Election Results: :

T-oo -Early~, EA. to Tell Voting was heavy and the results close -date the elctions before votes can be in yesterday's Polity elections. Votes counted. had not been completely tabulated by The delay left waiting candidates press time, 7:30 this morning, but were Patrick Hilton, president of the Haitian expected to be as of this afternoon. Students Organization, and Polity The Polity Election Board had been Secretary Adina Finkelstein, who are counting for about 8 hours this morning running for president. Sophomore Class and had still not gotten to commuters Representative David Gamberg and and write-ins. They began at about Commuter Senator Gil Ripp are vying 11:30 last night, delayed two hours for vice-president. Four of the other six while the Polity Judiciary was involved seats on the Polity Council, the under- with the Senate and its Monday night graduate student government's execu-

meeting, at which the budget was to =u-tive branch, are also up for grabs. Statesman u'ohcs David jasse have been finalized but was not. (See The elections winners will take office -Candidates for the Polity presidency, Patrick Hilton and Adina Finkelstein, did not know early this morning if they had won. Balloting had been reported as heavy and very close as of story on page 5.)The Judiciary mustvali- in mid-May for a one-year term. 7:30 this morning.

ldp- r-In Alternatives: Battle of the Bands, 'Romeo and Juliet' Third World,/ End of the Bridge: Two Views, - i ,;' ' '-and More....I

14- --d

Campus Wlk Sergice Will Surkiue Fe I Coordinators Replaced tfor Allegedly Falsifying Work Hourt

I MIt OF~~~~Ui e By Howard Saltz been going on for "a long time." z !And John Burkhardt - zBut the patrol has bounced back after }he-universit"s student walk service bhaving "to start over from scratch" with I dorm patrol are alive and well, hav- three new coordinators. In fact, they s vithv ignation *bout five -intend to expand mSd list waek re- bks ago of all six of its coordinators, implemented the dorm patrol, dormant ) were charged with having claimed this semester because of a lack of per- e hours for their paychecks all year. sonnel, according to one of the new coor- 'he resignations were requested- by dinators, Bill Bushman. cic Safety Director Gary Barnes "At first it was (tough)," Bushman -r it was alleged that the six students, said. "But I think the unit as a whole has >supervised 21 other workers, were adjusted and we're ready to go." ,ming hours for which they did not "It has survived and will continue to -k. Barnes heard of the practice, grow," Little said, "because we feel it's Drding to Public Safety Lt. Doug Lit- an important student organization. Just who, as director of the Community because we had problems in the past ations Unit oversees the walk service doesn't mean students can't run it." Idorm patrol, from somebody within The walk service, formed six years unit on a confidential basis. ago, currently escorts about 30 people :ach of the six coordinators was sche- per week from one point to another ed to work about 20 hours per week between the hours of 8 PM and 2 AM. Its 3.75 an hour, Little said, but actually new student enforcement division, in in somewhere around 14 hours, which students ticketed illegally parked lough exact figures were never tabu- cars, was discontinued after the six ,d. The coordinators' jobs include coordinators resigned and Little tem- ng paperwork, overseeing the other porarily took over because, he said, he rkers and walking patrols, he said. felt it was both philosophically wrong arnes originally had asked Little and an endangerment to the students I another Public Safety official to The service also includes the dorm Drm the students to discontinue the patrol, which is separate from the ctice, Little said, but later asked for Volunteer Resident Dorm Patrol, which resignations. Barnes also decided started last year in Kelly Quad. to press criminal charges for claim- One of those who resigned was the ing phony hours, which Little said has (continued on page 4) A menbor of the Walk S o _** *asudSnt beck to her dorm late at night. Britain Keys Up for Island Take Ovier Argentines are unlikely London (AP)-Britain warned yester- tions for the first time in the crisis bol- important staging point for shipment of sure to bear, the the Falklands." She day that military force may be the only stered speculation that the task force, troops and supplies to the Falkland to withdraw from way to retake the Falkland Islands. lashed by worsening winter weather off Islands. Unconfirmed reports indicated rejected an appeal from Michael Foot, Argentina said it had learned the Brit- the Falklands, may soon launch an similar measures were taken in the leader of the oposition Labor Party, that ish may attack in 24 to 48 hours, ordered assault on the South Atlantic colony southern Argentine cities of Rio Galle- she send Foreign Secretary Francis foreign correspondents from a key port seized by Argentina April 2. gos and Ushuaia. Pym to New York for talks with UN and reportedly told Secretary of State Secretary General Javier Perez de Alexander Haig not to return to Buenos Argentine Foreign Minister Nicanor The British dependency of South Cuellar. Aires. Costa Mendez told the Organization of Georgia, 800 miles east of the Falklands, Perez de Cuellar on Monday appealed Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher American States in Washington his was seized April 3, and Britain said its to both sides to halt any excalation of the told the House of Commons in London government has received information marines captured South Georgia and crisis and comply "immediately" with that "military pressure" now appears to that British naval forces may attack the 194 Argentines Sunday and Monday. UN Security Council resolution 502 of be the only way to dislodge Argentine Falkland Islands within the next 24 to The Argentine junta said, however, that April 3 calling for a cessation of hostilies troops from the Falklands. She warned 48 hours. He disclosed no other specially trained marines called "The and an Argentine withdrawal. that "time is fast running out" for a information. Lizards" continued resistance on the peaceful settlement of the 25-day-old Argentine military authorities gave island. Clearly impatient with Argentina's crisis. foreign journalists 48 hours to leave Thatcher said Britain still was pre- refusal to pull out of the Falklands, Her tough statements and a news Comodoro Rivadavia, 1,200 miles south pared to negotiate a settlement, but Thatcher said sending Pym to New blackout on the British armada's opera- of Buenos Aires. The city has been an warned "unless we bring military pres- York would "not achieve anything." -News DigesW -- -- - The statement also said that "numerous books, mag- The lawyer mentioned sex education manuals and -International- azines and newspaper articles relating to earlier asas- cother serious surveys as some examples of materials sinations" were found in Hinckley's home in tthat could run afoul of New York's law. Peking - A Chinese jetliner reported carrying for- Evergreen, Colo., and that there was a photography of The New York Court of Appeals, that state's highest eign tourists crashed near the scenic southern city of the defendant in front of Ford's Theater in Washington ttribunal, struck down the law in May 1981. Generally, Guilin, and China's official news agency Xinhua said where Abraham Lincoln was shot. The government tthe Supreme Court has ruled that under the First yesterday that all 112 people aboard were killed. paper drew no conclusions from the material. Sources Amendment's guarantee of freedom of speech a per- Xinhua said the British-made Trident jet crashed have said previously that there was "no hard evidence" iformance must be judged legally obscene before it can Monday but gave no reason for the delayed report and Hinckley had stalked public figures. Ibe banned. Nineteen states have laws similar to New did not mention whether any foreigners were aboard. Hinckley, who will be 27 on May 29, is charged with York's. Both the Congress and various state legisla- But unconfirmed reports from Hong Kong said two attempting to assassinate the president and 12 other 1tures have been asked to help curb sexual exploitation Americans, 50 Hong Kong Chinese and several Japa- felony counts. He has conceded he did the shooting but of children. nese tourists were on the plane. claims he is innocent by reason of insanity. China's government rarely discloses news about dis- - State AEd Leci- asters and there was no immediate way to obtain details of the crash until authorities released them. Washington - President Reagan plans to invite New York-Representatives of a prospective new Xinhua said flight 3303 of China's CAAC airline was House Speaker Thomas OYNeill and Senate Majority publisher of the Daily News assembled more back- carrying 104 passengers and eight crew when it Leader Howard Baker to meet with him today to ground information yesterday to support a claim that departed Canton's Baiyun White Cloud Airport for resolve the remaining differences over the 1983 $70 million in annual relief is needed from employees. Guilin but radio contact suddenly was lost 35 minutes budget, the president's spokesman said yesterday. Joe Allbritton is seeking labor-saving agreements later. The plane crashed 28 miles from Guilin, Xinhua Deputy White House ipress; secretary Larry with 11 unions representing 3,800 employees as a pre- said. Speakes told reporters thit budget negotiators nearly requisite to taking over the morning tabloid from its and averting a g Guilin is an attractive city on the Li River in the completed their task during a two-hour negotiating owner, the Tribune Co. of Chicago, shutdown. Guangxi Autonomous Region about 250 miles northw- session at the White House. The major difference possible with operating results est of Canton. It is a favorite tourist attraction because remaining is over taxes, Speakes said. He reiterated The unions, already provided quarters of 1981, said they needed of its picturesque craggy mountains. that Reagan remains committed to his three-year tax fro the first three and details of assumptions made Official confirmation of the crash came hours after a cut plan. fourth-quarter data losses. Edward Silver, the labor Kong television station reported the jet had not Reagan placed a phone call to O'Neill, but the in projecting future Hong Allbritton, said the data would more than a day and may have speaker was enroute home, accordingtoSpeakes. Rea- lawyer negotiating for been heard from for of Peat Marwick crashed. gan planned to talk with him later yesterday and invite be turned over to the accounting firm "today or tomorrow." That firm was then A spokesman for the Royal Hong Kong Observatory him to meet to settle the final differences. and Mitchell in the British colony 90 miles south of Canton con- "They (the negotiators) felt the time was right, that to report to leaders of the unions to enable them to reported firmed that weather over the Canton-Guilin area had they were close enough on most major issues to bring in judge the financial needs of the News, which last year. been poor since Sunday. the leaders. The major difference is taxes - how much a loss of over $12 million Monday, All- Xinhua said the State Council -China's Cabinet - and what kind. The president is still committed to Under a five-day extension announced through May 5 to present labor along with CAAC and the Guangdong provincial giving the American people his 1983 tax cut, but the britton has an option Co. and com- government had sent officials to the scene to join major point of difference now remains taxes." agreements satisfactory to the Tribune takeover accord. Guangxi officials investigating the cause of the plete the accident. Washington - The Supreme Court was told yester- day that banning distribution of books and movies New York-The City Council voted 31 to 12 yester- showing non-obscene sexual performances by children day to approve new boundary lines for 35 council dis- would "imperil a good deal of useful literature." tricts. The plan also requires the signature of the During oral arguments, the court's members often mayor, who has not taken a position on the measure. abrupt with Herald Prince Fahringer, who Washington - Surrounded by U. S. marshals and were The legislation creating 35 districts -two more a bulletproof vest, John Hinckley went on argued - opposing a New York law - that states can than currently exist - passed the council shortly after wearing bar the distribution of such materials once they've for attempting to assassinate President only 6 PM, following almost four hours of debate that was at trial yesterday been judged to be obscene. "I don't mind if I do offend Reagan. times humorous and that at times contained veiled Ronald you," Chief Justice Warren Burger told the lawyer at jury selection began, the government's chief pro- charges of racism. As one point. The chief justice had just asked Fahringer if that Reagan, himself, may be called The city was enjoined last September from holding a secutor indicated he could "seriously advance" the notion that films testimony about him or you council election because officials had not received pre- to testify. "There will be sexual performance by children were benefi- from him," said Assistant US showing liminary approval from the US Justice Department, will hear testimony people. it at that." cial to young which has jurisdiction because the Bronx, Manhattan Attorney Roger Adelman. "I will leave At another point, Justice William Rehnquist inter- Parker said he was looking for a and Brooklyn are under the US Voting Rights Act. Judge Barrington rupted a lengthy answer by Fahringer. '"Can you of prejudice, free of Democratic Majority Leader Thomas Cuite said he jury that is "free of bias, free answer yes or no," he snapped. prospective hoped the new lines would meet the approval of the opinion." To that end, he questioned Other justices also appeared visibly annoyed as Fah- jurors and six alternates will department. members closely. Twelve ringer, lawyer for a New York pornographic book may take the rest of the The department ruled Oct. 27 that the first set of be chosen in a process that store owner, often gave long answers to their was called for the initial district lines diluted the voting strength of minority week. A 90-member panel questions. screening process. groups. The latest lines were drawn with a view Fahringer argued that a New York law banning the toward meeting the federal objections. However, the After the midday recess, with none of the panelists promotion and distribution of materials with children yet excused, the judge asked: "how many have not latest plan failed to address the issue of the 10 council under 16 performing sexual acts contained an imper- members elected on a borough-wide basis. heard or read anything about this caser? Not a single missible "chilling effect" of free speech rights. The law hand went up. Parker then began summoning the A federal judge ruled those positions unconstitu- has been struck down by a lower court. tional on the one-man, one-vote principle last jurors to the bench. Justice Thurgood Marshall retorted, "The 'chilling r-' aMeanwhile, the government filed a statement with November on grounds that each borough had two such effect' doesn't have any effect on your clients, because seats although the five boroughs had widely different the court that it intends to introduce as evidence a they don't even want people to know who they are." populations. * videotape that shows Hinckley in a crowd about six fee Fahringer said of New York's ban: "It will imperil a then-President Carter in Dayton, Ohio, on Oct. 2, r from good deal of useful literature." (Compiled from The Associated Press) 1980.

