Pr - In Alternative Stones Concert, Steve Martin, Qu 'West Side Story, and More....
Student SB Council Member-Sough Lt Polity, GSO Asked to Fill Vacant Trustee' Seat
By Peter A. Scully Trustees. bly make this a non-problem by meeting Stony Brook Council Chairman R. The student seat on the council has ...and agreeing on a system to be Christian Anderson expressed dismay long been a subject of controversy. In the instituted at the beginning of next over the lack of a student voice on the six years since it was created, leaders of semester." It will be difficult, they council yesterday, and urged Polity three student organizations have often maintain, to get the CE D people to agree President Jim Fuccio and Jacob Stein, been unable to agree on how to fill it. The on an election format. Chairman of the Graduate Student three organizations, Polity, GSO, and If and when they do so, the three stu- Organization (GSO) to find an accepta- the Continuing Education Division dent groups will have created a format ble person to fill the seat for the (CED), would each like the seat to be which they have been unable to agree remainder of the academic year. filled by one of it's constituents. upon in the six years since the student Anderson also asked the student lead- Before a person can be elected to the seat on the council was conceived. ers to agree on a uniform voting mecha- student seat, acceptable guidelines A larger, more immediate problem nism by which the seat can be filled in must be adopted for the election of a will be answering Anderson's request the future. representative. The Council suggested that they find someone byJanuary tofill yesterday that each of the three groups the seat for the remainder of the year. The Stony Brook Council is a 10 nominate a candidate for a "general Stein said that his organization would member group responsible for review- campus election," which would then rather make concessions and have the ing all major university plans regarding decide who fills the seat. seat filled than see it remain vacant. He faculty, students, admissions and aca- Though Stein expressed the fear that and Fuccio agreed that although they demics, reviewing an' reccommending would be overwhelmed in such could possibly find someone acceptable statesman a)-oavir' ~-,Attz the GSO Stony Brook Council Chairman R. C. Ander- university budget requests, naming an election since they are far outnum- to both to fill the seat. student reaction to son yesterday urged that the student seat on campus buildings, and performing any bered by the undergraduate population, such casual appointmert would most the 10-member council be filled. other duties requested by the Board of he said that he and Fuccio "could proba- likely be negative.
f - _ FSA -to IncreasePrices Of Laundry Machines In Dorms by Next Year
The Faculty Student Association Bentley said the FSA Board of Direc- (FSA) may give the go ahead to an tors decided to grant the increase increase in the cost of using laundry because Coin Mach Industries has been machines on campus from the current requesting it, and they have been fulfil- 35 cent rate to 50 cents, according to ling all service requirements. If FSA FSA President, Rich Bentley. did not grant the increase, Bentley said, Coin Mach Industries might decide to recoup savings in another way. As an the machines According to Bentley, example, he said that they could start Mach Industries of are operated by Coin sending a service man to the university sub-contractor, Great Neck. an FSA three days of the week instead of five. for laundry which has been responsible Bentley added that no sub-contractor since January, 1980. services on campus can perform well if he is denied a reaso- said, the sub- Since that time. Bentley nable request too often. contractor has replaced and is currently fulfilling all service requirements. Ben- Bentley pointed out that if a rate tley said the company has been denied increase is denied too often the sub- rate hikes every semester since it took contractor might leave, and then, he over the operation. asked, what sub-contractor would want The increase is tentatively scheduled to come to campus. We'd "lose by over- to take effect Jan. 1, 1982 provided that denying a price increase," he said. Coin Mach Industries brings its current Both Bentley and Melucci said that FSA debt up to date by that time, Ben- even with a 15 cent increase, laundry tley said. FSA receives a commission machines in the dorms are still priced Gov 's Wife Tours SB from the sub-contractor for the fiscal well below the average cost of machines area off campus. Melucci esti- year ending June 30. 