FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 16 It is a grand year in the history of E.O.P. The investment and commitment that was made four years ago to provide disadvantaged youth who were culturally or economically deprived an equal education has finally come home to harvest. This year marks the graduation of the first E.O.P. class who, through much turmoil, rhetoric, and experimental stages, still survived, Some of these seniors were asked to comment on their plans for the future. Here arc their replies. Blacks Recruited For Law Careers by rose, herg The Council of Legal Education Opportunity is a program d e i g n e d for recruitment of Black and minority .students who are interested in law careers. Dr. Reginald E. pi Ann Bolden: I have majored in AfroAmerican Studies. I will attend the graduate school of Library Science at the Stale University of New York. I hive been here lor o i l l \ I wo years because I am a transfer student from Savannah Stale College Gilliam Jr., Assistant Professor of each. Note the food service figure-a near quarter 1070, the Council helped place over ''00 Black students into million dollar drop. At the same time, bookstore FOODSERVICE +$221,097.13 -$17,054.67 BOOKSTORE -$70,119.14 -$205,334.87 -$25,553.18 -$13,713.70 towards increased minority opportunity is growing, though al present, losses tripled and income from vending fell slightly. HOUSING Blacks are only 'AAYH o f the law student population of this nation. Only vending made money last year-and it is AUXILIARY SERVICES -$29,005.74 -$30,101.28 operating illegally. VENDING + $40,038.56 +$35,476.33 Even more staggering figures are (hat out of 325,000 lawyers in America, only 1,000 are Black. Here at SUNYA this past academic year, Dr. Gilliam spoke personally lo 70 Black students who were inleresled in legal careers. The overwhelming majority were freshmen and l>r Gilliam considers the next few years to hecritical in terms of S U N Y A ami the arms of l-'or me l o say thai I reall> enjoyed myself here would be ;i fallacy. Rather, it was a rewarding experience I have obtained an education; this was my primary goal. t In- first graduating classes of substantial numbers of Black students. l ) i . Gilliam points ou I thai while (he projected n Is of the I S work force as an entity are beginning to show diminishing need for lawyers, the milioii's Black population is -.till suffering from an excessively pooi Student Dollars Cover FSA Losses ration of lawyers to populaliori Accordinglo Dr. Gilliam, "Tin-re , s no ( |ueslion (hat I lie Black law graduate will have very Utile dilTicults biivinev,, piivale practice, government in finding employment m tir educ.it i o n , it's M|U|)I\ a tj.ii.si,on turn ot Blacks having legal skills that in the past were not available ; n t d I h.tve e n t o \ e d I >i Gilliam encourages all Black and m i n o n l \ student.-, who arc interested in legal careers lo see Inn, foi .m\ nr,-drd advice alioul a law career Tvpes o| programs available Ihrough the Conned and olhei firogranis are as follows Roland Anderson In May, four years of s.dlermg ,nd tormenl will come to an end. I feel inv time was wasted I as sociology major). The only thing I got out of my slay here is a belter ability to cope with the hypocrisy and bureaucracy which is so l y p i cal of the American system. YEAR ENDING 6/30/71 lists the major program items over the past two years and the amount of money made or lost by community, it h e r e . Ronald Simmons: 1 haven't decided yet. I have a bsi of graduate schools ol photography that I may apply '<» Hut when i realize that I have been in .schools for 10 years, the Ihollglit of going to school lor another (wo or three years isn't Ihal appealing. If I could find a job 1 liked I would definitely get an apartment and work lor |2 or Is months, then go to graduate school if I felt it necessary. As for enjoying my four years here- you better believe it' Seriously, I can't complain I majored and minored m Afro American sludiesthinkinglhat 1 would leach it. At that lime, the deparlmeul was, and probably slill is, the most progressive department They insisted thai the courses deal with the real world situations: everything from concepts of the Black struggle to appreciating the beauty of Chairman Mao's philosophy. ^ ^ ^ 3 ) Tuesday, November 