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.Vol.58 No.3· BARUCH COLLEGE, CUNY FEBRUARY 28, 1990

".,

By TONI COLAVITO

According to the Director of AdmissionsJohnFischer,incom­ ing freshmen for the Fall semes­ ter of 1990 must show proof of immunization for measles, mumps and rhubella before reg­ -istering. Provost John McGarraghy. Studentsthatregisteredin the Fanof1989mustalsoshowproof President Joel Segall and DSSG President Sean Mason. by a certain date. However, PROVOST ALLOCATES Fischer said, "Students that registered earlier than Septem­ ber 1989 may not require proof, .Board Votes to End EXCESS FUNDS but theyhave tobe kept on a list . CUNY BUDGET CUTS OVERESTIMATED andtheCollegehastokeepthem . off campus if there is an out- BY DIANE LEPPEK break in the school." Security- Expenses_. Provost John McGarraghy al- creating a surplus of'a savingsin The Office of"the Dean ofStu- . located $450~000in excess funds the budget." dents will be sendingoutletters Students Fear Cutbacks in Services this Springsemester tothethree In December, McGarraghy dis- within the next few weeks de­ academicdepartmentsandto stu- .tributedthe money to the three scribing to students what the By EDWARD ASANTE dent servic.e.s·'be.$.use~,the-'state., schools of the college, School of procedure is' for obtaining the edacat.iODbud8et~AOtreduc8d,q·LiberalArtsandSciences,School proofcrtheimmunizationshots. The Baruch College many times -on the issue and I asmuchas e~·inthe F'all Of. of BuSiness Public Administra- Fischer explained, "Most indi- Association's Board of Directors believe th;at students should not 1989.· ~~~~~~~~__e .~on, ~~001:~~~:~fi;; ~~~~:~·_.~~'·~~~~~~:~·~~,~~~~4·)~'''~~tai~~:~~~~of.-.·~7~~~~:,~·~tr pec~a'12Dtil\iOti~~~.~- l~~~~~~ .p .':-~'" ... ~... " ·c ..' .,,, " ...,:_ •.. ~...... '.'.. ',.. ,. .. :.'~:,=~,~ "~ 7ti~1~~.7=-;'. ~,~ ~.~ ;;·_:··7'::~:·~~·~:~{;f\::;2_~~·::~P:fi~: _:ItA%~4~~ ~ ,.~:~·:,;·:'~;d>c:' ~~~,:e ~~g~:~;~It,~:'~~)lt.the-:o~~4.i!~,~¥.~~. .. ',. "-, ._ ,., 'C, .. .. ~~. . ·1Ililli()n~B8rumConege ~·Eam.Gf~lhdiieym:,·,;."-,, ,'. "~;~ .. - ' .. .~~ ·:'St1rden-t· ~ntet~at~l'$.'C<'~ ·~d'·: .. tlie·bm~;o7B-/~·-me.-.' . President Joel8ega.1l. . hiring addi.tionaladjunct'(tem- . (StlideIits~nna~ntationor Street.~. college 1'Uher tbim tak. up the , Theschoolp1acedahiringfreeze porary)professorsandprtlfession- get ~em lm~umzed.. .. . The vote will enable the re- payment of the' entire amount, . ---:-."--o~.~!!~~~~~cteti=-_··a1~~~~~!!_~~~~etp--,=_.~l~, ~, ~~ r:e~, --'-·r~ Oi$l~~J9lX!.~.'h~a p~- -·pay~!O,®O f~~~~'"t:-~.a.r.~r·· .-.:.~~,~~.~~ cal stafCt custodial staff, adjunct ease crowded classes and lessen manwno:'.eglSte!ed In -septe.~- viously been applied tosecurity an another $10,000 each addi­ professors,andcounselorstosave the workload on over booked ·berl989,co~plal:ne.d,:'T0~el:s costs to other of student activi- tional year so that the student money for the expected cut last counselors for. this semester. ~h~sle~lloverag~nhJusthl~kell~ ties.AllsixstudentsontheBoard burdenwilleventuallybe phased semester. . Assistant Dean Joan Japha JUnlor high and big Sc 00 'voted-at-their¥eb.. 15 meeting in out. McG8riaghy said, "The college C nt,. d' P 7 Continued on fage 7 favor of the proposal to cease. ,This sum, according to Mason did not fill certain positions thus 0 UUU! on age payments of security. All five however amounts to about 10 . !.- administrative and faculty mem- percent of-the total cost ofstu- hers voted against the measure. dent payment towards security Graduate Student Government There is some fear that the and with inflation and otherfac- vote will force the administration tors considered; the percentage to cut other student services in coveredwill drop to aboutfour or Proposes Activity ·Ftre..·Increase order to be able to cover security five percent. ' costs atthe student aetivitycen-. Asked ifhe thought the ad­ ·ByMlCIIAELE.KEEI,y ter. SeanMason, presidentofthe ministratienwould tak~ retali­ .- DaySessionStudentGovemment atoryaction in termsofcutbacks The Graduate StudentAssein- . : $2.00'goe.s to~~ds the G.S-A., (DSSG)andanex-officiomember to student services in order'to bly (G.SA) has petitioned the .... ~~ng, th~ reII).~~!1g $0.85 goes to. of the Board.,said that "In the come up with.the money Icst, Student Elections and· .: ,. the. CU~ Government, the past there have beeh threats to Masorisaidtnat-'itwouldonlybe --Governence •.Review-Com~ittee-:· ·_.-Unl\lerslty-,St:ude.nts~enate-u- dose''down 'the stua-efit. actiVity---~a .testament ·~'the-PreSiden~s . (S.E.G.R.C.) to place a referen­ . (U.s.8.) - the CUNY WIde stu- center however I do not believe lack ofcommitment to stuUentS dum on to raise the Graduate .: , de~t government. Th~ pr~d ,thattheadministration will want Intheseereesbeeeuseitwill show 'StudentSActivitiesFeesto$21.35 . ..': inCreaseof$10.00wou~d~go?i- totakesuchanactionduetoheavY Inconsistency in his gesture to­ in theballotduringtheMay1990 rec~ly to the.G.S~A. I~ng Its __ !1_~e an,d a!'t_ticipated protest." __\V.~ds_~ttJ.l~n~.," Ha.f;!_.\V~n~_~~ to -----stllaent elections. Joel Segall,~sidentof the say t~t student services have , .. ~$12.00. Therevenues would The petition would onlypermit Baruch College, in an interview sufferedtremendouslyinthelast G~S.A. the to plaCe the propOsed .: go 'towards clubs and services. withtheTicker priorto theBoard's 'referendum on a ballOt in, the· "We have one of the lowest meeting said that "I have talked . COnJi1wetl Oft PageS. May elections, and not give the student activity·fees !Ulywhere, . G.SA the .authoritY:tonUse the· .~~ and We're· hoping to make the' fees. fee higk enough so the G.~A ceIn order-tQ puttbevote-....:: .weuldD'tbave·togothr~:-tbia,. the studentIJ, the petition.Bas to: '. .," P~8S.ain~couple ,~.·'~·LisaOeJirlre-Faye, havethesignature8«lo-pemmt ..-, the C:, · -iJ ., ~. ~ ~ ~.-. ~' graaWifi~:BGdY~ia::;. .,..,,., .....~:.=.:, .. ~'·G·13'A· .. sbic.L -nus ·EDJTOR4Al$···~ -­ o 2 'C ' ••-'" ....'..... _ .. ... ••"'" .ofthe . pmawmt UI. . ~., ._ , . P favoref-nquestiDg'to:'ID&ke-·t;he, .{:: ~,~ld give us-enougb, money to LETTE~OP-ED ,Pg.3 .... ,"Tffe···H·ttbt·· . ballot,'Th~ballotwould];"~cI:~·.'··:.:":<....?- :2'2;~:.,)~:: ... ~:.,,~"7 .. '.. : ....•. ,....• " . fwletion fora couple ofyears,· ~.. . you,favor-8ifinttease m.ther~? .. ·LtSa ~:Prnl'" she said. .·FEATURES Yes or No," said·c.rOJ.·Robbins,' dento/GSA. Thecurrent ~tudentactivities OnThe Street: Pg;11. Is·Oo .the· fonnerDireetor ofGraduate . ~ .: .. fee-h8s notbee~increased si~ce ·d E· -s.:'. .S"-_.:i....~ ·Servi,·-.. 'OCtbe current$lL36.'~...u- Point in Spain Pg.l1 an venmg· IoIaUCU. ' ~ ...... ~,ca.&J.& 1968, the fi~ year it. \!&S. 4iJ- . ·h· .. "hr,.--n' ....~...:...... •.--.;._ ate. stlJdent aetm. fee,.-·t~.~50 . ARTS w 0 IS currenl4.7~~ -,-'.. . .. ·tt•... .'. lec:ted.Tberearecurrently2.341 sultantfi &E:G1-c;~~11OW goestotbeStudentc;eDter~.l.OO. ~te'.stuclents. enrolled· .~ ,. ~HardTo Kill Pg.:18 .. ~ ,£.'1:;;.:' ""ti~:"'~ ,:.'" goestoithe Gratluote V~ -the ~ Ul~loIle ~_l~~ Get Var Rocks Pg.15 we S8.1d~~. .pnue, 'graduate students ne~~." Robbins .-"'; ,. . ..';'.. .. '.. , .. I Pg'.19 , SPORTS L-__---..:..--~------~

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.. ~. ~ .... - . .. ' .-. ,.~_.- '~ -, ~II" ...... ~ .. .• '" :;- -:-. ~. .. . " .....- ~ ." l . ...-.. - ..... " . ,-: -".': . .'. ~, ....-,: .. .. February 28, 1990 Page 2 The Ticker February 28, 1990 The Ticker· Page 3 EDIT0 RIALS ======:==~======0 P-E DS The Ticker letters I Taking A Stand Isn't Free Founded in 1932 Tales of the Darkside: - . - DECLARING THEIR independence ofadmin­ solely to manage the over $1 million of stu­ Kenneth E. Brown Be My Sexist dent fees collected annually. Student organi­ Horror Stories at Baruch College strative constraints, the student representa­ editor-in-chief Valentine? tives on the Baruch College Association's zations also do not pay for the large telephone By ARlHUR LEWIN and MARIA LOPEZ bills that they generate. Aylman pointed out February 20, 1990 Board ofDirectors voted to stop using student Martin Starkey To the editorial staff, Forget"Friday the 13th Wait a minute. The story moment when their students matter what grades you get! fee money to pay the security costs for the correctly that students will be asked to pay managing editor Part 7". Forget "The Texas does not end here. Listen to need them the most, Baruch Anybody knows you don't treat Student Center building. for these services and more ifBaruch was to I question the level of ma­ ChainsawMassacre". Forget this! Ifyou do not have a College tells 'the counselors people like that, let alone turity arid professionalism of Freddie and forget Jason. Ph.D. and want to work as a thatit is time for them to go young, impressionable students DSSG President Sean Mason and the other assume the cost ofsecurity at the Student Toni Colavito the editors and staffofThe You want to get a good scare? counselor, Baruch may hire on vacation. 'Why? -Because trying to make something of student leaders argue that security is a cost Center, which costs hundreds ofthousands of production manager Ticker. I can not believe the Listen to what has been you, but only as a substitute. Baruch requires thecounsel­ their lives. Many, no doubt, edttors ofa college newspaper happening to your classmates, Substitutes are automatically ors to come to work in August simply stopped coming to class best paid for by Baruch College as part ofthe dollars annually: .I and what may very well discharged after two years! . Edward Asante would allow the Valentine' .to handle registration for the and were turned-offforever ­ . college's obligationto protect the students and The Ticker cautions the students leaders to message that read; I happen to you. Without Even ifyou're doing a fine job entire school. Let us repeat from going tocollege. as part ofthe college's general security con­ weigh these factors and instead compromise news editor Happy Valenti1le's Day I further ado) hear then) the that! Baruch College forces This, is for all you sluts Baruch Horror Stories. the SEEK/Comp Ed counsel­ tract. Instead, they want the saved money to on this issue. Having the college pay for half Everyone seeking employ­ Every spring Those counselors Sammi Perez and bitches without ors to abandon their students be used for expanded student activities. Their the security costs next year would seem a far Valentines ment as a counselor at. semester in the when .they are needed most, in features editor Unknown Baruch is required to have a the weeks before finals, so . . that refuse to point is well taken and has merit. As Carl solution. Ph.D. They are hired as to be printed. last week before Baruch College can use them desert their Aylman, director of day student activities, The stand the student representatives on Itis a derogatory remark Assistant Professors and to handle registration in Glen J. Spangler therefore expected to publish says," The real issue is that the money saved the Board of Directors have taken is a bril­ . insulting to all women. I am finals, SEEK August for the entire school. students are not ,. arts editor ... sure ifit were a racially articles in their field ofstudy. What about those counselors will go to help run the student center." liant way to bring the issue of student fee insulting remark it would ·Ittney don't publish they are counselors are put who courageously refuse to fired. Other Assistant paid by the But will it? Have the student leaders cut off expenditures on security into the spotlight. Mickey Kramer have not been printed. dessert their students before Freedom ofspeech is one Professors have ten hours of on vacation, just finals? The college refuses to college their noses to spite Joel Segall's face? But now that the rhetoric has been spoken, sports editor tmngbutwhenitUrrge~ contact with students each pay them! Presently, student organizations do not pay they must stand back and consider the real members ofa group in a _ week whereas counselors when their The college has a policy that Another student failed Maria K. Liu disparaging manner, as this have 30. ·Even though ifa student fails remedial English once, and was told not for the student accounting unit, which exists costs oftheir resolution. counselors spend three times advertising manager so-called Valentine's message students need English twice they are auto- to take more than 13 credits the does, it is discriminatory. as many hours with students, matically expelled. Now following term. She took more A pathetic little boy may they are expected to publish them most. check this out. Last Spring than 13 anyway and passed Roberta Ransaw write something like and . just as much as Assistant many students failed English everything with flying colors. Professors. Therefore, ifthey . business manager consider it funny but I was for the second time. The Reg- Nonetheless, she was told that Same Old Stuff is Scary embarrassed that a college want to discharge their duties counseling students and 'istrar failed to check offtheir she would be debarred for editor would allow this to as counselors, they cannot helping them make it through names, and so their registra- disobeying regulations and publish adequately. On the school, you will still be dis- tion cards were made avail- exceeding the credit limit! THEYARE TALES that frustrate and disgust College adminstrators claim this policy exists Rafael Martinez print. It was not only allowed offiee managef----- to be printed but it was other hand, ifthey want to charged because you don't able to them in September, so Want to hear another? Every us more than even scare us. People aren't becaus-e the SEER counselors have "to run tall uniquely bordered and almost publish, andtherefore attain have your Ph.D. Ifyou did, they went ahead and regis- semester a number of students a pennanent position) they though,YQu would be dis- teredo They were notified in _ fail the terms oftheirprobation, usually scared by the familiar and the known. registration. This is so Baruch doesn't have .centered on the page to draw Michael Keely attention to it. cannot do any real counseling. charged in a few years, since November, however, that and so they are automatically On the next page, Professor Arthur Lewin to pay the counselors ext.ra money for the I can only assume the Is itany wonder that students you.would nothave'time.to since their names were missed ejected. However, they are Boris Loach bitterly complain about the publish!! Catch-22. Isn't that in the ~mmer,the-y would be allowed toappeal.' Ifyou are people who were involved in and Ms. Maria Lopez relate how Baruch ·Col- work they do in August., assistant editors . ~hatit'8~led?" <~v' S KickedoUtbfthe c:onep,'au~'!'. '~ejeiWd(deberi-ed}inMa;r~yotW.- .allowing this meSsage go quality and the availabilityof. to to How·:~tthisone. matically~ in~aDuary.~t lege, true to form, continues to ignore student The point is, ifBaruch is going to bother to press are perpetuating the counseling at Baruch?' EverY' at: the-end o£fJ1e ,appealisheard ..' spring semester in.the last . term; Can y~~ believe it? has alnY8 been this wtly•. '., '. . Prof. Roslyn Bernstein mentality that women are support services at the school. Lewin and run a remedial and support service for stu- ArtJuu- Lewin is (J professor of weeks beforefinals, the. There they are sailingalong, Then, all or-a sudden, last term . second class citizens and it is consultant Black Studies BtlTIICh and Lopez describe theirtales.as.horror stories.deP.ts why do they continue withthese half- -t&referto~m-~n at counselors in the SEEK/Comp doing well, making progress, ...aeeeptable . 'E(rDe'-;-r~---ent-are----Ut ..Miii-Ta ~ls direc,tiii'(jj .'..... 00.····-_·····~ "'andll'ieritJiif-et-ay~. Jl()tifiC8:-.. h. this offensive manner. .- .... p8rtJn._.. ...P-. . . . ., ...... 'We describe them as a tired-old rerun. ass efforts. The students that require these Counselingfor SEEKJComp.Ed vacation. Yes, at the very tion like that! .You're out..no Here's one story that's played over and over remedial services to improve their academic Staff I am furious at this sexist remark and even more again: SEEK! Compensatory Education coun- skills pay full tuition, and they deserve full Tom Baby Robert Byrnes angered that it was printed. I believe The Ticker owes all selors are asked at the end ofevery spring service and support. Nicole Farquharson semester to take a vacation, right before final We have just told you one ofmany tales. that women an apology for Peter Gonedes allowing this. I would think Tony Medina at THEe CUTTING EDGE exams. This obvoiusly is the time that their Lewin and Lopez relate, Read their op-ed, Georgia Kontos those members ofthe staff remedial students' need academic and psycho- . and then contact the adminstration andthe who are mature and profes­ Carrie Larrier sional would agree. logical support the most; this logic is' co- Day Session Student-Government. Tell them Diane Leppek of the Cultural Revolution maparable to asking the mid-wife to leave just you are disgusted by these horror stories. Patrick McKenna Michelle McManus when the pregnant mother goes'into labor. Eloise Niederkirchner Editors'Note: The Ticker regrets thefact that YO" took offense at a Gabrielle Portella Valent~ placed in OIU last Colin Roach issue. however we let all contri­ Preparation for War Joseph Reiss butions run unedited "SO tkey ·William St. Louis would express the truefeelings of the writer. THE GREAT HISTORIAN because white EuRAPEpeans to suggest Toni Morrison's how our brothers and sisters Steven Scheer Dr. John Henrik Clarke has allow them to. riovella,"The Bluest Eye". and childrenare beingeontinu­ Quotes of the Fortnight Marjorie Surpris said: "Powerful people never This diabolical conspiracy of The professor asked to borrow ously raped in the school my copy to see ifit was "appro­ systems allover this country. Jerry Tan­ educate powerless people in how ignorance, arrogance and to take their power away from exclusion has never been so priate" for the course. The fact that we allow ourselves Sean Mason, president ofthe DSSG, and Joel Segall, president ofBaruch College, Quan Tran the opinions on them." This-is relevent, blatantly display-ed to.me.. ~ ItitJ ~ ~~-K s~~~~~he to~~p~a!-e~Jntoa because ifwe look towards the until I attended a certain administrative branch at position to compromise our share their points ofview about the recent Board ofDirector's vote on student center the OP-ED pages history ofAfrikan enslavement English course, in which the Baruch College would have the minds and self-respect is security, and its ramifications: in Ameri~we see thatit frightening and pitiful. We. are those of the was literally illegal for an must realize that the hard The Ticker is published bi-weekly, individual writers, . Mrikan held captive in This diabolical conspiracy of . fought battles our ancestors and leadenbefore us have "It would only be a testament to the president's lack ofcom­ seven times a semester, by The and do not nec­ AmeriKKKa to learn how to TickerEditorialStaffat 137E 22nd read and write. And ifwe look ignorance; arrogance and exclu- fought to insist upon an intergrated school system and a I St., New York, N.Y. 10010,Room essarily represent closer, we can.also see that the mitment to students in these areas..." Sean Mason curriculum ofinclusion, in i301F. All work except printing is educational system that we have sion has never been so blantantly the oplnlons of today is structured in such a . .. '. which all races and cultures. I done by' Baruch undergraduate, would have fafr and equal "We would layofffaculty and ifthe students prefer that they . graduate, or CUNY BA students. The Ticker ·Edito­ waythatit~eepsotherraces displayed to me until .... and cultures mentally entrapped. \ representation in the white­ must be out oftheir minds." Joel Segall All typed andsignedcontributions rial Staff. The simply by excluding their male dominated and run. and letters are welcomed, and Ticker accepts peoples' history and contribu­ specified genre ofstudy is the audacity to allow an English educational system, have should be mailed to the above ad­ tions to the world. In turn, the modern short novel. The professor to teach a eourse in systematically been under­ "WY"e refuse to be intimidated" dress. Our office is open duirng -only typewritten white-power structure ofthis professor handed out a the modem short novel.with out minedby a decade and a halfof Sean Mason havinganyknowledge ofToni regular school hours. Any display . and signed opln­ society systematically programs syllabus, in which all the . complaeeney and comformity. advertising questions should be 'their own white youth, as Hitler authors are either EuRAPEan Morrison, who is one ofthe But the black and Hispanic . or white AmeriKKKan. When leading American novelists "Hell, we don't even have enough space for classes" directed to theadvertising orbusi­ .ion pieces for had done with his S.8. and Nazi courses thathave emergedfioom she asked for any other sug-' . producingliteniture today. those struggles, though giant ness managers at (212) 7Z5~7620. Youth, to think and feel as . publication. though they are superior and . gestionstoaddto the reading Ifthis bu11sbitishappening at Joel Segall . ." the rest ofthe world only exists list,.I quickly raised my hand the university level, imagine ,... ,

