16
<t •• . . .. at .. --- -- -- .r..' Issue .. .. .. ;J ... ,.... , .;' :', . 0\.-. - ·.Il By Josepb perez The controversy surrounding the distribution of new space acq uired by the College con- tinues to rage and has erupted into a violent storm. Day Session Student Government and the President's Office have been, for the last month, involved in strong debatesover the best way to utilize the space available. Salvador Cheda, President of D.S.S.G., and Stanley Abraham. Vice-President for External Af- fairs, met with President Joel Segall on Wednesday, November 25 to discuss the manner in which the space would be allo- cated. At that time. they sub- mitted a proposal to the Presi- dent which stated thelr opinion on hew the space would best be utilized. - .. " . -", 'The President has not been very sympathetic to the students' needs:' said Abraham ... Fur- thermore, the President has no intention of seriously considering our proposal for space in the Family Courts Building. Abraham believes that the President is merely going through the motions and believes he is very close-minded in that he will not view any student pro- posal objectively. •• In essence. the President is ig- noring the student voice and is Segall Says Plans Are Flexible President Segall, however, denies. ever 'making the state- the accu- sations are totally false. : •. I would not bother to hold meetings if the proposed spacing arrangemen ts were etched in stone," stated President Segall. . 'These plans are, in fact, flexible and have already under- gone one revision." Although there is room for flexibility in the plans, the archi- tectural layout of the' Family Courts Building has already been approved by Albany and the CUNY Board of Trustees; there- fore, there is very little chance of altering the proposed plans for the buildings. One proposal, made by a facul- ty mern her, suggested moving the executive offices of the Col- lege to 225 Park Avenue South and converting the Court House into classroom space; this is not very feasible since any altera- tions in the interior design of the court building would require the consent of the State government, as well as the Board of Trustees. This would cause a great delay since the current plans. although they were submitted three years ago, were only recently ap- proved. "We cannot afford any further delays in the moving plans since we must evacuate the tenth floor of ? 15 ... end of the semester," President .Segall.stated.. The new location of the Educa- tion department, which currently occupies the tenth floor of 315 Park Avenue South. would be 225 Park Avenue South on 18th Street. The fact that this newest space is isolated from the rest of the college grounds has caused a great deal of concern among Education students and faculty. The President did attempt to se- cure other space closer to the college. but was unsuccessful. Continued on page 5 column Sal Cheda. Student GoYel'llIlleIlt PresldeDt aad StaIIIty Abril....... Vic:e Pnsi- deBt for External Affain. CUNY Plans Educational Growth Despite Federal Fmiding Cuts z o u ;:) Q "' a: "' "'" ,0 ' Q a: -e i By .Mlchael FlaDIgan Declaring that .. we are going to try everything to hold the line on tuition." James P. Murphy. Chairman of the Board of Trus- tees of CUNY. informed repre- sentatives of the stiident media of the forthcoming reduction in aid to the University by the Fed- eral Government. and its effect on the voluntary S-year Univer- . sity planning process to coordi- nate the growth of CUNY. This process is being overseen by Chancellor Robert J. Kibbee. At the press conference. held on Tuesday evening, December IS at East BOth Street. Murphy also ga ve a progress report on the search for a new chancellor for the University. and addressed the area of affirmat ive action Presently. the Federal Govern- ment provides. financial aid in the sum of 590 million. It is estim- ated that it will be reduced by S20 million by the start of the 1982-1983 financial year. At that time. the city will be responsible for 100 percent funding of the senior colleges and 50 percent fu nding of the community col- leges of CUNY. There is a proposal to hold th-e ·line on tuition. according to Murphy. In this regard. CUNY administrators will meet with budget officers of the state. to ensure that New York State will adequately fund- the CUNY budget. Murphy pointed out that the cuts that might occur from the reduced funding would be implemented around 1983-1984, The search for ChanceUor Ki&- _ _ -----'-__--.:.. -=---- ---.;.-:J

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Issue

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·.Il

By Josepb perez

The controversy surroundingthe distribution of new spaceacq uired by the College con­tinues to rage and has eruptedinto a violent storm. Day SessionStudent Government and thePresident's Office have been, forthe last month, involved instrong debatesover the best wayto utilize the space available.Salvador Cheda, President ofD.S.S.G., and Stanley Abraham.Vice-President for External Af­fairs, met with President JoelSegall on Wednesday, November25 to discuss the manner inwhich the space would be allo­cated. At that time. they sub­mitted a proposal to the Presi­dent which stated thelr opinionon hew the space would best beutilized.- .. " . -",

•'The President has not beenvery sympathetic to the students'needs:' said Abraham... Fur­thermore, the President has nointention of seriously consideringour proposal for space in theFamily Courts Building.

Abraham believes that thePresident is merely goingthrough the motions and believeshe is very close-minded in thathe will not view any student pro­posal objectively.••In essence. the President is ig­noring the student voice and is

Segall Says Plans Are Flexible

President Segall, however,denies. ever 'making the state­~e~_~~~Eo~~~~~t the accu­sations are totally false. :•. I would not bother to holdmeetings if the proposed spacingarrangemen ts were etched instone," stated President Segall.. 'These plans are, in fact,flexible and have already under­gone one revision."

Although there is room forflexibility in the plans, the archi­tectural layout of the' FamilyCourts Building has already beenapproved by Albany and theCUNY Board of Trustees; there­fore, there is very little chance of

altering the proposed plans forthe buildings.

One proposal, made by a facul­ty mern her, suggested movingthe executive offices of the Col­lege to 225 Park Avenue Southand converting the Court Houseinto classroom space; this is notvery feasible since any altera­tions in the interior design of thecourt building would require theconsent of the State government,as well as the Board of Trustees.This would cause a great delaysince the current plans. althoughthey were submitted three yearsago, were only recently ap­proved.

"We cannot afford any furtherdelays in the moving plans sincewe must evacuate the tenth floorof ? 15 Park·Avenue..SoUth-.a.t.th~ ...end of the semester," President.Segall.stated..

The new location of the Educa­tion department, which currentlyoccupies the tenth floor of 315Park Avenue South. would be225 Park Avenue South on 18thStreet. The fact that this newestspace is isolated from the rest ofthe college grounds has caused agreat deal of concern amongEducation students and faculty.The President did attempt to se­cure other space closer to thecollege. but was unsuccessful.

Continued on page 5 columnSal Cheda. Student GoYel'llIlleIlt PresldeDt aad StaIIIty Abril....... Vic:e Pnsi­

deBt for External Affain.

CUNY PlansEducational GrowthDespite Federal Fmiding Cuts

zo~u;:)Q

"'a:"'~~

"'",0 'Qa:-ei

By .Mlchael FlaDIgan

Declaring that .. we are goingto try everything to hold the lineon tuition." James P. Murphy.Chairman of the Board of Trus­tees of CUNY. informed repre­sentatives of the stiident mediaof the forthcoming reduction inaid to the University by the Fed­eral Government. and its effecton the voluntary S-year Univer-

.sity planning process to coordi­nate the growth of CUNY. Thisprocess is being overseen byChancellor Robert J. Kibbee.

At the press conference. heldon Tuesday evening, DecemberIS at East BOth Street. Murphyalso ga ve a progress report onthe search for a new chancellor forthe University. and addressedthe area of affirmat ive action

Presently. the Federal Govern­ment provides. financial aid in thesum of 590 million. It is estim­ated that it will be reduced byS20 million by the start of the1982-1983 financial year. At thattime. the city will be responsiblefor 100 percent funding of thesenior colleges and 50 percentfu nding of the community col­leges of CUNY.

There is a proposal to hold th-e·line on tuition. according toMurphy. In this regard. CUNYadministrators will meet withbudget officers of the state. toensure that New York State willadequately fund- the CUNYbudget. Murphy pointed out thatthe cuts that might occur fromthe reduced funding would beimplemented around 1983-1984,

The search for ChanceUor Ki&-

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The 'Iicker':• t . • • "....

.-Deeember11; r9M':'::

"-

Learn the Issues Get Involved VIEWPOINTS:

Let the Holiday Spirit Last

Photography Editor. Frank KucijaBusiness Manager: Keith AlmodovarAdvertising Manager: Jay SchwartzNews Staff: Helen Chan, Veronica Szanto, Christina Gorman, Ingrid Fergusson. Sharon Waters. Jodi HorowitzArts & Features Staff: Dawn Rodriguez, Jay Schwartz, Paul Golden, Cathy Doonan, Helen Chin, Michael Goodman.Michelle WUUams, Angela BriggiDs, Marie ManaeU~Maurice Vmoria. CaroIyne Abernathy. Damien Begley. RossHartfIeld, Karen TysonSports Staff: Tom Schwarz, Mike Angelo, Kerin Cbang, Joe Seem

Photography Staff: Greg Glover, Herbert Hemanr!ezColumnists: WeDdeD M. Faria, BriaD WatmanGraphic Artist: MIchael Perrone

Problems That BesetThe Student Press

Take several hundred students, put them within a stone'sthrow of a sandy ocean beach, give them sunny, warm days toplay in, a-nd all hope of holding a serious conference shouldreasonably disappear.

That wasn't the case when the Associated CollegiatePress/National Council of College Publications Advisers heldtheir joint national convention Oct. 29-31 in Miami Beach.Granted, the attire of most student attendees was markedlydifferent from the previous year's convention, when the prep­.py set invaded Chicago on a never-ending search for theworld's best pizza. At more than one Miami conference ses­sion, shorts, sandals and wet heads predominated.

But most students were well aware of what the trip wascosting their newspapers and were after something more thana good tan. Student journalists are, on the whole, a more in­tense lot than average students. They tend to take themselvesseriously - a little too seriously, in the eyes of many on cam­pus. But in Miami, they confronted a number of very seriousIssues:

Freedom of the student press is an ongoing matter of con­cern. While legal precedents have established the right of stu­dent newspapers at state-supported schools to operatewithout editorial constraints by the administration, the in­dependence of private school papers is much less clearlydefined. In recent cases, administrators at DePaul U. and theAllentown College of 51. Frances confiscated papers to pre­vent distribution of controversial material. -- Most studentpress legal experts believe private school administrators canprove themselves publishers and can thus impose editorialrestraints. A press law attorney at the convention argued,however, that if private school students were willing andfinancially able to pursue the issue incourt, they might gaingreater First Amendment freedoms.