16, 1971 YEAR ENDING 6/30/70 The chart to the right shows FSA at a glance. It on Legal Education Opportunity. In Willie Mae Neal: I plan to attend graduate school in the area of Library Science. I transferred here my junior year and can say that I have enjoyed these two years. State University of New York at Albany Vol. LVIII No. 54 Afro-American Studies, is the Regional Representative of the Council freshman classes at law schools throughout the country. The trend Elmer B u x t o n : I plan to go into banking as a professional, and from there into graduate school. One day I would like lo help establish a Black hank in my c o m m u n i t y , for I feel this would be a v a l u a b l e asset to the The ASP THE FSA STORY (Part Five): by Albert Thompson An ASP Feature all photos Albany Student Press X Kenneth Williams I plan to work either in the field of management for the federal government or for private industry for a few years, eventually going into business lor myself Al the present I ime I am gel ling realty lo lake a series id' stale and federal government examinal ions for in ana gem en I internship posi lions I also plan to talk Willi some people in the Albany area concerning employment ,. m | . ^ ^ . )( s U N Y h . | V ) . M y h ( 1 [ i | 1 s u m t . w h ; M r i , w a r ( l i n g in ihal 1 met many people and enjoyed .l|U, s u m . s s i n s u m i , ^()1)(, | h m . s ,lr|d Besides en |h(i iU..uU.mu. ^ ^ m , h ( . p r o l y s s i 1 J l u , | rl(.|(| { l r m i i n a ( , ( . n m l , 1 hope lo obtain my Masters Degree in Business Administration. 1. Summer pre law nisi ilutes, •1. O.K.0.and II K W grants for "ecotmmienlh disadvantaged," :i. The NAACP Legal Defense Fund Intern program that i n v o l v e "pledging a law practice to a liven coin mimit \ in exchange for financial a i d . " The information stated above lists only one of the major areas (law) in which effort meaningful is being made to prepare minority roles in reshaping society alter students for four years of " i n d o c t r i n a t i o n . " There are many well-known national lellowships, scholarships, grants, assist ant slops, and financial aid lor needy but otherwise qualified Black and minority students. There are many fields of graduate study lor which minority students are being actively recruited. At present, KOI* with the aid of Mr. Thomas and other counselors is reorganizing, developing, and researching dala that would provide KOI 1 graduates with an opportunity to further their studies on a graduate level, practice a profession, or find placement in a job related to their majors. PROBE C O N T I N U E S : 1 0 0 1 ) SERVICE E X A M I N E D . PROFITS QUESTIONED by J.StephenFhivin and A l Smia The following is <hc fifth in a series of articles concerning Al batty State's Faculty Student Association If you are an undergraduate student, here at Albany State, and you think you arebeingmistreated by the all-inclusive corporation that is Faculty-Student Association, you are correct in your analysis. I f you're an undergraduate student living on one of the five quadrangles, you have even more of a reason to complain, because you are forced to deal w i t h the FSA corporate monopoly through its food service operation. As everyone knows, you can't live in a d o r m i t o r y at SUNYAlbany without taking a food service meal. And as everyone knows, Robert Cooley, director of the corporation, wants to raise the price of that meal. 11 seems a fair request when placed in the context of the general inflation of the limes. But you'd change your mind quickly if you looked at an FSA financial audit and saw what rcu! ty happens to your hoard money. "NON-PROFIT" CORPORATION Under the by-laws o f the corporation., FSA exists as "a non-profit corporal ion...exist ing pursuant to the Not-for-Profit Corporation Law of the Slate of New Y o r k . " What I Ins means is I hat FSA must provide essential services lo the community at minimal rosis, theoretically, al least il is forbidden lo make a profit. Any profits are supposed to he returned lo the elist oiner, either through belter service or lower prices. Food service used lo be tin 1 major money-meker for FSA T w o years ago (the year ending l June ;S0, I .»7l) ). H made $'2-l\ ,097. lit in profit But the profit never went back into loud service. Instead, il was