Ithaca College Digital Commons @ IC

The thI acan, 1983-84 The thI acan: 1980/81 to 1989/90

10-6-1983 The thI acan, 1983-10-06 The thI acan

Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/ithacan_1983-84

Recommended Citation The thI acan, "The thI acan, 1983-10-06" (1983). The Ithacan, 1983-84. 6. http://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/ithacan_1983-84/6

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The thI acan: 1980/81 to 1989/90 at Digital Commons @ IC. It has been accepted for inclusion in The thI acan, 1983-84 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. ITHACA COLLEGE THE ITHACAN 7,,...1.d 1119, , ·~ _ 0(.;1 1 A Student Newspaper For Ithaca College Fwml I 932 D 1983 lncarporared I 969 October li, 1983

Workshop Provides Leadership Skills

By Barbara Richards rnrnplislunenl was for tlw t·d: making dt·rision!, and ov1·r­ n1t'mliers 10 learn new leader­ This past weekend fif1y-two rnming olls1<1rks: allowing student leaders representing ship skills along with an nwrnlwr!, ol each group 10 practically every organization understanding of !heir realiL<· !heir importance; juMl­ at Ithaca College ,lltended tlw orgamzation and motivalions. ing acaclcmic, personal and cx- Fall 198:i All Campus Leader· Also lhe studcnis were expos­ 1racurricular cornm1ttmcnts; ship Workshop. Under the ed to other leaders of difft'rent and approaching and evcn1ual­ direction of Sharon Policello dubs anrl cornm1t1<·es. ly getting rid of apa1hy in and Don Hoscnblum, Director Hopefully, a 1w1work will lw your~<'lf ancl your orgaruzat,on. and Assistant Director of Cam­ formed among 1hem 10 1>cnd11 Tlw s1udrnts were grouped ac­ pus :\c1iv11ies, the students lcfl each of their organiL,llions and cording to orgcJnizations, in- the campus around 4:30pm tl1t' ennrt· campus communily, 1cn·s1s. and qucllification~ for Friday, Scptemlier 30, for The schedule for the the las1 leadership lab. ThL<; Cayuga Lake Nature Center. workshop was entirely s1ruc­ was a more md1V1dual effort to This was the fifth year lhe tured and allowed participants deal with specific problt'rns. worl,shop was held and it in­ to attend four leadership Jails. Throughoul 1lw workshop " eluded various activities and The firs1 two !alls discussecl ther<' were also cJC11vili<'s ~ ... .. - . ... ., 9 "lndividu<1l Needs ancl Motiva­ which enablc:d the kaders to D1'lu:arg the ManOWar ~ are,, left to rig}ll, Inigo \'alltil} d1scussiom, on leadership skills and responsibilities. tion" and "Delegalion am! gel acquainted and work \.igrra-,~aru Directcr, Barry Lancin-Directcr ard Gu5av (9'.lpl There were many goals of Task Preferences". The third together toward a rnmmon l,u~kn-Cl-.lirrmn of the Cioom arxl ltdograjlly Ot,:mtm-nt. the weekend evenls. Accor­ lab was the choice of the in­ goal, The one cvem that many ding to Policello, the major ac- dividual and the topics includ- participants expressed as the M.T. V. continued on page s AT ITHACA b} Joe Epstein tant director. working under \lmosl every LC. student Berry Landon. a 1978 LC. 1,·,1111~ an opportunity to work graduate." It was a special in .i professional setting. This shoot because the director did i~ t'½p<·cially true in the School all the camera work so ot <:ommunications, where students had more power in ~1udt'nls seek internships for making decisions and could be 1111· !,Limmer or a semester. more creative as opposed to . \1 h 11ier they arc TY /R, being mechanical. It was an , ,\i <.11wrna/Photo. Gommunica­ amazing learning experience ,d 11nn~ \lanagement or Theatre for everyone involved." said ;:j .\rl!, majors studenis try to get Inigo. Landon. who has work­ /1 proft·~s1onal experience while ed in both Hollywood and New ·] ilu·y aw still in school. York City was the Oirector and ·,,'J L,l!,I week, students in the camera man. William Cole. a ·1· St hool of Communications had junior film production major. ¥' .i r<11c opportunity to work on was the· assistant cameraman. f .i prolessional shoot. The rock "Everyone was willing to learn { g_roup Manowar came to Ithaca and did what they were asked, • Lollt·gc to get help filming a It was good to be able to work . ,....~, ·; ...... ~ rid(·o for their song Gloves of in a professional situation." HClcr11 ramr W<'dih<·r j1u1~ d c!Jrnp1·r on ('dlllpu~ Ill!' Metal. Shot in 16mm film. the Billy Hall, a senior Cinema major who spent last semester ~------_:______j arlion will be transferred to video before it is edited. The in Hollywood was the lighting crew and cast for the video director. "I saw a lot of crews COll!,Isted almost entirely of at work when I was in Parking Solutions? llhc1ra college students. Hollywood and I ,think the <,ustav Landen. Chairman of students on this shoot worked by Dian Dulberger situation, Safety ancl Sernr1ty re­ lh<' Cmema and Photography better than most professional This is the second of two ar­ The committee rnnrluded painted most of lhe lots to Dqwtment coordinated the crews ·did. The students were ticles dealing with the issue of that some suggestions were make the spaces narrower. ~hooling, "I did most of the willing to do more then their parking space at Ithaca Col­ feac;ible. such as a meterper­ and restrippt':d 1hose they flnc1ncial planning and let the jobs called for so things went lege. The first article exposed son, The process of hiring a could. In all. a total of rn s1uclents do the rest. we had very smooth," the problems that have been part-lime meterperson has spaces were picked up. s<·veral students who did a When there is the opportuni­ voiced and seen making been implemented. but the job The "S" lot, where freshmen grt·<11 deal of work for the ty for students to work on this both student and admm1stra­ would only be for the lime the are required to park L<; alc;o con­ shoo1, All of the students had type of project, many get the tion aware of regulations that students are on campus, This sidered the "over-flow" 101 an opportunity to work under experience. All of the students now stand. person would not be a student Anyonr can park there. but very professional conditions. had a fun time working with ------for reasons of peer some students figure this 1~ ·1 hey were able to see what ii Man o war on this rare chance Louis Withiam, Director of pressure.This would prevent where the extra space is and lc1kes to put together this type to get professional experience, Safety and Security at Ithaca "hopscotching" by resident thus disregard natural parking of filming." Should this situation arise College is concerned about the students between classes, procedures. The problem of again, many of I.C. students problems but feels a lot of time Donna Hoffman, a senior The parking lot problems are "between spot" people still ex­ will get a chance to have fun. and effort has been put into the T\'/R major was the Producer another story. In order to get ists, These people park get experience and see what proposed changes. . of the film. ·~tarted doing the full use of the curb space. diagonally across two spaces lies ahead. "We did a video for A group of students. pro­ odds and ends fo~film and cars must park at 90 degree or else they park "half and Desperado last year, so there fessors, and officers among soon became producer. I got angles (directly toward the half": half between each spot. is the opportunity for others to others comprise a group called lhe cast and crew together and curb), Diagonal stripping of lots These people are ticketed. be done here." said Depart­ the"Private Policy committee" they were all volunteers." takes extra space and possibily a job to be taken by ment Chairman Landen. If you which thr.ough the course of Other students were also put in therefore takes much more the meterperson, After so can get MTV, watch for Gloves the academic year meet to r>ositions of importants. Inigo consideration before discuss and hash out problems continu~..9,!t.pag&lir N"'Jf.\ Vallejo-Nagera was the assis- of Metal ,you'll see some of implementing. your · fellow students work. and solutions to the parking nHAl.A --- l I HE ITI-IACAN ... Otlobcr 6. 1983 FROM OUR POINT OF VIEW on September 30, 1983 all Ithaca College students education. one must sub­ stated within the original 98-perccnt. If this is so it Ithaca College came into asking if the~' were mit proof that they are in law, a maximum of five shows that people are accordance with the registered and setting out accordance with a ISi years in jail, and no serious about their college Solomon Amendment to the penalties for non­ registration of more than a s10,ooo fine. education and will do the Defense Authorization compliance with this law. themselves. this infringes Why more penalties are what is needed to insure Act of 1983. This amend­ Failure to return the on at least one of our needed to be added to proper funding to con­ ment stipulates that in enclosed card would be basic rights as American these already strict tinue this education. The order to receive federally taken as meaning that the citizens. penalties, is hard to decision to return the funded tuition assist, nee. person was not in com­ This law itself is a law understand. draft registration/financial a man must show , ,roof pliance with Draft of discrimination. Those The Ithacan can take no aid card is a personal that he is in accord mce Registration Act and persons who do not stand on whether the law decision that must be with the draft registration would lose all federally receive financial aid from is in accordance with our made individually. As the act of the Carter Ad­ funded tuition aid. this institution are not Consitutional liberties. All new term begins in the ministration. This act It stands to reason that forced to return the form. we can do is accept the Supreme Court this is one states that all men over the administration of Therefore it is the rich fact that this college has of the many laws our the age of 18 and younger Ithaca College is not to who are immediately free done fts job of informing highest court will be than age 25 must be blame. they are only of this law. its enrollment of the law. reviewing. We at the registered with the Selec­ fulfilling their duty. But If an American male is Other schools such as Ithacan, with a critical tive Service Department. when it comes to the time found to not be in accor­ Syracuse and Colgate eye, look forward to their To bring Ithaca College in this country's history dance with the draft University report that decision on the constitu­ into accordance with the that in order to receive registration act the compliance to the new tionality of this law. act. a mailer was sent to financial aid for higher penalties are clearly law is running better than

Security phone number

Correction for Safety and Security Phone ~y number. The correct phone · number is ~,,,, 277-2444. E.\tf.N!u•• \lr5©,! Library Book Sales Each year the Friends of the This year, there are hundreds Tompkins County Public of new books from the Cornell Library sponsor a booksale. University Press. all at fantastic held at the formre Ithaca Clock discounts. Also music and Factory building at the corner recordings. of Dey and Adams Street --- lht' The sale begins on Saturday Clever Hans Bakery and the October 8 and continue~ Circuit Tree are locatt>d in this through Monday October 17. building. The get there from Hardcover books start at 51. 75 downtown Ithaca. proceed for the first two days and pro­ ------1 north on North cayuga Street to gressively drop to .10 on thr the intersection of Lewis last two days. Paperbacks. Musl·c Scholarsh,·ps Street; turn left there and con- magazines, etc. are even tinue one block. cheaper. Ithaca, NY -- Ithaca College has sional traininH proHram. which scholarships to 13 juniors and More than 100,000 books will This is an unparalleled op­ received a 56,600 matching is designed to foster the career seniors who have be on sale. beautifully organiz­ portunity for students and grant from the National Endow­ development of committed. demonstrable financial need, ed into fifty categories. Each of faculty members to build up ment for the Arts (NEA) to talented musicians through \Ire pursuing the performance these categories is subdivided their personal libraries and to establish music scholarships. support of their training and program in the Bachelor of and often alphabetized. Every secure good used copies of The grant was received education as artists. Music degree and are rated by kind of book---hardback and standard textbooks. under the NEA's music profes- The funds will provide partial faculty as having potential paperback---is rt>nrt>sented.

The I rHACAN Is a student newspaper published by the Ithacan Publishing Company of Ithaca College, Ithaca, New York. It is THE ITHACAN 1)$llshed every Thursday d_uring the academic year and is Marc A Albert David Klem distributed. without charge around the Ithaca College campus every Adver1i~log Editor In Chief Production Manager Thursday. Chrn,llnd Fnct!I Dave Fischer \!arr F11zs1mmom, Lynn Srnllulh . As a public service, The Ithacan will print relevant events of public Editor lo Chief Pbolography Editor 1.1!.a Zrackl't interest to the students of Ithaca College in its Announcements sec­ Laura McDonagh Jean Troua ls through Office Manager Personnel Manager Jay Miller tion ~thout charge. II asked that these messages be sent llnan I'. Wal~h Allison H, Jcnnml!~ AO ,\CCOUntdTII intercampus mall or to the address listed below, and received Sales Manager News Editor Typists ~fore 5:00pm on the Monday before publication. PUblic service Lorraine Fanion Shdron Stegall Hilary Kemp i,Ulllounrements may also be- placed in the llhacan's mall box Asslstaot News Editor Advertising manager 11,irb McKagu<" located In the F.gbert Union near the check cashing window. Mona Krieger Chnsune Lazor Kim Palmer South HlU Editor Assistant Adv. Maoager The Ithacan also encourages student input for stories and/or sub­ Arm Pclllt"r Stuart MacDonald ~. Offices are located in the Basement of Landon hall, Donn Doug Clauson Sue Wald Sports Edllor Advertisement l'roducllon 6, Ithaca College. Phone 16071 274-3_207. Ivan Goltesleld Mary Fabiano Photography Asslstaot Sports Editor Fln11.Uclal Mll.Uajtet Joe Eps1c111 The Ithacan, Landon Hall, Richard Wilke. Geoff Donovan Dorm 6 Ithaca College 274-3207 AsS"I Sales Manager or 274-3208 •••UC•:IOjjibc-r6jji, 111983------i111C5. 3 fHE ITH:\C:\N BRIEFS/LETTERS .. New Dorm

