their suppori for "SAVE SUNY" campaign, and
academic departments bul the efa fellow union's cause, members of after a solidarily pilch from history
forts of Morganstcrn and his
ihe Union of University Professions professor Lawrence W i n n e r ,
associates, David Yokel and Judy
(UUP) are now walking sidc-by-side members joined the picket line lasl
Grccnbaum, could prove lo be the
with striking workers al Ihc Thursday.
first permanent university program
Western Avenue Ramada Inn.
"They're fighting a real antidirected by s l u d e n l s , said
The professors now join teachers, union situation right on our
Morganstcrn.
bus drivers, longshoremen, and doorstep," said James McCTcllan,
"I've seen it done at other univermembers of other Albany unions in an education professor who joined
sities and I've seen it succeed," said
supporting Hotel, Motel, and the picketers yesierday.
Morganslern.
Restaurant Workers Union, local
McClellan was referring lo the
According to Weinslock, there
417, now in the seventh week of lis worker's struggle with the manager
are 4,4(X) freshmen and sophomores
slruggle with owners of Ihe Inn.
of the Ramada Inn.
combined, "and the-new center
The workers are demanding a
UUP voted Ociohei Isl to supwould serve any percentage of
port Ihc hold woikcrs, alter union wage increase from Ihe minimum
them."
$3.10
lo
$3.75
per
hour,
overtime
representative Hob Helangei made
Applications for positions as StuI'holoi Shtro l.'nhtii
an appeal before an Executive privileges and a guaranteed paid
dent Advisors arc available in the
Program Developer Jeff Morgmistern
Committee
m e e t i n g . U U P vacation. Hold Manager, Peter
SA Office, Campus Center 116,
Peer Advisement "is a supplement to CUE.
continued on page thirteen
remembered the help offered by
through October 15.
by Amy Kanlor
A university-wide experimental
Peer Advisement Program for the
Spring '80 term will begin on
November 10 on Colonial Quad,
according to Central Council Chairman Peter Weinslock.
UUP Members Demonstrate
For Ramada Inn Strikers
/
October 10, 1980
Music C o u n c i l
Page Five
Albany Student Press
SUNY Fall Enrollment Increases
presents
THE CLEVELAND QUARTET
(Playing Mozart,
TUESDAY
Bartok
OCT.
&
Mendelssohn)
14, 1980 at 8tf0
RAGE HALL (downtown
pm
campus)
"Phenomenal . . . among their
peers there is no competition."
Chicago Tribune
Gen. A d m . $5 ; Sen. C i t . & Stud. $4;
SUNYA s t u d e n t s w/ tax c a r d $ 2.50
Chai - UJA BRUNCH
Oct. 12 • FREE • 12:30 • CC375
THIS SUNDAY!!
STUDENT B A N D S
WANTED
for a
BATTLE OF THE BANDS
Auditions
October
The State Had Expected a Decline
by Nora Klrby
SUNY enrollment this fall is the
second highest it has been, according to a report released by Public
Communications Officer for
University Affairs and Development Hugh J. Tuohey. In addition,
undergraduate enrollment has
reached its highest in the 32 years of
SUNY's history.
A total of 197,754 students arc
presently enrolled in the 34 SUNY
campuses. This figure is topped only by the 1975 SUNY enrollment of
200,999 students, according to the
report.
Undergraduate enrollment at
SUNY this year, according to the
report, is 164,318 as compared to
the 1979 enrollment of 157,735
students. In spite of this enrollment
increase, Governor Hugh L. Carey
proposed a major budget cut for
SUNY last April based on expected
declines in enrollment. The state
legislature later restored those
funds.
Citing data from the Executive
Budget, Vice Chancellor for
Finance and Business Harry
Spindler said Carey wanted a $12.3
million budget cut as "part of the
plan to reduce state government
throughout, including the University." Carey also requested a cut of
$14 million in view of "changed
economy and enrollments."
SASU president Jim Stern
believes it is "a misconception"
that
enrollment will
will decline
decline because
because
tat enrollment
"SUNY is the only affordable place
to go to school."
Stern also said that as part-time
and minority enrollment increases,
so will SUNY enrollment.
"For the Board of Regents or the
Governor to say SUNY is losing
enrollment is dictating more than
prophesizing," Stern said.
An article in the Albany Times
Union
r e p o r t s that SUNY
Chancellor Clifton R. Wharton Jr.
said, "This fall's experience certainly emphasizes' the fallacy of
premature assumptions of dramatic
student body declines."
However, Wharton also stated in
the article that enrollments could be
expected to show some downturn in
Ihe
future.
tne luture.
SUNY Chancellor Clifton Wharton
This represents "...Ihe fallacy of premature assumptions.
When you need some
notes at3:00a.m.,you find out
who your friends are.
21,22
Information Call Beth 7-5106
.?-. .-Bob 438-5459 ( § & k
Randi 482-4601 &jj!$T
m- ' i fTHIf
Proceeds
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to Telethon
'81
Still Thinking About What You're
Going to Do on Parent's Weekend?
For Men & Women
1/2 PRICE
WILL ROGERS
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Friday
10-9
Saturday
10-6
Go Back in Time with:
Monday
10-9
ALL OTHER MENS & WOMENS
BOOTS IN STOCK
B|
And Other Famous Americans
On October 18th in the University Gyrn at 8 p.m.
Saving up t o
'FRYE $ 2 0
OH
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Tickets on Sale Now in the Campus Center
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$2.00 with Tax Card (3 per
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1 5 9 Central A v e . A l b a n y , NY
$10 will hold your FRYE Boots on layaway at sale prices.
You left the notes for
chapter (> in the library. A sut
sign that tomorrow's test w
be heavy with questions from
chapter (i. Someone you know
is about to get a phone call.
He's not going to like it, but he's
going to come through. When
this is over, do something
special for him. Tonight, let it
be Lbwenbriiu.
A Speaker's Forum Event
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) State officials expect up lo 100,000 people
at New York's "Harvest of Music"
festival Saturday at the Empire
Slate Plaza In Albany.
The musical extravaganza was
the brain-child of Gov. Hugh Carey
and, according to Office of General
Services Commissioner John Egan,
should cosl the state about
$2(10,000.
"The major performers have all
donated their services," Egan explained Thursday.
Those major performers will include pop singers Harry Chapin,
Helen Reddy and the Manhattans;
the jazz bands of Dizzy Gillespie,
Duke Ellington and Mongo Sanlamaria; the Albany Symphony Orcheslra and Crane chorus Colleginted Singers and even an appearance by Big Bird of "Sesame
Street."
The free-admission festival will
begin about 10 a.m. Saturday and
will be officially opened al about
11:30 a.m. with a 19-gun salute by
National Guard howitzers.
Music, craft demonstrations and
movies will be on display
throughout the day. And there are
reports that Carey has been asked
to lead the singing of ihe state's official song, "I Love New York."
The day's festivities will end with
a huge fireworks display beginning
about 7:30 p.m.
As revelers leave the giani state
office complex they will see a towering G-Clef symbol outlined on the
side of the Tower Building al the
plaza. The symbol will be produced
by lighting only certain sections of
different floors on the building.
While ihe festival is considered a
massive undertaking by state officials, il was arranged for in about
a month.
"We knew the governor wanted
to do something," Egan said, "but
it wasn't until four or five weeks
ago that we found out exactly what
it was."
To deal with the large number of
spectators expected for the event,
officials have established a shuttle
bus system to outlying parking lots.
G E T Y O U R ASS
OVER TO
T E N T CiTy.
Lowenbrau. Here'stogood friends.
"
'
* " . • " - » . . . - " " " ™ - MJ.»..H» W
, |..,iH,„i, n .L-il.iill!.AIivmuillii.. " • " • » " • M.I-.A.. i»„,„,.„
Chapin, Reddy,
Jazz Greats to
Play at Plaza
—a-g_
NOW!
October 10, 1980
SUNY
SKIS
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SUMMER "JOB^
OPPORTUNITY
:,- .c rr C.C Lofcfey
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- " ; — - A.'0 OTHER SKI CLUB TRIPS AND
- • --'• - : V.;il 3E DISCUSSED AT OUR MEETING
M o M J A y ' M E T S NiTE
DRATT .25
SUNYA 's Made Accessible For Handicapped
by Beth Caminunila
The
ramps
aren't
for
skateboards, the wide doorways
aren't to solve the problem of who
goes through first; and the dotted
and raised lettered selection labels
on some campus vending machines
aren't for decoration. They're all
adaptation for disabled people at
SUNYA.
^
'—^'zr-i 5'=- st S2S.50
- <
!
J
BU Y E AR L Y
SKI WITH THE
ALBANY STATE
SKI CLUB!
Thurs., Fri.., Sat. Sun.
Draft- .25' Mixed Drinks-501
. . .Leiicn*. . .Skiir>g. . .Rentals
5 i .• E
.' Page Seven
Albany Student Press
* : *
NEWS FEATURE
Since fhe Rehabilitation Act of
1973, and Sections 503 and 504
(1978) mandating architectural and
programmatic accessibility for all
organizations receiving $2500 or
more from the federal government,
SUNYA has been a l t e r i n g
sidewalks, buildings and stairways,
and relocating classes to meet the
needs of its disabled.
According to Assistant Dean for
Student Affairs, Nancy Belowich,
who works with disabled student
services, SUNYA was not built with
accessibility in mind because "the
consciousness wasn't really there."
Prior to 1973, you Just didn't see a
lot of handicapped people
anywhere. WhyV There was no architectural accessibility and there
were no civil rights lot the disabled."
When these laws were passed,
Belowich said, "Everybody panicked. They thought adaptation would
take millions." Since there were
and still are few federal funds to
help organizations make these
adaptations, she said, SUNYA has
made as many adaptations as it can
with the money available.
"If, for example, the graduate
program you get accepted into is on
the second floor, and there is no
elevator, the program has got to get
to you," she said, "so, we would
move the program to accomodate
the disabled students."
" T h e disabled have . b e e n
discriminated against since time im-
memorial," Belowich said. "All we
are trying to do is give them equal
opportunity."
Archtcctural accessibility extends
to the dorms as well as the academic
buildings. Modified student housing is available in four of the State
Quad low rises and one suite on
Dutch Quad. The doors are wider,
the showers are adapted to accommodate wheelchairs, and, as Mike
McNichol pointed out to me, the
phones and light switches are lower
than those in unadaptcd rooms.
Mike, a sophomore from Rome,
New York, is wheelchair bound.
"1 really don't have too many
problems, 'course I don't look for
them," he grinned. "People are
pretty nice, holding doors for you
and stuff. My succinates help me
all the time."
Although Mike admitted that get-'
ting around in rain and'snow can be
a problem, he chose SUNYA
because of its accessibility.
Mike has to be good with a
wheelchair, (hough — he's on the
SUNYA-sponsorcd Wheelchair
Basketball team.
Charlotte Robertson lives down
'the hall from Mike. Charlotte, a
second-semester sohpomore from
•Nassau majoring in sociology, is
also In a wheelchair. She's been involved in civil rights for the handicapped for several years.
"Eight or nine years ago. I was
involved with Wheels For Independence. Ten years ago, people
felt that the handicapped and
disabled should be shut away.
Wheels For Independence and
another organization called Indoor
Sports both started getting people
out of their homes, to meetings,
churches, and other activities," she
said.
She feels that many people don't
concern themselves with rights for
the disabled because they think "it's
always somebody else's problem —
it couldn't happen to me. Adaptations are okay by most people,
"unless they're inconvenienced."
Then it's a different story, she said.
She agree with Mike that her biggest problem was getting around in
the snow. "You can't get to class
s o m e t i m e s , " she said. The
sidewalks and ramps are plowed so
they're clear, she said, but, in plowing one, the other is often blocked
off, as when a street plow blocks
off a driveway. "You're going
along line, and when you come lo
this" she raised her hands to indicate the lop of the imaginary
snow "and your attendant lurns
you around and heads hack for the
dorm," she said.
She has an attendant twenty
hours a week lo help her out with
"a multitude of things," she said.
"Attendants gel Xeroxes lor you,
call your professors lo make ex-
TUES. OCT. 14 AT 8:00 In LC
->s?05:is
525.00 and S40.00 respective!;.
-' -•i -.j..e~ad a: meeting For more info, call Stevi
^ .a:.-, a: 463-1750 or Skip Sperling at 482-3482.
'•COME OH NOME ro
W»I*EB£ THE COLHTRY & '
Senator Javits
* 9151)
^
featuring
¥E£DMUhin£
WITH SPECIAL GUEST
l E A l
Bi yBremner
"
3. P. ©'tarn,
Paramounf Pictures Presents'a Wlldwood Enterprises Production "Ordinary People"
Donald Sutherland • Mary Tyler Moore • Judd l-lirsch • limothy Hutton • Music Adaptod by Marvin fiamlisch
Rasod Upon the Novel by Judith Guest. Screenplay by Alvin Sargont. Produced by Ronald L.Schwary
A Paramount Picluro
— I neBTBicTCD "3£- I Dlrecled by Robert Redford
l E - easy to reach by SUNYA bus
TICKETS ON RAI P
(starting Monday Oct. 6)
AT:
The Record Co-op, Campus Center,
Palace Theatre Box Office,
Just-A-Song, Drome Sound
Comfing October 17, BLOTTO in the Campus Center Ballroom.
continued from front pane
good Senator for the mouniai
stales of the West, but that's m
what he's running for.
"D'Amalo is againsl women'
rights, abortion rights, the 55 nip
speed -limit, and hand-gun cor
trol," Javits continued, "It's sour
New York . . . 1 cannot conceive i
him representing that stale."
The Senator further charged tin
"if D'Amalo is to defeat me on th
grounds of age or physical imped!
ment, he will nol gel along with Ih
Senate,"
D'Amalo's commercials clurinj
the primary race attacked Javits
ability lo serve in the Senat
because of his age of 76 years.
Although officially rejected b;
his party and low on campaigi
funds, Javits said he js not "lik
Muhanuned Ali — a champiot
whose time has passed.
"There are two differences bet
ween Ali and myself," Javits said
"And they are spirit and commit
ment. I'm still a champ."
Terry Williams
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21 at 8:00 pm
ALAL>b
cuses for you, give showers, and is a .
friend."
Coordinator for Rehabilitative
Services in the SUNYA library, Jim
Lane, said the Learning Resource
Center (LRC) provides a range ol
materials to the disabled including e
braille dictionary, a large prim
thesaurus, Talking Books and large
print textbooks.
For example, the library carries a
73-volume Webster's Student Dictionary, "the World Book En
cyclopedia, Roget's Thesaurus, anc
the Columbia-Viking Desk En
cyclopedia. Newsweek comes ir
disc form, and catalogues of Recordings for the BHnd are available
Students can call the N.Y.S
Library for the Blind and Visual'}
Handicapped and request copies ol
materials, which will be providet
to them at no charge."
He added that the books art
usually lent for extended periods ol
time, since many arc used foi
courses.
The library has a Talking Boot
machine to play discs on, listenini
booths for students' use, and room:
and equipment to be used b\
readers lo record material.
The Disabled Students Services
according lo Belowich, also pool
resources with other local organiza
lions, "We're tied in with a lot o
local groups and try lo share expet
tise, friendship, and resources," It said.
Willi service constantly improv
ing, the disablcd's biggcsl handica
now is other people's attitudes, sh
said. "Your* average disabled per
son feels like '1 can do anything.
Other people, whether they'ri
afraid or unaware, are often a bin
d ranee."
"Many disabled people call u
TAUs," she said. "Temporaril
Abled Bodies. Some days we a
become disabled, some sooner lha
others, that's all.
iHDIK i i l i i | i » l ! icniMPHiMi
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October 10, 1980
ZODIAC N
High Tides Forever
W a t c r b c d s have gained a r e p u t a tion for m a n y things and n o w an
agricultural
another
newsletter
use
of
the
reports
walery
yet
mat-
tresses.
California
Northern
Farmer
says t h a t
California,
pot
in
growers
have started using w a t c r b c d s as irrigation reservoirs for
the d r i p ir-
rigation systems used 10 water their
marijuana crops.
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CRAIO ROOSTER AMP - Heavy duty 24 watts tolal power
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JENSEN J 1 1 1 7 • New Series I pair repl. speaker.
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VTSONIK A401 - Deluxe 40 watts/channel power a m p .
VISONIK 4 2 0 0 - Mew surface mount pair superbox lor European cars.
and
watch
your
crops
g r o w at the s a m e time.
Marijuana
growing In N o r t h e r n
SPEAKERS
California,
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$ 2 8 M . CRAIO 721 - B- 2-woy.
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$ 2 9 M . FISHER 11»A • 6 ' bookshelf with 8" bass speaker.
$ 4 8 * a . FISHER MS127 • New 8" 2-way bookshelf.
$ Svea. FISHER OS111 • 8" 3-way b o o k s h e l
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$ 9 9 « n . FISHER O S 1 M • 12" 3-way bookshelf.
$119ea. OENESIS V6 • Audlophlie 6" 2-way bookshelf.
$ 6 9 M . JENSEN 2 0 - "Best Buy" 8" 2-way.
$ 1 2 9 M . JENSEN JO • Deluxe 10" 3-way.
$ 1 7 4 M . JENSEN 4 0 - Deluxe 12' 3-way bookshel
$ 3 9 M . MARANTZ 308 - 8" 3-way bookshelf.
$ 8 9 M . MARANTZ 310 - 1 0 " 3-way booksholf.
$ 1 4 7 M . MARANTZ SEVEN - 1 0 " 3-way bookshelf.
$ 3 9 M . PIONEER CL38 - 8" 2-way bookshelf.
$ 6 9 M . PIONEER - 1 0 ' 3-way bookshelf.
dollar business.
according
to
official
slate r e p o r t s , is a hundred-millionCalifornia
Farmer
reported
figures on whether walerbcd
no
sales
have been affected by the pol growing b o o m .
Politics And Pot
Where do the three presidential
candidates stand on the issue of
decriminalized marijuana?
A report from the National
Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws (NORML) reveals
that President Carter has been silent
on the pol issue in the 1Q80 campaign, in sharp contrast to 1976,
when
Carter
supported
decriminalization. Since being
elected four years ago, Carter has
supported the spraying of paraquat
on Mexican marijuana fields.
NORML suggests that part of
Carter's reluctance to strongly
favor marijuana reform this time
around could be related to reports"
that top White House aides have
been linked to cocaine and other
drug abuse, charges that are proving to be a political liability for the
president
Ronald Reagan, in the meantime,
is very clear in his belief that pot
should remain a serious criminal offense. The Republican candidate
has called marijuana — in his words
— ''the nation's most dangerous
drug." While governor of California, Reagan vetoed several bills that
would have loosened up penalties
for the simple possession of marijuana.