Student government 'interference is another ticklish issue..College newspapers and college politicians are rarely onfriendly terms, except in fights against the administration.Yet many campus papers must receive student activity feefunding through the student government appropriations pro­cess. In more than one instance, the temptation to use finan­cial control to influence editorial policy has been too great forstudent government leaders. Papers like the U. of San Fran­cisco Foghorn are forced to choose between losing revenueana changing content. Too often, vaguely written a studentpress guidelines offer little assistance and the administrationor a campus media board must mediate a settlement.

Student newspapers are becoming increasingly agressive inseeking access to campus records and meetings. The U. ofFlorida student newspaper successfully sued to open deansearch committees at that school to its reporters, and the U.of Oklahoma student newspaper is going through the campusjudicial process to gain access to budget meetings there. AtMarshall U., the threat of a Freedom of Information suitgained the student paper access to registration figures aheadof the planned announcememt date. Threats didn't work atBoston College, where the student paper is suing to obtain ac­cess to campus police files.

Inflation and student aid cuts combine to put manynewspapers in a staffing bind. While potential student jour­nalists are increasingly in need of paying part-time jobs, stu­dent newspapers at medium-sized and smaller schools are in­creasingly unable to raise or even maintain staff salaries. As aresult, college editors may be forced to rely on less­experienced reporters.National advertising, the source of crucial revenue for manypapers, is also the source of controversy for some. Three na-. . .tional ad representatives are currently competing for a slice ofthe college market pie, which all admit has yet to be fully tap­ped. The competition, which has only evolved over the pastyear. can become heated. On campuses where the studentpaper sig-ns an-exclusive agreement with one rep, it may finditself in competition with a relatively new off-campus paperthat aims at the same advertisers - with the support of itsformer advertising representative.

It is often through financial issues that student newspapersare forced to confront the real world of publishing. But thereis also a growing professionalism among a student papers thatis no longer limited to major university campuses.

By Carol Witson, EditorNational On-eampus Report·

Pamela SmithSports Editor

Susan CuccineUoManaging Editor

William DudleyArts Editor

Joseph F. PerezEditor- in-Chief

MIchael F1ani&anAssociate Editor

Wendy GertlerFeatures Editor

An editorial which ran earlier in this semester stated that "the Baruch College Administra­tion cares very little for the rights of students." While this may be the case, it can be arguedthat the students themselves are to blame for the administration's authoritative attitude.

The administration would be foolish not to make decisions that are to· their benefit. Whyshouldn't. they, when they receive little opposition? The majority of the students don't knowthe issues that concern them, and don't care to.

When students are informed of the relevant issues - the pending classroom relocation, forexample ~ too many choose not to fight but, rather, to sit back and let these changes take ef­fect. Other students, while they may be aware of what is going on, will simply "soundoff" for a few minutes and then go back to business as usual. What good have they done?Two or three of their friends may know how they feel, for one moment, and then their opi­nion is silenced.

This is a sorry state for students to be in, and while riotous rebellion is not necessary,speaking out is. It is important for students to know what is going on around them, and tolet their opinions be known. Too many students choose to be passive, letting others makethe decisions which they, too, should take part in.

Speaking out is not a very time consuming task. Talk to representatives from studentgovernment, or attend one of their meetings. They want to know what you have to say. Getto know the people in the Student Activities Office and in the Office of the Dean of Students.They are not as unapproachable as some may think.

If an article published in The Ticker holds your attention, or if you feel strongly aboutanything you see going on around campus and feel others should know about it - guardsgoofing off, garbage piling up, high bookstore prices, stale cafeteria food, terrible teachers,and the list is endless - pick up a pen and let us know.

Acquiring book knowledge should not be the only goal of a college education. While ex­tracurricular activity at Baruch may be minimal, it should be taken advantage ofnonetheless. Joining the Accounting Society or the Marketing Society may look nice on aresume, but don't let your involvement stop there. Get to know people, get involved, andmake the most of your education."

The holiday season is a time for festivity, gala and reflection, among other things.Whether by design or chance, Christmas and Chanukah come just a few days before the endof the calendar year. In today's world where wars, crimes, inflation and supression ofhuman rights appear to be the order of the day, the holidays become more than a time forfamily reunion and partying; they are a time to take stock of where we are and where we planto ~o in this seemingly chaotic kaleidoscope of life.

And it is in living that we ought to be aware of others; how we relate to them and they to us- one for all and all for one.

Whatever our belief, this time of year hasa special solemnity that demands appreciationand response.

While the people of Poland including University students and faculty members are deniedtheir basic rights, while the "rebels" of Afghanistan still fight for freedom in their own landagainst an unwelcome visitor; the true meaning of the holidays remains denied.

It is true that problems like inflation impinge on all our actions, (after all it wiped .out allincome gains of November) and during the same month factories operated at only 74.9010 ofcapacity - the lowest level since the 1980 recession and close to the low point of the 1974-75downturn.

It is also true that rnuggings and murders are as much a part of life in the Big Apple as therotten subway system.

But it is because of all this that the holiday spirit should be nurtured in the Baruchcommunity. In as much as .we are students of academia, we are students of the world. Thelives of others affect our own. Reach out and let peace and good will reign among all.

II

II

II

•I

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December 21, ·1981 .. The TIcker

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NYPIRG.Seeks Student Support

Ralph Nader founder of Public Interest Groups.

By Erin Blackwell

Two representatives from theNew York Public Interest Group(NYPIRG) visited Baruch onThursday, December 10 to rallyBaruchians to the cause of activecitizenship. . Tom Wathen, Pro­gram Director for New YorkState, and Loretta Simon,

. Downstate Coordinator, spoke toa dozen students, on the benefitsof forming a Baruch chapter ofNYPIRG and outlined the' stepsinvolved. They also discussed theNYPIRG chapter that wassquelched by the Board ofTrustees two year ago.

"Ten years ago, Ralph Naderconceived the idea of PIRGs,stably funded, student-supportedand-directed social changeorganizations, with professionalstaffs to provide students withcontinuity and advocacytraining, " explains a tabloid-sizeleaflet, dispensed at the meeting.The leaflet also provided animpressive-sounding list ofNYPIRG achievements viaresearch, lobbying, and litigation.An a example is their report on thetoxic chemical contamination ofthe Niagara River, which wassubsequently aired on CBS's SixtyMinutes.

• 'We' re here for socialchange, " said Loretta Simon,"and this is not reducible to anyone ideology. Students arecitizens-they vote, they paytaxes, and they have rights. They

are potentially a strong force."NYPIRG: Past, Present, Future

Explaining NYPIRG's historicalevolution, Simon said, "We saw itin the sixties in the civil rights,ecology, and anti-war movements.NYPIRG grew out of that, taking

. the best of it and giving it con­tinuity. It's not a.question of onedemonstration. We're a vehicle

. for sustained cnange.".In 'order to start a Baruch

chapter, committed students mastfollow the four steps listed bySimon. Outreach comes first, andranges from standing in front of apamphlet strewn table to holdinga general interest meeting for thewhole school. Next is the petitiondrive to put a referendum on theballot, the work of gettingstudents to vote for it begins inearnest. One of the stumblingblocks here is the $2 hike in stu­dent activities fee it represents.Finally, the referendum, if passed,must win approval by the Boardof Trustees.

Two years ago, Baruch studentsvoted their PIRG in by a narrowmargin, but could not get the finalokay of the Trustees. Accordingto Wathen, who was not involvedat the time, there was a furor caus­ed by a pornographic publicationat CCNY, which threw into ques­tion all expenditures of student ac­tivities fees. This resulted in thetabling of the NYPIRG referen­dam until hearings were held andbylaws were rewritten.

Several students at the meeting

expressed doubts about thepossibility of moving otherBaruchians to action. A memberof the political Science Societypointed out that, as the majorityof students are business majors,and one of NYPIRG's functionsis, clearly, to regulate business,the' 'founding of a chapter wouldseem antithetical to their interests..Wathen replied that. the verybusiness-oriented State Universityat Albany is their strongest PIRGchapter.

Student Involvement Essential

~'We deal with the problem ofstudent apathy," Wathen said,"by showing them a reason not tobe. You say that many studentsare only adding up_ nurgbers in aledger, but they still ride subways,not cabs. CUNY is no ivorytower. It's smack in the middle ofthe most densely populated urbanisland in the world."

Apart from the rewards of ac­tive citizenship, business majorshave the opportunity to par­ticipate in NYPIRG's internshipprogram. To quote the leaflet,students who qualify will, "workside by side with NYP{RG's ex­perienced staff lawyers, scientists,organizers and researchers oncrucial issues-doing everythingfrom research to communityorganizaing...Over 100 volunteerand salaried internships areavailable." These cover suchdiverse interests as the legislature,toxic chemicals and anti-nuclearresearch, journalism/media work,

the Fuel Buyers Group for needyNew Yorkers, and research andlobbying on discriminatory ratesetting in insurance.

Simon told students about theannual spring conferences on theSUNY Albany campus, in whichstudents from allover the state

.meet to discuss issues with profes­sional staff members and attendworkdshops. And, in January,

there will be a conference weekendfor approximately 80 studentswith a keen interest in the workingof the legislative process.

Thee introduction of NYPIRGonto the Baruch scene could meana big difference to all students aspresent and future citizens ,"Most people think that justvoting is enough," said Simon,"We don't."

By Wendell M. Faria

i." .

Bahadin Ahmad Muhammad ofthe People's Republic of Yemen, ,disappeared" on March 13,1972, and has never been heard ofsince. Carlos Humberts Con­treras Maluje of Chile disap­peared November 3rd, 1976, andhas also never been heard of sincethat time, Alaide Foppa de Solor­zano of Guatemala, PetroniloTorno of The Phillipines, GudinaTumsa of Ethiopia...

These people have all been vic­tims of a relatively new form ofpolitical terrorism that hasbecome rampant among govern­mentsthroughout the world: theuse of "disappearances" as a pre­emptive means of eliminating pro­spective insurgency within a socie­ty.

In a flagrant violation ofhuman rights principles, un­counted thousands have been ab­ducted and made to •'disappear, "either by government forces orwith their comolicity,. inflictingterror and suffering on family.andfriends of the victims as well as onthe population as a whole.

Many of the victims are feareddead, but not a.vestige of evidencecan be adduced to substantiatethis belief. The fact is that the vic­timized remain unaccounted for,amidst vehement disclaimers bygovernment officials as toknowledge of their whereabouts,and leaving families without even

the solace of mourning and in astate of permanent uncertainty.