1981 which in the of Gov. Hugh Carey. toured University Hospital yes- an Evangeline Carey (right). wife amounted to a net of $58,058 for FSA, mated that the increase will generate terday with Carol Marbr (center), wife of University President John Marburger. to FSA Treasurer Dan additional estimated $10,000. and Michael Elliot. vice-preskdent for the hospital. Soo story on page 4. according L Melucci. -Laura Craven 9L- Volley ball Team Wins State Title - See Back Page > .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ US Proposes to Nix Europe MissilesII Washington - President Reagan is European targets. United States remains interested in a The U.S. at the moment has no ready to propose to the Soviet Union that However. there is deep skepticism in possible summit meeting between Rea- medium-rang<> missiles in the European both superpowers virtually eliminate U.S. arms control circles that such an gan and Soviet President Leonid Brezh- theater, but does have short-range tacti- nuclear missiles from the European approach will prove acceptable to the nev if the "necessary ground work is cal nuclear weapons such as Pershing I theater, State Department officials said Soviet Union, which is believed highly laid" and there are indications that a and Lance missiles. yesterday. reluctant to destroy new weapons such summit would prove "fruitful and pro- The Soviet Unionalreadyhasdeployed The president. -it was said, will use a as SS-20. capable of carrying three ductive and yield results." substantial numbers of SS-20 missiles. foreign policy speech today at the nuclear warheads. The United States is not supposed to National Press Club to embrace the so- A more limited, fall-back position is There are no indications Reagan will deploy its medium-range missiles in called "zero-option" approach as the said to include an attempt to win Soviet announce such a meeting in his speech. Europe until late 1983. The Soviets con- goal for Soviet-American negotiationson acceptance of the planned deployment despite statements from West German tend that other European-based U.S. restraining nuclear forces in Europe. of 572 American nuclear warheads on Chancellor Helmut Schmidt that he nuclear weapons, including those on air- Those talks open Nov. 30 in Geneva. Pershing II missiles in exchange for the hopes to get the two leaders together to craft and submarines, should be subject removal of more than 900 Soviet war- clear the air on arms control and to negotiations. The option consists of an unexpected heads now in place on SS-20, SS-5 and nuclear issues. U.S. offer to undertake the planned SS-4 missiles. That would be a shift in Brezhnev and Schmidt meet in Bonn The zero-basingoption is increasingly deployment of new U.S. medium range force levels aimed at producing a rela- for a series of meetings beginning Fri- advocated in Europe. especially in West missiles in Europe if the Soviet Union tive nuclear balance in Europe. day. U.S. officials have said they expect Germany. Where there is mounting offi- agrees to disassemble its own missiles. On a related subject, State Depart- a summit would take place sometime in cial concern over the scope and impact stationed in western Russia, aimed at ment spokesman Dean Fischer said the 1982. of the European peace movement. -News Diaests -- International---- Libva and South Yemen condemned the United States the investigation. for "arrogance of power" in staging the exercises. The Soviets reported to Nassau County Police that a Belfast. Northern Ireland - Britain's top official in which they contend are a threat to peace in the Mideast helicopter landed momentar ily on the roof of the resi- Northern Ireland was punched in the head yesterday and the Horn of Africa. dence last night and flashec a floodlight on the house wvhen hundreds of mourners shouting "murderer" and Foreign ministers of the three countries. which before heading away to the southwest. "traitor " surged through police lines and besieged him signed a mutual defense pact last August, issued the Police Spokesman Kenneth Cynar said yesterday at the funeral of a Protestant member of Parliament condemnation at the end of a two-day emergency meet- that the helicopter apparently had been an Air slain bv the IIRA. Meanwhile. gunmen believed to be ing to protest the maneuvers, the official Ethiopian National Guard craft transporting a medical patient Protestant extremists shot and killed a Catholic, the News Agency. ENA, said yesterday. The exercises on from Long Island to Manhattan. Irish Republican Army shot and seriously