John Anderson is the only major
presidential candidate to openly endorse the decriminalization of marijuana during this campaign.
However, his liberal view seems to
be a recently acquired one: during
his tenure in the House of
Represenintivcs, Anderson did not i
once co-sponsor any of the many.
decriminalizaliun bills that were in-'
troduced in Congress.
were set t o take a b o u t
$ 75
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$257
$309
THOMAS 1 1 1 1 - 1 0 watts/channel AM/FM receiver with power output meter
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SHERWOOD 7280 - Audlophlie spec. 35 watts/channel.
SHERWOOD 7480 - Audlophlie spec. 35 watts/channel.
SHERWOOD 7480 - Audlophlie spec. 50 watts/channel.
However,
the
scientists
tar
now
machines
10 percent
per puff
were virtually identical t o
fewer puffs per cigarette l h a n they
T h e t o b a c c o c o m p a n i e s claim the
%> &*$J
\
ing the s m o k i n g public when they
claim
that
nicotine
the
in
levels of
cigarettes
tar
and
have
been
declining in recent years.
Three
scientific
researchers
report that (he t o b a c c o c o m p a n i e s
are
using
a
"loophole"
in
Students are getting into ROTC
their
testing p r o c e d u r e s to m a k e it a p pear ihat tar and nicotine levels arc
d r o p p i n g . That l o o p h o l e , according
t o the scientists, involves the way
cigarettes arc s m o k e d by a u t o m a t i c
smoking machines.
The
researchers
say
they
com-
pared test p r o c e d u r e s on 12 m a j o r
b r a n d s studied In 1969 a n d
They
report
finding
that,
1974.
in
the
In a new " a b o u t - f a c e , "
college
students arc reportedly signing
up
in large n u m b e r s for the " R e s e r v e
Officers
Training
ROTC.
Corps"
—
reporis ihat
the A r m y expects t o have 65,000
colleges
and
ROTC
at
about
universities
2K5
in
the
because
the
on
and backpacking, management and
ethics;
and
minorities,
Air
ranks
hrj«
on s o m e prestigious campuses such
Yale, a n d
Stanford,
have
women
and
there
is still a
small
minority,
the
newspaper says, R O T C has surviveven
on
the
University
the bastion of student rebellion.
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T ^
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° ' ">"»"" ,)
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Albany, 95 Central Ave., 462-9501 /Northway Mall, Colonie. 459"7550/Schen"efttnHy .,
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. . . , - .
-
•
• •
•
•
-
•NHHSSUti
IBRSBRVBRVBRSBR^BRVBRVBRVHBBRI
UN ». "PRIVATE BENJAMIN"
Slarrill
O l M T WFJiBERl'SAf
EILEEN HKENNAN • AP
HAM1AHA UAH
c
,, , LACK • MAURY W A N S
- -n-ial AppearoiOT ALBERT
Willi™ .mil I'tuducfd I., • -
- R I RESTRICTED^
i»„
YERS i CHARLES SHYER* IIAR
d by HOWARD ZIEFE
,. g
OPENS OCTOBER 10TH
AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU
of
C a l i f o r n i a ' s Berkeley c a m p u s , o n c e ,
The Army ..
until Judy Benjamin joined it.
• Permanent Center* open days,
evenings and weekends.
' Low hourly cost. Dedicated fulltime staff.
Complete TEST-n-TAPE^facilltln
(or review of class lessons and
supplementary materials.
Small classes taught by skilled
Instructors.
been
lo
anti-military
newspaper says R O T C
Harvard,
the
up
Although
total-
been shut d o w n since the hue 1 % 0 ' s ed
.as
accepted
subjects such as leadership, hiking
8,(XX)
the
-
military classes of t o d a y focus
opened
and
on
T h e newspaper says R O T C a l s o
1980-81 academic year; the Navy,
midshipmen;
interest is u p
Iran and A f g h a n i s t a n .
! as b e c o m e
Tribune
Ofl'icers-in-Training
Ihat
most c a m p u s e s , partly because of
or
t
77n' Chicago
but
•ASF STUDIO C 9 0 - Studio quality cassette.
MAXELL UDXLC90 • Your choice Type I or II. Limit 3 per family.
MAXELL U * C 9 0 - Blank cassette.
$18.05
PER MONTH'
say
b o t h studies.
BLANK CASSETTES
NOW
$2.00
$3.2 f
$1.88
$3.97
$1.29
$2.39
$2.97
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and
dropping.
did in the 1969 tests.
Puffin' Stuff
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AKAI R20 • Deluxe 26 watts/channel.
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were
that the a m o u n t s of t a r a n d n i c o t i n e
1974 tests, the s m o k i n g
The
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levels
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that
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Cigarette c o m p a n i e s may be d u p -
TAPEDECKS
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1974 studies proved
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Page Nine
Albany Student Press
•Reg.^Srfjff
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'
J
y-v.v---;:,-»-. :--
--.-
1
-
,-. - . , - > . . -
---
••
viewpoint
columns
Whose Truth Is It?
A GOP Assembly:
Fresh Ideas For New York
7 i UK Ldnn| i u ^-irr-liu::; :
• 9 A t i e Trssiasioa] eeziiois a r ri—i»TTrrif -fD£ CIU2TI. EliZ HOB ZEL 2E5L"
5 urge: t i e a j c s n u i i i ~ a v "catsuit 1 ^ TILZS.
T i e .~:aii s^eiiii: _•*• n i l b n r a n l m r r a s u m
r u a r r m m c ? aiut a a i a m s u r T HUntttr 12
hiliinE i t 5sa=r& u c . tcmEHii t i e i n u t BOOi
h i i n p r i r l*f tnlim: a:jkir~:- T i e eaasiatur:
r m T t n n r v a l t n a mintr? _H sp=ot
7"na yzu: t M S ; ' " ! s f l a r : & i m n r v-aart
En t i e 5^5iut)ii=aEi i t p u t t i e m a e r r * n
t i e Afiaenm'> 1' t i e Erpuiiiicaiii n a n : m r t i rrf t i e A*semb>?. m a r * a r v l i a s n
p v n n i a r . w i l t a i ^ jitH-^ it mui-t N r v
Y-ort i e n r - " t r a l : r xa. S n n e :if tiers; r r : yiTBffti art:
• i i a t r a a e S U W ~ ' i tiiipp-: :.: t i a r n i r
Kuai =at s a w cos b o s paflffic ^ n l e ^ : t g t f u i
n t i e _ 5 * . r ^ u : i i c a m tirie 1 '': IBM a:-:
ti.ni. "Tie T ^ i m i u t a r t r t o D s a • i t t e n - 3 i K IEJ rrraccstr v i t i t i e mfffitim Tae. St
t i a r EJ n n r = EOK tit; pxninxfizn! of m r a r t e
m : m r roar n: n c n n e t a * = a.'»= o n not
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t i e a ^ : » u n n r u B R X a a i n a n" S r w I : r *
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t:i: Bateaoooti D u n g ingoiwionni rnnwnv
Loan ri'-'traiL =HI tiua n o n e ; a m
n o t : no fjau'r; UKH an^s-Eir Em prilocal
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Protest Today
T o the E d i t o r
O n Friday, O c t . 10, students fron
iin;pL;ses t h r o u g h o u t t h e state wfll estabb •
i ••Tent C i t y " o n t h e front b a r ; ol ; ' . ' . ' :
Central A d m i n i s t r a t i o n in Alba.-.;. 7 o n e o f m a n y actions being s t a g ? ; 10 p j
S U N V i n e » policy t o m a k e the i o n
pjfTioent by increasing rents a tola
3efir-.r.££: 120000, andean - KIJf
tenis on SL'S'V C e n t r a ! f:or.: . i - - -.• ;
p j n . S.-^SL' w,U bold a pres; cooferez
;• . . L't the d e m a n d s of S L N ' : Uidet
concerning d o r m conditc-r.- and
. " I b e t e n t s wiD r e m a i n u p thi
be du
ibe < n a i n g and I
tfaroogl '
the DJgbJ
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- • L.-A b a n n e r .
Trent City «
m a k e it d r i
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running the d o r m s .
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ecubve session a n d -•:?• •.- _'
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puses had recessed for the summei
In light of the Chancellor's 2.
IDE rossibility of a n eventual $-• 1 1
rent increase, SASL' has m a d - ibe I
dfrrumds t o Chancellor W h a n i I
•A halt t a j S * funher plans t o rr. •. dormitories toward
self-suff.
.•:•;; —mending that the Board of Tnii
Resolution (regarding self-suff..
ed o n M a y 18 b e recinded.
•A public c o m m i t m e n t by SL'NV Ccr
and the Board of Trustees t o p^
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VOTE!
^Tiein was turned d o r m , j o u j i m - i-hear » h a i t h e p e r w o n e w w you in
is saying- W b o k n o w s , you ~_g.-: _;
l o miss o u t o n i t . T h e r e OOBU be = De»
friend 10 talk with.
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1
rfAspectS
October 10, 1980
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The Student Notebook
1
M
t
M m
_
.
, _
, Page 3a
Cpnchita Rodrigues and Shii
Shirley Beans
Say I t With Flowers
Historically, people did not bathe often. the pie) over and, out.
Water was scarce, faucets unheard' of. So
Darling Llllles of the Field. Flowers for
everyone wore flowers. There were silver Algernon. Flower Drum Song. Carnations
bracelets to hold small bouquets on tiny and the dead. Martha's Vineyard. Pinkster
wrists and bands to hold violets on broad- rain. The man In the uniform said; "Don't
brimmed hats. Marie Antoinette stuck sprigs eat the oleanders."
of dogwood and Jasmine in her towering
Whenever she hears "roses are red," she
coiffure. The Little Women wore garlands on
their gowns; daisies dripped from their
decolletage Anne Sullivan (Helen Keller's
teacher) pinned lea roses to her doited swIss
graduation dress; she never fell lovelier. All
that remains of this glorious tradition Is Ihe
carnation in the buttonhole of the fat man.
Persephone was picking a dandelion and
the nice man called her over to his car.
There was sleam on his window, so she
started drawing faces. Her father says It
leaves streaks. The man sal smiling, pushing
his face againl the cold glass. Il was funny.
Her mother told her lo gel in Ihe house. The
man drove away. "He could have pulled
you Into Ihe car," she said.
When you don't pick Ihe dandelions from
your garden, It's like not shaking your fool
when II falls asleep.
Girls flower and lose their virginity.
There's talk of cherries.
Lenny Bruce liked a girl, so he sent her a
room full of flowers.
He brought her flowers before Ihe social.
They were wrapped In tin foil. He looked at
her. "Here," he said, "my mother said I
should give Ihese to y o u . " Then he ran
away.
Gwen Is 27. She loves Mickey Mouse a
lot. She talks baby talk when she wants
something from her father. She finally got a
boyfriend. He sent her flowers. They had lit- Ihlnks of Bobby Vinton. K-Tel has done this.
tle black bugs In them.
Bob O'Brian sent a love letter. "Roses are
When she was sick, Bill who lives with red, violets are blue, daisies are yellow, grass
Mona came to her window with a bouquet of is green," It read.
flowers. " H o w are you feeling llltle one?" lie
Robin the Liar told me she found a 4-leaf
asked. "Oh those are so nice," she said, "For clover In my back yard. I asked to see it.
me?"
" N o , " he said, "they're not for y o u . " " O . K . , but one of the leaves fell off," she
When I was eleven, I was not ashamed lo said.
say pussy willows.
In New York, a Hare Krishna gave us both
Flowers make great code names. Blue
Dahlia lo Appleblossom Special. The nym- roses. "Would you like to make a small conphet Is In the takehouse (the emeralds are in tribution?" she asked. " N o , " we said. She
took the roses back.
He loves me, he loves me not. (Daisies are
with underwear o n . My mother saw it.
"Cockamamle," she said. "Now you can't be
oracles, analysts, seers).
burled In a Jewlshcemetery"
She saw a picture of a daisy growing In a
But as soon as you pick the flower It Is
field, in Dachau.
dead. And the chicken and the head, the
We exchange our shoes for Japanese slip- frog and the heart, and pre-arranged marpers at her front door, pad in on the grass Images
Billy Rose, Rose Royce, Rose-ann
Scamardella. Rose Marie, Marcla Rose. Pete
Rose sat on a tack. Pete Rose (sorry).
There are chives growing at SUNYA. Jim
has eaten them. I have eaten them. They
need sour cream though.
She once brought me a black rose because
1 thought they were the ultimate in sexiness.
It was really a white rose spray painted black.
Belh refuses to believe that flowers have
pistols. She also is a vegetarian when the
roast beef is too well done.
There are many rosy women, but only
one poppy seed lady.
She wants lo fall asleep in the poppies
with Dorothy.
Manley gave Joy a flower. She smelled It.
" M m m . . . chrysanthemum," she said.
"They don'! smell," he said.
There is a series of photographs in the
album. The brother and sister (conceived In
Queens), In front of the birthday trees. Successive springs saw him lenghten, his nose
grow, and his eyes narrow. Polo shirts gave
way to Arrow collars. She grew rounder and
moodier. For three years, her smile was
close-mouthed, concealing tinsel teeth They
stand further apart In the later snapshots, while the trees embrace in a pink and
while canopy overhead.
At every birthday parly Hilary says "Oh I'll
carpet to her bedroom. Yumiko's magic take the flower." She thinks It's like Ihe end
hands fold squares of paper Into bright birds piece of bread, the green juicy fruit, the black
and open flowers. From glass jars In the chuckle.
cabinet, she picks tiny sugared mimosa
Plastic dowers last, bul Jonny's father eats
blossoms (oriental jawbreakers). Her mother them. I saw him. I must remember to thank
calls us into the kitchen. Tiny confection him.
roses bloom on her fingertips, petals squeezThey cleaned the bathroom, i mean really
ed from a pastry lube with infinite patience cleaned. Now there's a mushroom growing
and artistry.
by Ihe side of the sink. They haven't decided
Rose Hips. Poison, Ivy. Jr. 108-15-1091 If it's beautiful or not.
My sister has a llltle flower lattooed on h<;r
Someone told Amerila Bedelia lo prune
lush. Now she has lo walk around Ihe house the hedges. You know the rest . .
Roxanne St. James
Void If Detached
The Blue Roses Of S h a r o n
A n d The Lilies Of The Valley
Lily Lazarus came over from England on a
'boat bound for the States in 1883. She was
twelve years old. Someone bought her
passage to America with promises of a Job as
a maid upon her arrival. But she had been
deceived like so many other innocent young
girls. "There weren't never no job," she told
me, and by 1884 she was a prostitute turning
50 cent tricks in the back streets of the South
End of Albany. She told me of her clients.
Sailors mostly, but others as well, and yet
there were all the same In the end. They
would talk about their marriage problems,
always expecting to have sympathy lavished
upon them, and of course afterwards it was
always the same; up against the wall In the
alley behind the saloon,
At first it hadn't been quite so bad, she told
me She had been working In a "house", Instead of oul on the streets. But she got
thrown out (or stealing and breaking things.
Thirteen years old with no money, no place
in go; the only places where she could gel
something to eat were the local saloons that
gave out free lunches. Bul they wouldn't let
hei in because she was |usl a child so II was
back I being a "working girl" because il you
1
were "w'orkiny" you wen always welci »me at
tiny age
Soon aftet sin mel Frank, who started .is
,i client 'iiul eventually became her pimp I le
look ' are of her. He was a big man, "looked
like Diamond Jim Brady," she said to me.
But Frank only took care of her K she
brought In $5.00 a night, which at 50 cents a
shot, Is no small task. If she didn't bring In
enough money, Frank would accuse her of
not trying hard enough and beat her up and
then send her back out again.
She had one gentleman friend. A boy of
19 whose name was Martin. Another ex-
client, but he was her friend. Or at least she
thought he was. Bul when Frank took her
away to Schenectady, she pleaded with Martin to take her away with him. She knew he
had enough money lo buy her from Frank.
But Martin had renounced all lies with the
outside world. Just when she needed him,
he decided to give up all his worldly concerns and become a devoutly religious
fanatic. Me slopped eating and sleeping and
even speaking to women. Lily never saw
him again.
1 met Lily In a dimly-lit bar in downtown
Albany. I had seen her sitting at the bar,
laughing and talking excitedly, The many
rings; on her Ivory hands glittered from the
reflection of the one red light bulb hanging
from the ceiling. Even in the semi-darkness,
she stood out among the crowd. She had
cascading ringlets of jet black hair and
crystalline green eyes that looked as if she
could see into other worlds. As she talked,
she chainsmoked little brown cigars and
drank vast quantities of gin. I listened in
fascinated mystification to this inexplicable
yet entertaining character. But 1 turned
around for a moment and she was gone!
From my corner seat I scanned the entire
room, but she was nowhere to be found. I
asked the bartender where she had gone and
he laughed, He pointed to a table two feet
away from me, but 1 only saw a thin, blackhaired woman sipping a black cherry soda,
staring off into space. I stared at her through
the smoke-filled haze and all at once I realized . . . It was Lily! In total confusion, I walked over to the table and sat down next to
her.
"Lily, why'd you just gel up and leave?
Did I say anything to offend you?"
"Excuse me, Miss, my name's Sharon.
Sharon Lunette."
"But what about Lily? You were Lily five
minutes agol"
"Yes, that's just It. You see, five minutes
ago I was Lily Lazarus. She borrows my
body sometimes," she said quite malter-offactly.
You know, I'm almost embarrassed to admit It, but I believed her. It made so much
sense. I had wondered how someone who
looked about 25 could have been 12 years
old in 1883, I suppose I had thought she was
kidding, or something. I hadn't thought
about it really, I'd been so enraptured by her
tales that It didn't seem to matter If they were
true or not. It didn't seem to matter to her
either.
I never found out the real story about Lily
and Sharon. Maybe Lily is a psychic, maybe
she's one of those multiple personalities, I
don't really know. I don't know if I even want
to find out the truth. She seems happy; they
both do, Perhaps she took a look at the real
world and decided she preferred the flowers
of her fertile Imagination.
Man* & The Reserves
I In one can, crackers and "Candy,
! chocolate disk with toffee. . .Type VII,
'"Style 3 , " In another.
"Try this," one said as he tossed over
a heavy little can.
"Chocolate Nut Roll," It read. Well,
anything tastes good when you're
hungry.
They were still shivering; it was brisk
and no sun aided In warming their
goose pimpled skin. As Burke showed
me some of *' " u. mntaineerlng equipment, he e;
., ;d ju t who these men
were.
claimed, as he stood shivering on the
bank next to Ralph's house. The other
were quivering, too, as they changed
into dry fatigues.
