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Nader Lectures on Civic Activisn I Urges Students to Use Voting Power at Talk, Press Conference

By Andrea Rosenberg "Organization" was the focu. of a press conference and a lecture by consumer advocate Ralph Nader. The lecture, entitled 'Educational Priorities and the Quality of Education-" was given Mondavin the Fine Arts Center. It was Sponsored by the New York Public Interest Research Group (NYPIRG) and- :>Stat^ Brook Speakers, a Polity organization. Two hund < people, mostly students, attended the lecture. Organization and action are more necessary now than ever before, said Nader. "The burden on us is even greater," he said. 'The risks of looking the other way are much, much larger. Time and time again, major consumerental abuses have been going on because ...corporate employees have looked the other way." Nader said that it is easier for a student to become active because they do not yet have careers that may enflict with their consumer values. It's hard to double track," said Nader. "You'll never have fewer visible 'chains around you as you have now." Students are equipped with the assets of "idealism, imagination, the ability to get information, and the- ability to evaluate data," which especially suits them for civic duties, according to Nader. "As 12 million college students, you have the flexibility and assets to say the right things and do the right things," he said. -"There's an ability to organize civic values into power- ful, meaningful forces." Nader said that group of only a few individuals is enough to build momentum for activism. "Student activism breeds more student activism," he said. Organization begins with "the individual that con- nects up with other individuals. So many good things Ralph Nader have happened over the 200 years of our country because [of the initiation of] a tiny fraction [of the with th' idea of a general education. "Theseare integ- receive the Democratic presidential nomination, populationl" he said. rative skills," he said. according to Nader, but Alan Cranston (D-Ca) and "There has never been a greater need for individual Ernest Hollings (D-S.C.) could, as well, defeat Reagan, creativity," said Nader. Because of the high cost of Nader criticized the Reagan administration and said Nader. "There doesn't have to be a strong Demo- education, "the ability to pioneer is serverely dimin- predicted Reagan's defeat in 1984. He noted that only crat, just a congenial one," he said. In the last presiden- ished," he said. "There is a spiraling level of student 51% of the voting population cast a ballot in the last tial election, "more people voted against Carter than anxiety," he said. "They're not about to take chances.' presidential election. "If 51% vote again, he [Reagan] for Reagan," he added. Nader urged faculty members, to express their may win," said Nader, but"if nothing else changes and Nader said that if Reagan wins the 1984 presidential views. He said that some professors who were civic the vote goes to 58%, he's going." Nader said that Reve- election, "four more years of Reagan will not only activists have been denied tenure, mainly beue of rend Jesse Jackson has helped increased voter regis- wreck the civilian economy...but it will also militarize their activities. "Universities have lost some first rate tration among blacks, and called registration drives our whole society more than ever before." He added faculty," he said. He especially urged tenured profes- by student groups 'very important. that "Jerry Falwell and Ronald Reagan talk about peace through strength. What does that mean? Where sors to speak out. Nader was critical of the lack of student participa- Nader called for courses in 'taxpayer skills," which is it going to end," he asked. "The whole process of tion in elections. "Student turnout in national elections world destruction is being decentralized, and is now would teach students how to be more politically aware. want, write- are 25%," he said. "Vot for the person you delegated to field commanders There is some indica- "The level of waste is enormous," he said. 'You've got in a vote, protest," urged.Nader. * * people drawing salaries - they don't even show up." tion that before this decade is up it will be delegated to Nader has po d that students be taught to recog- = John Glenn (D-Ohio) and former Vice-President (continued on page 17) nize such wage and act upon it He said that this fit in Walter ale are the two candidates most likely to w -M

Kennedy to Attend Jav its Men s iCross Country . Or~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . Dedication at SB Places Second -Back Parse - Page 5 r~~~~~4 ea1e

6- I w W w I p Compiled from Associated Press Reports r "--News Digest-

r I) Reagan Proposes Mew , '\:_q Warhead Reduction -

. s - - Washington-President Reagan pro- promising to take up bombers at a later posed yesterday that the Soviet Union stage. 'We have removed the dividing and the United States each destroy at line between the two phase of our origi- int Iof the Brid e least five percent of their strategic nal proposal, Reagan said. .~--M l nuclear warheads every year. 'We want But he accused the Soviets of "stone- taily 11:3 to reduce the weapons of war, pure and walling," and Rep. Les Aspin, (D-Wis.), .simple," Reagan declared. who played a key role in White House The president, outlining a new U.S. consultations with Congress, predicted diI bargaining position in the deadlocked 'a very cold reaction" from Moscow. strategic arms talks, said the "every- The Soviets have proposed limiting thing is on the table." He specifically each side to 1,800 missiles and bombers offered, also, to negotiate limits on long- combined. Currently, the United States W-W e - range bombers and air-launched cruise has about 1,600 missiles compared to missiles. The United States holds an 2,340 for the Soviet Union. The presi- edge in bombers of 410 to 343, and also is dent met for 46 minutes with a group wro-fer- Wed- ahead in the crum" they carry. from the House and Senate before Earlier, Reagan sought to require' announcing the revised U.S. position in substantial cutbacks in heavy missiles, the Rose Garden. "Let me emphasize,' AL NIG which account for about two-thirds of he said, "thatthe United States ha gone rhursday the SovietWs strategic strength, while the extra mile.'

4 - Rintaol a Dance Ba $1Bar Drinks U.S. NuclearPolicy.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-T !50 BEERS la .r'v Friday - Under Soviet Fire

I.- V.J.--B Moow - The Kremlin kept up its gence at the negotiations to limit zen Pina Cc propaganda barrage against U.S. medium-range missiles in Europe. nucleir policy yesterday, warning that "By deploying its missiles," said Tass, ideo in N. Y. the deployment of new American "the American side would actually I rockets in Europe will "knock the knock the ground fromunder the talks." ground from under" the Geneva talks to It said Weinberger was trying limit to mis- Saturday the missiles. lead the public. I The commentary repeated earlier Tass, »Beers for the officical Soviet news agency, warnings that if the American missiles Bar Drink rejected U.S. Defense Secretary Caspar are deployed, the Soviet Union would Weinberger's contention at a news con- increase its arsenals of both missiles tar- ference to V.J. Bob in Rome that only deployment of geted on Western Europe and long- the L-Video Pershing 2 and Tomahawk cruise range missiles that could hit the United in N. Y. missiles would shake Soviet intransi- States. [€»NDAY iI€ HT r OTTBALL Cost Rising at Nine BigScreen IN. 0e HOTDOGS pp:k Tuesday Me .cear P . a Jazz Nite with "Swing" 8yraewe, N.Y. - The Nine Mile nuclear power enmaed the builders in a Point 2 nuclear power project, 750 wine already serie of court ehaMWW 11 tinm as expensive as estimated a In a February 1982 ruling,the PSC dadeago, will I Bottle Buds overrun itcurrent$4.2 approved cmpletion but told the billion trget pe before completion, a prners their I Bottle Bus- consultant olduld have him waned. - to foot the ost if the total r above$4.6 Frank Gimcio, a technicl manerbillon- for Canino Mo , said i his Na YdMea to Startthe latat report rinthe fll of 198. Meuwhi, I to the ste Public 8erriee in pyI< Commiiion that 0ootmctoa *aunreaeMUMelopmen the state oude d the $2.66billion projec- Cwnmwtinim r I V -injn repasteu MIL..2 donlaid out at the 19l3 annual mzxv has writtn the POC an a am -i I8rsaav il of Niagra Modawk Powr Corp. tioo- intoth~tePCaradreIw imahlbor w~ Tm Vm ,a 41 per unin bafd the puat -= et owse of The Syracse Nine Mi 2 in a _ four HBrald-« ournel Specials are from 9pm- 12 midnite other New York state uttahuam) Add O,_at X thatmteeetcomb a eb ere -ad ort, Located in the Student Union Building woldaW cun &orl hent , . m the iw aadot job The 1 me wr nrfi|||lba _ihth raitoi Oec'ilt*acom e-em-k '' on the second floor. x arefn the Lakce Ontai *hoewn vdke l Yor f lC. di ch-rfwmsI for the sic *d Sam- Call 246-5139 for further information. $881.7 mflii» The fiurm mowbsBW as * .*** * **.* r ratm d d ha « W - ti. University Senate Discusses Proposed Merge-r -m^ C | By Glenn Taverna uted, dwarfed" as a result of the merger and "Reaching The proposed merger-of the Department of Physi- of certain [specialized disciplines may be] limited." In ology and Biophysics with the Department of Neurobi- illustrating his point, Slobodkin said, "Renal physiol- ology and Behavior-dominated the discussion at ogy, for example, may go the way of duckmating." Monday's University Senate Meeting. Slobodkin also expressed his concern that resources The proposal, set forth in a July 20 memorandum by would be taken away from the College of Arts and Dean of Medicine Marvin Kuschner and Biology Dean Sciences to help from the merger. Kuschner said this Richard Koehn, merges the two departments to create would not happen. a single department-the Department of Neurobiol- William Van Der Kloot, professor of Physiology and ogy, Physiology and Biophysics-under the direction Biophysics, addressed his concern over neglected of a single chairman. areas of study as a rusult of a merger. He saidthatthe Currently, David Cohen is chairman of the Depart- areas of overlap in the new department would get the ment of Neurobiology and Behavior; the other depart- most attention, but areas of study that fell outside the ment is currently without a chairman. According to overlap might be neglected. / Kuschner, a search committee was established to find In a memo written by seven current faculty a new chairman for the Department of Physiology and members in the Department of Physiology and Bio- Biophysics, but the committee yelded no "overwhelm- physics, strong opposition was expressed to the pro- ing" candidate. One possible solution, he said, was to posed merger and there was a call for solving the merge the two departments, with Cohen as the chair- problem by naming a chairman to the department of man of the new department. Physiology and Biophysics. In part, their memo reads, The debate that followed Kuschner and Koehn's "First, the proposed merger creates a poor general presentation in favor of the merger was mostly critical framework for the future development of both disci- of the proposal. The criticism centered around the plines at Stony Brook. Second, the proposal calls for a merger's effect on teaching breadth and research. major restructuring of the biological and basic medi- Richard Koehn Lawrence Slobodkin, professor of Ecology and Evo- cal sciences, yet it is short-sighted and not based on a lution and senator at large, echoed the sentiments of thorough, perceptive analysis of the long-term needs of other senators when he said "Physiology would be dil- , w(continued on page 9) -GSO Approves CED Student Membership