February 28, 1990 Page 4 The Ticker FebrUary 28, 1990 The Ticker PageS Continuedfrom Page 3 Corainued from Page 3 CUNY Establishes Baruch Horror Stories Cutting Edge Campus. in Japan the Appeals Committee ofthe tion. Apparently the reasoning fails, whether in the first grade Through the use ofthe media: . ByEDWARoASANTE Contiruu!dfrom Fron: Page Business School decided not to is that ifa student has a great or the fourteenth grade, they steps, were just Pacifiers to keep the "natives" quiet. "When through the creation ofmaga­ hear appeals in January. deal ofcredits, and is signifi­ always think that it is all their The Beard of Trustees of the and culture city, is out a baby cries because he/she is zines, newsletters, leaflets, Carrying "'l Therefore, everyone who failed cantly below a 2.0 GPA, simply fault. They are so consumed CityUniversityofNe.wYorkhas activeinternationalexchangesin tenyea.rsanditwouldvery-rtaive" fliers, rallies and forums, we to meet probation last fall was earning 2.3 GPAs, will take with the tragedy they face, and hungry, you don't slap a pacifier can all begin to unify and approved the establishment ofa' wide-ranging' fields, including on the part of the President to automatically ejected without them well beyond 128 credits to so inexperienced in the ways'of in his/her mouth! That child organize and give birth to an branch campus ofLehman Col- .edueationandculture. Thefound. cause a further reduction in stu- even an opportunity to appeal. .lift their averages above 2.0. .the world, they cannot see that needs its full nourishment in effective and efficient political legeinJapan,withcoursestaught ing oftheCUNYJLehmanat Hi. dent services since "there is no Apart from the fact that this However, last year, for some very often, they were pro­ order to grow. Thus, when a arm dedicated to the continual in English by Lehman faculty roshima in Apnl 1990 embodies correlation between the two Is- type ofvindictive behavior mysterious reason, the College grammed not to succeed, that people cries out in fury because struggles ofpeople(s) ofcolor. . members. The school Issehed- educationalinternationalization sues" hesmd. makes no sense whatsoever, began placing hundreds of unnecessary obstacles were it demands fair and equal representation in the society in But first we must realize that­ uled to be opened in April and and is an auspicious beginning Segall was quick to point out the Business School did not Sophomores and even Fresh­ placed in their path, that they hasbeen namedCUNYlLehman for the 1990's." however thathis commitment to bother to tell any ofthe man on B probation! That is a were provided with teachers which they live, a society in we, as people(s).ofcolor, have many things in common- the at Hiroshima. Lehman will offer the same thewelfareofstudentsisunques- counselors. The counselors, death sentence. The college who cared not'at all about which they helped create through their hard labor and . foremost being ourstate of Three.hundred Japanese core curriculum it offers to tioned and cited as an example meanwhile, were telling their knows that they cannot make them, that they were not told freshmen, wi11live in residence Lehman student in the Bronx hiscontributiontowardsthecele- students to go ahead and Bs. The college is pretending to all the rules, or the rules were sacrifices, that nation, in all its oppression. We must reject this hallsandattendclaSses ananew This includes core courses in Dee Potter,' bmtion,ofBlack Hi~Mi)flth. submit appeal letters to see if give them a second chance when changed just to obstruct them. ignorance and arrogance, inferior educational system,' should meet the needs ofthe because it produces individuals thirty-seven acre campus in natural sciences social sciences . d if He went on to say that if the they can be allowed to continue they are, in fact, kicking them .I have heard it said that the oda, 1...:.' , assIstant irector0 student activities . posa1 hrouah --... uld people, or face its doom! and groups ofindividuals with ChiY' 'a,subor'b 0 fHiiroshima, humanities,anda historycourse. pro goes tAU "yt5 we wo in the spring. out the door. Why is the cOllege administration is trying to on·OriginsoftheModemAge~" When the students were told purposely trying to eject change this into an Ivy League "What people(s) ofcolor must inferiority complexes. And in - The school will add an equal St d' t C'" t Pl layofffacultyandifthestudents n~ber offresbmeneachyear, as well as courses in computer ' ereferthatthentheymustbeout by the Business School that students who, though deficient, School. I hope that this in not first and foremost do is believe the final analysis, at the rate 'U' en 'en er aceS that in white AmeriKKKa they that we are going, theimpact Wlth a totalenrollment or 1,200 science and English as a Second :oftheirminds.".He alsoSaidthat their appeals would not be are trying their level best to true, for, you see, no matter ~ read until next semester, and succeed? how high standards are set, this are not powerless. We must and power ofthis genocide will students planned. Language. C Cl b P ,,~es' he has always regretted the fact that therefore they were all de­ Some may say that this is an can never be an Ivy League realize that this is a capitalistic not allow us to exist in the 21st The ventureisfunded entirely Aftercompletingtwoyears,the ap' on. . u ..a, thatstudentsmustpayforsecu- barred, they were simply attempt to improve standards. School, because we are not Ivy society, a society, which has set century. by Japanese sponsors led by Japanesestudentswillbeableto rity and wishes that would not shattered. The counselors It is not. It is a cynical attempt League people. We are the real itselfup to control the world "The role ofeducation," the Tatsuo Tanaka, president of transfer to Lehman .or another By MICKEY KRAMER happen but since the college is through economics and has now great Dr. John Henrik Clarke NihonAnaenKizai Co., Ltd., who CUNY college. . The option of Three members of Latin facingfinancialconstraints,there were humiliated, and their to crush aspirations. IfBaruch American People. con~Duted credibility destroyed. But they is going to institute B probation, Ivy League Schools were found itselfpainted into a has said,"is to tell a people $50 million to build awarding a two year associate Dee Potter, assistant director are few alternatives. the campus. . degree is under consideration. of student activities, has insti- American Youth are outraged. VIjay Kumaradity~president did not take this lying down. it should state so in the Student reluctant to admit too many corner. Ifwe realize that their where they have been and what According to CUNY Chancel- Lehman college' students will tuted a Cap on the number of Carlos Lopez, an upper fresh- of the Evemng Session Student They demanded a meeting Handbook so that entering and Jews, in the past, for fear that power is in when and how we they have been, where they are lorJoseph Murphy, City have the opportunity to attend Fridayparties that eachclubcan man saidsimply, 8jtsucksnow," ,Association,alsoa memberofthe with college officials, and in a transfer students who feel that they would greatly increase the spend our money, we can bring and what they are... Most S. -rIte stormy session, they were they might not succeed here will level of competition, and this insult-of-an- educational importantly, the role ofeduca­ University's strong liberal arts CUNYlLehman atHiroshima by have. Hector Orellano.:an upper so. Board, believes thatthe vote is a system to its knees, and twist tion is to tell people where they tradition is highly regarded in September of 1990 and recent Pottersenta memo informing p~omore sai~ ·Some Fridays, step towards the right direction promised that the matter elect to go to some other CUNY endanger the "gentlemen's C." thi~ would be taken care of. College. Apparently the school Right now, today, an Asian its wicked head until it meets still must go and what they still Japan as an avenue to develop- LebmangraduateswillbeofTered allBaruchc1ubsofthenewpolicy··· place Will be dead. Why since-theschool paysforsecurity the needs ofall ofthe people so must be." When we change the ing the perspeetive and sk:ill: the chance to work as support and guidelines. Bookings for canttheclubsthatwanttothrow in all the other buildings except Exactly what will be done does not mind admitting many, American student must score nece~ s Geo~e about this outrage, as of this many students it knows it will higher than others to get into that it can be used as a vital, pale face ofthe current, age-Old for'international un- staffon the Japan campus. Itis space(thefirstandsecondfloorof parties, throw parties?" the student activity center" and writing, remains unclear. eventually drop, since as long as many Ivy League Schools. The functional tool in the social- Euro-centric educational system derstanding." He went on to say not yet known if students from the studen en r) will only be VanGoodman~ds,:t'snotf81r. this is not fair to students. He · be fits f tak 1· t w ks In advance. Before (the policy) It was fl.rst al ·dthatth' trafunds ill However, ifsome of these they are here they are paying reason? The schools openly say poli tical and economic progres­ to a multi-racial, multi-cultural thatamong the many ne 0 other CUNY campuses will beY soS8l tneex W1 students are allowed to re­ tuition and keeping the institu­ that otherwise there would be sions ofits people{s) ofcolor. curriculum, this would open City Universityis the devel- able to attend the new school. This m s that the period of come, first serve. ThereJ!l~ynot only help improve the qUality of enter (in fact, ail ifthem tion afloat. an overwhelming number of We must do what the great doors for educators ofdi verse opment of international pro. The teaching staffduring the March2 April 23, 1990, wasnot be parti~ every Friday beca~ life ofstudentsand shouldthere· should be allowed to re-enter), As further proof there is the Asians on their campuses! No, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. has . races and cultures and back­ grams in education, Cl1lture and first year will be composed of "available, for schedulingbe.fore . ~lubs ~lght have, used. their fore notbe CUrtailed. what type of probation will shameful tale ofthe young man we are not Ivy League people. taught us: we must refuse to grounds, creating morejobs for economics. Ourfaculty and stu- Lehman .r_~_'tymembers, along Febuary.26, andther,emainderof ,party' up. Ifwe or some others Ronald Aaron, the asSociate UlCU,l Ap 1 d' don't-throw parties, there' won't they be placed on? Which with a "1.99 average who had We are the'peoplewho make' patronize, refuse to spend our people(s) of color. This, in turn, dents will be give the opportu- with 'other CUNY faculty and' n an Maycanbereserved ~n be any." deanonstudents,whois a secre- this country great: Self-made money in an establishm~nt bent would provide important role. nity for an exchange experience adjuncts. The:,ehief on-campus . March 26 and therea.f!.er:- So,.lIl.r P. 8J' tary of staff on Ule Boe.-rd. ~d i~ages chilch-~h men and women, pulling on destroying us. We must models and for withtbeiiJapuiesecolleagueS.'" admjnjstratorforthefirstSemes_ordert~m~re ~lubs ~.~yEt~ antici;::':~.te:~ Shed~~. ,that"thiarisa'eateh-22'situatioD, boycott these systems of and older students ofcolor to The administration wants to make ourselves ug by our bootstraps, ·CUN\"s long standing suc- terwillbeFredPhelps,currently ~op~tytoh~ld.Panie.sonmentionedtbat'manyC1ubs1lUeh···':::y~::,'··=.~t,~": first in our families to attend exclusion; refuse to register; emulate. And therefore, build cess in educating first genera-· acting acting dean of student '.Fridaymghts,onlyone partyper as the Caribbean Club Gayand .' ,.,,, . -. college, and proud as hell of our refuse to enroll our children so self-respect and self-esteem in . Am. h' eed .• .' . c1ubmaybescheduledpersemes- '. ... ,. Ity center. He alsomentiooed IvyJ:,~ague s_~h09J~ ti.~~ ',' _.. _. e~~~s, ~ ..0 . n. ~. atraJl'"S !~ LebmmrColl~ge. .' .' Lesbian Society, the Jazz Club, . that theeoll e isrealisticall on ' - Baruch an ...I hope.. .roots. .' - that we couldshutthese racist,.. the.individual..andgroupsofin­ develop str'Olig~b:-skifts-YS"·_·---etlNY~lmralfll1:Hirosla··_.teL_-_·_,-~-.,-_··_-_··_-_··_·__···_·-----_·;~t-Bint"~ts f ---.. _- " eg ,y destructive mental eoncentra­ dividual. It would also educate .. 'what attraeted the' japaneSe," Wilffoiiow thetraditiOri&l Comparingth&new··.~.to 'osl' 'u"s'wthId love';' h~::··a.buage-t_fJili~~~t*t!i~.is., '-."~-.-'--':;-~-'- this' is not true A tight-knit, closed circle, this J:;." . ~ university, this nation, ifwe tion camps down! . and re-educate the white youth .d Leo ani Li f. . .d t f 'd· cal dar Th fi t lastsemester's, Pottersaid,"Last P. not much surplus dollars, He This can only be accom­ and older population ofthis -. S8l n e , prem en 0 neeeacaoermc .en . e rs th 't r Last party. believes that somethingcould be leads us to yet still another, completed 121 credits. He was continue to restrict access to LehmanCollegewhichislocated semester begins in April, the year teerebwasthD tahiPOd I~. "al.l VemaMayCharles,President worked out such that clubs, for "Tale from the Baruch-side," 7 credits shy ofgraduation and positions ofinfluence to such a plished through unity and or­ society on the existence and . th B Li f ked' . d begi . id-Se te be semes r, iJ e r wees, . ganization. And the way in contributions ofother races and In e rome. e was as m secon ns In nn p m r h Frida. book dWh t ofthe Caribbean Student Ago. instance who are having parties According to college regula­ one-hundredth ofa point below narrow band ofindividuals in the Spring of 1988 if Lehman andconc1udesattheendofJanu· ~ e . ys ~e~e e., a ciation,hadmixedfeelingsabout be made to pay for securitY dur. tions, as spelled out in the 2.0. Nonetheless, he was the broad spectrum ofpeoples which one can bring about such cultures through out the world. couldadminister~enewschool's m ng ~~ncouW~tehntehw, ~n·od methods ofunity and organiza­ ~ey would begin to respect ary. 'lubstryito hato the party cap. "Wehave limited. l'ng that Student Handbook, they must debarred! For a hundredth of a and cultures with which we are d . ogtte~am.· Th·p~s c1 d~th- . c ve ~ ..~es. 1 e . uld be . fj r-.. show improvement in their point! What a grave injustice tional tactics, is through people(s) ofcolor, see them as aca eIntDlc prl tul tie e C8Dl Ibn .uld.es a limited number ofFridays avail. space. And It wo mce orI Some also believe that the blessed. con~ d l:.>~t grades or they will be dropped was done him. Many students collecting, administering and equals and begin to break down a e r a ng story aea ellllc Ul Ing WI . able it's (the new lic) the onl everyone to have a party, recent vote could be a double- distributing vital information, the negative stereotypes that Chancellor Murphy on the ~ew cOUlPuter center an~ l~~e .• sensib1e.way----to~~~_Th; __.: .. reallydon'tagree~~~n~tall. e~ dagger. Carl Aylman, di- from the college. What consti­ struggle for six, seven, even IabOrato~, o~ eight years or more. They go to which will, not only expose the have been created by their program, the Mayor of Hiro· a gymn8S1um;tenms :. . all tlliClUDSnave patties. r-d hate rector day student activities tutes improvement? Students '-'- hi Araki ·d that Oil'· 1 th . maIn purpose IS to ow more d 'W 11 'I are customarily required'to school at night and work during .bias and racism that permeates white-supremicist forefathers!~ Shima, Ti:lAes, S8l courts, ymplc-Slze poo , ree: hold .....aY+-1 Frida for her (potter) to a opt a e, and student center said that the • h . of Hirosb· stri . d hall dtyI'groups to ~ __es on ys ' so maintain at least a 2.3 grade the days. They kill themselves the school systems, but also And we will do this like our t ~~~ty. te Imtia'nal vmg ~uletynth ~ an western-s e in the limited space available." you,alreadyhhad at'P~' d you "contractual costs ofsecurityhas 1 point average during the only to end up being thrown out map out effective ways, in master-teacher and brother to~meanm rna 0 peace lac oUSlng. Lastsemester,fivec1ubse ~hat worr.y.. ",__~ losers_ Advertising Rates: Councifapproved stiPends of meeting, the body approved alfheclubsthatparty,partyregu- Mathew c~c1udes that ~f Mason maintains that ifthe Next Issue is: March 14, 1990 $10.00 permeeting for all 20 of the idea ofgranting them- larly" imd this thus creates a there .are opemngs, Dee woul~ collegelookedmorecloselyatthe its members and the three selves stipends, but due to club problemtosmallerc1ubswhowant mostlikelyopenupthe s~ot- Shes contractual obligation 'with the. $6.00/column inch o~cers' appointed vice presidentS ofthe opposition and to hold parties. not out to hurt anyone. securityfirm,theycouldfindways Closing Date for adverisements: Day Session Student Govem- indecisiveness within the ofeuttingunneededsecurityc:osts mente Council itself: a motion to sUch as disconnecting cable teie­ The Council voted 7-3 in decide the amount ofthe vision $el"Yice at·the seeurity of­ abstenti~ favor, with one of stipends was tabled until the fice. Retaliatory aetion, he said, Wednesday March 7,1990 wee~ ~lmeeting. $3.00/column inch giving $10 per or $40 per next The Truth, Justice .was only used as a threat in the ~tipends 'th~ month, to council. Councilapintabled.amotion past to stop the 'pr0p08al. -We, members. Lower Council todecide the stipend amounts STORY DEADLINES:' (School organizations) .refuse tobe intimidated", hesaid.. attbeir-F~:15 and'Mr.·Ed member John Pedersen voted. meeting. The Board ofDireetora • the ~tbe against the proposal, and ....Stipends will also be paid to body that .~torathe diaQibu­ Arts, Features & Sports - 3/5/90 only Council member whohas the three appointed vi~ 10 % chargefor typesetting tion ofstudent fee money'to en­ decided not to accept the presidents orthe DSSG: Nicole sure~t it,complies with the stipend. The stipends will be Nembrand, vice president of 'CUNY fiscal guideHnea. The News & Op-Eds - 3/6/90 distributed on a monthly basis, legislative affairs, Angalla CALL The Ticker ~i8·composedoCsixstudent a1f~ ContactMaria Liu, Advertising and will be granted retroac· '. WiDiama ofcampus representativesfor alItbnegov­ tively from the Counc:il's fint and Scott Butti ofaeademic ernment 8888ions; and of fift semester·~. 725-76·20 Manager, at 725-7620 meeting this- afIiQrs. These three DSSQ administration and faculty rep­ January 29., .. oftie:enarenot el8ctedby . resentatives. .. . The Council also 'Voted 6-3, studentsbut are appointeclby 301 F Student Center ~ _ ..... ~...... -.• _ • , ..). ), .,. s '------._- - . "~ •. "-.",~",<,,,,, ...... ~ ...:...... , .."":-. ~ with one abstention, apiDst the DSSG president.