Regrouping, the men excitedly exchanged stories of the exercise thus lar.
"When you parachute," one explained to us, "you're just held in by a
harness. You have to undo your gear
on the descent, and then shed the
harness before you hit the water. From
there it's free-fall."
One trooper lost his boots, another
his flippers.
"The water jump is the harries! one
you can make," Dan Burke of West
Winfield, N.Y. said.
As the troopers changed, we got
reactions from some of the observers.
"1 wouldn't miss it for the world!"
"It was cold as hell as I hit the water!'" Dorothy P a u l e y from Watervliel
John Ridolfo of Hartford, Conn, ex- spouted. "We should have more people
much for being shot at.
>
Six or seven people had gathered
along the shoreline to watch the spectacle. They were all friends, we were to
learn later, of the family. Just as we
reached them, s o m e o n e shouted,
"Here they come!"
' Bob whipped out his camera, 1 my
pad. A helicopter turned into the wooded cove, sped toward us, swung suddenly, and troopers vaulted out the
sides. The noise was tremendous. The
powerful chopper blades sprayed water
In our faces as the troopers yelled to
each other. The townsfolk ran back and
forth, frantic, as if they themselves were
under attack. A boat raced into the Inlet, and troopers rolled off the sides to
join their once airborn comrades In the
autumn waters of Lake George.
look at this for patriotism," she staunchly claimed. •
Lisa Knapp thought it was fun to
watch, but her friend Bill Campbell was
more critical.
"Are they doing It for publicity?" 1
asked him.
"Sure," he answered, confidently.
"They aren't trying to keep it a secret.
It's a good political thing to see assault
groups climb a mountain, especially
after the situation in Iran." he said.
. By the way, how did he feel about
Carter's handling of the hostage rescue
attempt?
"Pathetic," he groaned.
By now most of the men, ages 19 to
4tf, had sal down to lunch—sea rations.
We were invited to try them —not bad,
although the assorted olive-drab cans
hardly contained what one would call
combat food. Rather, there was cheese
They are all civilia.
living In the
New England area, merm^rs of Company A, a reserve unit from Fort
Devons, Mass. O n e weekend per
month they are paid to plan and execute training exercises.
"We're highly specialized, but much
more informal than the regular, full time
Special Forces," he explained.
"Our main function, during wartime,
would be to jump behind lines and get
partisans banded together."
In regard lo the exercises, Burke said.
"We know it's a game, but we get int<
the game. We can be animals it we have
to," he asserted, with a glare in his eye.
The purpose of the exercise, Burke
admitted, is, In part, to drum up publicity.
"If the units don't do anything," he
explained, "they won't get any
recruits."
"Why do men enjoy the exercises?
Why do they enjoy combal?"
"We get to go out and do things,"
was the consensus. "We have a lot of
control over what we d o . "
"It (combal) is risky," Burke said, "but
we enjoy it."
Alter thinking a moment he added.
"And when you're scared shitless, you
live closer to reality."
This challenge, this satisfying thrill of
risk and danger, seems to be the
underlying psyche thai keeps these men
together.
Helicopter pilot Philip !de, a former
pilot in Vietnam and Korea, and now a
captain in the Army National Guard,
confirmed our theory. He has seen a lot
of action, he said, both active and
simulated as in these exercises, and he
has come to one conclusion as to why
these men do it.
"They love it! They eat it up!"
Background To Shelving Rock Mountain
The shore which Company A landed on,
and most of Shelving Rock Mountain, are
pari of the remains of the once great Knapp
estate. Lisa Knapp, who watched the
maneuvers with us, started the story.
Her great grandfather was George O.
Knapp 1, the founder of Union Carbide In
1895, George came to Shelving Rock and
decided to buy some 400 acres of land
which was on auction.
Ralph Stiles elaborated,
"He set there in the gazebo with his
girlfriend and said I'm gonna build my house
here. He had $2000 on his person and used
that as a down payment," Ralph told us.
There were two hotels on the properly al
that time. George O. Knapp built his house,
and the family continued lo buy land until
the estate covered over 1300 acres, Including 10 miles of waterfront.
Elsa Stflinback, aulhor of several books on
the area, has spent every one of her summers at Shelving Rock. She was present,
and added the details.
The house, built in 1900, was huge, she
recalled, and was bulll into the cliffs. It had a
rail car which ran up the slope from the
water, under a stone archway, and Into the
basement of the house. In 1917 it burned
own.
"1 remember the fire," Elsa reminisced
But the estale flourished. There was a
sleam yard, a yacht, and guests were frequent.
"ll was beautiful here," Elsa continued.
Ralph had his own story to tell.
"My father worked for 'O.I.' (George O.
Knapp I)," he said. "We moved out here in
1936, when I was 13 years old. There were
seven families on the estate then, and we
had our own school.
"There's only
three ways out
of here in the
winter: Take the
road, go across
the ice, or stay
here until springtime."
"My father and his brother were caretakers
of the estate and engineers on the yacht
"I owned a farm in Fort Ann. Then my
father was gettin' old and he offered me the
job. I been caretaker since '72," he said.
"Now I work for 'O. Ill," he continued
The eslale covers only 75 acres now, but still
supports three houses and Includes the (ace
ol the cliffs.
"The family comes here in summer, and
sometimes In Ihe fall for 'colours'," Ralph
said.
"But I'm just an old hermit in the winter
time," he laughed.
"They (the town) plow Ihe road when it
snows, but 1 tell 'em not to plow it too low so
1 can get around by snowmobile," he ex
plained. I know every crack and crevice in
this mountain here, and I can ride you 75
miles without doubling back.
"There's only three ways to get out in
winter," he said later. "Take the road, go
across the ice, or stay here until springtime."
He decided to conclude.
"Yep, the Stiles family and the Knapp
family has been together since they come
here," he said.
"I'll be here until I retire."
He smiled.
J
October 10, 191
Sound & Vision
gg
Trouble 8n
;e 6a
i f i c k To Square One
S"l
bands, etc. All of which was just fine, but the
more we see of Nicky, the clearer It becomes
that she Is nothing more than a hack poseur
supreme of "punk" etiquette, not to mention
a brat. This eliminates any Initial promise.
Next we meet the "straight" kid, Pamela
Pearl (played by Trlnl Alvarado), a repressed, "zombie" (as she puts it) of a teenage
girl. Hers Is a face to launch a thousand
sighs, those glossy, watery eyes begging for
release. Her father (Peter Coffleld) is the
Mayors commissioner, who Is heading a
campaign to clean up the "filth" of the Times
Square area. Of course he suspects Pam's
inability to communicate with people Is the
result of a mental disorder, so he puts her in
a hospital for some "tests" to see if he's right.
In the hospital, Pam meets Nicky, who
wound up there after smashing a car as a
finale to the opening scene. But Nicky's
t o u think you've heard It all? Well
l / f ^Aen to
tnls
-
None otner tnan
J Robert Stlgwood has produced a
new movie called Times Square that he says
will do for new wave rock what his Saturday
Night Fever did for disco. Swear to God.
Jim Jaffe
^ T h e o m y p r o b l e m Is that Fever was an accurate depiction of the disco culture It helped
to explode nationally and, while Times
Square may be a huge commercial success,
it Is a dismally exploitative and thoroughly Inaccurate portrait of the new wavepunk scene
It is trying to bank o n .
"New wave" Is used (abused, really) in the
soundtrack music, the supposedly punk-chlc
dress, and the kids' general attitude (the
words " p u n k " or "new wave" are never actually stated, but the suggestions constantly
made are too obviously aimed at that
reference point to be ignored). Some of the
music Is classic new wave (Patti Smith, Talking Heads), but there is also misplaced popschlock (Robin Glbb); the "punk" dress is
closer to Rocky Horror garb; and the "punk"
attitude is just a typical enactment of cllched
juvenile posing with the " m a n , I'll be dead by
the time I'm twenty-oni , so I'm gonna live
now" schtlck.
Take away the p u n k ethos and
underneath remains a tired view of
"alienated youth." The, uh, story line is
roughly of two disillusioned teenage girls
(aged approximately at seventeen or
younger) who escape the suffocation of the
older generation's shield for the carefree
adventure promised in the big city's street
scene, where they learn about life and find
out who they are and raise some Hell and
make a whole lot of trouble (but they never
get caught), until they realize that there is life
beyond being a rowdy brat and they really
can go home again and daddy will forgive
them and they know they'll never be the
same again and this whole thing is so terribly
familiar and roll over Sid Vicious and James
Dean we really miss you and I think I'm gonna be sick.
As a fan of new wave I approached Times
Square with high hopes, but 1 should have
known better. The film Is endless exploitation. The best shots come in the opening
moments, where Nicky Marotta (posed by
Robin Johnson) is seen In a New York
alleyway banging and slashing at an electric
guitar, living out her own private fantasy of
rock 'n' roll stardom. The first thing I thought
of was the idea of punk returning to the
original spirit of rock 'n' roll, where anybody
could grab a guitar and just play, because
the objective was to have fun without worrying about technical ability; you know, garage
"problem" goes beyond that. Hers was a
miserable childhood, abandoned countless
times by her father, who she describes as being " b u r n t . " Although she fixes up
somelhlng of a pad in an abandoned
warehouse on the East River, she Is set to
depict, besides a" bad Imitation of a "punk
rocker," the famed child of the streets, born
and raised on the very concrete on which he
stands.
Nicky is labeled as having a "thinking
disorder," but the viewpoint we are given
suggests that both girls are just normally
frustrated teenage girls going through the
usual growing pains and, if anything, it's the
doctors and parents who are mentally ill.
The two find they can relate to each other
and escape from the hospital and spend the
rest of the movie together living on the
streets of New York, ready for any wild and
crazy adventure that comes their way. We
see them doing things like washing car windshields in traffic for spare change, dealing
3-card monte on the sidewalk (which results
in a chase with a cop who they outsmart and
escape from), and boogying down 7th Ave.
to the sound of the Talking Heads' "Life During Wartime" (what a waste of a great song);
all typically familiar scenes you'd find In
N Y C , that reveal only a surface familiarity of
the "anything goes" atmosphere of hectic
New York. And there Is absolutely no
understanding of the streets' real tensions
and dangers, especially at night, especially In
Times Square, 42nd St. area, and especially
when two defenseless teenage girls virtually
live right out there.
Meanwhile, back at the Establishment,
Commissioner Pearl is worried sick over his
daughter's "kidnapping" by the "dangerous"
Miss Marotta. It Is only from the girl's
messages over the radio that he realizes his
d a u g h t e r has r u n away f r o m
her
" I m p r i s o n m e n t . " Their messages are
delivered by their favorite disc-jockey,
Johnny La Guardia, who Is played by Tim
Curry of Rocky Horror fame, and who is
sympathetic to the girl's cause. C u n y tries to
convey the noble wear and tear that comes
from the brutal demands set forth by rock V
roll and New York City, but only comes off
as a self-righteous wimp.
By now, the not-so-lnnocent anymore
Pam has gotten a job at a topless bar as a
dancer (with the top on), where Nicky has
started fronting a "punk" band called the
Blondettes (gimme a break!), singing
tasteless punk-drone reproductions with
chorus' like "I'm a Damned Dog Now" and
another with the catch-all phrase: "Spick,
Nigger, Faggot, Bum—your daughter is
one." There wasn't even enough sense to
put the girls in one of New York's many
punkhew wave clubs. And to top it all off
Nicky uses the "punk" alias of Aggie Doom.
The two girls become known as the Sleaze
Sisters (oy) and earn the trademark of throwing television sets from rooftops (the real life
punks originally damned, among other
things, the boredom of television—another
subtle punk exploitation). Before long,
however, Pammy begins to feel the thrill of It
wearing off and decides she's not really like
Nicky and goes back to being a normal middle class schoolgirl who develops acne and
menstruates once a month. As for Nicky
Marotta (a.k.a. Aggie Doom), she somehow
becomes a punk rock "star," despite the fact
that she Is nothing but a loud-mouthed, inarticulate punk (as In "brat") without a
home—sort of like an Impersonation of
Gllda Radner doing an impersonation of
Pattl Smith. Her stardom probably says more
about the Inartlculatlon of the fans who
idolize her, more than anything else.
These masqueraders come out to see their
hero In the final scene when Nicky gives a
concert In Times Square. It Is the film's most
forced attempt in trying to capture any spirit
In the kids' "punk" unity or In trying to
generate any real energy — hardly a climactic ending. The scene Is also the film's most
poorly constructed attempt at depicting any
" p u n k " culture. Nicky's fans must have
thought they were all going to a showing of
the Rocky Horror Picture Show because
their ghoulish, celluloid outfits depict that
culture far more than any attire you'd find at
a new wave concert In New York City. This
unintentionally results In the film's funniest
and most ironic moment, as we see Tim
Curry as Johnny La Guardia on a rooftop
eyeing the concert scene through a telescope
and then gazing wordlessly Into the camera
as If he's thinking, "weren't they In my other
movie?"^
I love rock's new wave (and good movies,
for that matter) which Is why I hate Times
Square. It is a totally misguided (or rather,
money-guided) fabrication of what some
hot-shot Hollywood filmmakers have decided to turn new wave into: corporate wave.
They exploit and misrepresent every piece of
new wave culture that they can think of, and
I find It impossible to judge this movie while
ignoring these overwhelming facts. Still,
what perhaps ultimately removes any worth
from Times Square Is that It takes Itself too
damn seriously, and Its serious pretensions'
take away any sense of fun and—the bottom
line—entertainment (check out the Ramones
In Rock V Rolf High School for the real
thing).
If this review has seemed endlessly
negative in tone—and perhaps cruelly
so—It's only because I fear the film's consequences. Were a fallacious exploitation like
this film to reach mass appeal, It could not
only erode any legitimate respectability new
wave might ever achieve in this country, but
could also take the scene so far away from its
original context, and make its very existence
: -> abstract in nature, that the movement
c iuld die out from lack of purpose and plain
d ection. In other words, contrary to Mr.
St.gwood's under-handed expectations of a
wide-spread, American new wave explosion
resulting from this film's Influence, Times
Square could very well mark the beginning
of the end of the new wave.
I hope I'm wrong.
Turning Humanesque
New Atmosphere For Growing Green
^ y
f a friend approached you recently
f I
and told you thai Jack Green had
—^
just released his first solo album,
your reaction would probably be "Who is
Jack Gr^L-nV"
Tom Lustik
A singer-composer from Britain. Green
broke into the music business when he joined the cast of the musical Hair in the late sixties. Since then, he's done a bit of moving
from band to band, some of which Included
Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow and T. Rex.
Now, Green hopes to find a home In a solo
career.
Humanesque,
Green's new attempt a\
success, blends some familiar instrumental^
into a brand of light rock-n-roll that Is often
.pleasing to the ears. The drum and bass
lines, performed by Mac Poole and Ian Ellis
respectively, are simple. These, along with
Green's rhythm guitar and Interlaced with
the lead guitars of Andy Dalby and Pete
Tolson, form a mixture of melodies that can
be enjoyed by those who want something
other than harsh heavy metal.
The songs, written by Green with help
from L. Adey, contain various themes. The
lyrical Ideas, ranging from love to life's
dreams and fantasies, do not produce much
depth or thought.
Cuts entitled "So Much" and "Valentina"
are love songs, the former having a
pessimistic theme. " S o M u c h " has
characteristics one can definitely find in a Nils
Lofgren song. That is. the lead guitar, played
by Dalby, sounds as If Lofgren wrote and
played the song himself.
Amorous topics from auspice to cynicism
are found in "Babe". "Can't Stand It", "Bout
That Girl", and "1 Call, No Answer". "Babe"
has a new wave sound to it. Green, playing
both bass and rhythm guitars keeps up a beal
to bop to. "Can't Stand It" emphasizes
vocals by Green. He mixes together two
choruses lhat Intertwine to form an interesting sound, although on one part his
screaming tends to annoy. "Bout That Girl"
Is evidence of how Jack Green uses his
rhythm guitar to characterize his music. He
emits a steady flow of riffs, creating the major
sound of this alburn. "1 Call, No Answer" Is a
catchy little tune that features the lead guitar
of guest artisl Ritchie Blackmore.
"This is Japan" has a taste of Japanese Influence. This is brought out by the use of the
keyboards. However, this song seems silly
especially with the current trend of
Japanese-flavored songs.
"Life on the Line." a quicker-paced tune
is represented by the lead guitar of Tolson
The lyrics express how some people lake
chances to live out their dreams, while in the
end they wind up paying the price of what
they sacrificed.
The song with the most feeling musically is
"Thought It Was Easy". The keyboards
create a feeling of calmness and serenity that
you can feel. The lyrics are nothing special
but they do have some depth.
On the whole, Humanesque Is a fine solo
album by Jack Green. The Instrumental in
fluences of Nils Lofgren and vocal influences
of Tom Petty blend logether In Green lo
form melodies that have a character all Its
own.
As far as I'm concerned, Jack Green does
have a solo career ahead of him. His music
does convey an atmosphere most of the time
and with a little radio airplay, he may have a
few hits on his hands.
0'.','
jtobar 10, 1980
Sound &• Vision*
• Page 7a
IakeJL*our_Picj5
Mini Reviews: Variations I n Sound
Jack DeJohnette
Special Edition
^ - j pedal Edition, Jack DeJohnctles'
X new album, is a collection of tunes
/
^ ^ * written by DeJohnette and John
Coltrane. Coltrane, now dead, was a great
jazz sax player during the late 195U's and his
contributions to this style of music were
numerous.
DeJohnette, a veteran jazz drummer, brings us a progressive jazz sound of the
1980's. His tune,"One for Eric," starts off on
a slow beat but picks up and comes together
In a structured syncopated rhythm. "Zoot
Suite" Is a jazzy swing type number that intricately puts together sax, bass and clarinet
solos. "Journey to the Twin Planet," the last
PeJohnette tune on the album, goes a bit
further than the other cuts in that it Is much
less structured and more creative. Its manictempo is characterized by upbeat solos going
off In all directions.
Jack D e J o h n e t t e
"Central Park West" and "India," two
tunes written by John Coltrane, are most
definatelywritten In a different era than were
the DeJohnette numbers. Coltrane gives us
the |azz sound of the 1950's. While the bass
and drums are the backbones of ihe cuts,
heavy sax and clarinet solos bursting with
energy are abundant.
this upbeat tune that is, by far, the most exciting new piece on the album.
"Orbit of La Ba" featuring Dewey Redman
on musette, could best be classified as
"Mid-eastern" jazz because of Its amazing
resemblance to snake charming music. This
cut, while It may be creative, lacks any real
substance.
Finally, a tiresome social commentary.