Ry Ray Fazzi GSO, 'The CED Student Government proposal would add about $7,000 in that since CED students are really grad- The Graduate Student Organization lowes its sovereignty in this deal," Hoff CED student activity fee money to uate students they should be repres- (GSO) resolved last night to accept stu- said. "Al Alio(theCED Student Govern- GSO's "unresolved" budget, which he ented by the GSO. dents ofthe Center for Continuing Edu- ment president] is essentially abdicat- said was roughly $50,000. 'There's been During the meeting Hoff pointed out cation (CED) as part of its membership. ing his position, as are the other officers at least a five percent drop in activity that an article in the GSO constitution The proposal needs the approval of of the government" He said the plan fee-paying graduate students-thisyear," stating that "membership in the GSO is Fred Preston, vice-president for Stu- calls for the $14 annual activity fee paid he said."We originally budgeted our- open to persons enrolled in full time dent Affairs, for it to become finalized, by each of the current 540 CED students selves thinking we would have more." graduate programs administered by the according to Sam Hoff, a former GSO to be transferred to the GSO starting "We're looking forward to the Graduate School of SUNY at Stony president who has been discussing the next semester and provides for two CED change," said Alio, who worked with Brookl"may lead to future problems. move with the CED Student Govern- student representatives on the GSO Hoffon the details of the plan. "The gen- "The Center for Continuing Education ment since last semester. Senate. eral consensus among CED students has isn't administered by the Graduate Although the GSO's proposal calls the 'In terms of dollars and cents the been that representation under the GSO School," Hoff said. 'Last year we move a "merger", Hoff said it is more merger is a good idea," GSO President would be more beneficial. We'll be merged with the School of Social Wel- accurate to call it an absorption of the Dave Hill told the senate before their represented by a larger student body fare without adjusting the constitution CED Student Government into the unanimous vote. He pointed out the and a more distinct voice." He added and we had problems." Hoff explained that last year the School of Social Welfare agreed to a plan similar to the one agreed to by the A- Blood CED Student Governments However, he Drive Hopes to Break Record said they eventually changed their minds and attempted to leave the GSO Uxivers4 New Serview by sayintheywerenotadministered by *nStudents from Stony Brook the Graduate School and were not con- _;,will be hoping to collect a thou- stitutional members of the GSO. The- sand pints of blood- setting a Senate rejected their requet to leave," > new statewide campus Hoff said. 'As it stands now they're tech- M record- when they conduct v nically part of the GSO but they don't ? their annual fall blood drive on send any representatives" > campus today. - Hoff said that to prevent a similar Z -"We're shooting for 1000 problem, the constitution should be $ pints, hoping to top the 976 pint revised so as to include CED students as 2t record previously set at the a GSO member. U.S. Military Academy at West 3 But Hill said he wasn't worried of X Point," said Stony Brook senior another problem. 'I feel we can take in O< Patricia Gardner from Beth- the CED students without a constitu- Q page, who in chairing the blood tional clange," heh said. It ient a consti- Q drive= tutional imue whether or not they can be °c "Greater New York Blood let in. Itll be a i utitutionale if @ -Pr Iramofficials tell us that a the decide they want to leave." He con- Pa ampful blood drive here tinued that the CED students have _ tda, because of its magni- already indicated that their decision is a w t o ax be iSrumental in frm oe- W man-d~crauldo- "I ibrce any ambiguitie being Tet blood isre ied by a constiva amend- ,out the Metopoitan area,' m t" he bd He ago warned that if Madded Gar r amd Edward the aconstitutionali of the plan were made into a 'big ife the GSO could from States sd who i Co- lIee the Sbchol of Social Welfare at a d oairinfthe drive ~ - --1.. 'IeT- blod drive wHI take Pt Gmrdn. vwrimof 4w kod_*«b. 9-M Wed. The -deaof GSO reeenao Ir phm fo 11 AllM 7:30 (tiudon page IS) L LPM _d~ in addsw_ -- -,Novel ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- Escaping the Paparazzi

(Concision) .. autograph seekers, who had iteraly gone craw upon awd that w d have to be done sowly and carefuly. Al And rm sure we would hawe gone all night too, and hearing the none Pacino. They became ike a pack of had alea dove into the front oat of the lino, and even closed the place Ike we had planned, if it hadn't wolves,. Ike a bunch of mad dogs in heat, chasing after buried hImsef under the doombard, h1idr from the been for a young girl, who p a didn't even know their prey Ike a bunch of wild men. They wanted him. He hundsids of flashin bulbs tat dsee to be expkxhM how to spel the word P-paezz. She had spotted Al, was theirs. It was open season on Al Pacino, and any- all around us. I kept yetf with Otto and Laurie as I got when all the others had missed him. Al had been so thing went. For a moment I felt sad that I had gotten Al in the carwfthe guus to lea1e us alne but theyjs kept brave, so bod, the whole night had opened up for him. into this mess, andIwondered ifhe was goingto be angry clic their camersWC ke a bunch of wid men, as I H1 seemed as free, and happy, as any te I had ever with me for letting aD of this happen to him. I hope he's transferrWd into the back seat, finully Ancot throing known him, but it was al short lived, when the Bash went OK, I said to Laurie, feeling realdy ney and sory Al had myf in, and Otto took my chair aound back to throw off on the Itte Kodak insamutic me young girl held in to leave without us. it in the trun. her hand. By now the entire car was DU, Al Paino, she screamed, flashing another Suddenly Al came racing back into as I me room Al, I said befe, pbrW dwn mewhere picture. It's Al Pacino. Oh my God, I thought, looking at shouted. What are you doing here? I couldn't befieve it. under the ke's dashboard Are you OK, are you al right? Laurie, 'hey got Al had coae ax the way back to get me. Come on I s tdl, haW ai to my"lf that Al haid been caught and him, and the chase Romie, Al shouted, gabbing the back ofmy wheelchair. all of us w a o n M o r e just n , I figred, if we .--ifC^ Ad

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B.y Elizabeth Wanerman and a dedication of the SenatorJacob Cuomo will also participate in the 1962, is ranking minority member of the Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) Javits Collection at this university on events, joining five Senate leaders who Labor and Human Resources Commit- will join five other Senate leaders in a Oct. 17. were Javits' collegues. Senate Majority tee and has served as chairman of the symposium on American government New York State Governor Mario Leader Howard Baker, Jr. (R- Judiciary Committee and majority Tennessee) and Minority Leader Robert whip. Byrd (D-West Virgina) among others Cuomo last visited the campus on will attend the brief invitational dedica- October 27 to deliver a campaign lec- tion of the collection of manuscripts, ture while he was running for governor. reports, awards and other material Jav- The symposium will be open to the its has given to the university. public with no admission charge but The collection is being catalogued by tickets are required and may be archivists on the third floor of the Frank obtained at the Office of Conferences Melville, Jr. Library and should be and Events, room 328 of the Adminis- ready for use next year. It documents tration building. the 34-years Javits has spent in the pub- The Javits collection when it is fin- lic eye- from serving in State govern- ished will "easily exceed two million ment, the House of Representatives, and items," according to the archivists. Jav- a 24-year Senate stint its has been working on the collection, lecuring to students and faculty and liv- Senators Kennedy, Barker, Byrd and ing in the area since late August. The Governor Cuomo will address the public former Senator, who has Lou Gherig's at a 10:30 AM symposium titled: 'The disease and is in a wheelchair as Role of the Senate in the Governance a result, efte lectured last month about the 1973 War United States." The symposium, which Powers Act- which limits the presi- will be held in the Fine Arts Center, will dents power to declare war and deploy also feature speakers such as Senator U.S. troops. Javits was one of the prime Nancy Landon Kassembaum (R- sponsors of the Act, which was being Kansas), chairman of the African revived in Congress during the past Affairs Subcommittee of the Senate month in response to the U.S. troops in Foreign Relations Committee; Senator Lebanon. Charles Mathias (R-Maryland), chair- A special library exhibit of Javits man of the Rules Committee; and Sena- memorabilia will open on Oct. 17 as tor Claiborne Pell (D-Road Island), well. Among the items to be displayed ranking minority member of the For- are: Photographs of Javits and Presi- eign Relations Committee. University dents John Kennedy (Ted's Bro), Lyn- President John Marburger will chair don Johnson, Richard Nixon and Gerald the symposium. Ford; campaign buttons, original politi- cal cartoons given Statesman/Mike Chen Senator Kennedy, who has repres- to Javits by the Mario Cuomo ented Massachusetts in the Senate since artists, letters and wards.

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0--- XCEnHACTER C9» Das. Ev" W&Vtef!fc Date: 10110, Monday .%OSEVELT FIELD 516-248-1134 * Place: Union Auditorium HJNTlNGTON 516-421-2690 FIVE TOWNS 516-2952022 Time: 8pm

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mmmn , Breakfast, Lunch 6 - hFountain Treats ,Campu Spec 2 eggs 2 French Toost 2 eggs Home Fies Home F Small Juiceo^ , Toas or CoMfeu9n Cofee Muffn- FRIUTIVO j *IT-- I HA'RCUTS _reeM~ffta with -aet- I $KY =^^mjil TH. I % C B-t ith SUSBID ^^*WRSWCHlH5!UCT m TH QLM ^ more effective." Eve added, "The university has to be N- assertive and aggressive. The university 3^ The Hillel Student itself has to have a committment...This Club at Stony Brook is a Jewish cultural, ethnic, and social * organization they have not done." X- that has received Polity support for over 14 years. * -s N- In 1982-83 Hillel received a line budget from Polity of $2185. N- m CO) 1^ ^ c Hillel submitted a detailed budget request for 1983-84 based on a successful z 3^ year of programming and a growing demand for Jewish cultural, ethnic, and 3^ N- social activities on campus. N-

^ Jewish students pay activity fees like every other Stony Brock student, but are 0 3 being denied the right to use them for Jewish activities.3^

Polity has funded the activities of every cultural and ethnic group at Stony ' 0 1 p 3 Brook except those of Jewish students.

a We demand the reinstatement of Hillel at Stony Brook as a Politv line budget club and a restoration of its operating budget. - By All

BOARD or -3( THE HILLEL STUDENT *WaWTON Robert Zenilman, President 3^***************************^ « - Editorial----- A Noble Move