Page 2 STATESMAN April 28, 1982 A Different Set of Problems - - ; StonyBrook and the Disabled

By Dara E. Tyson tor in 1978. The Office of the Disabled is (meaning cervical vertebrae 4 and 5 'attachment for captioned programs on "My day typically begins at 8 AM," a now a division of Student Affairs. Its were broken), Steen, a junior economics channels 4, 7 and 13 for the hearing little earlier than most Stony Brook stu- two goals are to sensitize the campus to major, said: 'I had a teacher who would impaired. dents wake up, said senior Lynette the disabled both psychologically and not let me into class five minutes late. Perez. "It takes about an hour and a half physically. "My function is to educate But a few days later, she let 10 people in Chairing the president's advisory to wash and dress. I have to leave 20 this campus about the disabled," Roth 10 minutes late. Is that fair?" committee is Patty Kelly, a visually- minutes to a half hour earlier for class said. "Many of the disabled feel alie- Beverly Harrison, Stony Brook's impaired social welfare student. Kelly just in case the elevator in the Humani- nated and find it difficult to make affirmative action officer, said that explained that the 27-member commit- ties Building breaks down. You know, if friends. I think there is an unconscious efforts are being made to facilitate peo- tee, which consists of students, faculty I have two classes in a row, I can't run desire to keep disabled people at a lower ple's understanding of the needs of the and administrators, meets every six back to my room for books. I have to level, to see them as childlike, as less." disabled. There will be a seminar held weeks to decide on campus changes, and bring them with me." Stanton confirms this statement as next week for the faculty and adminis- then Kelly writes recommendations to "Next semester, I need transporta- she expresses her frustration and anger. trators. Affirmative action strives to the university president. Four subcom- tion. I'm working 1% miles away from 'In the past, my teachers labelled me. modify the attitude of the able-bodied mittees comprise the advisory commit- campus and my back would let out if I They'd say I have cerebral palsy. through a training program. tee and every member is involved in have to walk," added Susan Stanton. Because I'm physically disabled, they Structural barriers are also a top either program accessibility, fund rais- Perez and Stanton are among 100 dis- would doubt my mental abilities. I don't priority for the Office of the Disabled. ing, exterior accessibility or interior ' ^ ^-; L;1; TT-n... abled students at Stony Brook. Perez ccessinuity. &elyexpiaineu 1-- ^";-a ama +tun* pro--_ - has spina bifida, a condition where the gram accessibility is important so that spinal column has failed to close when it outside agencies like the Office of the was developing. This disease has Vocational Rehabilitation (OVR) and impaired her motor abilities, leaving the State Commission of the Blind know her wheelchair bound. Stanton is a vic- that Stony Brook is becoming accessible tim of palsy, which leaves her with a and that they can refer college-bound limp (one leg is shorter than the other), students to Stony Brook. This is the first of a two part series. 'Part two will appear in Friday's The members of the fund raising com- Statesman. ' ' .~ mittee hope they raised $6,000 during the March swim-a-thon for the Red Cross van so essential to transportation. no peripheral vision in her right eye and Elvira Navarro, assistant to the chair- little coordination in her right hand. man for physical education special Like most able-bodied students, Perez events, stated: "This fund raising event and Stanton may worry about how hard is like a walk-a-thon. The swimmers a test will be, about early classes or if swam x number of laps for x number of their dorm buildings or club is having a dollars. In all, there were 51 volunteer party. But unlike most Stony Brook stu- swimmers, which Kelly called a "poor dents, Perez and Stanton may be con- response" for the population of the Stony cerned with accessible classrooms, Brook campus. professors that are sensitive to their needs and a van that provides transpor- The exterior accessibility subcommit- tation to the campus and community. tee works outside on ramps, steps and Any of these needs left unfulfilled can lighting. "We marked out steps that "handicap" or physically and/or attitud- needed to be painted in stripes and ban- Jnally prevent .625 percent of the cam- isters that needed installment for the pus population from participating in a visually impaired," Kelly said. "We even full college program. Monica Roth, coor- contacted disabled students and asked dinator of the Stony Brook Office of the them to map out priority snow removal Disabled, put it this way: "Handicapped areas. This benefits able-bodied stu- .is what outside society makes us, dis- 'dents as well." abled is what we are physically. I can't The interior accessibility committee go up steps because they handicap me, has asked each building manager to but I can go up ramps." assess their building for the height of What makes a person disabled? the water fountains, pay phones and ele- According to The Rehabilitation Act of vator control panels. When asked about 1973, Section 504, from the United the relative success of the whole pro- States Department of Health, Educa- gram, Kelly said: 'I think positive tion and Welfare, a disabled person is things are coming out. To look back to identified as someone "...with a physical say '77, there was nothing. In '82, we've or mental disability that substantially got a van, equipment, a student lounge, impairs or restricts one or more of such maps and a proposal written for a tactile major life activities as walking, seeing, map of campus. Every year another hearing, speaking, working or learning. rung on the ladder has been reached." Disabling conditions include, but are According to Roth, last year two col- Is . V% ~' . la "I * . I.IN . not limited to: alconolism, cancer, cere- satimwnn/moon we=& leges in Roth Quad, Gershwin and Whit- bral palsy, deafness or hearing impair- need people to tell me I'm defeatedt "New York State spent a half million man, were made accessible when five ment; diabetes, drug addiction, before I start." [dollars] in 1980/81 in making this cam- suites were modified in each building. epilepsy, heart disease, mental or emo- Stanton went on to explain that she pus accessible," Roth said. "One slight All doors were widened toa minimum of tional illness, mental retardation, multi- was supposed to die at birth because of problem is the physical layout of the 22 inches..., showers are wheelchair ple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy; lack of oxygen. Her entire right side was buildings. This campus will never be accessible, have hand lever controls and d e a l fo r t h e orthopedic, speech or visual impair- paralyzed and she had weak limbs. i disabled unless all build- contain a seat; there are lever type i n s a r e to r n ment; and perceptual impairments such After much physical therapy and a con- g down and rebuilt. But all .faucets, lowered mirrors and sinks. t h e as dyslexia, minimal brain dysfunction stant battle with her disability, Stanton buildings can be somewhat accessi- Most of the disabled have roommates. b l e and developmental aphasia,' (excerpt said, "I wish I could show all those peo- .' Disabled students only qualify for a from YourRihts as a Diabled Per- ple who doubted my existence how far medical single if they are severely dis- son.) The law also provides that all pro- rve come.d Stanton, a student in the Two committees which have been abled and have extra equipment. "We grams receiving Federal financial Social Welfare Program, also felt out ofinstrumental in encouraging and advo- try to integrate our disabled students assistance be accessible to disabled per- control and powerless when her social eating campus accessibility are Stu- with able-bodied students," Roth said. sons. This does not mean that every aca- work placement restricted her to cam- dents Towards an Accessible Campus '"We want to make other dorms accessi- demie or dormitory building be totally pus and to insensitive office workers. (STAC), and the Presidentes Advisory ble since disabled students are supposed 4 acessible, but the program on the 'I want to go into family therapy and, Committee for the Disabled. Cliff Perez, to have the same living choices as whole, must be. because I cannot drive, I wound up on a visually-impaired social science major anyone else. But Roth Quad is the closest Stony Brook, in an effort to comply campus in the Foreign Students Affairs and STACs president, commented: "We to canpus.' with Section 504, is attempting to make Office," Stanton said. "I have no coordi- keep a check on how accessible the cam- Perez, a Whitman College resident, the campus mobility accessible for d- nation in my right hand and some pus is towards the disabled. We keep commented: 'They're trying to be abled studentsad faculty. In 1974, a woman in the office forced me to type. I students in touch with each other." accessible. But acoesibility is limited to

g p of Stony Brook faculty, sudents had pain in my whole arm and I wars STAC is now in the processofcreatinga I two buildings and it restricts move- amd adminis s formed an ad hoe crying. I know my own physical limita- multipurpose student lounge in the H 1ment. It's not fair. We're being discrimi- committee to establish a central office tons." Humanities Building. Roth explained I nated againstw We can't live in the halls.

for the disabled, Roth explained. Roth PeterSteenbecamedisabledduringa that some people in Student Affairs I If you live in a modified suite. suitem- came from the School of Social Welfare beea =o game when he was 16-years- donated some furniture, lockers, and a ates are fored to move out if there are in 196 Ma Ubcame a full time coordina k old. Now a quadrapatgic C 4 and 5 television. The television will have an conflicts, you can'tw

April 28, 1982 STATESMAN Page 3 THIRDAM WORLD -D Hearing On /IFREB 8ALD BAR s GRAD)UATE3 ETUDESr ORGANIZATION wtit lathe prisnts Cooking Fee SHRIMP YOU CAN EAT FORMAL NIGHTX Phis % Doz. Raw or Baked Clams PLACE:Union Auditorium To Be Kid hursdly,8 Pam. with AM Dnwers and a ad. TIMEB4/29/82, PROGRAM: A public hearing on the proposal to raise the dormitory .{SPECLAL DIViVEPR X.Movtes a. _aA &Nee CoboWIfa cooking fee will be held tomor- KI1G CRAB LEGS - row night at 8 PM in the Lec- o Salad Bar o Baked Potato el9 S b. RhaMPP m _ ture Center. 2, Poetr P i =- X,.n AM " mbe 1-sCas { n~Vegetable The terms of the proposal include: a summer cooking fee of $44 per term; a base fee of withCrabmet $?- 5»» $100 per semester for hall resi- O &lad Bar o Bakd Potato dents; a base fee of $65 per SPEAKER semester for suite residents; o Vegetable proportional adjustments of the E EMRIUM base fee for students not on a J HFabod _~h~in 81afa Custom Speakers Cost Less!- full meal plan; garbage accum- ulation in residence halls is to Your Choice of Two Items o Calamari Car Stereos o Equalizers o Accessories be removed by students; and Scungffi o ams o Mussels o ShAmp Guitar Amps o String Tuners o Cords o Straps o Styli state workers will be hired to P.A. Amps o Speakers o Microphones o Cables clean kitchens in residence with Medium or Hot Sauce & Unguine Record & Tape Headcleaners aBlank Tapes halls and stove hood in suites. Repairs On All Stereo & Musical Equipment I Dinner for Z - $1 095 . Brian Kohn, a member of the HOME/DORM/AUTO = = = -~~~~E M_I/4/sX __ SPEAKER SYSTEMS FOR Dorm Cooking Advisory Com- mittee, will moderate the hear- B~ MhdMe Counby Rd. AT Up To 50% OFF W1fB ing. In addition to the 10%0 Discount For SUSB Student and Faculty i V^^B^^^^^^^^^^ M m to tW~ r otf Nichc& Rd. committee, scheduled guests will include Robert Francis, 14 Center "5kYM1°k - Ckwed Mondm , St., Lake Ronkonkoma 73751 vice-president for Campus ^Sfy Bay One Chlkk Dtnner, Got O0E WEEt_ - ~ ~ ~ .7703 Operations.

. THE LTTLc * Walk Service m COMPLETE OBSTETRICAL I IMANDARINS & GYNECOLOGICAL CARE I till Survive BOARD CERTIFIED OBS/GYN SPECIAUSTS Given * * * By the New York Times.' ~ ^ m *:* 0^ X '. . '~ PREGNANCIES CONTRACEPT 9 ION e..- , CC CKTAIL LOUNGE NOW OPEN (continued from page 1) TERMINATED STERILIZATION patrol's chief supervisor for the SPECIALI COMPLETE LUNCHEON-$2.50 - $4.25 AWAKE OR ASLEEP ADOLESCE;NT l past year, Steven Kohn, who ADDointments I GYNECOLO )GY - A La Con $2.75 - *8.75 was largely responsible for its "* F qrihtv I / Days a week » growth since he joined three and evening hours Confidential years ago. Little payed tribute 74 No. Coudtr v *OPEN DAILY I y d forRTd.lcus - to Kohn, saying the patrol I STUDENT DISCOUNT t. 25A. Setaut et urs. 11.30-10 Major Credit Cars 14063 sun.-ThSat 11 30-11 "didn't go to the height of pro- fessionalism until Steve took it 1928-7373 a over....He loved the organiza- I tion. It was something he really EAST ISLAND OGY SERVICES P.C. cared about" 11 MEDICAL DRIVE PORT JEFFERSON STATSO ; also said the former rI& Little *Wiggs, --- -'1 coordinators "did not realize in l their hearts and minds that

I ------m ------I They -- there was a problem." & - I I When you won't King Kullen/Genovese Ad New Summer Hours spent a lot of time strengthen- Shopping Center j5A Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-8 p.m. I settle for less ing the service while not on pay- Rte. 25A. Setauket /Z t^ 7 a m.-6 p m ^ roll, he stressed, and "if you * Miles East of SUSB 7 a3m.- h than the best. would match it up, it would oDeli 751-9650 i probably work out even. They were following old practices FREE DEUVERYTO CAMPUS Ports season in the sun, and it's a shame because they're ($5.00 Minimum Purchase) ramed sun glasses by: good people." Kohn, however, said he and i & Lomb some of the others charged ; HAVE A DORMR PARTY orican Ontical were not claiming false hours. Terri Brogan "Thebottom line is that a few of \ the coordinators did this and FOR$49.95 ; & Swim Goggles the majority of the coordinators * Precision Lenses * Cataract Lenses did the opposite," Kohn said. I * * He also said that work was done a Hearing Aids by Rx * Contact Lenses I I by Rx J for the service on the coordina- tors' own time, and that his resignation was sought because I W.L. Wiggs- - he was respoible for the others. Free Case of Bud or Soda and a 41b. Box of Xohn also said he was in the Opticians, Inc. process of "cleaning up the Pretzels with Purchase of Our Broadway i mess" in the bookkeeping that Charlie Giant Over-Stuffed 6ft. Hero had been there since before he Filled with for a lear differen took over, but that someone had l1am o Roast Beef o Turkey o Salami o Cola gone to Barnes just when he Swiss & Provolone o Lettuce o Tomatoes o Onions 10% DISCOUNT announced that he was check- plus - :- . . = STUDENTS, FACULTY ing the weekly iecords of each Potato Salad o Cole Slaw o Macaroni Salad | coordinator. Kohn said that I- - ^A SlAFf with I.D. Plates o Forks o Napkins . three or four of the six had with this coupon good thru 5/5/82 - as a protest when I resigned S~do - mmmmm Kohn did, and the rest were I l I forced out

Page 4 -X STATESMAN Apri 28. 1982 :~~~~~ I;.' r Injunction Halts Polity Budget OKL