"Song for Whales" leaves the listener
wondering what is going on. A two minute
melancholy sax and trumpet duel lhat
musically espouses the plight of the whale is
surrounded by six minutes of whale noises. It
is possible thai even a whale could not appreciate this number.
A r t Ensemble Of Chicago
Full Force
ull Force, by the Art Ensemble of
Chicago is an interesting new
album that combines the progressive sound of jazz music today, and the
much more structured jazz heavily influenced by Chicago blues.
The disc opens with an extremely unstructured number, "Magg Zelma". Alter thirty
seconds of noise lhat gives the listener the
feeling of anarchy, the ensemble goes into a
heavy disorderly jam featuring horns and
percussion Instruments such as gongs, cow
bells, congas and wood blocks,
"Charlie M" and "Old Time Southside
Street Dance" are two fast upbeat cuts. The
raunchy sax. backed by the clarinet, gives
the tunes a "B-Bop-ish" tempo
"Full
Force", the title track, is more progressive in
that it is heavily unstructured with jazz overtones.
Il seems that the members of the Art
Ensemble of Chicago like to do their own
thing. Sometimes it works very well and
sometimes one wonders whether the air that
:hey are breathing is too thin.
9
— Andrew Hecht
The group with Peter Wasser on bass, ArithurBlythe on alto sax, David Murray on
itenorsax and bass clarinet and DeJohnette
on drums and piano, is extremely crealive.
Theyare an exciting look at what jazz can be
in Ihe 1980's.
Blackwell, Redman, Haden
Cherry
Old arid New
Dreams
• ~ v n their new LP, Ed Blackwell,
/I
1 Dewey Redman, Charlie Haden
^ " ^ and Don Cherry; unleash a progressive form of jazz coupled with a social
commentary. The album, Old and New
Dreams, combines the talents of ihese five
established and popular jazz musicians.
"Guinea", written by Don Cherry reveals
he versatility of Charlie Haden on tenor sax
ind Don Cherry on trumpet. The sax anc
rumet solos compliment each olher nicely ir
Walt
Stedlng
Vivabeat
of classical and experimental rock melodies.
Check out this new genius.
Party In the War Zone
Souixsie and the Banshees
^ - ^ ne of the newer styles being pur/'
J sued by some bands today is one,
^—•^
which includes synthesized drums
and lead-heavy keyboard sound. Two bands
lhat are successful in this trend are Orchestral
Manouevres. the epitome of the style, and
Ihe Human League, which is more repetitive
in melody and simpler In lyrics.
An American contender in this sound Is
Vivabeat, and on their debut album, they
come close.
Musically the band is very palatable, with
good syn-drurpming by Doug Orillo, and interesting switching lead-to-background
keyboards and synthesizers supplied by
Marina del Ray and Consuelo de Silva.
which keeps the listener's attention, The
weak point of Vivabeat Is In the lyrics, which
are sung by Terrance Robay. Sometimes a
Brian Ferry-clone, other times a male-
Charlie
lHaden
soprano, Robay falls to convey intensity in
the lyrics by seemingly trying to cut through
the band instead of going with them.
Alec Murphy delivers a good unrestrained
guitar solo in "1 Know Your Room".
"Wild World" and "To The Heart" are two
strong cuts off this strong effort.
Walter Steding
Walter Steding
si f or a high tide of sameness.
- / / something very different has
~~~S f floated out of the new wave —
Walter Steding.
Steding is a violinist, and a good one. On
his debul album, he exposes his varied
musical influences — classical-country lo
Eno-esque — as well as tremendous creativity.
Side one of Ihe album contains Ihe vocal
tunes and two of them aie cover songs.
Leiber-Stroller's " H o u n d D o g " , which
features Robert Fripp on guitar, and the
"Isley's "Shout", with Richard Lloyd on
guitar, succeed as remakes. "Get Ready",
penned by Steding, is a choice cul on the
album with droning vocals and a mechanical
beal.
,
Side two is all Steding. Backed by his band
ol Jerry Ryan (drums) and Joey Pinler
(guitar and bass), Steding moves In and oul
Kaleidoscope
•
• his Is the Queen of Punk Rock. No
'
/ A M hits for this lady, with a band
—•»S that plays with no holds barred and
a voice that cuts like a laser-beam. Souixsle's
third album is both typical of her, and is
another new venture Into music for her and
the listener.
Souixsie first gained prominence by dancing wildly on stage at Sex Pistols gigs. Later,
signed to a record contract, she returned to
the limelight as a new artist with the careerstifling support of England's National Front.
With her band of Budgie on drums, Steve
Severln on bass, and John McGroch or
Steve Jones on guitar, the album is an intelligent mix of fast and slow melodies with
easy and kinetic rhythms.
Still relating to the strife of life, Souixsle's
subllmlnated lyrics always hit the head like a
nail.
"Happy r'.uuse" should be the big hit on
this album. Also check out "Christine" with
the acoustic background, "Red Light" with
heavy synthesizers, and "Skin" — about the
useless slaughter of animals for coats.
Slouixsie, and the rest of the album, is rated
no poseur's.
Black Uhuru
Sin semi I la
s—T\
ossibly the hardest reggae band In
S f^s the world, Black Uhuru has follow—J
ed up their incredible debul album
Showcase with the even better Sfnsemflfa,
Reggae bands in the past have been
known to get preachy without having the
melodies lo keep you listening. And when
Ihe preaching goes over your head, interest
Is lost.
However, this is changing, for reggae Is
rapidly becoming popular without losing its
strength, thanks to bands like Black Uhuru.
Credit must also be given to the pro
ducers, and drummer and bassist, Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare for making Ibis
album a musical masterpiece.
Michael Ruse. Puma Jones and Derrick
Simpson open the album with the bil
"Happiness", - followed by •> call foi unity
in "World is Africa" Side one then closes
with another hot ont "Then 1 is Fire" fealut
Ing Jimmy Becker o harmonica,
title cul
Side two highligl
include ll
, fealurwitli its lament on lift
Vam|
ing lead bans by ihe amazing Shakespeare.
Do not ci lfuse Uhuru with tin' light
• Velghts, This group Is serious. . .and great.
-EdPftika
Blues Power
Long Live Bloogie
ot quite the blues, yet not quite
boogie, the Buffalo Chips Band, a
five-man outfit from Woodstock,
' defies categorization. But Buffalo Bob,
e band's founding member, offers a sugestlon.'"It's bloogie music," he says, "and
uzanne Gerber
rehabilitation of prison inmates.
If the medium Is the message, then the
Buffalo Chips have the right idea. Buffalo
Bob and his colleague, Tara McCarthy, the
officers and co-founders of the corporation,
feel that through their music they can lead
prisoners toward self-actualization.
Bob, who's seen It from the inside,
believes the first step In Ihe rehabilitation process Is getting an individual to feel good
about himself. From there, he insists, things
can't help but make sense. And Bob feels
one way of making people feel good is
through bloogie music. "I was born In an orphanage," confessed Bob, "and I've been
playing the blues ever since."
e name of the game M o feel goo3l"
With a hot sound, "half-way between Z2
p and George Thorogood's Destroyers",
Buffalo Chips will rock Albany this
eekend with their own blend of New York
ncc music and Chicago based blues. Their
o night gigs at the Last Chance Saloon on
entral Avenue in Albany will feature three
ts of live bloogie music.
But the Buffalo Chips are not just another
lal r'n'r group. They're part of an organlzan called "Citizens Helping Interned Pers Sell-Actualize", or CHIPS for short.
CHIPS Is a newly formed, not-for-profit A m u . t - e e e p e r f o r m a n c e : T h e B u f f a l o C h i p , a t t h e L a . t C h a n c e S a l o o n
rporatlon whose main purpose is the
Two successful prison dates have given
the Buffalo Chips encouragement. With luck
more will follow.
The Corporation's ultimate goal is to
become Instrumental in establishing music
programs and workshops within the prison
system. Bui this lakes the one thing CHIPS
hasn't got; money. Plans are being made tc,
solicit private funding.
With the two most popular rehabiliation
programs being remedial reading and weight
lifting, Tara emphasized the need for a diversified program that Includes the arts. "We
aren't preparing anyone for a career In show
biz," she quipped, and stressed the importance of the experience Itself.
This weekend's line-up Includes Dave
Heinlein and John Erseg on lead guitars,
Gene Oliveri on tenor sax, Lenny Landsman
rounding out on bass, and Buffalo Bob
himself, on drirms.
So, If bloogie seems to be your beg, why
not shuffle on down to the Last Chance, lip a
few cold ones, and pass the Buffalo Chips.
'age 8a
October 10, 198
The Back Page
Fred the Bird: A Retrospective
I
IT'S BEEN TEH mtNUTESSiUCE
I ' * A6KEP H E * TO GO OUT
H M M W , THAT t E W J M N t y
UMS. A T&OfcH <?UE&TION
wmt mr wtt> Mm. He BRLV.* WES SIR , f. P E F l N i T E
TWou&HT ffeovoKER.
J WISH s u e * i V W « UP HER
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SUNYA Performing A r t * C r a t e r
Tickets are now on sale for our own Albert
Asermely's presentation of Two Gentlemen
of Verona, a play by William Shakespeare.
The cost Is $2 with tax-card, $3 without, and
$4 for the general public. Dates are October
17, 18, 19, 22-25 In the main theatre. 8:00
p . m . , 2:30 p.m. on Sundays.
The Ega
The Elephant Man, the play, on Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday.
Dance Theater of Harlem, October 16-19.
For Information call 473-3750
w e u . F R E D , APTEft s«eiAid*i-THow,H you Awo/tre * « t i y l / ' s o rue M C I D E D T o \ r ,
SHOULD 6 E T "COACH OF
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Jb THET TWUU. ."IF
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E m p i r e S t a t e Plaza
Harry Chapln In a free concert today, Friday. Hurry!
V
Blv*
I'VE 6 o f
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P9R A TEST AND
I'M THREE weeics
,BEHIND IN THE
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WOW, I NU/ER ffiALIZEP
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cLflS&LS ACL SEMiSER!!
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J . B . Scott's
October
10
Executives, The Todd Hobin Band
11
Executives, Dr. John
12
Stranglers
13
Ellen Shipley
14
Spill Enz, Ad's
15
Iron City House Rockers
P/x of the A/eek: Don't miss the Stranglers
on Sunday night. This original punk band
dales back to the Sex Pistols, and were
leaders In the punk explosion. Always controversial, a Iways exciting.
Hulla Baloo
October
10
11
Patrol, Rachel Sweet
The Kings
Last C h a n c e S a l o o n
10
Buffalo Chips Bloogie Band
(See Sound & Vision)
Cinema 1-6
Ordinary People
Song of the South
Coast to Coast
Airplane
Hopscotch
Terror Train
Hellman Theater
Divine Madness
Hair (midniyhtj
THERE cowES AT/mE IHEvtRi
FORTUNATELY / LIKE" A S//?L
WITH A 5ENSE OF HurtOR
STUoewri LIRE wME/v MEMUST
OfEtfeo/Hf HIS F£A(2 0FJS6/N6
LAUOHED AT in THE FACE 6 /
* M£mB£R O F THE cflbsiTfe
SEX
Colonie 1 & 2
Willie & Phil
Oh God. Book Two
Cinema 7
Put.
Benjamin
UA C e n t e r 1 & 2
In God We Trust
Octagon
you THINK you're so SMART;
H u t t f W E U ,WATCH T H I S ;
31
^/NOT BAD ••• FROM ANXIOUS
' D I S C O M F O R T T O TCrrM-Ly
|NCAfAClTft"nH6 NBWOUSURS
I N M-.5 S E C O N D S
The coalition against Nukes presents Iwu
films on Wednesday, October 15. The are:
More Nuclear Power Stations, and Early
Warnings. In Brubacher Hall (Alumni Quad)
at 7:30 p . m . ; suggested contribution is
$150.
On-campus
movies arc shown at 7:30 & 10
Albany State Cinema
Fri, Sat (LC18)
BelngThere
l . F . G . (LC 1)
Fri
The Chinese Connection
S it
International!
inuse
T o w e r East C i n e m a
Fri, Sat
ACROSS
1 Man on one knee
9 Delaware I n d i a n
15 Mockery
Collegiate CW79-19
16 Worships
17 Rock-band instruments (2 wds.)
19 Collector's goal
20 Great lake
21 Former anti-war
group
22 Magruder of Watergate fame
25 Folksinger Phil
26 Propeller of a sort
27 Certain batsmen,
for short
28 Mass or lump
31 Debate material
(2-wds.)
36 Dress style
37 Contemporary music
maker (2 wds.)
40 "I
fool"
41 Vital territory
42 Us: Sp.
43 Ei ther you
45 Singer Zadora
46 "Jacques
is
Alive and Well..."
47 Official language
of Zambia (abbr.)
48 Organization for
Mr. Chips
23 Word with chair or
street
24 Franklsh queen of
long ago
28 "Eyeless in
"
29 Draft animals
30 Golf accomplishment
for short
31 Treasury worker
32
sapiens
33 Epochs
DOWN
34 1938 song, "When
Media coverage
a-Dreamln'"
Irked
35 Paris when it
"Waiting f o r Lefty"
sizzles
playwright
36 One one-thousandth
of an Inch
Photo, f o r s h o r t
Calendar a b b r e v i 38
go bragh
ation
39 Unaccompanied
California's
43 California county
Dig
44 Was a tenant
Hebrew j u d g e
46 Feci sorrow
room
48 Word In Jane Austen
Missile site
book title
activity
49 To have: Sp.
Bunker and Head
50 States positively
"
a Stranger"
51 Old Irish script
Sandarac tree
52 Mr. Guthrie
P r e f i x f o r meter or 53 1949 A . L . b a t t i n g
scope
champ
He: I t .
56 "L'etat e'est
"
Fitness condition
57 Hairstyle
(2 wds.)
58 Mel cf baseball
Addie of baseball
59 Actress Mary
fame
60 Offshore apparatus
51 1977 SuperBawl
champ
54 Accelerate
55 1968 hit song
(2 wds.)
61 Assert without
proof
62 Mounted attendant
63 Like many plastics
64 Natural numbers
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
18
22
Electric Horseman
WCDB 91-FM
Saturday: SUNYA at Buffalo football coverage. 1:30 p.m.
Sunday:
"Notes
from
the
U n d e r g r o u n d " featuring Bob
Radliff's new album The Shining,
and a live interview.
Monday:
presents
"Front Row
the Cms uclers
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one month's public notice before acting on
any student fee increase proposal.
• A comprehensive plan to end tripling in
rooms designed to house t w o people. This
plan should be ready by December 1, 1980.
•The replacement o f the present housing
contract with a lease, binding on both administration and students, to be bargained
at the beginning o f each rental period by
student negotiators and S U N Y Central (or
campus administrators).
• A n FSA- (auxiliary service corporation)
type governing b o a r d , composed o f
students and residence o f officials be
established on each campus to administer
dormitory goverance procecdures, including policy-making and hiring o f
residence staff.
• A l l university and housing agreements between students and SUNY concerning fees
be honored by SUNY for their duration.
The Chancellor and Trustees have asked
SASU to call o f f Tent City and threatened
punitive action against SASU as an
organization i f it goes on. We at SASU feel
that we will not call o f f Tent City unless
Chancellor Wharton grants students the
above concession. We have told Chancellor
Wharton that we arc willing to discuss mid
negotiate with him at any time. We will
keep you posted on all developments,
— Brine Cronln
SASU Campus Organizer
— Jim T'lenii'v
Albany Student Union
Molester Feared
To the Editor:
I am currently a studeni ai Ihc Unlvcrstly
of Maryland and have recently become
aware of a very serious mailer thai is affecting Albany University students who are
residing in (he Pine Hills urea of Albany.
The matter I am referring lo Is known as i lie
case of the Pine Hills Molester who has
been terrorizing people in the Pine Hills seclion for over a year now. This problem
came to my attention through my best
friend who attends the University. She has
told me on many occassions o f the attacks,
including rape, that have been occurring in
the area in which site lives.
I have learned that within the last year
approximately fifty five attacks on young
women have occurred by this one man, or
possibly more than one, known to the
police as the Pine Hills Molester. I am very
concerned about the safety o f my friend
and I worry constantly about her and other
friends o f mine who also attend Albany
University.
It is hard to believe that the police have
not been able l o capture this man whose
composite they have and whose pattern and
area o f attack is always the same. I've been
told by my friend that the uniformed
policemen patrol the area in police cars
and usually sit at street corners in their easily recognized patrol cars with their lights
on. Now doesn't that seem a little bit
ridiculous to you? Since this molester has
been running around for over a year now,
and is obviously very clever, I would think
that the police would have a little more
sense than to just sit in their cars and wail
for the attacker to strike. Don't they realize
that a psychotic person like we are dealing
with now will shy away when lie sees a
police car and wait until all is clear before
he attacks again?
Being a criminology and pre-law student,
I feel thai I have ample knowledge of the
law including the functions and duties o f
Ihc police. 1 would think that the police
would be better o f f if they patrolcd the area
in 'inmarked cars and also used decoy dops
at some of the street corners. I f they arc doing so now, then 1 do not understand why
this person has not been caught yet. It is
about time that the police went out and
started looking for this molester instead o f
silting back and wailing for him lo attack
and rape again. After all, he has attacked
about fifty five women already; next time
lie might decide lo kill. Musi we have a
nun dcr occur before I his man is to be apprehended and punished?
Besides being very worried about my
friends, I also have another reason lor being concerned about this matter. I plan to
apply lo Albany Law School for the fall o f
1981 and am having second thoughts
because this Pine Hills Molester has not
been caught yet. I feel thai I f this attacker is
not stopped soon, it will affect the enrollment of both Albany Law School and
Albany Universtiy for next year. I know
that I personally would nol attend the law
school next year if this man was not caught,
even if it was the only law school I was accepted into,
We believe that peaceful picketing and an
orderly demonstration may proceed outside
of the buildings on the requested dale and
time. This is, o f course, subject to certain
reasonable requirements which must be
observed by the SASU organization, its
leaders and others participating in the
utilization o f University facilities and
premises. Although your letter does not indicate the numbers o f potential participants
In tlw gathering, we also direct your attention tc all applicable municipal health and
public safety codes. As you know, Slate
How Many More?
A y o u n g w o m a n was a b d u c t e d a t k n i f e p o i n t near D r a p e r H a l l last T u e s d a y .
Blade t o her t h r o a t , she was f o r c e d i n t o her o w n car a n d o r d e r e d t o d r i v e a cert a i n distance. T h e n she was s o d o m i z e d by her a t t a c k e r .