Instances of this practice havebeen documented in the lastdecade in country after country.Argentina is guilty; as well asChile, EI Salvador, Guinea, Ugan­da, Kampuchea, Zaire, Mesuco,Bolivia and Syria, among others.In Argentina, based on figuresreleased by Amnesty Interna­tional, it is estimated that up to15,000 people may have "disap­peared" after the 1976 militarycoup there. In Uganda, estimatesfor the period 1969 to 1979 rangebetween 100,000 and half amillion "disappeared" and killed.In Kampuchea: perhaps threequarters of a million "disap­peared" and dead.

Why has this method becomesuch a major form of repressionfor governmental entities? Whatattributes does it possess that haslured ruling bodies into employingit at the mere inkling of opposi­tion?

The repressive value of a policyof "disappearances" was succinc-

"'.t1y stated in a 1942 Nazi militarydirective on detainees in Francesuspected of "endangering Ger­many security": .....the prisonersare to be transported to Germanysecretly, " went the release," ...these measures will have adeterrent effect because (a) the

Continued on page 6, column J

HealthDepartlDent

FinesCollege

Cafeteria

The cafeteria at ISS East 24thSt. was recently cited by the NewYork City Department of Healthfor various violations of thehealth code. Violations includedpoorly maintained ceilings. roachinfestation. operating a restau-.rant without a permit. and forfailure to display poster outliningthe techniques of the HeimlichManeuver (to help a choking per­son.)

Tasty Vend. operators of thecampus cafeterias. was fined$130 for these violations and hadto attend ahearing on December14. the outcome of which is stillunknown. The Health Depart­ment is planning another inspec­tion sorneti me in January. atwhich time tile violations must becoorrected or the cafeteria will beshut down.

While the 24th St. Cafeteria hasbeen .the only one fined. so far,complaints have also been lodgedrecently against .the 26th sr., 23rdSt., and Student Center facilities.

Representatives from TastyVend, and the College AuxiliaryServices Board were unavailablefor comment..

!l

".

UdtSt. cafeteria. pIIty of ....rOdS IIaItII cede YIGIa......

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• c _ •

. The Ticker

c. .

December 21, 1981..~: : , : .... "":' ..

$ IMMEDIATE CASH $ ..

50% PaidFor books used for Spring Semester

PLUS AN EXTRA· .5% CASH BONUS PAID

Jan. 5th Thru 30th.. At

LEX BOOK EXCHANGEYour Unofficial Official Bookstore132 E. 23rd St. (cornerof Lex. Ave.)Nevv York, N.Y.777-6240

:-. ~ .._.L 1b

During this period a Michigancampaign will be launched andhighlighted by a statewidemarch. The Michiganders hopeto attain emergency governmentaid to dig themselves out of theirstate of fiscal collapse and to al­leviate unemployment miseries.She also expressed outrage at theReagan administration' s geno­cidal policies to,vards the Haitianrefugees and denounced the : 'le­galized slavery" of the Massa­chusetts Work Fare programwhich. she feels. . 'puts welfarepeople to repressive work."

She cautioned that "we haveto watch the U.S. war drive vervcarefully." as she believes thatthe major arms buildup. a back­bone of the Reagan revision. willresult in war in the near future.

She began to address the mea­sures that students should adoptto figh t Reagan policies. Sheclaimed that students have a par­ticular job: "Taking it (this infor­mation) to all the students. to allthe communities." Citing severalstudent movement failures of thesixties.' s h e warned again thatthis new. student movement mustbe unified and not just .. some­thing on the fringe."

Continued on page 6. column 3

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Reagan policies now...Her organization. she claims.

is a "Iiving movement rooted instruggle." A major problem shenoted was the diversion of peo­ple's attention from their "op­pression" at home. She stressedthe need for funds to carry outthe work of her organization.claiming that "we cannot look forthe corporations (to fund) thesefightback movements;"

Rog e r s then explained then c e d for what the APe ha sdubbed a '"winter o ffe n s i ve .""

- -The Tt_L__ • - ... ...~ ....

AJI-People's Congress representative Gwendolyn Rogers.

time navy enlistee, Rogers re­minded her audience tha t thebenefits of the military . 'are notwhat they could or should be"and dissuaded oppressed peoplefrom signing up for the armedforces.

Rogers described stru gglesagainst pu blic school programscutb a cks in Detroit, which shedescribed as "the indus trialheartland of this country,"' andtenant fightback operations inChicago and Hoboken. shecalled for Uaction against the

a

have the livelihoods of so manyAmericans been threatened bygovernment policy.

Rogers attacked PresidentRea&an's billion dollar cu ts inservices, which she categorizedas o·human needs" and went onto attack his increased militarybudget, which she views as apreparatory measure toward. war.While Reagan is asking the peo­ple to tighten their belts, Rogersopined. he is allowing billions in

, tax giveaways which only aid therich.

Rogers' main objective was torally student support of theAPe's sole proposal. a call for aunified "Days 'of Resistance,"scheduled for April 24-May 2.1982. The participants. includinglabor groups. welfare rights.Black and Latino rights, gay andlesbian rights, veterans' rightsan d disabled people' s rightsgroups, plan to stage strikes, sit­ins and demonstrations duringthis week in attempt to overturnReagan's policies 0

Citing high student unemploy­ment and the cutting of funds forstudent grants. Rogers arguedthat the government was tryingto entice "Third World people"into joining the military. A one-

,S

All People's Congress Representative Updates Curr-ent Project

Urging Student Support For 'Days Of Resistance'

Gwendolyn Rogers. nationalorganizer of the Lesbian and GayFocus of the People's Anti-WarMobilization (PAM) and doctoral'candidate in Clinical psychology,spoke before an assembly of stu­dents in Baruch's Oak Lounge onDecember 9 to relay a progressreport on the platforms acceptedand introduced at the All Peo­ple's Congress (APC). This con­gress took place on October 16-18at Cobo Hall in Detroit, Mich­igan.

Rogers' visit was sponsored bythe Student Center ProgramBoard. In a brief introd uction bySara Catalinotto, Baruch's solerepresentative at the APe, it wasannounced that Rogers would ex­plain who participated in theCongress and what measureswere adopted to fight the threatsof the right and challenge theReagan administration.

Rogers began her address qydrawing a parallel between thepresent U.S. economic situationand the economic collapse whichswept the country during theGreat Depression of the 1920 sand 1930 s. She maintained thatnot since the former depression

By Carolyne L. Abernathy

Dr• .lohn Bauer, Chairman of the Ps,cbology'departJllellt

Spacing Controversy Continues to Grow;Segall and Cheda Remain Deadlocked

Therefore. they were dissuadedfrom moving the department.

"1 have never been pro-Segall,or pro-Green for that matter. andhave often been in disagreementwith the President. However, Ibelieve he has been rather fair inlistening to input from the facul­ty." said Dr. John Bauer. Chair­man of the Ps ych o log y d e p art­ment.

President Segall plans to delaymaking a final decision on spacea llocarion as late as possible. Heis still accepting proposals andwill continue to do so until lateFebruary. leaving enough time toreceive feedback from. all inter­ested parties.

jecr ion to such a move. it wassubsequently decided that rhedepartment would remain in the23rd Sr, building.

The College also consideredmoving the Psychology depart­ment to 225 Park Avenue Southbeca use the lib ra r y '\" iI I beex­p a n d i ng downward in the 20thSt. building. The Psychology de­partment was also opposed to theidea of moving. The departmentsubmitted a 4-page report to thePresident's office. outlining thecost of moving. and reconstruct­ing the Psychology labs. Themove w o u ld have cost the Col­lege $100.000. since special mo­vers would have been needed. aswell as special electrical wiring.

Continned from page J

The President had hoped to ob­tain space in 357 Park AvenueSouth, but the rental price washigher than what the Board ofTrustees was willing to pay.

Unlike Student Government.the consensus among college fa­culty is that the President actedfairl v and b a rg a ined in goodfaith.

"The present situation maynot be the best. but the Presidentis trying to do the greatest goodfor the greatest number." saidProfessor Norman Storer. Chair­man of the Sociology and Anthro­pology department.

Professor Storer's departmentwas also slated to move to ]8thSt. However. after voicing his ob-

vide emergency merger and capitalinfusion powers to the Board.These powers would eventuallylead to interstate banking.

Future problem areas whichmight spark inflation include in­creasing oil prices. The glut isover and OPEC will start the priceassent despite its recent tokendecrease in prices. Many oilanalysts feel there is no prospectof crude oil prices decreasingsignificantly. In fact, there is littlereason to stop the prices from ris­ing. We need oil substitutes to befurt her developed and the oil inthe western states to be extracted.

Theodore Eck, chief economistfor Standard Oil Co. (Indiana)who told "Oilgram News" an oilindustry trade publication andwas reported about in the NewYork Post in late October, "thatwith inventories being drawndown at an average two millionbarrels a day worldwide. withUnited States inventories now inbalance and European inventoriesexpected to be 'in reasonablebalance' before the spring, thecards are falling. into place for anOPEC price hike."

Due to sluggish economiesworldwide, the world oil demandshould remain at about 96-97million barrels a day. OPEC, inavoidance of stagnant revenues.would be likely to further raise theprice of oil if for no other reasonthan meeting inflationary in­creases and breaking even.

Concerning the effects of~government policy on its citizens,

Reagan's tax cuts and budget cutsContinued on page 6, column 3

(The following is the last in athree part series on the economy).If the economy is in a recession,why is there a booming rate inshort term lending by commercialbanks? This summer, largebanks' business loans rose at anannual rate of 22 percent.

Perhaps, this is similar to thesort of liquidity squeeze that ac­companies all cyclical turningpoints. This is how the Ad­ministration views thephenonenum. This crisis revealsthe degree of panic evident inshort-term borrowing.

The borrowing boom partlyreflects the growth of unwantedinventiories, specifically in theauto industry. Corporations aredesperate to borrow to alter theirfaltering financial conditions evenat the all time high rates..

Banks are financing the lendingboom by selling jumbo certificatesof deposit. The Bank of NewYork points out, "during a recent14 week period cornrnerical andindustrial loans have risen by alarge $8.3 billion. Thebankingsystem in response to the surge hasleaned towards CDs as a source offunding. Over the same 14 weekperiod large negotiable CD is­suance rose by $10.8 billion.Banks must utilize CDs becausethe Federal Reserve has such apowerful grip on the monetarybase. Also, investors are pouringcash out of savings accounts andinto Money Market Funds.