Apathy. It's a word used repeatedly by Stony Brook officials and student leaders to describe involvement in campus affairs. The word has appeared in this space numerous times, in editorials designed to inspire stu- dent participation. This editorial will use the word apathy, but only in voicing our opinion about a group of students who have taken steps to battle it. Last night the Graduate Student Organization decided to adopt a proposal to absorb the students of the Center for Continuing Education (CED) as its members. Although this move will dissolve the '. CED Student Government, the very move was iniitiated by the members of this government. In light of the power struggles and personal drives for office we're used to seeing in student politics this is quite a noble action. The leaders of the CED Student Government supposedly pointed to the groups overall inactivity as one of the reasons for the move. The president of the group was quoted as saying he felt the GSO would provide a more "distinct" voice for, e A, CED students, who have been relatively unrepresented . eTTers in the past. The move is sure to bring about only positive results. It only strengthens both organizations: CED stu- Disgusted Over their food as a group on the cam- of the ;sature hove passed, a dents in increased representation and the GSO in added Poor Turnout pus They bought food on a large *1.25 billion Rebuild New York funds and membership. But what impresses us most scale and were able to receive dis- Bond Issue to provide funds to ren- about the move is the motivation behind it: to improve T o th e pid: sr counts which were passed onto the ovate roads, bridges, waterways, the lot of a group of students rather than a few. It's a I wishto express pity sonrowand students who belonged to the co- rails and arpot facilities. As the lates on gesture not seen on this campus very often - but one th ei u to m yf e ll owtci $mt op. In return, the students took sweeping, bi-partisan endorse- towards responsibility for cooking, cleaning, mens iof the Rebuild New York that raises hopes when it is seen. Hope that maybe the preaing the Fine Arts. i. When buying, collecting the money and Bond Issue demonstrates, the need word apathy may not have to be used as often as it has. do they expe to learn cuAture if managing the operation. Their for this program is dear. All that's left for the move to be completed is the they do not actively perrticipate responsibilities were fair in that To help your readwes decide this approval of Fred Preston, vice president for Student .,now? once a week, one would either cook issue for themseves, I have Affairs. We urge him to promptly recognize a decision On Oct. 1the Friends of the1 Fine or clean. Buying and managing dieted tha informational mate- based on care for student input and approve the plan Arts Center (FFA) started thmir new entailed different hours. rials be made available upon requested by the GSO. sason with world renown sopran-X Dinner was served at 6:00 and request The mateas can be oist Judith Blegan and acclaimed ended around 7:00. It was a great obtsined by writg: Bond Informa- pianist Martin Katz. I could barely place to socialize and gt away tion Tam* Force, Building 5, 1220 count 20 students at the show. One from academia for awhile. The food Washington , Albany, New would at least expect Statesman a better stu- consisted of rice, -vegetables,York 12232; or calling a toll-free dent gathering at the reception, beans, tofu, tAmpoh, home baked inomation number, 1-800-424- - Fall 1983- where free cordials, cocktails, pet- bread, fresh fruit denserts and nuts, 4421. its fours Glenn J. Taverna and cookies, were served. seeds and raisins. One could so as The need is rea and the issue is Is this the kind Editor-in-Chief of fedbackthat much as possible for $2.25a meal. important I urge your readers to one can expec from the so-called Harkness East was in existence know the facts and make their vote culturaly rounded student of Ray Fazzi Therese Lehn Stony for nine years and was just closd count by supporting the Rebuild Managing Editor Brook? I do not want to hear any Business Manager down late last semester. We would New York Bond Issue on Nov. 8. excuses like: "I hate Opera," or like to re-establish Harkness, and Mo Cuomo Alan Golnick "that tickets are too expensive." are encouraging both old members Govenor. New York Elizabeth Waterman You cannot hate Shakespeare until end new members alike to come to Deputy Managing Helen Przewuzman vou have read him. And for the lat- Editors a meeting on Wednesdayto di- Associate Editor ter. tickets were no more than $12 cuss this mater. The meeting will for student in advance. I hardly call . DIRECTORS take place in the [Stony Brook) Stu- that for a live perfor- Nows Direcdo - Mitch Wagner dent Union in room 226 at 5:30 PM Arts mance, since Directors (Actws Mark Neston Rock concert tickets on Oct. 5. Paul Miotto verage $1 6.Besde, the FFA rec- If you're a commuter who hag no SporaDirector Barry Mione ognizes the students' money Photo Dirctor David Jasse placeto go for a good dinner at dilemma and issues all of their EditorwI Pe" Di-ctor Geoffrey Reiss inexpensive prices, or tired of buy- icv unsold tickets, one-half hour prior ing a yogurt for 91 cents and a but- EDITORS to the pformance for $3. It is inap- tered bagel for 60cents, come Nowf Editor ^== David Brooks propriately called, Art* Editor "Student down and earnabout Susan Bachner RushIl" Harkes. Sports Editors Michael Borg, Silvana Derni, Elobetih Aiene - Teresa Hoyla JRose (0 Photo Editors Howard Breuer, Man Cohen, Simmy PlStok is Kenniy Rockwell,Corey Van der Undo Undergraduate <0 gor iic Editors Ken Copel, Anthony Detres ASSISTANT EDITORS Rebuild AWmnt-Z11~~~~~~~~~~~~1 Now Editors Carolyn Brokle, Carol Lofwo. M 1rhaRochford, Andrea P i*-tb New York Aistbant Sports Editor A" Glucaft Assistant logo mse r Laurette Altman, Lary Glade. What Happened Bond Issue Cary Sun To Harkness To he Edt:

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I .IMJ^ No.r. , , .^ Tempt. at ion' ' . " fin;- * - *this ^.. . 'Ederl. .. t-y -usan nacimUrA According to its press reledse, The Garbage of Eden,' Fourth Wall Reperatory's-political cabaret review, playing at the Truck and Warehouse Theatre in Manhattan, is a "reckless romp ii-through the. mie of American democracy," It is reckless, per- haps. Romp, though? Would you consider someone repeatedly M'bashing you over the head pnd screaming , 'The fascists are - cmingl The fascists are comingl", much of a romp? 'The Gar- ,bage of Eden" is just as entertaining. The "satiric barbs" it -claims to throw at "American militarism, banks, other nuclear -profiteers and the oppressive realities of Reaganomics" are -about as sharp as jello, well intentioned and right though they may be. The unfortunate part is, if the above mentioned fascists --were at this very moment, goose-stepping down your block, how much credence would you lend to such an obnoxious and tedious bearer of the news? A major problem with this show, is that it is an exercise in excess. The theatre group is comprised of two hundred people, who rotate shows, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday. These two hundred supposedly include professional musicians, writers, actors, and directors, in addition to social workers, teachers, chemists, carpenters, artists, lawyers, doctors and students, -who all make their contributions gratis. One song in the show sardonically encourages the unemployed to turn to show biz for lack of something better to do;"' When there's no business, there's show business." This could explain why all these chem- ists and lawyers, so sadly lacking in acting ability, are pursu- ,-.ing a career on the boards. Another reason could be to impress their friends and relatives who, judging by audience conversation, seem to fill the small theatre. Considering that there are at least fifty-odd (pun most devoutly intended) people on stage at any moment, its a safe bet that anyone in the audience was related to one of them. Unfortunately, the quality of the show is an argument in itself against the sort of collective effort of the masses which the show promotes. Its a mess. But it seems less a case of too many cooks spoiling the broth, than no one good enough to save it. Incidentally,,it is impossible even to note one performance which shone slightly above the rest, because the cast is listed en masse, with no notations made for who did what. The show begins when brightly clad people run onstage and start jamming with musical instruments; a rock band with a brass section. In the show's favor, the band was tight, compe- tant, and obviously well rehearsed. Its a shame, though, that thev had no conceot of the accoustics of the small theatre. The ThW scum wf_ TM.plejiii~i iiiinj b by CIOPSck~i~rfi~opcLiu0- POIO inAin dM tiwftey. Pflt A *-- volume on all am ps seem ed to be turned up to "PFDint of no return."f . . (continued on page 3A) 3

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- - -~~~~~~~~~~ -'U'HEAm iE------w An Open Forum For Laughs by Alan Golnick him a prostitute from the house of terium, known for his erotic pot- val snaps the production into 'We shall never find true happ- Lycus, who is known as the "mer- tery collection, tries to convince place. iness," Hero tells his virgin Philia chant of love." Pseudolous picks Gloriosus that Philia is dead by Everyone in the cast now works in Theatre Three's production of up Philia, who awaits her masquerading as her corpse at toward a single goal: comedy. "A Funny Thing Happened on the betrothed warrior from the island her funeral. Butera is full of Goriosus chases after Philia to Way to the Forum." Philia replies, of Crete. Pseudolous tells Lycus energy and even has personality get her once and for all. Domina, "Then we will just have to be she has the plague so it's best as the late Philia. He shudders who suspected her husband of happy without it." Philia (Kathy she's separated from the rest of when Gloriosus wants to lift his fooling around with Phifia, is dis- Brovetto) doesn't know it, but she Lycus' inventory while she awaits veil to "give Philia one last kiss." guised as the virgin to test her has said a mouthful about the her meat from Crete. Anticipating And Brovetto as Philia is hard to hypothesis. Not noticing the dif- show in which she stars. the arrival of Miles Gloriosus (Eric resist. Her performance is ference, IGloriosus goes after "A Funny Thing Happened on W. Holte), Hero tells Philia they delightfully innocent as the girl Domina, too. And Pseudolous the Way to the Forum" is funny, "will never find true happiness." taught nothing beyond beauty chases after Hysterium, angry has a colorful set, a wonderful What Hero really means is that and grace, not much of a role that he wasn't a very convincing orchestra and some fine acting they won't find any sort of happi- model for the '80s woman. corpse. and singing. It's a funny show. new, if Gloriosus has his way. Unfortunately, the most "A Funny Thing Happened on But all the aforementioned ele- obvious talent in "A Funny Thing the Way to the Forum," playing at ments don't work together. And Redding, for all his wit, for his Happened on the Way to the 412 Main Street through Oct. 22, some of the greatest talent isn't Ralph Kramden/ Curly Howard Forum" is relegated to secondary ends on a funny note. It's an exploited fully. Uike Hero and Phi- mannerism, lacks a voice power- roles. Laura Eisenhart as Domina upbeat musical-comedy, with lia, Theatre Three's opening show ful enough to project out to the has a fabulous voice and charm- some rough casting edges, but it's of their fifteenth season doesn't audience. Smith, the other male ing repartee but she only pops on easy to appreciate Patrick DeGen- find true happiness. lead, has the same problem belt- stage now and then. And not until naro's strong musical direction Pseudolous (Jim Redding), ing out a tune. Their voices corn- Gloriosus arrives halfway into the and what Joseph Varga does with slave of Hero (Christopher E. pete with the orchestra, and lose. show do we have a strong, really Theatre Three's small stage. "A Smith) will do anything to be free. Anthony Butera has a major memorable character. Holte sinks Funny Thing Happened on the Hero says Pseudolous may have role asHysterium, slave to Senex his teeth Into his role, grunts, Way to the Forum," while not the his freedom if Pseudolous gets and Domina, Hero's parents. Hys- snorts and appropriately, his arri- ultimate, does the job. Anti-Nuke Play Drops A Bom b