I n the last year, there have been over f i f t y cases o f w o m e n being sexually
assaulted i n this area. N e a r l y f o r t y o f these are p r e s u m e d t o be the w o r k o f one
m a n i a c , the m u c h - n o t e d " P i n e H i l l s M o l e s t e r . "
C i t y police c a n ' t be everywhere at a l l times — this is a harsh r e a l i t y , a n d d u e
l o state budget cuts i n the u n i v e r s i t y system, o u r o w n c a m p u s p o l i c e have
h a l t e d a l l r o u t i n e p a t r o l i n g o f the d o w n t o w n area.
Yes, we live i n h a r d e c o n o m i c times — b u t w h a t the hell are o u r p r i o r i t i e s ?
A n d h o w m a n y m o r e innocent w o m e n (students a n d n o n - s t u d e n t s ) w i l l have t o
go t h r o u g h the n i g h t m a r e o f sexual assaults b e f o r e a n e f f i c i e n t a n d e x p a n d e d
security system is established?
A n d where w i l l the m o n e y f o r increased p a t r o l cars, o f f i c e r s , a n d services
conic f r o m ? It must c o m e f r o m the state. T h e lives a n d w e l l - b e i n g o f N e w
Y o r k ' s citizens must c o m e f i r s t .
T h e ASP insists that b o t h the U n i v e r s i t y and the C i t y o f A l b a n y a p p l y t o i h e
state legislature f o r i m m e d i a t e emergency f u n d i n g i n o r d e r t o enhance a n d exp a n d b o t h their security forces.
Won't bullshit us. T h e m o n e y is there, especially
f o r such emergency
itua-
l i o n s as these. F o r instance, just a few years ago the G o v e r n o r a p p r o p r i , : ;d 15
m i l l i o n d o l l a r s to Syracuse U n i v e r s i t y f o r the const r u c t i o n o f a d o m e d !
idium.
Sounds like t h e y ' r e really hard u p f o r cash!
M u s t we w a i l f o r Ihc daughter o f a city o f f i c i a l t o be a t t a c k e d befo
Albany
seeks such assistance?
O r must we wail f o r e n r o l l m e n t at this U n i v e r s i t y t o decline as a i
i l l o f the
sexual assaults before ihc S U N Y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n pleads f o r slate a i ' .sec letter
t o the left)?
G o o d g o d , i f y o u p h o n e d the parents o f every female studeni or ihis campus
alone and asked i f t h e y ' d be w i l l i n g l o p u t , say, $15 each i n t o such a proposed
expansion o f security — y o u ' d have $120,(XX) right there.
S t u d e n t s , c l i p this e d i t o r i a l a n d m a i l it l o the S U N Y A
administration,
S U N Y o f f i c i a l s , the M a y o r o f A l b a n y , a n d y o u r elected representatives here.
Gel moving, n o w !
W e d o n ' t want l o report a n o t h e r d a m n incident o f a sexual assault, a g a i n .
I jusl fell that 1 had 10 state my opinion
in this matter because it personally affects
me. 1 realize that the ASP has nothing lo do
with the abduction o f the Pine Hills
Molester but I wanted ail Albany students
lo know that they are nol alone in regard lo
this matter. Of course we know that if, God
forbid, the mayor or some oilier high ranking political official's daughter was
molested or raped, this man would be caplured within days. Since this has nol happened and only college town women have
been aitacked, all we can do is sit back and
wait until the Pine Hills Molester attacks an
innocent woman again.
— Mindy l.orcll
University of Maryland
SUNY Limits Tent City Demonstration
Dear M r . Slnzheimcr (SASU Lawyer):
Chancellor Wharton has requested me to
respond to your letter o f October 2
(received October 6, 1980), on behalf o f the
Studeni Association o f the State University
of New Y o r k , Inc., giving advance notice of
the organization's plans for a gathering lo
express "displeasure" at an action o f the
Board o f Trustees. In your letter you stale
that the organization requests a permit to
have a peaceful, one-day demonstration or
gathering on Ociober 10, 1980, in front o f
the State Universtiy Plaza buildings in
downtown Albany. We interpret your request for a " o n e - d a y " activity to be defined
as the normal University business day which
ends at 5 p.m.
I
editorial
University Plaza is an office complex in the
middle of a busy city and not a campus environment.
University requirements include, for example, that the demonstration or gathering
be orderly and peaceful and restricted to the
walkways outside o f the Plaza buildings
and not include the landscaped ornamental
grass and shrub areas. We further require
thai there be no interference with ongoing
governmental operations or normal entry
and exit from the buildings and that there
be full compliance with all stale and local
laws including the Trustees Rules for the
Maintenance of Public Order. Because o f
potential health and safety problems, as
well as possible property damage, no temporary structures, tents or portable sanitary
facilities will be permitted on the premises.
We will, ol course, expect that SASU as
the organization sponsoring the activity and
issuing the call for activities which are not
fully consonant with the above or your application will be made aware of our expectations and their legal responsibilities. I f you
have further questions regarding these matters, please contact me directly at 473-7591.
Sincerely,
Sanford I J , I.cvlnc
Vice Chancellor for Legal Affairs
rW"'
and Ik. cizailuc
mafjazlnz
c^AspectS
I f . f o M J p f i r d in 1916
Rich U « h - r . Editor -In- Chit]
R o b E. G r a b n i n , Mtinayituj Editm
. . . Sylvia Snundcti
*i Carroll, Susan Millkinn, Belli Svaer
..
Rob tidi'lsieln. Ron Luvy
Joanne Winner
Naw« Editor
A » o H a i c Nawa Edltora
ASPacta Edllora
Aaaorlalc ASPaclB Editor
S o u n d A Vlalon Editor
Clrcatlv* A r t .
DaarJjn A L a y o u t
Sporta Editor
Aaaoclata Spuria Edllora
E d i t o r i a l Pagaa E d i t o r
Copy Editor
Ed Plnka
Suenerbei
Ron l w v "
Bob BulWiorr
Marc Haspi'l, I.any Kahn
Steven A Greenlwig
Mitchell A. Greelwl
. .
S l a i f w r t t a r a i Tom Bonflgllo, Pallida B t n n W . Bull) Commntnln, K m C.inltn. Michael Caimi'ii. Jim Dinun, Bruce Fox. Maurcu
iflu, Frank J Gil J ( , Ken Gordon. Whllnuy Gould. Erir Gmbtit, Wti.dcll Heddon, Mlcholu Itravl, Jamus Jaffe, Amy Kanloi
U n y Kinsman. Tom Lu.Hk, William O 1 Bflen, Wayni; Peffreboaiii, Mark Roiiler, J oil Schadotf, Barbara Schlndler, Paul Schwartz
Z o d i a c ft P r e v i e w E d h o r a : Marie Gnrbarlno, September Klein
D a b b l a K o p l , Buttnett
Manager
Jnnel Drt'ifuss
Bennie B i n w n , Miriam Haspl
HaydunCarriri
Advartl-lng N i n a g u
Billing Accountant
Composition Managar
OHIc« Coordinator
Bonnie Si.
S a l a a t Sieve Gotllef, Robert KnU C l a a a l f U d M a n n j i e i : September Klein C o a i p o a l t l o n i Hunk's Chick A d v a r i l a l n s p T o o u t t l o n M a n a o a r a i Marie Anne Colaullo 1 nmrru (iulfle! A d v a r l U l n a , P r o d n c l l o n i Dianne Giacoln, Mkhele I l i a d , Susan l v \
Mara Mendclwhn, Laurie Schwallberg, < \-., lyn S. dnwlck, Kaihy Udell O f f i c e S t a f f : Wendy Becker, Hody Brnder. T e r n (
H a y d a n C a m i l h , D a a a I l a t i Pmdurtron Mnr
. . Elista Beck
. Hunk's Chick
VartlcMl Camera
Typlat Extraordlnatra
P a e t c n p ! Rogei Cohen, A m
, Robin Umitcln, Deb Reynold., Vtwe Thonnti net T y p l a t a :
i. Barbara Nolan. Laurie Walters, C h a u l l r .
Imp FlKheltl
i 'holography, Supplied prinrlpalty b
C h i e f P h o t o g r a p h * * ! Bob Leonard
U P S Staffi Poire Ateher, Allan Callcm, Karl Chgn,
Morhion. M m l NuuVer. Suna Sielrifcamp. Tony To*
Tisen. M i l e Ftmtlt, Maik t taU-k, Mate 11,-ni.chnl, Koonne Kuhkoff,
, Will Yunnan
Pavt
The Albany Sn eril Preii l i puMlifted euery T W i d n y omi Friday during the ichobl year hy Ihe Albany Student Pnn Cbrpo/Ollon,
independent •I-/nr-profit corporation. Editorial* are written by the Edltor-in Chle/j pottcy it mbjeci to review by lh$ EdJlortoi
Board.
Mallimj addreu
Albany Student /Ve*i, CC 329
IAO0 WWilngfim A p t ,
Albany. JVV
(518) •j57-SH9S/332,J/XiS9
Octojxr 10, 1980
[Classified]
LJ I
C
Ride*
J
Ride Wanted to Ithaca/Cornell leaving Sat., October 11. Returning Sunday o r M o n d a y . Please c a l l
4826276.
Ride needed t o Rockland County/Suflern lor weekend of October
17 and 18. Please call Marie at
7-6053.
C
Wanted
J
Wanted: People Interested In singing professional music at a Benefit
Show for Telethon. Interested? Call
Kathleen or Karen at 7-5102.
Wanted: Female to complete 4
bedroom apartment on Washington
A v e n u e . Prefer
non-smoking
graduate student. Rent $85 plus
utilities. Call 489-7843.
C
For Sale
J
Carpets for sale. 9' by 12', brown
sculptured, $55. 7-8915.
Complete beginner ski equipment.
Excellent
condition,
price
negotiable. Call Tonl, 462-0211.
1975 blue Hornet
Hatchback,
automatic transmission, 18-20 mpg,
high mileage, good dependable
transportation! Asking $850. Call
Sue, 7-4872 days.
I Service* I
TYPING- 3 qualified typists located
near campus. $1/page. Call before 9
pm. 438-8147, or 669-7149.
Professional Typing Service. IBM
Selectrlc. Experienced. 273-7218,
after 5, week-ends.
Expert typing, fust service, 75 cents
per page. Call 462 0492.
Need a Tutor? Grad student will
tutor physics, math, astronomy,
and computers. Reasonable rates.
Call Jim, 7-8310.
Passport Photos, 1-3 Monday. No
appointment necessary. $5 for first
two, 50 cents for each after. Suna or
Bob, 7-8867.
Iron Horse Contractors-Painting exterior and interior, home remodeling, carpentry, Insulation, free
estimates. Doug, 438-9440
Guitar lessons $5/hr. Beginners, Intermediate, and advanced rock,
iazz, fussion, avante garde, country
rock, and space. Call Wayne Gellor,
436-1768 anytime day or night.
[Lost/Found 1
REWARD: $25 for sweater left In LC
2, Friday, Sept. 26. Call 482-7260. No
questions.
c
•Jobs
Page Twelve
_ Albany Student Press _
J
vlodels W a n t e d .
Commercial
Studio. All ages and types tor commercial ads to centerfolds. Centerfold Studios, Box 225, Rensselaer
NY, 12144
Part-time afternoons, must type,
good w i t h f i g u r e s , d o w n t o w n
Albany. 436-0107
Overseas Jobs- Summer/year
round,
Europe,
S.America,
Auslralis,
Asia.
All
fields
$500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid.
Sightseeing. Free Info. Write: IJC,
Box 52-NY1, Corona Del Mar, CA
92625
I l*ci*sonal$ 1
We am on an endless lllght,
My friend
With no beginning and no end.
I've
forgotten
more
than
I
remember,
Sometimes I want to hide mysell
away.
But I know there's no escape,
We must go on lorever.
Bored? Tired of meeting tho same
old Idiots? Come to Livingston 1204
and meet some morel Or, call for an
appointment 70004, ask for Mark,
Jerry, Stove, or Steve. Bring a ruincoat! I
Vlnnle,
Thanks again for the long and winding road trip to the Palace — It
was great.
Hugs, Evs
Stefanle Cooper for
Central Council
Cooper Party Friday, 9 pm In lower
lounge, admission $1.50. Be therel
Need a termpaper or resume typed?
Call Cindy, 7-3075.
The
Balloon
Launch
Comlngl
Contest Is
Qua and Leesle,
Remember — any weekend can be
twin rescue weekend. All you have
| to do Is call.
!
Loved having you around, Evwa
Happy Birthday Mark!
You've finally hit the big 181 What
are you doing tomorrow night? Nice
shlrtl Have a good onel
I love ya, J
Glenn on Indian,
Too bad you turned Into a JAP. I liked you better In faded Lees.
The Balloon Launch Contest Is
Comlngl
Paul,
I hope we can make this year
together, better than the two
proceeding. I love you more now
than ever.
Love always and forever, Amy
David,
IT'S YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW about Welcome to my little cement world
true spiritual freedom. For free of academia. I love you.
book by same title, write; P.O. Box
Forever, Randy
1447, Albany, 12201, Department S.
Liz and Al,
If you missed the watermelon party Thanks again for the Rose. You
don't miss this "Another Amazing made my day. I love you guys.
Pirty"
BOFNP.
P.A.L.
Rafters Nlte Is comlngl Watch for
details.
A,
No one has ever gotten Into my
To Everyone,
Thanks for making my 20th fan- heart or been apart of my life the
way you have. I hope you will
tastic.
always be there.
Love, Jamle-Grr
I miss you, C
You are the greatest. I love you.
Thanks for five-and-a-half months
of happiness.
SFG
Gary Honey,
There was a young girl from Nantucket . . .
Babes
Hey Andy,
Have a real good week-end. See, I
didn't even put In any LI jokes.
To The Tower of Strength and
Stability. Midroom 83,
Thanks for the endless How of kind
words, warm hugs and smiles. It's
appreciated.
The Jerk Off The Porch
Alan,
Did you ever think lessons could be
so much fun? When can we have
another one . . . soon?
Merl
Sharon, Ellen, Robin and friends,
You're the best.
Love, Andrea
Happy Birthday Markl
You've finally hit the big 181 What
are you doing tomorrow night? Nice
shlrtl Have a good onel
I love ya, J
Glenn on Indian,
Stelght-02,
Too bad you turned Into a JAP. I likThe smell is gone but the memory ed you better In faded Lees.
lives on. Who kamlkazled In our
The Balloon Launch Contest is
"|ohn?"
Comlngl
Love and lysol, Steight-03
KR;
iTisi
Would you wear Jordache on a day Thanks for a great weekend. This
Gemini loved the Gemini. Here's
like today?
Jllllan another surprise for my beautifulP.S.Oregon Keith, Never eat with eyed cutsle noodle.
KR
strangers.
P.P.S.Organic Janet, Never eat Don't miss WCDB nlte at the
anything strange.
Rafters!
Stay tuned to WCDB for more Into!
Jack! dear,
Finally your own personal! Good
Stefanle Cooper
luck tomorrow. Make me proud!
for Central Council
Love, Jennifer
Koalas,
Dr. Patricia Warren Webqulst is
Happy Birthday, a little early.
coming to SUNYA! Check the ASP
Love, Rolls Royce
for more details.
DKBT™"
Happy
Belated
Anniversary!
Love
I love K.F.
Love, Dan ya muchly and always . . .
Hugems
Carpet for sale. 9'x12', brown
t o Pattyklns, Liz Belh, and DIPl"
sculptured, $55. 7-8915.
Better late than never. Happy BirthDario,
day! We love ya.
Here's the personal we promised! Allsoyn, Glna Marie, Janeyoirl,
Thanks for the tips on getting an A
Naypay and Jackie Poopoo
In ECO.
R and K Marie,
It's definitely time to get away.
Big Bear,
Sept.
I will love you forever and a day.
of Morrlsi
Thanks for nine-and-a-half fantastic To the Ladles
Thanks for listening
months.
C
Love, Your boo-boo peaches
• PARS,
SepT"
Rhonda Is " a v a i l a b l e . " Ellen,
I think It's time to get away.
Marie another wild time at the TUTE?
Love, Robin
PauT
t h e Balloon Launch Contest Is
I hope we can make this year
Comlngl
together, better than the two
proceeding. I love you more now Guz, Mick, and Aim,
than ever.
Here's to good friends: Mateus
Love always and forever, Amy Rose (all over the place) and Seanl
What a great nlghtl Thanks.
David,
Welcome to my little cement world Beverwyck,
of academia. I love you.
If the office o l student annoyances
Forever, Randy does not close Friday, I'll kill you all
on Saturday. Shut tho f~k u p l l
Liz and Al,
Thanks again lor the Roso. You Eleanor,
made my day. I love you guys. How many tickets should be printed
BOFNP.
lor the Webqulst lecture?
P.A.L.
Linda
A;
No one has ever gotten into my
heart or been apart of my life the
way you hve. I hope you will always
be there.
I miss you, C
Gary Honey,
There was a young girl trom Nantucket . . .
Babes
To The Tower of Strength and
Stability. Midroom 83,
Thanks for the endless How oi klna
words, warm hugs and smiles. It's
appreciated.
The Jerk Off The Porch
Enjoy fine wines and cheese, Imorted beer and more at The
louselrap, located on the second
floor of Campus Center. Open Frlday and Saturday, 9-1:30.
a
B:
Life Is the question.
Love Is the answer.
Paul
Lleberchops,
Aren't executions fun?
Love, the " A " train R.R.
Amy,
I hoar the Mechanical Servants
need a drummer. Do you have a
good beat?
A Hardened Fan
Dear Karen,
Happy, Happy Birthday on October
13th. Have a wonderful day.
Love you, M and D
Lady,
Agnostic of apathetic, olther case Is
quite pathetic. Glad your back you
won't regret It. I love you.
P.S. L.A.V.-W.Y.P.S.O.M.F.
\n the "boglnnlng there was the
Watermelon party and it was good.
So God said, "let there be Another
Amazing Party and there Is . This
Saturday In Schuyler Hall.
Freddlo's ready.
Mark,
This Is |ust to say that I've never
been happier In all my life. I love
you, Babe. Happy 7 months.
All my love, Meem
Girl from State to make room
transfer with girl from Dutch. If Interested call Mlndy, 7-7789..
Beloveth Rachel,
When I'm with you all my fantasies
become reality.
Love forever, Robert
P.S. Would you like to dine out at
McD's?
Therese, Kate, Eileen, Cathy,
Welcome to Albany you wild and
crazy chicks!
Bob and Trlcla
Ever have an elephant sit on your
face? Come to the Clinton Hall Circus Party, Saturday, Oct. 11, 9:00
pm.
804 Dutch,
3 AM? Please gat some oil for the
bed springs.
To everyone who made my 21st birthday a wonderful memory,
I love you all
Lynn
Martha,
How's the man on the 22nd floor?