wounded a the training field of this air base some 18 miles west of police reservist, and another reservist shot last week Cairo began Saturday. A** [Ly the IR1A (lied in a hospital, officials said. With 4.000 U.S. troops involved in Bright Star'S2. it Islip - The Islip Town Board has unanimously ,James Irior. Britain's Secretarv of State for North- is the largest test of America's Rapid Deployment approved a local law banning the sale of drug-related ern Ireland. \was mobbed when he arrived at the tinv Force, the unit created to protest U.S. interests in the paraphernalia. Presbwterian church in the East Belfast suburb of Middle East should the need arise. Town spokesman Warren Greene said the law is Dundonald to attend services for the Reverend Robert patterned after a Westchester County ordinance Bradford, a member of the British Parliament gunned -- ai-ionlz-- which w,as upheld as constitutional by the Second Cir- ,down in Belfast last Saturday. cuit U.S. Court of Appeals. V-_\isibly shaken. Prior was hustled into the church bv Washinngton - After one retreat. the Reagan admmin- The Islip Town Board passed the ordinance this securlit officers. Later, as he left the church. several istration is forging ahead with the proposed sale of afternoon following a public hearing at which no one reporters close to Prior said he was pinned against a communication satellite gear to an Arab consortium voiced any opposition. wall and hit on the head bV a fist as a howling mob of that includes Libya and the Palestine Liberation Town Supervisor Michael Logrande said: "While the 300 surged toward him. A bodyguard put his hands Organization. law is not intended as a solution to the overall drug over Prior's head to fend off more blows, the reporters Sources told The Associated Press that the proposal. iai d. problems confronting us. it does provide a practical which could stir another fight with Congress on the response to a serious part of the problem. the sale of A phalanx of atrmed policemen charged into the heels of the $8.5-billion arms sale to Saudi Arabia, is drug paraphernalia. " crowd and put Prior into a bulletproof limousine. The being revived even though some serators object to Greene said board members felt that car was s;urrounded and kicked and several people allowing the delivering the sophisticated equipment to a group \\erc hurt in the five-minute melee. sale of paraphernalia encourages the use of drugs. Some of the whose membership involves hostile elements. punches intended for Prior hit bodyguards and police- Informal discussions were set at a secret session with men. A spkesmarn said Prior was unhurt. (Compiled from the Associated Press) key Senate staff aides. to be attended also by represen- Thc angyry crowd was protesting Britain's failure to m tatives of the Ford Motor Co., whose Palo Alto. Calif., _**7^-a.__ _ _J_ _AA _F-_ A_ mmr_^A { _6MA of.. wra.t(k down on the IRA. VW subsidiary would produce key components of the com- wwVW 7-J t** munications system. The gear would be assembled by Compiled By Meteorologists Bob Hassinger and a French government-owned company, with the neces- Dave Dabour Moscow - Ptr(oduction fell short of goals this year in sary satellites launched into orbit by the U.S. space agrivulture, coal. iron and steel, the Soviet Union's agency. Summary chief economic planner reported. He indicated the The U.S. share of the satellite and communications Soviet union would aim for the low end of its overall gear would total about $79 million of the overall I A storm now located east of Long Island was targets in the current five-year plan, which ends in French contract - for about $150 million. It would responsible for last night's rain. This storm should I .135. involve two working satellites launched bv the give us some brief clearing tonight as it moves away N 1'ikolai BaibakovI told delegates to the Soviet Parlia- National Aeronautics and Space Administration in swinging winds into a drier northwesterly direc- ;ment that "it \vas not possible to fulfill the 1981 plan" in the mid 1980's. tion. However, no sooner do we get rid of one storm -thoset areas, but did not specify how wide the gap was There also is concern that the Libyan government of than another come along. Already. a large low pres- -in anv of the four areas. Col. Moammar Khadafy and the PLO might make ,sure area has formed in the middle of the country Pr-I'silent Leonid Brezhnev told the Supreme Soviet militarv use of Arabsat, as the system is called, and and is forecasted to move in a northeasterly direc- oniMondav that the economic planners were to