1n late July ground was date for students moving into broken for Ithaca College's the new hall is dependent newest housing addition, a 100 upon completion of construc­ hed residence hall locater moving is nt·ar the Upper Quads. Under the weekend of October 22nd construction since that lime, and 23id. Although construe­ the new hall is set to open on lion delays are always possi­ ~C'hcdule later this month. It is ble, completion of the building a two story brick building fully is currently right on schedule. t'quipped with a kitchen, laun- The process Le, as follows: drv room. T.V. lounge, and October 10 at 6:00 pm: ~t;1cly lunges. The structure ~II An open infonnational meeting hou<;c one hundred students ~n for questions and answers on r.irpcted double rooms. II will the assignment d ht· staffed with four Resident - new hall 5c· proceB~ld~n . d H d R . . 1ence u1 mg Assistants an a ea es1· Room 202 dent and will be under the • ~upcrvision of Leslie Kent, October 12: ~pplications are Ht·sident Director of the Upper due in the Office of Residential Quall'>. II is fully accessible and Life by noon. an attractive addition to the October t9: Students notified oflt-••----;,,;,;;;.;,;,;.;;;:::; ______.J College residence hall system. new assignment by letter. Bill Perkins, Assistant Dircc· tor of Residential Life. slated Assignments are irrevocable and final. Details on when and that applications will be Campus Celebrities where lo check in will be distributed October 6, 1983 to provided. t'ligil>le students currently in PRINCETON. NJ (CPS)-- seekers and journalists who ly recognizable." wmporary accomodations. October 22, 23 (anticipated): Princeton University officials descended on campus. Recent Princeton alumni 111- Perkins also stated that the Check in by 6:00 pm Sunday, and students have been of- Princeton isn·r the only dude members of the Saucli process for. assigning rooms October 23, 1983. Transporta­ fcred bribes and other in- school contending with the royal family. actor Gregory has been established to insure tion will be provi_ded from 10:00 ducements for helping unusual problems of protecting Peck's daughter. and the that those students living in to 6:00 on October 2:? and 23, reporters photograph or talk to celebrity students this fall. daughter of Phillipinc President temporary assignments will be to move belongings to the new its most famous new Actresses Jodi Foster and Ferdinand Marcos. rnns1dcred first. The actual hall's lobb . freshman, actress Brooke "Flashdance" star .Jennifer The morc-rec0gnizable Jotm Shields. Beals are both back at Yale this F. Kennedy Jr .. son of the late Several national magazines term. but the university won't presedenl. graduated from Twilight Zone reportedly offered as much as comment on what, if any, ex- Brown last spring without at- ssoo for a candid shot of tra security arrangements it's tracling much outside interest. Ithaca. NY .. No one has ever Center/Media Services at Cor­ Shields. the model and srar of made for the women. Gelling them through school used science fiction on televi­ nell University (OCt. 13); Jane teen movies like "The Blue spokesman Waller Littell says. successfully means "respec- sion as effectively as the late Banks. assistant professor of Lagoon" and "Endless Love," They present, however. fair- ring the stu observes. "You rould walk prevent outsiders from gaining ,ll the College on "Science as free and open to the public and price if he could get a picture right by them and never know access to the actress through Fit'lion" on three consecutive begin at 7pm in Textor 102. of the 18-year-old celebrity it." her roomates anti frirnds. rt1ursday even ::, beginning This marks the second con­ naked. With students like Shields. Eager says. Ort. 13. secutive year that the College Bui during orientation week Foster, and Beals. "the situa- "She just wanb to tw a nor- Serving as 1 urcrs for the has presented a series of lec­ campus security guards lion is more complicated mal student," he t1dds. "and ~t·ries are , don Webb, tures and screenings dealing managed to turn away most of because she is a star in her we will do everything we ran supt·rvisor u, the Radio with the "Twilight Zone." the hordes of autograµh-.---'-"""'-=--"--"":...:::C:.:..:.::.:.:.:....:;..::;:.:.:::c.:;_ own ri hr. and almost instant- ______ro see that she h,tc; that _::.._right." Computer Frat Measles Irvine, Calif.-­ has been a difficult if not im­ through 111e H,·gistrar Office. (1.P.) Panhcllenic groups on possible task because there is will cost each participating. tlw rnmpus of the University of no system to monitor grades in "active" sororirytfrarernity vaccine California, Irvine, are instituting an .accurate and equitable member S4 to finance for the The mt·aslc~ va< rnH· tll,ll a first-ever computerized GPA fashion," she sald. first two years. The subse­ The I. David Hammond Center became available in 191» wa!, t.illying system io determine The new computer tabula­ quent yearly operating cosr. for Student Health Scrvin·s i~ usually given with gamma where within the Greek system tion system. Genii said. will Genii said. is al this time urging anyone who wa~ un­ glubula. which. says Macaulay. t'rnphasis on academics is hopefully not only provide ac­ unknown. munized for mea-;lcs prior to lowered the effectiveness of larking. National Panhellenic curate and complete figures. Each group will receive i:l 1968 .or before their first birth­ the val'nne, <:h.irtcrs require fraternities but also point out where actual complete printout of its day to receive .a boostn "In addition. ~onH' 111 ,md sororities 10 submit weaknesses lie in the Greek members· overall and quarter­ immunization. dividual!> were irnrnum,.ed quarterly GPAs of all ils system that are contributing 10 ly GP A averirthclay ,md members for both scholarship the decline in academic profi­ units passed. Genii said. The Macaulay, MD. director of th<" therefore. have not l>Uilt up an ,ind cross-comparision ciency. "Are pledging dumb printout will include a ranking Health Center. students from immunity sufficient to prott·rt purposes. · guys?" Genii said. "Do we within each group in addition to foreign countries may not be against the disea-;e ... "Within the Greek devote less time to a ranking among fellow adequately protected and Anyone unsure of their 11n­ philosophy, academics are academics? Should we imple­ sororiliCSJfraternities. Each in­ should receive immunizations munizations status should con­ emphasized strongly. But is it ment more., scholarship pro­ dividual GPA will be listed by as well. tact the He,alth (',enter. Appoint· a reality? Is ii falsehood? The grams? These are the ques­ student ID number rather than Concern over measles has menls for booster immuniza­ only way to determine this is tio"5 we will be able to by name. "We want to try to increased due to last year's tions may be made any week­ to look at GPAs," according to answer." respect their privacy as much measles epidemic at colleges day morning at the Center. ( Greek advisor Cynthia Gef)it. The new S3,000 computer as we can," Genii said. across the country, says There will be no charge ·'I Iere on the· lrVine campus, it system, which will operate Macaulay.

•• • .. -'~ ...... :; •, ; _. " .. .: • J • ; •• I, : • .,...... -: l ' > " • ? •••• " ...... t .. t ...... It ... ' ' ' '\, ~ ... ' ...... - - ...... __ ...... """' .. _ ...... I. ... ' .... l t ~ ' ...... J • THE lllL\CAN O<"lober 6, 1983 ANNOUNCEMENTS OF INTEREST Wine and Career Planning Special Opportunities Business Cheese New York State senate: ses­ Volunteers sions Assistants Program-1984. THE ITHACA COLLEGE School of Business is accep­ A wine and cheese- featuring Applications due October 21. Needed SCHOOL OF BUSINESS IS AC­ ting applications for peer ad­ a jazz quartet- in the 1983. For complete details and CEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR visors. Applications are Crossroads/Buffer Lounge of an application see Nancy TRANSFER. Frosh may not available September 26 at Egbert Union on Saturday, Oc­ Dudak. Director of career Plan­ apply until their second Egbert Union lnfonnalion Desk tober 15 (Parent's weekend). ning, first floor, Gannett center. There are a number of very semester. While each case is or the front Desk of the 4-7pm. Parents and students fine placements available in considered on an individual Business School. Submit ap­ cordially inVited. Sponsored by Seminars/Workshops the human service field, such basis, applicants who have: I) plications by OCtober 14 to Joy as; Youth Bureau One to ONe a cumulative average of 2.5 or _s._A_.B_._·s_F_in_e_A_rt_s_co_m_m_i_tt_ee--1. october 6 Stanton of Business School. Program is looking for students above. and 2) have completed Orientation to on-Campus to provide friendship and com- math courses . , ), Accounting majors with Re~ruiting, 7 p.m. in G 111. 113 105 108 9

• ' ' ' - ' ~ '" ' ' : t ,• )" ,• ,' f ,• .• ••• • .• ... ' ' ' ' ' : ' • •• ,• ,, "' "' ' • ,, .f " l" ' ." l 1 ~ , • i r , ,- , i 1 I ' , i ' ., i 1 ~ I l' t I i t 1 1 .a.-. 1 ·,· ·, ,;- .. , .: '\ -:, ·,, , , 1 1 ' ... -~ . : . . . ; ... , ~-..... , \,or s op. academic and career world. '5; workshop. were "the exposure / A series of Leadership The next stage is Decision ~ to other campus leaders who Workshops entitled "Lead Yer Making and the third is Action. E hopefully will be able to work Ship" are scheduled for both At Ithaca College Freshmen ~ together more effectively as a the Fall and Spring semesters and Sophomores have a uni- ::: result of the workshop.·' The to follow up on the weekend. que opportunity to engage in ~ individuals should take these This semester the topics in- the first step in the career plan­ acquired skills back to their elude: goal setting and plann- ning process.(Exploration). ploration Group·are intermingl­ and career titles. The Struc­ organizations as it will definite- ing; recruitement, retention and through active participation in ed with the two coordinator's tured Fantasy has participants ly benefit the school as a motivation; and publicity and a career Exploration Group. objectives. One of these objec­ closing their eyes and thinking _w_h_o_le_.. ______art_v_e_.r_tis_in..:gc:..· ______~ This group is co-sponsored by tives is to help students clear­ about a day in their lives ten the Office of cart"Cr Planning ly understand the career deci­ years from now. This is impor­ and the Counseling Center. sion making process. This can tant because we all have fan­ Career Exploration Groups help alleviate some anxiety oc­ tasies about what our lives will '' College By consist of Freshmen and casionally associated with be likt' and, to a certain extent. Sophomore students meeting making career decisions. The those fantasies help control ll<;. for four sessions with profes­ leaders also strive to clarify These two techniques help the Computer'' sional staff from the Office of that the study of academic student traverse from self- Cdreer Planning and the subjects does not have to cor­ , knowledge to carcn informa­ SAN fRANCISCO. CA (CPS)· the next dass period. Counseling Center. The pur­ respond to future job direction. tion and discovery. -A private. San Francisco­ At each classes end. "you pose of the Exploration Group A last objective is having in­ It is important for Fre~lunen hased telecommunications have an electronic workbook is to offer students an oppor­ dividuals identify what role and Sophomores to unders­ firm has just launched the na­ that you go over. and the com­ tunity to explore themselves work will play in their lives. tand that skills. values. and in­ tions f!rst "electronic universi­ puter th~n grades your work. and the world of work. In order to achieve the terests are closely connected ty." which is already offering and gives you feedback which Students receive concentrated workshop goals. the student is to career decision making. The over 170 non-credit courses by your instructor never sees." assistance from the counselors directly involved in two in­ Career Exploration Group pro­ personal computer. White adds. and the other students. Group depth phases. The first phast' vides an individual with con­ "We're working with univer­ "There's a lot less pressure members also get an early is self-assessment. This pro­ centrated assistance from both on you that way," he claims. sities. with home study people start on their occupational cess features three different counselors and other students. "and it gives you time 10 im­ and with corporations who pro­ direction. Many first and se­ activities:Values Card Sorting; The workshop highlights fac­ vide home study programs." prove areas you're having cond year students have not Skills Assessment: and Interest tors that should be considered trouble in." explains Tom White. president had the time to see how their Inventory. This self­ in the career decision making of TeleLearning Systems. Periodically. however. real strengths and weaknesses af­ assessment allows group par­ process and introtwork in tests do appear on the screen. fect their choices in a career or ticipants to accurately identify resources which contain and are then returned to the in­ mid-September. academic major. The group their own skills and align these significant information on the Students with personal com­ structors for grading. can help provide the needed skills with specific career fields world of work. This process puters would log onto the net­ Most of TeleLearning·s guidance. and jobs. This is a process we should permit the student to work and link up with 200-some instructors are The particular goals of the all engage in to some degree. develop a knowledgeable TeleLearning·s host computer university and college pro­ Exploration Workshop are two­ because a job is merely a com­ understanding of his/her career fessors who teach their elec­ here. fold: posite of various skills. direction. Any first or second "You can register elec­ tronic courses as eith~r alter­ I. To stress the factors that After completing the self­ year student with a desire to natives or supplements to their tronically and charge your tui­ should be taken into account in assessment, students par­ explore career direction and tion on a credit card, and regular classes. the career decision making ticipate in the second, ex­ sharpen the focus upon an you're basically ready to start In addition. several process. ploritory stage. This stage con­ academic major or career the course, .. White says. telecourses are taught live at a 2. To explain the resources sists of combining skills. should take the time to attend "We then transmit a digital particular time each day by in­ available to gather information values, and interests with the on of the Fall career Explora­ photo of your instructor. along structors sitting at their own on the world of work. world of work. This utilizes two tion workshops. Workshop computers, available to com­ with outline materials for the Ned Waterbury, Assistant activities: the structured fan­ no.I will be held from 3:30 - s municate directly and instan­ course and lecture notes for Director of Career Planning. tasy, and the Harrington­ p.m. on October 18,20.25,and taneously with students. the first class." and John Brown. a O'Shea Interest Inventory. 27. Workshop no.2 will be held Course fees run "about S75, At the moment, TeleLearn­ psychologis! in the Counseling The Harrington-O'Shea from 6:30 · 8 p.m. on October including textbook and instruc­ ing is offering courses ranging Center are coordinators for the establishes a relationship bet­ 31, November 2.7,and 9. Par­ tor interaction." White reports. from anatomy and law to "self­ first career Exploration Group ween skills, values. and in­ ticipants must attend all four improvement" courses like this fall. The goals of the Ex- terests. and school subjects meetinw, of their workshoo. assertiveness training. White says all anyone needs • Tropicul Plant, to take the· courses are an Ap­ Makeyo1'r 111dud111g 1111c, 1111 l11\\-liJ,(l11 .ired'- ple, IBM or Commodore per­ • Frc!-th, Silk & I>rh:d Flo\\cr-. sonal computer and a modem room an • Hundrcd!-1 of B1:1!-okc1, which will connect the • \\ ick::r ('h1:1ir,. l1:1hk~. llcudhounh,. machine to TeleLearning·s Humpcr!-o ..11 a!l<,nlal,k J>rlcc·'- Oasis: • '.\latch~tkk Blind, host computer by phone. But, he adds, a disk drive • St ra" H uA!-o .• '.\1 UA~ • ;\Ii rror, and printer are also helpful for • Pillow.., students to store class informa­ THE tion and print out their work. Students can ask questions and communicate with the ,.~ PLANT&TI01\l course instructors by leaving . .• i; "electronic mail" for them in , 114Ithaca Commons•273-7231 the host computer. The instruc­ s,-~ ® tors would later collect the Thurs., Fri. till 9 p.m.•Sunday 11-4 messages, and reply during •=- ti Tiff IHIACAN October 6. 198.1 OP/EDS