Barb
Dear John,
Thanks for coming down this
weekend. You're the greatest and I
love you so much.
Love aways, Leslie
What can you do with three rings?
Find out at the Clinton Hall Circus
Party, Saturday, Oct. 11, 9:00 pm.
The
Balloon
Launch Contest Is
Comlngl
i T F w C D B Nlte at the Rafters, October 23rd. Listen to WCDB for more
Info!
To Your Friend and Mine:
Take It anyway you want It;
Be your own superstar;
Let the world know
the only way you want It
Is the way you are.
From Your Friend and Mine
179 Partridge,
"
Another one bites the dust or shall I
say another one bites the bait.
Love, the Wokker
Dear Barbara,
t h o u g h the distance between us
maybe far, my warm thoughts for
you are very near. Happy Birthday.
Love, John
To the best roommate and greatest
friend,
Glad you are happy
Love, Claudle
For those of you who passed the
Watermelon test, can you handle
this. "Another Amazing Party",
Saturday, same place, same time.
Catch the best of folk rock this
week at The Mousatrap. See On
Tap, performing Friday and Saturday, 9-1:30.
Sept.
I don't have to tell you to have a
good weekend, because I know
you'll have a good weekend If I tell
you to or not. If you reach the Jump
level, you'll be at the perfect place
(Huh?) Don't worry about class, It's
not relevant anyway. I'll see you
Monday night!
Marie
October 10, 1980
"From Neighborhood to Ward: The Fashioning or the Urban
Political Machine." Lecture by John McEneny, Albany Commissioner of Human Resources and adjunct Instructor, Russell
Sage College. Saturday, Oct.ll, 10 a.m. N.Y.S. Museum
Auditorium, Empire State Plaza. At 1 p.m. lour with McEneny
of Albany's centers of political power.
Forum with Pat Mayberry, Socialist Workers Party Candidate
Tor U.S. Congress, 28th CD. Tuesday, Oct. 14, 1:00 in BA
209.
Preview
"Images of War: American and British Literature,
1865-1980," will take place every Sunday except November 30.
The public lecture: 1:30-2:30 p.m.; the complete program:
1:30-3:30 p.m. Auditorium of the New York Slate Museum al
die Empire State Piaza. Free.
Freedom or Information Law Robert J. Freeman, Exec. Dir.
of Committee on Public Access to Records, will speak on lire
Freedom of Information Law, Monday Oct. 20th, | -2:30 p.m.,
Draper 021.
Tokyo String Quarter performs on October 23,1980, at 8 p.m.,
in the Empire Stale Performing Arts Center (Egg).
Brlggs Collection will be featured on Oct. 12 at Son's
Restaurant at ? p.m.
Community Service Registration Nov. 3-7, 10 a-.m.-4 p.m., between LC 3 & 4.
Walkathon Tomorrow Be sure to come and help. Info call
Rich, 455-6984.
Recycling Project Come help NYPIRG organize and facilitate
a Recycling Project on campus. Friday, Ocl. 10, 1:30 CC 382.
"Sammy Doughboy: The Common Soldier of World War I."
Lecture bu Robert E. Mulligan, Jr., curator of military histdry,
N.Y.S. Museum. Sunday, Oct. 12, 1:30 p.m. N.Y.S. Museum,
Auditorium, Empire State Piaza.
•WtExciting Theatres Under One Roof
U i -
Albany Slate Pep Band Rehearsals Thursday nights, 7:15-9:'l5,
PAC B28. Come down on Thursday and check it out!
Albany Slate Ski Club Meeting Tuesday, Oct. 14, 8:00, LC 3.
Discussion of all Ski Club trips and events will lake place. For
more inlo, call Steve at 4631750 or Skip al 482-3482."
Ski with lire Albany Slate Ski Club at Steamboat, Colorado
Jan. 3-10 and Sugarbusli, Vermont Jan 18-23. For information
call Steve al 463-1750 or Skip at 482-3482.
A N E W DIMENSION IN CINEMA LUXURY
MATINEES DAILYI LATE SHOWS FRI. & SATI
Class ol '83 Meeting Sunday, Oct. 12 at 7:00 p.m. In CC
Cafeteria.
Korean Martial Arts Club Self Defense Class Co-ed classes
held on Sundays, 8-10 p.m. in the Dance Studio-Gym;
Thursdays, 7-9:30 p.m. Assembly Hall-Campus Center. For information call 459-7162 after 5 p.m. — Mr. Johnson.
Coalition Against Nukes General Meeting Tuesday, Ocl. 14 at
7:30 p.m. In SS 146.
Morris Wallers,
A fucking week-long birthday! To
everybody who took part In It,
thanks for everything.
Wall forever, Mark
Shi;
Princess Flower Child, our lives
may be rolling with the tide, but I'll
always love you. Have a great birthday, I'll be thinking about you.
It's going to fall off.
D.W., alias Herman
Shandy,
What's a kangaroo's favorite year?
I hope your ready for Saturday nlte. A) Elephant's shadow
I promise that this birthday will be B Phil's ego
your most memorable ever. (II you Cj Ask Mr. Green|eans
remember). Happy Birthday
D) Leap year
Love always, Kenny
Maria,
Dear Bear,
Happy 18th! Horizontal position
Down at the beach! (cause) It's a
tonight at Mac's.
summer world.
Love, Michael
Love, " H "
Okay, who's making peanut butter?
Marj;
Happy Birthday to the best friend They aren't green, they're gray. But
thanks. And what color are your
and roommate.
HNH eyes?
A.F.
Happy Birthday Plndelll!
I have a bottle o l white wine,really! Dear Patty, Laurie, Karen, Blnda
and
all
who
shared
In
my
birthday
When would you like to celebrate?
celebration,
Challenge Number 2
Thanks for the fantastic party. You
"Another Amazing Party"
made it a night I'll never forget, I
Saturday,
Schuyler
H a l l , love you all.
9:30-2:00A,M.
Love, Diane
Suzi
Dear PhIL
Happy Birthday! 21 Is better. Let's These past eight months have been
go get drunk in Pennsylvania . . . or the "bestost" ever and now I wish
maybe cruise on the Dayllnerl
you the "bestesl" birthday ever
Love, Meddy (and at least another eight months!)
All my love, Caryn
Jo-Jo,
Happy Birthday! Let's outdo last HI" Ma's,
year. Take the stage by forcel Got Hope your birthday Is the best ever.
your mind made up?
ILY.
Love you, Meddy
Your Mas
Eve,
Moose,
Here's to good friends! Welcome to Happy 4 years, 3 months and 22
Albany and have the happiest of bir- days! Je vous aime beaucoup.
thdays ever.
Moose
Love, Robin PS Apartment hunting Saturday?
The Balloon Launch Contest Is Mlkei
Comlngl
Sorry a b o u t t h e c o n f l i c t In
schedules, but we'll get together
Mare,
Good luck Saturday on your this week deflnately. Don't let it get
boards! We're all rootln' for yal you down.
You know who
Next time, It's dinner for seven and
on us.
HTTO;
Love, Lisa, Sharl, Aurello, Lisa, TO t h e sweetest, left-handed,
Rena and Bob
P.S.How did ya like the Chinese alcoholic I know. Thanks.
Lovo, Quanta, the revolving door
doggy-bag? See, we were thinking
Doug,
about youl
Happy Anniversary to the person
Hey you guys at 861 Madison,
who has given me more happiness
So when are you gonna invite US than I ever thought possible.
down and make dinner for US??
Thanks for being you and for our
XOXO, Barb and Mart five months together. I Love Youl
Pam
John,
Al Isn't available. I'll supply the 554 Hudson Is not having a party
cheesecake, If you'll supply the . . .I this weekend. We're too "chicken.
Donna
Ski Club Meeting: Discussion of all
(My) dear mud,
You can whisper sweet redrums in trips and events Including Colorado
and Vermont ski-weeks, tuesday,
my ear anytime.
_
The ticklish one October 14, 8:00, LC3.
To the wild woman of old Whitman, Na, Have a great tlmel! I'll miss you
(who will I nap with?)
(Babs),
Here's to an amazing finale of your EAE and LAL,
Time just seems to keep passing by
teen years. Happy 19thl
Lovo, your sultees. without anyone really noticing. But
I lust want you to know that I hope
Babs,
what you're doing Is making you
Here's to a great birthday and yearl happy and the time we have
You deserve the best!
together Is my best spent. Thanks.
Love, your roomie, Janet And now, I'm out ol here.
Dearest D.J.,
Later
Happy Belated Birthday and 19
Classified Knowledge
months (sorry It's so late but tho
10
cents
per
word
for
regular
type
love and the thoughts are still as
20 cents per word for bold type
sincere). Thanks for making me so There Is a minimum cost of $1 00
happy.
Submit your personals at the S.A,
Ditto Always, Cleo (how do you like Contact office In the CC lobby and
that name) remember, they do not make
change. To be printed In Friday's
Robin Kamfor,
God only "nose" who did your Issue, you musl have them In by
"nose," but he really screwed up Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. For Tuesday's
Issue, have them In by Friday at 3'30
your c h l n s l l l
Someone who " n o s e " p.m.
Page Thirteen
Albany Student Press
Miles
28 central
462-1020
alway
10%
off w i t h v a l i d
s t u d e n t l.D.
albany's most complete
natural food store
UUP Joins
Strikers
continued from page three
Quadrinl, had repeatedly said he
was "unprepared" to discuss those
subjects, and opposed even the intervention of a federal mediator. ,
The Union has filed a suit with
the National Labor Relations
Board, charging Quadrini with
failure to negotiate in good faith.
The workers blame Quadrini for
unproductive talks and a reluctance
to negotiate. Quadrini had failed to
even recognize the union during the
early weeks of the strike.
McClellan said that when UUP
joined forces last week, the morale
of
the
strikers
had
hit
"rock-bottom," and that the strike
seemed about to fold. He added he
hoped dial when the four or five
professors joined the pickets, the
morale of the strikers had lifted.
Belager said worker morale has
been bolstered not only by the
UUP, but by the first successful
negotiation thus far in the strike.
Wednesday night, workers met with
'•Quadrini for over 3 hours.
The union representative said he
may finally see some "light at the
end of the tunnel" but insists "it's
still a little hard to sec. If I had a
crystal ball," lie said, "I might still
not sec the end of this."
But Belangcr's spirit remains
high. He said he was grateful for
the support of. the unions. "We're
kecpng a lot of business out of
here," he said, noting that they turn
away 10-12 cars each night, at a cost
to Quadrini of $20 to $50 a night.
"There you go, Peter," he cheers
as another car is turned away.
"Another $50 bucks down the
drain!"
LEARN Abour
U.S. FOREIGN SERVICE CAREERS
Informal Conversation With
Foreign Service Officer Frederick H. Sacksteder
Deputy Director U.S. State Department Board Of Examiners
Students At Airy"Level Welcome:
Freshman To Graduate
Students
Come Ask Your Questions:
What To Study, Exarn Procedures And Dates,
Career Information, Etc.
ffOGtR DAI TREY • JOHN FNIWISTll HUTU MOON
FHUHTOWN5HFNO •viil.niNr.O STARR
E MARTIN—
•
mi.
8r SAT. ivr M I D N I G H T *
TW
CINE1-2-3-4-5-6
IfiOCKER-HECLINER CHAIRS • « « • «300 I
Thursday, October 16v1980
9 am to 12 Noon
University Library Basement, Room 86 (GSPA)
RT. 5 a i-a; • NORTHWAV MALL • COLONIE
This
Class of '6<
WEEIC O N
"NOTES FROM THE
UNDERGROUND"
Meeting
3ISRJ
Tllwrfsdliay
©ete®©!? H®
@tf ®8@© pm to CC ®T©
^wtacajyciraiawilCW;3ajacj«sasasaK5Mc»TaMicsJ
Bob RAdcliff's
THE SHINING
AIDANY'S OWN
This SuNcUy - 10-12 MidNJTE
THE SHINING - AvAiUbU AT
T
S.A. Funded
he RECORCI Co-op
October 10, 1980
CJn* ^eefeentr
ALBANY STATE CINEMA
^teeUe/-
"I can't read.
I can't write."
BEINGIHERE
*•
-Chance iho gardanar
"He can't lose:1
-Urianlmoui
Center
Cnmpiis
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Frlday, Oct.
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MM KSIWUTKWffTf WMTWW ltd
FtnOSIMUTiaNBT
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10th
JOt
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Lecture Center 18
$ 1 . 0 0 with tax
$ 1 . 5 0 without
L
/
•
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sa funded
The MouseTi\Ap
-
A COMPLETE LINE
OF YOUR FAVORITE
MIXED DRINKS
•Ui
ALL YOUR P O P U L A R B R A N D S OF BEER A N D ALE
'tr/it
ON TAP PLUS A FULL LINE
OF IMPORTED BOTTLED BEERS
NEW YORK STYLE
SOFT PRETZELS
.IOC
MOT BUTTER FLAVORED
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.20C A .lot
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Hi'sl Ki-piTHi'nl Ymir (Juiul And Win Kiir Vour Qimil
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10&11
October
c c j ^ 5 * . The Best Of Soft Folk
10&11
O
CAMPUS CENTER PATROON ROOM
2nd II nun
Ui
UNIVERSITY AUXILIARY SERVICES
hampered by a shoulder injury
which made it difficult to serve, in
addition to "coming up against a
very tough competitor in Strepman," according to Lewis.
In third singles, freshman Rob
Karen (6-0) remained the hottest
player in the Albany lineup as he
pulled out their lone singles win
over Marc Huetlman, 6-2, 1-6, 6-4.
"Karen gave a real gutly performance," said Lewis. "He was down
3-0 in the third set and came back to
win."
Dave Ulrich (3-1) played well early in his match, but was tagged with
his first loss by Matt Modlish, 3-6.
6-4, 6-1. Nick Julian walked all over
TT7T
Rob Karen (left) finished the season undefeated by winning on Wednesday in Albany's lirsl setback of the
year. Fred Gabcr (right) didn't fare us well us his record dropped to 4-2. (Photo: UPS)
Cut Class
ftfjurstoap (October 9tf)
6p.m. — 1:30a.m.
Jfrfoap & ^aturtjap October 10 & U
6p.m. — t:30a.m.
Jtuly (Jurflnki'l
& Mark I)ii-rf«nbaih
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
9 RM. T O 1 « A.M.
FRANKFURTERS
STEAMED IN BEER .50c
WITH SAUERKRAUT .1.(1.
by Larry Kahn
The Albany State men's tennis
team stormed onto the courts at the
University of Massachusetts on
Wednesday with a perfect 5-0
record looking for their first
undefeated season in five years.
They came up short as they were
outduclcd by an experienced
Massachusetts squad, 6-3.
It was a very tough match between two evenly matched teams,
but somehow Massachusetts came
out on top in five of six siftgleTmatches to clinch.
. ^_
"We're practically equal — the
match could have gone either way,"
said Albany tennis coach Bob
Lewis. "They were just more menially tough in the third sets. They
wanled ii a little more than we did.
We have no excuses."
In the lop singles match,
Albany's Barry Levlne (4-2 in dual
matches) lost to Neil MacKentlch,
6-2, 7-5. "Lcviqe played very tentatively, He didn'i play as well as he
can," noted Lewis.
Fred Gabcr (4-2) played al
number two and was defeated by
Sergio Strepman In a lough threesetter, 4-6, 6-0, 6-3. Gabcr was
M H\)ii ^eefeenlr m ft fjc $ub
|)r«*lnK SntUrJiij Nintil
IIA*
Contcmporarp »ock & ©tiginal iHuBtc
A SELECTION OF FINE WINES
DISPENSED FROM OUR
DECORATIVE WINE BARRELS
-
On Tap
(SoiTlliill
Robert Rentier
Mite 3(opcc
Kori Cira
Saturday, Oct. 11th
7:30 & 10:00
Tax Card Will Be Checked
»
Netmen Fail In Bid For Undefeated Season
at the
(i story of chance
Page Fifteen
Albany Student Press
Dlntucrsitu Auxtltartj fccnjiteB rjpmianrcb
HA*
-
University Auxiliary Services,
Lewis added, "We also have a
good shot al winning doubles til one
and Iwo. If we can gel some points
al number three doubles it will help
our chances greatly."
"This is definitely the highlight
of our season and we want lo win it
badly," Lewis said. "I hope
Massachusetts serves as a wake-up
match for us. It showed thai we are
beatable."
Hi
tWUrwCNlVflMIMI*'
F O L L E T T SUNY BOOKSTORE
FREE W R I T E B R O S . PEN (med. pt)
with each non-book purchase of $3.00 or more,
It's Our "30th" ANNIVERSARY
Dane Preview
Valid 9 - 2 9 - 10-31-80
One Coupon Per Customer
The Celebration Continues
University Auxiliary Services
with
Bowling Alley i
Buy 3 Games al Regular Price
MORE SUPER DISCOUNTS
GET S H O E S A N D 4th G A M E FREE
Next Week
One Coupon Per Customer
Valid 9 - 2 9 - 10-31-80
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Andy Diamond (2-3), 6-1, 6-0, in
the easiest match of the day.
In sixth singles Dave Lerner (4-2)
battled Paul Jaffer, but came 'out
on the short side, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2.
"Lerner in defeat played one of the
best matches I've ever seen him
play. He's starting to come along
very well," said Lewis.
Albany took two out of the three
doubles matches, but it was anticlimactic. Levine and Gabcr paired
to edge MacKcntich and Modlish,
8-6, in a pro-set match. Karen and
Ulrich were nipped by Hucttman
and Mike Harrclson, 8-7, but Diamond and Lerner finished the
match with a win over Craig Turner
and Steve Jordan, 8-4.
The Danes' season winds down
today and tomorrow as they defend
I heir c h a m p i o n s h i p in the
SUNYAC tournament and Lewis
lias high hopes.
We'll definitely be in Ihc lop
three," he said. "It's going lo be a
real bailie between Uinghuinlon,
Oneonla, and Albany. The draw
will be a factor in who wins."
Lewis feels that the learn can win
the 10 team tournament without
winning many individual championships. "Our besl bcl for a
championship is Karen al number
three," he said. "We are strong,
bul beatable, at one, two, four, und
six, but they should make it to Ihe
finals. Oneonla is very strong al one
and iwo, and Binghamton is sirong
al lour, five, six."
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6-
C U T your ties with the past during our "Great
Ring Exchange!" Trading your old 10K gold high
school ring for a new ArtCarved collcgiying could
save you as much ;is $90.
C U T the cost of a traditional or contemporary
Siladium ring to jusl
— a special ArtCarved
"Ring Week" discount up to $20.
C U T a smashing figure with a women's class ring
from our exciting new "Designer Diamond Collection."