blame there are questions about Libya's share of the financ- tion. A.s this storm moves to our west late Thursday for a "poor crop year," and food remained the nation's ing said to be about 17 percent. into Friday it should first provide us with warming central problem. Western experts said Brezhnev State Department officials say the satellite system then rainand finally with a sharp cold front to begin hinted at an increase in military spending when he would simply supplement the existing international the weekend. cited the "complicated" international situation as one telephone system, to which Libyan and all but two of faetor contributing to the sluggishness of the Soviet the 22 Arab clients have access. The exceptions are Forecast economy. South Yemen and the PLO. *** Under U.S. law. a license for the sale would go Today: Any morningshowers will end by midday through unless vetoed by majority vote of the Senate with some breaks Cairo West Air Base. Egypt - J.S. and Egyptian in the clouds by evening. windy and the House within 30 days of formal submission. and raw. trox)ps fired ground-to-air missiles, including Soviet Highs around 50. SAM-7s. at orange-colored drones and miniature ver- Tonight: Partly cloudy, breezy and cool. Lows 40-45. sions of Soviet Mig-23 fighter planes during maneuv- -Stale and Lorzal --- Thursday: Increasing ers yesterday. Glen (Cove- The FBI has taken over the investigation cloudiness with the On the second day of training between American of chance of a shower or two, late in the day. Highs a claim by Soviet officials that a helicopter landed on 53-58. and Egyptian forces participating in the Bright Star the roof of the (Glen Cove residence of the Ambassador Friday: '82 exercises. U.S. troops in desert fatigues showed off to the United Nations. Rain ending around midday. windy and turning colder. High in the 50s their anti-aircraft skills. Meanwhile. in Addis Ababa. FBI officials at the agency's Long Island and mid failing into the New 40s by evening. Ethiopia. the pro-Soviet governments of Ethiopia, York offices said last night that they have no details of 1% .9
S5TATESMAN (UPS 715460). newspaper at the State University of N w York at St'->nyBrc.ok and surrounding corm .unityis Publisi-Wt ree. .. esa week on Monday. WednedNow York. 1 n idayAurgus to r. y oxcept for December anti April inter sessions by Statesman Associat ion, Inl. an independent not-for-Prof it literary corooration sn orwrae t under the laws of th e Stat e o aN wFYrkidli, I address P.O. Box AE. Stony Brook. NY 11 790. Second class postage rates Wid at Stony Brook Post Off ice Storny Brook NY 1790 Stat n the saeoSf Nwa sakipt iohnsto701 the undergraduate studestgovernment. Subscript ionrate is 7.50.S1 he sale of sub saript ions to P ty.
Page 2 STATESMAN November 18, 1981 SB Group to Hold Fast for Famisheld
By Karen Greenblatt there are serious hunger problems in the refugee tomorrow beginning at 6 PM in the Ammann College The recently banded club, People Uniting for camps. Oxfam American, which is based in Boston Fireside Lounge. Everyone is welcome, even if they Recreation and the Sharing of Unlimited Education was the only aid group allowed to enter Cambodia are not fasting. The program includes a slide show on (PURSUE) is sponsoring local participation in a during the famine, and, they are actively involved with Somalia presented by Peggy Turbett of UNICEF: a nationwide World Hunger Day Fast tody on behalf of the current situation. speech on African development by Thomas Johnson, Oxfam, an independent international aid group that According to Charles Massaro, a member of director of the Third World Nations at the United attempts to ease world hunger problems, specifically PURSUE, one reason that the club is organizing the Nations; live folk music by the band Rappary; reggae Third World nations. fast is because they want to "raise world hunger music by a DJ and finally dinner at 8 PM. Donations awareness on campus." are requested. Participating students will begin the fast at 8 PM In addition to PURSU E's efforts to organize the fast. Harkness East, a vegetarian co-op located in the and will continue for 24 hours, donating the money Lackmann Food Services has agreed to give the money Stage XII Cafeteria, will also be providing food to they would have spent on food to Oxfam. Oxfam's from missed meals to Oxfam, if students contact them, break the fast. However, reservations are required. intent is to raise enough funds to help ease starvation according to Psychology Professor and PURSUE According to Silverstein, PURSUE is trying to and famine in