By Howard Saltz that was debated, but many frustrated An 11th-hour injunction by the chief senators left anyway, leaving the body justice of the Polity Judiciary halted the without quorum. The meeting then dis- Senate's passage of the 1982-83 budget -sipated into an impromptu, informal, Monday night, and may have thrust the and philosophical discussion of the important budget process into the hands causes of institutional racism-which of a 10-member Senate committee. many of the spectators charged was Chief Justice Anthony McGee tem- inherent in the budget-and how to porarily ordered the Senate to discon- combat it. tinue its policy of limiting discussion on The Judiciary ruling was based on an the $750,000 budget, setting a hearing article of the Polity Constitution that on the subject for last night. It was ruled says debate should be carried on in the last night that the Senate must create a Senate. It also said that other articles policy outlining how students can voice giving the Senate constitutional author- opinions, and turn that policy over to the ity over the budget were not intended to Judiciary for approval. give it ultimate power. The issuance of the temporary order According to Frank Jackson, a School Statesman I Howard Saltz ended a tense and sometimes emotional Anthony McGee, chief justice of the Polity Senate meeting, which was attended by ,of Social Welfare student and a former Statesmn/David Jasse Judiciary, issued a temporary injunction Polity vice-president, minority students Babk Movahdi, pint pro"tenpore of twice as many spectators-from groups against the Senate Monday night. The such as SAINTS, African-American feel the proposed budget was unaccepta- thoPo Senate, quetinedthepssgeof Senate broke up immediately following, and ble because it did not contain a state- t Affirmative Action Act NW the halting of will probably not vote on the budget this Students, the Stony Brook Gospel Choir, Po'ty's 1982-83 budget this week. year. the Haitian Students organization, the ment of adherence to Affirmative Carribean Students organization and Action guidelines, the money was not the Black Womens organization-as the distributed proportionately to minori- 30 or so senators. The order did not force ties and the recommendations to the Senate to Reviev Passage the Senate to end its meeting, although (continued on page 13) O Affirmative Action Act

By Craig Sehneider employment" Affirmative Action, the catalyst Most of the charges are weighed which Iet to the five hour chain reaction against the Student Activity Board of events at last week's Polity meeting- (SAB), Polity's leading student where the 1982 Polity Equal Opportuni- employer.. The organization, which ty/Affirmation Action Act (EO/AA) programs all the Stony Brook Concerts, passed despite fierce criticism-has still as well as hiring the security, stage not yet been settled. crew, ushers and a work crew, has been An emergency Polity meeting is accused of hiring employees in a expected nextweekto review the passage "buddy-buddy" patronistic fashion, of the act, said Babak Movahedi, presi- according to Van Brown, vice president dent pro-temppre of the Polity senate. of Polity. :mPrior to the ctt-s paage,Movahedi In early September, Brown said he distributed a memo urging senators not Sent 26 minority students to SAB to seek to approve it The memo said, in part, jobs. SAB does most of its Iiring for the t that "the proposal gives ultimate power school year early in the fall semester, to the EO/AA officer and the commit- collecting a pool of names for future use. Feature Magazire Folds tee. The purpose of the committee is not None of those 26 names have been to be the judiciary, and the purpose of called, said Brown. the EO/AA officer is not to be the "We are not racists," insisted Daniel By Laura Craven budget committees were made and enforcer of punishment." Movahedi said Lupi, chairman of SAB. 'They don't Fortnight, Stony Brook's feature Fortnight was not funded. The maga- he expects many changes in the act. know what they're talking about The magazine which was distributed on zine had printed only one issue in the In a memo entitled 'Friendly Amend- chairman for concerts is a woman campus bimonthly between 1975 and past two semesters and appeared spo- ments to the 1982 Affirmative Acti- [Deborah Piacentini], the head of speak- 1980, appears to have folded, though few radically in 1980-81. on/Equal Opportunity Plan", Lew Levy, ers is oriental [Carson Tang] and I am a could confirm its status. Editors of Edwards said when she phoned Par- executive director of Polity, asked for 14 foreign student -myself." Fortnight included photos, fiction, non- sons over spring break" she [Parsons] changes to be made. The suggestions Accusations hurled from both Polity fiction, poetry and creative writing sub- claimed the magazine was dead." varied from clarifications in legal lan- and SAB, finally came to a point in Poli- mitted by students. "I have no idea what's happening with guage to common sense Uisights. The ty's investigation on SAB's hiring prac- According to Polity Treasurer Tracy Fortnight," said Fortnight Production suggestion read that "wh~re positions tices. Polity's results, from a report Edwards, Fortnight's editor, Lisa Par- Manager Mary Augart "I don't know if are quite limited, for instance in the Pol- researched and organized by Luis sons, submitted a budget to keep the there is a Fortnight anymore.... I haven't ity Print Shop (where only two people Ramos, Van Brown and Kelvin Daley, magazine operating next year but, heard anything. I guess there was no work) it is absurd to set up goals for (continued on page 13) Edwards said, no appointments with (continued on page. 13) (contnuedonpae 13

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page 6 -- STATESMAN April 28. 1982 ...winning band "Precussion" at G-Fest...

...and the Hungarian Dance Liberty Group. statesman Davia jasse

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April 28, 1982 STATESMAN Page 7 -Editorial l;- - -- mamumm Demise of a Tradition

In a time when post-college studies and academic achieve- ment form the backbone of society's future direction, sources to strengthen and reinforce educational skills are absolutely vital. No one can doubt this. - The scientist has his laboratory to conduct experiments that question what will later become part of an invaluable store of knowledge. The sociologist has a vast collection of surveys, data, charts and the like to formulate theories on those subjects which he seeks a better- understanding of. Similarly, the journalist, the historian, the lawyer and the creative writer rely on a necessary tool for testind his-own growing store of knowledge- writing. The creation of prose and poetry is a unique study of the individual mind. Like the scientist and the sociologist, the writer relies on his own sources and skills to expand his own store of knowledge. Serious science students are not denied laboratory experience. Sociologists are not denied the research provided from questionnaires, data and charts. However, students who possess the desire to write and expound on their own skills and store of knowledge are being denied this with the careless neg- lect of a university magazine which seems directed toward its demise. Fortnight is thervehicle for the writer's success like the laboce- tory and the research data are the vehicles of success for the -awxw--rs -- scientist and the sociologist. It has become a welcome tradition in the circle of student publications. It has shone its uniqueness, its brilliance and its talent. Simple neglect of such a wellrespected 'No Protection tions from occuring and to stop Department that claims they- and needed part of a campus' pulse is brushing Fortnight under those already in progress. want g'ins for their protection? the proverbial carpet. If this were to happen to the scientist and Neither of these responsibili- What at Out our protection? the sociologist, a crippling trend of learning Chicles would To the Editor: ties was met. The department is Mark A. Schall develop. Then what would we need universities for? I would like to express some damn lucky that no serious concern about the efficiency of injuries were incurred that the Department of Public night. If there were, Public Stony Brook Studies F- Safety. -1 I think that Public Safety would be held liable for The 1960s, Too Safety has recently displayed any and all of them. irresponsibility, unresponsive- I find it hard to believe that ness and sheer unreliability to on a Thursday night, a big To the Editor: Sta tesman such an extent that it is beyond party night on campus, on a Your April 19 article on the pathetic and disgusting. campus with 29 buildings and popularity of courses covering The other night, Thursday, 6,000 student residents, the the history of the 1960s was Howad Seitz April 15, there was an incident department of Public Safety well done and reflected many of Editor-in-Chief on my hall that caused a great has only "two men on patrol in my own feelings about the disturbance and some violence. only one car" as I was told over period of my college years fal- LAr Cra~n D-ad M. Durt I called Public Safety at about the phone that night. If this is ling into the same category as Managing Editor Business Manew ,3:30 AM and told them to get true, it is pretty sad. the Age of Jackson or the Roar- down here right away. I was It does not make me or ingf Twenties. I was disap- Doe Tomb1 a told that someone would come -anyone else feel comfortable pointed, however, that your Associate Editor as soon a possible. a knowing that our uCampus reporter did not consider it At 4 AM I called again and Security" is not a very compe- appropriate to come a little John Burkhardt was told not to worry, someone tent force. I do not feel confi- ekner to home than Queens Col- . ActinBy _9ow*nDWdO Oh E*itor GlennTomr, PMlIchNWagrw would come soon. I waited dent that if there was an actual lege- Our very own history Robrt Gorski. Sirn Ruder another 45 minutes and called a emergency, be it a life or death department will be offering " P(er Wishnd third two courses next semester cov- Swft W- time, at 4:45 AM and was situation or what have you, that fonne Gordon, Cni Sch i told that they were out on a call Public Safety would even ering aspects of the Sixties: Altanewow Oiramto Sarba A. Fein, Vince To- at Stage XII and as soon as they respond. Professor Burners HIS 268, Artae Edlo Alan Golnick U.S. History since ,Hirfa Maxim ,Nancy Taiesitis get back they will be sent right This is absurd. These are the 1919, and eNmiew - ArtEdorosn^Aian Arlene Ebrle over. After long hours of wait- people that are supposed to pro- Professor Barnhars 400 level seminar ActMIn Phoft Diveelm Robwt Weiss ing, Public Safety never tect our well being? These are on the Viet-Nam War. Phato Edos ' Mid :hael Chen, David Cohen, Davi Je»s- showed up. the men that prance around They and others of us would ,A-t Photo Editos Micha" Hatkis, Philip A. Sauer This shows a lack of effi- campus in their uniforms push- have had plenty to say to Mr. Arti Lewis ciency and responsibility. The ing around their "authority' Needham. When Stony Brook JackHullihan situation was so bad, that only trying to create a "tough" guy deserves a little boosting, it Production M"w_ James J. Mackin the occurence of physical vio- image? If they are going to try seems to me that Statesman lence between hallmates could to create an image like that, could help out have worsened it. The functions why not try to keep it up by Wilbur R. Miller of the Public Edrtoriks represent themaforityopinion ofth EditorialBoard nd are writtenby Safety Depart- being tough when called to Associate Professor, one of its members or a designee. ment are to prevent such situa- duct? This is the Public Safety History - I%-'4% ------ifuaaiuir c roprs- AN StMet -on. Down

Page 8 -_ STATESMAN April 28, 1982 r ^

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iPide, Dignity, Dancing- ReggAswfeA I# I. Wr by Audrey Arbus VOJ hy don't you all get up off your backsides and do something for the world?" That was the repeated message of last Fri- day's concert in the Gymnasium featuring Third World. It was a funny kind of message to be hearing-contemptuous, patronizing, and ironic. And yet, everytime Third World repeated it, the crowd roared. Although Third World did not appear on stage until two hours and 45 minutes after their scheduled start, they gave a dynamic and high energy performance. As some may remember, Third World appeared in the gym last year with Jimmy Cliff. Their performance for both evenings maintained the same unique and consistently high quality. A - S * * - » » * _ » _*__ ._*L} t As*_ m1 _Jt Among tne -quanties- ot tne i mra vvors concert is the sincerity of their message. They cannot and should not be considered separ- ately from their intention. Third World is an I - emissary in Western Middle Class America- an emissary, obviously, of Third World coun- tries. They are philosophers, emanating a philosophy of spiritual discovery and the broth- erhood of man. And yet they are not - airy aesthetes dancing because it's spring and everything is beautiful. Their idealism is mil- itant and confrontative. Their Jah (god-head) conscious love of mankind is tempered by the extreme awareness of the modern and ancient injustices that continue to be a blight upon I4 A human dignity and worth. Those of racism, hunger, greed and fear. Simply, they are the advocates of their own human rights. And just as their music can be affirming and hopeful it can be jarring and prophetic. It is an exhilarat- ing powerful music that will not always sit comfortably on white middle class shoulders. Quoting Bob Marley they sang: "Until the philosophy that one race is super- ior and another inferior is finally and perman- ently discredited and abandoned...everywhere (continued on page 15A) 1% MMMEMOMP,

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Page 2A STATESMAN/Alternatives April 28, 1982 =---- id Kingstoner Bleaches Reggae Tepi* Dennis Brown Love Has Found Its Way written by Linda Thomp- A&M son and one of the produc- ers, Joe Gibbs. In the Now might a reggae refrain, vocals and instru- album by Lou Rawls or ments punch out a couple Cool and the Gang sound? of lines in unison, then Slick production; fluffy, separate into a blend of distant background pretty harmony and clever vocals; prefab horn charts; phrasing. "'Get High on vocals and instrumenta- tion so polished and pre- Your Love,' however, dictable they hit you like a sounds disturbingly like shot of morphine. Unau- the Bee Gees, and "'Any thentic? Insincere? Day Now," a remake of a Imagine the lyrics: Burt Bacharach/Bob Hil- ... and it makes me fee/ liard song, definitely so fine. doesn't improve on the I'm so thankful, so original. "Get Up (For Your thankful baby Rights)" has already been That Jah has made you done, but better, by Bob mine... Marley in "'Get Up, Stand No joke, these are lyrics Up." from the title song of Den- This album has neither -nis Brown's new and subtleties nor raw edged. second album, Love Has It's just MOR, watered- Found Its Way. The album down reggae. The smooth- fits the above descriptions ness of production spoils except the artist is a bona the appealing roughness -fide Kingston kid, who by distinctive styles in reggae unimaginative chord tiresomely similar rhythms of reggae the way white- the time he was 20 had music." So says A&M. changes and arrange- and tempos. washing ruins the beauty, -sung all over the West There is nothing "fresh" The only relatively out- albeit courseness, of Indies and "developed one or "distinctive" about this ments, repetitive phras- standing song is "Handw- unfinished wood.* of the freshest, and most record. It's generic reggae: iing, cliche, lyrics, riting on the Wall," -Catherine Romano

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Fist - -is taken to shape this raw energy Thunder In Rock and give it direction. Fist fails. A&M Maybe after this, their third W^ I -by Paul Caban album, they still haven't learned ith a name like Fist and an the precarious balance between album called Thunder In Rock intensity and creativity in this you had better have something genre. Maybe they just don't care. going for you. But that's not the Maybe there's more talent to be case here-this band plunges found two feet away from an downward from the start. They uptown express train on a Mon- run the whole gamut from medi- day rush hour. Fortunately, on ocrity to sheer self parody and vinyl, one handy knob keeps them tastelessness. in their place. If there is one adjective that Volume is only the more truly describes the philosophy of obvious cancer here. The whole band has got to gel; the parts corm- swells and eerie screamlike lines this band it is ""loud."' They're work is marred down the middle bining and working together as a have you practically there in the colorings. quite proud of this, making bold by undecisiveness, counteractiv- harmonious whole. scene with his mood bass of references to 1 50 dB sound levels ity and downright crudeness. A The first side is standard pread- Suddenly the intrusive drums in small clubs. Naturally, at that pity since the individual members olescent metal fare devoid of Jeff Nystrom and the noisy come crashing skull shattering level a lot is lost in seem competant and the work is, directed creativity. There is of Bob Patterson totally destroying the the way of subtlety and dynamics, perhaps, a serious effort. But pro- nothing that distinguishes this through, then followed by unless an extra creative measure ficiencV alone is not enough. A stuff from the average garage illusion. This band's sound. Even the vocals are Ron Chenier's intermitent power muddled and drowned out. chords which rudely jar you back to reality. Side two starts off with a poten- From here the whole affair tially good lyrical idea but is so turns into a ridiculous self parody carelessly handled that this side -with the music too upbeat for the sinks, too, into oblivion. This idea grotesque subject matter. The spotlights the misdeeds of a cer- story is told from the barber's tain demon barber of Fleetstreet point of view, which isn't neces- who gave shaves a bit closer than sarily bad, but the singer keeps usual. Then he would make insisting on taking "their bodies assorted baked goodies and sell on the sack/Up on the ally" and them through a bakery store right I makin' people pies" out of them. next door. Shut these guys up for cryin' out "Fleet Street" opens with the loud. now familiar voices of Holmes This album is uneventful and and the good doctor Watson. indecisive. Don't be caught dead Holmes' curiosity is edging them within 10 feet of it. On the other closer to the bakery shop. Then hand, you'll learn to appreciate keyboard Ivan Tessier's organ the spaces between the songs.*