IS NOW THE TIME? by Helen Cordes Mccarthy. Bobby Kennedy and regardless of who the eventual BA TON ROUGE, LA (CPS) -- If George McGovern in years candidate might be. Students the Reverend Jesse L. Jackson past. also mentioned Georgia state decides to run for president Nmvhere. moreover. has stu­ Senator Julian Bond. Atlanta next year, there may be no bet­ dent participation in presiden­ Mayor Andrew Young and ter place to announce it than tial politics been thinner than Washington. D.C. House any one of the nation's 114 on black campuses. Delegate Walter Fauntroy as historically-black colleges. But things have changed. candidates. At the nation's largest black Just last week. for instance: But it is clearly Jackson who campus, the University of the At Southern University in is leading the phenomenon. District of Columbia, for exam­ Baton Rouge. student Vice which perhaps can be best ple. "I can guarantee you that President Myron Hubbard led compared to last spring·s 90-to-99 percent of the an effort that included an Isley Chicago mayoral campaign, in students would vote for him." Brothers concert, shuttle buses which a candidate -- then­ promises Warren Green, presi­ and candlelight parades. In the Congressman Harold dent of UDC's student govern­ end. it helped register some Washington -- was picked by a planning an "extensive" col­ crowd was chanting 'Run. ment. 5000 students to vote. well grassroots black political lege tour for later in the fall. Jesse. Run.· He said everything A 15,000 UDC block vote over half the university's stu­ movement that began as a The 100-campus tour, says but...but he didn't say ii." would be no small potatoes. dent body. voter registration drive tied to PUSH spokesman Frank Shelton chuckles. especially in view of how a At Xavier University in New no one politician. Watkins from PUSH's Chicago "A lot of students here (ell switch of a mere ISO votes in Orleans, the week included Last month, supporters did headquarters, will try to southern) feel very good abou1 each voting district would have voter registration block parties, form a Jesse Jackson Presiden­ register a "rainbow" of black. a possible Jackson bid," adds reversed even the Reagan lapel stickers, a "second line tial Advisory Committee, and Hispanic, and white students. student President Cleo Fields. landslide of 1980. parade" -- an old New Orleans 125 black clergymen recently Jackson, who has coyly turn­ "They are definitely ready for But of even more custom in which revelers organized a Draft Jackson ed away questions about his ii." significance is the extraor-. march in a raucous parade committee. candidacy. is bound to leave Agrees Shelton, "The time is dinary enthusiasm for a black with a bank -- and radio disk And while Jackson himself is students hanging during his now for a black presiden1. presidential candidacy on jockeys off~ring prizes to peo­ currently in Europe registering tour. Xavier's Shelton recalls They said the time wasn't right many campuses. where ple who registered. U.S. servicemen there, PUSH -­ Jackson at the national PUSH for Frederick Douglass in the apathy and student unwill­ Much of last week's fervor People United To Serve convention several months late 1soos. They're still saying ingness to vote ultimately and the events planned for Humanity. the educational and ago"saying everything a can­ now is not the time. But if nol wrecked the ambitious college coming months are for the idea motivational group Jackson didate would say. We were all now. when? And if not Jesse. registration drives of Eugene of a black candidacy. founded and still heads -- is on the ed~e of our seats. The who?" Civil Disobedience East and West

by Andrew Levin case of civil disobedience, per­ tion slanderous or dangerous one hundred rubles." nature ol the totalitarian Hopefuily, civil disobedience formed. Those who do not to the regime is labeled B. "The organization of, or ac­ system itself. Tht> Russian will always exist in these agree philosophically with the "hooliganism·· and is im­ tive participation in, group ac­ courts are nothing mote than a United States. Were it not for protesters at the seneca Army mediately erased. tivities involving a grave microcosm of the society a'i a the civil rights movement led depot, or any place else, would Soviet law regarding expres­ breach of public order. or clear whole. by Dr. Marlin Luther King, Jr. never challenge their freedom sion contrary to that of present disobedience to the legitimate , Soviet citizens do not make twenty-odd years ago, this na­ to assemble peacefully and ob­ law goes something like this: demands of representatives of decisions: decisions are made tion would not be, in the words ject to government. A. "The systematic dissemina­ authority, or interference with for them by the elite member~ of Muhammad Ali, "the most Ironically it is the conser­ tion by word of mouth of the work of transport, state, or of the ruling party. The scary racially progressed of all vatives who are trying lo deliberately false statements public institutions or services, thing is that if the Soviet di<"· countries.·· preserve the freedom of ex­ deragatory to the Soviet State is punishable by three years of tatorship is willing to treat ,ts Whether or not one agrees pression vociferated so often and social system, as also the detention, or one year of cor­ own people in such an inhumane with the many groups that by the liberal community. preparation or dissemination of rective labor, or a fine up to manner, what would they be stage massive protest gather­ In the Soviet Union and other such statements in written. one hudnred rubles." willing to do to outsiders? ings is of no importance. Eastern block countries-such printed, or any other form. is Corrective labor? Rather strict It looks more each day t11<11 Freedom of expression is vital freedom docs not exist (unless punishable by three years of jurisprudence, eh? When A.O. the Soviet's own politics have to a democratic society and is of course it is expressing pro­ detention, or one year of cor­ Sakharov and friends sent a exploded in their face like c1 righteously displayed, or in the govcrnrnenl sentiments). Ac- rective labor. or a fine up to letter to the Soviet deputies trick cigar. As more American~ criticizing the articles. they begin to understand the true were well"' on their way to temperment of the AndropO\ Siberia. government. the tendency to Americans receive legitimate condemn their own recede~. trials and are innocent until pro­ Civil disobedience is justifircrober 6, 1983 THE ITHACAN 7 New Chapter On Campus by Joe Epstein Ithaca College·s chapter. on September 21 1983 the "There are only 15 college Ithaca College Chapter of the chapters nationwide. so we're American Produc!ion and In- very privleged." said Lifton. vcntory Control Society was An assistant professor ·or chartered. management, Lifton is trying to The group, which consists of get a production minor at 20 students, sophomores Ithaca College. through seniors, was organiz- "The group tries to make ed I ast spring. "We were other students aware of what chartered by the professional is going on in production." said society two weeks ago, but Bernard. The professional there W

Oc101>cr 6. 1983 JIii 1111.\( :\:-0 !l SOUTH HILL Human League

._., Stumbles to the Top London--Phil Oakey isi Motown-sounding dance tune "Dare." "People expected explained Oakey. "And then whom Oakey had met while perlpexed. the 27-year-old lead that probalby will be the se­ them to make 'Dare 11. · And when he remixed 'FasC'ina­ she was "working as a singer and songwriter for the C'Ond single from the mini-LP? they forgot how they did it." lion.' it turned out that he was waitress in a cocktail bar.") Up Human League can't, for the Of course not. "I don't know Sitting on a windowsill in a just as careful with the until this point. Catherall and life of him, figure out why his how it will do over there." he furnished flat a few blocks instruments.·· the band's other female singer. group has been so successful said. "Can you tell me?" from Hyde· Park, Oakey, who Oakey leaned back against Susanne Sulley, had been in America. "lt's a continuing Earlier this summer. a good was in London to work on the the window. On this unusually unusually silent, busy as they source of interest to me just many music-business group's nest LP, begged to dif­ warm and sunny London mor­ were brewing a pot of tea in which records will get bought observers were just as fer with Rushent's interpreta­ ning, he was sporing a couple the kitchenette. in America and which ones pessimistic as oakey about the tion of the split. "To be perfect­ of days' growth of beard and :·au, they pinched a lot of our won't. I'm never quite sure." Human League's C'hances of ly-accurate, it did get to us a bit. was wearing a pair of plain ideas." Catherall continued. The most recent shock came ever dominating the U.S. charts But our biggest surprise was blue jeans and a matching "Like getting two girls in. I suµ• from the Top Ten showing of again. But for different reasons. that it got to Martin more than denim jacket. It was an pose it's a formula they know "(Keep Feeling) Fascination." According to various reports. anyone ... Oakey paused and unusually untrendy look for a works." the first single from the Human the League was a band in looked over at the Saturday- . man who not only had worn "But it doesn't work," m­ League's new mini-LP serious artistic trouble. Since morning cartoon characters lipstick jn the past but who also sitsted Oakey. "I mean. it's "Fascination!" After all. it was recording "Dare" in 1981 (the parading across the television once donned a pair of ladies· transparent what they're doing. only a year ago that the Human album was released in England screen. · ·we kept writing shoes for an appearance on I think everyone can see " League, a -based syn­ several months before its ap­ songs, and Martin kept saying Britain's Top of the Pops TV "It took just a few weeks to thesizer sextet. went from be· pearance in the U.S.). the group they weren't good enough," he show. Oakey. it seems is no make 'Dare,'" recalled ing almost totally unknown in had managed to complete on­ finally continued. "We didn't longer too concerned with Hushenl. "II was fairly simple. the U.S. to having a Number ly the two aforementioned agree with him. A lot of the keeping up with being and everyone had a good ume. One single r·Don't You Want singles. And after spending songs were at least as good as fashionable--either in his dress because there was really Me") and a Number Three five months in the studio with. the songs on 'Dare.· So if you or in his music. nothing to lose--no one was ex­ album ("Dare"). the band. Martin RushenHhe disagree, what can you say? In earlier interviews. for ex­ pecting anything of the Naturally, Oakey never ex­ producer who had programm­ There was an impasse." ample, he had expressed his record." pected those records to do ed all the synthesizers on When Rushent left at the end annoyance at the fact that the . l'iot only was the album a well. either. "Dare" and who many felt was of .January, the League took a synthesizer-dominated sound smash in England and "We never had any intention almost totally responsible for break from recording and tried his group had brought into the America. but it also did well in of doing anything in America." crafting the group's chart­ to find a new producer. They mainstream had quickly several other countries around he explained. "We just didn't topping sound--had walked finally settlt>d on Chris become nothing more than the the world. That success. think a British group could sell out. Thomas, the veteran British · latest trend. He and the other however. cr~ated another dif­ anything in America any "II was taking them a long, knob twister who has worked members of the band had ficulty for the group. which more." long time ·10 write songs, and with everyone from Paul nothing nice to say about the suddenly found itself under a Rut, alas. times have chang­ I was just ~etting really McCartney and Elion John to hordes of synthesizer groups lot of pressure to tour. rd. and. thanks in a large part frustrated.·· Rushent had said. the Pretenders and the Sex that sprang up in the wake of "We were rotten," Oakey to Oakey and the Human "It was getting silly." Accor­ Pistols. the League's success. said. "We went out as a group League, the U.S. charts are ding to Rushen!. the writer·s "We made a big list of all the "Not that they sprang up ... that hacl never played together now in the midst of a full-scale block was a result of the different people who were corrected Joanne catherall, the before. Even when we did the assault by Brits. So does group's succumbing to the good producers, and he came group's dark-haired vocalist record. we didn't play together­ Oakey have any higher expec­ pressure or trying to follow up to the top because we think and Oakey's girlfriend. ("Don·, -everybody recorded his part tations for "Mirror Man." the the platinum success of he's very good with vocals," You want Me" is about Joanne. separately. The Entertainment Guide to Ithaca 10 1111 IIIIM \N