- ..- _ ..__ ..- ._--'----- February 28, 1990 The Ticker Page 6 The Ticker February 28, 1990 Page 7 Oemire-Faye said; The G.8.A.-hadconsidered pro­ Baruch Phonathon posing the reallocation, of-the Fee Increase $7.50thestudentcenterreceives, Enter Continuedfrom Front Page but according to Oemire-Faye, UnderWay "It'sa deadissue, I don't thinkhe Baruch College, and the G.S.A centofthe studentbodyvotingin . [Segall] would support realloca­ The Blood,·Drive Lottery By NICOLE FARQUHARSON receives approximately $5, 682 . the election, President Segall tion," she said. . .from the activities fee the stu­ wouldnotapprovetherecommen­ However, according to Segall, Thisyears-annual Baruchcol- to raise close to $400,000 for the dents pay. The increased fee dation for the increase, and con­ theG.S.A wouldbeabletorea1lo­ and WIN a 35mm camera, legePhonathon will beheldeach entire campaign since the Trus­ wouldallocatetheG.SAapproxi­ sequentlywill notpassitontothe cate the money, "Ifthey make a ~ ­ day frOm Feb 26 through March tees are encouraging alumni to mately $34,092. BoardofTrusteesoftheCityUni­ good case, and if the voter turn- 15 from 5:30p.m. to 10:00p.m. to supporttheschool, andfor newer In the past the G.SA has been versity. ' out was heavy enough to support a telephone answering machine or a VCR! raisefunds for the school. Every graduatestomakecontributions." forced to cut the seven clubs The process ofraising the stu­ the reallocation. I would say No! year Baruch college calls its Rowlands said. budgets in half. "If [the clubs] dent activities fee is a lengthy It's not a dead issue,"Segall said. alumni and friends asking for Some ofthe students who par- held the same sort of activities one. FirsttheG.S.G. mustseekto --rro make a good case theG.S.A financial support. ticipatedinlastyear'sphonathon, that were held this year, we'd petition for a ballot, -then it's wouldhave toshowa needfor the Baruchis statefunded butbas said that, they loved doing itand basicallygo bankruptbecausethe placed on the ballot for general money. The money can only be its own fund raising efforts -de- every body who participated had­ two dollars we receive does not election. Ifitpasses, then it goes used for an alternate student signed to meet the needs_of the fun. They believe that many cover the clubsbudget;We would to the President for review and center. However, thereislimited students. Events such as studentsrespondtoitasanactiv­ not be able to pay the clubs the approval. Ifapproved, itis then space available in the 26th St. Theatron, seminars and study ity tllathelpsenhancetheiredu­ amount of money they need to sent to the Committee for the building for theG.s.A to use. abroadprogramsarejustafewof cation. "Hell, we don'teven have enough function on just,., two-- dollars," Boardof Trustees for review, if the activities the money raised.... Students, faculty, staff mem­ Oemire-Faye said. approved, it is finally brought space for classes," Segall said. helps to sponsor. bersandtrosteesareencouraged Undertheproposedincreasethe before the Full BoardofTrustees For the graduate students -We usually raise about to participate in the event. "We G.S.A would effectively expand for consideration. The Board of however, using the student cen­ $100,000, but this year the trus- are .seeking callers and clerical servicestograduatestudents.The Trustees has thefinal say. teris impractical. Assigning the teeshaveestablishedamatching help' and anyone who is inter­ G.S.A would seek to expand tu­ In a telephone interview, Se­ G.SA another room for their challengefund;whic:hmeansthat ested in earning from $4.00/hr," torial services, and also expand gall said.he would support the activities is unrealistic from the they have agreed to match any said Rowland. Those interested fr~e legal and tax services, - increase because, "it's the stu­ Administration's point ofview. new gifts to the fund dollar for shouldeontact'IerrenceRowland, ~ewould do whateverittakes dentsbusiness,andithasn'tbeen The graduate studentsfeel they .." ...... • dollar," Terrence Rowlands, ManagerforDevelopmentat505­ are being neglected by the Ad­ " ...... to make life at Baruch College a raised since the dawn oftime. If ,\ .-::::::-. :.:~:::::::.' manager for development. 5891. Dinners will be provided ministration because not only do " \ little easier," she said. they wish to tax themselves then ~ ~ehope bytheendoftheyear for eligible workers. AccordingtoRobbins,theG.S.A. it's no problem. I'm neutral on they have the lowest activities f : ... t . ~. must have at least 284 graduate this issue." fee, butinaddition, all thegradu­ ~ .... ~~ : : .•..... !: ...... 0 •••• student signatures on the peti­ According to Oemire-Faye, the ate clubs are forced to scrounge tion before it's considered for studentcenterreceives$7.50 from around for rooms to hold their .... Vaccine ballot. Currently the G.S.A has the activities fee, which repre­ . meetings in. ~ received 160 signatures in favor sents a $31,409.20 revenue for a "I feel that we are being ne­ \• COI'Ilinuedfrom Front Page ; oftheballot. The G.S.A. hasuntil building the graduate clubs do glected because the graduate \ "It will be a hassleforme,, Said believe it's something we have to April 15 to acquire the rest ofthe not use. students are in the minority .: ...... Christine Carbana, lowersopho­ signatures.. within the school. It's normal, I , " do in order to protect our fellow "We rarely use it [student cen­ :! . , - , . in Thereferendum electionswould think, for the Administration to ,; more, who registered Septem­ students at Baruch." ter] because ofit's location. Most , , .. see , ,,' ber 1988, "because I will have to take' place simultaneously with Graduate students go to their this large mass of students :::. Recently, Governor : .:: get a physical and that costs Mario Cuomo signed a law man­ thestudentgovernmentelections, classes andthen go home. Ifthey which happen to be undergradu­ i ates, and tend to focus there just I money and I don't have any in­ datingthatpeoplebornon orafter butinseparatevotingbooths.The do participate in a function, it's \ ~ surance.' January 1, 195'1and who are elections are to take place from usually between classes.. There- . because ofit's size. I don't think ; to ~ .': However Even's Francoise, an attending a New York State col­ May 1 to May 3. The ballot must fore, togeta studenttowalkdown it's easy for them forget there : :.; ~:' .,"",. is a graduate school," Oemire­ . . . ..' upper sophomore whoregistered lege,showproofofimmunization. bepassedwithatleast10percent frotn26thSt.to22ndSt.andthen Faye said. inSeptember of1987, said, ~or· Each college has to develop a ofthe studentbody participating .backupto26thSt.is difficultjust me it won't be a haSsle because I .policyforgettingstudentstobring .intheelection. Ifthereferendum because we don't have a lot of have my records.' Adding, CJ: in documentarion.or-immurrized. pss_ses hut with less than 10 per- people with that much time," ·ExceSs:·YuBas··· C01ltimledfrom Front Page Learn-to

the School of Liberal Arts and undertaken by adjunct faculty. Write Well Sciences used thefunds tomain­ Dean of Students, Samuel tainthecstatusquo'andprevent Johnson has planned to use the a plannedreduction ofAcademic moneytoimprovethequalitiesof Write For Servicesto students. -&meallY', StudentServices. Hewill usethe saidJap~-we 118editforadding funds in three main areas, Ca­ a numberofc:1asseswewereplan­ reer Exploration Services, per­ Ticker ningto eaneel," sonal eounseling, and for a part­ Thecoursesreinstatedarebase timer in Helpline. News curriculum classes such as his­ Career Exploration Service tory,speech,sociology. Theadded hiredthreea

L- . . ------

.. . ~.- ----... , .... - -'-" , ..:,...... , ~,'. f ­ ... _It" ~_. "' •....:. 4C.' .•' ... '. ~.; '."*,...... -.,. ~ ~ ~. - .' '.' ..- '0 .:. . r«; '. i ~ • .,