used to defray the losses of FSA's "benevolent f u n c t i o n s : " A l u m n i Affairs, free meals for resident staff, International Students, Mohawk and D i p p i k i l l , and "Special University F u n c t i o n s , " which covers everything from faculty recruitment and receptions, to administrative "sluch funds." It was a situation that was unethical, if not outright illegal. The undergraduate students on the FSA membership board recognized this fact last year, and under the leadership o f Student Association President David Neufeld and Vice-President Lampert, moved to correct it. For the most part, they were successful. A Committee i-o-n Financial Affairs was formed to deal w i t h the entire issue. It concluded t h a i : "each of the selfsupporting (FSA) operations should stand on its o w n . " benefits catered by FSA food service. I It is an interest ing comment because a reporl issued by New York Slate Controller Arthur Levitt about a year aand a hall ago, contradicts i l . The stale auditors said: " T h e Campus Center Cafeteria is similar l o the Quadrangle cafeterias which have been operated profitably, and il would be reasonable to assume that the Campus Center Cafeteria should also produce favorable results." " I f this is the case, then the losses are the result of the Palroon Room and Special Functions.'" But that's not what Cooley told the board. And it's not what some FSA employees have told these reporters. The employees call the Palroon Room " t h e white elephant o f the Campus Center" and "a faculty dining c l u b . " This discrepancy has, of course, cast some suspicion on the accuracy o f the official audit. Food service personnel contend that "there are many extra expenses slapped against the Campus ('enter that management doesn't know a b o u t . " THE CAMPUS CENTER These reportedly include additional costs in the payroll charged The FSA audit shows the Cam- against the Campus Center food pus Center losing a massive a- operation which might actually be mount of money $222,298.20 Campus Center building cost or last year. padding of the supervisory pay Robert Cooley told the last FSA roll. membership meeting that: " T h e Significantly, Ronald ('lough, Campus Center has lost money newly appointed head of the en since the day we opened i f , " and lire Campus Center food operathat the Cafeteria is responsible tion told these reporters: " I f we I'ur most of the loss. Thai is no closed the Campus Center food understatement Since I'.IOK, I he operation d o w n , we still won't year it opened, the Campus Cen- make up the quarter of ,, million ter has lost $ 6 « | ,000, The quad dollar loss.'' profits paid off. To put il another way, when lie also said: "The Palroon you eliminate all direct and indiRoom should break about even" rect expenses, a deficit remains and thai "Special ('unctions that cannot be accounted for. makes money " (Special FuncThere is additional evidence of tions are usually dinners or oilier faulty figuring. According to an internal estimate made by food service nfficials, the Palroon Room must serve I T> lo f,,r) people a night to break even. Our information (verified by occasional spot checks) shows that the average number of customers served per night is anywhere from 'The final tally shows FSA as being $338,487.39 in the ivd" "Every quadrangle dining hall has made a steady profit over the last three years...' "The Campus Center has lost money since the day we opened it." 10 to 20. (The numbers were somewhat higher last w e e k ) Yet Robert C o o l e y told the Membership Board of the FSA that the Palroon Room breaks even. And last week, Food Service Director Malcolm Corbiey ordered all dinner operations to cease, hardly an action to take if the Patroon Room is indeed not losing money. Vice President John Hartley, responsible for the day to day operations of the corporation, counter-manded that order, claiming that not enough notice was given customers and staff, and that only the Board of Directors can order an operation shut. So the Patroon Room is now opened at night, still losing mon<*yJohn Hartley is the man who said earlier this year: " F S A cannot sustain the losses in the Campus ('enter. If a unit can be proven to lose (money), then ellminute i t . " Another time he said : " I f a unit can be found lo be operating