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- p4A STATESMAN/Altemaivs April 28,1982 af MusicI Conference Needed a Bulk

iment, Vernile was politically )iBella of WLIR )u college stu- you talk about a comment by at do you know r hippie. As for man." ice was well- -a hard wrtk of by Steve Kahn uy lennIIc l jamJUwl 1Iu Ulm0 ) ria *wo g. UIorganl z U, mLalu19 m fny LVuiI*u» I u %uJ Wl ve manager of WUSB- The 1982 Long Island Contemporary Music The third panel dealt with Long Island print Norman Prusslin, station media. This discussion was made interesting FM, who organized panels, set out a sandwich Conference, held Saturday in the Stony Brook by the sales pitching of the editor of Long platter, provided sodas and kept the confer- Union, brought together people from various Island Nightlife, Michael Cutino, as well as fence participants comfortable. backgrounds who have one thing in acerbic comments of Newsday music All the panelists attending the conference common-an interest in music. the had something to say, but there's got to be However, much of the conference was critic Wayne Robins. more serious vein, chqrisma. They didn't live-up to expectations. best, if not sometimes plain dull. The second point, on a average at of WUSB-FM. there was no other way to present There were five panels during the eight was brought up by John Vemile Perhaps -He said that most rock stations were 'stale.' the information. hours that the conference took place. The first was interesting for those ir with Long Island non- and there was no creativity. The conference conference dealt formats, the music business, but for outsiders, perhaps commercial radio stations. It was informative The panel members defended their Vernile's claim. it was confusing. but non-descript. With the exceptions of John -each disputing April 28, 1982 STATESMAN/Alternatives Page 5A v~~~~~~ Mm4m.. ..v.l. - - - * 1 ^ -aSS _-WSBSWT 0 0 0 > > FEW-m t . v1 ^ > AI k v .' METAL T *I Maw r * . :Uno Audtoiu iSB ''®1Re I_ r, 9 aJB. & 11 D M- * 4 * AM *S t * T B r Ga I ny * atuZ ~ --- - - I mrOm& 0dioO^ *___orn UR '-husda f < ^ir) t, *. Com]muter College I TV FAICE1 EN. l 3 0 { ~El LECTIONS * D and .-. .+ . PIZFZA PARTY z AbA * TIME: 8:0(Da.m. - 5:00 p.m. * DATE: Friiday, April 30th * * PLACE: Commuter College * SS * Union Romm 080 Wlhen IHe RafadN UiNF : A11Are Welcome! I * "FOR COLORE)D GIRLS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED SUICDE" *^ The play wil be shown on -I May 3rd & 4di at 9 pamr iu the Union Bllroo WASH and DRYER Adhesiftlon is 2lm00 S. * _, IV- YOUR CAR .- * WOMEN'B WEEKEDNDI * BLACK .*

e:t DREISER . .. : .. 6 CAR WASH! If you stil think there's nohing wrong * A *s with Rock Music then you msd thern .* When was the Last Time you got - 1st a o. v vn * Off Campus? *. * *, GET AWAY BEFORE IT'S TOO - THE SUBLIMINAL *- *s MESSAGES * LATE!!!!! O- OKtPSD"*-- *' Come to an ENACT trip to a local *s beach and wetland paradise, ** -- - DONT MISS ITTHIS TIME! -0-:-- This Sunday, May 2nd. Call 6-7088 or visit room 079 for more info. nATE:Wednesday. April28th-:- =- - *k * TIME: 7x0 p.m.-- -- x- - * PLAC& Unlon Room 216 FREE SCHEDULE* .. * Sponsored by the Frlends of FaIf Cub

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.. ~~~~~~~~,t. , -~IA An ,0 , 10 & 'A' F ------4 Pw - "wwpww ------W -6p -28.1982 Pap6A STATESMAN/Alternatives - April 28, 1982 Ao - ie -. 1...... -. .~~~~~~~~~ ------I

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nn: *fl";_ Jazz Liftsthe Bridge Bobby Shann Quartet Hubbard and is now a third The End of the Bridge of one of the best jazz trios April 22 -in the business-which also includes Rufus Reid Manhat- Ajiaz club in and Victor Lewis. Ralph tan just raised its cover Lalama, who plays the charge to $25 and its min- tenor saxophone in the imum to $14. However, great tradition of Sonny right here in good old Stony Brook you can get Rollins and Dexter Gor- into The End of the Bridge don, is a regularly featured for a single dollar, buy a member of the fabled Mel glass of beer for 250 and Lewis Jazz Orchestra. Neil listen to a first-rate jazz group called The Bobby Tufano has played drums Shann Quartet. with the Monty Alexander Last week at the Bridge Trio and Bobby Shann, the they delighted a small but bassist, is a Stony Brook enthusiastic audience music student who has with an evening of jazz played with Clifford Jor- standards such as "Seven dan. Shann, by the way, Steps to Heaven,' 'Stella :'was the driving force that by Starlight" and "'Like brought these musicians .Someone in Love." All here, and he was clearly four members of the group having the time of his life. have good jazz pedigrees: 'Catch them again this Art Resnick, the pianist, aloiesman/me' uenon Thursday night.@ has played with Freddie Ralph Lalama, Bobby Shann tenor -Krin Gabbard am-nun, mann. I

------:^C a ------

[I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Iig a Long Walk On a Shoff Bridge EAT YOUR HEART OUT.O. . The End of the Brdge As so far as the food goes, it is moder- AT Student Union b/dg. ately priced, but after you've eaten it, you 2nd Floor will think you were overcharged. SAN REMO PIZZAU1ANT The water was warm, the salad dress- bake this restaurant aind push it off the ing had a peculiar taste to it, and the of course..! bridge into oblivion. Suire, the place is eggplant parmigiana had absolutely no conveniently located, nc>t too expensive, taste. On an earlier visit the fried fish was Thi Weeks Big Appetite Specials and a step up from self .-serve but poi- extremely overcooked. On all visits the ann iw ie freeA The Wlarma was onhv about only edible part of the lunch was the r--- COUPON ---- - COUPON --- 12 percent full and tter. waitresses rushed cuE of the Bridge Restaurant *1-.00 on FE mers through their me offers a variety of food, ANY LARGE Choice wk te so quickly that one got from omelettes to salads, check literally shoved to burgers or sandwiches, IPIZZA Purchase of Any front of one's face bef or hot entrees. This may limit One Coupon LARGE PIE done eating. be a hard boiled critique Per Purchase Value $1.25 per pie Down to particulars, but avoid the omelettes, Cannot Be Cimbined No Limit to quantity of pies eat the other food, With Any Other Offer Cannot be Combined glasses and silverw don't clear of The End San Remo with any other offer!. I were dirty, and the v and stear of the Bridge Restaurant; aood thru 5/21/82 Sa Remo tresses didn't have tl _ _ ------Good_- Tru s ti.1 --- -1 just a toll booth on the act together. The air at it's 'highway of eateries. IOUE ITALIAN RESTAURANT and End of the Bridge Rest Based on a number of vis- iff1a for the whole family

atmosphere--- W th visible-w - walls are tacky, the cement ceiling its made to the place, take some advice- go. Some things stay the same, and 979"8882 makes the place look steTrile, and so much don't LEXANDER AVE .LAKE GROVE like the cafeteria denwnstairs that it the food at The End of the Bridge Restau- oiven Mail in Pathmork Shopping Cenferl deserve the exti:ra money it costs rant is still bad.- I even lSoll an Pothrnei Shoppers Centers i doesn't * -N. David Goldblatt

to eat there. -+ S April 28, 1982 STATESMAN/Alternatives Page 7A *

FAMILY RESTAURANT STONY BROOK (^ niohM 751.7411 (rnckW Shoppig C~r) IT'S CHEAPER TO BAT OUT II AKEE UT- REE II 'zITIIINUES *UT" rnc I I* - O . «K. -muiimP T4T. MMUMS 13/21/82^ * |uBAKES TMy-FEpnr iLASASIA DINUEK U"tm nC I -LoMiT asamem»* rM TAIE4T *U13W 5/21 /82 1

rcri~ir"""" UT- F lEE"I I CACCIATBUE UIU!EU '"' I"

UlHT. 16MhtT3M IITMEUT-MUnTHU 5/21/82 PEPER DINKER l t1 *nI

- UNT . * uMsmM HU TM114P *MM lIMI 5/21/82 The Contest: The Rules: B ^ISAISASE I lEVEE lEEF Ic~

e 1 I- chasing the most pizzas during the *-.„,ne 1 0wl e 5Te5 izswl eoeie I PAREISCIANA DINNER * " 7-day period starting April 26 and 2.^Any V 2 W 1.0pizzasoe ilb . The dorpmzawill bae one hitem running through May 2. counted twice. 5izeas. Thedr wills o have thecoi OUNT*iNANITI PUTME4U NWUr* c/18 same. Pizza tally wiN be adjusted for dorm 3. The winning donrms RHD will be be the ppula~tio sed on spring semesternotified. Completestandigwill housing figures. ~be posted daily in each hallway. , , *~~.16um~Ms TUI-«MT)MFMNZ-MM nMN 635/21/82

-. ' VUTSE FREEC ICLAUS -Oominfs Blend of Sauce UW. *M-fMTUl-MTasme MM JMN 5/21/82 Pizzais ahot. F t t Spca nutitious meal, custom- * F8St^ made to your order with Fi f~l spcalsucetwo Wis - ; Fr~ienliy Hours: *- * ol ,ual chese and your '*''*-^-pO 411 -2am Sun.-Thurs. ^pCI ALLY@UOCANEKAT **-w- . . a *~ ^ X ^sr1-3a»»iFrL&St *-V*;^ .^ «* « , ' '" ' - 1"^ 1EGGPLANT ' ^Vcw ptz~a is Deliver,^U Wy 'Our divers wary les8 -* SALAD . ,^ ix3 75 . .^-' than $20.00 * U with no de~ rchaigoe. Limited delivery ame& *BREAD - ^ - - ^ ..';^ / - . ^ ^ . 22100/3601 , NlyouhavetodolscaSt . . 75I-55(X COUPON GOOD THRU 5/21/82 | 3 E.Setauket I ?TUISDAY SPICIAL. ALL YOU CAN EAT I" SPAGHETTI USAUSAGE & PEPPERS 37 :rl USALAD 9-1 IBREADI -U * COUPN GOO THRU5/21 /82 1 I

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I I War ing. Their music is of the IOutlaw street. RCA The ghetto might seem _ -- by James Lee 3 depressing topic to War is bacK on another .write songs about, but label after a release of somehow War's sunny their greatest hits pack- California optimism and age. After going strong in good humor permeate. the late '60s and all the The songs have lively way up to 1976, War has good-time grooves and become the musical spo- lyrics that say, "under- kesmen for urban cities stand the city and its all around the U.S.; for problems and do what instance New York, Los you can to lend a hand." Angeles (where the band "Cinco do Mayo,' a is based) and Chicago. Latinized tune in the style of "Cisco Kid,' is The Summer session at Kingsborough Kingsborough's modern 67 acre seaside They were the first black Community College otters a choice of over 120 campus is located in beautiful residential music-oriented act to go -about a man infatuated college credit courses in the liberal arts, Manhattan Beach. Convenient to public platinum (before Stevie with a pretty East L.A. sciences, business. visual and performing transportation-only 5 minutes from the Belt girl, reminiscent of the arts-including required courses for all Parkway. On-campus parking available. Wonder and Sly Stone), pre-professional programs. the first to have a #1 pop original War sound. The Low Tuition-$35.00 per credit. album of the year in Bil- rest of the LP is done in 'twimming and sunbathing at Kingsborough's (N.Y.C. Residents) the emergent urban private beach* on the Atlantic Ocean is part of lboard, and have sold in the Summer studies recreation program along laiin registration: Before May 19th excess of 25 million styles of today; "Baby It's with the olympic swimming pool, four all- In-person registration: June 10th copies. Cold Outside" is a lovely weather tennis courts, summer repertory ballad in the contempor- theater and outdoor concerts. War's music is about the ghettos of America, ary pop mold (i.e. Lionel c appealing to blacks, Richie), "You Got the * A 4 Please send I- L^0 Application LI Summer Bulletin whites and Hispanics, Power" is funky disco in alike. Kool and the Gang's style ADMISSIONS INFORMATION CENTER Name _ -- Outlaw is their first (this is the single, too) KINGSBOROUGH Addre release after a six-year and the title cut is styled in the Rick James'sound, COMMUNITY COLLEGE/ Phone break, and they sound >||"M01 ANHATTAN BEACH College Currently Attending _ _-- tighter and better than "The Jungle"' is a rap bUn X BROOKLYN, N.Y. 11235 Year completed 1. 3 ever. Though number painting a color- *Beach privileses include 6-week session,- For furtheri2 AdE^ 800n the album L weekends and through the month of August information call ( 1) 9J3-58001 cover offers no indication ful metaphor. The inner r