At the end of October, PaulVolcker, the chairman of theFederal Reserve Board, requestedt hat Congress immediately pro-

IIl,Iff.,

oj.' ...~

'. December 21, 1981

series sponsored by the Quality ofLife Program of the Baruch Col­lege Fund. Henry Wilson, Deanof Students and Chairman of theStudent Personel Services depart­ment arranged Mr. Martinez'svisit.

- -- - ~------------

79 Street (2nd Ave.)57 Street (B'way)

We offer the best in Styling, CUtting andBeard Trimming.

We also specialize in Hair Replacement,(Done in Strict Confidence)

LOCATED AT:161 E. 23rd, Street

Between Lexington It 3rd Avenue (Just offThird Avenue)

Anthony'sHAIRCUTTING &

STYLING

For more iDfo: 260-0570

Interviews in our Park Avenue Store:Mr. Edwards 532-4697

Julio Martinez addressing SPS audience.

Part-tiIne Sales PositionsManhattans Largest

ConvertibleSofabeds RetailerExcellent working conditions.'Iexihle hours - days•.•nights••.

weekends•..holidaysGood Appearanee, outgoing personality

and conscientious work habitsNO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

$5 per hour (no comrnissfon]

JENNIFER HOUSE

said Martinez. who has a degreein Human Services from the Uni­versity of Illinois.

"It is mind over matter to stayoff drugs, ., he said.

The meeting was part of a

.The Ticker

More BitsContinued from page 5

do little for the middle class, thebackbone of America. Although,President Reagan feels thatwithout the tax cuts, recession willturn into stagnation, we havealread experienced a 1.9010decrease in real GNP during thesecond quarter of 1981.

The most widely used drugsamong the State's 500,000 col­leges were: marijuana, which isused by 59 percent; hashish,which is used by 28 percent; stim­ulants, such as diet pills and am­phetamines, which are used by 21percent; and cocaine, which isused by 20 Percent.

The underlying social problemsthat accompany drug abusepose' a problem according to Mar­tinez. ,. Kids look for role models.Music today encourages kids toget high. Kids try to emulatethese ideals," said Martinez, go­ing on to another social aspect:"Parents are not aware. Theydon't want to relate to the nega­tivity of the problem. the generalatritude is that no one wants totalk about it."

Overcoming the Problems

Making it clear that someonemust pay attention to the problemof drug use on campus, Martin­ez said, It is up to the adminis­tration to make changes. He thencongratulated Baruch for being"the only college which has in­vited our agency to speak so far."

Counseling services could ben­efit almost three out of every tenstudents, helping students copewith acute or potential problemsrelated to their substance abuse,

RogersSpeaks Out

Continued from page 5

As Rogers address came to aclose, she began to solicit ques­tions from the audience. Severa)students sought knowledge onhow to join her group and otherswanted to know more about thethreat of the right."In some schools they are start­ing up the ROTC program." shesaid. continuing. "See the world.help kill people in other lands...

Rogers again stressed the needfor Americans to keep their at­tention focused at home. "Con­stituencies must look at what is­sues are going on here." shesaid.

Also present. and equal in de­term ination. was Dav id Perez.formerly of the South Bronx Pri­son Rights Focus. He comple­men ted Rogers' assertions with afew of his own. notably that "theconcessions;" including less mili­tary spending and greater socialspending. can be won.

Perez noted that strong. or­ganized resistance to proposedcuts in Social Security paymentsforced President Reagan to re­consider his initiative. "Themoney is there.·' Perez said. "itis (just) all going to the mili­tary.

Those interested in learningmore about the APC may stop bytheir office at 19 West 21stStreet. or by calling them at 741­0633.

-- ~ ~ ~------------~-----~

cess is" to find ou 1. as best wecan. via a process that will in­volve all colleges. what the cur­rent and future demands willbe." Murphy explained. By do­ing this. it is projected that abalance may be struck that willmake CUNY a place where thestudent can get courses as wellas a practical preparation for so­ciety.

you to 'get into' a reading assign­ment. They won't make you partof the 'in' crowd, or a more attrac,tive person. Drugs won't makeproblems easier to deal with. Alldrugs will do is isolate,''' saidMartinez, who has been directorof the Division of SubstanceAbuse Services for three'years.

The director listed the reasonswhy this age group is part icu­!arly likely to use drugs: peerpressure, stress or emotionalchange, desire to escape prob­lems, curiosity about drugs, oreven the pain of making careerdecisions.

Promoting Awareness of Abuse

Educators who attended themeeting expressed concern overthe problem. According to Mar­tinez, the Division of SubstanceAbuse Services, which is sup­ported by various Federal, State,local and private funding serv­ices, is expanding its efforts toincrease public awareness of thedangerous effects of drug abuse.The agency uses news releases,and radio and television publicservice announcements to edu­cate citizens about the problemsof drug abuse.

Here are some facts. Two out ofevery three college students inNew York State have used illegaldrugs, such as marijuana or coc­aine, or have misused prescrip­tion drugs, such as ampheta­mines, according to a survey con­ducted by Martinez's division.

a means of enjoining governmen­tal infractions.

On November 30 of this yearAmnesty International, a groupthat has as its avowed objectivethe preservation and defense ofhuman rights principles for peopleeverywhere, launched a worldwidecampaign to expose and halt thisabuse by governmental units. Anesprit de corps has built upamong its members and sup­porters towards this endeavour.

It is to be hoped I though, thatthe initiative of this organizationwill be borne to fruition and thatfear of political reprisals will notserve to stymie able men of societyfrom expounding their views free­·Iy in the future. For the furtherupliftment of man-kind, theuniversal preservation of basichuman rights principles, thefreedom of speech among them, isrequisite.

(Based on an article issued byAmnesty International, entitled:"The 'Disappeared' - where arethey?")

Drug Abuse WidespreadAmong College Students

By Ingrid Fergusson

The increasing use of drugsamong colJege students was thetheme of the Baruch College Stu­dent Personel Services Forumheld on Monday, November 23.Guest speaker was Julio Marti­nez, Director of the New YorkState Division of SubstanceAbuse Services.

Martinez, in his address to asmall group of faculty members,and an even smaller grf>up ofstudents, said, .. I think it's clearthat drug abuse is a widespreadand serious problem among col­lege students. "In Fact," he con­tinued, "many students them­selves expressed concerns abouttheir own drug use and drugproblems on campus." .

A former heroine addict at theage of 14, Martinez is more thanaware of the effects of drugs."But I was able to beat my prob­lem, and had a chance to get acollege education, so I know thatside of the fence equally as well."he said.

Continued from page 1.. I feel that we are doing a

good job for minorities and wo­

men.·' said Murphy. Planning isbeing done. he further explained.with respect to faculty recruit­ment and development that re­sponds to both. affirmative actionrequirements and students needs.needs.

The aim of the planning pro-

'mgh' In The Classroom

In a survey of 105,000 collegestudents, 22 percent of them con­fided that they had been high inclass. Martinez said that hecouldn't imagine how someonecould attend a class while underthe influence of drugs, and ex­perience anything worthwhile.

"Drugs won't make it easier for

Page 6

Further Prospectives

.CUNY FOCUS Changing

Continued from page 3

prisoners will vanish withouttrace, and (b) no information willbe given as to their whereaboutsor fate."

The potency of uncertainty as ameans of engendering fear can begleaned from this Nazi directive.If we are aware that our brotherhas died then 'we can rest assuredin our knowledge of this fact;there is just the agony of hisdeparture to deal with. If, on theother hand, we do not know whathas happened 'to him, then ourmind remains forever in an unset­tled condition as we claw attenuous bits of rationale in an ef­fort to justify his mysteriousdisappearance.

.Death we can contend with, butthe boundless abyss will paralyzeus.

Moreover, from the viewpointof governments, the "disap­pearance" method is attractivebecause it is a convenient way ofsidestepping habeas corpus writsfiled on behalf of the victims, andof averting the use of the courts as

•~ "'•••• ,...". ~',",,~.__.--''''-'-1.. _ .. _- ,. ,.-q, '- __ -

December.ZI. 1981 The 'qcker

FEATURESCosmetic Design:Eliminating the Mystery

By Karen Tyson

Pat a light moisturizer ontothe 'areas of your face that needit. This will help the makeupapplied to these areas glide oneasier.

Pat concealer onto the parts ofyou r face tha t need to belightened or concealed. The con­cealer used should be lighterthan your skin tone, but not solight that" it creates a sharp con­trast. It can be applied overunder-eye circles, around

....::l~---llJ

Critical areas of makeup applkation:(1) TEMPLE (2) BROWBONE (3)

CREASE (4) UPPER LID (5) OUTERCORNER OF EYE (6) CHEEKBONE(7) LIPLINE•.

nostrils. and over any blemishes.Blend the edges.

Apply foundation to yourentire face including eyelids.Foundation evens out the skintone. provides a base for othermakeup. and helps makeup stayon longer, If your skin is on thedry side. choose a foundationthat is oil-based. If your skin ison the oily side or ha s a ten­dency to break out, a water-.based foundation would be best.The color of foundation shouldblend well with. the skin color ofyour neck -so that there is noline.

If using powder blush, use abig, fluffy brush to dust the en­tire face with loose tnmslucent

z~ (no color) powder. Baby powder~ is ideal for this use, Powderz~ takes away excess shine and setsg::

~ makeup. If you're not using a~ powder blush, dust the translu­~ cent powder on after applying~ blush.g::

§ Apply blush on the cheekbone:: starting at the end of the cheek-

bone near the tip of the ear,ending two fingers awa~ fromyour nose. Blush gives the skincolor. Blend the edges.

If necessary, fill in eyebrows

with an eyebrow pencil a shadelighter than your eyebrows.using light, short strokes. Thenbrush eyebrows up with an eye-

'brow brush.Line the outer corner of eyes

with an eye liner pencil. Eyeliner defines eyes and also

J.makes the eye lashes lookthicker. Line above and belowthe lower lash Jines Blend theseJines.

Apply eyeshadow. Eyeshadowshades and highlights the eyes,It helps to b ring focus to theeyes and can help lashes looklonger, bigger, and eyes to lookmore alert.

Curl the eyelashes with aneyelash curler, then- applymascara to the upper and lowerlashes.