W All In The Family [!] Slakol & Ebert At The Movlll8 / THURSOAYl [ID Sporle Week [HJ Movie "Dance 01 The Owarfa" [!]Benny HIii EVENING [!]News AFTERNOON Television 8:00PM. 8:00P.M rneonaon NOON rnl]][!IDNowa rn@Jeaaoball rn World Sarloa Unaung Horoaa (!] Y.E.S. Inc. [!] [!] Waehlngton Week In Review [1]Bowllng [I] Threa'a Company (I] The Dukoa Of Hazzard [!] [ID Magic Of OIi Painting [ID MacNoli / Lehrer Nowahour [I] P .M. Magazine [!]Get Smart Week [!] Buck Roger• [!] Movie **Ii "Harper Volloy PTA"' (1978. [!] Tho Hardy Boya / Nancy Drnw Mya­ Comedy) Barbara Edon. Ronny Cox [1]] Love Boat lorlas [!] Movie **n "The Man Who Died Twice" [j] How The Weal Wea Won 6:30P.M (1970, Drama) Sluert Wh1lmon. B11g1llo Fossey [lJABCNowsQ @Movie** "',l1nxodl" ( 1982. Comedy) Bone 12:30P.M. [1]@) NBC Nows M1dlor, Kon Wahl o.J (1] America's Top Ton [!] Bualnaaa Report [!] [ID Victory G,ardon 8:30PM. [IJCBSNewa [I] Movie*** "Kelly's Heroes" (1970. Com Oct. 6-12 CT]Webator [I]Taxl edy) Chn1 Easlwood. Telly Savalss [!] [!] Wall Street Week @)Thundan 7:00 P.M. [I] HoalthBeol m Wheal Of Fortune 12:69P.M. 9:00PM. The Jalfaraona [I] [ID Baaoboll rn (I)Lottoryl [!] MacNell / Lehrer Nowehour [!] [ID The Emigrant Saga 1:00P.M. (I] Entertainment Tonight IDAYTIMEj []]Dallaa (2) Movie * * * 11 "Tho Day Tho Earth Stood CT] M"A"S"H [I]MarvGrlllln Shll" (1951, Sc1enco-F1cuon) Michael Renmo, !ID Bualneaa Report Polnc,a Neal tO·OOP.M. (!] Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In [I] To Be Announced @l Tic Tac Dough (I) Matt Houston I:!!] Antiques And Americana (I] Falcon Crest MORNING 1130A.M [!] Fantaay Island [I] Movie ** "A Man Coiled Tiger" (1981, rn Loving @ Inside Tho NFL [I]Nowa Adventure) Billy Wang Yu. Okada Kawa, (!] The Saint [I] @I Droam Houao 7:30PM [ID Artacano 5:00 A.M @] NASA At Work (Thu, Fri) m P.M. Magazine [!] Independent Network Newa [!] Movie **II "The Poppy Is Also A Flower" [!] Focus: New Jeraey (Thu) [ID Journey Through The Solar Syatem a]@] Family Feud @ Movie ***I, "The Wortd According To ( 1966, Advon1uro) Trevor Howard. E G Marshall Gorp"' ( 1982. Comedy) Robin W1ihoms. Mary Be!h [!] Biography (Mon-Wed, Fri) [@ Video Jukebox (Thu) [S)M"A"S"H @I America's Top Tan Hurt 5:05A.M. [I] All In Tho Family [!) Movie * * "Bruce Loo's Secret" (No Dalo (!]News !ID Direct Lina t0:30P.M. Adventure) Bruco L,, Chang Chu AFTERNOON [!]Nowa 5:tOA.M [!] NHL Hockey @Movie** "F1Ye Daya One Summer" (1982. [Ml Inside The NFL (Fri) NOON [!] Nowa 11:00PM. Orama) Soon Connery, Belay Brantley [Ml Olivia Newton-John In Concort (Mon) (1] Love Connection 8:00P.M. rnrnmNowa 1:30P.M. [!] [ID Monty Python's Flying Glrcus 6:25A.M [I] (I][!] Nowa 12] Trauma Center [!] Matinee Al The Bijou @] [ID Signing Wllh Cindy (Thu) a] [!ID Baaoball [I]M"A"S"H [ID Movie * * ½ "They Made Mo A Cnmmol · [Ml Flashback: The Groat Plague (Wod) (!]Soap [!] Educational Programming (Mon· [!] [ID Sneak Prevlowa ( 1939, Drams) John Gart1eld, Ann Shondnn 5:30A.M. (i]J Independent Notwork Nawa Wed.Fri) (I] Magnum, P.1. [ml Thia Week In Baseball a] Vegetable Soup [I] P .M. Magazine [!] Bamoy MIiier (!] Joo Franklin (!]Midday 2:00P.M. [ID Educational Programming (Fri) [!] Movie *** "Mahogany" (1975, Dramoi 11:30P.M. [ml Naahvlllo Mualc [!] lndepondonl Network News Diana Ross, Anlhony Porkms. [ID High Foathar (Mon) rn (D Thicke Of Tho Night 2:30P.M. 6:65A.M. [ID Powarhouaa (Tue) [!]Sitcom a] Im Tonight [Ml HBO Coming Attraction• (Thu) [I) Movie ** "Tho Bullot Tram" (No Dote. [ID Soviet Style (Wed) B:30P.M. [!] (!] Latanlghl America Adventure) Sonny Chiba (I]Movlo 6:00A.M. @]Gol [!] Dlagnoala: AIDS [ml Naahvllle On Tho Road I}] ABC Nowa Thia Morning [j] Independent Notwork Newa [I] Carol Burnett And Frlonda [!] Hawaii Flvo-0 a] Infinity Factory [@ Sllcom (Wad, Thu) [ID Artaceno [!] Tho Honoymoonora 3:00P.M. 12] To Bo Announced []]Dialogue [@ HBO Coming Attraction• (Fri) [HJ Movie **II "So Fine" (1981, Comody) MIDNIGHT [!] [ID Maatorplaca Theatre CT] New Zoo Rovue [@ Tha Time Of Our Llvea: Tho Moat Ryan O'Neol. Jack Wardon [!] Sanford And Son [j] 20 Minute Workout (!] Movie * "Gold 01 The Amazon Women" Amazing Sixty Yaara In History (Mon) 9:00P.M. 12:20A.M [HJ Movie (Tue) [@ Movie (Tua) ( 1979, Advenlure) Bo Svenson, Anita Ekberg rnaTo6 @ Movio ** "Am1tyv1lle II The Possession" @] Austin Clly Llmlla Encore 6:30 A.M 12:30P.M [!] [ID Tho Emigrant Sage ( 1982. Horror) Bun Young, James Olson [j] Movie **I\ "Come Back, Charloslon rn (i]J NBC News Al Sunrlso (1] Ryan's Hopo ill Simon & Simon 12:30A.M. Blue" (1972, Comedy) Godlrey Cambridge. Ray­ I]] CBS Early Morning News [I] (i]J Search For Tomorrow [I] Merv Griffin [1] [j]J Friday Night Videos mond St Jacquos [I]Popaye [!] Educational Programming (Thu) 9:30P.M [!] Twilight Zone [HJ Video Jukebox [ID Yoga Wllh Prlacllla Palrlck m Tho Young And Tho Reatlosa rn ll'a Not Eaay [!] Jimmy Swaggart [!] Outar Limits 3:30P.M. [ID Educational Programming (Mon-Thu) 10:00PM. [!] Saturday Night [!] Tom And Jany And Frlonda [!] Movie (Tue-Fri) I]] NCAA Today rn20, 20 Greatest Sports Legends [HJ Movla (Mon, Thu) [!) Columbus Day Parado (Mon) 1:00A.M. (i]J ill Knole Landing [HJ lt'a Hard To Ba A Penguin (Wed, Fri) [@ Movie (Wed-Fri) rnsoUdGold [HJ Movie** "A Cry For Love" (1980. Drama) [I]Nowa [I]SoulTraln Susan Blakely, Powers Boothe 8:46A.M 1:00P.M. [!) lndopandont Network Newa 1:30A.M. 3:45P.M. [ID A.M. Weather []] All My Children [!] Kenny Rogera In Concert [I] (i]J Daya 01 Our llvea (I]Movlo [[] NCAA Foolball 7:00A.M. 10:30P.M Hour Magazine [!]News 4:00P.M. rn Good Morning America CT] (!] Newark And Reality [!] Movie [!] Independent Network Newa [1] SportsWorld rn@ITodey [!]Nowa (I] C8S Morning Nowa 1:30P.M. 2:00A.M @]Nova 11:00P.M. [I) WOOdy Woodpecker [!] Electric Company (R) (Fri) rn NBC Nowa Overnight [ID 1983 Drum Corpe lntornatlonnl !ID Saaamo Streat (R) c;i I]] Aa Tho World Tuma rnrnillNowa [I] Amorlca'a Top Ten Championship Hlghllghta [!] [ID Monty Python's Flying Circua (!] 700Club [ID Electric Company (R) (Mon, Wed) [!] Joe Franklin @] Fun Momenta In Sporta @ Movie (Mon) [I]M"A"S"H [!] Solid Gold 4:30P.M. 7:16A.M. [!] Soap [!] A.M. Weethor [@ Flaahback: Tho Great Plague (Tuo) 2:10A.M. []] SportaBast (i]J Independent Network News @ HBO Coming Attractlona @] Lome Graono's Now Wlldomasa 7:30A.M. 2:00PM. [!] Barney MIiier [!] Soaamo Streat (R) c;i (1] Ona Lila To Live @ Movie **II "I, The Jury" ( 1982, Drama) 2:30A.M. 6:00P.M. [I] Suga Bunny And Frlanc!a [I] @] Another World Annande Assanle, Barbara Carrere [I] Movie *** "Holl's Kitchen" (1939. Oro· []] Wida World Of Sports @] Educational Programming (Fn) me) Ronald Reagan. Dead End Kids [!] Firing Lina [!] Pink Panther 11:30P.M. [I]N-a CT] Staraky And Hutch [Ml Movie (Fri) 12] [I] Thicke Of The Nlgllt [ID Educational Programming (Mon, [I] Battleatar Galactlce [Ml The Hoobar·Bloob Highway {Tuo) [1](i]]Tonlght [HJ Fragglo Rock (Wed) Wad) @] Movie * * "Bruco Loe: Tho Man. The Mylh" [!] [ID Latanlght America [SATURDAY] ( 1977, Advenlure) Bruco l1 8:00A.M. 2:16P.M. [I] Trapper John, M.D. [!] Little Houae On Tho Prairie [I] WOOdy Woodpecker [I]Popaye 00 Racing From Yonkers [ID Educational Programming (Mon, Thu, 2:30P.M. [!] Tho Honoymoonora 8:00A.M. 6:30P.M. Fri) (]]Capitol 12] Now Zoo Revue [@ Movlo ** "Harry's War" (1981, Comedy) MIDNIGHT m Tho Fllntatono Funnies Edward Herrmann. Goraldme Page 00 High Feather (Tue) [ID Zarabenda (Wed) [I]Newa I]] Powerhouaa (Wad) [!] In Search Of ... [!] Human Relatlona And School Disci­ [!] Sanford And Son pline (!] Nino On New Joraoy (Thu) [!] Magic Garden (Tua-Thu) EVENING 12:30A.M. (!] Newark And Reality (Fri) [lJ Canaacolendaa (Fri) (I] Tho Blskltta [I] Lato Night Wllh David Lettonnon (!] Meat The Mayora (Mon) @ Kenny Rogora In Concert (Thu) CT] Wondorama [!] Twlllght Zone 6:00P.M. [I] Now Jereay Report {Tua) @ Movie (Wad, Fri) 00 lnalda Bualnesa Today [I] Children Batweon Life And Doath [1]N-a (!] Now Jersey Pooplo (Wad) [!] Olivia Newton-John In Concert (Tuo) (!] Chrlatophar Closeup [j] Saturday Night (i]J Groat Space Coaster [!] Tony Brown's Journal [!] Scooby Doo 3:00P.M. 12:40AM. [!] Tom And Jorry And Friends [I] Blue Knight [@ Kenny Roge,a In Concert (Thu) General Hoapltal rn I]] Movie * * 11 "Doclors' Pnvale LJYes" @ Movie ** "Harry's War" (1981, Comedy) [ID Wonderful World Of Tho Waltz [HJ Video Jukebox (Mon) [ml Fantaay (Mon-Thu) [HJ Movie (Tue, Wad) rn (1978. Drama) John Gavin. Donna Milla Edward Herrmann, Gerak1ine Pago 00 Racing From Belmont rn @I Baaoball (Fri) [!] Star Trek 8:30A.M. [!] Twlilght Zone 1:00AM. 8:30A.M. [!] Miator Rogera (R) []]Nowa ffi Tho Monchhlchla / Little Raacols / 8:30P.M. [iJ Guiding Light (1]Nowa [I] The Fllntatonea [I] lnapactor Gadget [!] Hogan'a Horooa Richie Rich [I]NBCNawa (ID Educational Programming (Tue, [ID Untamed World ··[@Movie ***II "The Exorcisr· (1973, Hor· [I] Tho Shrrt Talas Wad) (!]Family ror) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair [!] Clvlllaatlon [!] Tho Lawmakora [ID Tony Brown's Journal [I] Straight Talk [j] Tom And Jerry And Frienda (Tuo·Fri) 1:30A.M. (I] Saturday Suporcada CT] Mako Room For Daddy [I] In Search Of... [!] Tom And Jony And Friends 3:30P.M. [1] NBC Nowa Overnight [HJ Movie (Mon) [!] Chico And Tho Man [ID Computer Programme 7:00P.M. [!] Over Eaay [!) Meet The Mayora 9:00A.M. [!]N-• (1]HaaHaw CT] Woody Woodpecker And Frionda [!ID Dudley Dorlght rnDonahue Mlator Rogora (R) [!] lndopandanl Network Newa rn Tho Joflaraona 00 [j] Herald Of Truth [!] lnalde Albany rn Woman To Woman [!] Pink Panther 2:00A.M [!] [ID Sesame Street (R) c;J [@ Video Jukobo~ (Mon, Thu) 9·00A.M. rn Entertainment Thia Wook ill CBS Nowa Nlghtwatch CT] Welcome Back, Kotter (I] Hour Magazine [I] Movie*** "The Grool Lie" (1941, Oro· ffi [j]J Smurta t;J 4:00P.M The Lawmakers [I]ILovoLucy me} Bette Davis, Georgo Bren! [!] Civilisation [ID 12] little House On Tho Prairie [I]ThoSalnt @I Jim Bakker [!] Joa Franklin [I] Staraearch [1] STM Club Wllh Scooby Doo (Mon­ [ID Llllaa, Yoga And You @] How Tho Weal Wea Won [!] Great Space Coaaler Thu) [!] Emergency [HJ Flashback: Fire At The Cocoanut [!] Nine On New Jersey [!] Danca Fever [!] 00 Sa&ame Street (R) c;i [!] Jorry Falwell Grove (Thu) [I]LoveBoaJ 7:30P.M. 9:30A.M. [I] He-Man / Maatara 01 The Universe 9:30A.M rn Threa'a Company [I] My Throe Sona [!]Movie 12] Pac-Mon / Rubik Cube / Menudo @] [ID Agronaky And Company [!] Nowa (i]J Tho Flintatonea (Mon· Thu) (!] Under Soll CT] All In Tho Family [!] Brand Now Day (Thu) [lJ Suportrlands EVENING (I] Kldaworld [!) Laverne & Shirley & Company [!] Now York, Now York (Fn) [HJ Movie (Mon, Thu) 00 Sporle Week @Sitcom [!] Davey And Gollath [!] Focua: New Jeraoy (Mon) [HJ The Hoobor-Bloob Highway (Tuo) 6:00P.M. 7:69P.M. [!] Honnen Badlllo'a Urban Journal [HJ Sugar Ray'a All·Slera (Wed) [1][I][i]]Nowa 10:00A.M. [I] @] Bnaaball (Tuo) 4:30P.M. [!] Y .E.S Inc. [!] [ID Woodwrlght'a Shop 8:00P.M. [!] Jowlah Dimension (Wed) [I] What's Happanlngll [I] Thraa'a Company I]] Tho Dukoa (1] T.J. Hooker @ Sugar Ray'a AU-Stare (Wod. Fri) @] Scooby Ooo (Mon-Thu) [ID MacNell / Lehrer Nowahour [I] Saturday Morning [I]@] Dllf'rent Strokoa 10.00A.M. [!] Happy Daya Again [!] Buck Rogara [!] Wroatllng [!] Evening Al Popa (I) Breakaway [HJ lt'a Hard To Ba A Penguin (Fri) [!] Love Boat [!)Eaaonco (I] Cutter To Houaton rn Dllf'rent Strokoa (R) [HJ Movie (Tuo) [HJ HBO Coming Attractions [!] Inside The NFL CT] Movie ***Ii "G·Men" (1935. Drama) [!] [ID Educational Programming @ Fraggla Rock (Wed) 8:30P M. 10:30A.M James Cagney, Ann Dvorak (I] The Now $26,000 Pyramid 6:00P.M. rnABCNowac;J rnThoLltllos [ID All Creatures Great And Small II [I] Welcome Back, Kotter rn P'°t>la'a Court [1] @] NBC News rn Alvin And The Chipmunks [I] NHL Hockey (!] Romper Room rn WKRP In Cincinnati (Mon-Thu) [!] Buslnoas Report [!] [ID Thia Old House [!] Movie **I\ "Zsrdoz" ( 197 4, Sc1once-F1c @I Jimmy Swaggart [!] Mlator Rogora (R) illCBSNowa (I] Charlie Brown And Snoopy hon) Sean Connery, Charlotte Ramphng [!] Contemporary Catholic (Thu) I]] Fantaay Island CT] Taxi @]Underdog [@ Not Necoaaarily Tho Nows [!) Eaaance (Fri) [!] Ona Day At A Timo [!] Sugar Ray'a All-Stora [!]Hoe Haw 8:30P.M. [!] A Maaaage From Garcia (Mon) [ID Electric Company (R) 7:00P.M 11:00A.M. [I]@] Silver Spoons [!] Open Mind (Wad) @) Bullwinkle (Mon-Thu) rn Puppy / Scooby Doo I Schoolhouao @ Movie **II "The Sondor" (1982. Horror) @Movie 12] Wheel 01 Fortune [lJ Little Houaa On The Prairie rn Tho Jofteraona Rock Kathryn Harrold. Zcl1ko lvanok 10:30A.M @H's Hard To Be A Penguin (Wed) [!] MacNall / Lehrer Nowahour [I]@]Mr. T 9:00P.M. a] @I Salo Of Tho Conlury 6:30P.M. (I] Entertainment Tonight @](!]Wine, What Pleasure mLovoBoat (I] Proea Your Luck (}]Nawa [Z]M•A'S•H rn Abbott And Costello ffi @l The Rouatora CT] All In Tho Family [I] Three'• Company (Mon·Thu) [ID Bualnoaa Report (!]BJ/ Lobo [!] [I] The Emlgrent Saga [!] Richard Simmons [!] Electric Company (R) [I] Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In @Sllcom []] Movie "Sep1ember Gun" (Prom1ere. Wost· 11:00AM. [l]Nawacopa @J Tic Tac Dough 11:30A.M. om) Robert Proston, Pally Duke Ashn (1] Bonson (R) [!] WKRP In Cincinnati [!) FanJaay Island rn Laverne & Shirley & Company 10:00P.M. a] [!ID Wheel Of Fortune 00 Poworhouao [@ lnaldo The NFL [!] [ID Franch Chai []] Fantaay laland []] The Price la Right @] Rowan & "Martln'a Laugh-In (Mon­ 7:30P.M. CID Movie** "Abbotl AndCoslellolnThe For· [I]@] The Yellow Roao (!]Breakaway Thu) (1] P.M. Magazloe eign Legion" ( 1950. Comedy) Patricia Medina, ['ONowa (!]Bonanza 1H] Movie (Mon, Thu) [I]@] Family Feud Waller Slezak [!) Independent Network Nowa [!] The Rockford Fllaa @ Fraggla Rock (Fri) l]]M0 A'S"H @] Amazing Spider-Man / Incredible [@ Movie **II ''Paternity" (1981, Comedy) Hulk Buri Raynolds, Bevorty D'Angolo. TIU. 11 IIACAN 11 2:00P.M. (II Ml Family Feud @] Murder Moal Enollah []]M'A'S'H 2:30P.M. [D All In The Family .. (1950) Joyce [ID Grant Wood'a America [ID Joa Patamo'a TV Quarterbacks [wEDNESDAY coNt] [!]Movie*** 'Toe Bingo Long Travelu,g All­ [!] Benny Hlll SJara And Molor Kings" (1976. Comedy) BIiiy o.., (j]]Newa 9:30P.M. 11:60P.M w,n,ama. Rlcl>ard Piyor. Q]@] Family Tiaa 6:00P.M. [!!]Sitcom 2:"5P.M. rn World Sarles 10:00P.M. MIONIG

