Great Danes Place Fifth At Tk<$ JbeMoYne Invitational

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ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
p**a
Great Danes Place Fifth At
Tk<$m BJbeMoYne Invitational
The "uiiocy-cdiEii'ea harriers traveled to the LeMoyne Invitational Saturday with a team of virtually
untested strengths and weaknesses. After a strong beating by a potent Coast Guard team to start the season,
the runners of hill and dale soundly trounced the likes of Montclair and Pittsburgh. Thus they readied for
LeMoyne uncertain of their capabilities.
With the conclusion of the race,
the harriers became a team
convinced of their ability to win.
But the fortunes of LeMoyne
were not theirs. Running in
almost unbearable conditions of
mud and rain, the purple and gold
appeared to have their first
LeMoyne victory within grasp
with less than a mile to go in the
5.2 race.
by Pottkomfci
Waterbury's offense was unable to register a score against the AHA
defense.
Frosh Booters Blanked
In.. Second Match, 6-0
Twomey
by Mike Twomey
Oneonta State, looking for its
second victory without defeat,
b o o t e d A l b a n y frosh
last
Saturday, 6-0, under grey and
intermittently drizzling skies.
The state team, made up of
many first-time soccer players,
was hard put against the bigger,
faster, and more experienced
Oneonta eleven, many of whose
members had been on high school
varsity teams.
Three goafs in the first quarter
put Oneonta in a comfortable
lead. Albany came close to socring
in the second period during a
scramble in front of the
opponent's net, but could not put
the ball past their tough goalie.
Oneonta made the score 4-0 a few
minutes later in the same kind of
tussle.
In the third quarter, Oneonta
put together two well-organized
and strong attacks to drive two
more goals past the Albany
defense. But Coach Handzel's
"W" formation held any further
scoring in the last period.
After t h e game, Handzel
remarked that Oneonta, along
with R.P.I., are usually the
toughest
c o m p e t i t o r s . In
preparation for next Saturday's
_-_:__, w_u__,.i.
.
game, against
Mohawk «r%
C.C., the
coach plans daily scrimmages and
drills, hoping to bring the team
closer in organization and to mold
an agressive attack. Handzel also
said that the team was hurt by the
loss of Chris Werner and Larry
Bauman to illness.
Outstanding for Albany's futile
attempt were Terry Wilbert, who
played forward, and in the fourth
quarter, goalkeeper, and Larry
Thompson, who was hit hard on
the ear in the second period, yet
went back into the game, blocking
several Oneonta infield drives.
Triple Win For Romig
Heads Albany Girls
The State University of New
York at Albany served as host of
the
Women s
Eastern
Intercollegiate
Tennis
Tournament this weekend. Unver
the direction of Mrs Peggy Mann
of the* U n i v ersity women's
physical education staff
Miss
Betty Richey of Vassar, and Mrs,
Rosalind Beck of hong Island
University, the preliminary rounds
began on Friday and the
tournament ended with the finals
on Sunday.
Of the one hundred nineteen
girls involved, three girls from
Albany, Sheila Jacobs, Belinda
S t a n t o n , and J e a n
Romig
participated in the competition.
Miss Jacobs won the first round
by default, but was defeated in
the second round by Susan Clay
of Morristown 6-1,6-3,
Ramona Jonas defeated Belinda
Stanton of Albany in the first
round 6-3, 6-3.
Jean Romig was the most
successful of the (hree girls a* she
advanced to the quartet final:*
before she was defeated.
Miss Romig won the first round
6-'J. 6-1 over Marie Sliska In tinsecond round, Jill Miller was the
victim by a score of 6-;i. 6-3 Jean
defeated Bernice Schwarz 6-2, 6-2
in the third round. Cathy Mullan
<if Penn State, however, proved
too tough for Jean as she defeated
her handily 6-0, 6• i.
By advancing to the quarter
finals, Jean Romig did better than
any other Albany State girl ever
has done in this tourney.
Marilyn Aschner of Queens
College was the ultimate winner in
the singles division for the fourth
straight year. She is recognized by
experts as the best woman college
tennis player in the East.
Dean Garcia, who also won the
Sportsmanship Award, suffered
the defeat by a 6-2, 6-1 score.
In the dc/ubies finals, two teams
from Mary Baldwin College met
and t h e defending doubles
champs, Kit O'Bannon and Jill
Eisman, were beaten by freshmen
Mary Tompkins and Talbott
Jordan, 6-1, 6-4.
an almost separate offensive and
defensive unit.
This type of set-up makes the
Tappanites a well balanced group,
and will prove most effective
when the colder weather comes. A
ten yard halfback sweep by
captain Royce Van Evra, the extra
point, and a safety made the score
9-0 at the end of the first half.
Scoring in the second half was
similar. A 30 yard screen pass
from Cass Galka to Van Evra (no
extra point), and another safety
put away the NADs 17-0.
This was another defensive
display. The NADs made only one
first down. Gary dinger made
three interceptions for the victors.
Pat Ma h o n e y , one of the
Tappanites, labeled this win u
team efforl
S a l u rda \
morn i ng
AIV
defeated Wuterbury ly-c Tim
was APA 's firsi game, while
Waterbury is now 1* 1, APA i;
another strong defensive lean:,
and also has a potentially
explosive offense
Alter a slow moving, scoreless
first half, the action picked up.
Quarterback Gary Torino flung a
20 yarder at Bob Wood, resulting
in the first score of the game.
Denny Elkin caught the extra
point, making the score 7-0.
Captain Torino was injured on
a roll out pattern, and substitute
Mike
Barlotta
quickly
demonstrated the depth of APA
H e t o s s e d „ touchdown pass to
L a n c e Be r0 wski, and the score
w e n t t o i a--zip. Torino recovered
(n
time
to
tnrow
a n other
touchdown pass to Wood, uping
the score to 19-0, the final.
OCTOBER II, 1968
by D a r y l Wager
Photo by DeYouno
GEORGE WALLACE STOOD in front of the State Capitol and
delivered an address in his home style lingo. Excerpts of his speech was
carried by national television.
Socialist Candidate
Speaks to Students
"The university should be a
plaza for revolutionary activity,"
said Peter Buch, Socialist Workers'
Party candidate for Congree from
New Y o r k ' s
19th
district,
speaking here Monday.
Mr. Buch feels that the
American two-party system offers
no real alternative to those who
are dissatisfied. "The blow of a
police club" in Chicago, he said,
was "an echo of the vote you or
your parents cast in 1964 due to
the 'lesser evil' policy."
According to Mr. Buch, U.S.
involvement in the war in
Vietnam represents not the will of
the people, but part of a
bipartisan program to protect
capitalist investment.
The cold war is not the fault of
Russia or China, Mr. Buch said,
when U.S. bases encircle these
nations.
" R a c i s t insti tutions resist
change," Mr. Buch said. He cited
the resistance to the Ocean
Hill-Brownsville school board's
Why would Bic torment
this dazzling beauty?
Why?
To introduce
the most elegant
pen on
campus.
ALBANY, NEW YORK
Wallace Speaks On Capitol Steps,
O'Dwyer Replies At Counter Rally
and gold appeared to have their
first LeMoyne victory within
grasp with less than a mile to go in
the 5.2 mile race.
Larry Frederick was running a
itrong fifth or sixth, Pat Gepfert
eighth or ninth, and George
Rolling and Paul Roy were
somewhere between tenth and
twentieth. And despite the fact
that co-captains Don Beevers who
was expecting to break into the
top ten was running fifth for the
team and around 30th, at the four
mile point it looked as if Albany
was sure to bring home the big
trophy.
With that one last mile to go,
Fredericks developed stomach
cramps and slowly and helplessly
faded from position six to finish
52nd.
While the other runners more
or less held their positions, with
Gepfert finishing eighth, Rolling,
as Runner of the Meet twelfth,
Roy, 18th, Mastromarchi, 36th,
Beevers, 38th, and Breslin 53rd.
Despite their disappointing
defeat, all was not lost for the
Munseymen now know they have
the ability to win and though they
have an extremely formidable
schedule ahead of them, with
good fortune they should prove
Photo by Potskowski
quite capable of holding their
Albany served as host for the Women's Eastern Tennis Tourney this
own.
past weekend.
APA, Tappan Record
League One Victories
by Jeffrey Saperstetn
League I intra-mural football is
shaping up as a fierce defensive
struggle. This past week, two
more shutouts were recorded. Out
of six games thus far, five have
been shutouts.
On T h u r s d a y
afternoon,
Tappan met the NADS. Tappan is
one of the few teams that employ
VOL. LIV NO. 30
demand for more local control oi
schools.
Mr. Buch sees the struggle for
black liberation as a focal point
for America. He feels "The Black
Panthers, far from being nihilists,
bring real thoughtfuiness to bear"
on the question of America's
direction.
Hope is also seen is Latin
America, but he cautions radicals
against believing they can make
change alone.
The anti-war movement which
once held GIs in contempt now
finds support among them, he
reminded his audience. He taid,
"Young people and black people
must look to other segments of
the population for support."
Working people are not satisfied
with wage gains which lead only
to tax increases, according to Mr.
Buch.
He believes that working people
will join students, as they did in
France, where a rebellion led to
"the largest general strike in
A sizeable
g r o u p was
assembling across the street from
the Capitol well in advance of the
scheduled appearance of former
Alabama Governor George C.
Wallace a i three
o'clock
Wednesday afternoon.
A good deal of activity was
generated by the Brothers, a black
organization which planned to
show Wallace that they did not
appreciate his personal appearance
on the steps of the Capitol
building by displaying posters and
singing freedom songs.
Spokesmen for the group, who
wore black berets and medallions,
announced that their program
would include readings of the
Declaration of Independence, Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a
Dream" speech, and John F.
Kennedy's message to Congress on
civil rights.
The Brothers were joined by
individuals who
described
themselves as "independents."
Both groups pledged that heckling
history."
Radicals must above all be wary
of absorption, of selling out, of
compromising in order to win
moderate concessions, said Mr.
Buch.
He believes "the next stage for
Wallace attacked the young
humanity" is "the revolutionary people in the audience, who were
transformation from capitalism to almost all college students, for
socialism."
"giving aid and comfort" to the
Homecoming Queen
To Be Chosen By Judges
Ellis Kaufman, chairman of the
Homecoming Queen Committee,
Committee, announced that this
year both the Homecoming Queen
and the Freshman Princess were
picked not only for beauty, but
also for personality and poise.
They were chosen by eight
members
of
the
school
administration and a student
representative from each class.
T h e r e were t w e n t y -nine
upperclassmen and nine freshmen
in the contest which lasted over
tWp evenings, October 9 and 10.
The first evening, all of the
contestants modeled a Sunday
outfit and spoke a little about
F r e s h m e n and
t r a n s f e r s Smiles, Committee to End the
themselves. The girls were rated
interested in programming should War, SDS, YAF, and the Socials
on a basis of one to ten, ten being
apply
for a p o s i t i o n
on Discussion Group.
the highest, on their beauty and
Community
Programming
Applications due October 1 1 to poise w h i c h w e re separate
Commission.
the Student. Activities Office Rm. categories At the end of the
In general, the Commission
3 6 4 . All applicants will be evening,
eight semi finalists
deals with the i n i t i a t i on, required to have an interview. were announced for Homecoming
evaluation, and promotion of
You will be notified of the time Queen, but no contestants for
act i vi ties i n the areas of and place
F r es h m a n P r i n c ess were
Arts C u l t u r a l
Co n r c r n s ,
eliminated.
To apply, state in outline form
Recreation, Special liven is, and
Thursday night, the remaining
why you feel you would like this
Socail and Political (!oucerns, as
girls modeled the same outfits and
position
and
how
the
Commission
well as the Campus (Center
I h is tune were required to
could benefit from your ideas
Governing Board
describe them.
Following this, onl> the right
Any pertinent activities that
t Constituent groups under the
semi finalists changed into casual
Commission include: Special you participated in high school or
outfits which they modeled and
Events Hoard, Music (Council, in the school from which you
described where they would wear
Council for Contemporary Music, transferred should be listed.
them
Arts Council, Dramatics ('ouncil,
Prior to the interview all
The seventeen girls were then
IFU, AM1A, Camp Board, Chess
applicants will be invited to asked two questions, one of a
Club, Debate Council, Fencing
attend an open meeting and a humorous nature and one of a
Society, Modern Dance Blue,
coffee hour afterwards, so as to more serious naturefwhich had
Outing Club, Sailing Club, Ski
answer any questions you may been taken from forms the girls
Club, WRA, Forum of Politics,
have.
had filled out earlier in the week).
Expensive new
Blc B Clk*for
big spenders
49*
would have no place in their
efforts to inform the Wallace
group of their oppositon to the
third party candidate.
Meanwhile, a crowd began
forming in front of the Capitol
iUelf. Sepctators waiting behind
police lines were barraged with
posters declaring. "Equality Not
Bigotry," "Wallace: A Most
Discriminating Candidate," "Like
Hitler'' You'll Love Wallace!" and
"Support
Wallace and Get
Whitewashed."
Descending the Capitol st s
and smiling broadly the governor
was met by wildly waving banners
and posters and the chanting of
"Down
with Wallace!" He
managed to make light of the
o p p o s i t i o n evident in the
audience, opening his remarks
with the introduction of several
state and local Alabaman officials.
As Wallace began his speech
and became aware of the
appreciable number in attendance
who were adamant in their refusal
to accept his ideas, the former
Alabama governor's voice grew in
urgency and in volume, stopping
periodically when the poor
acoustics proved inadequate for
combatting the chanting of the
throne.
That night, the name of the
Freshman
Princess
was
announced. The names of the
Homecoming Queen and her court
w j|l be announced tonight after
the concert.
Communists by organizing food
and clothing drives for Vietnam.
The presidential candidate
stressed his contempt for the
presidential preference polls,
explaining that the current
predicted drop in his popularity is
due a conspiracy of "eastern
establishment moneyed interests"
wheih seek to control election
results through false poll figures.
Wallace would place existing
polling outfits under federal
investigation.
Prefacing his discussion of the
Vietnam situation. Wallace used
the phrase, MMWhen I become
the
President..."
which
precipitated a new round of
opposition chants.
Addressing his adversaries,
Wallace promised to send "thirtythousand troops, each with a
bayonet" to protect Washington
from the anarchists. He accused
the Con gress of passing a bill that
would permit Communists to
work in our defense plants.
Wallace explained that the
reason for our present situation in
Vietnam was our failure to look
to our Western European allies for
m u n i t i o n s and
manpower.
Wallace's Vietnam policy would
be a military solution to the war if
the Paris talks fail to produce a
political solution by January.
He cited education as the main
cause for the rise in federal taxes
and added that should he be
elected in November, he would
see that the New York schools
and the Alabama schools were run
independent of one another and
not by the federal government.
Closing his remarks, Wallace
declared, "There are more of us
than there are of you and on
November fifth we're going to
find that out." Waving and
throwing kisses to his listeners,
Wallace turned and left the
posium.
Con't to p. 5
Community Programming
Seeks Transfers, Frosh
fi
it
*SBQJ
O n l y Bic w o u l d dare to lormenl a beauty like this. Nol the g i r l . ,
the pen she's h o l d i n g . It's the new luxury model Bic Che. designed
for scholarship athletes, lucky card players a n d other rich campus
socialites who can afford the expensive 49-cent price.
But don't let those delicate g o o d looks fool you Despiie horrible punishment by mad scientists, the elegant Bic Che still wrote
first time, every time.