Page 8 The Ticke( Februorv 28, 1990- February 28, 1990 The'Tickef

reception will beheldinBaruch's of Education, as staff attorney they stop working. financial aid and another 14,000 ~rt Gallery in honor of the and then Deputy Director ofthe Most available jobs are of the students will loseall oftheirPell speaker. Office ofLegal Services. uns~J1led variety - in. bars. res­ _ rrrsnts unless CongresS amends ;TIC-KER The second part ofthelecture In his new position he will taurants, stores and hotels- but the President's budget proposal. series, scheduledfor Wednesday serve as the University's chief manystudentsrecognize thatany More than three million col­ May2, will feature distinguished legalofficerandsupervisea staff experience overseas may make legestudentsreceivePelIGrants, .TAKES Hungar-ian novelist George ofattorneys. The Office ofLegal their resumes more attractive to . the basic foundation offinancial Konrad. Konrad will discuss the Affairs provides centralized le­ futureemployers. Inthe Past, par­ aid to students who could not political and economic transfor­ gal servicestotheBoardofTrus­ ticipants have worked as life­ afford college without federal mation of Hungary. Joining tees, the Chancellor, and the guards on the Cote d'Azur, as help. About half the students FINANCIALAID Konrad will be Professor ofSoci- college presidents ofthe largest clerks at the Economist maga­ have incomes below $6.000 a . ology Ivan Szelenyi from UCLA. urban university in the nation. zine in London, as farm helpers year. At the CityUniversity of APPLICATIONS The lecture should be ofinterest He will also serve as a member on aNew Zealand sheep station, NewYork, theleadingurban uni­ Financialaidapplicationsfor the to all observers ofthe historical of the Chancellor's Cabinet. and as entertainment coordina­ versity in the country, 71,000 Summer 1990, Fall 1990 and changes occuring in Eastern tors in Jamaican resort hotels. studentsreceive Pe11 Grants.For Spring 1991 semesters are now Europe. The program is open to U.S. stu­ the second year.'in a row the available. Non-SEEK students W 0 R K dents who are 18 years ofage or proposed Pell Grant awards do an You or whowish toapplyforTAP, PELL, NEW VICE ABROAD PRO­ older and enrolled in a U.S. col­ notkeep pace withinflation. The ere lege or university. The only cost maximurn grantis.$2,300 though SEOG Loans or the Work-Study Program must mail this form to CHANCELLOR GRAM· .FOR tothe studentsis the program fee the Higher Education Act au­ the ProcessorbeforeMay 1'-1990. of$96 and the airfareto theirdes­ thorized level is $3,100. SEEK students should complete FOR LEGAL' THE SUMMER. tinations abroad, an expense The President's 1991 budget theforms andsubmitittoa SEEK AFFA'IRS AT which can be reduced by special proposal includes $472 million Financial AidCounselor prior to The Work Abroad Program of student fares available through in increased spending for Pell Times, Council Travel. For more infor­ Grants, however, $37i million March 29. CUNY. the Council on International Education Exchange, the larg­ mation and application forms, will be required to address prior write or phone: Council on Inter­ year shortfalls; leaving a real Robert E. Diaz has been named est student exchange organiza­ PHILI·P MOR· national Educational Exchange, increase of $100 million. The General Counsel andVice Chan­ tion in the U.S., will this sum­ PR-WA, 205 East 42 Street, New budget also does not provide RISLECTURE cellorfor LegalAffairsofthe City mer sponsor students who are interested in working' abroad; York, NY 10017, (212)661-1414; restoration of the $66 million The first of a two part lecture University of New York by the Frien--.-s? Nowinitstwenty-firstyear, the or 919 IRving Street, San Fran­ decrease in the current year's series, sponsored by the Philip CUNY Board ofTrustees after a Work Abroad Program helps cisco, CA 94122, (415)566-6222. budgetfor PellGrants, resulting Morris Program in Business and nation-wide search, Chairman over six thousand U.S. students in reduced awards to 1.3 million Society here at Baruch will be James P. Murphy announced. each year obtain permission for students under the Gramm­ held on Wednesday March 7, For the past two years Diaz has PELL GRANTS temporary workin Britain, Ire­ Rudman-Hollingssequestration 1990. The speaker win be Dr. served as Counsel and-Deputy land, France, Germany, New process. Jerzy Osiatynski who is the Min­ Commissioner for Legal Affairs FACE CUTS. Zealand, Costa Rica, and -Ia­ ister of Economic Planning for in the NewYorkStateEducation maica. the new government of Poland. Department. In this position he According to the National Pell Services provided by the Coun­ "The topic will be The Transfor­ has been General Counsel to the Grant Coalition, an organization cil andits cooperatingorganiza­ mationofPoland: TheMovement Board of Regents, to the Com­ Which represents major educa­ tionsineachcountryensurethat Toward a Free Market." The missioner of Education, and to tion,labor,studentandcivil rights most participants secure work lecture will take place at4 p.m.in . the Education Department. organizations throughout the within days of arrival, earning room 4 North at the 23rd. St Previously, he served for seven nation, more than a million col­ . . , enough to cover room and board building. Followingthelecture a yearsattheN ewYork CityBoard legestudentswill lose partoftheir as well as a vacation' trip once

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/ If you missed the. Ticker's Open House... j.: Don't despair... Street News- A Source ofIncome For the Homeless

:.-...,..... - By Helena MaiTa . . - / . Each day, as I travel to and from school, I am con­ Our house is alwdys -open' to you! stantly approached by numer­ ous homeless men and women. Sometimes unwillingly, I reach into my pocket for some spare change hoping it won't go to drugs or alcohol. But, I often Call Ed for News Glen~for ask myselfwhat is wrong with Arts this picture? Is my spare' change merely throwing money at a problem or is it really mak­ Sammi for Features Mickey for Sports ing a difference. Each one of us have encountered different types of pandhandlers. Some offer heartbreaking stories oftheir

~. '.::: . 725-'7622/ -7620 personal lives while others offer ..,1········> nothing at all but an empty cup. ~ .-". You can question the sincerity ofthe homeless when you see them six months later with the same song and dance. Coping With

Recently, I encoun­ tered a different type ofpand­ A JR. IE rx ((J) 1J.J AN handler, selling newspapers Acaderrric ".r called STREET NEWS. At 'first, I admit myirotial reaction IrN1rlEmWALrlICQ)N AJL was, "Is this legitimate orjust .Dishonesty another gimmick?" .It looked ~.1r1IJJ]) legitimate and so my curiosity By RAFAEL MARTINEZ . JEN 1r f ,. .~~~~diii~lrrl~~~::e. hartTsmps()~re:-~··--····- .. " ...... -.AnotheJl interesting·· The ASsociate Deanef-Students·Ronal4··M...Aaron isin the article entitled"'Real Estate; it the benefit ofa doubt and So what's in it for the midst ofdoing a national study on academic dishonesty and how INFANT VISION STUDIES read what STREET NEWS had reader? For one thing, there Achieving a Balance," was DO vou HAVE. QUESTIONS OR . to offer. are many interesting articles about the "Nimby" problem; not educational institutions are coping with the situation. about real people in real life in my backyard. This very real sentiment is portrayed by Dean Aaron said that the Baruch Code ofConduct states CONCERNS REGARDING:- For those who are not situations. One article in people who do not want to have aware, STREET NEWS is a particular which captured my that ifa student is caught commiting academic dishonesty the Vn§tdl~ their lives disrupted by home­ c non-profit charitable organiza­ interestwas entitled, "Employ­ . $- less shelters and moderate and Infants, 2 weeks - 3 months, can tion that supportsthe homeless. ing the Unemployable." It was faculty has to report the act especially ifthe student admits to it. about the Wild Cat Services low income housing. c IE mID lID II ([]) ymm

As a result ofSTREET borrowing a paper. THE WORKSHOP WILL ALSO FOCUS UPON NEWS, I see a remarkable Dean Aaron said that dishonesty is a concern to all OTHER difference in the faces ofvibrant For more info.: men and women who are doing students because it effects those who work honestly to achieve please contact Sofia Taylor at CONCERNS, SUCH AS CULTURE SHOC~, GETTING .something for themselves. One AROUND NYC, MAKING FRIENDS, ISOLATION . particular young man which their grades and also effects students who see cheating but don't (212)420-5150. comes to mind is Marty Carl know what to do because they don't want to turn in their peers. Smith. Smith, who to many THURSDAY, MARCH 8 may seem to be just another The faculty should have to address how to deal with homelessman trying to get on GL{~BUS L~UNGE, 360 ~AS his feet again, has a history of academic dishonesty by making statements concerning acceptable CLUB HOURS his own. He workedin Wall academie conduct ,by discussing the code ofconduct and by using State College of Optometry Streetand -fell from gl-ace" after he eneountered various better techniques for giving exams such as not using the same 100 East 24th St. NY,NY 10010 Sponsored By: . problems there. Now he sells STREETNEWS during the-day exam for each class. !HI IE IL IP IL II NIE and attendsJohn Jay College in Dean Aaron said that many students are under the false the evenings. So you see, no and one knows what lies behind assumption that academic dishonesty is committed by students ~ nn.@~g~ ~d'~~ IP'IraD~Ir_~IlJD.1 eAch and everyone ofthose .._.. ILnif . - --"""*""" ' .. • • .. --:. : .J~ '.- •_ .•• -.. or - ... -- ...... -; ...

Page 12 The TICker February--28, lWD The Ticker

"What If -More young people experience SeeSammi pain than older people Art Exhibit

Source:NupnftPatn_Report· -- 85% for a position IHEADACHE ~ 50% -. You - - Hosted By Worry?" I ~63% -BACKACHE~I 49% By Robert J. Kriegal, PhD. I MUSCLE ~62% in .thefeatu.res PAINS~.42% The Asian Worrying is the negative national pastime. Everybody ISTOMACH ~ 62% does it and very few find it is a positive experience. You don't PAINS 31% _ . ROOM MATES~ ~ think clearly or perform wen when you worry. Your main focus is .•Age 18-24 .r::· ~o81NTE1N1E~ I O~!.~L ~ 36% - secti.on: the worry, the fear of"What might happen if...," which overwhelms I PAINS i 114%· - Age 65 + Society you, makes you feel depressed, -reduces your energy, and prevents .:., ME ....PI 41% 171% you from getting your work done. --~------College students are big worriers. That worry leads to No- TalentNeeded.. . stress and college students are very big on stress. In fact, the , a wesome features or-entire Nuprin Pain Report, the first national study on pain in America, t ! By Bibi Thompson documented that more people 18-24 are likelyto suffer stress and When works ofart are pantheons create surrealistic pain than any adult age group. Overcoming the Gottas We will train. purported with religion in mind chaos. These thankas (wall Most of what we worry about is out ofour control. You their grandeur are often scrolls) recreate the religious . " can't control other people's responses, a grade prof. will give us, subjected to that of doctrines dynamics portraying angry, By Robert J. Kriegal, Ph.D. whether someone will agree with us, what they think of us, the and rituals. Like prophets in menacing gods as protectors of weather, traffic, roommates, money, how we look, grades, the Come to ROOM 301F their own lands their artistry the fate and destroyers ofevil. - . future. The more we worry about things we"can't control, the The alarm sounds. "6 common causes of their stress coming exam. "I gotta get an and craftmanship are often Ranging from about six to eight A," he said. I asked what would feet long, these scrolls found in worse everything gets. a.m. I've really gotta hustle. are: too much to do, too little taken for granted. Objects of happen ifhe didn't. temples and monasteries are Remember this rule ofthumb: You can't control other I've gotta finish that outline, time; exams; money; relation­ utility in service to the gods ­ people or external situations. But you can control how well you ships; interviews; family and "If I don't get an A, I In the Student Center from the temples ofBhutan to interesting both for their talk to Professor Jones, stop by won't keep up my 4.0 average. . '\'l'.. artistry and liturgy. Added to prepare for and respond to them. In other words, you can control the lab, read 100 pages for my career choices. the city of New York have So, get rid ofstress. Then I'll never get into a really this "quilt" collection are your information, attitude and actions. noon psych class and be at work I I become a rare collection of good graduate school, and then portable scrolls - embroidered Worrying is made up of two words: what if. "What at 3 p.m." Right? Wrong. I I artifacts of beaded flutes, water Stress is neither good I won't get a top job, and then I During Club Hours and appliqued mosaic· which if...they say no,...I don't get the money,...the professor Today's college cam­ pourers, offering cups, prayer serve as portable shrines that assigns, the traffic The key to beating the worries is to change puses are pressure cookers. In nor bad. How you handle it can I'll never make a lot of money..." bells, cymbals, wall scrolls and . By the end ofhis , monks use in their religious . the what ifs to "if then's." "Ifthey say no...then I wilL." Always fact, the Nuprin Pain Report, be. Learning to make stress wood sculptured gargoyles. ~n , change the worry to anticipation. Concentrating your energy on work for you can help you discourse , not getting A on I teaching. the first national study on pain -I "Art from the Himalayan concentrate better and think this test was akin to his life On Thursdays. Bhuddists believe that music what you can change, rather than dwelling on things you can't in America, documented that Kingdom ofBhutan, Land of is the means ofcommunication control increases your confidence and prepares you for any situ­ more people 18-24 suffer from more clearly under pressure, being ruined. the Thunder Dragon", now with the gods. The assortment ation. stress and pain than any adult have more energy, be more When he stopped and hosted by the Asia Society This strategy was used by President John F. Kennedy. brings together some 70 pieces ofmusical instruments as -, Before his press conferences Kennedy and his aides anticipated ofartifacts,.all solely intended would some of the receptacles any possible question or situation that might arise and developed for the teaching and practicing from the Dzong period may if answers for them. Whether a reporter asked about the Vietnam of Bhuddism. not shock, startle a western au­ -War, the economy or civil rights, Kennedy was prepared. ''Today's college. campuses Hearts, _Diamonds, Spades As much as this exhibition is dience. Human bones sheathed Likewise, in a job interview, instead of worrying whether a reflection ofBhuddism, it is with metal such as the skull cap or not the potential employer win ask about your grades, anticipate also a glimpse- ofthe high­ cymbals and thigh bone horns that he or she wil1. Then mentally list wins, accomplishments and are pressure cookers." cultureofBhutan's Dzong have survived Western influ­ qualifications-that your course grades might not reflect. AndCLUBSy Purakas, who until 1907 ence and have been createdand Get into the habit ofanticipating prior to any pressure theocratically controlled the re-created for over 300 years­ situation, whether it's an exam, an interview, a date or a tennis country. Most ofthese exhibits now. The materials used for serve. Make a "worry list" then change each worry (what if) to an have never been seen out of these artifacts are often organic anticipation (if..then). Leaving your worriesbehind oy-foeusing on -. agegroup. -thought about what -he'djust- ­ 'I'heAmezican.. Marketdng 13bii£ari"an(feyen ~a:trip-iliere-­ -... bones;.-wood -andfabrie.: .. what you can control enables you to concentrate your energy and As I've toured the said-that ifhe didn't ace this may not guarantee seeing them. Receptacles afidImplemeriteare perform at peak levels.- - country visiting college cam­ test, his life would be down the Association Is Keeping Concern for the preservation of ornately decorated sometimes uses students tell me the most tubes-he started laughing, "I these religious artifacts and using gold, silver and jade. must be crazy," fear ofreligious degradation Video accompaniments of He was not crazy, just Busy This Semester ~ not thinking clearly or realisti­ ------_/ cally. Many ofus get that way By·Michael Solomon under pressure. this type of Features Looks Back desperation thinking makes us During the past several months, the American Marketing Association(AMA) has increased its ''Bhuddists believe overreact and causes panic. membership by 200 percent, and subsequently initiated many new and diverse programs. Included The cure is to shift from among these are; a community service campaign, a fund raising to subsidize an upcoming interna­ thatwaystudentswon'tgetstuck DSSG to getheroutofoffice sine irrational to rational thinking. tional conference, a reception for visiting Canadian students(March 23), an alumni function and a that znuaic is the wi th shitty teachers." she was elected. Do a reality check. When you Direct Marketing Dayin New York(DMDNY). , get the gottas take a deep means of 1972 ATickercolumnentitled . Shots fired by a sling When the Vice President ofmembership, Rosemary Arestin, was asked about the sudden breath, exhale slowly and ask "The'Outsider," said, "Listen all shot in room 203 ofa Professor' yourself, "What is the worst increase in'membership she said, "Our increase in membership and active participation is attributed Baruch College held its you students and~rsout lawclass in the 23rdstreetbuild thing that could possibly to a strong outreach program as well as a heavy promotional campaign-which was supported by our "communication nnual convovationonDec. 14, in "there. None of t e ki getting ing forced the students to evacu happen? " and "How likely is executive board and active members," The Vice Presidentofpromotions was unavailable for com­ he auditorium. Appearing were stoned, smashed an ted are ate the premises. The polic that to happen?" ments about the matter. with the Gods." ankie Dante with orchestra dumb. In fact, they are the end examinedtheroombutonlyfoun The gottas usually Flamboyan," "Bulldog," and products of the "Intellectually that the damages were a shat occur when you think you have This type ofreality thinking The community service project which is presently under way is a canned food drive to assist E~h, Gifted,' which puts your entire tered window. too..much too do and too little puts the gottas in perspective. in feeding New York's homeless and hungry. This program, which is headed up by one ofthec1ubs ac­ Earth, Wind and Fire." have led the Bhutanese govern­ theater, rituals and the tsok system to shame and shows how time to do it. "I gotta study for Sure, not getting an A would be tive members, StuartAlman, aims to collect and distribute in excess of300 cans offood.(Donations ind and Fire proved to be the -Compiled By ment to ban tourists from feast merge flambouyance and screwed up YQU are..." This col­ two exams...1gotta read two a drag, butit wouldn't-be the may be taken to room 839 in the 26th Street Building.) When Altman was asked about the recent iggest hit at the convocation. SammiPerez entering the monasteries and reverence in their display ofthe e groups played to a full and umn had the following cartoon r chapters...I gotta call financial end ofthe world nor would it interestin community service, he responded, "As we become more and more involvedin our own fimd I temples. About 70 percentof perfonningarts and show these ppreciative house. The ques­ below it. aid about my loan...I gotta get a land this A student in the ranks raising.it came to our attention that-we were utilizing the resources ofour community without giving Bhutan's 1.2m. inhabitantsare instrumenta1llld receptacles at date for Friday night..." anything in'retum," ion of the week was "Do you ofthe homeless. Bhuddist. use. hink teacherevaluationsshould A 25 foot alter piece, donated In addition to the canned food drive, there is also a book drive in the planning stages. The Like neighboring TIbet, _ published?" Among the an- 1976 The gottas make Looking at the past by the Bhutanese·government, Bhutan a 18,000 square mile books will be donated to the Ronald McDonald house, where-they will be sold to raise money to It was titled "Socialist everything Seem harder than it win helps, too. After all, he and which.received the" sanctifi­ kingdom is very much support their programs. still None ofthe Takeover of DSSG," and it ac­ really is. You get into the panic already had a 4.0 average, and cation ofBhuddist priests is inaccessible to the rest ofthe cused "agents of the Young S0­ zone, rushing to get it all done. had done well on difficult exams perhaps the galleries' most students getting The AMAis also making a big effort to raise money for the 1990 internationalcollegiate world. Not only because ofits cialist Alliance" of forming an You walk too fast, talk fast, before. Reminding himselfof impressive exhibit. Wood conference to be held in New Orleans. . mountainous terrain and intricate,.deceptive plotto gain think too fast, write too fast, eat his past success on similar panels carved with serpentine stoned, smashed . "Last year only eight people attended the conference from Baruch, this year there are over 25 people limited roadways (not until the control ofBaruch's Day Session too fast. You can'tconcentrate exams helped him relax and designs hold together a center _who are planning to attend," said the club's executive Vice President Lou Messina. In order'to fully 19f:O's were any roads built) but" and wasted StudentGovernment. "Theirgoal or think clearly. You make restored his confidence. elaborately dressed in soft . subsidize this trip, an estimated $20,000 needs to be raised. The members ofthe club are using three because ofits religiousskepti­ is to gain access to the tens of careless mistakes, blank out on transcendtal colors. FigUrines, eism. Perhaps such ventures as ­ are dumb. channels offu1idraising. Thesearea T-shirt and sweatshirt sale, sponsors and a_trade show display thousandsofdollars comprisedof exams and forget things you Oaining' control ofyour flowers and vines carved out of for a competition that will be entered in New Orleans. this Asia Society exhibition wers were: "Yes because from students activities fees included already know. Everything thinking will help to turn a mixture ofbutter and flour, could provide opportunities for he students viewpoint it can seems like a life or death desperation reactions into peak together form what looks like in the consolidated fees that stu­ Direct MarketingDayin NewYork(DMDNY) will take place on Friday, May4, and isopen to all dialOK\le•.On June 17 th ,the -serve as a guide in registration" preposition. performance actions. Learning an enormous icing cake. dents payeach semester," Butas college students in the metropolitan area. -Theeay is designed to promote and educate about direct exhibitsleave NewYark-for an rnd"Itwill preventstudentsfrom this early in life will be invalu­ With the detailed precision stated by the writer, their ob­ marketing. There will be several speakers as well as a round table ofdiscussions and refresh:nents. exteDsive tour·in Japan. At a /Wasting $5.00 on dropping a stacle is "Fran McBunn, who as I was talking to a _ gh!e in the future, because no often seenin Chin..,. art, black studentprice ofone dollar there course later." But the ultimate junior at-University ofCalifor­ matter what you do or where treasurer has safeguarded The Marketing meetaon Th.urJIda~duringclubhOurs, inthe26thStreetbuilding, butthe =~~~:ca:;.~bto depiet is DO !'888Oft·Wby you. should : esponse was from a chemistry Baruch'sstudentsmoney"despite nia at Berkeley who had a bad you do_it, there's al.ways going dUb m umans . mi_a ebanee tosee it.- forth~ officeis opened during the week, andmore than willing recruit members. .. . d rp ¥Vibran-·· .col of . . an A.&a4fU&~-_....-. t,...~ ·orsophomorewhosaid,-Sure, of the various attem ts the case the gottas about a to be things you gotta do. .. ' •• _.. &• __ .... - _. ------_ _• ..: _ -, -: - ~. - .• ~. ~ ~ ••-._ ~. ;;;;: .."'!:_.:._'-..:.. _ ~ ~ ~.:....;;... ~ :.:. ...:.._-- . ... -. .... ~ ..- . -"',. -