Somalia. advisor Brett Silverstein. make Stony Brook more human and teach people to Somalia and Ethiopia are presently at war, and, PURSUE will be holding a "break-fast" program learn about the world in an interesting way. Volunteer Dorm Patrol Spreads OnIt By Howard Saltz Backed with impressive figures and rave reviews, the Volunteer Resident Dorm Patrol has expanded its operation and spawned another. The patrol, which consists of building residents walking through their build- ings and parking lots at early morning hours, began in Kelly C last semester, expanded to include all of Kelly Quad this fall, and now claims two State XII dormitories, one in Roth Quad and an offshoot program in the Stage XVI apartment complex. James College in the crime-and vandalism-prone H Quad, may be next. In addition, the patrol has fathered the Resident Action Program (RAP), which, according to its director, James College Sophomore Jeff Vlack, will act as a go-between for students and the uni- versity's administration. The program has already conquered one problem: Earlier this month, the university's Physical Plant replaced 46 broken light bulbs and repaired 21 broken fixtures in KJelly C two days after they were reported by RAP via a schematic dia- gram of the affected areas. Solving the lighting problem in Kelly C, the first major success for the embry- onic RAP, was engineered primarily by Steve Cohen, the founder of the first dorm patrol in Kelly C last semester and I Kelly A dorm patroller Steve Drelich checks with Laura Keefe, the patrol's Kelly Quad now the campus-wide coordinator. coordinator. At right, one of the signs installed at various locations on campus as part of a Cohen explained the basis of RAP is that new program that hopes to curb crime through increased awareness. students cannot ordinarily have access to the various segments of the adminis- back to them four-fold," Cohen said. percent drop. The numbers of crimes in IWELCOME tration, and that RAP can be a vehicle The number of buildings that have Kelly dropped by almost two-thirds. for that. joined the patrol seems to be increasing The total number of reported crimes in The dorm patrol has also proven steadily. Mount College and Stage XII A the first six months of 1980, compared to O bis is a materialistically rewarding in some are the latest, and Stage XVI is institut- the first six months of 1981, in all parts cases. The basement of Kelly C was re- ing a block watch in which awareness is of campus dropped by just under 20 per- furnished because, as Assistant Resi- stressed, and calling the Department of cent. according to Public Safety! dence Life Director Gary Matthews Public Safety in the case of suspected records. iNEIGHBORHOOD| expalins, the new furniture is safer from wrong-doing urged. The block watch is vandalism in a building with a patrol. unlike the drom patrol, in which, in New Plan Seeks WATCH Kelly B. the second building to have a most cases, two teams of two patrol a I patrol, also received replacement fur- building and parking lot and report, via I nishings, although none of the more walkie-talkie, to a control station. Pub- To Curb (rime, recent converts have been as fortunate. lic Safety is called if the situation war- "Any time they've [the administra- rants it. The patrollers do not get Community tion] gives us any money, we've given it involved in arrest or attempt to physi- Ralse Awareness cally thwart crimes, except in cases of I I O&lo*Ot.9 -^rofC.,. * fts. 9v O * * emergency, according to Cohen. "Welcome. This is a Neighborhood lbI }w - - - jI I The Kelly patrol has been keeping Watch Community," is the slogan dis- F :tv f : : : . m regular tabs on the quad, for the most played on 15 signs that have been dis- 95'.' .: ' .'. part, anway. According to Cohen, about bursed throughout campus. 10 of the 14 scheduled teams patrol each According to Doug Little. community week. in most buildings in the quad. relations officers for the Department of Public Safety, Neighborhood Watch is ,_ with Kelly E lagging slightly behind. i'- How successful has the patrol been? an organized effort by neighbors to pro- Very, according to a Public Safety spo- tect themselves by protecting each kesman. Crime has been on the decline other. Little equated the watch to a "big throughout the campus in the past few brother effect." He said the watch is years, according to Public Safety campus wide and is just that, "a watch." records, but in Kelly Quad, it's way On campus, students, who are going to down. According to Doug Little, a com- be away fro a few days. can tell their munity relations