Everything you want in o fine pen, you'll find in the new Bic
Clic. It's retractable. Refillable. Comes in 8 barrel colors. A n d like
oil Bic pens, writes first time, every t i m e . . . n o matter what devilish
abuse sadistic students devise for it.
r
OPPONENTS OF WALLACE'S views gathered across the street from
t|,e Capitol to hear speakers of the Peace and Freedom Party. Paul
O'Dwyer also made the scene.
i
Photo by Cmtor
*»»
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Peace and Freedom Party
Candidate Speaks Here
J u d e Mage, the Peace and
F r e e d o m Party candidate
for
Vice-President appeared here last
week.
She
previewed
the
a p p e a r a n c e of Eldridge Cleaver
their Presidential c a n d i d a t e , w h o
was at t h e RPI gym this T h u r s d a y .
Mage was a c c o m p a n i e d
by
L i e u t e n a n t Jorge A p o n t e of the
New York c h a p t e r of the Black
P a n t h e r Party (BPP), and four
b r o t h e r s of the Albany BPP
headed by Bill Gibson.
Mage referred us t o t h e Peace
and
Freedom
Party
(PFP)
Platform t h a t said, " T h e Peace
and F r e e d o m Party was formed to
unify the m o v e m e n t s which are
seeking radical change in America,
and t o create for these m o v e m e n t s
a focus and political e x p r e s s i o n . "
T h e Peace and F r e e d o m Part is
a coalition b e t w e e n the Black
Panther Party and t h e PFP. T h e
coalition was established officially
seven m o n t h s ago at the Peace and
F r e e d o m F o u n d i n g C o n v e n t i o n in
Tigers Maul Cards,
Lolich Pitches Win
Paunon
STUDENTS EXPRESS THEIR protesJ vocally during Wallace's
appearance on the steps of the Capitol.
Pacifists Found Guilty
On Draft Counts
B A L T I M O R E ( U P I ) - A federal c o u r t j u r y found nine R o m a n
Catholic pacifists, w h o were
accused
of d e s t r o y i n g
draft
records, guilty on all three
c o u n t s late T h u r s d a y after only
one h o u r a n d 25 m i n u t e s of
deliberation.
T h e d e f e n d a n t s , on hearing
the verdict, began t o sing, "We
shall o v e r c o m e , " t h e civil rights
a n t h e m . One man a m o n g the
s p e c t a t o r s s h o u t e d , " L a d i e s and
g e n t l e m e n of the jury, you have
just found Jesus Christ g u i l t y . "
T h e t w o w o m e n and seven
men,
Including t w o
priests,
could each be sentenced t o a
m a x i m u m of 18 years in jail
and fined up Lo $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 each on
the c o n v i c t i o n s of d i s r u p t i n g t h e
o p e r a t i o n s of a draft b o a r d ,
d e s t r o y i n g federal p r o p e r t y and
i n t e r f e r i n g with selective service personnel in the per for-
m a n c e of
their d uties.
T h e "Catonsville N i n e " entered
the
small
Selective
Service
h e a d q u a r t e r s in
the
Baltimore s u b u r b of Catonsville
May 17, s c o o p e d two d r a w e r s
full of records and b u r n e d t h e m
outside in a parking lot.
T h e defense m a d e no a t t e m p t
to d e n y the nine had b u r n e d the
records. But, in his closing
a r g u m e n t , Chief Defense A t t o r ney William Kunstler said t h e y
were o b e y i n g a " h i g h e r l a w . "
He urged jurors to c o n s u l t their
consciences as the nine had
consulted theirs.
Lowenstein Supporters
Canvass Republicans
A meeting of S t u d e n t s for
Lowenstein was held
Monday
night.
Plans were m a d e to canvass the
Fifth Congressional District to
convince a largely Republican
n e i g h b o r h o o d t o cross party lines
and
vote
lor
A 11 a r d
K.
T h e Commission for Academic
Lowenstein
Affairs
is
now
accepting
Lowenstein is credited with
applications for at-large m e m b e r s convincing Eugene McCarthy to
of
the
Commission
and
for
run lor President, is a m e m b e r of
positions recently created by the the S o u t h e r n Christian Leadership
Ad Hoc C o m m i t t e e on T e n u r e .
Conference, was one of the first
in c o n j u n c t i o n with this, there to visit V i e t n a m , and is the
of
the
" Dump
iff also i w o s t u d e n t seats o p e n e d o r i g i n a t o r
on t h e Council on P r o m o t i o n s and .Johnson" m o v e m e n t .
T h e meeting was led by Gary
Continuing Appointments.
S t u d e n t s interested in applying Weiner and Pal Meglin, w h o rend
quotes
I'rom the Village Voice
for the review c o m m i t t e e s in their
o w n a c a d e m i c area or for seals on describing b o t h Lowenstein and
the Council cm P r o m o t i o n s and his o p p o n e n t Mason H a m p t o n .
H a m p t o n is a conservative who
C o n t i n u i n g A p p o i n t m e n t s should
blocking
integration
send
their n a m e , class year, a d v o c a t e s
address, p h o n e n u m b e r , along and considers marijuana as a
with a list of positions held a n d / o r major Ihreat t o society and would
qualifications and t h e i r reasons like t o see pushers p u n i s h e d by
for a p p l y i n g t o the A c a d e m i c d e a t h .
Affairs Commission b o x , S t u d e n t
T h e s t u d e n t s m e t to discuss
Association
Office,
C a m p u s plans t o go from d o o r to d o o r on
Center 367.
the w e e k e n d s preceding Election
If a p p l y i n g for one of t h e Day t o talk t o voters and " m a k e
review c o m m i t t e e s , pleuse specify t h e m u n d e r s t a n d the issues, m a k e
t h e s c h o o l or division in which p e o p l e c a r v
y o u are i n t e r e s t e d .
Lowenstein,
who won
the
A p p l i c a t i o n forms for at-large p r i m a B
largely b e c a u s e of
m e m b e r s h i p of Academic Affairs s t u d e n t s canvassing for him, "will
C o m m i s s i o n can be o b t a i n e d from have rough going mainly because
t h e S t u d e n t Association Office.
of voter a p a t h y . "
As o n e s t u d e n t at the meeting
All
application
must
be
r e t u r n e d t o t h e C o m m i s s i o n b o x , said, " S o m a n y p e o p l e have n o
CC;*67, b y 2:.'J0 p.rrj., M o n d a y , idea what is going o n . T h e y k n o w
only party iablefc
O c t o b e r 21
Academic Affairs
Opens Seats
For
Tenure
By VITO S T E L L I N O
UPI S p o r t s Writer
ST.
LOUIS
(UPI)-Mickey
Lolich o u t p i t c h e d World Series
master Bob Gibson and the
Detroit Tigers b r o k e through for
three runs in t h e seventh inning
T h u r s d a y t o b e a t t h e St. Louis
Cardinals 4-1 and win their first
world baseball c h a m p i o n s h i p in
23 years.
Lolich, the rugged individualist w h o drives a m o t o r c y c l e t o
the
Tigers'
home
games,
m a t c h e d s h u t o u t pitching with
Gibson, winner of seven World
Series games including t w o in
this classic, until the seventh
when the Tigers got one of the
big breaks of t h e Series.
T h e break c a m e with two out
and
N o r m Cash and Willie
Morton on base as a result of
singles. Jim N o r t h r u p walloped
a long drive t o center field
which appeared catchable. But
Curt Flood, o n e of the best
centerfielders in the
majors,
s t u m b l e d as lie turned to run
for t h e ba!I and it sailed over
his head for a two-run triple.
Bill Freehan followed with a
d o u b l e t o left field scoring
N o r t h r u p and giving Lolich and
the Tigers a 3-0 lead over
Gibson, who had pitched one hit
ball
through
the
first
six
innings.
That's
all
Lolich, working
with just two days rest, needed
t o enable the Tigers t o b e c o m e
the third team in Series history
t o win a seven-game series
after trailing 3-1. He is t h e
eighth pitcher t o win three
games in o n e series.
The
Tigers, a
come-frombehind t e a m all season as they
w o n 40 games after being tied
or behind in the seventh inning,
were held t o one hit by Gibson
over the first six innings.
But the Tigers erupted for
seven hits in the final three
innings ro snap Gibson's sevengame winning streak in Series
competition.
It was enough to beat Gibson
although Freehan then doubled
in N o r t h r u p with an insurance
run and singles by H o r t o n ,
N o r t h r u p and Don Wert produced a n o t h e r run in the eighth.
A traditional late-s e a s o n
s t a n d o u t who likes t o pitch in
cool
weather,
Lolich
was
brilliant as he held the Cards t o
just five hits on the mild
afternoon in the mid-60s while
the crowd of 54,692 at Busch
Memorial Stadium pleaded in
vain for the Cardinals t o solve
his deliveries. But the only
player to do so was Mike
S h a n n o n , w h o hit a solo h o m e r
with two o u t in the n i n t h , after
the Tigers already had won the
game.
Lolich also stopped the Cards'
running game. In the sixth
inning he gave up singles t o
speedsters Lou Brock, who tied
a Series record with 1.1 hits, and
Curt
Flood.
But
then
he
proceeded to pick b o t h of them
oil' base.
Il was a heartbreaking loss
for Gibson, whose 7-2 record in
World Series play is still one of
' ' T h e
h n s a n the best leaving him tied with
( J
Administrate
want him Yankee aces Keel Huffing and
in. He wouli
chanij. he Allie Reynolds. Whitcy Ford
would have I.
was Hl-H and Lefty Gome/, was
Over ::<J()
other I) 0. Gibson still pitched a record
schools are L'Xpi
IIIVJISS eiglil straight complete game in
fur i .owenstein
l i l t t l j i r y siiy.'-, defeal
"We nvvt\ all the h. Ip we e;ill yet. '
Card sbortst l> Dal M
If you are from Lc in Island or ure set a record
ird Ifor frustrutii
i n t e r e s t ed
in
working
for he went I) lor 2 before being
Lowenstein call lary Weiner at lifted foi
pinch-hitti
aving
H700.
him 0 for 22 in the Series
In speaking of t h e candidate,
Weiner q u o t e d the Village Voice
as saying "If he wins it will be due
to the canvassing of the k i d s . "
Weiner has met and worked with
Lowensleing personally and said
of him, " H e ' s d y n a m i c , a hard
fighter and works for what he
believes.
!(|
California.
T h e Parties remain distinct and
s e p a r a t e , a n d geared t o their own
n e e d s , t h o u g h they are united
u n d e r t h e Peace and Freedom
b a n n e r , a n d have been working
t o g e t h e r for close to a year.
Mage e n u m e r a t e d the policies
and goals of the white half (>f the
coalition, and Lt. A p o n t e those of
the black c o m m u n i t y .
T h e t w o g r o u p s are protective
of their individuality, but realize
c o m m o n goals.
T h e PFP coalition lipids thai
the Social s t r u c t u r e of the L'.S A
is responsible for the fears anil tinexisting and developing conditions
t h a t are intolerable to many
Americans.
T h e P F P is just as convinced
t h a t t h e powerful development of
this c o u n t r y can IK* turned in
allieveate these problems.
Mage said, "With all the wealth
in this c o u n t r y , it is obcene to
have t h e p o v e r t y and oppression
t h a t we have in this c o u n t r y . "
She p o i n t e d t o the welfare
s y s t e m and social planning for
m i n o r i t y g r o u p s , and said that
they
put
money
into white
p o c k e t s while they "guaranteed
p o v e r t y " t o black people and
"institutionalized inequality."
T h e P F P Platform holds thai
t h e A m e r i c a n " c o l o n i a l i s t " policy
has resulted
in " s u p p o r t
of
r e a c t i o n a r y regimes throughout
t h e
w o r l d
and
in
co u n ter-ins urgency
against
oppressed
people
seeking
self-determination."
is p u r s u i n g a campaign that hopes
to " c h a n g e p e o p l e heads a little
bit."
It s u p p o r t s
meaningful
e d u c a t i o n t h a t will prepare and
involve people in the realities of
instability a n d change that are
happening around them.
Lt. A p o n t e emphasized thai the
Black P a n t h e r Party is a real
political p a r t y .
He said t h a t they are organized
for
the
"well
being
and
preservation of black p e o p l e " ami
t h a t t h e y are n o t looking for
t r o u b l e in w h i t e c o m m u n i t i e s
T h e P F P endorses the "Ten
P o i n t P r o g r a m " of the BPP. They
d e m a n d c o m m u n i t y control of
s c h o o l s , welfare, housing, and
police, and an i m m e d i a t e end to
police h a r a s s m e n t and brutality of
blacks.
Eldridge Cleaver defined Black
A m e r i c a n s as a colonized people,
and regards America as a " m o t h e r
c o u n t r y " in her d o m e s t i c as well
as foreign policy.
T o t h e P a n t h e r s , the police in
black
communities
a re
m
" o c c u p y i n g force
!,i
Aponl
told his listeners hat the BP
emphasizes d isciplin
m e m b e r s , T h e y arc >
regain
control
c o m m u n i t i e s , then n
their lives.
A rier
r e on n
examples of police li
the Panthers, Aponte
dare Li> stand up .1
men, they arc then
FLU SHOTS
individuals who know they liaue chronic health
problems involving lungs, heart, kidney, neroous system
diabetes, thyroid, etc., should consult their personal
physicians by Thanfesgiuing Recess or be/ore concerning
the wisdom of obtaining flu shots.
Elderly indiuiduals (ooer 65) should also consult
their physicians on this matter.
The Student Health Seroice cannot undertake the
gioing of flu shots this year.
J Hood. M,P,
Director
Student Health Service
2>dtao<u Stduui
AnwuxM TMtt
&
Bar
All State Students
& Student Groups
Welcome
67 Colvin Ave.
Phone 482-9759
Julian Bond
Cancels Speech
In Protest
KNOXVILLE,
TENN.
(CPS)--Georgia legislator Julian
Bond,
scheduled
to
address
University of Tennessee s t u d e n t s
O c t o b e r 2, refused t o appear in
Knoxville because s t u d e n t s there
had been forbidden t o invite Dick
Gregory t o t h e c a m p u s a week
earlier.
"If
t h e chancellor of the
university t h i n k s t h e s t u d e n t s are
too
simple-minded
to
hear
Gregory, they are obviously t o o
simple-minded t o hear m e , " Bond
said when he discovered he had
been invited in G r o g o r y ' s place. "I
certainly d o n ' t want to poison
student minds."
Chancellor Charles H. Weaver
had denied a s t u d e n t s p e a k e r s '
program
permission
to
invite
Gregory, saying he had " n o t h i n g
to
say
to
the
University
community"
and
that
his
a p p e a r a n c e would be " a n outrage
and an insult to m a n y citizens of
this s t a t e . "
About
Bond's
cancellation,
Weaver only said, "I am sorry that
he is n o t c o m i n g . "
" I t ' s n o t a m a t t e r of Gregory
himseir," Bond said. " I t ' s a m a t t e r
of s t u d e n t s ' being allowed to
m a k e their o w n decisions. I
w o u l d n ' t care if it were Marry
T r u m a n or George Wallace being
denied
permission. T h e
issue
would be the s a m e - f r e e d o m of
choice."
LA AC Discusses
Contract Dining
JAKE HERZOG DEBATED Dan Button in
stated an ignorance of an Albany Machine.
