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Image provided by: Guilderland Public Library
TheAUamont Enterprise — Thursday, July 21,1983 Betty MacDonaid Jazz Quintet Will Play At Town Performing Arts Center July 28 3 Nabbed For Bike Thefts Next Thursday evening, July 28, promises to be an especially good one for jazz fans at Guilderland Performing Arts Center in Tawa- sentba Park, as Betty MacDonald and her quintet travels from Woodstock to present \Jazz with Pizazz\—a little pop, a little rock and a lot of surprises. Betty, at one time a traditional violinist, studied at SONY at Fredonia, played with the Erie Philharmonic, and taught music in Ossining. It was not until after her marriage to jazz drummer Donald MacDonald (deceased) that she began to become seriously inter- ested in jazz. \. . . That's the feeling I have in my soul,\ she says, \although I was classically trained, I think somewhere inside I always wanted to play jazz... so I put together this band of my own.\ It's with this band, including Don Davis, saxophone and flute; Hope Ruff, piano; Bob Leon, bass; and Ken Lovelett, drums, that the Betty MacDonald Quintet is catapaulting itself to prominence from the Hudson Valley to the New York Women's Jazz Festival. Ms. MacDonald also hosts a nightly radio show, \The Sound of Jazz,\ on WDST in Woodstock, and has produced an album with Kurt Henry at Blackcreek Sounds. Her concert, as all others in the regular summer series of the Guilderland Performing Arte Cen- ter, is free to the public and begins at 7:30 p.m. at Carl J. Walters- Tawasentha Park, Route 146, one quarter-mile south of Route 20 in Guilderland. There is no charge for parking. Refreshments are available both before and during the perfor- mance, and it is suggested that those attending bring lawn chairs or blankets. In case of rain, this performance will be held at Guilderland High School, Guilderland Center. Three young City of Albany men were arrested for criminal posses- sion of stolen property — three shiny 10-speed bicycles — early, Friday morning by State Police based at Willow St., Guilderland. Picked up behind Twenty Mall shortly before 3 a on. were Allen J. Sagandorph, who turns 21 on Saturday, of 378 Sheridan Ave., William Alonzo Seeberger, 17, of 8A Zimmerick Drive, and William Joseph Sochor, 18, of 100 Morris St. They were arrested by Sgt. Joseph Olander and Tprs. Willard Schultz and Miguel Vega. With the accused men at the scene were three 10-speed bicycles — two off-brand machines and a Schwinn LeTour, the last valued at State University Hosts Top Scientists In The field Of High-Pressure Physics An estimated 350 to 400 of the world's top scientists in high- pressure physics will gather at State University of New York at Albany next week to exchange information about the latest de- velopments in their field. Among those registered to attend the international conference is a delegation of 15 scientists from the Soviet Union, which has tradition- ally been active in the field. Sponsored by the International Association for .the Advancement of High Pressure Science and Technology, the biannual confer- ence is being organized in coopera- tion with the University, RPI in Troy and the GE Research and Development Center in Niskayuna. The program, which will' run Lynnwood Reformed Rev. William de Forest - Sunday, July 24: 9 a.m. Worship with special music; child care for youngsters through first grade. July 25-28, will include general sessions on the latest research in high-pressure science and tech- nology, as well as specialized symposia dealing with such ques- tions as what happens to fluids under high pressure, a relatively new area of interest to chemical and medical technology. More than 200 papers will be presented on topics ranging from supercon- ductivity and shock phenomena to the effect of high pressure on magnetism. \The steel in your automobile would be just like putty under the kinds of pressure we ? rg talking about,\ explained Walter Gibson, chairman of the physics depart- ment at Albany and conference coordinator. \This- technology deals with pressures that are millions of times higher than the normal pressure you feel in the atmosphere around you.\ Artificial diamonds, now used extensively in industry, are one prominent result of high-pressure technology, Gibson said. They F END THE CIGARETTE HABIT FOREVER! WITH A ONE TIME, ALL INCLUSIVE Clinical Hypnosis Session - $35.00 It Works! The SchaHehn & Ahrahamsen Counseling Service INDIVIDUAL, FAMILY & COUPLES COUNSELING Quality Counseling at a Reasonable Fee Free Initial Consultation Located in the Bemie Schallehn, M.S. 482-6223 Guilderland Steve Abrahamsen, M.S. Community Canter K & A MEMORSALS Monuments - Markers Cemetery Lettering Granite - Marble - Bronze BARRE [GUILD] Monuments / Duplicate - Hand Tooled Lettering Ken & Anne F. Stewart Main Office, 1906 State Street Schenectady, N.Y. 12304 381-6090 Larry Murphy Guiideriand Representative 895-8805 V C&D Qulldstlentl's Newest BICYCLE SHOP 1758 Western Avenue New & Used Bicycles Sales and Service Parts and Accessories for All Bikes 49SO FAST, FRIENDLY, DEPENDABLE SERVICE were first produced at GE's Research and Development Center during the 1960s by subjecting carbon to tremendous pressures at extremely high temperatures. The university's physics depart- ment, working in collaboration with RPI and others, is studying materials produced by intense ion bombardment, a process in many ways analagousto what happens at very high pressure, Gibson said. The conference will conclude with the presentation of the prestigious Bridgeman award recognizing a scientist who has made outstanding contributions in the