. v~~~~~~~ O-% .W. - (continued from page 1A) music. Wizard of Oz, (Reagan is cast as the wic.ked The name of this first, very evidently home- Skits include, "Duet," where President witch,) is capped by the finale song, "Wori cfor imade political rock song was "Stop." Most of Reagan, and David Rockefeller introduce their It"..Here we are predictably urged, "'If you the lyrics were unintelligible, but they defi-"New, broad-based program, 'F-ck you', and want what you need, you gotta work for it.'' nitely advised stopping "factories and bomb- "Standing on Ceremony" where war veterans s till the whole thing gets rearranged. The get medals for losing limbs. The kicker is the Useful as that advice may be, the Focirth group claims to seek to "radicalize" people's guy with no head (a stunt ripped right out of WaH Reperatory's work stands as a rr lark thought. But 80 percent of the ideas it purveys 'The Leader" by lonesco, though this is no against it. Apparently good intentions and (anti-nuke, anti-Reaganomics, anti-war) are theatre of the absurd by a longshot). hard work are not the complete recipe for merely part of the mainstream liberalism A lengthy, tedious scene based on the good theatre. * - .. . _ LAi_ ^i:; ^ ^ which was built on and grew out oT tne aisserv of the sixties. The first skit, 'The Garbage of Eden," whict the show is pridefully named for, attempted tU m update the biblical story, now including cock en roaches and garbage cans. This ostensibil 2 purveyed the earth shattering thought tha z life on earth had become something less thar paradise. :> lyrics of the "Nuclear Rock"' states CD The SZ:3 eat a nuclear bomb, you can't driw CD "You can't »- You can'ttake a vacation on; a nuclear bomb. c nuclear bomb." No finer subtlety of message has been displayed since "Sesame Street" hi Q. the airwaves. Come to think of it, that bounc :3 (D tune did sound sort of familiar. (A Another upbeat tune called 'WIheelbar e) row" asserts "'it takes a wheelbarrow c money to buy a loaf of bread." No proposal ti -< ameliorate the situation was offered. Is thi o how Brecht got started? whcl (n Other sogs include "Banks,' -^ thanks "Mr. Banker for running the world. CDl "High level," about a high level official wh CO hires guards to protect him,"and he doesn Cro about you" (So what else is new?), an "Don't sign up for the draft," a well mear tryetse, although it doesn't cloud the issu with anything boring like reasons notto. All c CA) the above and all Other songs are piaywn ivj Oct. 6 at 8 PMl Tickets. at 97, »4 for students and senior citizns. imt bev wed bY caning tingthneFn A;sis C;er whatis obviouy the same. reworked piece ofle affsat246-6e78. EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT NOW PLAYING

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by Magnus J. Walsh talian scene where she sang Noria's aria - Judith Blegen, whose career as a soprano rom Donizetti's Don Pasquale (So anch'io la burgeoned after she made her successfu Airto magica). What made part of her perfor- debut at the Met in Donizetti's comic open mance especially intriguing was that for the L'Eliser d' amore, came to the Main Stage a First time she expanded the volume of her the Fine Arts Center Saturday night, to oper voice. Up to this point, she had sung in a lovely the center's 1983-84 season. soft range, but one really didn't know whether The concert began with two arias fron she would be able tobuild a fortissimo.But she Mozart's comic opera Die Entgrufung auo did, and it was fascinating to hear the voice dem Serail K384 (The Abduction from the expand. She was able to build a steady cres- Seraglio). The first aria, "Durch Zarlichkei cendo at various parts of the aria that capti- und Schmeicheln," Blegen had great contra vatd the audience. of her breath in order to hit the high E on the The second half of the program consisted of word "weicht-effortlessly.It was so light an two views of Juliette, which where Bellini's airy that one didn't realize the difficulty of h "O quantevulte" from I Capuletti ed I Monted- The second aria, not as demanding as th dhi and Gounod's "Je veux vivre" from first, was sung very clearly and she hit thi Rorneo and Juliette, followed by "Bidja" from notes accurately, which is important whel Lehar's famous work 'The Merry Widow.'" doing Mozart since if one note is missed itwi During these three selections, the audience ruin the flow of the piece. was quiet and motionless. Blegen was able to Following the Mozart, came five li ders b entrance the audience. Mendelssohn. Two of them Blegen sang di1 The last selection of the program were a set ferently than marked in the score. In "Neu of songs from Rodrigo's Cuatro Madrigales Uebe," she decided not to emphasize th Amatorio. These songs are becoming very staccato s, which made the performanc popular in the song recital repertoire, because much smoother. The staccato notes, if take one feels the warmth of the Spanish lyrics and seriously, would have added a chill to th rhythms. *ugbfa hteAgsQb nf thyi ehnnnml nhrase Special attention should be made of Martin PICra Mw^»ww wW%»VVVV%5W%~- Soprano JudithMgen Instead, she chose to mesmerize the audience Katz's outstanding performance as an accom- with pianissimo. slower to let the notes ring a little longer in pianist. He always measured the phrases The other song that she did differently was order to carefully measure the phrases. carefully and never overpowered Blegen's 'Venetianisches." Here she took the tempo From the German lieder, she moved to the singing. -Ai--- Shr a -h--- Cindy~~~~~~~her man Shoots Hersel~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f

Vy Howard Breuer same woman-Cindy Sherman. -pon examining th 44 ph ras on dis- "As a child, I kioed to dress myself and put on 8 Sply in the Fine Arts Gallery, you might first makeup, wigs, other people's clothing," said notice that they are all of women. Some are Sherman. "I photographed myself for an Art :btude, others brunette. Some look like movie project when I was attending Buffalo State I stars, others like working class housemaids. College, and since then I have photographed I (A You notice different moods, dispositions, no one other than myself."' I m ackgro unds. What you would not gues is IAccording to Thom Thompson, curator of thata# of the pictures were shot of and by the the exhibit, this is the largest collection ever I1 assembled of Cindy's work. It is also the first I Va time that there has ever been a photography I in the Fine Arts exhibit by one photographer 2 Gallery. 4t^k^lk 1i Thompson has broken down the artist's a :co work into four separate groupings. The first are color horizontal photographs, taken in 1981 and inteAd as magazine centerfods I M one photo appeared in Art Form, Life and t Newsweek Mageazines. These photos all show co her loking like the "vulnerable" woman, accodi to Thompson. Thesd vertical nowr cr color grouping came out in 1982; in this group tUndd Min Sf No. 38. 1979 5 she looks more a VOti"I set these two grouping up o to o not," Thompo untitled. Sherman claims she wouldn't want a C son said, in order to play each off of the other." Iphoto title to influence a person's perception e The third grouping shows Cindy in the fore- of4 the work. X ground, with an intriguing slide prtion in The show is sponsored by Metro Pictures. a the bcgWound. "Because of tchnl pro b- So Ho gallery specializing in media-oriented lems, dose are somewhat out of focus,"" Iartists. It will run up to Nov. 2. All spectators Sheian said. don'tI do that kind annxoe/4 should find the photos to be an extremely The foth going is 14 black and white Ipowerful stimulant to the eyes and the w > movie stills. As are all her pictures, thO are imugnto. ' O ShOw8MWOda, public s_ ha. l

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= .. s aG -TREASURER- -COMMUTER SENATORS eD A= 9 REP. -STUDENT ASSEMIBLY REP 5 -STONY 2BROOK COUNCIL a -mBUIDING SENATOR -FRESHMAN REP. A: c - 5 a e RESIDENTS VOTE IN YOUR BUILDING. =s = a c - COMMUTERS VOTE IN THE LIBRARY. 5 9 Cry 5 UNION, OR LECTURE CENTER. au A: 9 ae: ex The following referenda will also be on the ballot: a c Do you wish to rdise th student e = a fe $5S.O0 (per udent per - : Cry eB

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If you ar interested in being a BALLOT COUNTER or POLL WATCHER BE** *^ .^ ^* apply in Room*^ 258, 2nd floor of the Uroon, between 9am-5pn. Application deadline 5pm FRIDAY, OCT. 7th! k**> ** e„. - ^ a-4 in Room 258,Arncho 2nd PeoplRoor dotinoTnhn PwnrbBttr . ;' .". Fleet wood Minus the'Mac' p

I'm-Not Mbe play flashy solos- but the music album. Mick was striving for a songs on this record are really Mick Fleetwood's Zoo they make and the groups they "band spirit" on this album which offensive, but that seems to be RCA play in bear a stamp as individual he really fails to pull off. The the problem. This is such inoffen- as a fingerprint." If this be the music lacks any real verve or sively mediocre musicl There are, by Boett RMil case, Mick must have been wear- energy, which is criminal when however, two songs which do Question: Why does Mick ing gloves when he made this you cover a real rocker like 'Tear deserve some mention: "You Fleetwood bother making solo record. Mick himself further ft Up." Most of the songs on the Might Need Somebody," and albums? Does the fact that he assures us as he tells us, "Yes, album seem totally devoid of 'This Love." These songs capture happens to be a founding member this is a solo album; I consider it emotion. some of the creativity that Fleet- of one of the most popular bands originally my project in terms of Mick Fleetwood's first album wood Mac do. It is unfortunate of the seventies give him the right pulling people together that I The Visitor worked better that Mick can't keep that spark of to do these things7 He certainly enjoy playing with. And it makes because he spent lots of RCA's charismatic pop flair and run it has his place as drummer for sense to put my name on the money to go to Ghana, Africa to through the whole album. Maybe FLeetwood Mac, but this guy has cover because I'm the best known record it. There he experimented Nixon can help him with that as no more place doing a solo album (musician on the album]." That's with African rhythyms and well. than Allen Ginsberg has writing good logic, Mick, why don't you things. Most of "I'm Not Me was It's obvious that Mick needs lyrics for Joe Strummer (which put Richard Nixon's name on the recorded at Mick's house in something to do when he's not Ginsberg did by the way.) cover of your next album because Malibu, It doesn't give you that involved with his "other band," All that Fleetwood does is play he's better known than you. He same exotic flavor, does it? This drums on this album. He doesn't doesn't sing or write songs either. album sounds as though Mick but why doesn't he leave solo sing. He doesn't write any of the Aside from Fleetwood, Zoo spent too much time drinking albums to the likes of Buddy Rich material. He doesn't even play a consists of guitarist/singer Billy wine with Perrier spritzers on the and Billy Cobham? What is it with solo. As a matter of fact, he Bumette, bassist/ singer Goerge beach. Perhaps he was going for balding drummers like Mick doesn't even appear at all on one Hawkins and guitarist/singer that "CA mellow" sound. Four of Fleetwood and Phil Collins that of the songs. This man does not Steve Ross. Christine McVie and the 1 1 songs on this record are makes them think they can build sound like a good candidate to Undsey Buckingham also lend covers. Among these include a solo careers? Mick says it best record even one solo effort, yet some of their prowess to this 1979 Beach Boys' tune "Angel when he talks about the video it's been done two times already. effort. The band first got together Come Home," and 'Tear It Up" he's doing for the album, "...I'm ft sounds like RCA is preying on when Lindsey Buckingham asked which was co-written by Dorsey not singing; I'm acting out a part. Fleetwood Mac fans again. these boys to help him out when and Johnny Burnette (Billy's Steve [Ross) will be mumbling out At any rate, the correct answer he appeared on "Saturday Night father and uncle, respectively). a few words here and there, (according to RCA) is, 'Some Live'" Fleetwood then turned it The rest were written by because I don't want people to musicians are born leaders. They into a working band when he Bumette, Hawkins and Ross with think for one moment that I'm might not write songs, sing or asked them to help with this various co-writers. None of the actually singing." JiJ.Cale's Number is Up Jt side on the disc and is lowlighted by the lyric cut on the side is enough to keep any listener J.J. Cale on a song titled "Hard Times." The opening at quite a distance from the record. "Tear- Mercury/ Poly Gram line on that number is, "Hard times, hard drops in my Tequila" is the clear low water times, they took my woman." You get the mark on #8 as it combines the absolute worst by G eoff Re;s picture. elements from the entire album into one truly J.J. Cale's newest releas, #8, is an unre- The second side isn't really all that different terrible song. Teardrops" is the only song markable collection or original material that is from the first except for the second track, that Cale didn't write or co-write. How it frequently smothered by a heavy handed "Unemployment."' Again, the lyric is weak, if found its way onto this record is a mystery. production. not altogether meaningless, but at least this #8 is an album that was a lost cause when CA Cale, best known for writing two of Eric song features a strong guitar solo that is laid its songs were written. Only a slick production Clapton's most successIu songs, "Cocaine" over a soulfull repetitious guitar in the could have saved the project, but instead a m en -and "After Midnight," wrote 10 of the 11 background. poor effort in the studio buries the album and undistinguishable songs that leaves the lis- As good as "Unemployment" is, the fourth turns #8 into a repetitious bore. > tener empty-handed. After hearing the record the listeer is also hard put to recall a single >