"Since t h e University c a n n o t
PhoTo b y D i V a u n T g u a r a n t e e the return of lost
the P a t r o o n R o o m . He m o n e y nor furnish t h e s t u d e n t
with the m o n e y t h a t he has lost,"
he said, "a new meal ticket must
Master Plan
Announced
By Gould For 1968
Chancellor G o u l d last week
a n n o u n c e d t h e 1 9 6 8 Revision of
the Master Plan, built u p o n a
series of 46 r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s to
guid State University's further
growth during t h e next seven
years.
The
Chancellor
noted
the
Revision
coincided
with
the
University's 2 0 t h anniversary and
described the d o c u m e n t as a
"combined
effort
of
faculty,
s t u d e n t s and staff, designed to
maintain and e x p a n d u p o n t h e
great strides in physical growth
and a c a d e m i c achievement which
'have c o m e a b o u t during t h e first
t w o decades of o u r e x i s t e n c e . "
Chancellor C o u l d n o t e d t h a t
the first e m p h a s i s in the revision is
nl
'"" 1 ' 1 «innn (h*» priorities
of
Button Confronts Herzog
Before 125 Area Clergy
Congressman Danial E. B u t t o n
urged Wednesday t h a t we " s t o p
the b o m b i n g of N o r t h Vietnam
and rebuild urban A m e r i c a " , in
the first of a m o n t h l y series of
breakfast forums for area clergy in
the P a t r o o n R o o m of the C a m p u s
Center.
Guest
speakers
were
Re ] ublican Congressman B u t t o n
and his D e m o c r a t i c o p p o n e n t ,
Jacob
Herzog, a
prominent
Albany A t t o r n e y .
Vietnam was clearly t h e most
i m p o r t a n t issue discussed, with an
overwhelming majority of the area
clergy against the Vietnam war.
Button
charged
that
iL is
unnecessary to " s l a u g h t e r the
y o u t y " , and
hopes that
the
t ra ge d y
of
I he
Johnson
administration in Vietnam will he
ended with the election of a new
President.
His o p p o n e n t ,
Dem. Jacob
Herzog is closer to Nixon than
Button
on
the war
Herzog
s u p p o r t s President J o h n s o n on the
war and doesn't believe we should
s t o p the bimbing of the N o r t h , lie
indicated a c o m p l e t e lack of faith
in Ho Chi Minh to neogiate, and
w o u l d n ' t risk the life of " o n e
single fighting m a n " by stopping
the b o m b i n g .
Herzog feels dissent on the war
is healthy . . . " e v e r y o n e is entitled
to
t h e i r own
thoughts
and
beliefs."
He
supports
the
conviction of Dr. Spock because
he violated the law and " t h o s e
w h o violate the law should be
prosecuted."
He d o e s n ' t
believe in the
conscious objector status because
" i t is u n p a t r i o t i c " .
The
candidates after
their
speeches to the clergy were asked
their views on t h e darft and
lowering of the voting age. Both
candidates feel the present draft
situation is unfair.
B u t t o n said t h a t he would like
t o see Congress e x p l o r e other
wuys t o d o it, possibly a volunter
a r m y . Herzog told me he favors a
lotlery and the o p t i o n of servim:
in nonmilitary areas.
On t h e question of lowering i'
voting uge t o 18, B u t t o n stront
advocated h, and went on to ^y
be charged t o t h e s t u d e n t . "
"If a s t u d e n t loses his meal
card,
the
Housing
Office
r e c o m m e n d s t h a t he s h o u l d first
check t h e dining hall a n d m a k e a
thorough
search of all his
clothing. T o d a t e , fifteen meal
cards r e p o r t e d lost have b e e n
found. U he d o e s n o t find t h e
meal card, t h e s t u d e n t
may
purchase a new one at w e e k l y
rates.
If t h e card is s u b s e q u e n t l y
found, the Housing Office will
refund
the m o n e y
for
the
remaining meals.
"Because t h e meal card is
necessary
for
the
student's
freedom of eating in a n y o n e of
the c o n t r a c t dining halls," said
Seyfarth, " m e a l cards must b e
treated as m o n e y .
It is i m p o r t a n t t h a t s t u d e n t s be
involved in decisions regarding
living
climate
as a
good
c o m m u n i c a t i o n device b e t w e e n
s t u d e n t s and t h e various faculties
of t h e University," stated George
E. Seyfarth in a letter t o Vic
L o o p e r , C h a i r m a n of L A A C .
He further c o m m e n t e d , " o f
approximately
4500
students
housed on c a m p u s , a b o u t 3 0 0 0
are on the fourteen meal p l a n . "
t h a t " w e should let the y o u n g e r
generation k n o w that t h e older
generation is willing to transfer
their responsibilities.""! will give
it careful c o n s i d e r a t i o n , " Herzog
said, adding that he
favored
lowering it, but n o t t o IH.
According to A.D.A.'s rating,
B u t t o n is the second most liberal
Congressman in t h e House.
Button
noted
briefly
that
Wallace was t o speak later that
afternoon in Albany and urged
the clergy to bear him speak, even
if they disagreed with his views.
Congressman Button s u p p o r t s
Richard Nixon for the Presidency
" a s a man w h o has s h o w n a
capacity for growth in his public
career. Only his election can lead
to
a
turnover
t tie
Stale
Department
. tie will m a k e a
fine P r e s i d e n t . "
Jacob
Herzog,
prominent
Albany a t t o r n e y , s u p p o r t e d by
the D e m o c r a t i c and Conservative
parties, s p o k e n e x t .
It is alleged that he is part of
the O'Connell machine When a
priest b l u n t l y asked him if he will
buck the m a c h i n e il elected, he
replied 1 /! "What m a c h i n e ' ' " .
"Law
and
Order"
was a
d o m i n a n t t h e m e of his speech, in
which he urged that Congress set
up a National Police Academf to
professionally train local police
forces on a national level ( n o t a
national
police
force)
and
increases pay for police en with
federal funds if necessary (local
real estate taxes are t o o high).
Herzog, a l t e r his speech, lashed
o u t at B u t t o n ' s record and called
him " i r r e s p o n s i b l e " . "What is his
record? . . .Well I'll tell y o u . . . he
is a b s e n t ;i()% of t h e time . . . a n d
last O c t o b e r 16-November 7 of 41
roll calls, he voted on only 12 . . .
Was he a t t e n d i n g t o the needs of
his c o n s t i t u e n t s ? - N o . "
B u t t o n lashed b a c k : "I have
never been in Albany when my
vote in Washington would be
i m p o r t a n t . " He claimed to have
m a d e 8 6 % of t h e roll calls this
session.
Herzog
endorsed
Hubert
H u m p h r e y for t h e Presidency
because
he believes in
the
principles of the Democratic Party
and t h e D e m o c r a t i c platform.
Herzog indicated t h a t he has no
plans t o influence local politics if
elected . . . " m y job is n o t to
govern A l b a n y . "
In
summing
up
his
qualifications, Herzog said that he
realized that he d o e s n ' t have all
the answers to the p r o b l e m s b u t
he does have new, specific ideas.
T h e forum was co-sponsored by
the Ecumenial Council for the
Continuing
Education
of
the
clergy a n d the College of General
Studies at Albany State. A b o u t
125 clergy of all faiths a t t e n d e d
Wednesday's forum.
Upon
presentation
of an
approved
schedule card,
the
Housing Office will issue a meal
pass to the C a m p u s Center o r
Brubacher Snack Bar.
growth
t o e x t e n d t h e goals of
u n i t y , identity and excellence set
forth in t h e Muster Plan of 1964.
The prioritiesof growth specify
the n a t u r e , quality a n d scope of
work remaining t o be c o m p l e t e d
on missions already formulated.
T h e second e m p h a s i s of the
revision
is placed
upon
the
priorities
of change
t h a t have
taken form from swiftly changing
h u m a n values and behavior as well
as alterations in m a n ' s physical
enviornment.
A p r o c e d u r e has been set up for
s t u d e n t s w h o c a n n o t go back t o
t h e c o n t r a c t lunch r o o m s for
lunch.
T h e meal pass is w o r t h 80 cents
for lunch and $ 1 . 2 5 for dinner.
When the s t u d e n t presents a meal
pass he must also present his meal
card.
C o m m u t i n g s t u d e n t s may m a k e
arrangements for either of t h e
meal plans available t o resident
s t u d e n t s t h r o u g h t h e Housing
Office.
Please direct all q u e s t i o n s t o
the c a m p u s Housing Office.
Some priorities of change, such
as t h e rising aspirations of our
disadvantaged p o p u l a t i o n or the
impacts of science and technology
upon society, are already clear,
according t o the Chancellor.
Chancellor Gould pointed o u t
that priorities of change guarantee
continuous
renewal
of
the
University. They
assure
new
relationships
between
Ihe
institution and t h e society il
serves,
they
encourage
adaptiveness
in teaching
and
research;
they
combi ne
scholarship with social concern to
the end that s t u d e n t s may easily
see their furture role of leadership
and responsibility.
Policy s t a t e m e n t s will be dealt
with in a later issue of the ASP.
SKI INSTRUCTORS
Weekend positions a v a i l a b l e
for s k i e r s t o i n s t r u c t high
.school b o y s a n d g i r l s . Prior
i n s tructiun e x p e r i e n c e
not
ruqu irod.
Good
compensation. Excellent ski facilities.
SHAKER VILLAGE
SKI G R O U P
Write or C a l l :
S h a k e r Road*, New L e b a n o n ,
N.Y. Lebanon Springs (N.Y.)
7-1255
MR.HOTDOG
WILL
DELIVER
STARTING
TO
THE
SUNDAY
OLD
OCTOBER
AND
NEW
13th
CAMPUS
1968
DELIVERIES
-10:30pm
12midnight
DAILY 7:30 pm
9 pm
SUNDAY 4:30 pm
6 p m - •7:30 pm
12midnight
9 pm
10:30 pm
MR HOT DOG'S FAMOUS " A L L BEEF HOT DOGS" *
iHi-
won!•
25?
ROAST BEEF SANDWICH ON A roAb-n u , L S A M L ROLL
79?
KOSHER STYLE CORNED BEEF SANDWICH ON RYE OR ROLL
79?
HOT PASTRAMI SANDWICH ON RYL OR ROLL
79?
1/4 POUND GIANT " A L L BEEF" HAMBURGERS ON .OASTLO ROLL
55?
I IA POUND GIANT " A L L BEEF" CHEESEBURGERS ON TOASTEU ROLL
65?
FRIED HADDOCK FISH SANDWICH
49?
TUNA FISH SANDWICH
49?
THICK SHAKES
39?
VANILLA - CHOCOLA 1 L - STRAWUERRY
SODA - MILK
20?
POTATO CHIPS
15?
MINIMUM ORDER DELIVERED $1.00
call 463-4619 for fast service
•
A L B A N Y S T U D E N T PRBgg
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Europeans
Pa»6
Graduate Students
To Vote Next Week
Fear Wallace
}i
L O N D O N ( U P I ) - T h e assass i n a t i o n of S e n . R o b e r t F .
K e n n e d y dulled m u c h of Europe's
interest in t h e U.S.
presidential c a m p a i g n , b u t as
election d a y a p p r o a c h e s s o m e
interest
is
being
revived,
largely o u t of a p p r e h e n s i o n .
M o s t E u r o p e a n s find
little
difference b e t w e e n D e m o c r a t i c
c a n d i d a t e H u b e r t H. H u m p h r e y
a n d G O P s t a n d a r d - b e a r e r Richard M. N i x o n , b u t have definite
o p i n i o n s o n t h e c a n d i d a c y of
former Gov. George Wallace of
Alabama
and his
American
I n d e p e n d e n t Party.
F r o m R o m e t o S t o c k h o l m and
Moscow t o L o n d o n , n e w s p a p e r s
and
private
citizens
alike
express mostly fear a t Wallace's c a m p a i g n .
When Wallace a n n o u n c e d that
G e n . Curtis LeMay w o u l d be his
vice presidential r u n n i n g m a t e ,
European
newspapers
voiced
dismay.
SDS Forms
Draft Council
A student
draft
counseling
service is o n e major project of t h e
recently
formed
Anti-draft
C o m m i t t e e of t h e S t u d e n t s for a
D e m o c r a t i c S o c i e t y , a c c o r d i n g to
R i c h a r d Evans, a junior a t the
University and c h a i r m a n of the
committee,
at a m e e t i n g on
O c t o b e r 7.
Evans s t a t e d t h a t " T h e p u r p o s e
of t h e c o m m i t t e e is t o a c q u a i n t
the s t u d e n t s with their rights
u n d e r t h e present Sclec live
Service A c t , and t o inform them
h o w t o use t h e law t o r e m a i n o u t
of t h e d r a f t , " A n o t h e r a i m of t h e
group
is
to gain
increased
c o m m u n i t y s u p p o r t against the
draft.
T h e c o m m i t t e e plans t o train
University
s t u d e n t s as
draft
counselors w h o will w o r k in
conjunction
with t h e existing
faculty draft counseling service
which is headed by J o h n Riley of
t h e English Dept.
The
on-campus
counseling
service
will he e x p a n d e d
to
include o p e n forums with guest
speakers w h o will present farious
aspects of t h e draft. Ramifications
of t h e latter will assume t h e form
of individual d o r m lectures similar
t o t h e o n e already presented by
Dr. Riley at Colonial Quad.
Voting to ratify a c o n s t i t u t i o n
establishing a G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t
Association
will be e x t e n d e d
t h r o u g h O c t o b e r 1 8 t h in o r d e r t o
a l l o w all interested
graduate
s t u d e n t s t o have an o p p o r t u n i t y
t o vote.
Copies of t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n have
been distributed t h r o u g h o u t t h e
c a m p u s and are available at t h e
I n f o r m a t i o n Desk in t h e C a m p u s
Center wherer t h e ballots m a y be
cast.
Photo by S t m n i e n
T h e c o n s t i t u t i o n creates an
S E M I - F I N A L I S T S W E R E S E L E C T E D for t h e H o m e c o m i n g Q u e e n organization which will r e p r e s e n t
c o n t e s t . T h e Q u e e n , selected T h u r s d a y , will be a n n o u n c e d tonight the graduate s t u d e n t s o n this
during i n t e r m i s s i o n a t t h e c o n c e r t . T h e y are left t o right: Nancy c a m p u s . Along these lines, a
Broderick, R o s e m a r y Cania, G e r a l d i n e J a r a c z , N e v a n n e Marthens, Mary questionairre is being c o n s t r u c t e d
Mencer, Gail P a n t l e y , F r a n c i n c Preisner, Susan Reveile, J o a n Waehna. to inventory those interests and
activities of concern to g r a d u a t e
s t u d e n t s and will be distributed in
a week. One form of achieving t h e
goals of graduate s t u d e n t s will be
by participating in t h e decision
making process of the University.
Specifically, invitation has been
extended
to
the
Graduate
Apollo Astronauts
Orbit for Eleven Days
By C H A R L E S E. T A Y L O R
CAPE
KENNEDY
(UPI)T h e c o u n t d o w n for Apollo 7, t h e
three-man,
11-day
test
of
America's m o o n s h i p , entered its
critical
last
hours
"like
a
c h a r m " Thursday with weather
remaining t h e o n l y
question
m a r k for F r i d a y ' s l a u n c h .
Dr. Wehrner Von Vraun, head
of S a t u r n r o c k e t d e v e l o p m e n t ,
said a s t r o n a u t s Walter Schirra,
D o n n Eisele a n d Walter Cunningham w e r e " i n a highly
c o n f i d e n t frame of m i n d , eager
to g o . "
T h e a s t r o n a u t s t o o k a last
o p p o r t u n i t y t o h o n e their skills
T h u r s d a y b y s p e n d i n g a b o u t an
h o u r in a s i m u l a t e d spacecraft
a n d then rested t h e r e m a i n d e r
of t h e d a y . T h e y w e r e e x p e c t e d
to go t o bed a b o u t 10 p . m .