al a loss, and the prices can't be changed or the value increased. OUT!!" Said one food service official: " T h e operation loses Food service is aware of the loss. And food service shuts it d o w n . And the administration keeps it open. Who is responsible of the loss? As a furl her note on the cafeteria operation, students might be interested to know that Cooley considers it lo hi' a "service" r t ' n " dered lo I he student body by FSA. He chums thai only 10 per cenl of the resident students have contracted for three meals a day According to his logic, thai means the other 90 per cenl use the cafeteria. This ignores the fact that resident students have the option of eahng on two cash lines on the quads, gmng lo the snack bar. going out to eal for breakfast or lunch (since all residents get din ner), making I heir own meals, or not eating fit all. Mr. C o o k y also fails to mention that this "service." which the resident student* are underwriting, is graciously extended lo both the faculty and administration. In short: " N o one service—the student dining halls, for exampleshould be burdened with carrying out the other operations of the FSA program." Some of the programs were phased o u t ; others were reevaluated. But all o f this r e f o r m , it turned out, really begged the question. Undergraduate students no longer have to worry about what happens to FSA profits. There aren't any profits to worry about. The corporation is, in fact, insolvent. According to its own financial audit: The bookstore lost $205,000. Housing lost $13,700. Auxiliary services lost $30,000, (These include the barber shop, bowling alley, beauty salon, etc.) A nd food service? It lost $17,054, a near quarter of a million dollar turnaround in one year. The only aspect o f the FSA program that made any significant money, in fact was the vending machine operation. The vending machines, as was showed in a past article of this series, are being operated illegally under present stale law. The final tally shows FSA as being $33rt,4«7.39 in the red. FOODSERVICE This article of the FSA series will deal mainly w i t h food service operations. It is in this area that students have the greatest contact with the corporation that "serves" them, and it is here that the abuses of FSA are most blatant. Earlier this fall, we met w i t h FSA Director Robert Cooley who informed us that he was supporting a board increase the following January lo compensate for losses in the food service program. He told the October 20, 1971 meeting of the Board o f Directors that " F o r the second semester, a contract price o f $750.00 for 20 meals...has been assumed." (This information is contained as part of the minutes o f that meeting.) This figure is a one hundred dollar increase over the present rate; about a 1 5 per cent boost. Continued on Page 2 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 3 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Women's Groups Clash at Capitol " Rofc«rf C o d a y i * on on islomf." by T r a c y Egan T h e s t a t e w i d e c o n f e r e n c e , " W o m e n : A Political F o r c e " , was d i s r u p t e d briefly on S a t u r d a y by s h o u t i n g m e m b e r s of a g r o u p calling itself Women Against War a n d Fascism. T h e d i s r u p t i o n c a m e as B e t t y F r i e d a n , o n e of t h e f o u n d e r s of t h e N a t i o n a l O r g a n i z a t i o n of W o m e n , addressed t h e m e e t i n g in S t a t e Capital Assembly C h a m b e r s . T h e dissident w o m e n , most looking t o be in their early t w e n t i e s or y o u n g e r , c o n t i n u e d s h o u t i n g until Friedft-il t u r n e d over the microp h o n e t o g r o u p s p o k e s w o m a n Beth Rodriguez.. T h e audience of w o m e n , t h o u g h largely seeming t o d i s a p p r o v e of the disruptive tactics, were fairly q u i e t white Rodriguez s p o k e . S h e read a prepared s t a t e m e n t charging (hat the state has " h i d d e n " m o n e y from t h e p e o p l e , resulting in welfare c u t s . S h e also called for free day care centers. T h e p r o t e s t o r s s h o u t e d slogans i n c l u d i n g , " Money for Welfare, n o t for H i g h w a y s " a n d "Attica-Welfare, Rockefellers C r i m e s , " T h e y also objected t o what t h e y claimed was the staging