41I ORTHODONTIST DR. BRUCE I. MEYER

K,NRE N'r I - r p sP "IT - - 4 T, tir CSEA PANEL- c, q'* w Ix: ,PRIVATE otwnetner the LP was city is like a jungle: at~~r recorded using digital or Beware of the jungle other special techniques, where no one works but ORTHODONTIC the first thing that strikes all get around...the sly =~ the listener is the greatly tiger separates -'--OFFICE improved fidelity. With the rich from their %tES critics dismayed with the purses... album pressing quality I. Beware of the jungle nowadays, War offers a out there... freshing reassurance in which is lyrically strong. Fully Qualified Specialist the music business with The Caribbean flavored Outlaw. The LP comes tunes, ""Just Because GENTLE - EXPERIENCED alive with well recorded (I'm from the island "Emphasis on Non-Extraction drums, crisp and clean -,doesn't mean I don't like Therapy" harmonicas, deep rich rock and roll)", a delight- "Transparent Braces Available" bass tones and of course, ful funked reggae tune, Many insurance plans accepted as full War's strong vocals. and "'I'm About Some- or partial Described as an Afro- -body," a deft Cajun payment. Cuban-jazz-rock-blues gumbo that echoes the 5 Pebble Street band, War once again Mardi Gras grooves of Stony Brook, New York 11790 captures the contempor- Dr. John and the Meters. ary inner (516) 689-9822 city grooves by Outlaw is simply too updating their repertoire much, with such diverse with disco/funk which is dance music styles from I more electronic; rap Cajon gumbo to rap and music; and War's own such excellent fidelity, I Groovedreggae. War's this LP highly recom- mUsic defies categor iz- ____j - Liz- E An|_ April 28, 1982 Page 10A STATESMAN/Alternatives w 1 'Romeo 8-Juliet'Takes Litmus T- ,---l--99 b-a:^^^ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~irTAL -3a3

-by Gregg R. Glover "It will be a production that springs from A glooming peace this morning with it brings, tradition. I don't care to put into this any clever The sun for sorrow will not show his head, directorial ideas. What I want the people Go hence, to have more talk of these sad [actors] to do is express themselves authenti- things; cally, so that the audience gets the feeling of Some shall be pardoned, and some punished; people living this out, not actors posing as For never was a story of more woe Shakespearean performers. The result I'm Than this of Juliet and her Romeo. looking for is a production that is very close to ^ "Romeo and Juliet," (V iii) the real lives of the people involved; it's more JALS Prince Escalus speaks these last, a teacher's concept than a director's con- remorseful words to his people of Verona, the cept," Bruehl said. tragic story of the two star-crossed lovers To supplement this idea, Bruehl instructed comes to a sorrowful end, completing perhaps his actors among other things, to speak Sha- the most touching, heart-rendering love story kespeare's poetic and often difficult lines in a ever written, as well as the most famous one. clean, clear, normal American manner, to All the creation of one William Shakespeare, a avoid any false dialect that might make for a modest playwright and theatrical entrepe- phony performance. With this, the company neur of his time; a man who prided himself on has overcome a major problem dealing with his poetry more than the 36 full-length plays that he wrote, and who just ended up to become by most standards the greatest English-speaking literary figure of all time. Tonight, the words of the bard will once again be spoken as "Romeo and Juliet" opens in Theatre 2 of the Fine Arts Center. This production, the last of the year by the Theatre Department, marks the end of a year-long pro- ject, in which the study of Shakespeare from every possible angle has been emphasized. It began last April, when the director, Bill Bruehl, auditioned a group of students to par- ticipate in a Shakespeare seminar, starting in ,.the fall, that would culminate with a produc- tion of "Romeo and Juliet" the following spring. A class was chosen, and without F knowing who would eventually play what _parts, 22 student-actors plunged into every ft aspect of Shakespearean production imagi- nable, studying many past productions, with special emphasis on "Romeo and Juliet." -By December, a cast was chosen by Bruehl, and eyes were now focused upon the end of kwhan the asrrtal ctaninn of tha nlav iXkAqrellaval v i l, en Wiv U *aLcXciI UPL *#i WI As*^W PAT y ...- r-- J1- -- _ ..- __ ------_ __ was to begin. Since then, the students have 1-- possible. worked relentlessly, sometimes six and seven Shakesperean productions: language. In So after a year of intense study of Shakes- -hours a night for seven days a week in prepa- working out other problems, the actors have peare and "Romeo and Juliet" in production, ration for tonight's opening. undergone training in various aspects such as it remains to be seen whether this large 'They are part of a tradition. They are a new movement and stage-fighting, the latter of endeavor will indeed be a successful one. bud on the tree of tradition." Thus is the which a professional from New York was Nevertheless, as Bruehl exclaims, as far as emphasis that Bruehl has given this produc- .employed to conduct sessions to teach the the students are concerned, it has been a tion of the classic romance. Yet how wil it actors how to perform some of the more vio- Positive experience: differ from past productions of the play? Will it lent scenes during the play. "It's both an artistic experience and an -shedsome new interpretation on the story of In keeping with the theme of "springing intellectual academic experience. It involves a the star-crossed lovers, or can we expect an from tradition," this production will make use commitment, a discipline, their learning act- attempt at recreating a classical Elizabethan of a unique type of set, one that can be des- ing techniques, their learning history. It's just cribed as a sort of descendant of the original .,a completely total fully-rounded experiencea

April 28, 1982 STATESMAN/Alternatives Page 11A * m ^--"^^ II K ATTENTION ALL SUFFOLK COUNTY SPECIAL OLYMPICS VOLUNTEERS: Special Olympics is this Sunday at 8:00 a.m. at Hauppauge High School. Free Bus transportation will be available in front of the

Union at 7:25 a.m. Please do not-forget or a Special I I Olympian will be without a special friendl I STONY BROOK PEP BAND - There will be a meeting of all students interested in joining the Patriot Pep .d Band on Wednesday, April 28th at 4:00 p.m. in the - - - -- AL- w Physical Education Conference Room in the Gym. All Irsent, i I I 2J and r - students with musical ability are welcome to attend. I For more information contact John Ramsey, Men's ^ Athletic Director, at 6-6790. Speakers '/Polt i IBIENVENIDOS -LASO will be having a meeting on I f ' April 29th in the Union room 236 in order to discuss SPRING FEVE3R 4 the success of Latin Weekend and to also discuss our I "X elections which will be taking place on ROBERT GORDON upcoming MAY lst : I + ' ** May 6th. Please attend this very important meeting. I Everyone's input and participation is necessary. 10:00 p.m. I 1 I

L - tio ON THE ATHLETIC FIELD.

*.| In *"te- - k m I

I I i

I a== ShLOWENBAU ( l or PESNTS

I I ;s4 c I ^'^^^ CPc>f tu ^.S. ^.- //4 I

^-4 I1 -? ;to I

I I ? a Is s^II May1, 1982 (B.B.) . j .1Am ; I exl?"CI -ATHLEICF1ELD - ; 1:00PM 1,I .7I' \' 1-^' "--^<; -^ 11 DATE: April 29th cs?o r | o I 1 ^- ^ -^ '^ --^v

presents *_ . : The Weekly Mang I- I 8 p.m., Wednesday, April 28th, Union .2;; room 214. Topics to be discussed: 1) The Nationals (this Sunday) 2) Jackets (almost readyl) 3) Our End Of The Year Trail Rlde & BBQ 4) And so on and so on and so one - CHINA WEEKEND . I * , a n Se You Therel . i I S0, FRIDAY, Union Lounge

TimsensA F R =- Of ^ Sale I = preaof n. Pastry Workshop (calligraphy, Dr. Kahn brush painting.. etc.) 4 Taldng about 'Now that I have my . SATURDAY, Old Eng 143 p ~~~~~- I - ". - tove A- 1 degree h rwdo It a ? =Movies at /--H

DATE: Friday, April 30th, 1962 7 TIME: 2:30 p.m- A , SUNDAY, Union - - e, PLACE: S-141 Grao Physa s ALL ARE WELCOMEB n Buffet Dinner- ballroom(! n Workshop-lounge I Going to be here this summer? n- Night Show- auditorium I POLITY is accepting applications for Party- ballIroom N SUMMER SESSION ACTIVITES, board Chairperson and members, 4 Pmr BY03CHN iEKS Ca- .I applications also available for Summer SENTED BY CHINA VWEEKEND COMM. ,. Softball Commisioner & Umpires. <1, of Apply at Polity room 258 Union. r v . - - - - -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A i

Page 12A STATESMAN/Alternatives April 28, 1982 -

== Band Battle Blows 4 Mile Fallout EndmnsOm Ruwda J M- %IIE lwp~ Leciarea at *ms~ 77 I ^ A m,011% - II G-FEST - April 24 m aby Howard Breuer is a matter of opinion. They were Last weekend was G-Fest wee- judged on a lot of things, and kend. It featured the G-Quad probably lacked the most in all of olympics, unlimited beer and the worst places. Probably in food, and a battle of the bands. stage presence, if that would Most bands played rather well, have biased the judges at all. Slip- despite a hurting sound system, knot was not elaborate enough to which disturbed residents living win. four miles away from campus. In all, G-Fest was very success- The Battle of the Bands fea- ful. It was a perfect day, with a tured five local rock groups. They large turnout of local residents, -were judged on a scale of one to students, and even roller-skaters. 10 on such details as originality According to Bob Francis, Vice (diversity) of material and stage President for Campus Opera- presentation. tions, 'These things can be trou- Friday night's band was Tra- blesome. They usually are. Today vesty. The material they played everything went pretty smoothly* was not original, but it was very well done. And their stage pres- Horizon (left) and Suzette Wellons of Reon- ence was superb. They were a one (above and below) competed in the well polished group, highlighted Battle of the Bonds. by a drummer whose vocals were Pat netal. I quite close to Andy Summers' of female vocalist Suzette Wellens, Van Halen, Boston. And Kansas- the Police. They were only the a resident junior who just joined "Carry On Wayward Son." Per- preliminaries, though. the band this semester. This was haps it was the fact that Civil Resonance played songs from their largest crowd yet. Tongue went first that caused Pink Floyd, Rush, The Police and In third place was American them to come in last. That was Standard. Some said before the pretty stupid, when you think judging was over that they antici- about it. If you're ever in the battle pated seeing American Standard of the bands, don't go first. as a possible second or first The big disappointment of the placer, but it was hard to see why. day was Slipknot. Fourth place, Their best song was an old Traffic and most had them figured for at number. Their worst was the Gil- least second. They made few mis- ligan's Island parody of ""Stairway takes and performed considerably to Heaven." The only possible well, an assortment of old blues excuse available for them playing tunes along with their originals, this version was so they could "'Nitrous" and "'New Town play a Led Zeppelin song without Blues," mixed in. Slipknot was in anyone knowing that they play it first place the last two years. Have terribly. Awful, really. they lost their touch? Not likely. The second placer was Horizon, Did someone bribe the judges? a three piece band that didn't Doubtful, who cares about this seem nearly as good as the fifth enough to bribe a judge? The only placer-Civil Tongue. Civil explanation is that playing 'well' DaddyLicks the Plate Real Clean Thee Daddv Licks Band *- .^ee -^^^ ------Y . Iw Aloh- r / Got Wheels t 1 The next song, "They Might Be Giants," Emotional -w " ^a -»R should be changed to 'We made a big mistake by putting this song in our album." Although hat is ten inches in diameter and sounds the song lacks in musical quality, the album like an Elvis Costello album? If you say The pulls through. Daddy Licks Band's new album I Got Wheels, If you're wondering how the band accomp- then you have exposed yourself to a different lishes this, listen to "Lolita." This song gives brand of rock and roll. power to the album. The vocals of Scott Hot If you have never heard of Elvis Costello, and Dave Goddess work together as one. A then the Daddy Licks Band is something dif- musical performance that makes you feel like ferent If you look at the album cover (a car dancing is the result. You might find it tempt- smashed into a pile of shrubs), you might have ing to grab two pens and start playing the second thoughts on your purchase. Don't be drums on your desk. misled. The material is good. The other side of the album contains the All of the works are written by Dave God- title hit, "I Got Wheels," which is not as good dess, who is the Wad vocalist. That sounds like as the rest of the album. The music again an Elvis Costello carbon copy, the only differ- emerges on songs like "Kids Out Looking for ence being his lyrics. GoBddss writes about the Real Thing" and "Tragic Flaw," where teenage problems in the big world." Tom Brobst shows his saxophone talent The album begins with the song "We'll throughout. Show 'Em," which is a rhythmic, beaty love I The Daddy Ucks Band is a band that is baibed. Kevin Goddes drums add much color ics is heard when the older brother says, growing. However, the music needs to grow to the music. "Charm her with sweet words you say, 'Cause along with their popularity. The expectations The music sems to flow when you listen to when it comes to loving women, Just a little of the Daddy Licks Band lies in their music. "Just a Lttle Goe a Long Way." This is a goes a long way." This song has a good Both are improving.- bte's adie to his younger brother about chance of becoming a hit single. -Clff Raynz

April 28,1982 STATESMAN/Alternatives Page 13A - -m

I f^'^ * ^1

ELP INFORMATION COUINSELING Stylri, CONNWNTIAl I 7 D ys a WR 538&2626 z v .. up ; 582-6006 nave you can trust bv F.A.S. - -

rl^mu^r^ i be~too . II. e the Stone Brook SPAil T..Coatch it! I 1I8

Tryouts for Stony Brook's 1982-83 cheerleaders I ^ will be conducted the first week in May. Men *l 2 I, . and women students are invited to attend ! special practice sessions with Joan Murphy, a captain of this year's team, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, May 3, 4, 5 I z I' at 6:00 p.m. - gymnasium. 40 Judging of the finalists and selection of the I- ', 1982-83 Cheerleading Team will take place I Thursday, May 6,

5 p.m. - Gymnasium jE E hIported yiO€tBeer Candidates are invited to report to any practice session to register and get full information. If you A real masterpiece frso Hollands have any questions concerning the criteria or the guidelines, please contact Joan Murphy, 67203.