T h e y were t o b e a w a k e n e d at
6 a.m. F r i d a y t o p r e p a r e for t h e
flight.
" I have never a t t e n d e d a
p r e p a r a t i o n for a space vehicle
t h a t has gone as s m o o t h l y as
has this A p o l l o 7 , " said V o n
Braun.
The
nation's
first
manned
venture into s p a c e in nearly t w o
years was s c h e d u l e d t o roar
aloft a t o p a 2 2 - s t o r y S a t u r n I B
r o c k e t a t 11 a.m. E D T .
Weather A F a c t o r
T h e w e a t h e r , h e r e t o f o r e expected to be good for t h e
S T u d e n t Steering C o m m i t t e e to
n o m i n a t e , in t h e interim, graduate
s t u d e n t delegates to serve as
m e m b e r s of several committees of
the S t u d e n t Affairs Council.
A n y g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t who is
interested in serving in such a
c a p a c i t y s h o u l d c o n t a c t Michael
A. F e i t , C h a i r m a n of t h e Graduate
Student
Steering
Committee
Pierce Hall, 4 7 2 - 7 7 8 8 .
There
is a bulletin
board
reserved
for g r a d u a t e student
notices across from t h e coat cheek
r o o m in t h e C a m p u s Center.
A n n o u n c e m e n t s of interest to
graduate
s t u d e t n s will appear
there.
T h e Steering C o m m i t t e e calls
upon all g r a d u a t e students to
d e m o n s t r a t e their concern for
themselves and t h e University by
voting
t o create a Graduate
S t u d e t n A s s o c i a t i o n which can be
responsibe t o their needs.
The Yellow-Billed Wordpicker
doesn't write words.
It helps you remember them.
Officials said u n m a n n i n g t h e
cehicle
after
the astronauts
were settled into it for flight
would m e a n a delay of at least
4 8 h o u r s in t h e s h o t .
It will be t h e last spaceflight
for
Schirra,
t h e 45-year-old
veteran of Mercury and Gemini
s h o t s , and t h e first for Eisele,
38, and C u n n i n g h a m , 3 6 .
Must Prove Safety
T h e object of t h e a m b i t i o u s
Apollo inaugural is t o prove t h a t
the 16-ton m o o n s h i p — t h e
world's heaviest m a n n e d spacecraft—is safe for a 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 mile
r o u n d trip t o t h e m o o n .
Schedules
Campus Center Coatcheck
T o d a y and M o n d a y .
THE PETER, PAUL and M A R Y
CONCERT IS C A N C E L L E D
T h e launch of Apollo 7 will
c o m e a l m o s t 2 0 m o n t h s after
the ill-fated Apollo 1 ship was t o
have
started
manned
flight
testing.
YFT
ONE DROP
FRESHENS
BREATH
INSrANILY'
Sigma Phi Sigma
Invites
All-Uniuersity Women
To An Informal
Open Party
Where, Van Corthndt Hall
When: Tuesday Oct. 15
7.-30 - 9 ; 00
.
See You There I
00Ro*if
&
*
*
Dance To 2 Top Hands Nitely
Legal
Alcoholic Bev. Served
Thurs. Nite - Ladies Free!
Binaca
Thurs. - Sat. 8:00 pm - 3 am
Admission
$J.5()
LBJ Gives Up Fight
Warren Continues In SC
WASHINGTON
(UPI)-President J o h n s o n gave u p t h e fight
T h u r s d a y t o n a m e a n e w chief
justice to succeed Karl Warren
before he leaves Lhe White
House.
Eight d a y s after he w i t h d r e w
his a p p o i n t m e n t of Justice Abe
F o r t a s lor t h e j o b in t h e face of
a Republican-led filibuster, t h e
President
issued a s t a t e m e n t
saying he would n o t s u b m i t
another
nomination
to
the
Senate.
He said it would be bust if t h e
77-year-old
Warren defer his
r e t i r e m e n t plans and remain on
the high c o u r t " u n t i l e m o t i o n a lism
subsides,
reason
and
fairness prevail."
This was an obvious reference
to
the Senate's
refusal
to
confirm F o r t a s , his old friend
and c o n f i d a n t , to be Warren's
successor. T h e President withdrew t h e n o m i n a t i o n at F o r t a s '
request, as well as t h a t of
a n o t h e r friend, Federal J u d g e
Homer T h o r n b e r r y of T e x a s , to
b e c o m e an associate justice in
F o r t a s ' place.
Wallace Speaks
Psycadelic World Of
MINI-
P h o t o bv D . Y o u n g
W A L T E R P. L A N C L E Y , R E P U B L I C A N C a n d i d a t e for S t a t e S e n a t o r
s t a t e d his need of s t u d e n t s u p p o r t in t h e local issues.
In asking to retire, Warren
noted he would stay on as chief
justice until his successor was
c o n f i r m e d . T h e Senate rebuff t o
F o r t a s left b o t h on t h e S u p r e m e
C o u r t in their usual seats when)
the iuslices o u e n e d the c o u r t ' s
Spring S e m e s t e r 6 9
Will be d i s t r i b u t e d in
A movie, c o n c e r n e d with tl
Boston Draft Resistance G r o u p
was viewed by t h e c o m m i t t e e at
the
meeting.
Information
pertaining t o the draft, HUch as
material on Canadian immigration
laws, and draft d e f e r m e n t s , wan
being m a d e available by the
committee
snag for the s t a r t of the 4million mile earth orbital test
for later flights t o t h e m o o n .
" T h e w e a t h e r is a little bit of
a q i e s t o p m m a r k , " said Von
Braun. Heavy rain was falling
o n t h e s p a c e p o r t as he spoke to
newsmen.
" T h e predictions are good at
the m o m e n t b u t there will be
s o m e s h o w e r activity in t h e
m o r n i n g . Should t h e s h o w e r
s i t u a t i o n indicate t h a t winds
prior t o launch m a y increase
b e y o n d t h e magic 18 k n o t s (21
miles per h o u r ) figure, it m a y
be necessary for t h e crew t o
leave t h e s p a c e c r a f t . "
O'Dwyer To Lure Unionmen;
Fears Wallace's Strength
The SfPPb Wordpicker is a marking pen
that pinpoints names, gleans words, and
highlights them all in bright yellow. You don't
use it to write down the words you have to
remember. You use it to write over them.
The Yellow-Billed Wordpicker.
It reminds you how smart you should be.
And for 49c, you shouldn't have to be
*y*b&
reminded to buy one.
Con't from p. 1
Flyers
d i s l r 11> u t e d
by
• ;i n l i • W u l l a c e
vu I u n l e e r s
p r o n o u n c e d t h e basis of their
a t t a c k ' " l i d you want Wallace to
di> for A m e n t a wh.it In- lias d u n e
for A l a b a m a ? "
Across t h e
s t r e e t , t h e llrolhei-s rally was
being addressed hy D e m o c r a t i c
•> e n a I o r i a I en nd i d a I c
Pa u I
O'Dwyer
Attacking
Wallace,
O'Dwyer
declared. " T h i s is n o t LJUIIIU, t o be
the image of o u r state t h r o u g h o u t
the United States n n d l h u w o i i d "
A n o t h e r group participating in
the event called themselves t h e
" H i p p i e s for Wallace." This g r o u p
explained t h a t Wallace's c o n t e m p t
for
the
hippie
movement
p r o m p t e d I h e m to feign s u p p o r t
of his policies. In this m a n n e r ,
they h o p e to i n t i m i d a t e tile bird
party c a n d i d a t e .
T h e t u r n o u t at t h e Capitol,
which was e s t i m a t e d at four t o
five
thousand
p e r s o n , was
impressive, t h e Wallace s u p p o r t
was n o t .
ONE
: ;. ;•>}-.. .-._
:-i-:~i=
h e sstonnpH
t o p p e d snh™t
h o r t of
«f calling
,.«iu«„ hu i:m
_
"soft o n W a l l a c e " in answering
a reporter's question.
T h e c a n d i d a t e said Javits had
c o m e o u t in o p p o s i t i o n t o t h e
former A l a b a m a governor b u t
n o t in a n y place w h e r e it would
have a n y effect o n Wallace's
strength
among
blue
collar
w o r k e r s . He cited J a v i t s ' failure
t o say a n y t h i n g a b o u t Wallace
Wednesday w h e n he s p o k e t o
the iron w o r k e r s .
O ' D w y e r said Javits' s u p p o r t
a m o n g labor cam* from u n i o n
leaders w h o were " n o t wrestling with this p r o b l e m " of Wallace, while O ' D w y e r ' s s u p p o r t
came from t h e " r a n k and file."
An aide of O ' D w y e r said a
m e e t*i :n_gV ^w.iutuh ..-•—
u n i o n leaders r e p resenting 6 0 locals resulted in
the decision t o hold t h e g a r m e n t
c e n t e r rally.
He said a n o t h e r rally of labor
men
would
be
held
next
Wednesday a t M a n h a t t a n Center a t w h i c h further plans for
developing s u p p o r t a m o n g b l u e
collar w o r k e r s will b e m a d e
a n d plans for t h e g a r m e n t center rally m a d e final.
O ' D w y e r said he w a s m a k i n g
t h e effort t o win labor votes
away from Wallace because if
the campaign polls are c o r r e c t
and t h e election were held t o d a y , Wallace would get 2 million votes in New York S t a t e ,
or 2 5 per c e n t of t h e t o t a l .
new t e r m o n Monday.
J o h n s o n expressed regret t h a t
the filibuster had prevented t h e
Senate
from
voting o n his
nominees.
" I n o r d i n a r y times, I would
feel it my d u t y n o w to send
a n o t h e r n a m e to t h e Senate for
this high ofHce. [shall n o t d o so
n o w , " he said.
Hong Kong Flu
In New York;
No Vaeine Yet
NEW Y O R K ( U P I )
This
year's version of t h e Asian flu
has arrived in New York, t h e
city
health
department
said
Thursday.
T h e d e p a r t m e n t said it had
diagnosed four cases of t h e
" H o n g Kong flu" so called because it appears to have originated in t h a t British crown col
ony on t h e China coast. T h e
d e p a r t m e n t said p h a r m e e u t i c a l
houses are working on a vaccine for t h e flu b u t as yet n o n e
has been developed.
Hong Kong flu, t h e department said, runs its course in
a b o u t five days.
Dr. Don (.'on well, assistant
health c o m m i s s i o n e r , said t w o
of t h e p a t i e n t s were health dep a r t m e n t e m p l o y e s who h a d
traveled a b r o a d , o n e of t h e m
to Hong Kong. A n o t h e r case involved a man w h o walked in
off t h e street and asked tin- dep a r t m e n t ' s bureau of laboratories w h a t w a s ' w r o n g with him.
T h e fourth case was that of
a p a t i e n t whose virus specimen
had been sent in by a hospital.
English Meeting
A s t u d e n t c o m m i t t e e to advise
the C h a i r m a n
of t h e English
D e p a r t m e n t o n policy is t o be
elected by t h e s t u d e n t s in the
D e p a r t m e n t . A meeting of al!
English
majors
and
graduate
s t u d e n t s is to b
•M in the
:i 0 0 on
Assembly
Room
Monday October
II
hi.
!h«'
purpose
nl'
forming
the
committee
The
Student
Advisory
C o m m i t t e e in English will be
charged
with
advising
the
D e p a r t m e n t chairman on such
matters as c u r r i c u l u m , t e n u r e , and
p r o m o t i o n , and general academic
policy.
LAST
TIME
Auditions For
Take full advantage of shape. Hang poster on side.
Green, black, purple, blue, orange, red and white.
20"x28"
Redecorate where you
meditate, translate,
c o n j u g a t e . Send for
your set today.
G.B. CO.. INC., ROCH..
KMtdlQStQIZ
GENESEE BEER POSTERS, P. O. BOX 701, ROCHESTER, NEW YORK 14603
Enclosed is $..
All-University
Talent Show
Sunday 7-9 In Assembly Hall
-
NEW Y O R K (rtlPIV—
U P I ) - DpmnDemocratic senatorial c a n d i d a t e Paul
O'Dwyer announced Thursday
h e will m a k e a major effort t o
lure b l u e collar w o r k e r s away
from third p a r t y presidential
c a n d i d a t e George Wallace alt h o u g h t h e t w o are n o t c o m p e t ing against each o t h e r .
T h e first event will be a mass
rally of u n i o n m e m b e r s to be
held in t h e g a r m e n t district of
M a n h a t t a n a t n o o n , Oct. 2 1 , t h e
day Wallace has scheduled a
rally
in
Madison
Square
Garden,
In a n n o u n c i n g his campaign
a m o n g u n i o n m e n against Wallace, O ' D w y e r
criticized his
Senate rival, Reiublican incumb e n t J a c o b K. Javits, although
. lor
sots of Psychedelic Bear Posters at $1.00 per set,
NAM!
en r
ADDRESS
srnn.
_
_ .
:v„ZiP.\
NY.
ALBANY STUDENT PRBSl
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FCC Admonishes NBC
For Quiz Show Fraud
'bdUoon' is
J:
a to* Of
""j
«
isseKs
fi*A,
^
Sa-
lt
°' &5°
We want a natural mood land look, like before...Only Geomet
Whether the white barriers should be taken
down or not is not the basic issue behind the
controversy
concerning
the gates about
the
perimeter road. The principle under examination is
whether the human element on this campus is
actually being recognized by the physical plan of
autos.
If this method is not fully successful, then, the
road could be paved with built in bumps so the
vehicles would have no choice but to drive slowly.
Last year when the attempts to keep cars out of
the residence areas failed, it was threatened that
the University.
cars would have to be towed away since they were
Theoretically the campus was to be reserved for
people and no vehicles were to be allowed to
interfer with the pedestrian. Unfortunately, * his
view is still held by some on this campus. These
people sincerely think that this system is designed
for the human clement, but it is not. Too many of
the
present
plan's
adherents
have
not
acknowledged that the age of the automobile and
of general affluence has affected the University as
well as the American society.
The automobile has become an integral part of
life to the human clement on this campus, as it has
to the general public. To deny its existence is to
deny the person what he feels is natural. The
physical plan, then, is demanding that the people
on this campus do the unnatural.
By prohibiting students from bringing llicircars
near their living areas, the physical plan, that is
presently being adhered to, is artificially restricting
the student. We do nut feel there is any theoretical
support for the barriers that were erected about
Oct.
2 8 , 1968
New
Developments in the Measurement
of Meaning Oct. 28, 1968: New
Developments in the Measurement
of Meaning, Prof. Charles Osgood,
Institute for Communications
Research, University of Illinois, 3
pm, Library, LR-3.
Nov. 21, 1968: Adaptation
Level Theory, A Study of Six
Perceptual Continua, Prof. Viktor
Sarris, University of Dusseldorf, 3
pm, Library, LR-1.
blocking the fire lanes. The cars blocked the fire
lanes because the obvious place to park (on the
Due to the fact many people
have requested time for auditions,
and communications concerning
the original auditions were
misleading, another night of
auditions have been sched has
been scheduled. They will be held
in the Assembly Hall on Sunday,
October 13, from 7-9 pm.
stones) was blocked off. Automobiles should be
allowed to park on the pebbles as they arc south
of the Joseph Henry (Physics) and Chemistry
Buildings. Because there is room to park some 100
automobiles around each quad, and because of the
nature of student parking, there would be little
chance of double parking. The fire lanes would be
clear and emergency vehicles could get to the
buildings.