of a conference which p o o r w o m e n could not arrange t o a t t e n d , even though it was free. If o unit con be proven fo lose money, eliminate it' . chow FSA Story Continues . chow Food Continued from Page 1 ' T h e l minutes also state that: "Dr. Benezet stated that he had recently informed a group of students that there would be no 'whooping' increase in the board rates...It was suggested that the matter of a board increase be given careful study..." Cooley, in his interview with the ASP, offered the following reasons for wanting the hike: —Prices were not raised two years ago and both food and labor costs have increased. —The new academic calendar disrupted the twenty year pattern of hiring established by the corporation and increased the difficulty of hiring qualified help that could be dropped from the payroll during vacation periods. —Stealing and freeloading in the dining rooms continues. Service His points are valid, though some of them are open to some criticism. For instance, Cooley admits that rates were not raised two years ago because the campus had been involved in a national student strike and: "We (the management) didn't want to t h r o w the issue of a price increase into a very disturbed situation." In other words, you don't push for a price increase when students are already agitated; you wait until they calm down. Then you hit them for a boost, claiming that prices weren't raised when they should have been. Some undergraduate board members are claiming that it is not a very logical way to run a corporation. And while "ripping off" undoubtedly occurs, the prime reasons Cooley pushed for installation of the "cages" that encircle Probed the quad dining rooms, is to make a price increase less likely Cooley says the cages have stopped the brunt of the theft-but that a price increase is needed anyway. The installation of the cages, by the way, was opposed by many students-including the student government president. But more importantly, none of the factores cited by Cooley get to the main issue. According to his own figues, every quadrangle dining hall has made a steady profit over the past three years, even after all direct and indirect expenses were deducted. -Dutch made $271,000. .-•Alden/Waterbury made $208,000. That is over one million dollars in steady profit; profit that never got pumped back into the quads. Where does the money go and why are students being asked to pay more of it by Mr. Cooley? The answer is very simple: Because the operations in the Campus Center, the Brubachcr dining facilites, and the little-known Husted cafeteria downtown, all of which give little benefit to the very students who underwrite them—you. BRUBACHER Brubacher is FSA's second monThe quad cafeterias have been atary loser that the undergraduate consistent money makers. The total for the last three students underwrite. The Brubacher cafeteria lost nearly years: $40,000 last year, and interesting-Colonial made $325,000. ly, the undergraduates who pay -State made $326,000. Note: Brubacher Cafeteria is ex- Where the Food Service Profits Go Fiscal Years ' 6 9 - 7 1 Campus Center Brubacher Cafe for this loss are not even allowed to use the facility. Only grad students are allowed to eat in Ihe Brubacher cafeteria, and the pud students do not have a mandatory meal plan as the undergrad. rcsi dent students do. Food service recently shut down the cafeteria on weekends (at an estimated payroll saving of $211111) a month) and now grad students arc complaining about the lack of service. They have to walk across Alumni Quad on weekends and eat at Alden/Waterbury. The Brubacher Snack Bar also loses money and part of the reason may be the way underbids are treated. Says a food service official: "Making the Brubacher territory reserved for graduate students has resulted in ndcliloniil losses in the Brudbncher snack Continued on Page 4 clusively for graduate mandatory meal plan. Husted cafeteria is uperatetl by SUNYA Fond Service at the private Total Sales Gross Profit Expenses $2,217,950 1,281,209 1,841,145 $159,903 86,070 147,018 $275,228 150,661 223,587 Milne Service -$559,425 -$72,782 -$60,914 School to S u n d a y , t h e c o n f e r e n c e con linn i'il, without (Iisi-upl ion, as a school for c a n d i d a t e s , wil h Assemblywi MH'II Cook, (iinininii and Krupsak