song, b use the album lack* a single mem- X _ s S 3 orable melody. Not that the most important "* _ W WJ Q» requirement in an album is the presence of * " * * f * W melody. There are several other criteia that taIk -Ing must be met namely thwughtful lyrics, cear and img prodtion. CL #8 can't by M- Hri brothers themselves, the show documents claim dn of theme quafitsch o ^04c Cahe writ in a uniq syt combine Earth Walk, a graphic slide show on th

u Xri~~~~~~~~~INTHE POLITY SUTL i tl( W n f^~~~~~~COME CELBRATE THE EGG-OS w ...... 1BIRTHDAY AT THE RNH A #4 ^ =»«n 111 in --n--> -U -X -111 ii . TALENT SHOW2t! A- E The Latin American "m Student Organization HARKNESS EAST MEETING A --A . I

h 2,0 ~(L. ~~~~~ A. S. 0.).~]D WED OCT.' 5th .- fI Cordially invites you to its First Annual T hK f t C . ll 9 1~"REUNION LATINA'` 2 at .J 3O J. *l ~~to be held on Oct. 13, 1983 from 6pm-9pm >^ in the Fine Arts Center Lobby. For more Harkness is a Vegetarian !^ reference we invite all to our next general meeting CO-Op run by Students f Thurss..rdon Oct. 6. 1983 at the Union on oom 231 designed to create healthy dinners We'll discuss issues involving proposed activities - = . - deige il -for the year, etc. at discount prices. -I-. |f LATINOSI IT IS IMPERATIVE THAT YOU ATTENDINew members and old are encouraged to atte u ^~ p. s. You may be eligible for our scholarshi.- I A acI F"TALLANCE PA 'S. j^Sl^S A x s eE l ^ ~~~~~~~~General membership Meting Jf ^ ^---i ^^^B_ -1 ~~Every11 Thursday at 8pm &s - AxF-^5tn-X-^ -EVRW i n Un io n Roo m 22 3 Ne w members "»P -arealways welcome! Ea: AN IBVECNINGWITH ..b yC EDDIE GRAfNT- WX~~~~~8 PM SATURDAY. OCT. 29tn T A LC U ; In the Stony Brool Gym.TO A L CLUBS TICKETS GO ON SAIE SOON!! « PAi- E ]FATHER GUIDO SARDUCCVI Mln n bySc,Mp : F jtf OCTOBER 14th f c o m Po S and n U -. h1C) N IHE UNION AUDLITORIUM MCl or* o lag- 8 2 show.- 8&10 pm h on rt ~~o flp^ . TICKETS $6 students $8 public ^ tg 9< ~ TICKFT.S N SAI F NOW Ul Cmllo C& i m u _? STONY BROK SPEAKERS »

I sA and TOYUO JuE'S are hlping SINGLES * 11.l Blood Servicen*-e t t ot t l a o o e f ¥ THE ANNUAL BLOOD DRIVE y n i i - p n an d_ wo-e^.e< %;+ 4. --" r -) io the Gym on Oct. Sth from 11-7:30 pm p WOtm. - FREE PASSES TO TOKYO JOES WILL BE 7 SO p by the I Ofie " INW9 GIVEN TO DONATORS FROMI THE DORM THAT sig n u p toda y.(Gy-mid BdldtBd G-7. For _ ,_ < *1 GIVES THE MOST BLOOD. -_l "wrt o, 6818 - C ta = .C^Wt^^Ui^VI^^V^ WHee~nf~l)~1dM ~~~~~~~~~fo* )P9p9 9k *qT7»i>^»mjmii"_2"t _ m ~pm_ liri -Vie wpooi------GSEU -Means -Democracy -I Rick Edwtin of others. This is what a union is sup proesor emphatially concluded, if an This transformation may not be reflec- There's nothing like a hot room and ply aboe and, indeed, what any adviser is abusing some relationship, tive every in that hot rooar 1; p9O- cold beer to efkit the best argument in democratic organization is about; Listen- what are graduate students possibly pie's minds might have chant ,ed in town. With the" elfemets both abund- ing to aH those involved in order to syn- going to do about it as individuals? exactly the opposite direction. BIut this ant, the Graduate Students Employees thesize a course of action best suited for On the far side of the steamy room, one outspoken person was swayed Iby the Union (GSEU) organizational "party" all those inanoed nother union supporter agreed that argumentspresnted Hewasppes uaded (held on Sept 16 it 6 PM) was the piae taxes might be taken out of our stipend if to logically re-evaluate his position. And to be if arguing is your gig. Many of those coming to consume bor graduate student employees are recog- if general atmospheres can be 9Auged, and to sweet were markedy against a nized as "real" empMoIee rather than he was not alone in his reconsider Jtions. Weas darted back and forth as those graduate student mle union. One synthetic" employes. But, what benef- both for an against a rdute students in particubr hold the fbo for a few min- its might we derive from this status "au A crucial point was realized: this uni- union spake. Constantly cradling voices utes and got- right to the point: What natural?"' What about decent health versity (and the other SUNY schools) can- -of conficting opinions competed with -about his rwe onship wkh his adviser; insurance now denied us because we are not function without the very "real" work each other for space in the GSO what about reteaation from the adminis- 8"aticial' employees? Under our pros- of graduate students- both in the class- Lounge- already crowded with ove 100 tration; what about the income tas that ent oera, e only thing graduate room and in the xerox room. If our sti- curious bodies. Anyone familiar with the wil be taken out of our stipends? Aren't students can afford is dying. And with the pends wer gifts, as some folks insist, they Eskimo name-calling ritual would think we better off not rocking the boat? *igh cost of funeral expenses.... would come without stipulations. In real- this exhibit was some re-enactment- in And what about a written contract ity, the lives of graduate student a slightly more tepid environen t. A psychology prof countere the exicil defining our duties as GAs, TAs employees abound in stipulations. Real first argument sing tha most profes- and RAs? Or do we enjoy having our gifts do not come with strings attached. And this was the real beauty of it this is sors belong to a union themsehes. duties arbitrarily defined daily by the con- w-hat made the afternoon priceless: Bides, he added, relationships with tent of the wastebaskets or what needs Unions are an organizational tool rational discourse. Exchange of ideas. professrsshould be acadeiic in nature immediate xeroxing? What should be which can only be what the members Easing ignorance through the knowI rather than businesslike. Finally, this expeced of us as graduate students and make them. Unions can help workers as employees? And, most importantly, realize the full value of their labor. Almost how are we going to insure that our any GA, TA or RA will agree that they are desires are fulfilled? How can one person grossly underpaid for their services. Not apply leverage against an entire systems all, but enough to make us think it is a The Republican Band Presently, if our employer- for wha- serious public issue rather than the per- tever arbitrary reason- is less than sonal problems of individuals. Perhaps plead with our labor, our stipends can the GSEU is not a panacea. But it is still A id: Ronald Reagan be eliminated. Case closed. No hearing is young enough and accessible enough to required and no unemployment benefits allow for more of the democratic dis- course so rampant at this "party." The We are students at the great equalizer received- for only "real" employees are By Ed Ref - upcoming statewide delegate assembly sopped doing it to in our egalitarian society- the state uni- eligibe for such compensation. It mems Republicans hwe (Oct. 15 in Binghamton) provides a grand their country, Democrats, W their versity. We still think we live in the best that when our stipends end after 10 ear, are only opportunity for grass roots ideas that O'secretaries. country in the world. We still know ours is months, or simply "artifi- have a real impact. Nixon, Ford, Carter- a virtual Mount the happ and most vi usplace. We " tcally" unemployed and cially" hungry. Rushmore of incom e has given illbelieve: The be is yet to come: Because as it stands now, if we gradu- At this point in the discussion, some- way to a capital "R' republican BandAid: ate studenu have a beef about our jobs, With training, with skill, without inex- one recounted a first person example of Rond Reagan. what can we possibly do about it? How periene, we have a glue that keps us an abruptly disappearing stipend. He Those days of getting our financial can we possibly hope to bargain with an from failing apart: being profssional. assured those gathered that his goose cooked in a jajkpot of inflatio and employer who has total control and alternative station- was very real =unemplom t, those dys are bygone. The amateur, a somewwhat exalted cul- power? How? Unions have worked indeed. And that only by working in a Yet we still get annualy skined by, a ture hero, is too much a luxury, not "blue throughtout history at giving workers local sweatshop could he afford to pay his taxidermist, the IRS. johip" enough. some control over the decisions affecting very real rent and food bills. Thoe days of using our arms inead their lives; at establishing a truly demo- The iron law d momen- Th11 rather feverish discussions, and our hads, tOee daff all but gone. cratic process. There's no logical reason tum, ally to the stow quo. the traditional vcountless others, continued well past But if we do not epowr yes's and no's in why a union can't work similarly for grad- gool or arnimng lots of money and making sunset. Opinions continued dancing the NUKES bu w might d up uate student employees- unless having one's merk in the worKd has not lost its around like ping-pong bels in the wind. with the abominable No-Man. other people run our lives as they see fit is ap ea . , .. - Then, just like in the movies, the person Those days of rIbeion, drugs, mysi- an attractive alternative. that originally spoke against the union cism, intellectuansm, ifdoet idt sWef Omr geatbon does not question up and publically changed his Which. is what we have on our hands pity that belied true pretentions- those -'ow awe we going to live?" It only s, etaod mind- saying there were facet he had right now. daJsong with the *1 don't care. I don't '"Ho.ware we going to owm a living?" not considered before, and that he was {The writer is a second yew Stony Brook 'bww. I doisn't make any difWence" fThe writer is a Stony Brook now su ring the union. graduate stude.) -attitude- those d" amr gone too. undrgedetj =