Line the lips wit" a Up pencila few shades deeper than thecolor of the lipstick that youchosen. Lip pencil defines thelips and helps lipstick last longerThen fill the lips in with lipsticll,applied using a lip brush.

Hopefully I have taken someof the mystery ou t of makeupapplication for those who werenot familiar with it. and havegiven new ideas to women whohave been using it.

Emergency Medical ServiceNow-Available To All,

Seeks Volunteers

An Emergency Medical ServiceOrganization is being established atBaruch College. Its primary goal willbe to establish a first response medicalassistance to the college community.

. There is a need for qualified individualsin the areas of emergency medicaltechnician, advanced first aide, cardio­pulminary-resuscitation, and manage­ment and clerical skills. Participation inthe organization is on a volunteer basisand is open to all members of theBaruch Community(faculty, staff, andstudents alike). All interested wardname", address, telephone number andappropriate qualifications to Box 341,17 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y.10010.

THIRD PLACE:

Winners ofPoetry Contest Celebrate at Dinner;Top Thfee PoemsandPanelists'

Work Recited

FOURSrCarolyne L ANZAS

. Abernathy

I.

Spears Of. . gross be/ld

l1'/fh the otoI, h:s oJ~

aurumn I . el)'a Punches' .

the c:hlldr.e' ' Winds bloh'n Indoooran ee daru-, rs ro h'Olch

-<; -u, nClng 1';'el'er . .flames omid1h

penelrOlmg cold. e

IJI.

'" Gh'es It'l71' 10 lit •

It'~Tere sun ~nd sone fi~QI solslice

Huh e.qual alike abandonp rOI1Tise

It'ilh It'Ol'e ad' 10 rerllrnn sl11ile -"'L

sOllndf 0/ . It . I'le. . nfg t draw .1

and Ilt"if!S b. . croser,. "eok In lit h

e ollvw dusk.

I~:

The e"'p~l' fore;, sribouncinf! wi 11" ° .Iles cryOf !oke's' r. In lis k'o/ls

cracl... andOfchild dr, . Sk'a/lok'irs "{J.r!g~d k'f/lti"

sreea.... bel(~'

Sister of the Moon ([ call to yo)Now traveling The high seas.Around the universe )lOU go.I long to se you.

Nancy Lerman

SECOND PLACE:

The moon shone brightly, reflecting on the glistening sandWe were barefooted, and slurred a solemn silence,Expressed only by sisters of the infinite past!Isolates, on. the beach we walkedIn our silence we communicated.. 0.0.

The moon cast an eerie glaze,That seemed to mesmerize us as we walked alongCalling us back, to our homeReality struck us never return.

The sound of the dishwasher churning,Reminiscent oj the incessant wavesGently breaking on [he shoreI felt at peace there

Remember that night we walked along the beach that summer?

Sitting in my room, I recalled that pastoral scene

Remembering that night, I never felt so closewith anyone, as I did with you!

Sisters of the MOOD

I am the monsoon -- sdh cean InSI eThat turns teo

out to have you .ke vou mv le}t SIdeTo ma ~ . .

FIRST PLACE:

IN PURSUIT OF LOVEomo-keta Iabbar

For P.AoB.

1 am the angry seaThat soars high .r

. b °dgos ports OJDestroymg n -.° h'ch dwell on meShIPS W I

Just to get to you

. th peaceful volctInoI am. e h vcJJevsThat rests above t e .

B I now that I am hOlu 0 V lava

I In spreadmg m;a td ble

Becomin~ fonnI aIust to gel to you

I am me whirlwind h'al' at all 1 eThat sweeps aw .

opposing forcesTo get to you

1 am the monsoonThat changes the orderOf the seasonal weatherTo get to you

The winners of Baruch's PoetryContest were announced at a wineand cheese party on December I I,1981 at the Oak Lounge in theStudent Center. Theevening'sfestivities were co-sponsored byGay People At Baruch and the'Student Council Program Board.The awards for first, second andthird prize went to Omo-keta Jab­bar, Nancy Lerman, and CarolyneL. Abernathy, respectively.

Pat Giandolfo, President ofGay People At Baruch said, "Thepurpose of the contest was to getstudents and faculty to interactwith each other in a school event.and, hopefully, to open up com­munications with each other.More importantly, it was to getthe students to think, to feel, andto imagine. And, what better wayto accomplish this goal thanthrough poetry. My club washonored to sponsor this event,and we hope to make this an an­nual occurrence."

The Poetry Contest was judgedby Grace Schulman, AssociateProfessor of English; Dr. JohnBauer. Professor and Chairpersonof Psychology; Wayne Finke,Assistant Professor of ModemLanguages; and Bill Kahn. Stu­dent Activities Assistant andNight Coordinator.

In judging the Poetry Contest,Professor Bauer stated, "It was inmany ways a difficult task,because so many well-intentionalefforts were submitted. I washappy to be invited to be ajudge.' ,

The winners received gift cer­tificates from Barnes & Nobles of$50, $30, and $20. Each winnerread his or her poem to theaudience. after which, the judgeshad a chance to read some of theirpoetry. Regrettably, ProfessorGrace Schulman could not attendthe event, but her poetry was readby Giandolfo.

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a

, .Page 10 .The t:icker December 21.., .1981: ~. , .

FEATURES

One To One Experiences With Marketing Professionals~

Provides Majors With Preview Of Prospective Field

By Karen Tyson

A common complain t fromstudents looking for a job or go­ing on an interview is that theydon't know what to expect- Forthis and other reasons, theMarketing Society organized theMarketing In Action program,which took place frern December7 to December 10. This programallowed marketing majors toshare part of a professional's day.All who participated found tile ex-,perience enjoyable and hel p ful.

Angelo De Rise, presiden tor theMarketing Society, said that,"this program helps to provide

p r ac t i c a l e x p er i e n c e for

,tudents." He went on to outlinethree objectives of the program;development of resume skills,development of presentationskills, and opportunity to observemarketing concepts in practice.

.41 saw how my bookknowledge applies to the business\v orld." said Emily Adamo, vice­president of the Marketing Socie­ty. I. ast semester she went to Sim­mon s, a syndicated service ofresearch information. This termshe went to Market Facts. MarketFacts is a supplier of research in­formation. She was able to com­pare t he two.

Jay Katz, an employee at

Market Facts. said [hat [he pro­gram is a great idea. .. It takes the

big ideas that you learn in schooland shows [he students how theydiffer." Eve Oster, a senior atBaruch who spent her time withKatz, said "It's a wonderful ex­perience. It was a chance to spenda morning with a professional inthe marketing research field."

Marty Lam ia and Mel Levine,marketing represen tatives forIBM, expressed enthusiasm whenasked their opinion of this pro­gram. "It was nice having some­one along with me," said Mr.Lamia. He added, "We wentthrough a number of advertisingagencies. We also went to a plan-

ning session for a customer con­version from one computer toanother." He affirmed the im­portance of personal image. "Yourepresent the company. And inthe case of IBM, it's a very power­ful company."

Mr _ Levine commented onwhether city college students areless desirable than ivy leaguestudents: "City schools are notagainst you. If anything, citystudents are more aggressive andbetter equipped to handle the cityenvironment. "

Loretta Volpe, an adjunct atBaruch who teaches media plan­ning, is a Baruch alumna. Shetook two students with herthrough her day at SSC&B, an

advertising agency. She thinks theprogram is, "an excellent pro­gram for both' students andemployers. It gives the students in­side knowledge of how a companyfunctions and whether the studentwants that career. It also gives thestudents experience in how to pre­sent themselves." Concerning thecompanies, she said, "It gives thecompany a good feeling aboutBaruch students and aboutBaruch in general."

All who participated in theMarketing In Action programmet at a luncheon on Thursday,December 10. This gave them achance to make more contacts andto deviate from the usualacademic schedules.

Real Estate DroppedAs Major After 50 Years

/:'

Baruchians Take to the Phones,Dialing for Dollars

1III

I

II

III,IIIIIIIfJI

Feinberg.The Phonathon will take place

on twelve evenings, Mondaysthrough Thursdays, during theweeks of February 22, Marcil I,and March 8. Students are en­couraged to volunteer whatevertime they can. You can sign up bycalling the Office of College Rela­tions 725-3355, or by sending inthis form. ..

_______(Home)

Name

Address

Phone(Bus.)

Spouse of _

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25

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school. Theatre productions,publications such as Artographand Dollars and Sense, the Deanof Students Office, and somephysical education activities aresome of the activities that are par­tially funded by the Baruch Col­lege fund through its many events,including the Phonathon. TheFund also provides scholarshipfunds for students, according to

Student

3

24

10

Alumni

2

9

23

1

8

Staff

22

Faculty

WBMB590AM

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"'.B.M.B.... THE BARUCH COLLEGE 'RADIO STATION WILL BE.-\CCEPTI~GAPPLICATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIO~S:

RECORD LIBRARIANSE~GI~.EERS

'E\\'SCASTERSDISC-JOCKEYS

February

March

March

Mail to Baruch College, Office of College Relations, Box 293. 17 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

I am (circle one):

IF YOl' ARE SERIOLSLY I~TERESTED I' TRYI~G OCT FOR 0'£OR MORE' OF THESE POSITIO~STHE' COME DOW~ TO:

360 PAS (PARK AVE'l:E SOl:TH)ROO~ BLIS . . . (\\'E 6A\RE I~ THE BASEME'T.

'EAR THE BOOKSTORE'

INTERVIEWS wILL BE HELD THROUGH FEB. 5,1982.

THIS IS THE ONLY TIME INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD.

The eighth annual Baruch Col­lege Phonarhon is currentlyrecruiting volunteers for theevent, which begins February 22.'~The Phonathon benefits Baruchstudents direct ly,." said LindaFeinberg, of College Relations.The money collected through thePhonathon goes into the BaruchCollege Fund, which is the non­profit fund raising arm of the

,------------------------------------------------------------iI Phonathon Volunteer Sign-Up SheetI I want to help with the Baruch College Phonathon. f will be available on the follOWing evenings (circle dates):II!I!IIIIIIII11.IL _

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JoinThe

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dards separately.The AACSB requires that at

least 40 percent of the studentsregistered in a department aretaught by a person holding a doc­torate along with 75 percenttaught by full-time staff mem­bers. It also requires that in­structor's maximum teachingloads exceed no more that 12hours per week.