speaking. Congress w o m e n Bella Ah/ue, and Shirley Chisholm also spoke Chisholm h o p e s t o form i coalition of women lo hack her declared candidal y f o r Pi -ski Mil. She said Sunday lhal '.. w o m i moving in a more posifivt dir •chun than men they an crossing cla and color lines be •ause o f a re il gui c o m m i t t m e n l r™~ Lai Zier know profits absorb Ihe losses lot these as well as I atnll) items, store. Alumni Office. lioids- Mohawk Campus, etc. I . c * ATTENTION BUSINESS MAJORS & ENGLISH MAJORS *5^ 'There are many expenses & THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY! slapped against the Campus Center CHRIS CUNNINGHAM that management doesn't know about." Retail Advertising Manager, Capital News Group Do you have questions jln.iM- will speak on INSURANCE? i AW . M M ' • '• J VOUK KK.II I! i THEN ASK SANFORD ROSENBLUM "ADVERTISING AND THE PRESS L Iuesdav, November 16 th in Humanities 129 al 8 pm SA lawyer i He'il be here tonite ai 7 pm in CC $saS *••"* ; il - S.A. Accused of Allowing 'Racism Funded by Student Tax' by Allen Altman Council member .lody Widelitz, chairman of the Grievance Commillee, accused Student Association of "racism funded by student tax" at the Central Council Meeting on Thursday, The charge was made in regard to a speech hy Black Islam Minister Kurrnkhan, that took place on Wednesday. The speaker was sponsored by the K O.P. Student Association and funded by student tax. The charge resulted from E.O.P, S t u d e n t Association's a c t i o n of barring white s t u d e n t s from the speech until all seats were filled in the buck, Widelitz presented Council with a signed s t a t e m e n t from s o m e of t h e p e o p l e t u r n e d away from t h e speech declaring When G o v e r n o r R o c k e f e l l e r s u b - " t h e y were n o t p e r m i t t e d t o a t by Stephen H. Goldstein m i t t e d his budget l o Ihe Legisla- tend a function paid for by StuDr. Philip S nil kin. University ture, t his university's total a p - dent A s s o c i a t i o n . " was sel at One of t h e white s t u d e n t s who I d i academic p r n p r ia t i o n ice - p r e s i d e d I addressed a special $:U*,H5.|,0(K). Thai figure was firsl was refused a d m i t t a n c e , said that lairs, r I hi- Uniw-i -sily Semite reduced by nearly $1 million, and he was I old all scats were reserved etillK legislal ive review cut anol her $ I for 10.O.P, s t u d e n t s t h o u g h he saw lav and sumniari /.ed Ihe stamillion from il After a n u m b e r of old and y o u n g black people being I us I' Ihe 1117 I nnivcr b l y hu(l|iel, oilier restraints were i m p o s e d , in- admit led Me c o m m e n t ed " t h e y Ihe projected hudiiel un- I'.172 j eluding an " e x p e n d i t u r e ceiling 1 '' finally let us stand in Ihe b a c k . " tile priorities decided npoi o r d e r e d by t h e Division of Ihe Alio! her w h i t e s t u d e n t w h o was meet ni|4 bet wi 'I'll ilinversllv i IJudgel, Ihe final budget rested al refused a d m i l l a n e e , c o m m e n t e d $;!(>,S2,s,n<H), m o r e than $1 mil- that he was told he w o u l d have to tut lire eniollnr lion higher than I h e 1970 budget. wail for all K.O.P, s t u d e n t s l o be O n e target of Ihe budget pro- seated before he c o u l d be seated. blems, t h e mlio of s t u d e n t s l o In response t o t h e c h a r g e , Mike faculty, has suffered, according l o L a m p e r t , President of S t u d e n t AsS i r o l k i n . Official figures note a sociation, assured Council that t h e ratio of 11.2 .students per faculty Executive Brunch would look i n t o member but t h e " o p e r a t ional the incident in o r d e r t o d e t e r m i n e figure" is I f),:t t o 1. T h e ratio in if it is a violation of s t u d e n t tax 1970 was i a , B t o 1. T h e general policy. If it is, he e x p l a i n e d , he feeling in t h e SUNY system is that would try t o prevent it from this ralio is o n e of t h e b e t t e r ones happening again, by either aiming SUNY units. freezing E.O.P. S t u d e n t AsT h e 1072 budget will be s u b m i t sociation's budget for a s h o r t ted t o t h e Legislal ure w h e n t h e period or warning t h e m t h a t their session opens i n J a n uary. b u d g e t would be frozen if the S U N Y A ' s c h u n k of t h a t d o c u incident o c c u r r e d again. m e n t first