, •,-- ,Febn,JQ!Y. ;28" :-l990 Po e14 The Ticker Februa 28 11 1990 Page'lS' Dishonesty He Creative~

Continued from Page 11 grades)." "Students when caught usually admit it it

because it is black and white" and usually is poorjudgement on the I -j part offirst time "cheaters" and usually "not in the nature ofall I By GABRIEIJ.A PORTELLA students to be dishonest." said Dean Aaron. Come Did you know that Baruch has its very own "world ofart"? Yes , our own Art Gallery, nestled right in the heart ofour campus at 135 East 22nd on the ground floor - right next door to the student center - (just east ofLexington). This month the Baruch College Gallery is hosting a collection of work from Catalan, an autono­ mously governed region in Spain. This collection of works from 11 "Students when rite artists represents "The SecondVanguard" ofartists from Catalan. The names of "the first vanguard", Pablo Picasso, Joan Miro and Salvador Dali are very well known. And like their predecessors Xavier Corbero, MOdest Cuixart, Josep Guinovart, Joan Hernandez caught usually Pijuan, Marcel Marti, Joan Pone, Albert Rafols Casamada, J.M. Subirachs, Antoni Tapies, Jo3. Tharrats and Moises Villelia bring to the United States, the Baruch community most pointedly, a admit it ... " For wealth of talent and vision. ' The idea behind this exhibit must be credited to our gallery director and curator ofthe show, Sandra Kraskin. The gallery has five shows per year and as Ms. Kraskin pointed out, they are specifically designed for Baruch College students as the target audience. This show was executed with our Spanish-speaking Dean Aaron said that the situation can not be ignored but Features students in mind. The next show planned will be about African has to be addressed through a community board effort involving ancestral art. the Provost, Dept. deans, faculty senate, and the students because The exhibit flows smoothly and easily from piece to piece, giving each work ofart the space it needs, yet allowing an easy segue to the Baruch College Code ofConduct can not just be stuck in the Ask for Sammi the pieces preceding and following. The collection of works, two or Undergraduate catalog but must be taught and discussed along three pieces from each ofthe eleven pieces, is poignant and intense. They are surreal, expressionistic and abstract, marked by with academic ethics and honesty. recent and not-so-recent works. Each artist, through his/her own medium, express their interpretation ofthe on-going evolution of Xavier Corbero's'Lluna Plena art, the meaning ofart, the direction ofart.

You don't have to be an artist or a critic to appreciate the collection COLLEGE------.~------~~------~~ofartists and work that Ms. Kraskin has made available' to all of BARUCH E~ch'p~n~ng? sculptu~e, ~ou'll ~n e~ch each is inviting and find 0 f'.- Tuesday Wednesda .. something_only yo.'!,can ~~.,. ~~ ~uty .0f:aJ?t ~_..o~-~~~he - '-':' . ELECTION.... '90 Monday artist intended when they painted the pmntiiigor sCulpted thii . .' .', sculpt~re,but w?at you as ~he vie~er, as the one who comes to 1".~ CAMPAIGN appreciate, sees In any particular piece ofwork. Stop by. Take '. this opportunity to expand yourhorizons. Pick-up a free color . ~ ~_.~-_ ~ATES catalogue'an(fiiSk questIons:-' 0·· 0-"- .0 ••_,.,._ •• _=.. .._. --..... ,. ":' .. '.1 · AND DEADLINE]) I The opening reception, held February 8th, which included the President ofthe Autonomous Government ofCatalan, as well as several ofthe artists on exhibit, was a great success and added to FEB. 28TH Party, Candidacy & Referendum the air ofimportance this show carries for the Baruch campus community. applications available. The show only runs until March 7. Take advantage, the gallery is open Monday through Friday, from 12 to 5 pm. MAR. 15TH Approval deadline for proposed referenda'

MAR. 29TH Candadicy Declaration & Party registration filing deadline Save Up To SSO On Gold: Invest In Yo~r ~utur~. ' ~ Buy an ArtCan"edcollege nng a Full Lifetime ~ arranrv '·:::~:~::%;::;::~::::::::~::::x' .;..<::;::::. APRIL 5TH Referenda filing deadline . It's a smart inves~- AndArtCan·ed offersa· ·":::::~:~::[~*!!~I~I~li~l!ldl~:\":. ment, Because ,/-">~jp"4: varietv ofmen's and ·'Wf:¥:ffi.it' \. MtCan'ed ~~~ wo~en'sstyles"ith ~), ELEefIONS· .. --~ ~- MAYl-3RD gold. rings~L:,:., ~.'..,,>-,:::::" .• lots of options. C rose a are crafted with college memento

-,':':':':'<.':.>:.:".:.:.:':':"':.'. the kind ofquality that grows more :::!:~ill:~~l~!~:::!!r~~~~ili~::t::" you can put stock into. valuable with time. Information and forms for the following are '{:W&iijJ':;:::·::;;:::;:·,::., Each ArtCan-ed Askhow YOU can :~, ·\if.~·' :~'" ::~·::k·.,. college ring save ~n gold ··::~~-:t ~'-" °0 ::::'" y. h' .: .-" .... ,... .. available ,.:~:,~ ,., .':,. :~<'" comes wIt ·""~;f,;ri£:·,. ,:~-::.".-;,~ accessones. too. -::~~$> '.~ j:~%~~t:.. -~ .. .' ,,'0- ••••••• in Rm 527 (26th St), Dean's Office Rm 1702 ~--~ (360 PAS) . n~rR &eYJ~Q and Student Center (22nd St): 26 St. 5th TCII -Political party charter form ~ --, Cafeteria March 5, 6, 7 11 - 6:45 pm .. -Declaration of Candidacy INFO? Location Date 1 ime Deposit Required -Election Guidelines 725-3385 Payment Plans Available" ••

. .. , A• • .I•

,...... ':' ,...... ' p. ""-~".;. ~. 7· -- _. " -. February 28, 1990 . Page 17 ---MARTIN STARKEY-~------,- TARK'S MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Com.edy Hour I Concert Showcase Aerobics Aerobics - 1 - 2 p1Il Series 3 - 4 pm 4 - 5 pm. §- TBERUNT s::: FOR 1- 2 p1ll ~ Movies Movies Movies .RED OCTOBER! Aerobics SeanConneryis Captain Marko Alec Baldwin is CIA operative 5 - 8 plll 5 - 8p:m 5 .; 8 pm- Ramius. . Jack Ryan. 3 - 4 p:m . ABOARD THE RED OCTOBER ABOARD THE USS DALLAS CSPECIAL EVENTS] Captain Marko Alexandrovich Ramius ( Sean Connery) Captain Bart Mancuso (Scott Glenn) Captain Second Rank Vasily Borodin (Sam Neill) Lt. Comm. Phil Thompson .(Anthony Peck) ... Dr. Nikolay Petrov (Tim Curry) Seaman Ronald Jones (Courtney B. Vance) March 1st, Thurs. - FOOD.FEST, .Club HourS, Alley Lounge Ivan Putin (Peter Firth) Chiefofthe Boat (Larry Ferguson) Loginov (cook) (Tomas Arana) Seaman Charles Beaumont (Ned Vaughn) March 7th, Wed. - "TAROT CARD READING" 1 - ,,3 pm, Oak Lounge IN WASHINGTON D.C.

CIA Analyst Jack Ryan ~ -4~·r--.. ~~ March 8th, Thurs. - "THE ARM wRESTLE" ByJarnalJoseph Admiral James Greer, CIA director ofNaval Intelligence (James Earl Jones) Club Hours, Auditoriutn .: National Security Advisor Jeffery Pelt (Richard Jordan) Soviet Ambassador Andrei Lysenko (Joss Ackland) - "T~ E IT IS~' Gil Noble from ABC, 6 - 10pm, Oak Lounge Dirmer will be served Co-Sponsors: STUDENfS' FOR STUDENTS AFRICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION , ~-.. DAUGHTERS OF AFRICA Somewhere in the chillingdepths ofthe Atlantic Ocean the i ,. United States Navy and the Soviet fleet are involved in a deadly I chain of .events. Captain Marko Alexandrovich Ramius, com-I I M~ch 9th, Fri. - "PARlY" Dub Masters Oak Lounge ...mander 'of the nuclear powered Soviet Typhoon submarine" RED .\ • .. OCTOBEa has apparently stolen his vessel .and is beginning to . .' carryouta verysinisterand deadly plan. As the nuclear submarine March 14th, Wed. - "PLANNED PARENTHOOD" 1 - 3, Oak.Lourige -makes~anunauthorisedapproech on~Ameri~s",eastern seaboard, I, CIAanalystJackRyanissummonedbythestatedepartmenttofind /. .. ,. out what the'SOViet captain's plansare. . ./ March 15th, Thurs. - "BRAZIL DANCE COMPANY" Club Hours, Audftorfum " .'.I Co-Sponsor: LA.S.O. As Captain Ramius leads the RED OCTOBER west, an . ., ·PA-£;D£. ' inc:re-d1ble-·eha.~~n~:~e)itt.~or ~~1h:he",· L . ,the ··.·'n .' TENNIS CLUB Soviet Union both begin an impossible hu_ni·for ihe-'mQSt·deaaIy-

L.-Se--ott-G...... le~n-D~(t-op-)-is-C-a-pta--jn---M-an-c-U80--an-d-J-.-m-es----l submarineeverbuilt. An unprecedentedfleetiscalledintocombthe L--_---..;.~__----~--~--~-----J ,I March 22nd, Thurs. - "DELICIOUS CAKE & LUNCHEON SALE" Earl Jones (bottom) playsAdmiral Greer. ocean surface and floor for the renegade vessel. The Los Angeles CourtneyB.Vanee(top) i8 Seeman Jone. and classsubmarine USB Dallas andthe SoViet Alphaclass submarine RichardJordan(bottom) isJeffery Pelt. _ Club Hours, Alley Lounge & Student Center _ SSN Konovalov are summoned to lead the search. In Washington D.C. CIA analyst Jack Ryan voices his belief'that a defection might be planned. What would make Captain Ramius consider def~on? Being handed the blueprints ofa boat designed to be able to, in one strike, take out the largest city in the United States. The RED OCTOBER is

April 19th, Tfrurs, - TALENT SHOW, Club Hours, Auditorfum not a defense weapon but an offensive weapon of"'attack. ,- -- - . - .. ' /: - .. . , Auditions start March 12, Mon. 2:3;· Tues. 12--1; This soundsgood doesn't it? On March 2, 1990 all those red, black, and white posters reading, "THE HUNT IS ON!" that have been plastered on billboards and buses and in subway stations allover the city will finally be explained. THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBERisrumored tobe thefirst truly big boxoffice hit ofthe 90's andinsiders have Wed. 4-5 and Thurs. 5-6 -- in ROOIn 212 voiced opinions thatTIlE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER will dofor the navy whatTOP GUN did for the airforce. TOP GUN was the top grossingfilm of1986. That translated intobigbucksforParamountPicturesandanincreasedsignupratiofortheannedforces.Whether~DOCTOBER"can.dothesmnethingremainstobeseen.ParamountPictures has, however, pulled out all the stopped in hopes ofrekindling that same box office enthusiasm and zest that catapulted TOP GUN to the top ofthe charts in 1986. April 26th, Thurs. - One Act Play ''WHERE WE ARE TODAY" By Tony Medina -~------~_._._.._-_.- 5:30 pm, Oak .Lounge ' , AlthoughTom Cruisewasapparentlybusyatthetimeofcastingfor"REDOCTOBER", Paramountluis assembleda sure-firecastguaranteedtobringpeople tothemovie April 27th, Fri. - One Act Play "WHERE WE ARE TODAY" By Tony Medina theater. Oscar winner andfan favorite Sean Conneryleads the castoftalented actorsandactressesasCaptainMarkoAlexandrovich Ramius,themaverick Soviet ship captain whois the primaryeatalystirrthe filrrr.He plays a bad guyanditwillbeinterestingto..seehow moviegoersreact ~ him on the otherside ofth~ fen~·_Coll:!le~.~~in the no.2 5:30 prn, Room '111, 24th St. Bldg. movie of1989 INDIANAJONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE, which won him audience anderitieal nods as Indiana's dad. In 1987 he won the best supporting actor award for , . ' his portrayal ofMalone in THE UNTOUCHABLES. Joining ~eryis Alec Baldwin as CIAAnalystJack Ryan, a representative of the group ofCIA personnel Comprising a *Auditions for "WHERE WE ARE TODAY" March 1,2,8,9 ; 3-5 pm, Oak Lounge majority within the agency. He has been involved with the mundane taskofprofilingbiographies ofSovietNavy personnel when heis suddenly thrust into'Serving his. country _.__inanoperational Cl:\pac!ty. Priorto"RED OCTOBER"BaldwinhasstarredoppositeMichellePfeifferinMARRIEDTOTHEMOB,EricBogosianinTALKRADIO,Michael Keaton & Co-Sponsor: STIJDENfS FOR STIJDENfS and Geena Davis inBEE1'LEJUlCE~nnIsQUaid In GREATB~-eFFlRE"andMol1yRingwaldinSHE'S HAYING ABABY_J~esEarl Jones_ deadly terrorist onto the screen in 1988in DIE HARD. Prior to thatMcTiernan lead . ~ ... ~' Arnold Schwarzenegger, Carl Weathers~ and Jessie "the body" V~ntura on a hunt