, Major Dropped from CunicuJum

Professor Aaron Rennert,head of t he real es ta te depart­ment, agrees with Dea n New­house as to why real estate wasdropped as a major. "The offi­cial reason is that the depart­ment c..iuld not meet the accred­iting standards as to faculty.'·he said. Professor Rennert ex­plained that he and Dr. StephenSussna are the onlv instructors inthe real estate department. Be­cause this only gives the depart­ment two full-time instructors,with just Dr. Sussna holding aPh.D. the phasing out of themajor seemed inevitable. Ren­nert commented that the prob­lem was not unique and that allthe departments have troublefinding people who have doc­torates. Some departments over­load classes taught by profes­sors \.... it h Ph.Ds, but ProfessorRennert thought that would notwork we II in a real esta te class.

Most Baruch students are con­scious of the physical alterationsthat occur at Baruch each year.However academic changes arenot as easily seen. This fall, ones ig n ifica n t change withi n theSchool of Business and PublicAdministration is the terminationof real estate as a major at Ba­ruch.

According to Bertha New­house. As soci a re Dean of theSchool of Business and Publ icAdministration, lack of studentdemand and the new ways thatBaruch must meet the accredit­ing standards of the AmericanAssembly of the CollegiateSchools of Business (AACSB)ca used the phasing ou t of realestate as a major this semester.

When real estate first becamea major at Baruch in the late1930s it was part of the businessadministration d e p a r t m ent .which was broken into manage­ment, marketing and statistics inthe late 1960s. At that time realestate became part of the mark­eting department and subse­quently in 1976. it fell under thesu pervision of the law depa rt­

ment. During these changes itcontinued to meet the standardsthat the accrediting assembly re­quired. Nevertheless. Dean New­house explained. last year theAACSB determined that each in­dividual department at Baruchmust meet the accrediting stan-

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~mber .21, 1981 The Ticku.,,.~11:-'tOo

ENTERTAINMENT

The Hits and Misses of 1981;A Year-End Review Of Rock

'Cuckoo's Nest' is Fall OfferingOf Speech Department & Theatron

Trivia Tests Knowledge

OfSpinoffs and Switcheroos.,-

The Leserse­I), Grace Slick2) Lindsay Baddngh••

- 3) Rush4) Shadow5) Meatlo2f

-2) Lindsay Buckingham, Lawand Order-The only reason Lawand Order ranks so high in theworst album category is becauseof the backup help from ChristieMcVic and Mick Fleetwood.-3) Rush, Moving Pictures-Thispoorly conceived album couldhave been a big con-ten-da, butnoooooo! It falls into the categoryof hype. Bubblegum 'rock, KISS(the group. not foreplay). andStarwars Action Figures.-4) Shadow, Shade ws in the Street-This record is an insult tomusic. If Belfa Donna could beconsidered art, then Shadows canbest be considered graffiti. Avoidit. and hope it avoids you! '-5) Meatloaf, Dead Ringer-Thiswretched mess is best describedby its title, Dead Ringer. Themusic sounds dead and it rings inyour inner ear even after you findthe good sense to Stop playing it.

That's it, folks the 1981 hitsand misses. We can, try to beoptimistic and say. ';'It can't getany worse next year. "but that iswhat I said last year! .

Raymond .E. Heuer and Joe Scerri (I. t~ r.) in a scene from 660ne Flew «n'er DeCuckoo's- Nesf " ,

THE WORST RECORDS OF1981

(ADd-there are qu.ite a few)

The Winners:1) Stevie Nicks2) John Lennon ", Yoko Ono3) RolHng Stones4) Doug" The Slugs5) Fordgner

only enjoyed moderate success inCanada. native land of Doug andCompany, and no success here inthe States, it contains some ofthe best white R&B since VanMorrisson. I liked it.I ( Foreigner, 4-This hard rockgroup had some real losers overthe years that were. at best.noise. On 4. the group seems tohave matured. The music soundsfresh and. as you will see in thenext category, that" s a desirablequality.

And now for the, pits. the bot­tom of the barrel. the stuff thatcrawls around beneath the bot­tom of the barrel. the noise. tilejunk, the total wastes of time-

-1)' Grace Slick, Welcome to theWrecking Ball-Poor 01' Grace,she must have been desperate'for money to agree to this humi­liation. Come on. the Star-shipcould not have been that bad!- '

But the play did move at asteady and well-paced rhythm,and had .other things going for itas well, Its action was highlightedby a few exceptional portrayals,notably those of B.J. Haber asNurse Ratched, Russell LN.Figaredo as Cheswick, (a naturalactor), Barbara Gray as NurseTurkle and again Mr. Scerri asMcMurphy. His highly in­dividualistic portrayal of RandlePatrick McMurphy took on anamusing, and by no meansnegative, twist when he presenteda very Italian characterization.

The multi-purpose set, designedby John Tietsort, was a trium­phant piece which served asrecreation room, nurses' station,hallway and lavatory. The direc­ting was handled by Eleanor B.Ferrar who, with exception to thelack of adaptation, did a fine job.The lighting was operated bystudents within the Speechdepartment and was, when notoverly expressionistic, usedcreatively and with good judge­ment.

Working together, these menand women helped to produce afine, worthwhile show. Onceagain, however, the play shouldhave been more finely tailored tosuit the players and to retain a bet­ter sense of credulity.

Like they say, hard work doespayoff. I'll be looking forward tothe spring production, which I'mconfident these experienced youngactors will be able to improveupon.

By Jay Schwartz

For those of us who thoughtlast year was the worst foralbums. 1981 h~s given us an­other woeful 365 days. But therewere a few brigh t spot s. Andhere they are ...

THE BEST RECORDS OF 1981

5) Stevie Nicks, Bella Donna-Agood listening alb urn.Stevie tsraspy, sensuous voice definitelymakes one take notice. The lyricsare solid and the colJaborationwith Tom Petty on "Stop Drag­gin' My Heart Around" deserves·praise. Bella Donna is equal tothe best that Ffeetwood Maccould offer.4) John Lennon and Yoko Ono,Double Fantasy-Lennon's tragic

"passing last December made mefeel guilty about putting his ~l­

bum ·on the list. But even thoughit is a year later., Lennon's musiclives on. Double Fantasy is beau­tiful; it contains wonderful musicfrom' a great man who couldn'tresist coming out of retirement toshare his music with us.3) Rolling Stones, Tattoo You-Acouple of good cuts-,nothing likethe old Stones. of course, but stilla solid album. And who couldforget the Garden concert? Me! Ididn't go...2) Doug and the Slugs, Cognacand Bologna-While Cognac

tion, Raymond E. Heuer gave apoignant characterization of thishumbled American Indian andheld firm control over his deep,resonant voice. One small quibbleconcerning the audio track-thevoice that was used to express theChief's private thoughts was in­consistent with his own,measureably deeper voice. A bet­ter recording should have beensubstituted.

As stated earlier, the play isflawed in several respects. These ~

include overly-zealous lighting ar­rangements and especially thesorry adaptation. Importantscenes lost all their significance byeither ending too quickly (as didthe scene where Mclvlurphy :isunable to restrain himself and at­tacks Nurse Ratched) or by notallowing us to suspend ou rdisbelief.

Personally, I could not acceptBilly Bibbit's (Caesar Monroy)alleged bleeding to death in thefour odd seconds he was affordedfrom the time he left the stage.There were also a few instances ofembarrassing silence, as opposedto dramatic silence, when Mr.Scerri was unable to get the funimpact of his speech across, andappeared shaken by the lack ofresponse. He would not have ap­peared so bewildered had therebeen more going on· around himon the stage. Movements anddialogue should have been writtenin to the script to heighten tilepower of McMurphy's lines.These factors served to detractfrom the' over all production.

Before you go, we have somegood news and some bad news.The good news is this is our lastcolumn for the Fall semester.The bad news is we will see youhere again next semester.

s idere d to be the police antho­logy of the 1980's, but PoliceStory was the police anthology ofthe 1970's. What two shows be­came spinoffs of Police Story? (lpoint each)9) On the polot of Barnaby Jonesone actor of another televisionshow appeared in this episode.What was the show and who wasthe actor? (1 point]TOTAL POINTS: 2S

1) Green Acres2) Petticoat Junction3) Love, American Styte4) A) Laverne and Shirley

B) Mork and MindyC) Out of the Blue

5) A) Maude,B) The JeffersonsC) Archie Bunker's Place

6) A) RhodaB) PhyilisC) Lou Gran!

(-1 if you included The Love Boat)7) Owen Marshall, Counselor AtLaw and Marcus Welby, M.D.8) A) Police Woman

B) Joe Forrester9) Cannon; William Conrad

by Brian Hochberg andthe MANIAC.

During the week of December1-7 the Baruch College Depart­ment of Speech presented its an­nual theatre production. Thisyear's show was a funny, albeitflawed, production of DaleWasserman's One Flew Over theCuckoo's Nest.

The adaptation, based on thenovel by Ken Kesey, staged the lifedrama of a handful of patients ata state mental institution and theirbattle to overcome their dread ofthe all-powerful and domineeringNurse Ratched.

The quiet harmony of the in­stitution is disrupted by the in­filtration of one Randle P.McMurphy. humorously por­trayed by Joe Seem. McMurphychallenges the dictatorial authori­ty of the head nurse and she, in adesperate bid to retain her holdover the others, mercilessly plotshis disintegration.

In between these two points, theplay's beginning and denouement,unfolds a warm story of afrustrated effort to "fight CityHall," to attempt to inflict justiceupon an indifferent universe. Theplay's themes extend far beyondthe stage and serve a practical ap­plication in the "sane" world aswell. While the play ends on a sadnote (which, unfortunately, wasirretrievably lost in ,Ulis produc­tion), there should lie a glimmer­ing beacon of optimism, hereunrealized, in Chief Bromden'sbungled escape from the institu-

By Carolyne L. Abernathy

Two games played by network.. creators" are spinoffs (giving acontinuing character his or herown show or showing a pilot forone show as an episode of an­other) and switcheroos (reversingthe situation that gives the showits meaning). Here are a fewquestions based on them.