If the parking areas about the quads were
cleared every night by ticketing the parked (not
standing) cars in the early hours of the morning,
then the students would use the parking lots.
There are positons open for
freshmen and sophomore resident
and non-resident students on
LAAC Judicial
Committee.
Applications should include name,
address, class year, telephone
number, and reason for applying
and sent to Lori Post, Box 3032,
Ten Eyck, no later than October
18.
Students are invited to attend
the varsity debate on October 22
at 7:30 in HU 355 on the national
t o p i c . (Resolved: that the
executive control of foreign
policy should be significantly
curtailed.)
"What's It All About?" a
discussion for freshmen about
what it is to be "involved" will be
held in the State Quad Flag Room
at 8 P.M., Monday, October . .,
The program is co-sponsored by
the Church of the University
Community
and Newman
Association.
The following committees of
the Student Affairs Council have
o p e n i n g s for undergraduates:
Financial Aids (1); Student
Conduct (1); Student Government
and Organizations (2); Student
Residences (1); International
Students (1—International).
Also Task Forces for further
study of the recommendations
made
in
Patterns
in
Undergraduate Education Report
are being formed. Students are
needed to serve on the following
task forces: Experimental College;
Calendar (changes or reforms);
Instruction
(new instruction
techniques); Academic Reform.
Please
note that "The
Umbrellas of Cherbourg" will be
presented Sunday, October 13 at
7 P.M. and 9 P.M.
Seniors and Graduate Students.
who expect
to c o m p l e t e
requirements in January 1969,
must file an application for degree
in the office of the Registrar, not
later than Friday, October 18,
1968.
SELF NOMINATION FORMS
AVAILABLE AT CC INFO DESK
FOR CENTRAL COUNCIL AND
LAAC. Positions open: STATE
QUAD (2 to Council, 1 to
LAAC); ALUMNI QUAD (2 to
Council, 3 to LAAC); DUTCH
QUAD
(1 t o
Council);
COMMUTERS (2 to Council, I to
LAAC).
The students who would be using the parking
area about the quads then would either be using
his car again that day or picking up or leaving off
someone or something. Ai no time do we see over
a hundred vehicles parked about the quads (except
during the period of moving in to the dorms).
Albany Student Press is published (wot times a week bv the
TLUedASpAoffice't,iUn . W ^ " " ^ ° f "™ Y o ^ a A C °
Washington Ave'nn
'" R ° r ° m 3 8 2 " r l h c C a m P u s Center «' I 4 0 "
niKh of n l he
' !S X " r T 7 " 1 2 l ' m - S ^ a y Hut. Thursday
the campus.
A substitute would be needed for the pebbles,
However, there is a valid argument that if cars
were allowed, the chances of a person being hurt
by an automobile would be probable. Most all
accidents would be the result of speeding on the
lire lanes. Yet, this danger could be easily reduced
to negligible proportions if the roads that form
straight connections between two points of the
Perimeter Road could be blocked off at both ends
since the cars would sink into the mud during the
spring. Also, there might be a need for more
security at night, but these problems are minimal
and not serious obstacles lo overcome.
We sec no reason lor the gates to have been
erected except for the fact that a philosophy alien
to human nature has beon the policy concerning
the physical plan of the campus. Because of this
so through traffic could not pass. The right angle
policy, the student is faced with an unnecessary
tinns on (lie- fire lanes would aid this technique of
inconvenience. It is fesible and practical that the
Mocking straight thoroughfares to slow down the
barriers come down.
atiasgswfsw
John Cromie
Editor-in-Chief
News Editor
Jill I'aznili
Arts Editor
Gary Gelt
Sportn Editor
Tom Nixon
Technical Editor
David Scherer
UPI Wire Editor
Tim Keeley
Associate News Editor
Ira Wolf man
Assistunt Sports Editor
Jim Win&low
Assistant Arts Editor
Paula Camardella
Photography Editor
Lurry DeYoung
Business Manager
Philip Franchini
Advertising Manager
Daniel Fox man
Circulation Editor
Nancy Pierson
Executive Editors
Margaret Dunlap, Sara Kitlsley, Linda llerdan
Assistant Editors
Jan ie Samuels and Sandy Porter
subject to "mting The A h b ° l '™ , e , d , 0 5 0 ° w < > ^ and are
responsibility f)r
, . „ „ ! . I h a n y S l l " l e n , | , r c s s assumes no
CX res d
|communi""to,aa„ S T n
P f
'« Hi columns and
^ i v W i ^ F m ^ hySA a x , X p r C S S ' 0 n s d " " 0 | necessarily reflect its
Langley Urges Student Support
Walter P. Langley, Republican
Candidate for State Senator from
the fortieth Senatorial District,
s p e a k i n g at a University
conference Monday sponsored by
the Forum of Politics, stated his
belief in the necessity of student
support in the local issues.
In his forty-five minute speech,
Langley criticized his opponent,
Julian B. Erway, on his practices
and his disregard for civil duty.
One of Langley's major goals is
to " o v e r c o m e fear in the
backwoods, " by teaching the
voters to vote.
A "tremendous amount of
voter registration" has Lo be done,
said Langley, "but first the fear
must be eliminated."
Fear, Langley charged, arising
from the forty-seven-year reign of
the Democrats in Albany pervades
the educational system, police and
fire departments, social groups
and
even
t h e local Bur
Association.
Langley, the candidate from
Albany and Schoharie Counties,
believes the voter is afraid to vote
Republican, thus the lack of local
GOP support.
His central issue now is "not
what kind of representation the
voters want, but do they want
representation?"
Langley
pronounced the local Democratic
officials as not working for the
people.
He proposed to reduce real
p r o p e r t y t a x e s by ending
unfairness in distribution of state
aid and also by making the state
pay real property taxes.
Campaigning actively for
several months, the GOP hopeful
endorses the lowering of the
twenty-one-yeur-old voting age.
He is presently counsel for the
Republican Minority, Albany
County Legislature and is a tax
attorney in the Albany law firm,
Langley and Kinum.
Formerly, Langley has been
instrumental in improving Albany
housing and in enforcing Multiple
Residence Laws, in working for
the outlawing of the "five-dollar
vote" or the buying of votes.
Speaking of Albany politics in
general, Langley viewed that the
city machine has somewhat
improved but there is still "much
to be cleaned up."
When the NAACP wished for
the use of voting machines in an
attempt to instruct the people in
voting p r o c e d u r e , the city
obstructed the request.
L a n g l e y , running for the
second-highest local office, noted
that he needs 18,005 votes to win
against Erlay, the present State
Senator.
He supports Nixon as the GOP
Presidential candidate, but feels
that Governor Rockerfeller would
"make the best president."
Referring to himself
* a
"moderate, progressive, modern
Republican,"Langley believes the
State Senate is where he can best
help the people, by not being
caught up in the local machine,
nor by getting too far from the
voters.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Federal Communications Commission accused the National
Broadcasting Co. Thursday of
misleading the public by providing guest celebrities on two
television
quiz
shows the
questions—and in some cases
the
answers—prior
to the
programs.
This was the second time in a
month that the commission had
raped the knuckles of NBC for
alleged failure to maintain its
responsibilities to the public.
This time, the admonition had
teeth in it.
The commission told NBC its
"lax procedures" in the conduct
of the network quiz show,
"Hollywood Squares" and the
' PDQ" program shown only on
five NBC-owned stations, would
be considered during its application for renewal of the license
for KN BC-T V, Los Angeles,
rw
In that decision, Commissioner Nicholas Johnson dissented
and suggested the commission
go much farther and consider
the breah of public responsibility in connection with the
pending application for KNBC's
license renewal..
"PDQ" is produced under the
supervision of KNBC. It is also
carried on NBC's four other
wholly-owned stations in Washington, D.C., Chicago, Cleveland
and New York City.
Gun Act Passed
By ANN WOOD
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Nearly five years after President
John F. Kennedy was assassinated with a mail-order rifle,
Congress Thursday approved a
virtually total ban on interstate
shipment of guns and ammunition.
The compromise bill, expanding an earlier restriction on
pistols to cover rifles, shotguns
and ammunition, was given
final passage by the House and
sent to President Johnson for
his signature.
i
Last Sept. 13, the FCC
chastized NBC for not informing
Expressing need for student its viewers that network newsvolunteers, Langley urged further caster Chet Huntley had an
student support
for 1 ocal interest in the meat industry.
c a n d i d a t e s , just as youth The admonition came after
supported Eugen McCarthy's bid Huntley broadcast radio editorfor the Presidential candidacy.
ials against the so-called clean
.flieat bill in Congress.
Communications
was the mass refusal, after World
War II, of Asian and African
nations to conLinue to submit to
the humiliation and exploitation
To the Editor,
After a two year absence, 1 of European colonialism. The
again feel it necessary to write Vietnam War of today has its
your distinguished newspaper. I origins in this revolutionary
feel that I must take exception to movement to overthrow Western
your editorial of last Friday (Oct. domination of the Third World.
It is a paradox of human nature
•1) concerning "Locked Doors,"
There is one excellent reason that there is no reactionary like
why the women's dorms should yesterday's revolutionary. The
be locked at night and it is a increasingly counterrevolutionary
four-letter-word: rape, Certainly, nature of the Dulles-Rusk foreign
Mr. Cromie, non-residents wander policy we have adoptetl is a
about the men's dorms after hours reflection of this paradox. One of
with no complaints. I will be the our greatest miscalculations is the
first to agree with thath. But then, belief that the forces that have the
when is the last time you most of lose by re-distribution of
remember someone being raped in resources can somehow be urged
to
''guide"
revolutionary
a men's dorm??
If the women's dorms were development. Such a "guided
open all night, it would be an revolution" is no revolution at all,
open invitation to all rapists. It is but, at. best, a grudging, minimal
certainly im possible to have response to conditions which call
security guards at all the entrances for radical change. Proof of this is
to all the women's dorms, despite our pa t h e tically unsuccessful
the wonderful security force we a t t e m p t to get the Saigon
government lo implement land
have here at KUNYA.
You say "The women can lock reform while we fight their battle
their suite doors and remain against I he truly revolutionary
secure." True. Bui let's not forces of South Vietnam. It is
inconvenience Llie.se poor girls any significant that the government of
more than possible. What about South Vietnam has become even
the girl who prefers the quiet of a m o r e repressive and less
lounge to study in late at night? responsive to the needs of its
Or the girl who has a considerable people as it has been shored up
amount of typing to do and seeks and -strengthened by the foreign
a place outside her suite where m ili tary intervention of the
sxhe will not disturb her sleeping United States.
Our government has repeatedly
suiteniates? Would any girl feel
"secure" outside her suite if she defended its military action in
knew there might be men Vietnam as necessary to guarantee
security from communism lo the
wandering about her dorm?
1 thus ask you to reconsider developing nations fo the world.
We seem unable to understand
your position concerning the
that the paramount need of the
"locked doors."
people of these developing
Bruce Rose
countries may not be security
from communism.
What they need--and what we
are unable or unwilling to help
them
achieve--is security from the
To the Editor of the ASP:
The United States of America oppressive conditions of gross
was
f o u n d e d
o n maldistribution of wealtti which
revolution-violent revolution. The invite internal revolution and
s u c c e s s fo the American communist infiltration.
Secretary of Stale Rusk tells us
Revolution has had a profound
by f u l f i l l i n g
our
effect on the history of human t h a t
society, holding out hope to the "commitment" In Vietnam, we
oppressed of the world that they have instilled confidence in the
of ail t h e
can effectively
resist their g o v e r n m e n t s
oppressors, even against what non-communist nations of Asia,
appear to be overwhelming odds. Africa and Latin America, that we
The
most
w i d e s p r e a d will support them against any
manifestation of this phenomenon c o m m u n i s t ' ! n spired "war of
Lock Doors
national
liberation''
Unfortunately, that is exactly
what we have done and, in the
process, we have destroyed any
incentive they might otherwise
have to enact badly needed social
and economic reforms.
We have, in effect, told every
tyrannical oligarchy in the world
(hat, faced with a popular uprising
by
its desperate
and
undernourished masses, it need
only scream "COMMIE!" and
Uncle Sam will be there with the
napalm and Green Berets. And, at
the same time, we have told the
d o w n t r o d d e n and exploited
masses in these countries that
they can no longer look to the
land of Washington, Lincoln, and
John F. Kennedy for help in their
desperation. Is it truly so
surprising that they have turned
their faces toward Mao, Castro
and Ho Chi Minn?
DROP
.
rv
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tt> 7<»CAPT&/*Iepjy-. >i\ny Al-PAr* v'
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Revolution
I would like to receiue notices*0/ forthcoming exhibitions at
THE ART GALLERY
Name.
Address
IlfL
'
P«I«8
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Off Center
If
P«te9
The Right Way
by M.J. Rosenberg
}
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
by Robert Isrnian
It's hard to believe that only a learning only that the press was to attractive way out. Senator
merely troops in large numbers.
One of the few contemporary
little more than eight years ago blame. He spent six years backing Muskie is the one candidate who
The situation in Vietnam, for
our eyes were on Senators John every reactionary Republican in can talk to the students the way issues on which members of the example, demands a relatively
left and right can find agreement small number of highly skilled
Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey the country until he could, in
Kennedy and McCarthy did. He
as they fought for the Democratic A u g u s t , a c c e p t his party's shares our reservations on the war. is their common dislike of the soldiers. Thus our future need is
draft. It is not necessary to list for a small, efficient, professional
Presidential nomination in the nomination with inspiring talk
We can use him on the high
the faults of the system.
West Virginia primary campaign. about a poor Quaker boy who councils of our government.
army; precisely what a volunteer
The inherent economic and system would produce.
Kennedy had won an indecisive listened to faraway trains
So therefore I say, without
racial discrimination found in the
Wisconsin victory and it was West That's Dick Nixon.
The second question concerns
apology, that I will support
draft is widely known. I think the attracting enough men to military
Virginia that would make or break
Hubert Humphrey's record 's a
Hubert Humphrey. We all should.
a m o n g life. Unfortunately, the call of
his candidacy. Most of us were for good one and we all know it He is Humphrey should not be the p r e v a l e n t a t t i t u d e
A m e r i c a n s t o d a y is, t h e patriotism will not be sufficient;
Humphrey then; the crowd that responsible for the 1963 nuclear
scapegoat of those in our society
peace-time
draft
is
unsatisfactory,
took its cues from the "New York test ban treaty, for most of the
we have to make military careers
who oppose the present course. I
but we haven't been offered a financially enticing. This can be
Post," and Mrs. Franklin D. civil rights legislation of the past
too am sorry that he did not
workable
alternative.
Roosevelt. We wanted Humphrey twenty years, and for the peace
accomplished without
further
speak out against the war, and
However, in this election year a burden to the taxpayer.
and our "impossible dream" was program. He is a great progressive;
against the President.
candidate has provided us with an
of Adlai S t e v e n s o n . John The Peace Corps was his idea. He
But one should not blame
Since our army
design will
option, an all volunteer army.
Kennedy was for a later year, if is most vulnerable on the issue of
Hubert Humphrey. One should
be much smaller than it presently
Viet Nam but he has promised to
Two
major
questions
are
ever.
blame a system that makes it
is the money now being used to
The Kennedy campaign was a £ d , J h e bombing if he is elected
impossible for a man to be true to immediately raised vhen sue!" a house, clothe, train, feed, and
plan
is
proposed.