REVENGE. StarringKevin Costner,Anthony Quinn, and Madeleine Stowe.Directedby Tony Scott. Scr~nplayby Jim Harrison and Jeffery Fiskin. Based onthe novella byJimHarrison. Here I's another perfect Running Time: 124MIN. Rated R. example-this cut can not be 0 labelled-muse,"butallyouhouse e Beloved peopleoutthereshouldenjoythis duced by Martyn Phillip "HARD TO KILL" one. The bass thumps.. The beat tlantic Records "Vengeance is mine," sayeth the Lord...THANK GOD for that because REVENGE, starring oneachoftbefourcutson·the 12- TING: ••• 112· Kevin Costner, Anthony Quinn, and Madeleine Stowe is an insipid romantic tirade that languishes in The Sound of Music ·inch are c:tisti'nctly different--a little something for everyone. The. its own boring storyline and goes absolutely nowhere fast. From the beginningthis film offers a tired old IS· HARD TO MISS plot with a fast-paced highgloss look thatkindofsplitsthefilmintotwogenre's. Ononehandit'san action "Boys & Girls" cutis fast with justa touch ofacid, utilizing samples movie, but on the other hand, and mostly, itis a love story that really doesn't go anywhere except down. .. from their otherhit,"TheSun Rising." "Honky Tonk"has a slight 'Hot **1/2 97feel toit, wlu1e "Single"is slower, harder, andhas guitar breaks to , The end result is a movie that cancels itself out as entertainment and becomes a prime candidate for boredom. make itrock-ish. Myfavorite, "Unele Arthur," is practicallyall bass, .' andthumpshardandslow. Dare I say slightlyreminiscentofPrince's ... •Anna Stasia?" . Basedononeofthreestories from authorJimHarrison'snovella"Legendsof'Fall," Kevin Costner HARD TOKUJ,. StarringSteven Seagal, KellyLe Brock, Bill According to tJ:1e Beloved's bio, they were exposed to rap and stars as J. Cochran, a hotshot navy pilot who after12years ofservice retiresand heads down toPuerto Sadler,and Frederick Coffin.· Directed by Bruce Mabnuth. .- house when visiting New York about three years ago; They enjoyed Vallarta for a little rest and relaxation at the home ofhis powerful and wealthy sportsman friend Tibey Screenplay by Steven McKay. Running Time: 95MIN. Rated I used to be great with , the American music's "soul," and were influenced by Mantronix, Tom (AnthonyQuinn). While there hefalls inlove, almostatfirstsight, withhishost'slovely,yetunhappy wife R. records-l could tell by the first Toni Club, and Prince. (Hmrn...maybe I should dare say "Anna Miryea(Madeleine Stowe). Despitehisfriend'sgraciousnessandreputationasamurderer, Cochran takes few notes what song was coming Stasia...) They call what they play "ballearic," music being played in the suicide plunge anyway, running offwith Tibey's wife on a wild sexual trist that leads to Tibev's men on, and even recall the name of clubsinSpain, Italy, andtheMediterranean-itis"all kindsofmusic, pounding the stuffings out ofhim in the desert and Tibey's wife beingcarriedoffto a whorehous~ where There's definate power in this movie. Ifnothing else HARD the group. I'm sure many ofyou as long as you can dance to it...the glasnost of music." she is drugged and abused. Cochran does oneofthose "onlyinthe movies"miraculous recoveries and sets TO KILL packs a wallop! Steven Seagal, who made his screen debut have noticed the great rash of It'sjustlike I toldyou..itisdifferent, butworth the risk. Give out on a wild hunt for his loverseething withangerandjustdyingfor revenge. Thisis when we think the in 1987 with ABOVE TRELAW, is back for more or less the same records that 'sound exactly the KIL~ ita chance and it Will take the airwaves by storm, You heard it here movie is going to get good, unfortunately we're left flat because there are no surprises. Granted, most thing in HARD TO a quick-moving, action-packed hybrid same-they have the same hook shoot'em up/karate flick that borrows the old Rip Van Winkle gag to witha littlevariationon thespeed first. kick the movie into high gear. orarrangements. There's Soul II Soul, whose whole thrives Seagal is Mason Storm, a cop who is nearly killed in the on the same underlying rhythm. opening minutes of the movie after shooting a surveillance video There's Sybil, who can't seem to linking congressman Vernon Trent (Bill Sadler), a top city official, to come up with an original song some serious corruption. A bunch ofTrent's minion's, determined to and apparently has her career THE SUN RISING The Beloved is exactly retrieve the videotapes, burst into Storm's house' filling Mason full dependingon thatsamebeat. I've The Beloved ofleadand inthe processblow Mason's wife away. Gunneddown and been. hearing a bandwagon-load Wea Records . the type of European group I leftfor dead, Storm.falls into a comaandishidden away in the bowels ofotherartists that use thatbeat Produced by Martyn Phil­ was just talking about. "The of a hospital coma unit by corrupt cops. When he finally regains as wen, andactually-get airplay! lips Sun Rising" fits very nicely into t~ consciousness seven years later ( sporting a laughable phony beard I guesseverybodyfigures RATING: •••• house music genre and still ;'" that makes him looks alotlike Jesus Christ) Storm nurses himself they might as well latch on-I,· sounds unique. It is a smooth back to health with the aid of Kelly Le Brock, who portrays Andy mean, "ifit ain't broke, don't fix ReOrd~methirigI would classify as "driving" music. This is one Stewart; a beautiful young trauma nurse from the coma unit who it," right? A while back, there ofthose songsyou pop into the cassette deck in the car and set off becomes Storm's sidekick and lover. was a big surge of house into' , on a long trip. The rhythm keeps you going, and in a car I guaran- . rna;nstreaID:,_EVERYBP.DY-R-u1.- . '. . .. .-The..beat..gets..you..going..andthehaunting. With no idea who tried to kill him, Storm sets out on amad . a twingeofhousein theirrecords. ­ .... WICaldraws yon deep intothe music. . .. '. seek and destroy mission, leaving a trail ofbodies behind him a mile I mean Ashford and Simpson, All fourcutsonthe single areverysimilar-·the usual instru­ long. Storm whips himselfand the movie into a lather, transcending NataIie Cole, and even Michael mental, the extended vocal, the remix, and the album cut. You can the ruthlessboundariessetbysuchmachomenasJohnWayne, Clint Jacksonjumped on it. Every 12­ . play this oneend toend without a break. Itis most defintely a mover. movies aren't that hard to figure out, but for this one you didn't exactlyhave to be a rocket scientist. Eastwood, and James Bond and bordering on the sadistic as Storm inch single had not only a radio Ifthe Beloved's upcoming album, "Happiness," is anything v' breaks limbs andripsflesh in explicitlygraphicfight scene's that are remix andthe dub version, but a likethefirst twosinglesreleased, I suggestyou buyit. I knowyou are Anthony Quinn is a bright spotinthis dim movie. His personaisawesome andthreatening as a bound to provide action junkies with a good fix. pseudo-house remix as well. ~orriedabout swaying from mainstream, but this album mayjustbe I~s It cold-bloodedkiller outto teachhis cheatingwife and aisloyal frienda lesson. thebestAnthony Quinn isdifficulttoduplicate the one to keep you away from the radio and alongside me, record perform, nce in a long time. Too badthat's the onlygood thingthatcanbe saidabout this movie though. Director Bruce Malmuth (NIGHTHAWKS) makes the best the underground sounds from hunting. Madeleine Stowe is pretty and great to lookatbuthercharacterappears to benothingmore then a pawn ofa scriptthatreally'doesn'thave anything to offerinthe category of Chicago. House music evolved for Costner and Quinn to fight over. Because ofthat, her characteris leftbanging. As for director Tony originality. As a matteroffact Steven Seagal's huge screen presence from those classic discohitsfrom Scott? The director ofTOPGUN opensthefilm with a spectacleofairelshotsthatareeOmparable tothose and commandofhis craft (Seagalis a sixth-degree blackbeltmaster the 70's-songslike "To Be Real" .: shot in TOPGUN, unfortunately the spectacle fades and REVENGE slowly begins to put us to sleep. of aikido, karate, judo, and kendo) is what makes HARD TO KILL from Cheryl LYnn, "I'm Caught ...... ~uch an enjoyable film. It's a grade"B" movie with a class."A" appeal. Up(In A One Night Love Affair)" , We'll forgive KevinCostner this time...afterall, It was his big chance to be executive producer. But Kel1y Le Brock (Seagal' .~. al lif ). 11 ith ith th from Inner Life, "Che Che La Michael Jackson thinking about how much hoUse to-add hat's zoi h hen it's ti r. hi di ? S wne In re lie nuxes we WI WI e w at s going to appen w en ~ s time lor m to recto actor buther character has trouble_keeping up with her husbands. Femme"byThe SavannahBand, into his records. Music, Politics "'_J'~ . and So manyothers, The-latest -:: .~ . --' -.- 0- •• " __..... •• • r Perhaps she was slightly miscast. Regardless ofthat fact HARD TO . There is a way out. If by Marlin Starkey album release from disco diva andthereare 13-yearoldgirlsaIl KILL will be definitely be hard to kill at the box office. you can afford it, shop around for Donna Summer has strong disco over the country with posters of tendencies, but it is just not the 12-inchimportsfrom Europe. My these groups On theirwa1Is.To brother came back from a busi­ And .OatBran same. many a newmusicfollower's dis­ Instead -of listening to nesstriptoEnglandwitha bunch may, even some ofthese groups . of records for kid-sis (me!), de­ why I dream this way.· The rest 'I the monotonous sounds from the themselves have gone commer­ By QUANTRAN claring a virtualhouse I~s,been ofthe album ranges from simple radio, I buy records. As oflate, cialandabandooedtbesOundtbat sr: almost two music haven!··-Not' only-do you. songsofsorrowandsentimental­ (J?ecord Reviews) StacyLattisawiaa very talentedsingerand her voice in her even thathas becomea proolem. made them'popular. years since 'nle Howie of Love findmusicfromEuropeangroups, ity; ·Somebody's Got To Love STACYLA'ITISAW music seems to show that she has fun doing . 'Dance for You' I can'ttakethewordofmostofmy Someone is bound to released their first album in but also European remixes of You," anet"Beatles and Stones," 'Dance for YOlT can fall under urban-contemporary , like somethingyou may he-ar at 'peers'-manyofthem have only catch on, though. The more EngJand.Now after many per­ American singles. The sound is to intricate songs of rage and Smokey never seems to Motown Records WBLS, a station known for playing this particularformat. recently discovered house, and commercial something is, the sooaI complications and a new somewhatditrerentfromChicago madness; tlJledonist," and ·32nd SMOKEY ROBINSON giveup. He'sstil1goingonstrong. Rating: **112* are stuck in that should-be-void, easier towIltitforallit'sworth. guitarist, the group is back with house, and thatisa plus. I think Floor." Can the House of Love Everything You Touch His new single 'Everything You Good sound, good voice, but SOOOOOOOWHAT? "HIP-HOUSE." Thisisanexcru­ GroupsIikeNewOrder7 Depeche their.firstAmerican release on a it due to the strong r&b Mo­ reclaim the attention they had Motown Records Touch' has that 'Smokey-ness' ciatingmix of'hip-hop and house IS Mode,PublicImageLimited,and majorlabel,Pol~. This self­ townintluencesomanyEuropean twoyearsago? Well,judgingfrom Rating: aaa ahoutit,meaningthatnicec:racl{- 'Dance for You" fails to distinct itselffrom somany other singles currently on the market. This music. Blasphemy! The large the Cure have funky remix titled LP is produced by several groups claim. They create a this most splendid LP,their ~======:J in turn createsconfusionintelling who's who amoug works ofmusic. This is not to say that this single is majority ofhip-house is a waste singles..-Funkyenoughtomixin cl:ifferent people. Among them lingvoice thatseemstogivemany uniquesoundthatfits verynicely comebackshouldbenothingshort ofbislovesongssmoothness.'lbat bad. On the eontrar, Stacy Lattisaw seems to want to put the best on Motown wax. It is just that there of vinyl. There are a few good a club-more thanfimkyeDOUgh are: Paul Staveley .0'Duffy, who into the house music genre. . oftriumphant! , same familiar voice gives his creation fervor throughout the piece, may be people whowillnot bother to comb out the small differences between many ofthese artists and ones, particularly, K-YZE~s to stomp to. It 'wuald he wry . prodIk"ed.Swing,Out Sister and Similarly, a lot of -new InotherinterYiew.(With will just pick up one (say, this single) and assume that this 'sounds like the rest' under the urban, -Stomp,"DougLazy's~tItRoll," interestingifhouaedeejaJBwaald Stephen Hague who produced strengtheninghispoint during the song.Thisislike theSmokeyfrom music" (the 'kind they play on the English press), lead-singer/. contemporary catagory. take note ofthis andstock up OIl suchadsas:, NewOrder the past, the only difference being sound modernization, and this KC Flightt's"PlanetE," andyes, songwriter ,~uy Chadwick ap­ 92.7 FMWDRE) goes through 8IMt: singlejustmayrecei'If: a warm welcomefrom' Smokey' loversasweD even the oveiplayed Takes some new music. What I would PIL. Tbeprocludion this .. "t serious changes when released peared to'be a,rrOgant, nuilbunc­ as those who enjoy quiet evenings at home ...VH-I material. Expect some air play, but don't hold your breath too long for this latest single from Stacy to be Two·by RobBase. Mostofthem, give to he~r Public Image time around is mueh better, yet domestically as~2-inch sirigles. tious, and~yobnoxious. But .. asellout. Playitatapartyorhearitat'B.Smith's' anditissuretohavesomefeet shuffiing,butformaking however, justfade in and outofa Limited's -Warrior"ata party_ this album still hasthehaunting The only thing is that the opening verse about 'the guys all WDREusedtobeWLIR, analter­ in an interview with The Ticker, theguysshowtheirpecksand makingthe women take offthe pantyhose 'Dance for You'mayneeda Iittle party unrecognized. , Intime,Isuppoðings moodandfeel utheirfirstLP. It fall over each other...to get to you' could possibly be made more native radio station with a small thechap ~,~pretentious,soft­ more tequila. House music is at it's will straighten themselves out. starts with the atmospheric interesting... but strong underground follow­ spoken arid (b100dy) quaint. -Aaron Hyde bestwhenitissimplymusic,easy Then again, as lcmg as tbere'sa CJIannah" and follows with a lu- More ReJJiews 011 Page 20 - ing.' ,Like.house, new music was /' ) band~ ai~ But ' ~1en again,how many people rush for pensand say 'HolyChrist!, on the lyrics. It is impossible to there will. be cent remix or -shine. On" (their .... ~ ~. haverapmusiceasyonthelyrics. once nowhere near mainstream. somewhere for music.maken to I!ingle Ticker: Why-did Terry Bickers tlx "' Joes AARON HYDE!' No~1iOwever, first in England). which Therefore, hip-house cOntradicts newmusicisbeing jump. basGuyChadwiekexpressing1)is leave theDincrr' , "The limeyou enjoy wasting is not wasted time." ---BERTRAND RUSSELL 'playedontop-40formatstations, I itselfin name and in form. 8elf-uDcertainty: tIJ don't know ~.OJIPtJ6e 21 ..~, , February 28, ]990 The Ticker .Page 21 Page 20 The Ticker February·28, 1990. signify the state-ofinterna­ us ashamed to be white? tional relations. (When we cloee our ears The lyrics make it clear to the sound ofmachinegun ~ecordRevieW~' 'thatJohrisoniso~mtingund~ ·fireJ THE WHAT? the assumption that ifhe And while the niggers throws around words like ofthis world are starving with Just when you think that music has gone totally electronic, Truth, God, Love, Evil, ete., he their mouths wide open, A CHANGE IN THE WEATHER ~ ~ somebody comes along and releases acoustic album. Gregson & By GLENJ. SPANGLER is automatically saying very What is it that turns Give Gregson & Collister fall right into that description with their latest, "A Change wise things. In fact, he is more' thecoins we throw at them into in the Weather.