I) The Beverly Hillbillies was acomedy about country people inthe city. What did it inspire as aswitcheroo, (that is, a comedyabout city people in the country)?(1 point)2) This other showas a spinoff ofanother. What was it? (I point)3) On what 'show were the' char­acters later to be seen on HappyDays first seen? (S points)4) What shows belong to theHappy Days family tree? That is,they are spinoffs of Happy Daysor spinoffs of these spinoffs, (1

point each)5) What shows belong to the AllIn The Family family tree? (lpoint each)6) What .shows belong to TheMary Tyler Moore Show familytree? (1 point each)7) Something very rare was donewith a show about a doctor and­one about a lawyer. The storybegan on one show and part two ­was seen as an episode of theother. (S points if you can nameboth shows)8) Hill Street Blues could be con-

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~'- Page·12 "

The Ticker

TO AU BARUCH STUDENTSfrom the people that brought you

BOND'S ICAMPUS AFFAIRS & D.S.S.G. NOW PROUDLY PRESENTS BOND'S II

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YOU ARE INVITED rOTHIS EXCLUSIVE HOUDAY MNT BYINVITATION ONLY!

FOR THE ULTIMATE IN SOUND-PLEASURE-MUSIC

By The "SOUND EXPERIENCE II" and "VIN THE SPIN"

COMPUMENTARY SNACKS ADMISSION: $10.00 each with invitationand REDUCED DRINK PRICES $15.00 without invitation

invitations available at

STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE. or at

ROOM 302 STUDENT CENTER

Deadline Design, Inc., NY

. P..~J3 .•

.Oh, Calcutta! is a tasteful anduniquely musical comedy show.Everyone else seems to think so.After all, its been playing for 13years.

a sex ad they .place; a youngVitorian era bachelor locks hisvictim, along with himself, in fur­niture designed to trap and seduceyoung "virgin" ladies of society;Harpo and Groucho Marx con­duct sexual experiments on aneager college co-ed "volunteer."It gets kinkier.

For- the more aestheticallyminded viewers, Oh, Calcutta!features a closing number inwhich a couple engages in, well, Imean, performs a beautifulmodern dance number, sansclothes,

dorsernent but is rejected. This se­quence was overly long and con­tained dialogue which was dif­ficult to comprehend.

It may be argued that t he cur­rent interest in J( hn Reed andcompany is nil and therefore afilm of this scope about him isworthless, but his story is an in­teresting one anyway. His healthhas by now failed him and withLouise by his side he dies in a Rus­sian hospital. Later he became theonly American to be buried in theKremlin.

So much time and money wasput into this movie that for a whileReds was called "The TenReels that Shook Paramount."But it's quite a film, even if it is200 minutes long. The editing, byEd Allen and Craig Me Kay, maybe the best of the year. They haveleft in an immense amount of in­formation.

Vittorio Storraro's camera andlighting are superb. RichardSylberr's detail with art directionis so perfect he literally puts theviewer in 1920. Beatty and Keatonhave the right chemistry. The sup­porting cast, especially Nicholson,

. Jerzy Kosinski, MaureenStapleton, and (in an unbilled ap­pearance) Gene Hackman, all ex­cell. For all the good things saidabout this epic it is, in the end,Warren Beatty's film more thananything else. As actor, eo-writer,producer, and director he issingle-handedly responsible forone of the year's very best films.

ENTERTAINMENT

formers sometimes, in fact almostalways, perform either partially orfully naked.

You sit down, and as the lightsbegin to dim, the bandbegins toplay some-very saucy, spicy, musicwith a jazz/disco beat. Enter thecast, clothed, with naughty smileson their faces. They proceed toundress. Without missing a beat,they-wiggle their bodies and .shoutlike teenage kids about to skinnydip.

Disrobed, they form a chorusline and proceed to tease' andtitilate the audience by exposingvarious parts of their personalanatomy in exquisitely'choreographed pieces.

··What follows is. a series ofridiculously funny scenes: Ayoung southern couple's introduc­tion ro the swingers ·scene through

workers there that the Americanlabor force is behind them shouldthey choose to strike against theczar. The first half of the filmends with a huge march to theKremlim.

To fill in the gaps in the storythirty-two "witnesses," real peo­ple who remember Reed, Bryant,and their era, tell us how they feltabout John Reed and his work.They appear every now and thenin the film. By the end of the filmwe are given a complete picture ofthe political and social events justbefore the 1920's.

The second half of the film is. dominated by Reed. He has writ­ten an account of the RussianRevolution, "Ten Days ThatShook the World," and wants toget back into Russia. In 1918Reed is smuggled into Russia.Thi s is a time when one couldcount the number of Americanswho were there on one hand.

On his way back to America,Reed is caught and jailed. Bryantsets out to find him, going thesame tortuous route. Finally, aftermany months, Bryant, who nowlooks like a Russian farm worker,catches up with a scruffy-lookingReed outside Petrograd. Theydecide to stay with each other.. Reed oversteps his power whenhe helps form the American Com­munist Labor Party and tries tomerge it (and become the soleleader) with the American Com­munist Party. He goes all the wayto Russia in order to get the en-

Calcutta!' Is Still Going Strong

The T1ekeI' .

By Maurice Villoria

'Oh,

By Damian Begley

Socialist's Life is Chronicled in 'Reds'

Oh, Calcutta!Oh, what a show!Most are probably familiar with

the title, Oh, Calcuttal, some mayalso be familiar with the show,and others may think it. adocumentary on alternatelifestyles in India. ,

Well, for those in any of theabove categories, or not. in any,here is the scoop on one of themost extraordinary, if not themost incredibly wicked,Broad­way experience my eyes have everwitnessed,

Campy, funny, erotic shocking,and even bizarre are the best ad­jective that can be used to describethe contents of this show. Oh,

, .CalcuIta! is an erotic musicalcomedy, meaning that the per-

Reds, Warren Beatty'smassive tribute to journalist JohnReed, has come to the widescreen, encompassing a variety ofhappenings. Among them areReed's involvement" with LouiseBryant, the. Russian Revolution,and the Socialist Party in the U.S.~The very detailed screenplay,

written by Beatty and Trevor Grif­fiths, covers Reed's life from 1914through his death in Russia in1920. John Reed was a socialistwho felt achange in the politicalclimate during his time. He con­ferred with a small circle offriends, among them EmmaGoldman, a communist sym­pathizer; Eugene O'Neill (JackNicholson), with the beginning ofthe Group Theater; and - LouiseBryant (Diane Keaton), an aspir­ing journalist herself.- Reed travelled around the coun­

try, trying to stir up recognitionfor the Socialist Party in America.Reed and Bryant become attachedand they end up writing together.This works for a while, but Jack'soutside interests begin to put astrain on Louise, who feels in­ferior. They split, each going aseparate way.

Eugene O'Neill, played withperfect control by Nicholson, fallsin love with Bryant but she leaveshim, after a briefaffair, to marry

. Reed. O'Neill is hurt but he keepson writing and drinking. Reed isnow in Russia, telling the

. the same message. The lyrics, byMiss Harvey and John Amato(both have leading roles in theshow), are severly repetitious, butAmato's music manages to makethe songs bearable.

One song, titled "Dots andCircles, U explained visuallyhowthe growth: of nuclear energy isgetting out of control. A map ofthe U.S. is shown several times.With each verse of the song, dotsand circles pinpoint regional loca­tions of nuclear power plants, andthe population in the surroundingareas. This three minute songrepresents the main point of themusical. It is well conceived and,at the same time, frighteninglyreal.

In the second act the cast takeson, in no particular order, theU. S. political system: multi­national Banking, private in­dustry, etc. They even dragRussia onto the carpet. By theend of the evening the audiencewas left .with the aggregate energyof a defused· nuclear reactor.

Few as they are, there are a cou­pIe of bright spots in the show.The· staging (again by MissHarvey) is competent, as is theensemble acting by the cast. Theyall sing and act convincingly, mostnotably Bob Miranti.

Joan Harvey has built theFourth Wall Rep Company into apolitical force in the theater. It's.too bad she bangs it over the au~

dience's head so obviously andconstantly. After seeingFreedom Ain't No Bowl of Cher­ries, I could almost admirethe Reagan administration.

'. I:: . ~ , '," ~ " .. ., 0 - -

By Damian Begley

.••,~_.--.•... ..-

Final ScheduleContinued from centerfold

I""r'\?'-' ,,- SECT10l:~ DATE !I!':E_v..,r_., z;

STA (GRAD)1/14 6:15 p.m.;;oi7S R68 Tnurs.

9776 W68 Wed. i!20 6 :15 ·p.m.9785 T68 Tue •. 1/19 8:30 p.m.

TAX (GRAD)9562 . TR6 'Iue. 1/19 8:30 p.m.

9879 xss Mon •. 1/18 6:15 p.m.

9881 RS3 Thurs. 1/14 6:15 P .Il:.

98S~ ~r~53 Mon. 1/1B 6:15 r·n::·9886 'I5 Tue. 1119 6:15 p.r;;.

9887 ""·73 Wed. 1/13 8:30 p.e.

"- 9S89 \6 Wed. 1120 6:15 p.m.

Jon Haney aDd Job. AlDltc. of uFreedom Ain't- ,No Bow. of Cuerries."

DeceJiaber 21.·.19810• .,. • _

Repertory Company'sAlusrealProduction

Decries Nukes, ArmsJoan Harvey's new anti-arms,

anti-nuke play, Freedom Ain't NoBowl of Cherries has arrivedat the Fourth Wall RepertoryCompany with all the subtlety of afalling safe.

Taking deadly aim at . theReagan administration and all itrepresents, this musical centers onsix actors (three men and threewomen) touring from small townto small town with theirpolitically-based show.··

The structure is set very quick­ly, as the entire evening goes likethis: an anti-nuclear song; follow­ed by a cast member telling the au­dience 'about a dastardly deed ofthe Reagan administration; ananti-war song; a cast member los­ing his marbles-and blaming iton the Reagan machine; an anti­anything song; followed by...well,you get the picture. This con­tinues unmercifully for nearlythree hours.

We catch up with the castfinishing the last song in theirrevue. They are playing in theirhome town, which could be calledAnytown, U.S.A. The troupeends up staying for the week at theapartment of one of the actresses.Her husband, who publishes asmall weekly .paper, doesn't likethe others or their ideas but goesalong with it anyway.

There are fourteen songsseparating short scenes in whichthe players discuss an individualHproblem" with one another. Atleast a dozen of the songs areforgettable, since they all contain

,

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I Page 14 . The Tieker December 21, 1981.. .: .; .' ,. :

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ENTERTAINMENT

'Kingdoms': Literary Influences Shape Historical Tale ..