Will
it
endanger
blitz. Kennedy money poured That's a start.
his ideals and stay in office. One
even draftcould be applied to
The relative merits of the Vice
into hungry West Virginia to
should blame a system that allows our national security? How will increased salaries and benefits.
produce an effort with ail the Presidential candidates need not
only men with millions of dollars we get enough men to volunteer?
Before you get the impression
In responding to the first that the title of my column is a
glamour, excitement and style be discussed. Agnew is a buffoon;
to speak out without fear of the
that was the hallmark of that a bullnecked old line politician
financial
consequences. One query, we must examine the misnomer, let me make on thing
nature of future conflicts. It is crystal clear. Today, regardless of
family before the two murders. who is not qualified to be
should blame America.
The Kennedys jetted all over the governor of Maryland. Nixon:s
1 shall vote for Humphrey highly likely that we have seen its shortcomings, the Selective
the
end of conventional world Service System is the law. I
state while Hubert Humphrey choice of Agnew, to please Strom
because he is Humphrey; forgive
tried unsuccessfully to keep up in Thurmond, when he could have
me, I don't think that he is a wars. A n o t h e r war on a realize that I too am a pawn on
his battered campaign bus.
Fascist or a killer or any of the world-wide scale would almost General Hershey's chessboard;
had Lindsay, Hatfield or Percy
Humphrey was trying to prove shows that their is no "new
other things that the "New Left" certainly be a nuclear conflict
but I refuse to sympathize with
Future engagements such as those who flee to Canada, burn
that a poor man could be elected Nixon." Four years of the
so glibly calls him. And as for
the
war
in
Vietnam,
however,
are
President--wi t h o u t a plane, Nixon-Thurmond Administration
you; when you shout about how
draft cards, and lie down in front
without an organization and should be enough to make nuclear
y o u will never vote for real possibilities. For this type of of troop trains.
limited
war
a
well-trained,
without big money support. It holocaust appeal to some as an
Humphrey, do this one thing;
In fact, I hardily applaud when
specialized soldier is needed, not these people are dealt with to the
was no contest.
Consider the Alternative.
On Primary Night Hubert
full extent of the law.
H u m p h r e y walked into his
Any change in the system must
headquarters to announce that he
be made by democratic process.
was withdrawing from the race,
True, minority groups and the
His people wept as Humphrey
poor have long suffered under the
by JI M SMALL
spoke.
draft. We have sought a national
1 think that Hubert Humphrey
leader who would alter or abolish
learned something from that
victory, '.s the man I most fear in
With elections only one month
HHH has in the past and the selective service method of
experience. He learned how to away, the country is in an uproar. the office of President. He has
present shown his willingness to recruitment.
play the ball game and it is hardly The Albany area is being plagued
blazed a trail of propaganda across let the fringe groups on either side
Finally we have found a man
his fault if all of a sudden in 1.968 by the crime that all three of the this country, and the way he of center work with a minimum who has pledged to establish a
somebody changed the rules. For candidates are pledged to stop; works spells disaster to the of interference. In other words, he volunteer army. And who is the
a while the system worked for the "war" in Viet Nam is still
present liberal movement. He doesn 't discriminate and he has one who will make this change?
him. He became Vice-President grinding on; the people don't like
plays exquisitely on the emotions solid liberal background.
NIXON'S THE ONE!!
and for his term's duration he it.
of his audiences; rather like an
supported his President. After all,
accomplished
organist.
He
always
Quite a number of us are
was t h a t
n o t t h e way qualified to vote in this election,
gets the desired result.
Vice-Presidents
b e c a m e for many it is our first
The first time I heard what
Presidential nominees? For once opportunity to help select a
sounded like a policy statement
in his life he listened to the president for this country. Aside
from the man, was on a record.
cynical men who run American from the fact that we aren't
Perhpas some of you remember
politics and he won. Today represented by the candidate of
Simon and Garfunkel's "Seven
Hubert Humphrey is his party's our own choosing, we can be a
Under t h e leadership of the political situation in Albany
O'Clock News." It is on the
nominee for President.
Senior (
Donald "a miniature fascist state."
Parsley. Sage. Rosemary and D a r t m o u t h
significant force in the coming
He runs against a man who balloting.
"Chip" Etitzer, an organization
The group does mainly all of its
Thyme album.
always knew the score. Richard
Now we come to the man with has been created in the Albany work on weekends, specifically
George Wallace isn't even
Nixon has no conflict between his making an effort to appeal to the everything to lose and very little area which cites as its main Saturday mornings.
youthful
idealism and his c o l l e g e s t u d e n t s , or the to gain; Hubert H, Humphrey. He objective "the smashing of the
Every Saturday morning there
pragma ticism of today. Nixon
is a short general briefing meeting
"over-educated." That is good, has the worst problem, because of Albany Democratic machine."
started without illusions. He because he has nothing to sell to his subservient position to
Elitzer has taken a term leave at which the students are given an
began his career with red-baiting; most of us, What is a race like Johnson and Johnson's policy from his studies at Dartmouth to idea of what they are to do in the
he won a Senate seat by calling a this, if not a massive attempt to makers. He's damned regardless of "view Albany politics firsthand next few hours.
great
woman a Communist sell an individual to the people At his action.
and to have a part in its reform."
These meeting take place in
symphathizer.
lie grabbed any rate, he has a very small
This is the man that 1 am asking He hopes to use the techniques Lecture Room :i at 9:110 A.M. on
headlines by nailing Alger Hiss. following among the college you to vote for; not as the best that seemed to have been so the University Campus.
He, when exposed in 1952 as people of today, and I encourage man for the office (McCarthy was successful
for Sen. Eugene
On the University campus,
something
less lhan t h e all of you to make it even smaller belter in my opinion) but as the M c C a r t h y
in his p r i m a r y Elitzer has been working with the
personification of integrity, wept by stopping even your most lesser of several evils.
campaign.
Young Republicans, who also are
before the T.V. cameras and unconscious prejudicial action.s
Me was an active member of the working for the election of
If either Wallace or Nixon are
begged our forgivenes:
McCarthy campaign in California Proskin anil Button.
Richard Nixon, who I once elected, I am afraid of the
He ran for President and lost; heard touted as the man who can unnecessary violence that they and has voiced the hope thai
He has reiterated that there is a
Ihrough
student work he can help great need for anyone who is
learning nothing in the process, snatch defeat from the jaws of will cause by trying to slop the
"Bust
up
the
machine
for
good."
^[g^ra" for Governor and lost;
liberal movement.
interested in helping "smash the
Students throughout the area machine" to begin working now,
have been working with Elitzer as since less than four weeks are left
he concentrates mainly on door to until Election Day.
door canvassing.
All those interested are lo
Students from Russell Sage, contact Chip Elitzer at -177-017 1,
R.P. 1., Union and some from or Cathy Bertini, president of the
A 11) ii n y S t a t e have been Young Republicans, at 157-7871.
instrumental in his drive.
The group is non-partisan, and
By BUTCH McGUERTY
m e m b e r s of all p o l i t i c a l
It was announced by the h a v e
increased,
wilh a
The conflict of the year seems persuasions have been urged to
administration today that a water- corresponding worsening in taste.
lo be stemming from whether or join.
filled ditch will be constructed to
Food Service, also, has had to
According to Elitzer, the bulk
not Central Council will find Don
compliment the foxholes now suspend ils policy of basting its
uenetles newspaper, The Sheet of of the students working with him
surrounding Colonial Quad. No food with laxitive as part of anew
are former McCarthy, McGovern,
Call IV 9-2827
the Piece.
announcement
was made program to eliminate waste.
K e n n e d y , and
Rockefeller
concerning the function of these
or IV 2-0228
Central Council has denounced s u » P o r t e r s preparations.
North Korea; YAF has denounced
" " " e v e r . i n »" drive, the group
Zenger Hall still holds the
University toilet flushing record
Central C o u n c i l , SDS has has endorsed only Republicans,
Food
Service
surprised set last year. At that time a
denounced YAF's denouncement; the most notable of those being
everyone today by serving corn s e c o n d floor
toilet flushed
and the crew of the Pueblo don't Arnold Proskin, candidate for
without
peppers,
p e a s , continually
fo
Albany County District Attorney,
know it.
seventy-two
m u s h r o o m s , t o m a t o e s , etc. recorded hours,
and Dan Button, incumbent
(Three Suba Minimum)
thrown in.
Question: Whatever happened Republican Congressman from the
to
LAAC's
resolution
supporting
^9th
Congressional
District,
Mon-Fri
Food Service is still serving
closed doors at open houses? Who
B l i U e r was very
much
S t u d e n t s have also been aeconds this year. After you finish
8 pm 1 am
ever said that door's weren't ll»P™w«* w l t h " » «•• * f<"
surprised lo find that served meat eating it, you may return lo the
closed anyhow?
reform in the area. He c.ted the
l* now tabling better, what there is serving counter and be served with
Sun & Other Special
of i|. and that servings of potatoes waconds of seconds.
corruption in the area and called
IS
your
;
Students Unite
To Destroy Machine
BACK OFF >
Walt's
SUBMARINES
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DELIVERY
Days 4pm-1am
•BHHHH
up?
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Buses start at State Quad eoeru half-hour
from 6,00 -8,30 PM. Theu proceed for
pick-ups (o Colonial then to Dutch Quod.
Return trips leaoe Stuuuesant Plaza euery
half-hour starting at 6,15 until 8.45 PM.
Saturdays
Buses start at 11,30 AM, eoeru half-hour
through 5:30 PM. Return trips leaoe
Stuyoesant Plaza eoeru half-hour between
11,45 AM and 5,45 PM.
Corner of Fuller Road and Western Aoenue.
Hours, Monday through Friday - 10.00 AM to 9,00 PM
- 10=00 AM To 6=00 PM
MHNMHM
110
ALBANY STUDINT H U M
S"
"America Hurrah" Opens
Theatre Season Tomorrow
(
i't'l '
(I <
JEAN-CLAUDE VAN Itallie, author
"America Hurrah."
'H
of the controversial
FILMS
by Dave Bordwell
A national touring company
will perform "America Hurrah" at
8:30, October 12 in Page Hall. In
s p o n s o r i n g t h i s production,
Dramatics Council of the State
University of New York at Albany
will raise the curtain of the
1968-1969 season at the State
University Theatre.
"America Hurrah", Jean-Claude
van Itallie's satire is one of two
guest artist performances to be
offered this year by Dramatics
Council. A second artist or group,
not yet announced, is planned for
the spring semester.
Playing off-Broadway for
e i g h t e e n m o n t h s , "America
Hurrah", blazed the trail for much
of the current exciting theatre on
Broadway today. Van Itallie
p o r t r a y s various factes of
contemporary American society.
The three one act plays which
m a k e up "America Hurrah"
present a timely reflection of
play, c u r r e n t
trends
toward
anonyminity and violence.
Student tickets are now on sale
at the University Theatre box
office in the Campus Center.
Students must present their own
Student Tax card as well as
University identification. All
other tickets will be $1.50.
pervades the whole movie; more
and more becomes less and less.
In one steamy southern town in
summer, mix together two deaf
To the fault of wastefulness can
mutes (one of low intelligence), a
slow-to-ripen tomboy who loves be added that of implausibility.
Mozart, her crippled father, a Singer happens to move into a
proud Negro doctor who hates jeweler's house (Singer does
white, his daughter who hates jewelry work); the drunken drifter
him, her husband (also a cripple), happens to play chess (Singer
an alcoholic drifter, a knife fight, plays chess); and the same
various
race t e n s i o n s , a drunken drifter happens to be
deflowering, a slow death from around when the knife fight
cancer, a sudden one from a
breaks out.
kidney ailment, a yet more
Small difficulties like these can
s u d d e n one by suicide—and
you've got "The Heart Is a Lonely ruin a film: the feeling of
H u n t e r , " which despite the contrivance is hard to dispel. And
isolated excellence of Alan contrivance it is. As the movie
Arkin's performance seems to me grinds to a close and the
one of the most ill-conceived and calamities pile up thick and fast.
sloppily realized films of recent
One by one the escape hatches
months.
shut with creaking finality, until
at the end all those characters
I haven't read the Carson who h a v e n ' t been maimed,
McCuIlers novel (and now have no contracted cancer, or died a
desire to) but I assume there the horrible death wind up with
theme is depicted with a certain
permanently crippling trauma.
economy. Not so in the film. It's
Nothing wrong with a nihilistic
much too long; nearly every scene
view of life, but "The Heart is ;i
could make its point in about half
Lonely Hunter" is faked nihilism,
the time. For instance, does the
an overt manipulation lor bathetic
prologue establishing the mute
effect. In fact, one could call this
Singer's reason for coming to
something of an exploitation film,
Jefferson need to be garnished
in that perhaps the assorted
with so much extraneous detail?
deformities of the characters are
What about the subplot of the supposed to wheedle us into
drunken drifter, who exercises no a c c e p t i n g their
implausible
influence on the major action and sufferings.
vanishes two-thirds of the way
To such as this Alan Arkin's
through: Why need the Negro
subplot
be gi ven so much performance is a saving grace. Just
development, to so little effect? to watch his eyes throughout a
scene is to see a genuine gift at
And who's supposed to be the work. And there are moments in
center of consciousness? (A plot other performances, and now and
as complicated as this needs some then a good detail in the staging
Hut at its center the film seems
indication of point of view; I
don't ask for one single viewpoint, empty. When Singer commits
suicide
(where did thul gun come
only some consistency and point
to the shifts.) In the art of the from, anyway?) and the girl Mick
film, less is more; here the visits his grave, where there should
feebly-realized sequences thrash be pathos is nothing. As with so
slowly past and begin to much in this movie one is left
accumulate a deadly rhythm that finally in uneasy disappointment.
- COMPUTER DATING College Students and Graduates
(AH Ages]
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iiWliMiiinliiiiiiMm'i11'111""11"
New TV Network
May Hit Waves
NEW YORK (UPI) - Metromedia Inc. and the Transamerica Corp., announced jointly today agreement in principle
to
merge,
giving
rise
to
speculation of establishment oC
a fourth television network.
John W. Kluge, chairman of
the board and president of
Metromedia, said at a news
conference "the joint resources
of both organizations could
provide Metromedia the capability for an alternative program
service for television stations
lacking network affiliations."
Kluge, as well as John R.
Beckett, president and chief
executive officer of Transamerica, who also was present at the
news conference, declined to
elaborate on the statement.
liolh men, however, would not
deny the possibility that a
fourth network could be created.
Kluge told the news confer'
ence,
held
al
Metromedia
offices, the Federal Communications Commission would have
to approve the merger before il
would also have to give their
approval, he said.
The University theatre season
proceeds in rapid order with a
November 6-9 production of
Thorton Wilder's "The Skin of
Our Teeth," directed by Martin
Mann
and p e r f o r m e d
by
University students. Man will
survive, says Wilder, by the
proverbial skin of his teeth, but
why does he always operate with
so narrow a margin?
will be the third major offering by
the University Theatre. Directed
by James M. Leonard, this play
with music presents the classic
tale of the old man with a young
wife
in
an
exuberant
mini-extravaganza of joyful
sexuality. Auditions are to be
February
6-8, 1969 and
performances May 7-11, 1969.