officer at Public neighbor so he can keep an eye on the Statesman Michael Will (le v <-tifr - e Safety, thefts, robbery and criminal room, Little said. If anything suspicious Stye Cohen, founder of the volunteer dorm mischief totaled about $16,155 in 1980 (continued on page 9) 1 patrol. and $4,861 in 1981 in Kelly -about a 75 November 18, 1981 STATESMAN Page 3 - - Carey's Wife Tours SB ' By Barbara A Fein "I was a school teacher," Evangeline Carey, wife of New York State Governor Hugh Carey, explained during her one hour visit to the University Hospital yesterday. "I feel very, very close to children. I am delighted to see this.... I am tho- roughly impressed with what's going on here...." Long interested in children's health care problems, Mrs. Carey specifically requested to view the children's health care facilities on her first tour of any university hospital. V~~~so CEO One of the highlights of Mrs. Careys circuit was when she :E, met 14 year old James Giargi- FOREIGN DOORSTIC ana, editor of the Pediatric Press, a mimeographed publi- cation that circulates the Pedi- atric Intensive Care Unit for the childrens' benefit. James - - - - -m - . orwww R Ar - %w ff ~ Known Coast to Coast has had two kidney trans- 179 MIsLE C@IITIV RUB 58sftfif32 plants, both of which %isbody CETEBEA6N. II.*. 117ol.7T n ^ rejected. After having been a GET 2 Blocls W*st of Nicoho Rd patient on the ward for the last AAMCO 10%rOFF WITH SUSB ID seven weeks he is now con- This Center roc«*iwd th* highefst rating ter hono nected to a renal dialysis unit 1^^^^. Reportfd by N.Y. Timos mm for three to three-and-a-half I hours daily. Mrs. Carey shared tales of 20% her editing days, and left her name and address with a nurse on the floor, so that she might receive a subscription o! their OFF work. She also promist d to ---... 000"op- Cuisine return and visit James "around Christmas-time." ENTIRE STOCK OPEN 7 DAYS "What if I'm not here then?," Sunday through Thursday James asked the governor's of Swezey's Setauket wife. 7 a.m. til 9:30 p.m. "Then I'll come to your house," she replied without a Young Men's FRIDAY & SATURDAY second consideration. She'll i I OPEN 24 HOURS I make an interesting Santa and i Clause, as James placed his gift Across from Railroad Station order with her - apairofJord- At Ceder St. & Rte. 25A, Stony Brook, N.Y. ache Jeans, size 12 (though Junior Sportswear Mrs. Carey thought James to be 751-9866 ,j Departments - closer to a size eight or ten.) She insisted that she would -Previous Markdowns remember her promise. are not Dr. John Partin, the included. Pediatrician-in-Chief of the University Hospital and the -Young Men's and Junior Sports- Chairman of the Department of wear Departments Only! Pediatrics in the medical i school, directed the tour, rout- -Purchase must be accompanied ing the group past Outpatient with coupon below and student ID. Services, toward the Newborn Intensive Care Unit and the Intensive Care Unit Nursery, over the bridge that connects the two towers of the Health Sciences Center, and back to his office for a brief reception. Throughout her tour, Mrs. Carey was particularly impressed by those facilities 1 geared toward handicapped 1 1 ic H AIIIIIIIII- , - A persons, and also remarked on the 'homey" and friendly atmosphereof the waiting areas V,t ^ A a * - - - and the wards themselves. -^ -^ WANlTED 'It looks more like a hotel < -4 Males, 19-29 that they would want to check ^ yrs., into," she commented in a voice 1-4 I I r4 l* - _ __ _ _ . l -4 slightly haunted by a Mediter- blt IAUKL I b IURb ONLY )-4 ,1zu-zuu IDs., as paid volunteers ranean accent. , in psycho-pharmacology experiments : Mrs. Carey has been read- >-^ dressing such issues as child inHealth Sciences Center I abuse and Thalissene (Coolie's *^ Anemia.)AccordingtoDr. Par- -4 ^ Call 246-2560 Etin, Thalisene, striking a large >-4 percentage of those of Mediter- *4 k Bonny Baron and Linda ranean descent, is a genetic b~b~r~flA abnormality in the hemoglobin molecules. the part of the red - - -~~~~~~~~ blood cells that carries oxygen. C~~gh~TTTT I ITIInTnin^HlT yTCC^, (continued on page 8) Page 4 STATESMAN November 18 1981, - r - -
-A Al O^uCp Pr eaang nitt es 3tuaymng >7-->for ^7»T-TI/^-?*" Laura Baldwin and Luke Spencer were married yesterday in Port Charles, and students at Stony Brook attended the wedding in large numbers. It was standing room only in the television room of the Stony Brook Ar~rUUi DoorWM a..+* *As..- Union between 3 PM and 4PM, as AdL- --_J LF-._.X_AL_ -__ _- ...... I_ _:- or_ ___ _-- i - . #) ga~~~~~ditia restauran (bue 1wwitnessm Restaurant (below).