- \ Produced by often spouting pretentious worthless little tokens? The acousticguitarplaysa verylargerole in thisalbum, and . nonsense. It serves to make the­ Rhino Records doesn'thinderitatall...themusicitselfdoesa good enoughjobof'that, RATING: ** 1/2 The The album tiresome and a little bit I assume, or at least I Thealbumstartswiththebestsong,-rhisisthe Deal,"which Produced by , Roli Mosimann depressing. hope, thatcJohnson uses the effectively uses the acoustic guitar, a ramming snare drum and a The lyrics also make it word "niggers" sarcastically. perfect amount ofvocal hannony. Unfortunately, from there on it's all downhill.. . & Matt Johnson clear that Johnson assumes But why use it at all in this Gregson and Collister have been classified by their home press in England as a folk- rock type duo. Clive Gregson, lead singerand Epic Records that ifhe understands what case?, What purpose does it .writer ofall the music, feels that the characterization is inaccurate. He feels that they are a rock act. Well, Clive, you'd have a better shot he's talking about, that's all serve here? as a folk-rock act, because your music just doesn't cut it as a rock act. . that matters. An example Mind Bomb's strong When they called, I had heard ofTHE THE, but I didn't The music is too slumberous, with the exception of"This is the Deal: which isn't a good enough deal to spend seven dollars for. Yet which would cause a G'n'RlPE point is the sound ofthe music think I had heard any oftheir music. There was no time to find I mustadmit that Christine Collister's voice is impressive. Nomatterhowimpressive her voice is, itstill cannot save thisalbum from hitting type furor ifTHE THE was itself. Itis highly recommended the discount rack. . .. someone who had, though: The press conference were later that more popular here: as a gift for youz friend who same day, Thursday, February 1. I found myselfstrainingtolisten to side two. Hope for a good songstill lingeredin my mind when I turnedit over, but my mind soon doesn't- understand a word of began to wanderas the lethargic music started in. . . A minute or two after I hung up, they'called back to ByD~VIDBORG What is it that makes English. There is one song on the album called ,Don't StepIn) My Blue Suede Shoes," The impression I got at first was that the song was anxiously warn me against asking any questions about A lot's been happening or about Electronic. Well, okay. . meant to be a tribute to Elvis Presley. The songspeaksofthe tabloid press's insistance thatElvisisstill alive. Gregson speaksfor Elvis, and Matt Johnson asksthemnottostandinElvis'bluesuede shoes. Buttheycannot,becauseGregson'sfeetarealreadythere. Thisupsetme. Gregsonisspewing in the world of rock and roll. 1had been to the Beacon once before, for an expensive and these high sounding words about how Elvis'memory should not be exploitedfor personal gairi, andGregsonisdoingexactly what he's asking Among the many headlines, disappointing Bob Dylan concert, but 1had to be reminded of other people not to do. _ rumors, stories, facts, etc.: where it was; 74th and Broadway; At· around the appointed time of Overall, the album gets one * for originality, one * for instrumental performance,anda final half*for diversityofmusic. Still, I wish Summer "Monsters of 4:50 they led me and my esteemed colleagues from other college I could have given it more.' . Rock" tour with Aerosmith~ newspapers downstairs to a lounge area where we waited for THE MotleyCrue and Kiss...Also THE. expect an EP to be released by . Matt (jJhnson), we were told by some publicity person, Aerosmith this summer which would be with us for the conference, but might not be able.to stay The House of Love Will contain outtakes from their with us for the "meet and greet." Well, okay. . last two albums... At the AMA, The photocopied press release and articles made it fairly Slash,ofGunsn'Roses,saidthe clear that the creative force, the poet, the ego, the Roger Waters, if Continued'from Page 19 band has written 36 songs for LOVE IS LIKE AN ITCHING IN MY HEART· The pointis that The Good Girls are just that: good, or at you will, ofTHE THE is Matt Johnson. He is also the guy in all Guy: His heart left the group basically and he became very egotistical and it manifested itselfin a very their next LP. 24 ofthese songs least good enough. Good voices, good "team work- with the singing the posters with the quarter-inch haircut. Johnny.. · Marr~the lead unpleasant way. Anditgot to the point where we couldn't be in a room with him without wanting The Good Girls will be putoutasa d9ublealbum. make this a good urban contemporary song with an up-tempo-and­ guitarist, was a founding member ofThe Smiths. to kill him. Motown Records As for theother 12, we'll have-to presently-in-stylebeat. You mayaskwhatthe -nt-style-beatis, well Perhaps the most memorable moment ofthe co ' renee: Ticker: How did you acquire guitarist Simon Walker from the Dave Howard Singers? wait... Among those 24 will be a RATING: ** 1/2* it's like this: Take Big DaddyKane's CJlaW- and speed it up a bit(use / The crew cut in front ofme had been asking aseries ofquestions Guy: We wanted to keep going as a band and we certainly didn't want to go .through the pains of song entitled "November Rain," about types ofmusic. When he referred to a THE THE album as a auditioning. We needed someone at.a day's notice and Dave isa friend of ours, so we said, "Can we borrow the instrumental side, please)...that's the "in-style- beat and it seems to be selling quite well. /' which makes "Stairway to Theonly problem is that the GoodGirlsarejustthat: good. Thereisn'tanythingoutrageouslyoutstandingaboutthesongthat I would "dance album," Matt Johnson leapt over the table, knocking over a Simonfor a month?" He wasn't very happy about it. But that was the ki ndofunderstanding that Simon Heaven" and "Dream On" look cup ofwater, and cut offthe young man'shead with a pocket knife.. had with Dave Howard; Ifsomething else better comes along, I'll take it. really WANT to remember. Don't get me wrong- I commend their efforts in trying to get a piece ofthe pie...Expect some airplay on 'BLS or like nursery rhymes... New ale KISS, but it may take something special to make "Love is Like an Itching in My Heart".not just'another face in the crowd. Alright, that isn't precisely what happened. But he was a Ticker: Is oat bran as big in England as it is here in the U.S.? bum on the way from .New York little bit hard on the kid. "Why must you categorize everything?," Guy: Oat bran? ...hum... What's that? ...Is it cereal? City's very own Circus of he asked. Matt told him that the attitude was "narrow-minded," Ticker: Yes, fiber cereal. Another single , "YourSweetness" was stuck into the 'B' side. I got the "House Muzak·Version."·Let me·tell all you house maniacs Power... N .Y.C.'s other hot new went on for a bit, and snapped, "next question!," dismissing the Guy: Umm... probably. I'm not sure; Ijust eat once a day and that's aboutit-anytime between four and that this is not what you think. "Your Sweetness" is very "casual house", meaning it is smooth around the edges.•.Okay, I mean that itis -band,~gSlab,justfinished subject and the writer. There weremurmers ofsurprize and eight and it's usually not cereal. cute: Noheavybass,No"Who's-it-by?"responce,andNo"Yo-Dave-play-it-on-the-show"inquirieS(someofyouunderstandthelaststatement). touringandareheadingbackinto sympathy for the student. His head wasn't exactly separated from Ticker: How do you feel about being compared to The Smiths and Echo and theBunnymen? Again, possible air play on 'BLS and IqSS, and even at SOme partiesfor the mellow crowd, but I think lime-green Ferraries will the studio. to. start" their much his body- that was a bit ofan exaggeration on my part- but it Guy: I don't mind because Irunderstand we come from the same tradition. I see us as a traditional rock fly before you hear "Your Sweetness- at MARS, RED' ZONE, or even the TUNNEL. anticipated second album... Just was flushed with embarrassment. . 1- • band. Ina sense ofguitars, and kind oftuneful. '1do believethaewehaveactuallygot somethingslightly' released- a new live EP from ---Aaroft Hyde On the subject ofveteran bands who continue to sing differentfrom thosebandsinawaythatthosedifferentin theirownright. I'veneverthoughtaboutcopying Ozzy; "Just Say Ozzy"... Alice about having sex-for the first time instead ofaddressing their own EchoorTheSmiths, but1don't mind being1urnpedin with them because I thinkthey'rereally good bands. . C~~r _~~_The. _~!~ _.QI1_M..arctl. _ age groups,-·Jolmson..,gaid,-~·mtlk~~/'-·He-had-similar'.-- .. , -.Butl·wouldn't-nke-beinglunlped~thbandslike-The-Mission orThe-eult:..'.. . . ~f 12.-- One thehattest "under­ sentiments for RollingStone magazine and fOT groups whose music . Ticker: What kindsofmusic do youIike? . ground" tours now on the road is so "retro" that it could have been done fifteen years ago. Guy: I like a lot ofthe muzaks, I'm a big Prince fan, I like R.E.M. I like a lot ofEnglish dance music at featuresVoivod,Soundgarden Johnson accused most critics of"sitting on their backsides and the moment, umm... New Order. I listen to a lot of sixties stuff: Neil Young, BobDylan, Simon and "CROWBAR••• IS THAT A NEW PORNO?" andFaithNoMore(lasttwoare sweating and farting." Matt Johnson did not stay for the "meet Garfunkle. > up for Grammys in the Heavy and greet." Ticker: What do you think ofHouse: music? Do YQU think it's going to stay, or fade faster than the disco Metal category)... Deep Purple­ When the concert finally got underway that night (I kept ofthe seventies? - is now looking for a new lead hearing fifteen minutes and thinking, well, okay.) I found that I Guy: I don'tlookatitassomethingthatwillfadeorstay. I meandance musickeepschangingandevolving. singer after the departure ofIan By PHII.I,IPE LEONG had heard some ofthe band's music on WORE (a sponsor ofthe And now the newest one I think is somethinglike "Ambient House." What's that? It'sjust dance music Gillan... Rumormill also .has it Amidst the "porno" theatres that line 42nd Street between show) and possibly on WNEW..The most recognizable piece was to me- it's not just dance music, I mean it keeps changing. that keyboardist John Lord has 7th and 8th Avenues, one theatre stands out; the Victory Theatre. "Armageddon Days Are Here (Again)." That's the one that goes, Ticker: You calledyourselfa rock band, butifthis album doesn't take offfor you (knock on wood), would left Purple as well... Wil~~ What's so differentabout this one? Does it show gay movies? No. It you consider changing your sound and being more ofa dance band? Blackmore look to reform~ istheoldesttheatreintheTimesSquarearea,ithasbeenrennovated, Islam is rising, Guy: 1don't think so. It's notjustthe way thegroupis. No. Intimately, it's not what I wantedto do when bow now that Joe Lynn Turner and it has returned to featuring plays for the first time since it was The Christians mobilizing. 1started the band. Basically we wouldn't compromise. We wouldn't do dance musicjustbecause thatis hasbeenaxedbyYngwieMaim· turned into a burlesque house in 1930. The world is on"its elbows and knees. obviously what is popular. steen?... Don't expect Zeppelin CROWBAR, by Mac Wellman, which is making its world It'eforgotten. the message and worships the creeds. Ticker: I've read where you've said you want to sell millions ofrecords!.. to tour this summer... Dolook for . premiere at the Victory Theatre, is a funny, interesting, weird ex­ Guy: 'No (laughs), I just said that to wind the English press up 'cause theyjusthate hearing that kind of the·Sex Pistols to get together, ample of contemporary drama. The seating was very interesting: (Not that it waspossible to understand many ofthe words thing. They wantto hearyou say: "I want to starve. It's really great starving'cause thenyou really are well, those that are still alive... With the audience sitting on the stagefacing the mezzanine and the at the Beacon..) anartist. I wantthegrouptodo well. Itwouldbe nice to·sellmillionsofrecords, butthat'snotwhyI started Eagles (Don Henley and Glenn left halfofthe first few rows facing the center aisle, the play takes That song, like some ofthe others, is good. There are the group. . Frey) are back' together and ex­ place all around us. There were scenes in the mezzanines, the right innovative'beats and structure, and some interesting new sounds. Ticker: So were youjustplayingwith thecritics whenyou said, "Wearecapableofbeingthe biggestband pectandalbumanda tour... Ditto halfofthe first few rows, on stage and up inthe rafters. THE THE relies heavily on the miracles ofmodern - ofthe nineties," or do you really feel that way? . for Foreigner... Ozzy's out of CROWBAR is a story ofghosts that haunt the theatre. It technology. What could be mistaken for a hom section is in fact a Guy: I don't knowanymore, becauseasyou go on itneverceases toamaze me how hardit gets,you know. alcohol rehab following last takes place on September 28th, 1900, the day Ocsar Hammerstein synthesizer. Two or more microphones were rigged to deepen You think you've reached a certain level, like, "Oh, we're really gettingsomewhere-and you know, then, September's drunken assault on (fatherofthe notedlyricist)firstopenedthetheatreto the public with Johnson's voice on words like "die~and"hell:or-make it more --BLEEW! Someonehitsyouintheface. And... Umm.. ldon'tknow,it'snotthatsimple~ ..butwhoknows... his wife/managerSharOn: ·He's JamesA Heern's''BagHarbor," Ittakesplaceoverthecourseofthree tinny. At one point in' a song I noticed that although there was 1think the groupiscapable ofbeing a really bigband. I thinkit is Possible that a lotofpeople Will really working on a new studio effort days and was based upon or adapted from daily newspapers of the music, no one had touched an instrument for quite some time. No turnon to theband. Butwhen Ilookatbandsthatarereallybig,they've usuallygotreallysexyfrontpeople entitled "No Dogs Allowed"... time. Throughoutthe playwe havea saxophoneplayerhanginginthe one was even anywhere near the keyboard at that point. or sort oflike real energetic leapers and we haven't got that. Watch for an udpated version of airabove us, dummies falling from the cieling, anda group oftwenty The worst aspect ofthe concert atthe Beacon was the Ticker: I notice thatyou use the band's name in some ofyour songs, such.asin "Shine On-and the Beside, "Smoke on the Water," which is odd ghosts who rhoam the theatre randomlyand add to the humor of usual abuse ofthe sound system. Like most concerts these days, it "The Spy in the House ofLove." donating its proceeds to victims the play. traded clarity, fidelity and intelligibility for distorted, ear-numbing Guy: Yes, that's a Doors' song. It's a cover of a Doors' song. oftheArmenianEarthquake. Ian ThemusicbyDavidVanTieghemwasamazingand.itleftme volume. Perhapsit didn't matter to thejiggling, gyrating girl on Ticker: Oh... singingcatchy tunes all the way home. As the play begins, a screen Gillan, Ritchie Blackmore, my levelwho should have been wearing a T-shirt saying "Hey, .Guy: I've alwayslovedthatline: "the spyinthehouse oflove" andthatisa book, which is where the name David Gilmour, Brian May, •• rollsacrossthemezzanine,andwe see~Pictorial historyoftheVictory everybody! Look at THESE!," or to the guy in the front; row who . ofthe group'comes from and where the name ofthe Doors' song comes from as well. And itjust seemed. Paul Hodgers all contribute... Theatre, which was originally the TbeatreRepub1i~,then Belasco's thought the stage was a combination drum.and keyboard, or to the tohave a sortofirony.to stickthe name in the songin the.way that the Doors stuck·thename ofthe book Michael' Monroe (ex-Hanoi Showcase untititturnedinto a burlesque hoUse. In 1942 it switched kind ofpeople we see at every concert whose mania seemste have in their song-s- and the nam~ ofthe book is the name ofour group... Yeah! Oaughs) . . Rocks} has out a FANTMTIC tomoviesandbecametheVictoryTheatre. Theplayis basicallya plea . nothing to do with the quality ofwhat they hear. Personally, I Ticker: Wha!-do you think about some oftoday'smusie that carries a politieel and.social message? newalbum;'"NotFakinIt"... Don't to the public to keep the theatre alive. think it's a shame wJ:!en the music sounds ten times better at 'Guy:/Somethingcame tonghtoverthelastyear; ~he more popular we've becomeiI.lBuzope..and-. England, expect anythingfrom Metallica The play is presented by En Garde ~ who use the build­ home. At the Beacon~THESounded best when I kept my the more people would ask me, "What wouldyou do? What doyou thinkabout this?,-and -what·do you until 1991...... • ings and streets ofNew York as their stage. They try to bring live fingers in my ears, but I thought I must look silly so I took them thinkaboutthat?" And thiskindofrulejuststuckintome:'1>on'tanswerthoseque~.don'ttel1people Before we go, here's a performancestounexpectedsettings.toawaken newaudiencestothe whatto do, don't tell people whatyour political f~lingsare, 'causeyou'renotI!- poli~.Person, inthe tr'a- brain teaser for all ofyou- out...... Mind Bomb, THE ~salbum, sounded approximately ditional sense. You know, justmindyour own business and hope they like the ~'..Anditgets kind possibilities oftheatre. Gi ve me the original . Though I can'treallysayI understoodthe play entirely, ~t is .. 7.9 times better at home. The lyrics are·much mere understand- ofborin~som~eS. I thinkitwould begood ifpeople stop~l1ing'peoplewhatto~_tim"Oaughs). names ofthese three bands: worth watching. It reminded me ofthe New York ExPerience and . able on cassette than in eoneert,and the lJi':ics·are written inside, ,_~4:_~ ... ~.. . 1) ~d Zeppelin 2)Black Sab­ introduced me to the enrichingpossibilitiesoftheatre. but in this rare case it is only a mixed blessing. To give you an Endingonthisnote,hence, thiscriticwill nott;ellyou togo andgetTheaou.ejjfJlcwe'snewalbum, bath 3)GratefulDead idea ofthe. tone ofthe lyrics, the photoin front isofJohnson ana which~l1ofticial~y~rel~dM~h6. ~or win1Urgeyou~catch~~attne~Center