Any way you cut it, next week is the best week to select your ArtCarved class ring!
,
c
Pick' your favorite ArtCarved class riiiL;. Cur it out.
Keep it witli you lor a while. Gel an idea what it's
like to own the rin^ that says, "I did it!"
Then, next week, have the genuine article lined
by. the ArtCarved representative visiting campus.
For one week only, you'll have our newest .selection
of ring styles to choose from — and n specialist
who will make sure the fit is perfect. Plus, there
will he some incredible ArtCarved offers to c r ' the
cost of your class ring . . •
u
A/1RJ(7IRVED
9 ^ #
#J
^ C O L L E G E RINGS
SYMBOLIZING YOUR ABILITY rO ACHIEVE,
O
POU.ET SUNY BOOKS, OR,
Depoall required. MastorChargo or VISA accepted,
^ S ^ " ^
» * -
""»
•*»
©Art( nrved College Ringi
continued from hack page
the duo of fullback Tim Najuch and
tailback Mark Maicr. The latter has
356 yards in 97 carries, and was
termed by Chambllss us "a good
tailback. A shifty runner with good
speed." N- inch is "a big kid (5-11,
215). H
tty powerful," according t< • lumbliss. "It takes a couple 01 people to bring him down."
The Buffalo offensive line is
young, with three juniors and two
sophomores starling, and is anchored by center Rich Phillips (also
the kicker), and guards Brian
Wilson and Kevin O'Shaughncssy,
"They are probably their better
ballplayers," Chambliss noted.
"I suspect thai they'll have some
momentum when we go in there,"
said Collins. "They were pretty
lucky to win that game (against
Rochester), but that's the kind of
season they've been having."
"When they (Buffalo) go into the
game this week, they'll probably
have the same feeling they had last
year, bul for a different reason —
they're undefeated. And because of
the way we beat them last year,
they'll be ready for us," Chambliss
concluded.
Welcome back
Claire!
Love,
Karen and Ana
mmmmE z
-U-U-*.
Dutch Quad
FEATURING THE MUSIC OF
-CHUCK BERRY
-ELVIS PRESLEY
BILL HALEY & THE COMETS
same place, same time, same beverages
(beer, punch, mixed drinks,
BEER,
Admission $1.00 with lax $1.50 wllhoul
j 7nr Trn-n-<r^rirTr < i- < r«-<'-<'-'^^
'^ taiAUingabor*t
JLEEJEANS
Colored ouera/ls. $20.95
The-3-l)ayAll-Ybu-Can-Eat
DESIGNER JEANS
$26.95-$29.95
ITAUAN FEAST
EVERY SUNDAY • MONDAY • TUESDAY
•Bonjour jeans 8t cords
-Sergio Valentes
•Jordacha jeans & cords
•Calvin Klein jeans
•Sasson jeans & cords
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Women Harriers Win One,
Lose Two In Week
sa furick'tl
League 2B
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2) Buzz Bros.
3) Stingers
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2) Siudley's Boys
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1) The Characters
3) The Force
2) Campus A's
2) Caviar
4) Mixed Nuts
by Debbie Kaplan
' Last Tuesday, the Albany State
women's cross-sountry team lost to
Cortland State. One factor was a
shortage of the necessary number of
runners needed to score team
points. The harriers were deficient
due to a sickness and an ineligibility. One more runner was excused
due to an academic committment,
leaving Albany one short of the
mandated five competitors.
Chris Gardner, the number one
Albany runner at this time placed
first with a strong time of 18:49:9,
followed by Nancy Nelson of Cortland Slate with 19:19:5. The course
consists of a 5,000 meter distance,
covered by many hills and turns.
Even though Albany was not. able
to score as a team, a problem they
have faced before, the individual
scores count towards the State
Regional Championships.
Albany coach Barbara Palm is
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' Page Seventeen
Albany Student Press
AMI A Rankings
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pleased with her team's overall performance thus far, citing Saturday's win over Union College —the
women harriers' second victory.
The coach is especially pleased
with the performance of Gardner,
who Palm feels "has a good shot at
making the All-Eastern team and
the Nationals."
Palm also stressed her squad's
growing feeling of unity and weekly
improvement, and named Debbie
Sussman and Kim Bloomer as two
people to watch as the season continues.
Tomorrow, the women harriers
travel to Central Park in Schenectady for the Capital District Championships.
J.V. Danes
Drop To 1-3
by Pete Stein
A fourth quarter rally by the
, Middlebury junior varsity football
team led to a 19-17 victory over the
Albany JV team last Friday afternoon. The loss gave the JV Danes a
record of 1-3.
The Danes defense, led by Eric
Newton and Hobby Jojo, played extremely well, despite Middlebury's
touchdown drive in the final period.
Newton's interception at the
Albany one yard line set up an 89
yard touchdown run by Rickey
Miller, which lied the game at 7-7.
Jojo's 67 yard interception return in
the third quarter gave Albany a
14-12 lead.
A fumble recovery by the Danes
at the Middlebury 23 resulted In a
34 yard fieldgoal by Tom Lincoln,
giving the Danes a 17-12 lead at the
end of the third quarter.
Meanwhile, the offense was having an off day. Other than Miller's
89 yard touchdown run, turnovers
at the wrong time in the wrong
place stifled the jayvee wishbone.
Two key injuries to the Albany
quarterbacks forced coach Eru
Chambliss to substitute halfbacks
in the quarterback slot.
Today the Danes will face
Westchester Community College at
3:00 on University field.
Men's Soccer
continued from page 19
Morales at leftwing.
"Morales did a heck of a job. lie
might only be 5-1, but he played
like he was seven feet tall. He will
definitely start in the next game
against Potsdam," noted the coach.
Following the Potsdam game
Albany will compete in another key
contest against SUNYAC rival
Blnghamton In a game which could
decide the conference title. A win
here will at worsl leave Albany in a
tie for first place.
"We played really outstanding
today. They showed that they can
score some goals. Three of the four
scores were professional goals. If
we played Oneonta today, the only
conference game we lost, Its not a
matter of whether we can beat
them, I know we could beat them,"
Schieffelln concluded.
3$eretoolbe
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9PW
Page Eighteen
October 10, 1980
Albany Student Press
October 10, 1980
| Page Nineteen
Albany Student Press
Kansas City Puts Yanks Up Against The Ropes ProudBooters 'Outstanding;' Win Over Union
KANSAS CITY (AP) The Kansas
City Royals strung together, foui
straight hits in the third inning, including Willie Wilson's two-run triple and an RBI double by U.L.
Washington, and held on to edge
the New York Yankees 3-2 for a
commanding 2-0 lead in the best-offive American League Championship Series.
Dennis Leonard, Kansas City's
only 20-gamc winner, scattered
seven hits before giving way to Dan
Quisenberry, top reliever in the AL
this year, following Reggie
Jackson's Icadoff single in the
ninth.
The Royals jumped on New
York's Rudy May and scored all the
runs they needed in the third before
the 36-year-old left-hander slammed the door.
No team ever has rallied from a
2-0 deficit in any league championship series since the current playoff
method began in 1969.
On The Brink Of Elimination
The Yankees will call on 22-game
winner Tommy John to try lo prevent a sweep when the series switches to New York Friday night.
Kansas City has nominated Paul
Splittorff, who won 14 gam^s during the regular season.
Leonard, a hard-throwing
29-year-old right-hander who was
born in Brooklyn, N.Y.. retired the
Yankees in order in five innings.
He yielded a pair of harmless
singles in the second. He settled
down lo retire eight bailers in a row
after the Yankees scored twice in
the fifth inning on Graig Nettles'
inside-ihe-park
home
run.
Leonard's only walk of the game
and Willie Randolph's RBI double.
The Yankees had the potential lying run thrown out at Ihe plate for
Ihe final out of the eighth inning,
thanks lo some quick Kansas City
fielding. Randolph singled with one
out. After Bobby Murcer struck
out, Bob Watson ripped a drive ihat
bounced off the base of the left
field wall.
Randolph, one of New York's
fastest runners, was on the move
with two out, bin left fielder
Wilson, the speediest man in
baseball, retrieved the Kill qulckl)
and fired i! to third baseman
George Brett. Brett's relaj lo catcher Darrell Portei was in lime lo
nail Randolph, who tried lo crash
through the lag with a head-first
slide. Watson was credited with a
double, bui the third out left
Yankee slugger Jackson standing
futily in the on-deck circle.
Jackson opened the top of the
ninth with a single, chasing
Leonard. Quisenberry, whose submarine delivery enabled him to tie
for ihe league lead with 33 saves,
reiired Oscar Gamble on a soft pop
fly, but Rick Cerone lined a single
over short, moving Jackson to second. However, Nellies rapped Ihe
first pitch sharply to second
baseman Frank While. He juggled
ii for a splil second, bin fired lo
shortstop Washington for one out,
and first baseman Willie Aikcns
dug Washington's relay oul of the
din to complete a game-ending
double play.
A record Kansas City baseball
crowd of 42,633, thirsting for the
Royals lo avenge their 1976-77-78
playoff losses to the hated Yankees,
had little to cheer about until the
Royals struck swiftly in the third in
ning.
With one out, Portei lined a
single to right field, and While's
grounder skipped through Ihe right
side on the artificial turf for
another single as Porter stopped at
second.
Wilson, who doubled home the
final two runs in Ihe Royals' 7-2
opening-game victory, laced an
opposite-field smash down ihe First
base line, and Porter and While
scored as the fleet Wilson easily
made it to third. He scored the
decisive run when Washington laced a double up the lefl-ccnler field
alley thai hit the fence on one hop.
Key Game Of Week In New York
by Michael Carmen
Severe, Nezaj, Markes, Giordano, Sergovich, Rakas, and Isaacs
_ not household names, but they
are the players who have lead the
Albany State men's varsity soccer
team to a 6-2 record this season.
Wednesday afternoon, the Danes
traveled to Union College to play
another key game. They did not let
down a n y b o d y ,
especially
themselves, and handed Union a 4-2
loss.
"It was a quality performance,
filled with pride. We know that
we're the best team in the Capital
District and think we are the best
squad in Ihe country," commented
a proud Dane coach Bill Schicffelin.
Leslie Severe pulled the hat trick
as he recorded three scores. Severe
was voted the outstanding player of
the game by Division 111 officials
who classified the game as the "Key
game of the week in New York
May, who led AL starling pitchers with a 2.46 earned run
average, allowed only two singles
Ihe rest of the way, but Ihe damage
'tad been done.
Spikers Beaten By N.Y. Tech, Top New Paltz
by Robin Brown
Traveling to New Paltz Tuesday
night, the Albany State volleyball
team splil both ends of a dual meet,
losing lo New York Tech in Ihe first
round, and coming back lo defeat
New Paltz in the second match.
The Danes surrendered the
touchy match to Tech, a Division I
school 15-7, 12-15, 15-6.
"The firsl set wasn't lost so much
by Tech's dominating play, but
The spikers split a dual meet on Tuesday night by losing to New York
Tech, but defeating New Paltz. (Photo: Roannc KulakofO
rather by flagrantly wrong calls
made by the inefficient referee,"
according to coach Pal Dwyer.
Senior captain Anne Carberry added thai "thai does something IO the
morale of the team." The unsettling
calls made the spikers iry harder to
win, but their strategy worked
against them until the second set.
Making a victorious comeback
from a 10-1 deficit in the second
boul, the Danes put it all together,
necessary.
Despite Albany's recovery of
momentum, inaccurate services
bumps too powerful lo set up, and
the loss of sophomore star Lisa
Dichl (out with a twisted ankle)
contributed to the spikers' defeat.
This loss far from dampened the
Danes' spirits in their contest
against New Paltz. Albany marched
on to a victorious 15-3, 15-5 win
over Ihe host team. The mild competition was easily controlled by
substituting the starting line-up
with other Albany players.
Outstanding
team
play
Ihroughoul both contests was led by
Lynn Mocsch, Reba Miller and
Rosa Prieto.
"The team played really well and
exhibited a great deal of momen-
Forward Afrim Nczaj scored a goal in the Booters' crucial 4-2 win over
Union on Wednesday afternoon. (Pholo: Marc Nadlcr)
(AP) — The National League record since 1976.
Championship series switched ar"We've played down there
tificial surfaces Thursday, moving before, you k n o w , " snapped
from Philadelphia's Veteran's Philadelphia Manager Dallas
Stadium
to
the
Houston
Green. "It's not as if we're doing
Astrodome, a house of horrors for something completely new. We're
visiling clubs ihis season.
9-5 for the year against the Aslros.
"It's a pleasure lo be going We must have won some down
home," said Houston Manager Bill there."
Virdon, whose Astros split the firsl
In fact, Ihe Phillies have won
two games in this best-of-fivc pen- four of six under the dome in each
nant playoff at Philadelphia.
of the past two seasons, c.
It should be a pleasure. The
More Important than playing inAstros were awesome at home doors is the stale of mind I lie
season, compiling a 55-26 record Phillies will bring with them for
under Ihe dome, compared lo 38-44 Game Three of this scries Friday.
on Ihe road.
They lost a game lliey should have
Thai doesn't scare the Phillies, won Wednesday night, leaving 14
I hough. They won 21 of I heir last 28 runners on base, 10 of them in Ihe
games on (he road lo finish 42-39 last four innings. They had the
away from home, their besl road bases louded with one oul in the
seventh and did noi score and Ihe
bases loaded with one oul in (he
seventh and did noi score and ihe
bases loaded with one oul in the
ninth and did not score.
The 7-4, 10-inning loss in Game
Two can stay wilh a learn, but the
Phillies insist il will noi slay wilh
them.
"We goiia' forgel about Ihis and
just play like nothing happened,"
said shortstop Larry Bowa.
"We jusl didn'l do il," said slugger Mike Schmidt, who was the lying run at the plate when he filed lo
righl ending the game. "We can't
worry about opportunities gelling
away. We just did noi gel Ihe job
done, that's all."
Schmidt said Wednesday's
failures will be forgotten by Friday.
1
,', I
jf^Bp.j \
BTTH ' ESS 31
^t -
I
:/-.i
The Great Danes' 4-2 victory Wednesday over Union College
featured a hat trick by Leslie Severe. (Photo: UPS)
Vlado Sergovich and blasted a shot conlest, Giordano took a hard shol
from 25 yards oul. The Union on ihe knee. Schieffclin was forced
keeper never had a chance while lo remove his goalie and go wilh
substitute keeper Billy Sleffen.
Albany wenl ahead for good, 2-1.
Sergovich, who sel up Nezaj's
"Sieffen did a very commendable
goal, according lo Schieffclin is "a job, He is a very versatile athlete
quality playmakcr who can do il all and we use him in other positions
— selling up Ihe big play or making when he is noi needed at goalie,"
Ihe key pass."
said Schieffclin.
Steffen, despite being relatively
Alter Union added a goal,
Albany wasted no lime in cushion- inexperienced, had to come up with
ing Iheir advantage. Nczaj knocked one outstanding save. A Union forIhe ball over lo Isaacs on the wing. ward attempted a blinding shol.
Isaacs proceeded lo pass the ball lo Sleffen could not see ihe ball urn I
Severe, who banged Ihe ball into the the lasi second and desperately dove
for the ball, and got the save.
goal.
Albany started six freshmen in
There was a moment of calm ill
Ihe Albany viciory. Wilh approx- Ihe game including 5-1 Luis
imately six minutes remaining in Ihe
continued on page 17
Women's Soccer Loses In Double Overtime
The Danes will take on Pittsburgh and Potsdam tomorrow in a dual
meet at University Gym at 1:00. (Photo: Roannc KulakofO
turn," said sophomore Donna
Chait.
These games boosted the Danes'
record up to 7-4. There arc fifteen
more matches in regular season
play, and the spikers arc optimistic
about Ihe Slate finals competition.
Dwyer said, "The team played
well, and should have won both
contests."
Tomorrow the Danes will take on
Platlsburgh and Potsdam at
University Gym, at 1:00.
Drop Second Consecutive Game;
Hartwick Scores Twice To Win
by Sharon Cole
The Albany Stale women's soccer
team suffered their second straighi
double overtime loss, 3-1, at the
hands of the Hartwick College
Warriors on Wednesday.
The defensive match lasted nearly
two and a half hours on a clear, bul
chilly afternoon with neither learn
scoring-much In regulation play.
The Warriors scored firsl al 9:55 into the match, on a goal by Ginger
NCAA
Division III
Rankings
Top 15
The Astros Are Heading For The Dome
Series Goes South Tied At One
Stale."
"Although Leslie played an exceptional game, anytime you put
the ball in the nel three times that's
great. The game was an outstanding
team performance and it's hard to
single oul one player for being more
outstanding," said Schieffclin.
The scoring started at 39:32 of
the opening half. Jerry Isaacs flipped the ball to Severe. The right
halfback dribbled passed one
defender and only had the goalie lo
beal. The keeper came out to meet
Severe, but despite being off
balance, he fired a shot past the
goalie lo put Albany on top 1-0.
"Leslie's goal was not a good
goal — il was a professional tally,"
Schieffelln said.
In the game, Albany only had six
shots on goal, a very low number.
Incredibly four of these blasls landed in the goalie cage.
The first half ended with Albany
leading, 1-0, but Union quickly
changed Ihis in Ihe final half.
Alberto Giordano, Albany's potential Ail-American goalkeeper, was
walching Ihe action come down the
right side. Union then tried lo
penetrate across the middle. John
Markes was there to cover, but
when lie iried lo clear the ball, il
found ils way into the Albany nel lo
lie the score at one.
The Danes were quick lo strike
back. Less than Iwo minutes later
Afrim Nczaj look a pass from
•k^t^jMH
"1 don't believe in a lot of talk
about pressure and momentum,"
he said. "It's no factor once you
walk oul on Ihe field. What's past is
past, (hat's all."
Pitcher Tug McGraw and firsl
baseman Pelc Rose, full of pleasantries in ihe often grim Phillies'
dressing room which has been
described by some visitors as a
demilitarized zone, tried to lighten
Ihe load of Ihe painful loss.
"We just don't wanl our fans to
get overconfident, that's all," offered McGraw. "If we had won
Wednesday, Ihe third game would
have been an ami-climax. We
wanted to build ihe suspense, you
see."
Rose said, "The commissioner of
baseball, Bowie Kuhn wanled il this
way. If the series had ended in
three, look ai all (he money lie
would have losl at Ihe gale."
"They are a very good team,"
said Albany coach Amy Kidder.
"We didn't settle down and really
slarl playing until after Lynne Burion made our only goal."