Bn--f StUOW ffD fe
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-
Whateie r happened to John Toll? T. A. Pond? Dick Schmidt?
Or Gerry Manginelli, Dartid Herzog, Ischai Bloch and Rich Zuckerman?
The answer is in Monday's Statesman, in a special issue in which Statesman editors-in-chief from 1970 to the present will write about how things were then, are now, and could have been. That's Monday, Nov. 23, in a special old- timers'editionof Sta- tesman.
Watch for it.
November 18, 1981 STATESMAN 'LiPano%JE; 5 I
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- - Page 6 STATESMAN November 18, 1981 r
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>----Sftft~~tH^ T~t/Ut y4 - The Other Steve Martii Oh Brother! by Howard Saltz Wwho is that defiant, banjo-totin' guy wil wavy, shoulder-length hair and beard on th back of the new Steve Martin album? He's so unlike his counterpart on the froi of the album, the Steve Martin we all kno with a pink suit, jacket draped over h shoulders, a ridiculously large ring on eac finger, each hair perfectly in place and cigarette (in a holder, naturally,) in hand. Hey-wait a minute. That rebellious hipp with the Jim Morrison grin is Steve Marti Yes, the same Steve Martin in the pink st and gold chains. And the new album, euph< mistically titled The Steve Martin Brother consists of two forms of entertainment < diverse as the photographs of the corre ponding "brothers" on the cover's exterio It's quite a gag, and not at all unlike Martii to offer an album that contains half come< and half music, except that the half adve tised as music's not music at all, but corned Thus a joke before the album is even hear But Steve Martin fans have become used expecting the unexpected, and so Martin, remain one step ahead, has to have th expected expected, or something like the The joke is on you. That's right, The Steve Martin Brothers actually only half comedy-the substantial shorter half-and half banjo music. Not th there's anything wrong with banjo musi (continued on page 1 1A) L- mmommidw P - 7~~~~~~~~~~~ A 0^^ift Se~~~iff^^l^4nte AIH A ______^ 3aAA I - -VIo G.S.O. LOUNGE Located in Roorm 133 of the Old Chemistry Building NOW OPEN TIJFKSDAVCtIf Appearing This THURSDAY entertainment by HOUR Kelly Luber ~J/ PROCESSING and FRIENDS *Jor a fine, not so fine, but - 9 COLOR PRINTS -definitely FUN acoustic music" . AND SLIDES AMSTEL Light AUGUSTINEN Light & Dark BECK Light & Dark DAB DINKELACKEN Dark THREE VILLAGE CAMERA DORTMUNDER HANSA GUINNESS EXTRA STOUT E. SETAUKET a ROCKY POINT o SELDEN GROLSH 751-7997 744-7576 736-2022 KRONENBOURG Next to Swezey's and Goodies Assorted Wines MACKESON STOUT - -I Assorted Teas MOOSEHEAD Coffee PILSNEER URQUELL Cookies & Munchies Special Beers of the Week ,^ GUINNESS on TAP - $1.1o |tL_ DINKELACKER Dark - $1.1 %2 :-%: 1 t*: aa*a:Q - **I % ~- --- a: atb :ie%.t 2b TONITE ON WUSB: You can foud out what were all about here at 90.1FM as SUNY SIDE UP takes a look at WUSB. Host Al Oiclde will interview Station Manager Norm Prusslin and Program Director Eric Corey tonight at 6L-00 and you can call in with questions! Then at 9:0S (right afterthe USB CONCERT BILLBOARD), a rebroadcast ofthe Sean Sands speech, taped at Stony Brook two weeks ago. Seanspeaks about his late brother Bobby, the I.RJL, and conditions in Northern Ireland today. TOMMORRoW NITE: Don'tmfds another USB extravaganza amue broedcast UIe once again from the End of the Bridge. ibis dnw the Music oftwo fie Long Island bands CONTROLED BLEEDING and THE CLIQjE) wffl be featured. And, if you come down, youUl get sewral chances o win some tickets to Sunday night's GO GO's,/JOE "KING" CARPASCO concert, as weD as other assorted Cprapnanenae I wu I 90*1Xm stereo I Page 2A STATESMAN/Alternatives November 18, 1981 1 r a^^^ j^^ s ^^ gx^ ass ^ -^ ^ ^^ j^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^ ^ * *-.*' *". " " """."...... ".." .""''""'"""''**»-*„, .i.....i»...... i...... n...... 1.1...... »...... 