showed an e x p e c t e d Council m e m b e r Eric Lonschein . i n c r e a s e of $ 5 million, SUNY commented that everyone w h o Central h a s reviewed the r e q u e s t , paid tax s h o u l d be allowed i n t o an but it has not reached the Division event funded by s t u d e n t t a x . He of the Budget. said that the incident wus a flaSUNY Central's review of t h e grant violation of S t u d e n t As1072 budget cut t h e $ 5 million sociation policy t h a t m a n d a t e d increase t o $2.H million. Accordi m m e d i a t e action. Widelitz. said ing fo Si ml kin, a result of t h e that t h e K.O.P. S t u d e n t Asbudget c u t would be an increase sociation b r o k e t h e trust t h a t Stuin t h e ralio of s t u d e n t s t o facility dent Association had in t h e m by to 1(3,14 s t u d e n t s per facully m e m not allowing all s t u d e n t s t o a t t e n d ber. the speech. When t h e E.O.P. Student Association applied for "We m a y well he o p e r a t i n g with funds, they assured Council that a worse deficit next year than this all events w o u l d be o p e n t o the y e a r , " c o m m e n t e d Sirolkin, w h o entire University C o m m u n i t y . cited the defeat of t h e T r a n s p o r t a Day Care R e q u e s t tion Bond issue as a source of future fiscal difficulty, In oilier business, a loss of Meeting with Deans q u o r u m d u e t o Council m e m b e r s S i r o l k i n ' s meeting with univer- leaving the m e e t i n g , c u t s h o r t sity d e a n s resulted in Ihe fol- discussion over a budget r e q u e s t lowing agreed priorities; t o in- from t h e Friends of t h e Day Care crease the employment of Center. The Friends of t h e Day m i n o r i t y groups a n d w o m e n ; t o Care Center is an o r g a n i z a t i o n f o r med for l he pu rposo of improve Ihe workload d i s t r i b u t e d supplying funds for t h e Day Care continued on page IS ('enter. Gloomy Budget Picture Revealed at Senate see us for your next engagement Fund operate a administration. Undcrgrad'- hoard program . . . rosenburfi \/OIL care. have been thwarted by the IWitu't housing, Betty Friedan was one of the speakers at the weekend conference, "Women: A Political Force." During her address to the some 800 women present, she was interrupted by women protesting the conference. ——m strict vending operation al Milne operations Net Loss High attempts S u n d a y ' s C o n f e r e n c e Activities students. Graduate students do not have a Husted Betty Friedan tried t o c o n t i n u e h e r a d d r e s s , but o n c e again t h e r e was an a t t e m p t t o s h o u t her d o w n . A brief scuffle, of which most of the c o n f e r e n c e p a r t i c i p a n t s were u n a w a r e , b r o k e o u t in the back of the c h a m b e r s when s o m e conference w o m e n asked t h e g r o u p t o be quiet a n d t h e n asked t h e m t o leave. T h e g r o u p of a b o u t 25 w o m e n dissenters left soon after a n d c o n t i n u e d their protesl in f r o n t of t h e Capitol s t e p s . Inside, Friedan r e s u m e d the s t a t e m e n t of p u r p o s e for t h e conference— the political p o w e r which w o m e n must learn t o assert. She pointed o u t that " W e are n o t here as a t o k e n political force This ( t h e Assembly C h a m b e r s ) has been t u r n e d over t o us because we are already a political f o r c e . " S h e stressed t h a t if w o m e n were t o he effective as a force t o b e t t e r .society t h r o u g h g o v e r n m e n t , t h e y m u s t be able t o transcend r h e t o r i c and work with w o m e n whose style and political s t a n d i n g m a y be different from their o w n . Decrying t h e fact t h a t t h e S t a t e S e n a t e has n o w o m e n m e m b e r s , a n d that o u t of 2 0 7 seats in t h e S t a t e A s s e m b l y , o n l y t h r e e are held by w o m e n . Friedan urged t h a t " t h i s g o v e r n m e n t be of, by and for t h e w o m e n w h o deserve t o be h e r e . " She c o n t i n u e d " m e n in high places are t r e m b l i n g at t h e t h r e a t of this n e w non-violent force... All t h e talent a n d political energy which formerly was given t o m e n will be given t o w o m e n . . . t h e only power which can keep w o m e n from attaining their goals is w o m e n t h e m s e l v e s . " J u n e