ACP entered the 1980s with its lowest enrollment in 10 years, reflective of a drop in colleges throughout the country, but also heading in a brand new direction. In 1981, the College marked its 100th anniversary with a huge celebration at the new Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza in downtown Albany and broke ground for a new wing for its flagship building on New Scotland Avenue. The following year, Dean Walter Singer '48, Ph.D., retired making way for the arrival of a new president and dean, Kenneth Miller, Ph.D.

ACP celebrated graduation and its 100th             Hanging out at ACP, 1983.

birthday in style on June 6, 1981, with a Centen-

nial Dinner and Gala Centennial Ball at the plaza. A new Alma Mater was composed for the occasion by David Miller '80, a graduate with a degree in music from Cornell University, with lyrics written by a team of ACP faculty led by Susanne Dumbleton, Ph.D., assistant professor of English. The fledgling piece was performed that day by the Albany Symphony Orchestra.

During graduation ceremonies, Rudolph H. Blythe '31, Pharm.D., received an honorary Doctor of Science degree recognizing his pioneering work on the timed-release capsule, as did Donald Brodie, a nationally recognized hospital pharmacy administrator and educator, and William Helfand. An exhibit of Helfand's comprehensive collection of 19 th century pharmacy and medical poster art was exhibited that fall at the New York State Museum in honor of ACP's Centennial.

Another fall event, marking the anniversary of the first day of classes in October 1881, was the groundbreaking for a new two-story wing (rechristened the Rudolph H. Blythe Wing in 2000) for a library, administration offices, classrooms

 Med Tech students, 1980.                                and a computer center. The $4 million expansion

                                                                       would provide room to grow for the College as it embarked on its second hundred years.

The new expansion came just in the nick of time for the growing ranks of ACP students who came for either the five-year B.S. in Pharmacy, the four-year B.S. in Medical Technology or a Master's degree in Health Systems Management/B.S. in Pharmacy, offered through the graduate program at Union College .

By the 1982-83 academic year, ACP needed room for a whopping 578 students, up 7.4 percent from the previous year, with 337 women and 341 men. The third-year class in particular was a record breaker, with 149 students. Though there were 545 students for the B.S in Pharmacy, only 33 were enrolled in the Med Tech program. The number of women at ACP continued to increase and by the following year, the Class of '88 contained 65.7 percent women. With tuition raised to $3,200,     Abby Road reprise on New Scotland Ave., 1980.

ACP's fortunes seemed to be looking up.

More change for the College came in 1982 with the retirement of Dean Singer after 15 years at the helm. His successor, Dr. Miller, started at ACP in time for the 1982-83 academic year. Dr. Miller had earned his master's and a doctorate in Pharmacology from the University of Wisconsin and previously had coordinated the Pharm.D. program at Vanderbilt University . Dr. Miller had a strong interest in the establishment of a similar program at ACP and one of the first changes under his watch was the reorganization of the administrative structure at the College. Two key moves were the appointments of Joseph Lapetina as associate dean of academic affairs and Albert M. White as associate dean of student affairs.

ACP's new leader had an open-door policy and an immediate rapport with students, listening to their concerns about the dress code, class bells and student apathy. At least one of those issues was addressed immediately; by the following year "rustling paper ha[d] replaced bells" at the end of class. The dress code hung on throughout the decade, with occasional letter to Mortar and Pestle about ripped jeans, sweats, tie dyes and shorts on campus before 5:00 p.m., when the rules were relaxed.

The new wing of the 1927 building, which recently

 President and Dean Kenneth Miller, Ph.D.      had been named in honor of former dean Francis J.

                                                                         O'Brien '20 for his many years of service to the College, was set to open in January 1983 when disaster struck. The night before the spring semester started, heavy rains, in combination with a layer of ice and frozen drain pipes, led to a serious leak. Three ceiling panels came down in the library and water came pouring in, flooding the new space and adjoining offices with several inches of water. The "new swimming pool," as the students took to calling it, forced the postponement of the semester by one day while the mess was cleaned up.

By 1984, several changes in degree programs were ushered in at ACP. Although the B.S. in Pharmacy remained, with substantial curricular changes for the third, fourth and fifth years, as did the combined M.S. in Health Systems Management/B.S. in Pharmacy, the four-year B.S. in Medical Technology was replaced with a program of part-time study. The "Medical Technology Part-Time Flexible Study Program," held in the late afternoon and evening during the fall and spring semesters and in a concentrated format during the summers, would allow holders     In 1985, you might as well jump!

of an associate's degree in Medical Laboratory

Science to obtain their B.S. The last two graduates of the full-time B.S. program in Medical Technology graduated in 1988, bringing an era to a close at ACP.

Changes were in the air in terms of residential facilities as well. For the first half of the decade, students either lived at home, in neighborhood apartments or, for female students only, at Lima Hall at The College of St. Rose. By 1985, with increasing enrollment, it was clear something needed to be done. The College acquired Alumni Hall, an apartment building located at 25 Holland Ave. , and opened it to all non-commuting freshmen. Each furnished apartment had a living area, bath and kitchen, with access to a laundry room, pay phone and recreation room in the basement.

Though, initially, there were "less than ideal conditions, as the purchase had only been finalized one month before students moved in," by November the new dorm hosted a Thanksgiving dinner for residents upon their return to school after the holiday.

Even with the new dorm, students continued to rely on the "Greeks" to form the backbone of social life. Four professional fraternities - Kappa Psi, Lambda Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Chi and Rho Pi Phi - kept up an active schedule of social, professional and service activities.