by Stephen Tropiano "BV th<' wa~ Glt'nn Miller LAST played ... ··

Tiles<' are the opening bars of television's most ~urces~ful telt·,·ision comedy. When All in the Family premiered in January of 1971, CBS was ex­ perting the switchboard to light up. It wasn't until the ~umrrwr of 1971. when the reruns were shown. that the rnhtrovcrsy l>rgan. Despitt' those who pro· wsted against the remarks of Archie Bunker. the show found an au(licncT and millions would tune in each week just to hear :\rchie tell Edith to AnswC'rs to last weeks quiz on ~t iflle. The Honeymooners. Test your knowlt'dge of the 1. Ralph and Ed make &62 a show with the following quiz. week. 1. What is the name ot t11c 2. Ralph's social security show·s closing theme'! numbPr is 105-36-22. 2. On what British televiaion 3. The Kramdcns live at 328 Hlm·d h~ l\fargaret 1-'arrnr and Jame, C Boldt series is the show based'? Chauncy Street. l'IK\ I 11, \11i,: .. lr, 1111,r·, ..,,ndn,llr 3. What three TV series were 4. Ralph and Ed howl on alley By Mel Rosen 54 Clark Kent's 94 Custard apple 18 Requirements 66 Take part. number three. ACROSS love 95 Composer- 20 Roc·s All in the Family spin-offs? in early 5. Ralph and Ed belong to the 1 Room at 55 Delicacies. singer King weapons November 4. What was the name of the the gym old style 98 Tower town 23 Having a veil 68 Witnessed local bar that Archie patroned? Racoons. 7 Famous 56 Designer 99 "Don't- 28 Early 69 Lawyer's 5. What relation is Maude 6. Ed Norton works in the Bostonians Cassini and me. futuristic loads sewers. 13 Team number · others Argentina" play 71 Nip's partner Findlay to Edith'? 19 Breathe 58 Corne up short 101 Radiation-belt 33 Scene 73 Ship's prison 6. What is the Bunker's 7. The original Alice and Trixie 20 Raw beef 59 Grafted, in physicist 35 Prove false 75 Curve with a address? were Audrey Meadows and treat 104 Platter heraldry 36 Bordeaux and regular 7. What company did Archie Joyce Randolph. 21 Fighting man 105 Gorged Burgundy 60 "-bin deviation 8. Morris Fink is the Grand Ex­ 22 Eighth e1n Berliner" 106 Armor plate 37 Cease! 76 Northeast work for'! President 61 "Shane" 107 Low-down 38 American cape 8. For whom did Archie drive alted Ruler of the Racoon 24 Syracuse actor Joints? caricaturist 77 "Honeist.. a cab? Lodge. color 63 Rummy meld 108 Moon 39 Wrestlers· 9. The Kramdens reside in the 25 Medicinal 64 Harrow rival goddess milieu 78 Rod- of a sort 9. What is the name of Stivic's plant 66 Have a market 109 Purloins 40 Chicks 80 Southwestern baby boy? Bensonhurst seclion of 26 River mouths 67 Stigma 42 Coin stamps Indians 10. What is Mike Stivic's Brooklyn. 27 Main vessel 68 South Pole DOWN 44 Jack and 81 Take away profession? 10. "Alice. you·rf' thf' greatest." 29 Churl explorer 1 French race Jill's burden 82 Lifeless 30 Take-away 70 Washington site 45 Most 83 Red-carpet game personalities 2 Cleansing suggestive recipient 31 Amor, 1n 72 Shelter acid 46 Lawmaker • 84 Scold Argyll 73 Darwin's ship 3 Pigment: 47 Flemish 86 Armpit 32 -blue 74 Auditions Prefix portraitist: 87 Vend, in 33 Grable feature 75 Apply steam 4 Smith of song Var. away Word Search 34 Weaving 78 Less tired 5 Yalie 48 Harmonize 88 Lifting defect 79 Type of squad 6 Tear apart 49 Scoring unit devices 36 "No-hit" 80 Weeper of 7 Moralized 50 Grant 89 Certain WOODY ALLEN FILMS Johnny myth 8 Turkish oxcart 51 Corne again. vertebrae 40 "- fishing" 81 Marie 9 Bnt. heat 1n a way 90 Enriches by Stephen Tropiano 41 Blue pencils Antoinette. units 53 Custard 94 -over 43 Closes 1n on for one 10 Scu!ling gear treats 95 Part of a 44 Under- 82 Sunbathe 11 Generou~ 54 Frankie of parrot's beak A N I A N N I E H A LLRSMDI J 0 standing 83 Memorable folks "Mule Train" 96 "Gloomy - 45 Correct, in Senator from 12 Men of 56 Ham transfer author's C T N R R T s F G N C L M N 0 p Q M I away Michigan La Mancha words prospe_cts". 48 Doryand 85 Flesh· Prefix 13 Act up, 57 Clique Hawthorne A·K AS CR CE T C F V N 0 I J A A N dinghy 89 Reasonable on stage 58 --out 97 Tolkien 49 Rap 90 Nol taped 14 Zhivago's love (popped to creatures s CTMFONI N K L P I G A F V S T 52 Oakley and 91 Ratite bird 15 Stat for center) 98 Bend, in ballet F p N E Laurie 92 Dry: Prefix 36Across 62 Out of favor 100 Large bk I N T Q J C G u I X I L R s Q 53 Winter 93 Ending with 16 Dutch painter 65 Deidre's 102 Torme N 0 A R T K I T L R A L U W R M A I R complaint cow 17 Takeon beloved 103 Self: Prefix 0 R H L 0 V E A N D D E A T H I J A I Earn $500 or more each school year. Flexible hours. Monthly Abortions to 12 weeks. R 'r N T H E F R 0 N z A I H S F V G 0 payment for placing posters on R Confldentlal co1111Sellng, one visit, 0 M A S G E L I R M p E N F A N T A campus. Bonus based on labwork Included, S210. Office of y L M K T H E F R O N T T I N J M T s results. Prizes awarded as well. Salomon Epsteln,M.D. Southern 800-526-0883. 'Tier Women's Services. 1•772-8757. A z I F M Q R s T U N I E J A L C 0 F L M E Z X C V M E u R E R L N M I J D ORSEBACK RIDIN ITHACAB E Q L L I N X V B N T I I p A U y w K The Far Country Alrpon: S7/one;S6/ea. add'l Q I 0 F B J 0 F L Greybound: SJ.50 ea. S5.00 for I½ hour~ of F w A s N T u w R I Wilderness Trails 0 Also Havrides. G I F J T G s L E E P E R M p R T M 533-4447 1·315-4 . - 42 Last week's solutions I s E I R 0 M E M T s u D R A T s F y y Need a term paper, resume, or job-j The Ithacan needs people to p L A I T A G A I N s A M T R F L Z work an AdvertiSing Layout application typed, then call HEL11 and Advertising Sales. Ex­ Annie Hall Love and Death UNLIMITED at 273-1323 perienced preferred but not necessary. can 27 4-3207 or Bananae Manhattan 5pm-10pm stop by the Ithacan. Cai::ino Royale Play It Again Sam Ithaca's oldest and best typing The Front SleeJJer service Interiore Zelig Starduet Memoriee guaranteed work oetober 6. 1983 THE ITHACAN 13 Leading Comp~ser Visits Ithaca

Pianist, composer. conductor chestra. The Wind Ensemble Amram, our initial visiting ar­ York Philharmonic's summer published his first composilion and musical innovator, Lukas will perform Stravinsky's tist," says Sidorowicz. "Foss is festival col}certs at Lincoln ar age IS. Al 19 he composed Foss will serve as the Ithaca "Symphonies of Wind In­ one of the world's leading Center. an oratorio based on cart Sand­ College School of Music's struments" and Foss· arrange­ composers, conductors and He has conducted almost all burg's "Prairie." visiting artiSt for 1983-84. ment of Beethoven's "Military performers. He will provide an of the major symphonies in In 1960 the New rork Philhar­ Foss. conductor and music Marches." The Choir will per­ enriching experience for our this country as well as the monic premiered Foss· "Time director of the Brooklyn form Foss· "Psalms" while the faculty and students." Berlin Philharmonic, Israel Cycle." There followed a Philharmonic and Milwaukee Orchestra will play Ive's Lukas Foss is one of the new Philharmonic, Leningrad Sym­ number of works which fit in- ' symphony Orchestra, will be "Decoration Day" and Foss· generation of musicians, equal- phony and Tokyo Philhar­ 10 none of the prevalent on campus Oct. 9-11 and again "Night for John Lennon." 1y ar home composing. monic. In addition, he regular­ "schools of new music," Feb. 6-8. Both concerts are fre and teaching, and conducting, as ly conducts the Jerusalem notably "Baroque variations" During hiS initial South Hill open to the public. well as performing on piano. Symphony. which had a marked influence visit, a faculty chamber During his three-day stay in His programs range from Foss received the Dilson on the younger generation of ensemble will perform Foss' Ithaca, Foss will visit classes. music of the Renaissance to Conductor's Award of Colum­ composers. "(ave of the Winds" for Wood­ work with students, and meet the most recent developments bia University in 1974 for the In 1974, Aaron Copland wind Quintet on Sunday, Oct. with members of the faculty. in music--developments he conductor who has done most wrote: "His compositions are 9 al 8:15 pm in Ford Hall The visiting artist series was has helped shape with his for contemporary music. In among rhe most originial and Auditorium. initiated in 1982 to provide compositions and experiments 1976 he was presented with a stimulating composed in Following the -concert, Foss students an opportunity to in ensemble improvisation. New York City award for America." And in a recent ar­ will conduct a lecture/discus­ learn from and work with a Foss has been music direc­ special contribution to the arts. ticle by Tom Johnson ("Lukas sion on "Composer, Pianist, leading professional musician tor of the Ojai Festival in He was also the recipient of the Foss Works on the Cathedral") Conductor--A Perspective." on a regular basis, according to California, has directed ·12 Laurel Leaf and a Brandeis it is said of Foss: "Little by lit­ On Tuesday, Oct.II, Foss will Alex Sidorowicz, assistant marathon concerts at the A ward both for his continuing tle he is knitting rogerher a direct a combined concert by dean of. the School of Music. Hollywood Bowl with the Los contribution to music. body of work which may ac­ rhe Ithaca College Wind "Lukas Foss continues the Angeles Philharmonic and for Foss, who studied at Yale, tually speak for contemporary Ensemble, Choir and Or- fine tradition set by David two years directed the New Curtis and Tanglewood. culture as whole more elo­ quently than any other."