1...... 1 ...... f e Ideas Lock-Up in 'Exchange' Key Exchange Mike, and Lisa are bicycling Wade cleverly spoofs modern sin- enthusiasts who meet every Sun- gles with his satiric dialogue, Orpheum Theatre day. Phil and Lisa are having a especially in the scene which Lisa 2nd Avenue and E. 86th St. most casual affair. As Phil puts it, admits that she has been faithful a movie here, dinner there, a to Phil. Phil is astonished and by Brad Hodges night spent together over there. abashed at her old-fashioned- She sees other people, and so ness. He reacts to her in the same Dby Exchange" is a bright, does he. Mike is a newlywed, who manner that a married man might articulate, and funny play exa- has the unfortunate distinction of react to his wife's infidelities, and mining the casual attitudes in being married for one month the result is well-done comedy. contemporary relationships. before his wife walks out on him. A few problems within the text: Playwright Kevin Wade has, in his These three form a close bond Mike's purpose in the play. Early first work, created real, viable and share all their troubles. This on he is the odd man out, sitting characters that have honest rela- is wiiere the writing excels, for quietly embarrassed while Phil tionships between them. Wade is an excellent listener of and Lisa smooch. Then, an inter- The action takes place in Cen- people. The conversations which esting triangle begins to form, as tral Park on the bike lane. Phil, take place on stage could easily Mike seems to be falling for Lisa. be heard in real life. Mike's fasci- But this is not followed up, and nation with women's panties, from then on Mike and Lisa's rela- Phil's idolization of French bicy- tionship is not examined. Mike clists, and Lisa's memoires of her turns into Phil's buddy who goes mother's death are quite touch- on the town and listens to prob- ing, humorous, and very human. lems. Unfortunately, Wade falls into - Wade has trouble completing novels, engages in a very casual affair with the trap of making his characters his ideas. At the end of the first (See photo below;) extraordinarily literate. Mike is an scene, Copland's "Fanfare for The most natural performance ad copyrighter, and Phil is a writer The Common Man" blares out, was that of Mark Blum as Mike. (of detective novels, no less.) indicating a scene change. The There is a great deal of sympathy Because of this, Phil has a ten- actors come out of the play and for this ordinary nice guy who has dency to talk much like Raymond react to the incidental music. This been dumped on by his wife. Chandler writes. The whole play is done very humorously, but it is Blum feeds on this, but never is written in a textbook English, never done again, and it exists becomes too pathetic. More than which takes away from the emo- only as an isolated incident. his colleagues, Blum's thoughts tional responses of the action. The acting, under the direction are clearly delineated through The conflict of the play comes of Barnet Kellman, correlates voice and actions. when Lisa tries to take the rela- with the language problem in the There are other problems with tionship a step further by sug- text. Wade has created real peo- the set and sound. Terry Ariano's gesting that she and Phil ple, but the actors try to make plywood set in no way suggests exchange keys to each other's them larger than life. Ben Mas- Central Park, and in between apartments. This threatens the ters, as Phil, is a prime example. scenes, rock songs from the past bejeesus out of Phil, who is terri- He is macho, he is non-committal, few years are played. This is fine if fied of any sort of commitment. ' V%-AnteI liled fed&- %I + Te'd&.% -,a rt. .+ INOVeM Der 1, jo D eI l I m / /A I le lu LV t1 ) A Iitr- N, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-m Pe I v I^» ty~I^ THREE VILLAGE SHOPPING PLAZA ROUTE 25A. SETAUKET. 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