- -~~~~~~~A 0

I. m S~mtaot jeIs man Have Something to Say? V)

Statesman will accept all letters rep looking :-for news land viewpoints from its z readership. They must be typed, 09 :> and sports tripled-spaced, signed and 0 phone number to include your CL writers--join -the and address. Letters must not €0 exceed 350 words, and 00 wax teaLe- L P; now'Io ! For viewpoints must not exceed 1,000 words; both are printed on 4- more -Info contact a first come, first served basis. They can be delivered in person HGlsenn' w Ray. at to Union room 075 or mailed to I- P.O. Box AE., Stony Brook, N.Y. 11 790. i -246-3690-- a L -I ------A- Ak -4w -;,-. 4. - 4&ba& - abHe-- a. - N- X_.A - '.- K- - ob Uv *v=.fl^trx,-.,k,;;.>_-+3F- ^IV '_-?* Ad.- tk-', Ao- - A o4-v- VHo liciirruabI.~ ~~~~~~1~oI'Sutn . . P,,pTIrfTelds kg OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ltflian Restsuumn * ______331-1WC I || || 4 B AS AWAY.11 PON 0 JUIIgM _ Free. Delivery To Your Dorm Or Office * Fast, ------lw %.F r- I I _ * I - -a A I l*argee IO" Pizza FRIED CHICKEN Iree Lunch Restaurant ! DELIVERED RIGHT TO YOUPDOC * Tinis coupon entities + $5 * O O ~plus tax bearer to 1 Free Luncheon I when accompanied by a person Moed. I 4" Pizza ~from 2.10 purchasing an entree of equal C Snc-e 0 o or greater value. Chicken Snack 1 2 (2 i nd french f(nesj Must be presented before ordering + $4.5 0 I-ax Ct-.cken Dinner in combination with anv other coupons. 3. Not good 14pieces itench tries coleslaw) | ' - Eph-os Oete19. I - + Mini 12' Pizza Checksn BuAkdd I= r - e n b M b m 4 v~iet 2..60+ + $3$50,^-.. 8 ieceD - . - - 4 - - - - a * ***Tuesday Special***** 2 pieces e 8 -00 * 16 pieces - i 11 .00 + Large 1611 Pizza A20 r!ces : 13 I60S^ lw t~~~~~w Let GOODIES cater you, H«l Parties - I,^ p s * $-075 lu tax_ 3 6 foot heroes available .lo r| - - ,Wb~ss( VILAGvte --I A0 -ft AKWV I! i M!E VLAZAvmt =lt N xT Rickels/ Brooktown PlazaX Finasi Q -§6. SETaUKET TavSNUFT HHallodc Road and Rt. 347 751-3400) H Brook East Setauket | Stonky 751-95H ~~~~~~751-9618 f r - I $2.00 OFF | * " -- I. l: any cake {or larger | Any ^ i Softt - 1 B. l I ;'Serve '99I I

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Sq- - Oct. 14 co in a I- X 'Xc Statesman Personal 3: ,_-fll z 4a I 1 12 s-CI _9MS_ s_^^ 15 words for I 2 bucks... What a Barain! GSO Approves CED Membership

(continued from patge 3) Hill said he feels that CED students CED students was first brought up by will be adequately served under the Alio last semester according to Hoff who plan because of the GSO's involvement was then the GSO president "He told in various university organizations. =me of the inactivity of the CED Student .7We're a full-wale organization," he Government," Hoff said. After he polled said. "The GSO has representatives on -the CED students and found that they ; the Graduate Council and the Univer- were in favor of being represented by sity Senate. It suppors SASU [the Stu- the GSO, we both started to work out the dent Organization of the State details of the change." Univerity]... We're an organization that Alio declined to comment on the can actively represent the interests of details of the plan, saying they have yet our members-especially in times of to be "fine tuned." But he confirmed that budgetary duress." Hill added that the CED Student Government would be although there will be -two CED dissolved if the proposal takes effect, repreentatives on the senate if the plan adding that there are currently five stu- goes into effect, the possibility of adding dents holding positions with the more "$is an -option for future £0overnment . consideration.'

sEACH. °O.. :Advertise-In -Statesman

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t.Q /- Ralph Nader Lectures on Civic Activism l

(continued from page 1) computers," he said. He added that while 'capability to transform the world is up, risk in destroying the world is up." As a lame duck, Reagan would "go for broke," said Nader. He predicted 'more money to bail out big busi- ness," and "the destruction of health and safety regula- tions," if Reagan were re-elected. "do you want Ronald Reagan and the Fortune 500 to totally rule this country for the next five years or do you want Glenn or Mondale to run this country in-a slightly more open fashion," he asked-. Nader strongly expressed his support of the New York Public Interest Group (NYPIRG), and called "the most active and effective citizen group in the state. He cited a number of NYPIRG's achievements, including the group's work on toxic wastes and the bottle bill, and urged students to support Tuesday's referendum to raise NYPIRG's funding from $2.10 to $3.00 per student. He called NYPIRG's work "an example of what students can do in numbers," and told

students to "get out and vote for that referendum." He ,tatesman/Doreen Kennedy added that groups like NYPIRG are "building the most important career role; the career role of full time Ralph Nadw public citizen." which would include wind power and other alternative produces plutonium. He called it "a very dangerous Nader gave the audience a taste of what he is most energy sources, as well as solar enery. "If we solarized reactor," "a white elephant," and said that the reactor famous for: consumer advocacy. years ago, would we not be so worried about acid rain is "the first nuclear plant in the United States which and the greenhouse effect," he asked. could explode." * He said that if the Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant were operational, "if it had an accident, it could make a *"Cars on the highway are still averaging less than 20 *He supported a proposal to form the Telecommunica- large part of Long Island permanently uninhabita- miles per gallon. They should be averaging 70 miles tions Citizens Utility Board (TeleCUB), a non-profit ble." He called electric heat "an absurd misuse of elec- per gallon," he said, but are not because "this is what organization that would represent consumers before tricity," and said that whether a home has electric or -the oil companies are interested in." their public strvice commissions. gas heat was "a battle between the gas and electric *He condemned a Department of Energy proposal to Nader concluded his lecture by one again urging industry," with "a choice based on kickbacks." renew funding for the Clinch River Breeder Reactor, a civic action. He said that students have both the assets - He said that Long Island could be "solarized," type of nuclear reactor that is fueled by uranium and and the power to "etch the conscience of a nation." l

I ednI - ~Schcxxl o)f Lanje wishes to announce that an admission officer will be on campus in Sunday...* to speak with anyone interested in pursuing a legal education. To arrange an interview or to attend a group session, contact OOPIs! the office listed below. rif- Date: Thursday -"Contact: Career Planning cn October 6, 1983 & Placenent Office v I rji Fast, Free z Delivery I 751 -5549 0 t of Stony Brook Railroad Station I 10 1 Doz $3.75 smSac 01 &=;fs: CO as 2 Doa $5.25 00 G» .-- . ~-coupon - *-- WE SERVE I NEROS - CAkLZWES FRE COKE1: l~ - *N-$4.751ftdS l Pzza2 I X 1 $ 1 2 cowS"ranAu D Oct. 14th only C; It~r-t~fi~iaml FM et p ,iLJT ] 15 words for $2.00 I lam-l am d mq o" OULSIr^~ow W. 1 a VWd am AISM- ^ am - mm - v - w You couldn't say it *wfof _~ SISRWto de fN , FM.FM.RE H MM