By Erin Blackwell

What do Shakespeare, Shaw, andAnouilh all have in common?Two things. First, they all didrather well at transforming' thestuff of history into theater. Se­cond they share"the distinction ofhaving served as models for thenew play at the Cart,Kingdoms, by Edward Sheehan.

Napoleon and Pope Pius VIIare the two main characters, sym­bolizing, Napoleon says, "the.kingdom of God and the kingdomof man." The plot of the playfollows the two from Napoleon'scoronation as Emperor of theFrench to his. final' exile on Elba,during which time he has the Popekidnapped and held prisoner.

Shakepeare's influence is thehardest to spot, but Anouilh'sBecket is manifest in a second actscene between Napoleon, 'his starwaning, dressed in a gorgeousgreatcoat, and the enfeebledPope, hunched on a stool centerstage. This is Caesar and Christ,unredeemable enfant terrible want..ing sanction from his papal papawithout having to pay for it with'piety. It's tolerably -well-writtenand well-played, but we've seen itbefore, and better. Sheehan's

misreading of Shaw's St. Johnis behind the" misconceived lastscene, where Napoleon, on a stool(denoting Elba), is able to speakto the Pope, down center (Rome),and Josephine, who breezes infrom Eternity. .Sheehan is' grasp­ing after "size" here, but thatcomes only with original poetic vi­sion; it cannot be taken, in bitsand pieces, from library shelves.

The production is an unsatisfy­ing mix of the minimal and thevoluptuous. David Hay's set con­sists of a blue clotb-covered play­ing space flanked by stark blackwalls, forming the wings. Thisstarkness is relieved by three sets

. of flying panels, which serve as.the walls of the rooms we .aremeant to imagine, and have acurious tent-like effect. There are

. two ornate chairs and one littletable that are constantly beingtaken off and brought on againand rearranged. Somehow all thisfails to suggest the opulencedepicted by David. Patricia Zip­prodt's costumes, au contraire,are all one could ask for in theirevocation of imperial splendor.The figure of Napoleon is well­.served throughout, but especiallyby the afore-mentioned greatcoat,and the inevitable for which weare made to wait until the end ofthe second act.

. Armand Assante's Napoleon isa splendid, earthy, cocksuretrickster, but his bully's triumphover the Pope is too easy. If hedoesn't believe his promises to thePope, if he is incapable of beingsincere other than in his lust forabsoiute power, he must becountered by a truly spiritualforce incapable of corruption.Unfortunately, Roy Dotrice's em­phasis is on the humanity of 'thePope, and though be plays it con­vincingly, its presence does notmake up for his lack of convictionas a man of God. Whenever he'sgiven something religious to say,he shies from .it. Each time hedoes; the conflict is rendered void.Josephine isalso present,.but chief­ly as a plot device. Instead of asultry climber from Martinique,we're treated to Maria Tucci'selegant, almost Shavian, draw­ingroom hostess. This makesneither historical nor dramaticsense.

If I've been rather rough on. Kingdoms, it is perhapsbecause there's plenty of meat onthe bones to gnaw on. This is nota small. subject or a small play. Itprovides a full evening of theatre,and should give you plenty. to talkabout over your coffee at HowardJohnson's. .Armand Assante as Napoleon in 'Kingdoms.'

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Counter dockwise from upper: iert:-·' A .ceDe from' the Christmasdisplay w1Ddows at. .B. > AltmaR's; a~~irom ~e na*le Or"ti.e NewYork Ot)' ~s·.praeatatioa of the N""cker; 'ad • ~" fromnffaay's .......:.....,. AU phetOs.lty Hubert Hemandez.· _~r _

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.What better place to be.during the holiday season than in New York City? The transfor-mation from a business-as-usual atmosphere to that of a winter wonderland takes place soon

> after Thanksgiving, and lingers well into the- New Year. Those willing to slow down theusually.fast pace of NewYork life will discover many of the pleasantries of the season.

Store windows of the 'larger department stores have been transformed into ChristmasvillagesvSanta's workshop, and children's fantasy worlds. Macy's, Saks Fifth Avenue, B.'Aitman's-, Lord and Taylor and- Tiffany feature the most creative and imaginative displays,though many store owners try to make their holiday windows something special as well.Stop, look and enjoy while you shop. .

Even if one does not wish to ice skate, Rockefeller Center shouldstill be visited, at leastonce, during the holiday season. Enjoy a hot chocolate in the cafe, or stand around the rinkand watch the skaters, listen to the holiday music' and marvel at the famous tree.

If you have not yet seen the Christmas Show at Radio City Music Hall, try to do so. Betteryet, try to get tickets ($5 seats may still be available) to the New York City Ballet'spresenta­tion of The Nutcracker, Both shows will help you-get into the holiday spirit, if you are notyet there.

The holiday s~on comes but once a year; enjoy it while ypu can!

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Rnnning Rebels Win Intramural Championship; ,Marshall Named MVP

By Pam Smith

After defeating the ··BrewCrew:' the "Running Rebels·'went on to win the IntramuralBasketball Championship by up­setting the •. Ball Busters,"65-57. Scorin'g a total of 27points, Captain Cliff Marshallwas named MV?

It was the fiftfi' time the ,. BallBusters" made it to the cham­pionship and were sent down indefeat. This year. and in thosepreceeding, the team managed toremain undefeated until the finalround of play. and then wasforced to take second place.. Harry Fountoukidis led the

"Ball Busters" with 20 pointsand forward .Iohn Panosoupoloshit 11. Captain Willie Toro, be­fore fouling out. managed 9.

Two technical fouls were calledagainst Panosoupolos and ac­cording to many, one unneces­sarily.

I. There were three refs in thegame and only one made decent

calls." said a spectator.Had the ., Ball Busters" been

able to stop Marshall and pre- .vented some of the fouls t hey :committed, they may have pulledoff the victory. Instead they con­stantly fouled Marshall, givinghim a chance to hit 15 of 17 fromthe foul line.

By the end of the third quarterthe ,. Running Rebels" had a44-39 lead when Gary McCul­lough hit a jump shot from midcourt at the sound of the buzzer.From then on the ."Rebels"seemed to control the game.

With 1:47 left, a free throw byPanosoupolos made it 52-56 andthe ., Bait Busters" trailed byonly four. It looked as if a come­back victory was in store for the"Ball Busters." But the seconds

.. kept ticking away and with :21left on the clock. the •'RunningRebels" kept the lead 59-55. Afoul against a "BalI Busters"gave M. King of the "RunningRebels" a chance to make two.making the final score 55-61. TOllY Mc8anlette (r.) attempts to bIoc'k Cliff Marshall's shot.

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By Pam Smith

Baruch Finishes 2nd•• .•••• o. .• -"

in ··GuII ClassicTournament

cheerleader include, a cartwheel, asplit, determination, coordina­tion, and according to ClaudiaJohnson, dedication.

Some of the cheerleaderswouldn't mind cheering for otherteams, but were told that the othersports require concentration andtoo much noise would distrub theplayers. On the other hand, aftercheering for twenty three basket­ball games, there is little timeleftfor practice and supporting othervarsity teams.

Clad in their school colors, blueand white., the cheerleaders createan enjoyable atmosphere withtheir rhythmic foot stomping andhand clapping. But the only wayto know how well the cheerleadersperform is to go and see them atthe next basketball game.

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minimum, the girls are often theonly support the team has,especially on road games.

"The girls work hard and arevery good," said Syd Phillips, aforward on the basketball team.

Most of the cheerleaders agreethat they are treated like sisters bythe men's team.

"Whether we look good or bad,the guys will let us know," saidAndi Codner, a freshman on thesquad.

Claudia Johnson, Lisa GeraldmAlise Askins, Sulan Chin, AndiCodner, Velina Mitchell. KarinDekie, Suzette Campbell, andJoanne Lewis, make up the1981-82 squad. Six of the ninewomen have returned from lastyear's team.

Requirements for becoming a

By Kerine Cbang

Nine Cheers for Baruch

Baruch cheerleaders are atit again. Last year they cheeredtheir way into second place in theCUNY Cheerleading Champion­ship, while John Jay captured thetitle,

The championship is not untilMarch and although the group ofwomen eagerly look forward tothe event. their concentration ispresently centered on rooting forthe men's basketball team.

4'ft's fun to support theguys in their games," said Cap­tain Lisa Gerald. H But we alsoenjoy representing' Baruch. "

At every game the cheerleadersyell and jump for the team andsince attendance is almost

The Statesmen finished in secund pl.ace at the Gull ClassicTournament last weekend in Maryland. After flouncing ShepherdCollege. 106-99. the team surprisingly lost to Salisbury State.90-81. Roger Miller led the Statesmen in the Shepherd victory with31 points.

Prior to the tournament. the reros shot saved the game.Statesmen whipped Medgar So far Coach Levine has stuckEvers 91-65. Gerald Taylor led with his five starters. Taylor.the team with 18. Jacob Guerrero Miller. Cliff Marshall. Guerrerohit 16 and John Panousopoulos and Panousopoulos while usingscored 13. After six games the Keith Jones as his sixth man.team is averaging 79.2 points per Marshall is leading the team ingame. six: points higher than assists with 30 and MiUer followstheir opponents. with 28.

Jacob Guerrero's timely shot After the cancel-led Lehmenwith two seconds on the clock game. due to an army drill heldand John Panousopoulos's 14 re- in the Armory, Baruch is 1-0bounds helped the Statesmen within CUNy. The States-menpull off a comeback victory over thought it unfair to play twoWillll:ington on December 2. games on Lehrnens court. there-

. Panousopoulos leads the team in fore the game is expected to berebounds 47. played later in the season.

Baruch trailed by ten points at The Statesmen are home forthe half but came back strong in the next three.' ~'hen they"Il facethe third quarter and with Roger Jersey City State tomorrow atMiller leading a strong defense. 6:00 p.m. The team from Jerseymanaged six quick points. Then is a Division I team and thewith 3:56 on the clock. Baruch Statesmen will have tow ork fortrailed 55-57 but a graceful layup the victory. On December 28.by Taylor tied it at 57-57. they T! battle City College and

Wilmington used their last Monday. January 4. will meettime out with :56 left on the Queens College. lt's -sure to beclock, as they trailed by two. an exciting game as· the States.oJ-59. Wilmington quickly scored men will seek revenge on the

. . .. but Baruch played with the clock Knights who won the CUNY title

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