In addition to directing "the
Highlighting the season will be Shoemaker's Prodigious Wife,"
the premier dramatic performance Leonard will direct the activities
in the University Performing Arts of the Experimental Theatre.
C e n t e r scheduled for March Open to both students and faculty
12-16, 1969. Paul Bruce Pettit, of the University the evolution of
Chairman or the Department of theatre events through study and
Speech and Dramatic Art, will experiment is a major goal. Events
will be announced as they happen.
direct the production which has
n o t y e t been
announced.
Two productions in Children's
Auditions for the production will Theatre under the direction of
be held this semester on Patricia B. Snyder are planned for
November 20, 21, and 23 in Page the year. The fall semester will
Hall.
include experimental productions
while in the spring a puppet show
"The Shoemaker's Prodigious is scheduled for March 21-23,
Wife", by Federico Garcia Lorca 1969.
Art Gallery Features
Superb New Exhibits
by Paula Carmadella
The exhibit now showing at the
Art Gallery is really superb.
Featured are the works of Rafael
Villamil, a Puerto Rican painter,
Donald Ogier.
Both Villamil and Ogier
interpret
the
world
pessimistically, and they both deal
with social injustices, individual
failures, and war and sex as
destructive forces. But their
manners of presentation are
c o m p l e t e l y different, which
makes the entire
exhibit
refreshing and exquisite.
Donald Ogier, working with
" t h r e e dimensional painting,"
e n h a n c e s the communicative
possibilities of his work.s because
he involves the onlooker by
making him participate physically
in appreciating the creation.
He uses a combination of found
objects, canvas and wood to
convey his message, and he also
eliminates the "look but don't
touch" attitude about observing
paintings. Instead, he makes the
sense of touch a compulsory
element
in t he observation
process
Sliding wood panels, and
hinged doors make lor perfect
communion of thought between
the artisl and onlooker. "Romeo
md Juliet" is the most ingenious
(jf his 12 paintings, whereby he
uses the frame of an automobile
which has doors to open to reveal
the meaning of the creation.
Villamil, on the other hand,
uses h a r s h e r art fomis to
communicate a harsher message
about his world. Instead of using
rich canvas, acrylics and wood
textures, he jabs the onlooker
with aluminum, plastic, morror
chips, distorted pictures, and
flashing lights.
His creations usually deal with
the gruesome irony of the horrors
of war against a peace loving
nation and the hypocritic religious
sentiment of "love thy neighbor."
He introduces such an idea in
"The Last of the Great Lovers."
and "Yes, it Was Not Sad, But . .
Villamil uses mirror chips to
reflect the onlooker, so that he,
too, is distorted and grotesquely
out of propo .i<>n. He juxtaposes
b l o o d y scenes with silver
decorative elements to add a
cynical, sadistic enjoyment of the
scene of horror.
There is no solace or hope
w h a t s o e v e r offered by the
paintings of Villamil as he
audaciously reveals the glaring
facts of social hypoeriey, abuses
of sex, and horrors of war.
Ogier manages to incorporate a
less cynical outlook about the
same situations by the use of a
Christ figure in many of his
paintings, which adds a dimension
o I' c o m passion
for h u ma n
shortcomings.
Both artists make their points
on different emotional levels.
GRAND PRIX PROVIDES RACY EXCITEMENT
By Paul Mann
Human nature is plagued by a
s o m e w h a t large number of
frailties. At this time of year,
certain of these behavioral
weaknesses become more rtahn
readily apparent amongst the
people who are members of the
Grand Prix racing elite.
October brings the penultimate
events of the racing season and
when the Grand Prix circus alights
upon Watkins Glen, a sleepy
hollow in upstate New York, for
the U.S. GP, very few racing
people are in an amiable mood.
There are several reasons for this:
1) Since Everyone cannot be first,
all the time, there are many losers
at a season's fini. 2) Beginning in
May, or earlier, the world's
greates' racing competitors have
had tin r nerves chewed and
ravaged by hordes of autograph
seekers, by rounds of testimonial
dinners, by inane public relations
appearances, by cocktail party
gush, by living out of a suitcase in
Europe's seedy hotels, by stupid
quesitons put by dialy newspaper
journalist and by a general lack of
privacy-because of this bother
and uproard a couple of drivers
have lost their wives this season,
among other things. 3) The first
two reasons for crumby behavior
amongst racing people are
exacerbated by the fact that the
Glen race is prevaded by an
a t m o s p h e r e of c l a n d e s t i n e
intrigue, Machiavellian political
chicanery, and a general scent of
subterfuge. This atmosphere issues
from a great deal of intra-and
inter-team bickering about who is
going to get what contract for
which car next year. Meanwhile,
drivers, team owners, managers,
and wives are all busy casting
aspersions upon one another for
past mistakes and grievances-the
cold chill of error has everyone on
edge. Four letter woid expletives
are used in abudance to describe
another man's personality or car
or both.
y\mid all this
bumbolt and yellow stink of
treachery there was a race on.
Twenty-three of the world's most
expensive
thorough-bred
racecraft, each effulgent with a
kind of tawny pride, each
incredibly erotoic, vulpine, full of
harnessed anger, turned up to do
battle with the asphalt arpeggios
of the 2.3 mile Watkins Glen road
racing circuit.
Friday practice was held from
one to five pee M, and Saturday's
from 12-4. The weather both days
was frightful. Smoky colored
lachrymose skies hovered over the
Glen's autumnal purlieus. Bouts
of rain on Friday afternoon
fouled up fuel mixtures and what
not and eroos-winds played havoc
with the newly instituted wings
that all Formula I cars sprouted
this season.
Scuderia Ferrari fielded three
cars, one each lor Chris Anion
(New Zealand i and Derek Bell
(England). The third was a
muletta ear for the boys to play
with at their whim. Amon
monkeyed around with fuel
b l e n d s and the new Y-12
Firestone rain tires. Bell's car was
kind of an old nail, 15 months of
age,
and hence n o t very
c o m p e t i t i v e . This was the
Englishman's second Grand Prix
{his first was Italy) and it is
obvious he hasn't been around GP
racing long. Being naive, he's hot
to have any titwit journalist ask
him sum sudsy question or give an
autograph. He'll get over thai
right quick, if he's around racing
at all long. Amon got to work and
turned a 1:04.25 lap. The Kiwi
has turned up the wick this season
and is long overdue for A Grand
Pix victory. Crease (as team
manager Forghieri calls him in his
gumbo English) is a terribly
wistful chap and really too nice a
guy to be a racing driver,
Vic Elford and Lucien Bianchi
drove for Oooper-BRM but the
cars were not competitive. The
engines ( V I 2s) have two-valve
heads instead of the customary
four, and Elford could only
account for this engineering
bobbble by uttering the words
"Politics, my mon, politics". Vic
reckoned he'd quit racing and go
to the World Series if the weather
didn't clear up.
Chen BUM works team, the cars
were running ratty too. Rodriquez
was rowing around like a galley
slave and Indy 500 winner Bobby
Unser managed to get into a shunt
at the top of the hill past the pits
and beat the bungee out of the
second car. Team Manager Tony
Rudd did much gnashing 0 f teeth
This particularly fine exhibit
will run until October 1 3.
I'he VlcLaren Fords ..I' Hruec
McLaren and Denis (Inline (both
of
New /eal.mil i looked
beautifully prepared and as Vie
Elford noted, they .started the
r a c e wit h a I remendous
psychological advantage, having
Homecoming '68
with
For Women Only
by Leslie King
Tk (S©(S1®
on
Tk@ Happeimlinig
$1.50 With Tax Card
$3.50 Without Tax
Tickets On Sale In Campus Center
10:00A.M. to 3:00P.M.
Sponsored By Counncil For Contemporary Music
over tha. the car did make the
race but Unser couldn't get a
move on and packed il up. He
sprained his ankle playing
b a s k e t b a l l , for Cod's sake,
Thursday night and looked to be
in a considerable amount of pain,
not to mention what he looked to
be in walking back to the pits,
after breaking the car.
One could not view the Lotus
pit without the rise of a lacerating
gnaw in the entrails, do to the
absence of Jim Clark, who was
killed in April at Hockenheim,
Germany in a banal Formula Two
race. Twenty drivers have been
sacrificed to the Goddess of
Racing this summer and that's
twenty too many. Cineri gloria
sera venit-glory com s late when
it comes to one's ashes. Anyway,
team Lotus was in a terrible state
of
d i s o r g a n i /. a I i o n .
Owner-manager Colin Chapman
didn'l show up til Sunday for the
race itself and Graham Hill looked
to be in charge of team
management in addition to his
own driving chores. All sorts of
incoherent gabble and babble was
going on. Andrei ti's engine was
crook all weekend and it was a
tribute lo his driving skill thai he
took pole position. I reckon he go
so disgusted with the car (the
engine was in awful shape and the
car's driving manners were nil) he
just flung il, instead of driving the
rattly old mother. Third Lotus
driver Jack Oliver crashed at over
100 mph. in Sal. practice and
wrote the car off. A wheel (the
left rear one) let loose. Lotus are
notorious for flimsy suspensions,
surtees (Honda) looked rueful
and resigned. John is tired of
putting up with the baloney of
Japanes palace politics, lie's had
bouts of mechanical trouble all
season. He played with suspension
geometry at the Glen and drove
like tophet as he always does. In
Hie pits, he kepi looking :il wife
Pat will) a tenderness arid love not
to he expected of a mall who has
been described .is Having an
infinite capacity lor hale
•H
Encouraging is the word which its first series ol' Special Interest
would best describe the progress Sessions. Beginning Tuesday.
made so far by the Women's October 15, and extending over a
three week period of Tuesdays
Recreation Association.
This past weekend, three and Thursdays, interested people
W.U.A. members traveled to will be able to meet to play tennis
Brockport to attend the New from 3:30 to 5:30 I'M. on the
Y o r k S t a t e A t h l e t i c and Women's Tennis courts (near
Recreation Federation of College Dutch Quad).
will
p r o v i d e an
Women
( N YS A R F C W ) This
C o n f e r e n c u . F r o m their opportunity for beginning players
impressions, it seems that in many t o o b t a i n
free
lessons
of the other New York State (professional lessons are quite
olleges, the only factor missing costly) or for tennis lovers to just
low is success; but from the looks play the game.
>f the first General Council
There will be people on hand,
noting, it may not be so difficult either from the tennis team or
u achieve.
from the physical education stafi,
Next week. W.lt.A. will present to give instruction
State Ufwmutif
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$5.49
Snle Starrs MondayOct. 14
...
jLhuLlaLJkLJQ..
won the last two Urand m x at
Italy and Canada.
Jackie Stewart of Scotland,
who ultimately won the race in
the French Matra, drove with
great ebullience and impecable
style. He turned the fastes
practice lap on Friday, which was
never headecd except by Andretti
who look the pole in the last few
minutes of Saturday's trials. The
works Matra of J.P. Beltoise
looked lumpy aerodymanically
and the Frenchman just barely
trundled thru the ruck during the
Grand Prix until the clutch blew
up on the hack straight.
Sunday's dawn brought more
of Wagner's Gollerdammerung
weather. Before the race, molha,
we look a speculative stroll about
the Infield, to view some of the
03,000
ale-washed
wags
composing a Weekend subculture
unto lliemselves--one gets the
impression thai a great many
people are pursuing an autistic
way of life. Willi! a donnybrook
the Infield is. Pasty veal-faced
college blokes drunk to the gills,
sitting in Indian-style postures of
grave stupor. Slack-mouthed
tongue toilers with lasl niijit's
vomit down their fronts, All the
males, ol course, are hot lo play
kissy-face and touch-body. Every
once in a while one can walk pasl
a lent and hear some young
wench's voice inside gruffly
whisper "Stop That!" The blood
wary cattle crowds. Minds of stale
torn rags.
A little past two o'clock, nerves
tensed, lips lightened in grim
determination, hadns anxiously
gripped gear levers, engines rose to
an excruciating nasal whine, the
flag dropped and then the 20
fixed bayonets of speed roared in
high hot haste up the hill and into
I he future lo play tag all
afternoon at 170 mph. Stewart
led the flashing cascade of cars
along the front -draight, down
into the precipitous loop chute,
Mien hollering like hell down the
back straightaway, into the 00
degree rigiu nanuer, past tne pits
and up the hill agains. The
Scotsman never gave up the lead.
Andretti (Lotus) blustered after
him like a rocket for 33 laps until
the transmission packed up. A
"parte poste" Gurney and Surtes
were conducting a helluva flap
cum ding dong for third spot
behind Graham Hill, who took
over second slot from teammate
Andretti. The cars tore on under
skies mentioning rain, playing nip
and tuck d o w n the back
strighlaway with some of the
most incredible dicing I've seen in
a great white. Beltoise's Matra
s o u n d e d sicker than Guy
Lombardo's saxophones. Amon's
Ferrari was down in the seventh
after 20 laps and finally packed
up two thirds of the way thru the
race with a broken water pump.
Crease relieved himself ol* a few
choice words to Forghieri after
the race on water pumps in
particular and Ferraris in general.
Wo du nichl hist dorl ist Glueck.
Steward averaged 121.HO mph.
for his third Grand Prix win this
season for Matra. Graham Hill was
second, 25 seconds behind. Big
Bad John Surtees finished third in
his lorqueless wonder of a Honda,
a position he picked up on the last
lap when a grim Han Gurney lost
fuel pressure on bis McLaren
Ford.
The next race is in Mayheecoe
and only Denny Hulme has a
mathematical chance of winning
the World Championship there,
lie scored no points at the Glen as
he fell down and broke his crown
by spinning at the hard right
bander in front of the pits on lap
03 whilst lying sixth.
The lOfiH U.S. Grand Prix was
a fine motor race, too often
Formula One cars tend to spread
out and simply parade, but most
of the drivers were on top form
last Sunday and the 93000
drongoes who attended the event
go I l heir money's worhl in racing,
Phnlo by Kowfilus
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Featuring Irv Sewel &
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Finest Dixeland Music in
Upstate N.Y.
Jackets Req. For Men
ALBANY STUDENT PRK88
STB Mauls Waterbury 34-0;
Tappan Defeats Potter 7-0
Photo by Potskowski
ALPHA LAMBDA CHI has proven to be the team to beat thus far in
League II competition.
ALC Heads League II
EEP Commands Three
by Tom Libbos
As it seems in AMIA, defense is
the key influence, and leagues 2
and 3 illustrate this fact very well.
The leader in league 2,
surprisingly enough, has only
scored twice in two games, while
the highest score in the same
league has been under twenty.
League 3, which is hampered
this year by a lack of team
membership is struggling with
only four teams, but still has shoe
wed a great deal of spirit and
individual effort.
At this point.ALC is off to a
fine start and their record is 2-0
which leads league 2. This year,
ALC has combined all their talent
into what seems a trophy winning
team. Depending mostly on their
very strong defense, ALC has been
tough thus far • they have shut
out both the Raiders and TXO by
a score of 7-0.
On offense, ALC is cpatained
by quarterback Jerry Calvario,
who intercepted a pass and sped
for a touchdown against the
Raisers and passed to Steve Shear
for a score agains TXO.
State Quad and Waterbury A
opened their season with Stale
winning 12-2. It has been their
only games but a substantial
amount of abillity was revealed on
both
sides
Stale's
q u a r t e r b a c k , J i m Cava n a ugh,
proved very effective, and
W a t e r b u r y ' s captain
Paul
Smalheiser also did a fine job,
The Raiders led by the
Cudmore Brothers - Dave and
Rog, showed good scoring ability
agaisnt
APA w h e r e
they
overpowered the good guys by a
score of 19-0. Their record is 1-1.