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Sony Brook. ^^^ * "^^^^ | Seldn or Lw Grw w-. Call FENDER STRAT for sale. Asking I had the gre _ w h t Ruth Frankl tner with vou at Free Pregnancy Testing R a 248390, owveckey 12I "50.00. Need cash right away. ELECTROLYSIS: Tokyo Joe's fllow ESA. recom- AUDREY-Your fatl huft Hoa dining to "So Many Men." I Family noon o P M Unique color off white sunburst certified Planning Counseling 6 . f inginto silver. 246-4716. mnded by physidan. Modern Hap birthday anyway. Loa know tht will be a grew snior method - Constultations invited your- panri- y-or, because you're all f STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL f WANTED-MOTHERS H*%4 - rrifidt-Stephanie I SOFA BED-Brand now, must- Walking dclo Hneto cwapus. M n no n e-ca 'hmM1Wmmwav LIC. PHYSICIAN'S OFFICE 2 "- ckw s e oc- LI I sdl. *79. Call 6-3700 ask for 751-860. w i h Uonday 12:30 to 1:30. AN we PHOTOGRiPHERS, WRITERS, I MEDICAID, - ^tw t c~tkrvi - Hours I » IBROKENBICYCI LE?Profaaional \v"elCome for c and cookies A oha Stony Brook c...... I and Master Card f m ReiR rWNe^331-5327. Icampusl FREE Ae will be resing future m-n Thurs. VVisa 72 TOYOTA Corona, automaticrps irs dormon \ students, Oct 6 at * W Accepted o WANTED DEAD or aih: Formw r good runningsmany new parts. stimatesm Lowrose. Fats to rvate anthe nedxman. 7:00 M is Specula's first staff PtU. Sci. 220 studert" pobf I Call after 4 PM 699560. overhauls. Call 2 146-5774 Peter. I J ' ro THE GIRL from and-I MW inuolv with theU84yearbook f rwcas of l Asp or Act5 Z. 'v GARAGE SALE. VrietylStony AUTO REPAIR ft» car, V.W. fou again at the sock hop on walcome. I CanI Brook Rd. Hellock Orbit 5 Olympia. spcialist. Room mble rtes. 1Thursday night. You wr wear-_- Friday 10-7. 9-3. Bart 924-8788o r928-4654. ing a purple minl kidn. You'veso TO THE FUTURE dentist who's 0 HELP WANTED 1to be oneof the wideat dhife on "Uklathis"-OAT's will be cake- 1972 VW SUPER Beeft. Excel- 1he compual I would lova to most yor only problem will be expand. lent mdheanicely. can body, HOUSING Iyoul Love-Your admier Mg vour vocabulary and becoming EARN $201 MArried coupyeI interir, two snow tire. *850 or _an ac optbnaljazz guitarist wnted to penicipae in esrchI ro THE GIRL who vw in the frhl)fyour first inter- on mwrie. oaaI offur. 09-7315 after 3r m-. I Quedonnare and I Grad.Bimc librarton Sunday ng view KnoctEm Deed You, Gost v -- APARTMENT WANTED: Newty writn methab only. Cal (616) rey ata 8:30 PM-We avway say hal~lo Youl We Love Yal 5798646. 75 FORD GRAADA-2 dr., 9 ' married couple would like to ram a P.S., stereo, b/bucyft, n/bralkes. studio or I/bedroom apamant InN paass4, but we hoe navrr ha n/shocks, r/dig, n/tirk, riot ntly Must be in the Ceftoach, a chance to me. I woud Wt io A.M-YOU CAUGHT my es I v v God y _ s !TP/T LOCAL CQip. now hiringcdo- tuned. 246-3948. rme you oon. If into td m n I fs saw ou. I've been l. Seklan or Lake Grove ar".CaN f ig studnt. Work in mlml mr*. mef at the End of the Bridgeon _nevesedavr since. Hay. how NVON4lbINS *8.75. Must have Jon. Ruth at 246-390 w ys12 a S toing rate b V.W.'S-EXCELLENT condit Thurs.1 night or at the Drebor . aboutFrdynghkThanksfor iv- V RPVlII^ M m car. Call 4-7 PM to wng Call 924-8768 or 928-415"4 noon to 6 PM. buildingt pty on F nsght hng mw a dc a No regrets. Lov 1 8 1 1 0 6, Ex 750 DeerPark, N.Y t729 (ava). PORT JEFFERSON Villag_-3(P.S. I was the pon who dased y -T.K S T U E bedroom ranch, youI about genteca.) *_4o_4w-^g,^ l~,!-^ DNT ASSISTANT as"coner acro,attached t grage. full baseent. Mint con- ______PHTGRPYCRITIOUE have AdwwWo, I a nluum par I Must beable to it Ina1 p dition. Low taxes. 100,000.68- HOVIE-You are thw mom am- to my about Statesman I of Ant panig. See An n For- 7638. ling and *pedal paron in my Wet phoeo kievi conments in Sts- . ~~~~ t~~ kin, 246-3326. SERVICES HeppyBivhdy.I Jet'dom OXOX Nation Newsoom 057 in Union HOUSE TO Share: One bedroom _ rbaaiatcm of David Jess THISI PERSONAL IS in honor of photography dirseo : LAW SCHOOL MOM ned available- Close to shopping and theaIstI Benedict B-3 Oua- caring for 7-yer-old chi d :hlpan I RESEARCH PAPERSI 061 pqegUniversity. East Setauket. houm Mande" tough F:ride" s cat"g - 16,27 woical f Rush * 91 25 +Autil. 331 -9725. o9I eof '83-'.4Congrtto OLT THURS nits Irving College I from 2:30 PM-60 PM. Near r *2.00. RESEARCH, 11322 idaho. Ker, omt andAlforbreaing in I S.U.N.Y. Must be reiabe. 060.00a ##206M, Los Angoe 90026. the newest membdrs. Here'q to MEETIG OF minorities in En* weL761-4909 evminka. (213)477-8226. theI captains of the blow lim nearin T: 7:30. Place: Union. LOST AND FOUND Ste.II CJ, OK, Mike, Chris, Eric IRm. 231 TEACHERXS ABOE-Ppw c EXPERIENCED MOTHER willcame ---- __ - _ andI Skunk. ChrisW e's your wr- I t". ckeical. 4.P. t fof Vour child in my home. S 1 0 retaine, Ch the ya Eri- It's TO ALL THE wonderful and crazy know high school math. ffmith-Smust day. FREE meeos and pan a LOST: Blackcordoro blazrwith college,I it happens. Guyr: ts not people that made my brthday ths town 360-0670 evenoings, aention. Call Tine at 981 -0 0nd0 keys inside a pociet, inaignia 'R', theI senior prom nw oe. Love bet and happies birthday that I 6 at st Fridays Tokyo .1 weids. Loated in the Cantersach a Jo's. Itao Th. vetera of 1-2. over hadi-Losli, my roommate l__ ro- had whiteOxford shirt. Iffound, -ind bee ftiend. thanks for eveY- peas" ca N6-3876. M DEARI STEVE-Tomorow w*t be 1hirW To Eibon, F-2's crazy R.A aI day th rIl nove Wts and her roommate Helene, To _t n .I RED GYM beg lost on tennis beenI a yer of loving and carin Donne, Anntt, Laura, and to W^-- BL courts across from Langmuir. that contiuse to gwdeapil in Tedone-Thanks for putting up contained Physics book, calcula- myI hear Happy An es wh me through all the strain l'v tor and notes for subjects. if swee1theort. (I bo u-Trsocy b. ging through and not turn- 7 found, Cont Joe Smyth: Lang. ---- _ ___ing away from ma To Cheryl a Dearuw muir C206. There will be S small PERSON WILLH to dean suF wondw ku friend, thanks for being rewad. resonabe rn". Contact Ma thm whever I reeded you-

A0 -A- 6-4943. , you're a true riand Ray, G-2's --dRA(Ad ndagritfriand. Ihope 1Sp5als CAMPUS NOTICES FRIC 'WE" don't share evay- Vour room didn't 9g too masd thingl but what "weve" shared up Cy a e frWnd who is tr- 00 ara the beat. snckers, apeedy mg to drive me cray. Maybe I a ma 01575 H IANSTUDENTS Oraniza- nighOts Schifto" Friends, and a ttle dizzy for not suspeing what room full of menl Bee of khckvft an you guyp wer up to. To Cindy, (Qty. 1 order) tion welcome back party-Friday, Oct. 7, Roth Mount Mr. B3ill'sPub. Scatty-Frac (P.S. Whr i " Debbie. Dwarw. Androw. Cthy. 10 PM until- Admission FREE. rm koing.) own, Chs, John, Sung. Rich. So come and have a good tin,. -G-- r------Ga- , Marc. Al. AWEE-HAPPy 19th l Now tO Stewrt. Larry-My Chinese DON'TGVE UP yet...Crawfords you'rl (lagBir)a we out* rnd aW a greaM person to be Toshiba T100 comNVi Crawford Leritts an intwr- and gat drunk. No good? fOh. w~h. Thanks for always beang t-- pwr _ir m tawino onaionnIwun spaakar has lc- Goa) Anyway, hav a GREAT dhw teochaarr wup when things WWah& m ud «amre fte. ftwd to thousands of unrliv fty,4Wg"(ifwon't.dW(LYALwe_- go Mg" low. I hope I've ben Otudat twoughoutthe Uni n Baad _o~e-ou(Your Fawlf 416111o0a11 aa1 na forVou.Thank ' w St . Europe a frica*. In an De ta w af far giv - a lhoft" surprise f --- - - ____ fltinylldB~e.-yu lNand I wish 00 dVV l O d1apeion. Crawkrd 0) a o <»"w0olutior hto ital TO -the chden vouwaW2Wavwandth41rsto KAybd: -- hade and avin the wg adi cowe. I'm akwys *emr that V- SPECIFICATIONS lwoaOct. 13, Thurs. LC I t ~Detached, 89 keys. ncluding acpabetic and numerIC keypai a PM. 6SPecially allowance, Mom" day an an of you Low Alwevs- cursor control keys and 8 programmable function key-, Central Processing Unit pySiB LaL m aways- 0 Pfocr ssor I PERSONAS San (Your, te _ soter EQ 4MHz F RESOFWA1- RE .------____ 8HdOU RLN PrSEjcPhas imma- c) Mafi Memory LTLE MISS ftsughty--Mom dkai op -nga fr cr memeL id4" 64KB RAM m OOPS1 Happy Sy-zIem Memosy ^ 32KB ROM WT AIOO a 1(C"Whl OOPS"I Opurtwnls n edw. Ans't ECOUNTER FREE. iWdcto Bihh OOPSIl (Crh«1) cLve_ boom param kIy 9^ Vide Meffory 16KB RAM _ - r .. membeship, mee fmo c Iw procei- Wialler Ckumy Film aiveftanc not naeaasay- I Sandy- lt se&kc opeolog ------. ______VW dearailsaalKen at 246-4267 RS-232C Seria- *la. For information, send I / Wmrke~ a-O~oa~ooy __ _.--- ^ ;pallekr I 41tW1d. se~f Ondreee*wao I 0 CENTRONIC Parakle sleHdobs"- by- -' e fA I .fl xe. wh rve been 1 for 6f DoT GM upUP viL..Cnrawordrs op* 1 Enw: ntr^Do STB-I.t nm dall ?-LjmloaiYwr cominel Crawford Loritts aII - II- i-' oh" 12" Green Phosphor 640 x 200 doXmatrix* CEd-lc*-a4*l-el Fam in traveling e s (0 oPtional chars. x 21S Nn Aailumiral awt m 11"0 GCU»WN TO MY W inp _ .Oct 13. LC1118P.8 14 Fie Color 640 x 200 dox matnx musm* OOOD CLEAN m e* w up X _ be Bead« rm Ai ULo 0HOW Prie«- Yo 'Toobadf you &Wrio to ays untiHou 'wnahwo-4a slW_ On b° go"Na O ltkOrates: ' lftr-i we wBo for -am ou Mo Two fowy dres.5-14 dounbeszA. '' - I ,an't"lo S o o b* II doubte-donsry.- 560KB 04dsu ah ni ro , ui op.^ry*^-'"^'FORTUNE 'Vesm^*'^c""vo hm miaass Yeand a"_ _or a._dwAdo-Ad _ 1- T-Disk -SA CO WE____-- W~~~~~~~~owlbe A._ L at VW o-as. _ e n forS t e u s. .6WW . K- Te *o-ne ^SsJ032:6po- 2L- dd~10 P-Jd~ - IM t 1-.; ATcooii-NAPT wdd_ ,e _^» dew, _WA N -sum - _ fyog we now far gb ll. Coo 131 W Mu and,, aS am W* Lim Tm .-_ l -~~- BH11 W -lo doa ilr-a E VCONES.MPO=IARY C -MPUTE=R 516-567-4206 AL- - . gpe-- " Vd™ 9---9--q |1JSERICESO INC. e^*maM I e ^^ w^t_ 1sZs y^ 4 aWmk am on. _ go w~W Pw PrTMad -Sports Digest- lPhiies Win Game Ibe SJBSoccerBeats Westbury Los Angeles-Mike Schmidt hammered a first-inning home run and Steve Carlton made the single run stand up, with late-inning help from Al Holland, pitching the Phila- By Teresa nald commented. "But, we played more aggres- delphia C. Hoyla Phillies to a 1-0 victory over the Los Angeles The men's soccer team will be facing Drew sively than they did." Dodgers in last nights opening game of the Nitional League I Championship Series. College today at Drew on a 3-2-2 record with an The aggressive team is a young team. Out of optimistic coach. the eleven starting players, three are f-eshmen Carlton, baseball's all-time strikeout king, hurled a mas- After Saturday's victory against and five are sophomores. Faulkner and Richard, terful game Old West- into the eighth inning, outdueling Jerry Reuss bury, coach Shawn McDonald said, "We have no who both earned points Saturday, are both fresh- in a battle of southpaws before a Dodger Stadium crowd of 49,963. superstars on this team, we play as a team." men. Goalie McDade is a sophomore. Senior John Goff started Stony Brook's 3-0 shu- Playing together, this team was ranked in - Schmidt provided him with an early run smashing a two- tout by kidcing in a penalty goal 62 minutes into -ninth in its New York State division by the out homer in the first inning against Reuss, who has been the the game. He had been tripped in front of the National Soccer Coaches Association. The rank- Phillie slugger's favorite target over the years. It was the goal on a previous rush, but McDonald said, "he ing, which was given two weeks ago, was the o10th time Schmidt has connected against the Dodger left- would have scored anyway." Phil Russo scored highest the Stony Brook soccer team has ever hander in his career and no pitcher has surrendered more homers to him. the second goal seven minutes later with an assist been granted. Last week they were ranked under from Roy Richard. The final kick-in came at 75 'honorable mention." -t was to be the only run the NL East champions would get minutes intvthe game when Dennis Faulkner McDonald mentions his team honorably too. this night but it was enough for Carlton, the crafty 38-year- scored one with an assist from Goff. Patriot goal- 'I'm really happy the way that the defense has old left-hander who won the 300th game of his career Sept. 23. ies Matt McDade and Jim Kralick stopped a total been going. We don't have the scoring punch up of 36 shots while the team's offensive players had front, but I'm confident that we can keep the eleven shots on goal. other team from scoring their goalsn..no matter AL Teams Prep for Seres 'We should have scored more goals," McDo- what team we play." Baltimore - Dan Ford, Baltimore's hobbling right fielder, was the only question mark yesterday as the man- agers announced their lineups for the first game of the 1983 American League Championship Series between An Analysis of the Old the Orioles and the Chicago White Sox. Orioles Manager Joe Altobelli said Ford, if healthy, would start today's first game of the best-of-five series, despite being a right-handed hitter facing Chicago's 'Hundred Guineas Cups LaMarr Hoyt, als a right-hander. "Ford was our regular By Ed Reif this time was certainly in jeopardy. The Lib- outfielder during the last part of the season,' said Alto- Perhaps no other sport has a charm like erty crew had few if any traditional advan- belli, who platoons at the other outfield positions. "If he's sailing; and no other sailing has a charm as tages. Connor's organization had been widely capable, hell staet" the world's premier sailing event- The imitated by Australia It. They had studied Ford has been hampered by a sore right foot, injured America's Cup. It is a wonderfully subtle race just as much raw data, had vastly improved when he stepped on a base in a game late in the season. If to watch. Speed and boat handling are the their hull and had far better sails than pre- he cannot start, then Jim Dwyer, a left-handed hitter, will ingredients, tactics and strategy. vious challengers. play. On Sept 13, off Newport, Rhode Island, the Peter Cambell of Australia Consolidated Altobelli said that Al Bumbry would start in center New York Yacht Club began its defense of Press said, "They have the best crew [Liberty I field and bat first, followed by Ford or Dwyer; Cal The America's Cup for the 25th time. The But we have the best boat. It's the best crew Ripken, Jr., shortstop; Eddie Murray, first base; John challenger Australia II, representing the against the best boat!" Yet when you peel i Lowenstein, left field; Ken Singleton, designated hitter; Royal Perth Yacht Club of Western Australia, away the layers of money, the superb synthe- Rich Dauer, second base; Todd Cruz, third base, and Rick met the New York Yacht Club's Liberty in the sis of fresh technology, when you peel this Dempsey, catcher. Left-hander Scott McGregor, 18-7 best of seven races. away- two glorious yachts locked in a com- with a 3.18 earned run average, will be the Orioles' Originally known as the Hundred Guineas petitive embrace remains. opening-game pitcher. Cup, it was won by the schooner America in a White Sox Manager Tony LaRussa announced a start- yacht race held inconjunction with the British The final race began with fierce close quar- ing lineup of Rudy Law, center field; Carlton Fisk, World's Fair of 1851. America defeated 17 ters maneuvering. all the summer struggle catcher; Tom Paciorek, first base; Greg Luzinski, desig- yachts of the Royal Yacht Squadron in a race came down to two lithe racing sloops. A sta- nated hitter; Ron Kittle, left field; Harold Baines, right around the Isle of Wight. lemate of 3-3 no longer made the Ausies field; Vance Law, third base; Scott Fletcher, shortstop, On,Aug. 22, America participated in an diverse or enigmatic. They were downright and Julio Cruz, second base. Hoyt, the major leagues' open 54-mile race around the island. Her threatening! winningest pitcher at 24-10 with a 3.66 ERA, was LaRus- nearest competitor finished eight minutes The winds were reasonably steady at six a's pick to start Game One. later than she did. The cup was deeded to the knots. Liberty took an eight-second lead after New York Yacht Club by the yachts owner in a bit of nautical fencing for positioning at the Jets Beat Buffalo Bills 1857 and is always to be known as the Ameri- start. An advantage at the start can be pro- ca's Cup. tected throughout the race and held to the Cn Orchard Park N.Y. - Playing a team with statisti- The trophy has since become the focus of the finish. It looked like "full speed ahead" for g cally the worst defense aginst the rush in the National longest continuing winning streak in the Liberty. - m Football IeaMe BUffab Bills Coach Kay Stephenson's annals of yachting history, with the U.S. Cn gume phn wasn't hard to guess remaining successful through 24 defenses On the fourth leg ol the race, the wind 2 Stphenon had hoped his teah could run aganst the over 132 year. changed and the trailing boat, Australia II, > New York Jet Mody night, but it couldn't set The dynasty's destiny was met this year by established a lead for the first time. Dueling untracked d the Bills were bten 34-10. Liberty. A radical step towards the extremes downhill in the fifth and final mark, Austra- = e had thight that we Mouldhavegotten them alittle of conventional 12 meter shapes, the vessel has lia II held her favorite position with little dif- off balae ealy und then come back and run the ball" a smaller overall hull volume, a larger sail- ficulty. They were moving faster than the aid Stpeso o- I ea, the Jeta snmoheed the Bills' plan and an articulating keel. defender in the light air. C. rumiing game, aoing only 66 not yarrs rshing. Mean- The Liberty skipper, Dennis Connor, In desperation Liberty tacked onto port in e whie, the Jet, despitetb e lk of Fnreeman McNeil, last honored and defended the America's Cup an effort to get up between the challenger and O yas NFL rshing ler, gined 216 yards on the against the best international challenger in the finish line. The tacks slowed her down I