i l

-

You'll be amazed at all the oppotunities and advantages the Army offers men and women with BSN degrees:: * Excellent starting salaries and benefits, including a lib- eral vacation policy. v Real opportunity for advancement and professional ALL YOU-CAN EATr growth -every Army Nurse is a commissioned offier. Adults $6.95 'Children $3.95 0 No basic training for nurses; just a basic orientation course to familiarize you with the Army Medical Barbecued Ribs Department. Barbecued Chicken * The chance to travel; time to do the things you enjoy. Barbecued Sausage and Peppers * Opportunity to qualify for specialized roks, teaching [ Barbecued Chops--or- lor additional education. 'Baked Pork Chops or Chicken See if you qualify. = ' . ALL the French Pri -212) 522-1551 Greek Saoed, Garlic Bd r sYOU Can at -EGULAR MENU ALSO AVAILABLE The Army Nurse Corps. : :- ; = F:Fo seemBe A__, WHOLE LOBSTER S.G Michael Rueine Army Nurse Recruiter oGreek Salad a Potato o Vegetable 346 Adam St (7th Fl.), Brooklyn, NY 11201 o Bread & Butter *

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Page 14A If STATESMAN/Alternatives 'April 28, 1982 T I T :;: 11111 1 :; / 1; r ; :; : 1 1 vu IvyndingsV^ ^ ^ ^ ^ --- ^^^^^** - * i * * ^' -" e . waa~ WaANO

Braided Lives En-wine the Psych

Brakied Uves tured relationship with her Summit Books mother in which she strives end- $15.50 lessly to win her mother's love, by Dolores Girani and approval of herself as a he feminist prospective is woman. Aside from her family, hardly limited to contemporary Jill leaves behind her close friend, llg)[FiMAL[EI society. Women have always Howie, in her search for inde- been struggling for an identity of .pendence. their own, and this struggle has In her first year at college, Jill been the subject of many novels. develops an intimate friendship Through her clear, open and hon- with her roommate and cousin, ©IFH&A~2y est style of narration, Marge Donna. Through Donna and a few Piercy succeeds in telling the other female companions, Jill moving story of one woman's learns to value a woman's friend- search for her own feminine ship above all other relationships. truths. Jill believes that "if you can't trust -Braided Lives encompasses a a woman to pull you out from trophe, Jill discovers that she is marry a selfish and dominating six-year period in which Jill under the noose, you might just pregnant. Her mother's only husband and she eventually, and Stuart, the heroine of the novel, as well hang." Jill and Donna attempt to save Jill is by helping ironically, dies as a result of an looks back over her college years. both experience love and desire her abort the unwanted child. illegal abortion. when Jill falls in love with an After this unpleasant event, Jill In that time, Jill becomes the If the plot of the novel doesn't aspiring poet, Michael, and resolves never to be without woman that she remains keep you reading page after page, Donna with Lenny. Accepting enough money and information to throughout her life. She expe- then Piercy's style of story-telling their sexuality, without guilt, ena- provide any woman with a safe riences love, passion and friend- will. The story is told through a bles Jill and Donna to liberate abortion. ship; she practices her politics clear, open and honest narration. themselves from the restraining Jill wins her freedom and her and she becomes a writer. One almost feels as though Jill is standards that their society pla- individuality. She desperately The reader first meets Jill as a an extension of oneself as she ces upon them. searches for a relationship that .mature woman of 43. From there, acquaints her reader with the I When Jill's parents discover will allow her to be the strong, the novel quickly turns to a retro- events of her life, her thoughts that she is sexually active, they try spective view of Jill at 17. The and her feelings. Jill is loveable to force her to marry Michael, intelligent, active woman that she -year is 1952. Jill announces to even as she makes her mistakev only succeeding in destroying the is and finds it only after stumbling her strict parents her intentions in and out of many different rela- and we want her to win the fight, home in relationship altot other. Neither of leaving her sheltered and marriages. Donna, her search for her own identity- at a uni- -Jill nor Michael want to marry- tionships Detroit for an education and ideals origi- an identity that is strong, inde- to both have too much to do in the whose values versity in Michigan. Jill's need nally paralleled Jill's, chooses to pendent, and above all, feminine. leave home is triggered by her tor- world. Shortly after this catas- Third World: Danceable Messag6?r

/«^*** tin S ai{r^n anoa 1 A J |cH"EIIWuffu 11 11 payI As/ antic (onstage "soliciation" and graphic It appeals to a diversity of gestures) the vocalists exhibited definite ""types" that might not otherwise all find cocky rock starisms and none of the pro- themselves under the same roof at the fessionalism that would have made their same time. There is an instinctual liking group more appropriate. Nevertheless, of reggae music. It would be difficult to the instrumentals and reggae rhythm say if that is because, in spite, or uncons- section were good and the music dance- cious of its militancy. Or perhaps able. And not to be -too hard on the group, because it recognizes the militancy in they were more entertaining than many human pride and dignity. such groups, If te poled bV comparison Third World professes joy and clean to Third World, it is not an unknown phe- conscious living. That is an important distinction for western society, whose nomenom for starter bands. music has begun the inevitable trend of A definite tribute to Third World was nauseous self hatred. (This is, of course, their ability to get people out of their not to on new m=. A seats, and it is equally a tribute to the of the comparison between say the B-52's and organized and well-policed efforts the high the Plasmatics should be self explana- concert committee crew that was kept tory). spirits and joyous dancing con- Moreover, Third World retains their unobtrusively and effectively under perhaps integrity. Their music is a true and non trol. Last year's concert was For this con- "industry homogenized" by-product of memorable in their minds. and there Jamaican culture and the experiences of cert people danced in the aisles between the Black West Indians. They are rooted in was a good 15 feet of space first row of the integrity of their own existence. last row of reserved and the that held the inevita- Although reggae has been popularized general admission concert gained and imitated quite well in the industry, ble overflow as the upon inspection the original rooted reg- momentum. encored twice before leav- gae is far more lifegiving and responsive Third World Their 'high than imitation. It is as if something within ing the stage exhausted. their energy were celebrating its existence against all standard of musicianship, performance, and the odds in a modern and anticeptic society. and charismatic of their message This could not have been more clearly clarity and integrity a memorable and illustrated than in the comparison of made their concert one. It's rare that those Third World to their starter band, "The slightly humbling of the performer's art are Heptones." three elements fused in one group, The vocalists sported "Shondelle" fal- brought together and It was a truly enlight- settos and simpering bMW-won't-you- one performance. quickly 'Mimi And, in the ening evening and one not to be m - -1 baby-would-you lyrics. amusing, if somewhat insulting sexual forgotten.0 April 28. 1982 STATESMAN/Alternatives Page 15A I ------~~~~~~~~~~-

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-Page 16A STATESMAN/Alternatives April 28, 1982 -^Viewppoinls -- *------NEWNWO

Stony Brook, Public Safety and Guns

By Steven Cohen of the night certainly makes me walk a encouragement of the Stony Brook sall, they are certified peace officers." They do have college As founder and director of the Volun- tad faster, and Ill look around as I walk administration, programs such as the ' and a police Volunteer Resident Dorm Patrol academy under their belts. "Why can't teer Resident Dorm Patrol (VRDP), I through the woods, but I generally feel and : the Community Service Unit have Public Safety attend to the problem?" have had an excellent opportunity to, safe enough to walk home from a late been I allowed to grow and positively affect All I can say to the people who have and indeed have made it my business to, night party. I am six feet tall and weigh the ;. campus as far as crime is concerned. jcomplained about just such a situation keep well informed as to the crime and 180 pounds. I don't feel invulnerable, The Department of Public Safety has Itinvolving a weapon, who have watched vandalism situation on this campus. It but I feel that I can probably handle created the Community Relations Unit Public Safety sit back and wait for the continues to bother me each time I myself if necessary. Then again, maybe to educate the campus community in county to show up is this. What are wal- encounter either naivety concerning I'm wrong. crime prevention techniques; a Public kie talkies, a night stick and a pair of this matter, or worse-a false impres- According to the VRDP, log sheets, Assistance Team has been instituted to handcuffs going to do against a gun or sion of the true nature of the security -about 40 percent of the criminal inci- of patrol the campus and dormitories more knife? the Stony Brook campus. With this let- dents we handle are incidents involving people from neighboring towns, not effectively, and four Public Safety offic- Other positive moves by Dr. Francis ter, I hope to identify and promulgate ers devote their time to training and the positive and negative situations here Stony Brook University residents. No have been the installation of lighting in magical walls exist. There is as much of working with Student Patrol organiza- parking lots and walk ways. Will this at SUSB, and to encourage people to act tions. (P.O. Doug Little, Lt. Richie accordingly. a crime rate on this campus as there is stop crime on campus? Of course not, anywhere else on Long Island. To qual- Clark, Charles Lever, and Dominick but it will help. Will the volunteers The people I have spoken to seem to ify that, I should add that. there are two Macedonia.) The efforts of Dr. Francis against crime on this campus help fight feel that this place is either a criminal divisions of Suffolk County with higher and [Public Safety] Director Barnes vandalism and assault? It will help quite haven which would require the National felony rates than our campus. Suffolk will indeed continue to chip away at the a bit regarding vandalism and theft, Guard to clean up, or a euphoric Xanadu County Police precincts and Riverhead crime problem. and unarmed assault. Will the Public exempt from the sins of the rest of the precincts have a higher felony rate than The question might be asked, "what Assistance Team help fight crime and world. Neither impression is correct. we do. I cannot, unfortunately, add happens if someone is armed with a assault? It will help fight crime in gen- This campus is 1,100 acres of Suffolk Northport village, Southold, Greenport, knife or gun?' Well, there is a problem. I eral, including unarmed assault and County. There are no magical walls Amityville, Easthampton...or any other have directed, along with Jared Isaacs unarmed robbery. As I mentioned ear- separating SUSB from the rest of the county police agency to that list of areas (Assistant director VRDP) and Drew lier, I'm a male of six feet, 180 lbs. My county, nor is there a magnet on top of with felony rates higher than our cam- Fried (joint committee for Resident friend Sue is five feet four inches at Grad Chem which attracts more than pus. Action Program and VRDP) that in the approximately 110 pounds. If you think the average number of criminals event of any situation involving a wea- she should walk around by herself at (accept perhaps the fact that the rest of Does this knowledge deter me from pon of any kind, VRDP patrollers may night in dark areas or in secluded areas, Suffolk County law enforcement offic- attending this university? I've been here not approach the situation. They are to you're wrong. She should call walk ser- ers carry fire arms, and university for two years and I intend to remain notify Public Safety. Public Safety will vice at 6-3335. If you are concerned with police officers do not). another two years until I graduate. I'm in turn contact Suffolk County Police, the crime problem on this campus, join The question most frequently asked to -not staying here because it's safe. I'm who will arrive several minutes later. forces to fight it. In force we've been students patrolling for Volunteer Resi- staying here because Stony Brook is a The question might be pursued, "You working to beat it. In force, we will. Call dent Dorm Patrol by other students is good school suited to my academic mean if someone is threatening me with Public Safety for more information ,is this campus safe at night? Can I walk needs. I'm attending this school in spite a knife or gun, you'd just stand by and about anything concerning this campus around by myself and feel safe?" My of the security problems. watch?' Members of my dorm patrol and crime or crime prevention. If you answer to them is that this campus is as President Marburger and Vice- should run away good and far. How can give a damn, ask how you can help. safe as the rest of Suffolk County. Hav- President Francis have been aware of I possibly direct a team of two people (The writer, a Kelly C managerialassist- ing been raised in Queens, New York the crime problems which plague our with nothing more than a walkie talkie ant, is the chairman of the Residents City, the seclusion of Suffolk County campus, and should be commended for ; to attend to a situation involving a wea- Action Program,andfounder and direc- makes me feel pretty safe. Walking in their efforts and action concerning the pon? Obviously I couldn't. "How about tor of the Volunteer Reident Dorm the shadows of buildings in the middle matter. Through the -support and Public Safety," you might ask. "After Patrol)-

The University Needs More Computer Faciliti< m8

By Brian Ford (This is an open letter to University President John Marburger,the Registrar's Office and the students of Stony Brook.) If this were not a university, I believe the phenomena I am speaking of would be called fraud. It is not an academic system that knowingly allows students to register for courses that will be at capacity after the first day of registration. The situation that I am writing about is known only to a few students at this time. Due to the overtaxed computer science facilities as well as faculty the enrol- lment in just about all computer science courses will be cut by two-thirds this fall. MSC 112, which currently has over 400 students enrolled, will be cut back to 120 students in the fall. MSC 120 and 201, which currently have almost 200 students in each class will be cut back to 60 students each. Why hasn't this information been distributed? I can't say, I don't know. I do know that many students who enrolled for these courses will get the standard form letters over the summer explaining theydid find the money to open the computer centertiti like. To learn that computers are toois that expand our that they were de-registered from these classes. My 4 AM. They also found the money to put a student human capabilities and not simply a big calculator own personal opinion is that these letters will probably monitor in the terminal room located in Light Engi- that breaks down a lot. This means new equipment, not arrive after we get our bills. neering. It seems they even were able to get hold of necessarily "state of the art" but at least variety of Who is to blame for this situation? From my own more keypunch machines for the elementary compu- systems to handle the variety of computer jobs on cam- experience I don't think the computer science depart- ter science courses. I applaud these actions as very pus. (Everything from data management for the ment is to blame. I can honestly say that they were of necessary, if not very overdue. But what are they doing administration to file space for a MSC 111 student*) the opinion that students would beturned away at about next semester? What action is being taken to I call upon the administration, through Dr. Mar- improve the facilities? Well, they are going to make the pre-gistration. burger, to help us. Much has been accomplished but What about the registrar? Well, as usual, each stu- exterior of Engineering Mall look nicem so all the young it's not enough. Don't allow this computer science dent was issued a pre-repstration ticket This ticket freshman have a better attitude, I guess. But why? *situation go any further. I say it really doesn't matter What was supposed to be prseted at pren-r to this university needs is at least new terminals what the outside of the university looks like, what we ensure that people Gisterlin some sort of order. But, hooked up to the UNIVAC. Immediately, if not sooner. students are concerned about is the quality in theclam- as usual, few (if any) of theme tickets were chocked. We also need a commitment, a long term commitment, I room. Quality that is slipping fast. Thus, anyone could ese time, regardless of to the computer sciences-a commitment that will allow anyone andeveryone to enroll in a computer (7The writer is the pridext oft Sty Brook Compu- clas standing. And what about the administration? Well, it seems sciene course and learn what computers are really ter Seim" Society.)