"We were on Ihe defensive for
most of Ihe second half," Kidder
continued, "while Harlwick completely dominalcd. Wc only made
two good atlacks al their goal in the
whole period. LaurieBriggs, our
goalie, did a fantastic job wilh some
really beautiful saves (a lotal of 23
throughout Ihe game). Wc were
very lucky Ihat they didn't score in
Ihe second half, and that wc went
into overtime."
1. Ithaca
2. Widener
3. Baldwin-Wallace
4. Wise-Whitewater
5. Carnegie-Mellon
6. Dayton
7. Wabash
8. Lycoming
9. Wagner
10. Elmhurst
11. Adrian
12. Minnesota-Morris
13. Simpson (Iowa)
14. Bethany (W, Va.)
15. Buffalo
Dane Football
Sat. 1:30 P.M.
91 FM
Swingle wilh an assisl by Joanne
Garrison.
^
The Danes retaliated with an
unassisted goal by right wing Lynne
Burton al 26:16 in ihe firsl half lo
lie il up. Thai's when Ihe scoring
came to a standstill, with neither
learn gaining another point until the
second overiimc period.
Dane Sue Stern moves the ball downfleld In Wednesday's double
overtime loss to Hartwick College, .1-1. (Photo: UPS)
The first 10-minute overtime
period, with the score locked al 1-1,
was a repeat of the second half
regulation period with neither team
capitalizing on open shots, and wilh
Albany still on the defensive.
In the second overtime period,
Kidder made Ihe decision to have
the learn play more aggressive, offensive ball, which enabled Warrior
Swingle to come through and score
her second goal, with an assist by
The women booters look lo even their record al three tomorrow
when they take on Skidmore College. (Photo: UPS)
Lisa Sposato, to make it 2-1 in bad decision though. If I had it all
favor of Harlwick wilh 7:53 left in to do over again, I would do it exovertime,
actly the same."
This was followed by another
"It was a tough game to lose
goal for Harlwick, which raised Ihe because il was our second overtime
score to 3-1, and effectively put the •loss in a row. Hopefully we'll come
game oul of the Danes' reach. The out on top Ihe next time," she congoal was scored by Patti Scllcuold tinued.
wilh an assist by Rachel Duel wilh
The win boosted Harlwick's
54 seconds left in the game.
record to 5-1-1 on the season and
"It was my decision," said Kid- dropped the Danes lo 2-3. The
der. "I took Ihe chance and gambl- Danes' next opponent will be Skided and we lost. I don't think it was a more away on Saturday.
t
1
Men Booters Win
page 19
B
October 10, 1980
Batmen Suffer Painful Setback To Siena, 5-4
by Marc Haspel
Second baseman Frank Rivera
simply sat quietly on the bench with
a blank look on his face. Coach
Rick Skeel clutched the dugout railing with his hands and looked out at
the field with an air of disbelief.
And both men contemplated the
loss just suffered as Siena College
had walked off with a 5-4 victory
over Albany State Wednesday, at
Schenectedy's Central Park.
What made this loss particularly
painful was that Albany, entering
the bottom of the ninth inning was
leading 4-3. But the Indians rallied
for two runs in their final turn at
bat to steal away the win from the
Danes. Albany State-Siena confrontations are always close struggles and Wednesday's game was no
exception.
"Each lime we play them it's
lough," said Skeel.
Sophomore
pitcher
Ron
Massaroni started for Albany and
held Siena hitters at bay for eight
innings. He allowed only three runs
on eight hits, while striking out
three.
Siena jumped out lo a 1-0 lead in
the bottom of the second, as Indian
Bob Thompson scored on Frank
Ronkese's infield baschil.
Albany came back quickly with
three runs in Ihe top of the third.
Bruce Rowlands supplied the key
hit, slicing a two run triple down ihc
rightfield line.
Massaroni had some trouble in
the bottom half of the third as he
gave up two costly walks to opposing pitcher Chuck Sohl and
firstbaseman Chet Smith. Thompson promptly doubled both his
teammates in. With those two runs,
Siena deadlocked the score at 3-3.
"I hurt myself. The innings I
walked batters they scored runs,"
said Massaroni.
During the next four frames,
neither team scored. Siena occasionally tagged Massaroni for some
long flies while the Danes could
hardly touch Sohl, except for a couple of deep pokes by Tom Verde.
Sohl threw hard stuff all night and
only allowed five Dane hits.
The Indians did threaten in Ihe
seventh, but that was soon erased
when the runner on second, Ken
Hayner was nailed ai ihird by leftfielder Bob Arcario, trying to tag
up on Sohl's fly out. Finally, in the
top of the eighth inning, Albany
broke the tie. Jerry Rosen scored on
Rowland's sacrifice fly, giving
Albany a 4-3 lead.
Massaroni looked solid again in
Ihe bottom of the eighth retiring the
side in order. But in ihe bottom of
Ihe ninth, Albany's hardluck faic
manifested itself one more lime.
Massaroni yielded a walk to
leadoff hitler Chris Clemens. On
the next play, Hayner bunted.
Fielding the ball, catcher Verde
elected to (ry for Ihe lead runner,
Clemens, at secondbase. His rushed
throw was low and skipped out to
centcrfield, giving the Indians runners on first and second.
Skeel removed Massaroni and
brought in ace reliever Mike
Esposito to try and put out the late
Siena fire.
"Ron (Massaroni) pitched a
super ballgame. He felt himself that
he wanted somebody else to finish
up for him," said Skeel.
Having had his complete game
bid spoiled, Massaroni said, "I was
pretty happy with my performance
but I came away unfulfilled."
The next hitter, Sohl bunted one
that bounced over Esposito's glove
and loaded up the bases. Then, on a
sacrifice fly by Smith, Clemens
came into score on a disputed play
at the plate, and Ihc ballgame was
lied 4-4. Thompson, who had four
hits in four plate appearances and
three ribbies, singled, driving In
Hayner from second to win the
game, 5-4.
"We outplayed them. Thai play
at the plate could have gone either
way," said Skeel. "We had them
againsl Ihe ropes."
For the Danes, it was another hit ter one-run loss. "We're having
such hard lough luck on the road,"
concluded Skeel, who now must
look to the remaining conference
games this season. The Danes, 6-7,
have upcoming doublchcaders
againsl Binghamlon and Oswego.
Tent City Flops
they named the cily (Tent Cily)
alter me,"
The Chancellor refused lo comthe administration agreed to allow ment on ihe closed meeting al which
the protest. The reason for this the rate hikes were approved
compromise, she added, was that because "the session is a subject of
"we didn't want lo worry about
litigation, and al (he advice of legal
students gelling arrested." Slem council. 1 will noi discuss it." This
said that a cily permit for the event referred lo the still filed by SA and
was still pending.
SASU foi a violation of the Open
Several tenls were erected on the Meeting I aw.
SUNY Central lawn lo represent the
Wharton said that Ihe students
participating schools. A banner fac- were represented by a student
ing B r o a d w a y p i o e I a i in e d,member of the Board of Trustees,
"Welcome to Wharlonsville." Ihe which was responsible for the rate
events, which began at 2 p.m., in- hike decision. This, he said, was the
cluded speeches, a symbolic hous- proper channel through which the
ing contract burning and a teach-in siuclenis should vetll theii comon the rale hikes.
plaints. However, several students
Ihe speakers were from SUNYA. pointed nuI that the studeni trustee
SASU and olhet SUNY schools. only accounted foi one vole on I he
Their speeches were inlet spliced ten membci hoard and student
with chants and singing from ihe trustee Sharon Ward latei said site
crowd. Aboui halfway through the was unable to wain students of the
speeches, ("haucelloi Wharton ap- hikes since she was ".sworn lo
peared. He commented thai Tetil secrecy" as a inembei of the board.
Cily was ail "expression of free
Siern said Ihni "Tent Cities" on
speech in ihe United Slates," ;
three otbei SUNY campuses which
joked, "I feel I should speak since
continued on pam'five
Only 100 Show to Protest
by Wayne Pee re boom
Although over 400 students were
expected to attend the "Tent Cily"
protest over the recent dorm room
rate hike, only 100 gathered on ihe
SUNY Central lawn last Friday
afternoon, according to SASU
Communications Director Pain
Snook.
According 10 SASU Coordinator
Bruce Cronih, SASU would have
canceled "Tent City" had SUNY
Chancellor Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.
agreed lo six studeni demands concerning on-campus housing.
However, these demands were not
met and SASU President Jim Stern
announced, "We are here loday
because the Chancellor chose to ignore our requests lo negotiate in
good faith."
Snook explained that SASU
agreed lo limit the number of tetlls
and lo end "Tent Cily" by 5 p.m.
instead of having the even I go on all
lliglll as planned. In turn, she said.
Now, though, Buffalo is
undefeated over their first five
games and ranked 15th in the nation, and Ihe tables arc somewhat
turned. Albany is, for all intents
and purposes, out of the playoff
picture — the two opening losses
did thai. But Buffalo could make
themselves a real viable coniendcr
wilh a convincing victory over the
Danes.
"They're 5-0. Thai does an awful
lot for a learn," said Albanj head
Albany cornerback Jerry Wier/lilcki makes a tackle on a special team
In an earlier game againsl SCSC (Photo: Sieve Eaten)
*r
tVrmln: Will Vu
Slalr I'nlwnlh ill !Sc» York ul Allium
< :
Will Students Form a
New, United Voting Bloc?
I)> Sue MIIIIIMM
Alhanv Mayoi I rasliis Corning II told the Knickevhtn Her News he
thought ii a "ludicrous theory" thai smdenls could form a united
force and itffcci eh) elections,
Yel SA aiiotnes lack I ester, who represented the Ii studeni in ihe
voting lights case, feels thai Ihc decision lo allow students to vole in
ihcii college communities could have "a tremendously .significant Impact.
"The Alhanv Count) (political) machine is very responsive lo Ihe
rjpplcs t>t change and voting trends," he said. "Ihey will have to
become aware Mini now there are students who arc voting (in Albany
County). . .students won't have lo go lo the cily on ihcii knees
anymore; ihey are now equal partners."
l.cstct said ihai Ihc decision could have an effect on hoih local and
state levels.
"In Albany we can try lo get students to vole around issues. . .such
as rent control, lite anli-grnupei law, and the security ordinance a
well as improve access lo city government," Lester said, "Studeni
also have the potential lo change the composition of the slate
legislature,"
The first major effects of the ruling may be seen in the I9K1 mayoral
election. Corning, who defeated Carl Ton hey by a narrow margin o'
3500 voles in 1973, will now have to contend with three limes thai
many students added to his consiluency, should he decide lo run for an
11th term.
Students could make a 25,(XX) voter difference in Albany Con o h .
I.csiet noted thai New York is one of ihe lasl stales to declare
continued on page seven
The husehall learn dropped a lough one on Wednesday when Siena
scored twice in Ihe ninth to beat them. (Photo: UPS)
Danes Try To Top .500Against 5-0Buffalo
by Bub Hellafiure
Rotary Field, home of the
University of Buffalo, has noi been
a friendly place for Ihe Albany
State football team. Two years ago,
the Danes marched into Buffalo
with a top ten ranking in Division
III and a real shot at posl season
play. They trudged off with a 15-8
loss and a bit less than a hope of
any playoff consideration. In 1979,
Albany slightly avenged thai defeat
by blasting the Bulls, 40-12.
Angry siuclenis march around the Pla/a
Speeches, songs ami chums voice protest.
coach Bob Ford. "They've gol the Mike Rossi, but the real concern is ting will hurl Ihcm on Saturday
Gary Brown. At 6-0, 270 pounds, because of Ihc nature of Albany's
feeling thai they can't lose."
Granted, Buffalo is 5-0, but thai Brown "does some damage. If triple option offense. "I sec the
hasn't been againsl lop notch com- you're running al him, he'll give stunts giving them problems," Collins said. "You can'l slum againsl
petition. Of Ihcir wins, two have you (rouble," Chambliss said.
been by six poinls (over Hobarl,
The ends on defense are big, the wishbone loo oflen and be suc6-0, and Cortland, 20-14), and iwo quick, and aggressive, Chambliss cessful."
have been by one point (over said, and will have the duly of keepOffensively, Buffalo hasn't had
Brockporl, 14-13, and Grove Cily ing Ihc Albany backs from getting the ability lo score many poinls. In
College, 3-2). The B,ulls' latest vic- to the sidelines. They will be Jim five games, the Bulls' I-pro and slol
tory was over Rochester, 9-7, last Granchelli (6-0, 200 pounds) and formations have averaged just over
Saturday.
John White (6-0, 210 pounds).
10 poinls per game. "They gel
Buffalo blitzes and shifts fre- down into scoring territory and just
They're not ihe greatest 5-0
team," said Albany coach Erv , quently on defense, and lhat causes don't put the ball ill," Chambliss
Chambliss, "but they gol there the secondary lo play man-lo-man said. "They arc mainly a passing
coverage on the receivers. Co- learn, but wilh a good enough runnsomehow."
One way that Ihe Bulls have got- captain Sam Monaco (5-9, 180 ing game lo get by."
The quarterback situation for ihc
ten (here is defense. Buffalo has pounds) plays the deep safety spol
yielded a meager 36 poinls all and "runs the show. He's definitely Bulls is similar to Albany's in that
season (that's 7.2 poinls per game). Ihe leader on defense," Chambliss when Ihc starter isn't moving the
Their 4-4 alignment is more like a said. He will be Hanked on either team, there is a sub that is capable
wide-tackle six. That means that in- side of the Bulls basically three- of taking over. Jim Rodriguez, at
stead of having the outside deep secondary by Frank Bcr- 6-1, 185 pounds, is Ihc primary
linebackers set up off the line of rafaio and Craig Rozar. "They're signal-caller for Buffalo, but throws
scrimmage and outside the ends, good athletes — fairly good speed a not-so-spectacular 37 percent.
"He lends to run the ball a lot,"
they align inside Ihe ends and on tIn- and hard nosed," said Chambliss,
line.
"They're going to need a little Chambliss said. He also noted thai
"They get righl up in your face more quickness against us rather a 25 mile per hour wind hampered
and ihink Ihey can stick it to you," than strength. They'll need Iheir their game against Rochester. His
Chambliss said.
quicker people out t h e r e , " sub is Al Whitehead, who although
being more of a Ihrower, is only six
The focal area of the Bull Chambliss continued.
defense, according to Chambliss, is
If Buffalo keeps their fronl eight for 15 on Ihe year.
Buffalo's top receiver is flanker
the inside linebacker position, man- men on Ihe line of scrimmage like
ned by Scott Dcming and Cosmo Ihey have so far Ibis year, Albany Frank Price, with 16 catches for 206
Neslola. "They're Ihe strong point will resort to Ihe passing game, yards and one touchdown. Behind
of the defense," said Chambliss. "just enough lo loosen them up. If him is speedster Gary Qualrani,
Dcming and Neslola arc Ihe ones Ihey stay on the line of scrimmage, whose 9.3 second 100 yard dash
that Ihc Dane offense must control we're just going to throw Ihe ball — lime makes him a deep threat at any
if they are to win, according to use our quick stuff out of play ac- time. He has 10 receptions for 166
Albany coach Mark Collins, who tion," said Chambliss, "They're yards, but a neck sprain has made
scouted Buffalo along with hard hitters and fairly aggressive," him questionable for Saturday. He
Chambliss. "Their linebackers Chambliss noted of the Bulls, who will be replaced, if necessary, by
played well for them," Collins said. give up a miserly 214 yards per Joe Mcata, who also returns punts
The defensive lackle spot for the game In total offense. "They have and kickoffs.
Bulls, said Chambliss, is "not spec- the potential to play good defense."
Running the ball for Ihe Bulls are
tacular." One is 6-0, 205 pound
Collins feels thai Buffalo's shifcontinued on pane 15
SASU Vice President Janice Fine (left) surrounded by fellow protestors.
Fine discusses the recent decision to raise dorm rents.
SUNYA Ends Ten Year Bid to Vote Locally
by Amy Knnlnr
After a len year struggle, Albany
college students living away from
home can now register to vole here
for all local, siate and national elections.
SUNYA's legal bailie was won
lasl Thursday when U.S. District
Judge Neal Met uin of Ulica handed down a I edeial Couri order
which allowed eleven students to
regisiei to vote in Albanv Count)
for the November A election,
The oidei came altei eight months of court litigation in time foi the
tenth onniversar) of the 26ih
Amendment io the United Stales
Constitution, which guarantees
those !H years ol age and older the
righl to vole.
The Octobci 9 i uling represents
ihe first positive legislation involving the t'ighls of college students lo
vole in their school communities,
and strikes down part of ihe New
York Slate Lleclion Law which
established standards foi voiei
residency in 1972.
Stale Board of 1 lections executive director Thomas W.
Wallace called Judge Met ut n's v crdict a "potentially landmark decision."
Legal counselor for the eleven
prosecuting SUNYA students and
SA attorney Jack Lester terms the
coini preliminary injunction "a
tnajoi breuktiirough aftci ten years
of wailing on this issue."
To dale, ihe voting rights of
sitidents have been violated in New
York Slate despite the 14th, 15th
and 26th Constitutional Amendments, and Sections 1971, 197.1 and
1983 of Title 42 of the United Slates
Code. Undet the State Election
Law, students, upon voting in
Albany County, have been required
io fill out a personal information
page in addition to their mail
registration forms. The survey requests detailed information concerning ihe personal life and financial
status of the applicant.
According to the memorandum
— decision and order record of I be
ease, when the Albany County
Board of Commissioners under the
direction of Raymond J. Kinley Jr.,
and George Scaiingc first met lo
hear the case of the SUNYA
Students last February 20, they explained why ihe students were
denied registration rights slating
thai, "you (the students) do noi
have a valid, permanent and fixed
residence in the County of Albany
for voting purposes."
Later "in person appeals" by
students to the Commission were
met with denials because dormitories were noi considered lo be
"legal residences for voling purposes."
One of the prosecuting students,
Stephen Scbricbcr, an off-campus
studeni, was told in an individual
heating thai he could not vole in
Albany because he did not have
"sufficient roots here." However,
he docs not live with his parents,
"ami ihey recently moved out of
s t a l e . " He became "disenfranchised" because his registration
application was not valid in any of
Ihe slates.
Following the order of the court
that students can register heie, the
County Board refused answer to ihe
alleged discrimination and inappropriate legist rat ion procedures
under the election code.
SA Attorney .lack I.esier
Represented students voting rights.
Prosecuting SUNVA studeni
Monica Rossi, who lives oncampus, purposely did not register
to vole in her home county. "I was
hoping to register here." She did so
on Saturday, in time lo vote on
November 4.
On campus studeni Andrea
DiGrcgorio, and Rossi—both prosecuting students—expressed surprise regarding the court decision,
"It's been an appeal for so long. I
continued on page five
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