=+gwnbnd. 1980 with Freedom. The same display of badly. Australia II made history, nipping Lib- vr New YrVs ir eed a o m tie for first sportsmanship that has been established by erty by 41 seconds. ® 1pUft the A 1rmea East Division, with Dennis and his crew with Freedom was dem- pn te Jet, the B and te ir Cot. onstraed in this exciting series between Lib- America's Cup summer is always full of We pot n eel new rWatoa forthi ame-s and or erty and Australia IL surprises The instant reflection of this pinna- oo :e _Lidr oof JtBs C If Waltaln, John Bettrand, a Finn world champion, cle rof international sports, the sudden weigh- was commander of Australia II. Hugh Tre- ing of all this grandeur and impracticality for B Be Harer ai wyrCnitSehfld,eluae them- harne served a tactician. Veteran Cup Helms- this tritennial rite, with personl rivalries, sdibs imn _-ry_bO Harper *msincgand yards far man Sir Jim Hardy worked along with the with staggering sums, with a great wealth of thers t t InqWcmr,s Lorr._ 113 yardo an Uwe crew a consultant and back-up skipper. The tradition, can be fused together in the span of 'i cM&i r^nig_ _ r _ fOr a ^ B 8 oW Ausis eontroverial keld, a somewhat vex- one sentence: For an American sailor there is -* carr-_qlui HCt-MI . WDi- some trdkar, added to improse their ve- no grotr honor than to defend it (lhe most r y > _ .breWmti_ I W sl's upwind permrance petgiouas trophy in sailing, the America's .:;a tbZX~ Iiw arirl Ifl 1bd, I1 U - American's had since proved peerles in Cup) and there is also no greater at Uewll1%e kup Ube d" bo -match after match. But the U.S, domination imespoasibility. 14 __ Nod Menus X-Country Places Second

By Ed Reif The top five finishers score towards a cumulative With a bit of faith, hope and parity, the S.B. Varsity total. Forth and fifth place therefore are essential cross-country team at last Saturday's New York Tech ingredients, often considered the backbone of cross- Invitational, placed a respectable second with 56 country superiority in terms of both quality and points, with rainy muddy weather conditions and quantity. without full strength-Jerry OHara was injured; Mike Winter had bronchitis. "Richonda made a breakthrough," Westerfield said, This is not a team who has reached such acute "...running so close." Dan's 16th place finish, despite limited excellence that the remaining season savors competing most of the year was injured, was a signifi- anti-climatic. In the odds and ends of this squad is an cant contribution. integrity, a feeling of consistency that puts aside the Muscular enough for the task at hand, 5th unnecessary, and at the same time runs in an unspoken man and way. 18th overall was Mike Winter (26:58). Assuring S.B. a ,controlling second place position over the other It was first place or no place for Junior transfer (via rivals, were the six and seven men Bill Pima Junior College, Tucson Arizona) Steve Brown. Oehiline and Rob Timmons. Their tactical abilities and His first place finish of 25:17 on this fast five mile strategic vision took on a new importance as they course is 59 seconds faster than any previous mate, displaced opponents' scores with their 29th (at since the 1977 26:16 Rich Santacknik 27:31) and 38th (at 28:27) performance. place finished respectfully. "I am quite please" [with the overall achievements said head coach Gary Westerfield, "quite pleased." The The Stony Brook cross-country team is at Sunken team has one commandment: contribute to the team. It Meadow this Saturday, hosting their own invitational. was not broken. The tough five-mile course always ups the competitive statesman/1corey van aer lnwo Co-captain Charles Ropes, second for S.B., ran 26:25, ante severalfold, creating almost an entirely new set of The cross country team made respectable second plain freshman John Panta, third for S.B., ran a sequel to his rules with is steep hills and rough terrain. The first showing this weekend. spring '83 Collegiate Track Meet 26:30, chopping three race goes off at 10 AM. seconds off in a 26:27 I1th place finish. Woment s Ten nis Team Aces Farmintydnlze W- w A 146~ -

By Amy Gluoaft The Stony Brook tennis team defeated Farmingdale College by 7-2 on Monday. It was their first victory this season. Their record is now 1-5-O. Melissa Gerdtx, a new player, made an outstanding comeback. She was los- ing 8-4 in a l e-gareproset but came back 10-9 in a tiebreaker. According to Cowch Steve Yurica the oc team's major disadvantage is their lack of depth. He rgards this season as a VI "building seamon. Unity, however, is the Pats strongest point. "We work well as a team," he sated According to >. 0s- Yurica, Goodman and Farrell are very strong players. Te will probably g9 ! to the SatesP he saed They, along with Mary Lavinio were Mondays three top indiviual ier Goodman beat Diann Schwartz lo. Farrell won over Is Lee OM=W 10-2 and Lavinio beat KaRt 07'eilly 1o. Yurica m cf tdt tbis, seaon will be a or PatriotL 'If we haskWptti 5i1awavidecn- tin ta rtdo wa didon day,

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