April 28, 1982 STATESMAN Page 9 I MO we i

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FRI. EVENTS v ^^ ^ \ Arts and crafts fair-All Day \ Club Fair-All Day l 50s Car Show-All Day College Tug -0 - War- 4:00 p.m. winning team receives 2 kegs

- iSAT. BANDS 2:00 Stanton Anderson 5:00 The Triplets 10:00 SAB PRESENTS... ROBERT GORDON 'Rock - a - Billy Boogies i\\I - 0-:7-SAT. -EVENTS Arts and Crafts Fair - Al Day

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Page I1 April 28, 1982 STATESMAN_ C e

I 'Alb.-'Ash- .b- AM-jI Ib-- 'N- 'CorrespondentFor : Q4QQ 7 ARt = . =.* Jerusalem Post Lectures at SB

I \ By Susan Baehner I \ Wolf Blitzer, the Washington JAnuii IASmONS ? correspondent for the Jerusa- '- X? lem Post and an expert on ? Israeli-American relations, * V* lnstrument Check Up With Ad F spoke on the recent Israeli New and Vintage String Instruments > withdrawl from the Sinai and ? the future of Israeli-American Guitars a0 Banjoa Mandolins 'relations Monday night in the Dulcimers o Fiddles Union Ballroom. Blitzer, whose articles have ? appeared in such publications Complete Repair as The New York Times and Shop The New Republic, and who accompanied former President Carter to the Middle East as a I correspondent, spoke for two Strings and Accessories ? hours and addressed questions Custom Inlay from the audience. { Blitzer discussed the pros- 750 Rie. 2MA, Setuket { pects for Israel in the next five Next to D Car 1890, S minue walk fom SU8B ^ to 10 years, with regard to Palestine Liberation Organiza- - 7s1-0212 tion advances and general A^'^^^^^^^^W^^^'X^X^C^^^W^tb^UO^^e^'M^lL^M^^O^40"40%t4&Q f Arab conflicts. He professed shock to the recent downfall of Israel's image in the American media. He said that the first year of any new American administra- tion is hard for Israel because LefYSamect the President is no longer try- ing to gain votes. However, he also said that not beyond his wildest predictions did he think it would be this bad. about Blitzer also cited the crip- pling effect on the Israeli eco- nomic situation brought on by the constant threat of attack by its Arab neighbors. Because of - asconnec this, Israel is forced to spend 26 percent of its gross k national product on defense.

Correction

It was incorrectly in last Wednesday's Statesman that '/** Babak Movahedi, president pro temp of the Polity Senate, was removed from chairing the l nicssw near iromi tou, an April 26 meeting upon a vote of dormitory telephone service will the Senate. That vote failed, be disconnected on Mav 20th. but Movahedi voluntarily gave IfXyou need service through up the chair later in the meet- the summer, please call us at the ing. Business Office (246-9900) before Mavs 1st. and j Low Cost j we'll be happy to Personalized I continue it. Now that We've Connected j ABORTION ; AS A.EEP . *'ourApril 25th bill can be paid at the Bell Phonc cntcr in the M-4UU/ administration building. Just stop regnancy Testing bvy anvdav from Ma 1 I th to Mav inning Counseling; 20th, I pm-4pm, and see our .Y CONFIDENTIAL i representative. S#CIANIS OFFICE * The final bill, which covers EDICAID, charges between April 25th and rd Mater Card | the date vour service is disconnec kccepted 5 ed, will be forwarded to the res- ponsible student's home address i by June 3rd, with pavment due bh luine 20th. You CanSave The Bell Phonccnter in the next year, wC loo)k forward to again. If not, we wish Ia administration building will he serving you in Four careers! open from May 18th-21 st, from vou all the best INA P:Ni'C-% #am-5pm, so you can return your tek-phone set. If vou bring our set New brkTekephne VILION , t 1172I i .* ,'* £ . . s.-. *%- PoorNKY - And lk i A60O- - 1 Affirmative Action Act to Be Reviewed

(continuedfrom page 5) sent the students. "After all, Beverly Harrison, the affirma- members of the Affirmation they been crying for more stu- tive action officer for the uni- Action Committee, echoed a dent involvement'"Brown said. versity. According to Lupi the review done two year ago by "To tell you the truth, the SAB members entered the Samuel Taube, then a dean at whole incident [the passage of office expecting a compromise. Stony Brook Univeersity. Both the Affirmative Action Act] "We understand that our hiring - reports found Polity-of which was rushed," Levy said. "The practices are off the mark," he SAB is a part-guilty of senators only had a few days to said, "and next semester we've discrimination. look over the proposal [which agreed to abide by the equal Ramos has been accused by was close to thirty pages long], opportunity guidelines. In fact, Lupi of doing an 'lousy job" of and some of the senators said we plan on surpassing them." Lui Ramos, Polity's affirmative compiling his information. "A they never even got a proposal." During the meeting, SAB action officer and a researchers of . lot of the records are in my "I put one in each of the sena- members explained to Harri- *a report charging the Student room," Lupi said. tor's mailboxes," argued son how their limited budget Activities Board with DISCRIMI- Polity Vice-President Van Brown ActhvWe Board with discrimina- M" the proposed Polity budget is There are copies made of Ramos, the pamphlet's major had already forced them to cut tory hiring. unfair to minorities. every check signed, every author, "and I must have left 50 back. Hiring more people, they application signed all all other copies around the office for a explained, who were untrained documents," Ramos said. week." would probably force more Remos' week long, 10 hours a Three weeks after SAB qualified workers- out of a job. Injunction Halots Budget day research led him to the turned down the minority "This is reverse discrimination unquestionable belief that SAB applicants, the SAB chairman in it's worst form," Lupi added. (continued from page 5) "How can you put togethere a has used discriminatory practi- received a notice that his organ- "You don't need no expe- Senate by the Council were program for the campus when ces in hiring. One example, ization had disobeyed affirma- rience for those jobs," Brown actually composed by one or 20 percent of the population Ramos said, is the typical work- tive action guidelines. They said. SAB's eventual hiring of some council members. [the number of minorities] has crew for a concert, which usu- were then asked to attend a the students was deemed a no input?" Movahedi coun- ally employs 10 people, with "compromise meeting" to be "creative solution" by Brown, ICouncil minutes of April 11 tered, saying that since the one person required to repres- held in the administrative who had earlier in the week support the claim that the meeting wasn't advertised as a ent a minority. This unbal- building. writtten a memo to the campus Council did not formulate a hearing" it is unfair not to have anced pattern of improper "I had no desire to comprom- community informing them of budget, in violation of the Con- input from everyone who might utilization of minorities, Ramos ise," Brown said. "Federal, SAB's discriminatory policies. stitution. Polity Treasurer Tra- have wanted to. said, also thread through jobs State and Local Law are not Harrison could not be reached cey Edwards would not say who The end of the Senate meet- in the stage crew, security and matters.. to compromise with. for a comment. did. Regarding the affirmative ing Monday without a passed ushers. You simply comply." The law was broken by the action statement, necessitated budget signalled to many sena- -Most recently the two groups 'It was compliance; no, better university and the Polity coun- by the university, a number of tors that the budget would be have clashed over the recent yet it was coercion," Lupi said, cil, Lupi said. According to the senators said it would be added done by them, but, rather, by a is concert by Third World, a reg- explaining that SAB was newly passed act, he said his on when the budget special committee established gae group. The conflict involves "forced to hire the 14 minority organization has seven days to completed. to budget the money in the the hiring of 14 minority stu- people." appeal the decision. SAB hired Jackson was representing event that the Senate does not dents who applied late for the 'Listen, no one twisted their the people after only three days. Chris Joyce, who made the com- by a certain date. That date this Third World show. arms," said Ramos. "In fact, the "We were given an ultimatum plaint, at theJudiciary meeting years is Friday and, although "We had a feeling they were idea to hire the 14 people was of either complying or else, last night. Polity Vice- Brown said it is not impossible sent by Brown," Piacentini theirs." "Lupi said. "That's a lie, I ans- president Van Brown, who said to call another meeting this said. Brown does not deny he Chairing the meeting was wered him," Brown said. he agreed with Jackson's week and would dependd on the assessment of the minority sentiments of other senators, view of the budget, represented many indicated Monday night the Senate because, he said, he that the budget would go to this Stony Brook's Feature Magazine Folds was obligated to as its special committee. The Senate chairman. had been less than one-quarter (continued from page 5) to do in-depth news feature having said "...A person does This raised some questions through with the lengthy one who could find time for i- articles that Statesman could not have to resort to rape if he from two othere Senate offi- budget when quorum was anymore." not accomodate. Statesman wants to get it on with a girl. cials, Babak Movahedi, the called. None of their decisions "I really don't know anything was the only campus publica- All he's got to do is find the president pro temp who was are final until they have voted about it [Fortnight]" said tion then. right girl. And he will find the chairing the meeting Monday on all items in the budget. Richard Newman, Fortnight's The fall semester saw the right girl within the campus, in Brown's stead, and Secre- The budget process is a long poetry editor. He too said he publication fortnightly, on where he wouldn't have to rape tary Daniel Creedon. Movahedi one. Seven subcommittees, has heard nothing. glossy paper which it retained to do it...." charged that, "It is ironic that each for a different classifica- Fortnight was formed in the throughout the years. the vice-president, who made tion of funding hear requests fall. The spring of 1975. Its only issue The report resulted in angry the complaint, is both the plain- from clubs in the late budget is formulated from that semester was published in One of Fortnight's most protests from groups all over tiff and the defendant at the these various recommenda- a newspaper format. memorable issues contained an campus. hearing. I have no doubt in my is then forwarded to The publication was the crea- interview with then-director of In recent years Fortnight mind that the Senate would not tions, and the Council, which may revise tion of two Statesman newswri- Public Safety, Robert Cornute. had shifted its emphasis from want him to represent them." any or all of it. It then goes to ters, Mark Dick and Jeff Cornute was quoted in Fort- news/feature to poetry and Movahedi, who has appealed the Senate, which also may Grinspan, who felt they wanted night's Feb. 20, 1979 issue as creative writing. the Judiciary ruling, said that speaking at the Senate "is the alter it, before finally passing it right of the senator and the on to the university president privilege of the guests." McGee for certification. At Stony said no date has been scheduled Brook, University President yet to hear the appeal. John Marburgere has dele- The Senate had, toward what gated that responsibility to Stu- proved to be the end of the dent Affairs Vice-President meeting, voted to allow presi- Fred Preston. If the Senate is dents of clubs or their represen- unable to pass the budget by the tatives to speak. McGee said deadline, the special budget this policy might be acceptable committee has until the end of if it was firmly established. the school year to do so. If it does Jackson, in explaining his not, the Summer Senate is then objection to the meeting, asked authorized to do it.

< Need a job? - Consider the Stony Brook Union. We are now accepting t / applications for summer and fall - work study and student ) - employment positions. l Apply this week - Interviews will be conducted the week of J } May 3rd. Visit Room 266 of the Union. _