HAVE YOUR CAR PROFE,SIONAILY Taylor Trio to Per(orm TINTED

;~- One of jazz's truly great ar- · popular disc jockey on will be Keith Copeland on ~ ~1 tists, Billy Taylor and his Harlem's WLIB. A few years ·drums. whose "strong and · c~roM~IAS~~~ · -. critically acclaimed Billy Taylor later. he became general sensitive playing" has been Specializing in Cars, Trucks, Vans, Boats Trio, will open Ithaca College's manager of WLIB, one of New praised by the New York 5 \'ear Warranty 1983-84 Concert Series on Fri­ York's only black-owne(f radio Times and Victor Gaskin, one day, Oct. 7 at 8:15 pm in Ford stations. He was a charter of the most successful jazz Jack Hedges Laurie Benedict Hall Auditorium. member of the Inner City bass players in the country. 273-3010 CaU For A Free F.stlmate A versatile jazz pianist, com­ Broadcasting Corporation as Tickets for the Billy Taylor poser. arranger, teacher and well as the Black Com- Trio performance can be pur­ even actor (Taylor appeared as municatons Corporation. He chased in the Dillingham Box ··wesley" in "The Time of also has his own corporation, Office on the Ithaca College 'To Keep Your Spirits Up' Your Life"), Taylor has written Billy Taylor Productions which campus and ar Hickey's Music ' more than 300 songs, a dozen produces radio and television Store in Ithaca. hooks on the art of jazz piano commercials. records and General admission tickets are H&H and made over 30 recordings. concerts. S7; S6 for Ithaca College facul- A prominent voice in the jazz ln 1969, Taylor became the ry, staff and administra­ LIQUO~ AND WINES community. Taylor was a firs~ black n:1~ic dir~ctor of a . rion,Friends of Ithaca College presidential appointee to the maJor telev1s1on series. "The and other students and SJ.SO National Association of Recor­ David Frost-Show." His name for Ithaca COilege students and CLOS LS TU(jUOR STORE ding Arts and Sciences. and music became familiar to senior citezens. TO I. C CAMPUS Since its beginning in 1965, a whole new audience. as The Concert series will 2 I 8 ON THE. COJ'vfMONS he has served as president "O.K., Billy!" became the cue resume on Dec. 7 with a per­ <1nd principal fundraiser of with which Frost began each formance y pianist Sergei "Jazzmobile," a program that program. Edelmann and will continue brings name artists and their Taylor's own compositions when the Berlin Chamber Or­ music into the inner cities of include "Suite for Jazz Piano chestra comes to Ford Hall WEEKLY SPECIALS more than 15 American towns. and Orchestra,'' commissioned Audtorium · on Feb. 16. The A gifted lecturer. Taylor: who by Maurice Abravanel and series will conclude on April 8 holds a Ph.D. in education from premiered by the Utah Sym­ with Boris Goldovsky's "Opera the University of phony and "I Wish I Knew Highlights.'' Massachusetts, has brought How It Would Feel To Be For season ticket and other jazz into high school and col­ Free," which has become one information on the 1983-84 lege classrooms all over the of the theme songs of the civil Concert Series, contact the rights movement. COW1try. He regularly combines Ithaca Collegt' School of Music . performances at colleges and Joining Taylor for his Ford at 274-3171. universities with lectures. Hall Auditorium performance workshops and master classes. '!f:t,.f:u!t Born in Greenville, NC, ~t§:t'!f:t'!f:t'!f:t+'!f:t+'!f:t,J,4!t,J,4itt§:t4lt'!f:t'!f:t * Taylorbeganhismusiccareer (~ Susannah Heschel * ar the age of seven in ~ Washington, D.C. After gradua- ~ will speak 00 * tion from Virginia State COilege .• ~ * he came to New york and J h * Great For A began playing piano with the ~ "Being a ewis Feminist" * Birthday Ben Webster Quarter. cf! * Taylor thus found himself in cfi Thursday,_ Oct.6th,8pm Analver1ary the middle fo the New York cf! Partyorto ~ * Embarrass· jazz-be-bop revolution of the cf! TEXTOR :. a Friend '40s and ·sos. performing with cf! 103 Billie Holiday, Dizzy Gillespie, Ao PLAN TO BE THERE * Coleman Hawkins, Roy ~ * Eldridge, Charlie Parker and cf! Sponsored b IC HILLEL * i other greats. cf! FREEi * .I In the 1960's, in addition to • ·. · -~ ,

:rpearances,hac~!e:n:igh:tc:;lub~da~tes~· Taylor~an~d;:co:;nce:rt:.,.l'.•'i'.+_'f'•+-+~+-+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+ became a __ +_.;._,~.L~---~::::,.._;:;=:~!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!i=J· \ ------

October 6. 1983 14 THE ITHJ\CAN

FINE ARTS INFO Fishheads. • • Continuing its tradition of the new Factory Theatre Lab's theatre form with directed ac­ presenting innovative theatre call for scripts by writing tion, and is an opportunity for forms to Central New York au­ "Prince of Naples," and since the author to h~ar and see his diences, Theatre Cornell that time he has been closely play in a performance situation TOP presents the world premiere ,associated with that theatre. while it is in its development staged reading of George F. Factory produced all his early stages. Mr. walker will be In Walker's new play, "Better Liv­ plays, and in 1973 took residence at Cornell during the ing," the comic study of fami­ "Bagdad Saloon" to London's final rehersal period, and will ly survival in a world gone Bush Theatre. In 1977 he began host a question and answer SCALE mad. "Better Living" is the a three-year association with period after the opening premiere event in Cornell's the Free Theatre: and during performance. year-long celebration of cana­ 1981 was playwright in Tickets for "Better Living" dian art. The Canadian residence at the New York are available at the Theatre by Dave Fischer From the very start it was ob­ Festival. "Better Living" will be Shakespeare Festival's Public Cornell box office, lower floor The many who attended The vious that the· Fishheads presented in the Drummond Theatre. His work has been of Willard Straight Hall. Cornell Nines last Friday nigh! were possess a special quality. This Studio on Oct. 6, 7, 8 at 8:15 produced in Canada. the University. Tickets are S4.25 delighted to get a peak at the quality is an uncanny ability to p.m. and Oct. 9 at 2:30 p.m. United States, England, for all performances. Reserva­ Fishheads' first major perfor­ transmit a personality, both as George F. Walker was born in Australia and New Zealand. tions and information may be mance. After only playing the individual musicians and as a Toronto in 1947. At the age of The staged reading is a com­ obtained by calling the Theatre smaller clubs as a start, the group. twenty-three. he responded to bination of the familiijr reader's Cornell box office at (607) popularity of Fishheads grew The first set, for instance, 256-5165. as was evident by the large consisted of a beautiful Jaco turnout. tune. a down and dirty "Down The band consisls of ex­ on the Farm". a spacey take­ The Ithaca Ballet will present µerienced musicians who have off on Bernstein's "West Side its Autumn Performance on The four works include· "Promenade". a hlmtor<>us, formerly played with other Story", and Zappa's "Mr. Tuesday, October II and "L'Air du Temps", a neo­ &ontemporary spool well-known cult ensembles Green Genes". Wednesday, October 12 at the classical pas de deux. Choreography: Elizabeth Van here in Ithaca. Throughout the night the Alice Statler Auditorium. Cor­ <;:horeography: Jon Vlcek and Lawrence Brantley Guitarist ['.etc Min was most Fishheads intermingled fine fu­ nell University. Four ballets will Dunbar-Cooper Dancers: and ensemble of 7 recently with Simon Jester; sion originals by Sokol (glad be performed, including one Dancers: Cindy Reid ancl women and 4 men bassist Billy Sokol with The he's writing again) with new Ithaca premiere. Ti<:kets are James Eavenson Music: Robbie Aceto and Mark Rhythm Method: guitarist Mark Adrian Belew, Allmans. and S3.50 (general admission and Music: Claude Debussy's "First Callisto who will also accom- Jacoby with Curious George: lyrically sarcastic verses by senior citizen reserved sealing) Arabesque"- Pianist Laurie and drummer Taz (Tazmanian Jacoby. Also, one coulcl cut the and ss.oo (reserved seating) Conracl will accompany the "Ballon Boy", an Americana Devil) was with The Blues air of tension when a dance and are available at Williams dancers. story ballet. (Ithaca premiere) Shadows. contest was announced to Shoes on the Commons. Con- . "Night \'igil". a dramatic. Choreography: Lavinia Reid It is this vastly diverse ex­ Steve Martin's "King Tut." venient Food Mart on the moclern dance piece. Dancers: Peter Vincent in the ti­ perience that makes Fishheacls The musical reputation of Village Green. carey·s Luggage Choreography: 1..avinia Reid tle role. Lavinia Reid and a sup­ unique. The members are not each member of Fishheads at Pyramid. and at 109 East Dancers: Elizabeth Van Vlrck. porting cast drawn from the full only exceptional musicians. speak for itself. Whether ii be Seneca Street. Curtain is at Lawrence Brantl('y. and company they are also good listeners- a rock, jazz. fusion or blues, their 8:15. For information. call Allison Hillman as the ('htlcl Music: Aaron Coplanct·s· "The trait which opens the doqr to knowledge of music theory 272-3700. Musir: Stephen Drews Red Pony" and "Music for the Theatre" wild solos ancl extended jams. makes each moment dynamic. Sunclay. October 9, 1983, 2:00 What clo Millard l.arnpell, ghetto. hfe in !he doomed, Saturday, October 8, 1983, 2:00 p.m .. Taughannock Falls State Joseph Haycln. Mary Chase, walled-in city goes on during p.m .. Watkins Glen State Park: Park: William Shakespeare.. Ten­ the travail of the holocaust. This walk will depart :from Meet at the parking lot on nessee Williams and Leonard Within !he range of gunfire. the Entrance Tunnel in the NYS Route 89 at the beginning Bernstein have in common? babies arc born. lovers get Main Entrance in the Village of of the trail to the falls. The walk Each will have one of his or married. prayers are prayed Watkins Qlen. The walk will last l'h hours. ending at the her best works produced by and ceremonies are held ac­ through the glen will last a lit· falls. The trail and the pace will the Ithaca College Theatre dur­ cording to Hebraic ritual. The tie over an hour. · ing its 1983-84 season. community's hope and aspira­ he suitable for pushed once again the Theatre will tion cannot be destroyed by wheelchairs. offer a menu of superb the Nazis. clramas. musicals. opera anct comedies that are sure to satisfy the appetite of theatre goers. What makes this line-up even more attractive is that the Theatre is also offering season subscription tickets a a substantial savings over the single ticket prices. Both the S17 .so season ticket TONIGHT · "Only Madmen · (for Tuesday, Wednesday and c~mplimentary Ask Why" PULSE .3D Th.ursday evening perfor­ Grateful Dead Cover Ban~ mances) and the s20 season drinks $5 NITE ticket (for Friday and Saturday evening performances) buy 10 11 12 13 14 15 seven shows for the price of five. o.v. _Disc night $5 Jockey PAUL LUKE Season tickets arc also 3 for $1 BAND o~' available for senior citizens. $5 NITE io with I.C. ~~' Ithaca College faculty and staff. \)~~ all students and Friends of 18 19 20 22 Ithaca College at SIO (Tuesday, 21 My Three Wednesdays.and Thursdays) ~'\o~-t. My Three T.D. and S12.50 (Fridays and Satur­ o.v. Sons- and the complimentary Sons - days). Special discounts are Fishheads also available for groups of 20 NITE HAPPY or more. Frozen Drinks $5 Nite HOUR The season will open Oct. it=ll.. - ...... ,...... at-t ...... -1~---~------.i--...... ______. __ ...... _.... t-_rJ 7-13 with Lampell's "The Wall," basecl on John Hersey's Happy Hour 3-7 AFTERNOON -- __ best selling novel about life and death in Warsaw's Jewish Mon.-Sat. STEAMERS DELIGHT ghetto during World War II. $.50 Drafts $1 Bar Drinks $3 a dozen Mixed Drinks $.50 "The Wall" is primarily a $.25· off bot(!e~ beer Mon.-Sat. from 2~3 pm human document. Life in the . ~ ...... 6, 1983 ortober rHF 11 HACAN 15 ------

1TH AC A COLLEGE WEEK,n·"ev,Ew- N - Nabenhaucr Roo~ Music Theatre/Films Lectures/Seminars r Furd Auditorium Meetings Sports Etcetera

,\:,to be-1 6 Octobei 6 Oe,tobvz. 7 Oc.tobVt 6 1 ----t c (1-/Jc,\ 6 I tli.1c.i College Woodwind "The Wall", M.a1.n Theatre, Reading by Michelle Cliff SAB Spe<>lwrs' Coimnittee Women's Varsity Tennis Oc-tube,,,, 11 Octobvz. 11 Bloc~ l Ends, & pm Oc.tc bv,. 11 "The Wall". Main Theatre, APICS Mtg., Job Room, Dillingham, 8 pm 7:30 pm School of Business W111d Ensemble, Orchestra Peer Adv1s1ng ~n

ITHACA COLLEGE BUREAU OF CONCERTS i Proudly Presents BOBBY and the MIDNITES I Featuring BOB WEIR of the GRATEFUL DEAD

