Volley Ball Team Wins State Title
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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.