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Page 14 STATESMAN April 28, 1982 . W»« ft«Ai mbS m "If -Classified s FONZ EXTERMINATING-Sign-up now G QUAD COUNCIL: Thanks for giving us a WANTED for gypsy moth spray. May special with I :NFL great G Fest. You kept your cool under Makes C] Jac/staff I.D. Termite work. Call 246- pressure. You're the greatest. Irwin. 6202 for free estimate. STUDENTI NEEDS Calc TA to tutor in MSM 125.I Please call 246-4414. TO ALL CONCERNED: Friday's personal HALLS AND BUILDINGS still have funds New York-There were no big surprises at the National regarding the handling of the OKTOBERF- left? Throw a fantastic ice cream party, for Football League EST money was in no way an implication draft yesterday. Bert Jones and Russ Fran- info call Bruce at 6-4801. cis changed teams and the Baltimore Colts and New Eng- HELP WANTED of wrong-doings on the part of the Tabler Quad Council, as some people have been COLLEGE SELECTION IS COMING1 Do land Patriots began taking on a new look. led to believe. OKTOBERFEST made a you need someone to room with next MANAGEMENTI POSITIONS AVAILABLE profit, and each college's money has Jones, a nine-year veteran who was tagged with a "fran- semester? CONNECTIONS will computer for next semester at the Hard Rock Cafe. since been returned. It was written to chise" nickname when the Colts pck the perfect match for only S2.00. For drafted him out of Louisiana Applications are now available in the point our the presence of bureaucratic red application send name and address to State, had become disenchanted in Baltimore, especially Scoop Office, Room 257, Polity Suite. which delayed the money being P.O. Box 78, E. Setauket, N.Y. 11733. tape during a 2-14 season in 1981. Deadline for all applications 4:30, April returned. We have to prevent ourselves 30th. from being enslaved. The first step is to TYPIST: Homework, term papers, reports. He played out his contract, exchanged caustic words with elect Robert Brynien Senior Class Presi- manuscripts, all types. Call Christy 751- OVERSEAS JOBS: Summer/year round. dent. He is one person who understands volatile team owner Robert Irsay and said the only way he'd 7900, ext. 263 Mon-Fri. sign with the Colts would be if it was part of a deal to trade Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All the students' needs. (P.S. My apologies to fields. $500-$1200 monthly. Sightsee- those offended.) him. *ing. Free info. Write IJC, Box 52-NY-29, 'TYPEWRITER repairs, cleaning, machines .bought and sold. Free estimates. TYPE- Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. THE PRO! S2.00 ist he total cost He did, and they did -to the , a team CRAFT 4949B Nesconset Highway, Port GOWITH CONNECTED. Find a roommate, Jefferson Station, N.Y. 11776.473-4337. to be which played quarterback roulette in 1981 when Pat Haden, SUMMER DAY CAMP POSITION: WSI, friend, or lover-or just meet someone Jeff Rutledge and Dan Pastorini were at various times in or life guards, arts and crafts, drama, gen- kinky enough to answer an ad like this. It out of favor with Caoch Ray Malavasi. eral counselors. E. Setauket, near SUNY. LOST AND FOUND can be funI For application write: CON- 751-1081. NECTIONS, P.O. Box 78, E. Setauket, NY The future of the quarterback who had guided the Rams 11733. into Super Bowl XIV where they lost to the Pittsburgh DRUMMER WANTED for working band. LOST on 4/23: One 14k gold necklace Experience, equipment and dedication a Steelers remains clouded. Vince Ferragamo, who was as with 4 gold charms. Vicinity of SB train THANK GOD (7) for Rock 'n Roll- must. Vocals not necessary. 6-8010. station. Reward if found. 6-7348. Pettingill. disenchanted in Los Angeles in 1980 as Jones was in Balti- more in 1981, fled to the Canadian Football League lastyear. LOST: Green knapsack Stage XII front PETTINGILL: Yeah, but Adam and the FOR SALE parking lot. Need contents desperately. Ants are THE best. Sorry! Love, the girl He got a four-year, $1.6-million contract from Montreal. Please call Peter 399-2804 collect. who loves to laugh and sing all day. had a disaster of a season. And he and the Alouettes REFRIGERATOR, Large Freezer, room Reward. tOMORROW NIGHT be at the James Pub He may someday return to the NFL, but for now he size, perfect for dorm or suite. $65 negoti- for Fursternburg night. 2 for 1. Be here able. Call Nancy 6-4276. remains under contract to Nelson Skalbania, the owner of CAMPUS NOTICES Thurs., 4/29. the Als. CLASH CLASH CLASH TIX for sale. Call COME PARTY TONIGHT at the James Bruce at 246-4508. As soon as the Colts announced the Jones trade-The Asso- THE DEADLINE FOR CORRECTING A Pub. Heineken 1 for $1. Doors open at ciated Press learned he signed a contract worth $320,000 the 1981-82 Student Eligibility Report (SER) 9 30. UNLOCK YOUR TALENTI Graduate wri- is May 15, 1982: corrections received at first year, $330,000 the second and $340,000 the third-they ter's booklet, "The Art of Writing: Basic the processing center after that date will CONGRATULATIONS to the Douglass Principles," $2 50. John Nutter, P.O. Box used Los Angeles' first-round pick they got the second-round not be accepted and could result in loss of Marauder Expeditionary team consisting 1 1967. pick, tto to select Schlichter, who broke Ohio State's passing 363, Shirley, N.Y. Basic/Pell Grant eligibility. of Burton, Lam, Lamar, and Raine who were the first to successfully traverse the THE GOOD TIMES BOOKSHOP: Two and total-offense records. To confirm eligibility for 1981-82 Basic bottom of Roth Pond. The selection of Schlichter was Baltimore's second in the floors of quality second-hand books. Hard Pell Grant Awards, students should sub- cover and paperback (no hardcover text- mit three (3)original copies of the Student GET CONNECTEDI For two lousy bucks first round. Earlier, with the No. 2 pick, they chose Johnie books). Current books at '1 price. BOOKS Eligibility Report (SER) to the Financial you too can join those who have met girl- Cooks, a linebacker from Mississippi State with exceptional BOUGHT DAILY. 150 East Main Street, Aid Office by Friday, May 14, 1982. Fail- friends, boyfriends, roommates, wha- Port Jefferson. 928-2664. Open: Mon- speed and the ability to play either inside or out. ure to submit valid SER's prior to the close teverl Have fun meeting a stranger Sat 1 1-6. The Patriots traded away a former 'franchise" player and of the academic year (5/21/82) will chosen for you by computer. Send your result in loss of Basic/Pell Grant name and address to: CONNECTIONS, TOURNAMENT SOCCER FOOSBALL drafted what they hope will be another one. Russ Francis, eligibility.. P.O. Box 78, East Setauket, NY 11733. retired just before table, excellent condition, many extra the All-Pro tight end who unexpectedly parts. $500. Call Eddie or Gary 6-5165. he wanted to set up shop on the West BH JAMES D1: I'm so glad you're living in the 1981 season-saying PERSONALS my building next year. Things will be a lot SELLING: Car ramps, recorder, bike rack, Coast, close to his burgeoning television and film career- easier... P.S. Yes, you were the bestl Love scope, meter, surf board, golf clubs, fuzz DEAR -- , I can't begin to tell you how I ya. was dealt to San Francisco for first-round pick, the last one and wah wah pedals, toolboxes, camping felt the other night. It was a dream come ^ true, one that I will never forget. Let's do it in the round. lantern, stove and heater. Call Frank days LISA: Wowl You were fantastic the other again. Love, . P.S. Your body is the pros by the other highly 751-1785. night at End of the Bridge. I didn't know Schlichter was followed into incredible. there could be so many uses for salad rated quarterback, Brigham Young's Jim McMahon. The 1980 YAMAHA special 400, excellent dressingl Let's do it at the Bridge againl condition. 2,400 miles. $1,000. 6-7423. TO ALL THOSE AMAZING GIRLS IN Chicago Bears, who haven't been able to win consistently Steve. KELLY C who came down to the softball with Vince Evans, Mike Phipps or Bob Avellini calling the FASHIONABLE EARRINGS FOR SALE at game, thanks. With your support we can't AMY, It seems like I'm always sending picked McMahon, who smashed numerous NCAA reasonable prices. Sterling silver, gold losel From the softball team. signals, you some sort of note. I thought you said filled turquoise and otherst Great gifts passing records. you couldn't hang out? You did a pretty (Mother's Day 5/9). come to Kelly C100 TO MY FAVORITE COOKIE CLOWN: good job of it Friday. What kind of note Seattle, which has long been defense-poor, was expected to and ask for Brenda or call 246-4926. Market, this is your formal invitation to would this be if it weren't a little per- come live with me in California. Please pick guard to give quarterback Jim Zorn verted? Michael. some more protection. Instead, the Seahawks wnet for def- CHEVROLET ARISTOCRAT Mini motor- R.S.V.P.I Thanks for a great weekend. home. 1971 self-contained. Good Love, Paty. ELECTRIC MINSTREL for your next party ensive end of Clemson.; mileage, new parts. $2,800. Call 9-5, Very wide range of music-for your heart 246-6830. CAROUPUPS: Took time from shtuding The selection of Nelson began a veritable run on running and feet. WUSB DJs. Better rates than shnych to wish Happy Birthday to the big- Seductive Sounds. 928-5469. backs. After Houston took Munchak, six of the next 13 choi- FOR SALE 1980 Ross 10-speed bicycle. gest goon a roommate ever had. Lynn. Excellent condition. $100. Call after 9:30 P.S. Wanna walk by the Quand? ces were runners-Arizona State's , by SEND NO MONEY NOWI Response to PM. 751-3050. Jerry. Atlanta; Southern Cal's Heisman Trophy winner, Marcus CONNECTIONS first ads was tremendous TO DORI (DP), Happy Birthday! You and and we still need more matches right Allen Oakland; Baylor's Pittsburgh; your laugh will never be forgotten now. CONNECTIONS will find you the throughout our hall. We hope you quack -Richmond's Barry Redden Los Angeles; Michigan's Butch HOUSING person you're looking for-and it only for many more years to come. Here's to San Jose State's Gerald costs $2.001 For application send name Woolfolk the New York Giants, and good friends and good times. Yeah, rightl and address to P.O. Box 78, E. Setauket, Willhite Denver. HOUSE TO RENT, four bedroom house Enjoy the big 19th. Love, Heidi, Anne, NY 11733. ACT NOWI 12 rounds ended in 3% hours, the longest conveniently located opposite south P-lot. Nancy, Karen, and Lysa. The first of the Walk to bus. Complete kitchen, washer opening round since 1976. The draft ends Wednesday. qnd dryer. $675 plus utilities. Available June 1. Graduates or staff. Call 6-7 PM. r Reggie Returns Home 751-3783. SWAP FOR YEAR FROM JULY. Two bed- room apartment Tel-Aviv for house apart- New York - Reggie Jackson returned to New York on ment, one bedroom Port Jefferson area or Tuesday, this time as a visitor with the California Angels, rent Israel apartment $150 month. Con- and he found the town's baseball community in the same ct Falkowski days. 282-2961; nights, 751-6593. kind of uproar so familiar when he was a resident slugger with the New York Yankees. Jackson laughed at the sugges- SERIOUS ABOUT YOUR STUDIES? Two furnished rooms (share bath) available in tion that George Steinbrenner's firing of Bob Lemon as spaciou centrally A/C house, walking- Yankee manager on Sunday was contrived to upstage Reg- and biking distance to campus, $175- gie's return. 8225 includes all. Quiet, non-cigarette smokers pleasew751-2365. 'Upstage me?' he said. "I'm hitting .160, .175. It's easy to upstage me. But there's nothing you can do from 8 to 10:30." Jackson refused to be drawn into the Lemon-Steinbrenner SERVICES Gene Michael triangle, saying "It's none of my business STUDENT DISCOUNT AT BODY WORLD That's for you folks to have fun with." to shape Vour body like Vou nevr thougt I i could e All thoe equpent* you wrt As for playing in Yankee Stadium again, Jackson said, "I we have. Call 758-7555. or conm in with know III be up for the games. I feel good about coming back, ID. Summer is for firm bodell but uncomfortable at the same time. It's a strange situation PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY will do your for me to be uncomfortable in New York. I was so much a tping in her home on IBM Selavc part of the city. I don't know what to expect, whether it will typ.write Very r__on b. 585-7831. be positive or negative. I've got butterflies." The city wel- TYPING: Es.y, term papers. tth-a comed Jackson back with a proclamation from borough R onle rte. Call Pu 751-3809. President Andrew Stein declaring Tuesday as Reggie Jack- ELECTROLYSIS Ruth Faed, certified son Day in Manhattan. Oebow ESA. e nded by physiciene, Moder m . Consulttions invitd I Weing dissome to campu. 751 8800. April 28, 1982 STATESMAN Page 15 -

bteten--w veldt A- : | NFLDraftBegis at PO RTS _|_------Pagel J - -M -Pats Softball Slams in a Winner; -By Marilyn Gorfien The Stony Brook women's softball team participated in an independent invitational tournament at Albany this past weekend. Four SUNY centers participated in this action-packed event - Oneonta, Albany, Bingh- amton and Stony Brook. Most com petitions of this type are eliminations, but this particular one was based on a round-robin system, where each team plays all teams present. On Friday, Oneonta narrowly defeated the Patriots in their first game, 14-13. The basic problem was that Stony Brook got off to a bad start. At the top of the seventh inning, the score was 12-3, and Stony Brook felt the pressure. The Patriots rallied to score 10 runs in the top of the seventh, but Oneonta fought back with two runs in the bottom of that inning. Phyllis Mehalakes was the starting pitcher, but Teri McNulty came in for the second inning. "Teri pitched well; she held us in the game and then let us get back into it," said Coach Judy Christ. Lori Leftoff had a good day, going two-for-four with four RBIs and a grand slam. Saturday was a trying day as the Patriots found themselves up against Albany in the morning and Binghamton that afternoon. Albany, one of the strong- est teams in the state, loomed large in Stony Brook's presence. "We played an excellent game," Christ said. Captain Michelle Scott did an impressive hitting job with one triple and two RBI's. Teri pitched a pheno- rnawnl) L. ^ I AA . m - »A *-.*-> _- - _**- _-4 I-+. mienai tnree-nuter. ine ratrioLs supern effort let them fly by Albany 10-1. In the next game, Stony Brook battled and defeated Binghamton 10-9. Although Stony Brook was ahead 9-1 in the sixth inning, it wasn't that simple. In the top of the sixth, Binghamton scored six runs, and then got two more in the next inning to tie the game. The pressure was on the Patriots. Jill Spage had walked to first base, then advanced to second on a wild pitch. Spage scored when Cheryl Dininno's clutch hit in the bottom of the seventh gave the Patriots that one pre- cious run. "When I got up to bat, it was do or die." said Dininno. Spage's talent showed itself throughout the game by going three-for-three with one triple and two home runs, including a grand slam and seven RBI's of another exceptional player, Lucille Gianuzzi, who played a great defensive game against both Albany and Binghamton. At the end of the day, Oneonta, Albany and Stony Brook each had two wins and one loss. The officials tallied the total runs scored in all three games com- bined for each of the three contending teams. Albany and Stony Brook each had 33, Oneonta only had 30. However, in a dramatic decision the well-deserved championship was given to Stony Brook because three losses were by only one run. In Division III, there are six games left before the State Championships May 14 and 15 at Lehman Col- lege. There are 39 schools competing, and only eight can make the playoffs. Both coach and captain are optimistic. Oince before our game against Ljenman, the bats have been working," Scott said. 8 s Pava ass for a bunt. Micho Scon pans to _t* bow

Up and Coming Patriots00; LoseIt I Mot'aTtwit Today vs AmW 3:30 W, ' Thursday vs Cu-n 3.0 P The Stony Brook Tennis and B aseballTe d Are .. -- dw vs dStoto Andt MX PM Inot victorious yesterday. Both Patriot teams lost to - Tueday v- M.mMWm 3:00 PM their oDownents in close but unsuccessful flamen. * ' I In the baseball game, Stony Brook hmt to Dowling - - : Men's Today ve Bwuch 3:00 PM dtay vo Swan Wand 120 PM College by a score of 10-9. Su-nday ve Concorde 12:00 PM 'Thetennis competition was highlighted with wins II a-= , . :. Momdey vs 300 PM from singes, Dennis Marcus - 7-5, 6-7, 7-6 - and Tueday v C.W.P 3:30 PM +~ ~ ~~~~-Q__ . &-_A &_ In9Ad " Alan Obenapxro - An-, e, u-a - anu Atex pmmorrn -tX wd Anum Nath - 76 6-&3 Wm-*.- s- L Taft v! Mm as 4:00 FM **ujiwi*mum * ^ Frk^f v Brooklyn > - = Howeter, ovrll the Patriots tennis lost to C.W. Post 4:00 PM ;TvInr» v- N.Y.Tech 4:00 FM I College by a swore at 4. A*.R-ouna r Gordon X * WmT'aTwo* FPry NY AFAW T.DA. .a,- =' ' - f i '" r . t * , - i ; 0 i' ' ' ':,^ * . Xt.dop Se_ _w T.B i - - ~m-- = -- -

P1 T N21 iP16* STTESMAN April 28,1982