Tickets on Sale l r:ckets on Sale Tickets are $6.50 1.C. Tickets are $6.50 I.C. Students Students $7 .50 General Public $7.50 General Public

Sunday, October 23rd· Tickets on sale at Egbert Union Ben Light Gym Cainpus Activity Office. 8:~0pm Limit four (4) tickets per valid student I.D. Read the ITHACAN, listen to 92 ICB--FM 'for details ------Oclobt>r 6, 1983 \THE lTHACANI SPORTS ITHACA STOPS ALFRED, 14-10

by Doug Clauson yards out. Del.urn, who pick­ down to the 20 yard line. The After jumping out to a 14-0 ed up 44 yards rushing on the interception was the first of lead in the first half. the Ithaca day, paced the scoring drive two for Stone on the day. College Bombers had to hold which began at the Alfred 45. "We didn't think that their off an Alfred rally in the second "In the first quarter we running game was going to be half for a 14-IO victory Saturday w~nted to be able to option the effective, but we did know we at Merril Field in Alfred. ball to the outside." said But­ had to stop their passing "Alfred is an aggressive type terfield. "Kurt has the option of game." said Butterfield. "David of ballclub." said Ithaca Head passing or running off the op­ happened to be in the right coach Jim Butterfield. "To be tion sprint-out." place at the right time and did able to beat them at their home Stone intercepts pass a good job making the field is very good." The IC defense set up the interception." The Bombers jumped out to Bombers second score of the Horton scores an early 7-0 lead when quarter­ game. Linebacker Dave Stone From the 20 yard line, Ithaca Coleen McDonald takes a shot against Cornell on Tuesday (; back Kurt Deluca ran the ball picked off a Glenn Law pass at upped its lead to 14·0 when night. IC won 5-1. See story on p, 17. ~ into the endzone from three the Alfred 35 and returned it tailback Howard Horton ran 17 yards for the score on the se­ cond play from scrimmage. VICTORY AT RIDEAU Horton's touchdown was the WOMEN final points Ithaca was going to get on the day. Missed scoring opportunities and a tight Alfred TAKE defense were the key to the of­ fensive breakdown in the se­ cond half. ICAC "We missed too many op­ portunities to score in the se­ cond half." said Butterfield. by Scott Kaye "All together we missed four The Ithaca College women's touchdown opportunities and tennis team hasn't had much had one score called back due 10 cheer about in recent to a penalty." weeks. until this past Alfred, which closed the gap weekend. After last weeks loss to 14-3 on a 47 yard field goal 9-o at the hands of Cornell. by Chris Johnson before the which dropped·Uhaca·s record close of the first half. lhreaten­ to 2-3, the Lady Bonbers hr-ad­ ed to overtake the Bombers in ed to the ICAC tournam~nt op­ the second half. timistically. This op'timism Law throws t'.D. soon faded as Ithaca's After a scoreless third women's tennis team swept quarter, Law hooked up on a both the singles and doubles screen pass with running back championship in the first Dave Bach, who ran 37 yards women's IC.AC tournament for the score to bring Alfred to ever. What has strictly been a within 14-10. However, from tournament for men's sports. MURRAY EYES OLYMPICS this point on the Bomber the Lady Bombers carved their defense controlled the contest. halting three Saxon scoring names in the record books as by Sue Steiger to 100 other players from all stage after being chosen as drives in the fourth quarter. the first champions of this Senior second baseman over the nation. best all around prospect at the "Their quarterback (Law) is tournament. David Murray will attempt to "The competition should be open tryouts for this area at very good," said Stone. "We Representing Ithaca were achieve one of the highest tougher at this level," said Utica College. knew he was going to throw Priscilla Davis at first singles honors in amateur athletics--a Coach George Valesente. Jim Spartano, Head Athletic the ball alot. The frontage peo­ and Paula Kelley at second spot on the U.S. Olympic team. "David has a very good at­ Directer and baseball coach for ple and Mike Bontempo did an singles. Both players were Murray has reached the final titude though, and therefore. Utica College, along with five excellent job in keeping him given first round byes. In the tryout camp to gain a spot on h·as a very good chance at other coaches from the area pressured." second round Priscilla met the the U.S. Olympic baseball team making the team. It should pro­ were to select the best all The Saxons were given one second singles player for St. in the 1984 summer games. ve to be a very challenging and around players. Sixty players final chance to take the lead Lawrence University and came "Being a member of my high valuable experience to him. from this area, including David late in the fourth quarter after out victorious, winning 6-3, 6,-3. school and college team was whatever the outcome." murray and Greg Egan from a Horton fumble gave them the Also in the second round Paula always my primary goal. Mak­ Only 25 spots are available Ithaca College, competed for ball at their own 30 yard line Kelley beat the number one ing the pros is a dream that on the U.S. team. The players the opportunity to advance to with 1:47 left to play. singles player for St. Lawrence every college player has. Bltl, at the national tryouts will be the national tryouts in 6-4, 7-6. These victories put being offered the opportunity well-talented and well LOuisville. The Bomber defense, both of our players into the to make the U.S. team was represented. . "Each player was tested in however, stiffened once again as Law was ·sacked by semi-finals. In one of the semi­ something I could never have "Right now I'm sitting back various areas-catching, throw­ final matches Priscilla Davis imagined. It would definitely and looking forward to the na­ ing, hitting and- running," said Bontempo, noseguard Bill beat RPl's second singles be a nice honor to be able to tional tryouts," said Murray. "I coach Valesente. "A scrim­ Sheerin, and defensiv.e tackle player 6-3, 6-3. and advanced compete in the Olympics," plan on going into this with the mage was then played with Eric Keller on three con­ to the finals. Paula Kelley on said Murray. same attitude as I did for the about 20-25 players to t~st secutive plays. Bob Gneo seal­ the other hand was not as for­ On October 21-23, Murray will first stage. I have the frame of them under game conditions." ed tt.e victory for the Bombers tunate as Priscilla and lost 6-3, have his shot at making the mind to make the team by giv­ Murray went three for four, with a fourth down 6-4. It was then up to Priscilla U.s. team. He'll be flown. all ex­ ing it my best shot and trying hitting a double, a triple and a interception. to bring the singles champion­ penses paid, to LOuisville, Ken­ to do well in whatever they homerun. In the field, he show­ The victory was Ithaca's se­ ship to Ithaca. Priscilla was tucky for the national tryouts. have us do." ed strong defensive ability cond in a row and gave them a 3-1 overall mark going into see women p. 18 He'll be competing against 60 Murray reached the final see Murray p. 18. see Bombers p. 18 ------~---- . October 6. 1983 THE ITHAu\N 17 SOCCER TEAMS WIN Men Top LeMoyne Women Win

By Ivan Gottesfeld coach Ray Rostan, "I was wor­ bench late in the game after by Debbie DiMaggio Bombers showed signs of The Ithaca COiiege men's ried about how the team would being ejected for fighting. So The 1983 season may be tur­ improvement. soccer team proved yesterday respond after the Alfred game, with the teams playing with on­ ning around for the IC After playing the way they that they have the ability to and I was very pleased that we ly 10 men on the field Bomber women's soccer team who at did against Colgate, it was ob­ bounce back from disappoint­ escaped with a victory." Jim McDonald made the game last count was 2·3 and has now vious that IC was ready to take ments. After losing their first The Bombers took their 2-0 saving play late in the game. evened it's mark at 4-4. on St. Bonaventure. game of the season last lead into the locker room at As a deflected shot was head­ Monday's 2-1 victory over IC exploded on offense to weekend · to Alfred, the halftime, but had the _lead ed toward the goal McDonald Geneseo State squared the register an 8-0 shutoy.t. Bombers traveled to LeMoyne reduced to 2-1 early in the se­ came out of nowhere to kick Lady Bombers' record. Bombers' third shutout of ihe and defeated the Dolphins 2-1. cond half. With starling goalie the ball away and preserve the A goal early in the first half season. Thanks to first half goals from Doug Weitzel on the bench Bomber victory. sparked Ithaca's attack. Seven different players con­ captain Bill Bonsu and Jim with a pulled thigh muscle, the "I've said from the very freshman striker Maureen tributed to the scoring for IC. McNeely the Bombers barely Bombers regrouped and literal­ beginning of the season, that Nolan, who has returned from Janet Wright led the offensive held on to gain their fourth vic­ ly fought off a physical and the best thing for the Ithaca a knee injury suffered early in attack with a hat trick. Leslie tory of the season (4-1-1). "We stubborn LeMoyne team. soccer team is to win games the season, scored for the Murphy notched two while played kind of flat, particularly Defenseman Jeff Neumami by one goal," added Ros tan, Bombers. Geneseo scored, Terri Cilento, Tracey Marullo. in the second half," said head found himself sitting on the "By doing this we will stay un­ and it wasn't until the end of and Julie Aspenleiter each cocky, and continually build the second half that senior scored once. Cheri Goetcheus. character." Janet Wright. assisted by Murphy,, Marullo. and At 4·1·1 the Bombers are off sophomore Karen Severson. Aspenleiter all added assists ITHACA TOPS to a good start and have a broke the tie to give IC the while sophomore Diane realistic shot at an I.C.A.C. title victory. Sleeper passed for two. and an N.C.A.A. bid. Their The team's transition began Defense rounded out Ithaca's CORNELL, 5-1 character and abi!i:y will be when Colgate came to town triumph with goalkeepers severely tested this week-end last week. Although Colgate Laura Slagle and Didi Cioffi walked away with the win. the combining for 7 saves. by Maureen Robinson control over the ball in the se­ when they travel up north 10 The women's varsity field cond half with an improved face Clarkson and St. Lawrence. hockey team de(.eated Cornell passing game. The Bombers S·I on the wet astroturf at Cor­ also demonstrated an improv­ nell's Schoellkopf Field on ed defense against the Big RUGGERS DEFEAT ALBANY Tuesday night. Red. The Bombers came into the Coach Doris Kostrinsky was by James J. Bellusb · In the beginning of the se· end, but could not quite get it game after a strong win against very pleased with the team's The Ithaca College Lonestar cond half, Mickey Lincoln. with in. With less than 30 seconds Colgate University on performance. Rugby Football Club traveled the help of some fancy foot­ left, Tom Sikora broke lose and Saturday. "Linda Amuso played one of to Albany State last Saturday work, made a picture perfect scored to end the game at 18-14 Both teams played a fast her best games tonight. She and defeated the Great Danes so-meter try. Lonestars miss­ in favor of the Lonestars. moving game, neither of which really handled the ball well. in sudden-death overtime by a ed the conversion and the After the game, Mickey Lin­ held a great advantage. IC's Lisa Clarke put intense score of 18·14. score stood at 14-6. coln had this to say. "The first two goals came from Lin­ pressure on Cornell. Barb Tom Sikora scoreu first for Things began to look bad for team really pulled together, da Amuso, the first one com­ Wachowiak played very well. the Lonestars on a spectacular the Lonestars. Albany State even though we had some first ing early in the game, the se­ She proved to be a very potent 30- meter run which came after scored two quick unanswered time "A" players, we came cond with three minutes re­ played at link. At halfback Jane a well set line-out by the Ithaca trys and at the end of regula­ together to take home the vic­ maining in the first half. DeGrenier and Jenny Powers scrum. Sikora added the con­ tion time the score was tied at tory." Tom Sikora was truly In the second half IC scored played very well in the second version to make the score 6-0. 14·14. the Lonestar of the week. His three more times, two goals half. They were where they Later, Sikora scored again on The two captains then met three trys and ronversion kick coming from Barb Wachowiak, were supposed to be. The girls a is-meter run. The missed With the referee and it was were the cutting edge of the assisted by Amuso and were passing much better conversion brought the score agreed that one s minute sud· victory. Heather Doyle, and one from tonight on the turf. They show­ to I0-0. Before the half ended, den death period would be The 1-1-1 Lonestars play thefr Eileen Beairsto a little over a ed good stick work and you Albany answered with a try played. During most of this first home game next saturday, minute after wachowiak's first tan really see it on the turf. and a conversion to make the period, the Lonestars manag­ October 8th, against the goal. The Bombers will be travel­ score 10-6. ed to keep the ~I in Albany's Binghamton Barbarians at 1pm comell was able to get on the ing to Virginia on Saturday to board in the second ha!f with play in the James Madison In­ less than eighteen minutes to vitational where they will be go. facing Ohio State in the open­ IC demonstrated much more ing round. Football At Its Best

e GRIDIRON REPORT /9

~Liffi/ ,.,.. With Head Coach Jim Butterfield Sunday Nights at 1O:OOpm on WICB-TV 13 Sponsors Versatile Food Management Services Inc., The Printer's Gallery, Dryden Specialty Trophy, Pudgles Pizza, J. Goulds College Outfitters, Ithaca Composition Graphics, The Ithacan, The Ithaca Times, Cullen's Sporting G~ds, Bausch & Lomb. 8 THE ITHACAN ocrober 6, 1983 COLLEGE PICK OF Doug Kurt Jim Steve Seth Mike Dennis Ivan Deane Runyon

Ithaca vs Springfield IC IC IC IC IC IC IC IC IC St. Lawrence vs Alfred A SLU SLU A A SLU SLU SLU SLU Cornell vs Harvard C H H H H H ff H ff Syracuse vs Maryland M M M M M M M M M Peon State vs Alabama A A A A A PS A A A Oklahoma vs Teus T T 0 0 T T 0 0 T aemson vs Virginia C C C C C C C C C Pitt vs Florida State FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU UCLA vs Stanford UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA Stan Michigan vs Michigan State M M MSU M M M MSU MSU MSU

This week's celebrity picker:. Deane RunY,on Each week campus ~ports media experts Doug Clauson, Kurt Smutko, Jim Connors, Steve Mayer, Seth Fenton, Dennis Read, Mike Catalana, and Ivan Gottesfeld test their wits in predicting top college football games. · Last week's Results r..;.;....,;;_,;.;,.,_.;;...~...... ------, STANDINGS