TXO,
captained by Gary
Simser, is even on the year at 1-1.
They could very well be a threat
as they improve with each game.
In league!*, Potter Club has
again illustrated a seemingly
overpowering team. With such
impressive individual efforts of
Kevin Sheehan and Charlie Stamp.
the Club has compiled a 2-0
record by defeating STB and State
by scores of 12-0 and 13-6
respectively.
In other league 3 action,the
Huns scored a forfeit over State.
Frosh Harriers Place
Fourth At Le Moyne
Paul Bresli n Boosts
Great Dane Harriers
by Hob Zaramba
Paul Breslin is one harrier the
Albany State cross-country team
is glad to have on its side.
A graduate of Binghamton
Central High School, Paul came to
State with a high record of
achievement in cross-country. He
also excelled in track, and was
privileged Lo be captain of both
the cross-country and track teams.
1 The 132-pound runner sported
a perfect record in high school in
every dual meet he competed in.
His high school bid fa re we to
their ace track and cross- country
man by presenting him with the
Middlebury College
Homecoming Opponent
Mid (Ik-bury College, having
only recently returned from a
European tour will be the
opponent of the Albany State
soccer team for the Homecoming
g ;i m *• this K ii t u r d a y . T h e
M i d d I e b nry
Ioam
toured
t hroughoul
Europe playing
i wenly games aginst teams from
(I IT many. Denmark, Sweden.
Finland, Russia, Poland, ami
France
Although the team was wlnluss
on their lour, the experience
w h ifh
I I) uy
gained
will
undoubtedly serve to make them
a better disciplined learn than
J . J . by Jeffrey Saperstein
Two teams emerged this week victorious in League I intramural action, and both must be considered
champion contenders.
On Monday, Tappan upset the Potters 7-0. State Quad is now 2-1 and this game proved that they have
jelled into a competent and cohesive football team.
Both teams were unable to mount steady drives in the scoreless first half.
Tappan broke the ice in the
second half, when quarterback
Cass Galka threw a pretty pass
into the flat to George Margan.
Margan did a little ballet so as not
to step out of bounds and finished
it off with a dive into the end
zone. He then kicked the extra
point, for Tappan's 7-0 victory
Both Jim Sommervillc and
Royce Van Bvcra played fine
games for the Tappanitcs.
The first routing of the season
took place Tuesday afternoon,
and it was another shutout. STB,
with probably the finest set of
receivers in the league, also got
great
performances
from
quarterback Larry Myers and both
lines. They dominated action over
Waterbury through the entire
gume.
The first time STB got the ball,
(after a partially blocked kick)
Myers rolled right and threw a
touchdown pass to Tom Sears.
Myers used this roll out pattern
quite effectively, often choosing
to run power sweeps to balance
his passing game. One of these
sweeps was good for STB's second
touchdown.
An interference call set UF
STB's third touchdown. Myen
threw a long pass to Tom Nixon
Photo by Potskowski
and the first half ended, 19-0.
The great pursuit by STB's SIGMA TAU BETA displayed an awesome passing attack as they
defense, especiallly Al Herzlich, overwhelmed the Waterbury defense.
caused Waterbury quarterback
Monte, to fumble in the end zone,
for a safety. A long pass to Tom
Sears led to Mike Pavy's first t.d.
He also caught one to finish the
scoring at 34-0.
Jim Healv Dlaved a tireat game,
making a beautiful onehanded
The Freshmen cross-country (37), and Bob Peterson (40).
grab. Pavy and sears were stars,
squad traveled to LeMoyne this
Coach Munsey commented that
along with defensive halfback
past Saturday to compete in the the runners were hampered in
Mike Golub.
LeMoyne Freshman and Junior their performance by a heavy
College Invitational meet.
downpour which made the course
The team placed fourth among very slow and muddy.
the ten teams competing. Last
Mr. Munsey also went to say
year, the freshmen squad won the that he particularly impressed by
r a c e as Larry
F r e d e r i c k s the performances turned in by
established a meet record of 11..'10 Holmes and Hackett.
for the 2.8 mile course.
The final standings in the race
Most Valuable Runner trophy.
The frosh harriers placed two read as follows: Buffalo State, 36
His t r a n s i t i o n to college
men in the top ten of the fifty Cortland State, 71; Alfred, 101
cross-country was smooth. Once
runners competing. They could Albany, 109; Brockport, 119
in the grips of Albany State and
not, however, manage enough Plattsburgh, 139; Oswego, 151
Coach Munsey, Paul began where
points to challenge the ultimate LeMoyne, 156.
he had left off, scoring highly in
winners, Buffalo State.
meets
against
State's
In addition to losing to Buffalo,
cross-country opponents.) "The
Albany also was outpointed by
distance is longer - that's all" says
C o r t l a n d S t a t e and Alfred
the talented senior, though it
University.
doesn't seem to bother him at all.
Top runner for Albany was
He was third man in his high's
Paul Holmes who finished fourth
school's frosh squad, fifth man as
with a time of 15:47, Dennis
a soph, and third man again In his
Hackett was only two seconds
junior year.
behind Paul, yet finished in sixth. [are you getting the mostf
In his junior year, Paul won the
The next finisher for Albany was from your present
Most Consistent Runner Award.
Lou
Wittig
who
placed
wetting solution?
Aside from his achievements in
twenty-second.
TRY
cross-country,
Paul
has
The other three runners who
distinguished himself in other
finished for Alba-iy were Paul
areas as well.
Novakowski (25), Rick Wiese
The twenty-year old Sigma Tan
Beta fral member is a member of
at our
Myskania and lias served as class
expense and
treasurer am) has been on the
Dean's list of scholars.
FEEL THE DIFFERENCE!
they otherwise would have been.
The Albany hooters will be
seeking Lo even their record and
main Lain I heir winning ways in
Homecoming games.
Thus far this year, the Great
Danes have one win, two losses
and one tie. They have, however,
displayed a propensity for scoring
as they have amassed eight goals
in four games.
The game on Saturday promises
to be particularly exciting as the
players will have the extra
incentive of playing before a large
Homecoming crowd.
COMFORT
for CONTACT
LENS WEARERS
PRE-DATE DROP
Notices
Signup sheets for nominations
of AMIA officers tor the l»o8-69
school year are now posted in the
back lobby of the gym.
The sheets will remain up
through Friday, October 11, All
necessary information to run for
office are on the sheets,
A captain's meeting for League
I bowling will be held on Friday,
October 11 in the gym in room
13 4 .
iUSTONE
FRESHENS
BREATH
INSTANTLY!
FREE SAMPLES
and brochure at
NO OBLIGATION
Send coupon below
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I 520 Bonner Road
j Wauconda, Illinois 60081
NAML
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VOLrblV N0~3tf " T
ALBANY, NEW YORK
Forum Offers
OCTOBER 15. 1968
Student Conference
To Discuss Rights
Dicussions On
Vital Issues
Freedom Forum will launch its
second q u a r t e ? cen tury of
presenting public discussion of the
controversial issues of our time by
outstanding personalities
The 1968-69 series
begin
on October 28 with a debate on
"The Presidency-1968" between
Daniel B u t t o n ,
Republican
Congressman from the 29th
Congressional District and Joseph
Resnick, Democratic Congressman
from the 28th District.
New
State «MN
will <=<*.)*see its «—*
first
New York
York Sfcnf*
state wide conference on student
civil rights on October 19. The
conference, to ho held in the
ballroom at the University, will
include a series o( authorities
experienced in the field of student
civil rights, a motion picture of
the famous Feiner vs Syracuse
Supreme court case, and a
luncheon.
and will cover such contniversiaf
issues as demonstrations, racism,
in the University, speakers on
campus, freedom of campus press
and radio, curfew., anci conduct
and housing regulations.
''Confederated
Student
G o v e r n m e n t s is extreme) y
i n t e r e s t e d in promoting an
understanding of the legal rights
of students," Gerard Colby Ziig,
President of the Confederated
Student
Governments,
said,"particularly since today's
students are so active and involved
in many controversial issues."
T h e i m p r e s s i v e list of
participants in the conference
include such organizations as
AAUP (American Association of
University Professors), National
Student Association, New York
Civil Liberties Union, Law
Students Civil Rights Research
Council, National Organization of
Women, offering an unparalleled
concentration of knowledge on
the civil rights of students. The
conference is open to any citizen,
although particularly designed for
interested members of student,
and faculty bodies. Invitations
have been sent by Confederated
Student
Governments
to
campuses across the State, A
nominal registration fee of $4.50
per person is required to cover
expenses, which include the
Con't to p. 3
The conference, sponsored by
Photo by Murphy tt nh ee C o n f e d e r a t e d
S t uuddeenntt
MARY MENCER BEGAN her reign as Homecoming Queen during Governments of State University
n
w
K "' r
the concert. The Freshman Princess is Barbara Stuart. Members of the of New York, is the first of its
n. ,
On N o v e m b e r 2o, Dick Q u e e n ' s C o u r t a r e N a n c y Broderick, Gail Pantley, and Nevanne kind in New York State history,
Gregory, nationally known Negro M a r t h e n 8
.
.win. u w i e mstory,
comedian, civil rights worker, and ^ - ^
—
candidate for President of the
United States will speak on "Civil
Rights and Black Power."
Dr. John Merrill, professor of
m e d i c i n e at t h e
Harvard
University Medical School and the
man who introduced the artificial
Graduate
Fellowship
kidney into the United States in
Those interested in applying for
Science and
mathematics
the 19'10's, will discuss the applications are available at the
with a DEFINITE interest
Office
of
the
Academic
Dean, 218 a Fellowship should " t a k e " the imajors
scientific and ethical aspects of
n thls
Profession may also be
organ transplantation on January Administration Building. The Graduate Record Examination
Aptitude Tests in Verbal and nominated. If United States
"Assistant
R o g e r Secretary
H i l s m aof
n , State
former
for fell °wships include the Danforth n"
*""' """ •*•
""" , ""
"
"
Gradua
abilities as
as soon
soon as
as cciittiizzeennss,, they
t h e y must
must apply
apply
Far Eastern Affairs, and presently
t e Fellowship, Woodrow ^Quantitative
!
abilities
preferably SnU.rH
Saturday
simultaneously for
for aa N«tion«l
National
professor
of g o v e r n m e n t , W i l s o n fellowship, and New York Ppossible,
° S S l b i e ' ^referabiv
!lv simultaneously
October 26, 1968 (deadline for S c i e n c e Foundation Fellowship.
Columbia University, will speak S t a t e Gn *duate Fellowships,
A n y o n e w h o feels h c au Iifies
«
Nominations for the Danforth application for this GRE is
on "American Foreign Policy" on
nomination and wishes
Fellowships are open to men and October 11)
February 5.
Candidates for appointment to f u r t h e r information should see his
All Freedom Forum programs women who are seniors or recent
cademic
»<Jv.sor <" major
are held at 8 p.m. in the Linton grad ua te o f aecred i ted colleges the Fellowships are restricted to «
a r
'„ m e n l
Chairman.
High School auditorium in and are interested in college those persons nominated by P °.P
Department Chairmen of the Con't to p. 3
Schenectady. Each program will teaching as a career.
<-on t to p. 3
c o n c l u d e with an audience
Applicants may be single or University. Nominations close
participation question and answer married, must be less than thirty November 1.
Anyone who thinks he qualifies
period.
M e m b e r s h i p s a re years of age at the time of
available from Mrs. Fred application, and may not. have for nomination and is interested
Luborsky, 1162 Lowell Road, undertaken any graduate or in applying for a Fellowship
Schenectady, New York 12308, professional study beyond the should see the Chairman of their
major department.
baccalaureate
uuccaiaureate.
Nominations for Woodrow
, i r by Barbara Duncan
Wilson National Fellowships are
"For our own safety we should discussed t h e reasons tor
made directly to the Foundation's support Hubert Humphrey. We s u p p o r t i n g t h e
Democratic
Regional Chairmen. The deadline have to have a longer memory n °minee. They cited Humphrey's
for nominations is October 20, than the past four years." With » tr ong civil rights stand, feeling
1968. The competition is open to these words M.J. Rosenberg t n a L n e knows the problems and
jm.
ft/
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)Former
of the understands the black pride.
men and women of outstanding evening
addressedheld
the in
rallysupport
last Thursday
the
Chase-Manhattan
Bank.
But
Vice
PresidentN.Y.
Richard
Nixon
ALBANY,
(UPI)Former
•£ PU^.U^.L.
„ . <.
Humphrey.
intellectual promise, graduates of election
:-.. of. .Hubert
. .
Humphrey was likened to FDR
the Nixon adviser said it could
will bring his campaign to AlCommenting on the small in that he is a progressive. He has
or seniors in the colleges and
prove difficult to have two
bany Oct. 28, it was learned
universities of the United States turnout of students, Rosenberg supported such liberal legislation
Rockefellers in a GOP cabinet
Monday.
remarked, "The leftist students
and New York Gov. Nelson and Canada and, at the time of are maintaining a neutrality at a as Medicare, Food for Peace and
Sources close to Nixon told
Rockefeller
also
might
be nomination, not registered in a time when there is a great moral the Peace Corps.
United Press International he
graduate school.
On the question of civil
tapped.
and Governor Rockefeller would
Rosenberg
The Foundation primarily seeks issue. It takes more courage to d i s o b e d i e n c e ,
Some have speculated that
campaign side by side in the
stand
up
for
Humphrey
thanit
did
remarked,
"Nixon supports law
Nelson may be named secretary candidates in the humanities and
capital city in an apparent unifor
Bobby
Kennedy
or
Gene
and
order,
but
Humphrey
favors
social sciences with an interest in
of defense,
ty move.
McCarthy
law and order plus justice.
a college teaching career.
Those
Nixon had not planned any
When asked how he proposed
further upstate appearances folpresent at the rally to get the young people interested
lowing one scheduled in Rochesin the campaign, Rosenberg
ter Thursday. However, growing
stated, "We must trust in the
indications of increased strength
college students and realize they
for Vice President Hubert Humwill make the right decision."
phrey have changed the Nixon
"Nixon's appeal is to the old
plans and aides indicated he will
line conservative; the people who
make a third upstate visit bearc afraid of the blacks
fore the end of the campaign,
"But 1 have faith in the
The Albany appearance was
American people; they're not a
expected to include a tour of the
bunch of bigots, They have no
South Mall state office building
desire to turn the clock back."
project now under construction,
On the question of Senator
a trip through the capitol and
Muskie's qualifications, Rosenberg
possibly a rally on the capitol
remarked, "Thirty three percent
steps similar to am^ held last
of our Presidents have died in
week by third party candidate
office. The voter is forced to
George Wallace.
seriously consider the Vice
Presidential candidate. Muskie is
Exact details of Nixon's schedarticulate and the students can
ule have not yet been worked
relate to him. He also has the
out.
McCarthy image."
Among those being considered
However, they realize the
Photo by T M Moon L M
for
treasury
secretary
was
obstacles which confront them.
STB TOOK FIRST prize with the above float. State Quad placed second, Gammu Kap third, and APA
David Rockefeller, president of
According to Rosenberg, "We
honorable mention. The scholarship trophies were won by Phi Delta (2.80) and Kappa Beta (2.52).
must talk to people; we cannot
sell out America."
Grad Fellowship Applications
Available At Dean's Office
StudentsForHumphrey
Discuss Political Issues
NixonTo Visit Albany,
May Hold Capitol Rally
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