Kappa Psi and Lambda Kappa Sigma coordinated Sweetheart Weekend, a semi-formal event, in addition to service activities such as blood drives

 Sprucing up Alumni Hall, 1989.                      and volunteering at Ronald McDonald House.

                                                                         Kappa Psi also threw a huge Halloween party each year, sometimes at local venues such as Guido's Playroom and sometimes in the Panther's Den. Phi Delta Chi sponsored an annual Drug Fair and the well-attended Taco Tuesdays. Rho Pi Phi threw a Chris-giving dinner between Thanksgiving and Christmas and educated school-age children during Poison Prevention Week.

Although ROPE no longer sponsored the Campus Queen dance of days gone by, they participated in Greek Weekend with other Inter-fraternity Council members. The all-frat weekend featured a semi-formal dinner dance as well as a costumed Toga Party. Another IFC event was the wildly popular WAMPA (We Are Massive Party Animals), a huge picnic that usually fell on the last day of final exams and cost just $5 for food, beverages, bus transportation and music. The Sausage and Cheer Party also kicked off in the '80s in a backyard on Warren Street and grew from a small gathering to an extravaganza open to the entire school.

Greek life was not without controversy. Pledging and hazing at colleges throughout the nation became a topic of much debate          Kappa Psi Halloween party, 1988.

after anti-hazing laws were enacted following

the 1978 death of a pledge at Alfred University . By the end of the decade, the future of frats at the school seemed in jeopardy and Mortar and Pestle was filled with letters on the issue from students and faculty, both pro and con. A 1988 letter from Dean White spoke of improvements to the pledging system and, at least at ACP, the crisis seemed to be averted.

For students interested in Greek life without the partying, the Alpha Upsilon chapter of Kappa Epsilon was chartered in April of 1989. The chapter was part of a national, professional, co-ed pharmaceutical fraternity that sponsored both professional and social functions, such as clothing drive to benefit a homeless shelter and ice cream socials and picnics, with a strict no-alcohol policy.

While the Rho Chi Pharmacy Honor Society, recognizing scholastic ability, already was firmly ensconced, 1983 brought a second honorary society to the College with the formation of the Omicron chapter of the Phi Lambda Sigma Pharmacy Leadership Society. With Dean White a founder and president of the national organization, one of the first chapters in the country was established at ACP. Other professional organizations at ACP during the decade included the

 Phi Lambda Sigma, 1984.                                      student branches of the American Chemical

                                                                                 Society, Pharmacy Society of the State of New York , Northeastern New York Society of Hospital Pharmacists and Albany County Pharmaceutical Society. The Academy of Students of Pharmacy formed at the College in the late '80s. All students were welcome to discuss issues and legislation affecting pharmacy and the Political Action Committee gave the group a voice in what the pharmacy profession would be in the future.

Another new group was founded at the College in 1985 when Mainak Amin '87 organized the International Cultural Awareness Club. Dedicated to celebrating and exploring the diversity of cultures around the world, the group sponsored multi-cultural dinners, dances and outings to the theater and ethnic restaurants.

Other clubs and organizations included the Student Council, Circle K, Drama Club, Music    International Cultural Awareness Club, 1989.

Ensemble, Film Club and Photography Club,

while publications included Mortar and Pestle , Alembic Pharmakon and the literary journal Panther Tales.

 

The literary-minded also were accorded a rare opportunity to meet some of the stellar literary figures of the time through the "Living Writers" program at ACP, coordinated by Dr. Dumbleton. Toni Morrison, William Kennedy and Nadine Gordimer all made appearances at the school during the program's tenure. Gloria Steinem, who had been instrumental in the founding of New York and Ms. magazines, was another of the "gadflys" whom the program attracted. According to Mortar and Pestle , those invited to participate were "well-known irritants who refuse to accept the status quo as inevitable and urge others to rethink their world view."

The musically inclined had a chance to perform in the annual Coffee House, an integral part of Parent's Weekend. The music, both instrumental and vocal, ranged from the silly to the serious. Those who couldn't sing could be seen around campus with the headphones of their Sony Walkmans clamped to their ears as they listened to Michael Jackson, Wham, Pat Benatar, Culture Club, Bon Jovi, Talking Heads, Cyndi Lauper and the Pretenders.

 

For those more interested in athletics, sports at ACP during the '80s included successful golf, bowling, women's cross country and men's and women's soccer and basketball teams. Dorothea Palen was the women's cross country Northeastern Athletic Conference champ in 1982. By the end of the

 Women's basketball champs, 1984.                         decade, the women's basketball team had

                                                                                  taken home three first-place NAC trophies, including the 24-1 season of 1985-86 led by Martha Naber '86 and Rita Leighton '86. The men's basketball team underwent a big change in 1989 when John Denio, after 12 years, 125 wins and two NAC titles, announced his decision to stop coaching.

With a heavy academic load and plenty of opportunities for extra-curricular activities, sometimes students just needed to kick back and relax. Classmates celebrated the hard work of a rigorous five-year Pharmacy program with a series of parties that marked their progress.

The fall semester kicked off with a Champagne Breakfast at Ralph's on the Park. On a designated date in October, beginning at 8:00 a.m., Ralph's served eggs, sausage, bacon, rolls and tater tots, plus champagne and orange juice. One impromptu opportunity to let off steam occurred when a freak snowstorm in October 1987 caused the unheard-of cancellation of classes at ACP and led to widescale snowball fights. A typical year in the '80s also included the Halfway, Four-Fifths, Count-Down and All the Way parties.

Soon even those milestones would change as ACP entered the '90s and got ready for a new six-year Pharm.D. program.                                     The memorable snowstorm of October 4, 1987.