IS w+ littl\~ IS.to. . :L <. • -.. } ,..' s- ~ . -,. . l .. - .... - Of..a little. do.v-~':..""'f;:~~imnalecl on acute •.This~ ,~ loss.... 4·~'. .., -:~.',.,'" ~.~"~ ri~~-.n:.--- ,.~, -o;.~~~ :l.~ ..-.,-.:,. ltN#Vt.' ..' u-:-]';:· " 't.,<4 .• <.. ' • .. 0 •. •. "':(\"\" ••• ~ ~"' _~ ..,..",! __ " 4t,., ",. W"~ ~o4> ..~ ',""' ,. ',.'t··oJ··~ ~ ~ ~,., "'."~ ~".",. anythi'ii;I1;''''~Mark' •. .... ,.;6-JI... .,.-.. - , ,;a .. ~"_',•• •• ~:.. ",~;:.. "Ifyou tell the truth, you don't have torernember nvain' ... .. oJ ...... , . . _ '_., '., ",' ',- .. . - '-_'"' '.::: ..

I.. .. •• '-0"' -:• ...; ••. ~_•• :_ : .._...:..-~.--~_.-:-.------,--_:.~~----'.:....:-... _.. - .~.'-' .... -_._.--_._.:.:_._--~..:..... Page 22 The Ticker February 28, 1990 February 28, 1990 The, Ticker Page 23 Quick -NIX·THE I Qui% TICKER

NATIONAL!. - 1- Who is the last NBA ~ SPORTS player to lead the league in WRITE FOR ... AND OTHER SPORTS steals and assists in the same TICKER. THOUGHTS! Call Mick season? (Mickey Krameij ~- Who led the Major Leagues SPORTS!! 725-7622 I imagine I wasn't the only one utterly shocked by the new undisputed heavy:,~ightchampion, James "Buster» Douglas. m homers, in the'1980's?. I kept waiting for Tyson to finish his man. Still waiting. . ··3- Who was the first NHL At first glance, Holyfield got the shaft, but he'11 probably ASK FOR make out better than before the upset. ' . Ifhe fights Buster first for a nice chunk ofchange, and .Mick's player to achieve over 100 as­ WIns, he then gets a small fortune to' tackle Tyson. , , IfTyson gets his mitts on Douglas first, Evander gets MICKEY more than the original 11 million to fight whoever wins. sists in a single campaign? My friend Howie R. wants to know if the lock-out helps or .Qutck hurts Domaso Garcia's chances ofwinning the every day second 4- For which USFL team did base job? ' 'Answers IN·ROOM Mr. Divac, ofthe Lakers, is one hen ofa ballplayer. Has anyone seen Mikko Makela? ' Jim Kelly begin his career? Montana to Rice is unreal, but I'm glad football is over and done with. 5-- Who was the first fighter to Did anyone watch the Pro Bore? ' 1 John 301 F Ifyou saw the game, gimme a ring at 725-7622: fm serious. go the distance with Larry­ Big.George Foreman is too dam funny. When asked how Stockton he'd settle the heavyweight mish-mash ofDouglas, Tyson and STUDENT Holyfield, he said, "I'd settle it all by taking out Tyson, Douglas '2 Mike H?lmes, while he was defending and Holyfield... All in one night!" , And just the other day, he mentioned his three weapons. his heavyweight title? "1 have a good left, a good right, and if neither is working, 1'11 belly- Schmidt CENTER ,bump you!" , Answers on Pager 23 Has anyone seen Walt Poddubnv? Why am I the worst procrastinator? 3 Bobby I'll tell you later. I doubt Harvey; ofSt. Johns, has an NBA future, but I'd Orr' "Lady; any cab driver would love to see himjoin the Timberwolves' Richardson. WHERE- IS YOUR AD? Pooh and Boo. ',. -4 ' H·ous-' __ have toldyou nDtto.buy those " TI1E~r,~.i~.I1'~_~~!.~r~~~~_to.have in sports then Boo. , The worst that'll happen is.you'lfget-,"Boo"ed.· .' bonds!!" , Has anyone seen Joe Cirella?' ' .. 'tori Gam-. Get to know your fellow man - Hobnob with rich and famous BARUCHIANS ARE . Street News continues to help those who wish to help Deal with the movers and shakers - Tell off a politician themselves. And for those who wish to help, those who wish to help bIers ... Collect material for your book - Experience the weird, unique DISCQVERING themselves, please call (212)768-7290. and strange When the baseball season gets started, it's going to be -i 5 Trevor BUS~NESSESALL OVER missing one ofits all-time greats, Lawrence Peter "Yogi" Berra. o ,T.V. shows are about cops, doctors 'and CAB DRIVERS Now introducing, the Bi-Weekly Yogism- On a fancy Has anyone seen Mikko Makela? Your views will be sought by the media White House dinner he .attended, "It was hard to have a conversa­ Berbick Become street-wise in the million-tooted-city tion with anyone, there were so many people talking." ~eetthatproducer THROUGH Men's Rankis said, "It was a Some extra cash when needed talented team, probably the won the CUNY title for the tough and cut the lead to 8 at frustrating year. We didn't get "This job is really going places." most talented in theconference. second straight year. What a 61-53 with 11:00 minutes left: the talent level I expected from difference a year makes! Will there be an upset? Almost! If you have 5 years of driving experience we can sponsor you B-Ball Their problem is that they the team. I hope we improve. aren't disciplined enough." Four straight losses is Reid passed the ball to Varellas We will have to bring in some for a taxi license Contiued From Page 24 enough to make you think what who's shot was blocked against. Rego - Stan Maintenance Call (718) 786-5811 Var.ellas had 10. There was one In this contest, M.E.'s new players to improve compe­ talented and undisciplined you have. to do to win. But, the backboard. Itwasclearly tition. The guys were too bright spot though in the game. there was onlyone day for goaltending. The refdidn't call Monday - Friday lOam - 2 pm Ask for Stanley Reid, with his 5-5 from the squad beat Baruch's less comfortable. They felt that talented but disciplined team, Rankis to prepare his troops for it, CSI came down to score charity stripe, established a the first round ofthe CUNY making it a 10 point lead new Baruch College record with but not without a struggle. Both teams played an up-tempo Conference Tournament which instead ofa six point lead. 21 consecutivefree throws. It's began'on February 19 From there on the Statesmen not Larry Bird, but it's a good .~nd physical game. It was TICKER '. (President's Day) at ehe-College- had no will to continue- and Need Help Solving Academic, Business c1~e' start. fairly all the way except ofStaten Island. died. .Rankis' nightmare was --- ~as-a------~ ~~--- The next day was for M.E.'s 18 pointlead at one With a seventh place almost over. Down the stretch and another CUNY game at John point which Baruch chipped finish (out ofeight teams), Baruch's free throw shooting 0 Jay College. Surprise, the away at. The Statesmen were firustratin BE APART OF Baruch had the honor offacing was horrible and lost 86-68. .'. ~ Other Problems? Pressed for Time? Statesmen went up by 10 early only down 50-46 at halftime. their nemesis (and second Reid led the Statesmen at 19-9. JJ went on a run and The second halfremainedjust 'Season" place) CSI~ (In the other with 18 points with Varellas ' THE REVELATION took a slim 35~341eadinto the as close. Baruch got within four games, number 1 Hunter faced pumping in 15 and Derrick THEN TRY locker room. The second half points and was only down 90-84 number 8 Lehman; number 3 Griffin, a career.high.Id. ... t, ' was tight and went back and with 1:00 left. As usual, the -Coacb forth and back andforth, with a Statesmen couldn't pull it out CCNY met number 6 York and . Contact ourAdvertising Manager or number4 Medgar Evers met ,One,of the ~ngs the THE SYMPOSIUM GROUP few ties thrown in. But, in the and M.E. ended up with a big ,RAYRankis. , number 5 John Jay). Baruch Statesmen m-ust learn is that our Managing Editor for end, JJ's zone defense wore 101-90 win. Varellas led the hadn't beaten CSI in quite they can't quit after a bad call is Research Consultants Baruch down and came away Statesmen with 28 points, with sometime. In three oftheir last made. It was a judgement call with a 75-66 victory, which Reid pouring in 20 and Greaves our low rates, issue dates , four meetings, CSI won by at on the refs part and he chose to handed Baruch their third 19. Sean Jones, Baruch's least 20 points a game. In their make the calIon Varellas' Eager to assist in all areas straight loss. Varellas led the answer to Dennis Rodman (the - - and deadlines last meeting, a few weeks ago, blocked shot as a clean block Call 201-438-5665 Statesmen with 16 points, all in Detroit Piston's defensive Baruch blew a seven point lead and not goaltending. The lead, there jobs were safe." - at (212)725-7620 or 7622 the first half. Reid had 14 specialist) had a career high 18 late and lost at the buzzer on a was only 10 and there was still ' N~w Rankis can finally FIRST CONSULTATION FREE points and 12 rebounds and rebounds. Incidentally, M.E. desperationshot. 11:00 left on the clock. Instead relax and take aome time offto 137 E.22nd St., Box 442 Freeman chipped in with 11. went on to heat College of In this contest, CSI Baruch chose to give up right figure out what he can do to . ' Reasonable rates There was little time to Staten. Island by a similar score took the early lead and coasted there and take the loss. There ," improve on this year's 8-18 New York, N.Y.' 10010 rest as MedgSr_Evers came to . a few days later, Last season, to a 47-32 lead at halftime. A will J}.O doubt be major changes record overall and 4-10 in the town five days later. Rankis .. '.M.E. occupied the basement-of rejuvenated Baruch squad.hung next seasot:t·o 0 ' , conference, Maybe it will come, describes- M:E.-as a·-Very------the CUN¥ Cenference and CSI .. - .... __ .- .- - --'-to-:hinr:itt-a·d:team~· .- , .-..,. , ..

. .-': '." ,'. ~ .... Page 24 SPORTS February 28, 1999 VOLLEYBALL r.

By MICKEY KRAMER Easy as one, two, three. The Baruch Statesmen whipped Fordham in three straight games to raise their tecord to 9-6. After falling behind 1-0 in game one, Baruch would not trail again in the opening game. . Two blistering serves by setter, Huy Tran gave Baruch a 5-1 lead. A Fordham time-out couldn't slow the momentum. Led by a Chris Demers kill, David Rosado's multiple hits and continued strong serving by Tran, Baruch stormed to a 12-1 lead and cruised to a 15-2, first-game victory. ­ Game two was a bit tougherr A Billy Sappia smash gave the Statesmen a 6-3 lead. More strong play by Sappia including two kills and a well-placed dink gave Baruch a seemingly insurmountable 10-4 lead. :r::. Fordham slowly came back and eventually knotted the .,~ game at 13. _ The Statesmen regained their composure and won 15-13. Game three was a washout. Fordham scored zip, zilch, nada, not-a-point. 15-0, Baruch. Demers said, "We played our best in the first and third games and if we play like that, we can continue to do well." , Tran adds, "(on the shutout) That's the way we should al­ ways play. But, sometimes, when the level of competition goes down our intensity goes down.". . ' . As an example, Tran gave"the Feb. 13, match vs, USMMA. . "The Wan" Rusado with the smash. "We won in three straight, but we allowed them to score m?re then they should have." . The Statesmen have run up a very respectable 9-6 record, Statesmen Conclude- which-ineludesa-forfeit;loss-toLehman..Baruchhasvictcriescver . York, Queens, Sacred Heart, Eastern Montana, Bridgeport and a ~~ second'victory over Fordham.-- r_ .' .' .' • '. ' .. On the key to the season, Sappia said, "We need passmg. ··~S Our passing could be.a little better. Other then that, we're having ·a very good season." By STEVEN SCHEER Attention Ray Rankis, season. in the hands ofSandy Varellas...... "This is your body speaking. , On Feb. 5, the States­ He had a wide openone foot You have been haying a men, looking to win their fourth shot. There was no one within horrible nightmare. Itis now in a row, visited conference five feet ofhirn. But, the . over, Your team's season is rival York College. The game usually accurate Varenas .~ finished. You may now relax was well played and was very missed it somehow and Bar!ich and enjoy the next eight close until the final buzzer. went down to defeat after months. Go to Club Med for a Baruch could have wonthis almost pulling out a miracle. few weeks and rest up. Let game-and shouldhave won this Greaves led the team your high blood pressure (which game. With six seconds left in with 16'Points with no doubtably came Cecillio Freeman about during this adding another 15. dismal season) l' Sometimes what a team needs is a subside·"Whatwas "We didn't get loss to get them going this nightmare that again. A 2 point game Coach Rankis was th t I .. t' II . will not usually do the having? Basically,it . e a en eve trick because they was about this almost won. A promising team, who ...... blowout works well. --4ffiishedmzel".500 --.- that we-were ---That-is what BanlCh last season, made it received in their next to the CUNY Confer- game a week later vs. encesemi-finals,got expecting.' Rutgers-Newark. a Division III post Baruch wasn't season bid and came supposed to get seven into this season with days off, but Xavier much higher hopes. High School (Baruch's What transpired was a team regulation with York leading home court) was being fixed up I' that finished 10 games under 60-58, Tyrone Greaves was so they had to wait. t • .500, a seventh place finish in fouled. Greaves missed his first .~ Rutgers-Newark didn't >::: the CUNY Conference, a very free throw. Rankis immediately mind the wait because they ~" short stay in the CUNY called a time-out to plan out ~ carne out roaring. No matter ..g, tournament and tons ofques­ what he wants his team to do, what defense Baruch threw at ri tion marks which the coaching which is for Greaves to inten- . them, Rutgers was able to ..6' staff-must answer before .:::::- tionally miss the next free thwart it with their superior .- 9 November. ~ throw and for his teammates to outside shooting, which was a When we last left you crash the boards and try ana hefty 69 percent. The final ~ :'~ \'''.' , . two weeks ago, Baruch had won 'regain possession for a final and irj6w1{tt$jJ.li¥jgi;{~::- ·d~d£~:~1.~.#e¥%~::·)£~:;x.:~;,~., L~.""t score was 88-59. Nobody really •.· •.:.,;;.·.··.. ..''''.,«ii three,yes,three,garnesina tying shot. The plan sort· of stood out for Baruch. Freeman row. We continue with ~he final worked. Greaves missed the and Mike Reid each had 11 and five games ofthis dreaded free throw and the ball landed Pag~ David Rosado (12) prepares to make a perfect pass. Continued on 23