Doug 7-3 Doug 29-11 WOMEN TAKE ICAC Steve 6-4 Ivan 28-12 Steve 28-12 continued from p'. 16 Jim 7-3 Mike 29-1 I matched up against the Lawrences number two they did like true champions. Seth B-2 Seth 29-1 I number one singles player for doubles team 6-2. 7-6 and ad­ "It worked out well that we Ivan 6-4 Jim 28-12 RPI. After losing the first set vanced to the semi-finals. In had to play them first. I think Dennis 8-2 Dennis 28- I 2 6-7. she rallyed bacls. and won the semi-finals they beat RPl's that it made us work harder Mike 8-2 Kurt 26-14 the next two sets 6-3. 6-1 to number two doubles team 6-0, and gave us a great uplift to Kurt 7-3 gain the championship. 6-2. and like Priscilla Davis. play in the rest of the tourna- .______,.. ______In the doubles bracket of the found themselves in the finals. ment." says carnell. · tournament. Ithaca was In the finals they defeated St. The victory in the ICAC tour­ represented by Lisa Brown Lawrence's number one nament was not only good for MURRAY and Alice Houghton at first doubles 6-3. 6-4 to complete the players morale, but it will continued from p. 16 doubles and Jean Crawford the Lady Bombers sweep in help them in the seedings of along with consistency. best shot." and Sue Wallner at second the ICAC tournament. the State tournament which It was a challenging ex­ Ithaca College ha.!i done alot doubles. In the first round Lisa As the draws for the tourna­ takes place in Rochester on perience and everyQne did for me. both academically and Brown and Alice Houghton ment were announced. Coach October 21. In last years tourna­ well," said Murray.'s teammate in baseball. The school's beat RIT's first doubles team camel\ said that "we were a lit­ ment both RIT and St. Greg Egan. "No one could always had great teams and 6-3, 7-5. Our second doubles tle upset that we had to play St. Lawrence were seeded se­ compare to Scooter with his the coaches have done a lot. It team however, was not ac, for­ Lawrence in three out of our cond and third respectively. combined skills. With the is definitely a privlege to repre­ tunate, as they fell short to St. , first four matches." The Lady Both of these team!' were amount of effort he shows and sent Ithaca College in these Lawrence's number one team Bombers. who lost to St. beaten by Ithaca in the ICAC, with his positive attitude, he tryouts. It gives me the chance 6-4, 6-2. In the second round Lawrence 7-2 earlier in the which should put the Bombers definitely deserved it." to give something in return for Lisa Brown and Alice year. were faced with a big in good position in this years "After the announcement all they've done for me." Houghton defeated St. obstacle to overcome: and tournament. that I was chosen, I was hap­ Baseball is a trial sport for the py. I was glad that Coach 1984 summer Olympic games valesente and Coach Fazio in Los Angeles. Only six na­ suggested that Greg and I go tions will be represented of <;town there," said Murray. "I which the 0.S. is one. All the SPORTS L.A. vs. PH/LL Y went in with the attitude to games played will be atDodger play hard and to give it my Stadium in Los Angeles. FOCUS: FOR PENNANT BOMBERS continued from p. 16 Only four teams remain in instead of a drawback. renter and newly acquired Six- In the infield the Phillies have to Lezcano in right. Matthews this Saturday's game at Spring Hanson in 1977 .... This Satur­ the 1983 Major League Baseball field College. a Division II days game will by played on season: the Philadelphia Pete Rose and Joe Morgan, at and Lezcano both can hit for nrst and second base respec- power. Maddox is a fixture in opponent. the astroturf at Benedum Field Phillies, Los Angeles Dodgers. "Being in Division II school in Springfield. Ithaca won 30-8 Baltimore Orioles and the tively. Both are proven money center where he has won eight players during their playoff golden gloves .. they will be visibly bigger and in their last appearance on the Chicago White Sox. The stronger than us. It's an added carpet.... St. Lawrence, which Phillies and Dodgers are days with the Big Red Against right-handed pitching Machine. Rose has slumped to the Phillies switch 10 Von incentive fo~ the kids to play beat Hobart 17-0 last week, suf­ playoff veterans in the National them and they have. done a fered a major setback when League as are the Orioles in the 240 at the plate this season. Hayes in left, Greg Gross in but will always be a threat with center and Joe Lefebvre in good job against them in the their quarterback Bill Stone American League. The White pas,," said Buterfield. seperated a shoulder. Stone Sox are virtual newcomers to the bat even when he's so right. Gross and Lefebvre_ are years old. Morgan also had a both very underrated at the Bomber blasts: Against will miss the rest of the the playoffs, but won the most Alfred, punter Chris Weiller season .... The Bombers return games (99) in the majors thL<; sub-par year but has come on plate. Hayes has been incon­ very strong during the month sistant after having been ac­ broke, the Ithaca record for the home on October 15th to face season. The Phillies and longest punt, when he booted the University of Buffalo. I¥>dgeres will be playing for of September. On the other quired from Cleveland in a ma­ side of the infield the Phillies jor deal before the season. a 78, yarder. The previous Kickoff for the Springfield con­ the National League flag. For rerord was 73 yards by Tom test is set at 1:30 pm ..... the third time in six years. have the powerful Mike In the outfield the Dodgers while the Orioles-Chisox mat­ Schmidt at third and steady are solid with Dusty Baker, Ken chup will be a brand new one. Ivan OeJesus at shortStop. Landreaux, and the rookie Hi:re's an in-depth iook at the Schmidt led the majors in Mike Marshall. Baker has National Lcagule matchup that homers this season with 40· slumped at the plate this year SPORTSRAP - will decide the NL entrant in DeJesus, an outstanding fielder but his experience in the the Fall Classic. but relatively weak at the plate, playoffs should help the - National and loca_l sports coverage These two teams are not is the youngster of the infield Dodgers. Landreaux is a - Commentary new to each other in playoff at age 30. . steady hitter, while the rookie -. Special Guests on SPORTSLINE th action having met in the 1977 The word to descnbe e Marshall is definitely a big .. Sunday evenings 6:00 pm and 1978 NL championship Phillies outfield. is_ dept~. They leaguer. · on THE. WVIC series. jThe Phillies or the have tw~ startm~ outfielders, Steve Yeager and rookie Jack SPORTS STATION 'K'Wheeze-kids" as they have one against .lef11~s and the Fimple will split the catching 61 AM, 106 -FM Cable been referred to this season. o!her. one _faci.ng nght .handed duties. Fimple has been a plea­ are a veteran ballclub. pllchmg. AgamSt lefties. the sant surprise at the plate this Hciwever, I feel the experience Phillies will start Gary Mat- on the Philly club will be a plus - thews in left, Gary Maddox iri continued on p. 19

~ . . . . . ·, '\...'\.-' ... ~ ...... oc101>er Ii 1983

continued from p. /8 The Final Leaders year and Yeager is a steady American League National League playoff performer. The Dodgers pitching staff is .....:k..-;:=..."':'11a1. a talented group of veterans. O All R H Pct. 0 Al R H Pct. Boggs.Bos••.•••• 155 S82 100 210 .361 Mldlod<.Pttt..... 130 03 61 1Sl .l2l Jerry Reuss is the ace of the The Final Standings ~~~:·.::l: ~ ;: ~ ~ ~.:,-~~~:.::l:l: : 1: if. staff. although he has only RIPkln. 11111 ...... 162 A511 122 211 .311 Heno1d<.SI.L •..1.U 529 n 161 .311 1+:.':.:·:l:?. ~ 1~ :ilr ~~~: ::::::i: : 1~ ~ posted a 12-11 mark this season. American League National League =: 1: 1 1~ ~~t~:.::::::lt : : 31~ :.:::~ ~ 1~ ::i Following Reuss in the rotation s1mmans,M11w .. 1Sl 600 7S 1asm .3118 =~T.l'lnl.Pltt..••.. 151 mso S1 163 .301 SUNDAY'S GAMES will be Fernando Valenzuela, SUNDAY'SGAMF.S Yaunf,Mllw ...... 149 S78 111.l 171 .3118 :'~·. ::::a: ml~ m := Baltimorel, YankeesO. Mets 1,MontrealO (1st). who had an off-year. Bob Boston 3, Clevellllld 1. Mets 5, Montreal 4 (2d). ltOM!RUNS IIOMl!RUMS caJJ.fornial, T61l180. Atlanta 4, San Diego 3. sctunkff, P!lllldtlPhla. c; MlrPhv, A~ Welch will fate Hudson in the Chlcaso 3, Seattle 0. Ria,, Bos10n, J9; Arma, Bo,1or\, J6; lanto, J6; DIWIOn, MonlrMI, 32: GuaT9' Houston 3, Clnclllnati 2 (n.). Kittle. ChltagQ. ll; E. Murrov, Baltlmcn, ro, LDs Angtla, 32; Evons. Sin Francis­ MilwaUkee 7, Detroit 4. Pittsburgh 4, Pblladelpbte o. 33, Luzlnsltl, Chicago. 32; Wlnfleld. Y11>­ co, 30. third game. In the bullpen, Rick koa.l2. Minnesota 9, Toronto 3. St. Louis 0, Chicago e. RUNS BATTl!D IN Oakland 8, Kanaaa City 4. RUNSIIATTEDIN Honeycutt and Tom San Franciaco4, Lua Angeles 3. Murr,/tf, Alt1nta, 121; Olwsan, Nonl· Coooor, Mllwl\ao, 126; Ra, IIOsl00. Niedenfeuer will try to make­ EASTERN DMSION EASTERN DMslON 126; Wlnflllcl, Y...... , 115; L.H. Parrish, ~~"'I~~~:. Detrott, 114; E.Mun"ov, lllttlmcn, 111. SlnOlego.91. up for the absence of Steve W- L Pa. GB W L Pct. GB llOU!NIIASl!S •Baltimore 98 64 .605 ITOI.IQI IIASl!S Howe. •P~htledl'J 11P 72 .556 R ,._ Olldond. 1111; R. ,_...,, Raina, McntrNI, \ID; WIGOIR&. Sen Detroit 92 70 .568 6 Pi 84 78 .519 6 O,lcago,76; W. Wll1011, Kans&1Clly,59; J. Diego, 66; S. Six. LasAngtln. 5,1; Wlban. Lasorda is one of the best in Yankees 91 71 .M2 7 M 82 80 .506 8 Cruz,Ollcago,57:Sllrde, TIUl,41. Mm,5'. Toronto 89 73 .549 9 St. Louis '19 83 .488 11 RUNS RUNS the business in the dugout and Milwaukee Erl 75 .!JI 11 Chicago 71 91 .438 19 1 really think he does bleed Boston 78 84 .481 20 Mets 68 94 .421, 22 11~r=m~~~ ,.. ~~r~::::~r~~ Cleveland 70 92 .432 28 Hender10n. Olklllld. 105; Natbt, Taran­ Plllllldtlllhla. TOI; Soncllorg, 0,"'-,95. to. IOI. Dodger Blue. WESTERNDMSION Hin WESTERN DIVISION Although the Dodgers have ·ChiC88(> 99 63 .611 Cruz. Hous1cn, 119; DIWIOn, Man!rMI, Kansas City "Los Angeles 119; 011-, Mantrul, 115; R. Ramiriz, '19 83 .488 20 91 71 .562 Altanta.185; Riina, MonlrNl, 113. taken II of 12 from the Phillies Texas Tl 85 .475 22 Atlanta 88 74 .543 3 DOUILIII this season and have been Oakland 74 88 .4Sl 25 Houstao 85 77 .525 6 California 70 92 .4.1Z 29 San I>iego 81 81 .500 lllld !limy, Pllfladllll!H, TN, JflJ. 2.Al; players. and the pitching of Cindi! .... Plttlbunlh, 1~ .'52. UJ; McWlllllml. p~ ·~ JiSJ., :U,; P. PVIZ. Atllllla. 1~ .652, 2.AJ; or._ Carlton and Denny, will bring 1\lets,1H,.6511,U7. the pennant back to Veteran's ITWIKIOUTI Stadium. muuoun hllt~~'-=:,~~°'\

The World's most talked about role-playing game. The best way to enter the world of role­ playing games. D&D® Basic Set Is now even easier to play! Game comes complete with everything needed to begin adventuring. ~~ DUNGEONS & DRAGONS- lo a --- regloterecl lrademark owned by TSR Hobbles, Inc. ©1982 TSA Hobbles, Inc All FREE AlghloR&sarved PIZZA SIZE COKES ----- Comics for Collectors MEDI UM i48 on the Commons PIZZA ------2 LARG E (' yfi'udgiE"sq PIZZA \ ------4 I \ ·. PiJ]B / \_ - )- ( ., SHEE T PART Y PIZZA 6 Purlgie·s Pi33e 211 Elmira Road

1272.7&001 20 THE ITHACAN

Not just what you " need, but just

what you want OPEN 7 DAYS

0~ - :.·. 'TIL MIDNIGHT

PRICES IN EFFECT OCTOBER 7 THRU OCTOBER 19

When you visit your neighborhood Convenient Food Mort store you make tho MOLSON! heluva good most of your shopping time. We offer groot selection - with over 4000 nome-brond items - end quick. efficient service. You're oble to locate your SHREDDED items quickly ond eosily while knowing thot courteous personnel ore on hand BEER•ALE MOZZARELLA OR to assist you ot ell times. Stop into o Convenient Food Mort storo and you'll CHEDDAR moko shopping with us e habit! GOLDEN CHEESE

6 PK. 12 oz. SJ''- Plus Oep. boarshead AMERICAN PERRY'S DELUXE BOLOGNA CHEESE •ice cream FRESH SllGEO WHITE OR GOlOREO

A_ll fLAVORS ~~~ s1 89 ~ tc2IY' •

g~pepsi. ScotL ,.E ~ PEPSI.... ~-,- tr bathroom ' ma ~~ - . tissue • 2LIT£R =SINGLE 1 s1~,! ROll i

I· I• I MINUTE l';i;sRICE

1~· su,Eo Dolly Madison

609 W. CLINTON ITHACA. NEW YORK _,.BACON snack pies 272-3822 - 1 POUNO All flAVORS Sl.79 ~~·- -3 for s1

I ,.

OPEN 7 DAYS 'TIL MIDNIGHT