field. The award, presented every two. years, is named for Percy Bridgeman of Harvard University, who received the Nobel Prize in the 1940s and is considered the father of high-pressure re- search. Co-chairing the conference are Clarke G. Homan, adjunct profes- sor of physics at Albany, and Theodore Whalley of Canada's National Research Council. Guilderland (Continued from Page 6) about getting their, projects or products ready for sale. It all happens on Sept. 10. Look for our ad to find what we will have altogether. hi the absence of Rev. Duncan, Rev. Newman spoke very well to the children about \Appoint- ments,\ how to and how not to keep them and I sometimes wish more people would feel like he does, the on time part. Then the grownups had a message similar to what Rev. Duncan left us with and that was \This summer attend church and worship and don't put your faith on hold until fall.\ This Sunday, July 17 we had Rev. William L. Steele to lead lis in worship. He is here as a guest of the pastor nominating committee of the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Albany. He is, at present pastor of the Bethany Presbyterian Church, Lafayette, Ind. As a result of my request for any of our young people that I might have missed, I am glad to say two of our parents let us know that their sons were also among our college graduates. They were Michael Calhoun, son of Frederick and Beverly, a graduate of Niagara University, and Keith Stroeble, son of Charles and June, graduated from Cobleskill College. Although I missed you, now I've made you special. Sincere con- gratulations. . ' hi Guilderland hamlet, the Enter- prise is sold at Twenty Mall Price Chopper as well as Stewart's Ice Cream Shop, east corner of Routes 20 and 146. Deadline for classified ads (payable in advance) is 12 noon, Wednesday before publication. 'Talks And WaSks' Series Continues At Tanglewood ByMACFULLER The annual series of five lecture- luncheons known as Tanglewood 'Talks and Walks' — a behind-the- scenes look at the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra — began on July 14 with Edo de Waart, music director of the San Francisco Symphony. The remaining schedule is as follows: July 21: Sherriii Milnes, Bari- tone; guest artist with the Boston Symphony at Tanglewood. July 28: Maureen Forrester; Contralto; guest artist with the Boston Symphony at Tanglewood. Aug. 4: Yo-Yo Ma, Cellist; guest artist with the Boston Symphony at Tanglewood; Aug. 11: Roger Voisin, former principal trumpet wish the Boston Symphony Orchestra. The \Talks and Walks\ series begins at noon in the Tanglewood tent behind the shed, with guests invited to bring their own lunch. Coffee and tea are available in the tent. Following the lecture and lunch is a guided tour of the Tanglewood grounds at approxi- mately 1:45 p.m. The fire department's seating regulations allow a maximum of 250 people to sit in the tent; benches, however, will be provided along the side of the tent. A new PA system was installed last season, and high-quality amplification will be used. Admission to the series is $3 (individual). These \Talks and Walks\ have been made exclusive to Friends of Tanglewood. Reser- vations must be prepaid and cannot be accepted by phone. For further information on the Talks and Walks' series, please call the Friends' office at 1-413- 637-1600. about $300—and a small van. State Police theorise the trio were depositing the bikes at the scene for pickup and transport later mat morning to the City of Albany. Sagandorph, Seeberger and Sochor have also been charged with possession of burglar tools. The three were arraigned that morning and released on their own recognizance pending a second appearance in Guilderland Town Court next Thursday. Accused Of Rape A Woodlake Apartments resident was arrested by State Police Saturday night in connection with the recent rape of a Town of Guilderland woman. Charged with rape, first degree is James M. Sim of 36-3 Woodlake. He was arrested on an Albany County Court warrant at his apartment by SCI Investigator Frank Connolly and Tprs. Bill Khachadourian and Fred Cason of the Willow St. substation. Arraigned Monday morning in County Court, Sim was remanded to Albany County Jail pending a bail hearing. Investigator Connolly is currently checking the parole status of the accused. City Man Charged With $1,400 Bank Computer Theft A 27-year-old City of Rensselaer man was arrested last Thursday afternoon for overdrawing his account by $1,400 through a computer card at Home and City Savings Bank, Guilderland. The alleged theft was reported by the bank to State Police at 1:30 the afternoon of July 14. Shortly before 5 p.m:, Stephen D. DeLong of 22 Academy St., Rensselaer was arrested by BCI Investigator Frank Barbone; DeLong was subsequently charged with third- degree grand larceny in Guilder- land Town Court. Town Justice Steven Simon released the accused man on his own recognizance pending a reappearance in Town Court July 28. PEOPLE IN SERVICE WEBBER — Airman David R. Webber has been assigned to serve with the 69th Consolidated Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, Seymour Johnson AFB, N.C., after com- pleting the Air Force avionics communications systems course at Keesler AFB, Miss. The son of Robert R. and HeleneK. Webber of 125 Church Road, McKownville, he is a 1981 Guilderland High School graduate. -Vr./'VI\|£EI3''-A-BROkEI\l /WINDOW REPLACED? • VVEPICK UP AND DELIVER AUTO GLASS INSTALLED WHILE-U-WAIT INSURANCE APPROVED 100 MAIN Si. [Across from Main Entrance To Altamont Fair Grounds] ALTAMCNT, NEW YORK OPEN: MON.-FRI. 8-6, SAT. 8-5 861-8162 »»«~t£r Screens and Storm Panels Repaired INDUSTRIES _ 'J '*&