Martin, Director of t h e Central Staff of Ihe New York S t a l e Assembly, gave an address on s p o n s o r s h i p , lobbying and the drafl of legislation. T h e conference t h e n b r o k e u p i n t o w o r k s h o p s t o discuss reeom m e n d a t i o n s for t h e drafting of legislation of interest l o w o m e n . O n e of the r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s called for p r o s t i t u t i o n t o be legalized. \hok for our pamphlet - it's in this issue... Free Ear Piercing Service TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 4 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 * Wh$re the Food Service Profits Come From Fiscal Years '69-71 Dutch State $1,124,402 $758,215 $576,771 $208,685 Total Sales Gross Profit Expenses $2,138,572 $1,410,230 $1,085,623 $1,951,761 $1,264,015 $993,111 $2,108,936 $1,389,901 $1,074,091 Net Profit $325,060 $271,284 $316,261 Total Quad Meal Contract Net Profits, fiscal years 1969-1971, $1,121,290. I Colonial Alden Waterbury Service: "Undergraduates are Continued from Page 2 absorbing t h e losses o n bar. Undergrads feel u n w e l c o m e Brubacher—as they are on other a n d are b o y c o t t i n g the facility... FSA o p e r a t i o n s . " t h u s increasing t h e l o s s . " HUSTED C o m m e n t s Peter Haley, AssisT h e third and final food service t a n t t o t h e Director o f F o o d loser is t h e Husted Cafeteria, loca- ted in the Milne School, a private high s c h o o l . The university operates Milne, and high school students as well as central administrators use the facility. Most undergraduates don't even realize i t exists. Food service management recommended a few years ago t h a t Husted be turned i n t o a straght vending operation to alleviate the losses. The high school s t u d e n t s and central administrators d i d n ' t like that. The Albany S t a t e administration killed the idea. The loss last year? $ 2 0 , 5 9 6 . 3 5 . Undergraduate resident s t u d e n t s paid the bill through quadrangle profits. PRICE HIKE? DESIGN OUR 1972 SALOMON BINDING T S AND e v e r y o n e in t h e University comm u n i t y can c o m e and sit in on the meeting. A t a n y r a t e , FSA is in trouble. R o b e r t C o o l e y told these reporters in S e p t e m b e r that "the corp o r a t i o n is n o t iwolvent." But it is nearly $ 3 5 0 , 0 0 0 in the red. FSA is p a y i n g off it's d e b t s by borr o w i n g f r o m t h e banh.s (thus c r e a t i n g n e w o n r s ) , converting s o m e real e s t a t e \\ owns into cash assets, a n d using he board money and i n c o m e frori textbook sales t h a t is has been receiving. Almost e v e r y o n e in t h e student governm e n t , a n d m o r e than a few adm i n i s t r a t o r s argue that this situation d o e s indeed equal insolvency T h e r e is also c o n c e r n that ui'-gative s t u d e n t a t t i t u d e s arc further u n d e r m i n i n g the corporation O n e faculty board member, In the light of all of this eviA r t h u r Collins of the English dence, the chances of Coolcy get- D e p a r t m e n t , is known to lie so Ling his wish and increasing meal c o n c e r n e d a b o u t this that lie recontract prices has appreciably cently invited the editor in duet diminished. In fact, no other FSA of this n e w s p a p e r , the President official supports his boss in the and Vice-President of Student Asbelief that u n d e r g r a d u a t e s sociation, and the Chairm; I s h o u l d p a y more money for Central Council t o his home for meals next semester. Because of dinner to talk a b o u t the snbjevi the shaky financial posture of the He is afraid t h a t increasingly .<d organization, n o one is saying verse s t u d e n t criticism of FSA is anything about what next year may scaring a w a y would-be money leu bring in the way of price in- ders and t h u s , further threatening creases. an e c o n o m i c collapse. But as for the spring of ' 7 1 , o n e But in a c t u a l i t y , m a n y \w\ Hut high FSA official told the ASP Collin's fears should have Iweti that " R o b e r t Cooley is o n a nanticipated. As Robert Cuole\ island." wrote in his d i r e c t o r ' s epi And if I as I m o n t h ' s membership O c t o b e r 28, 1970: meeting was any indication, the " T h e FSA is an open book, ih Membership Board and Board of e m p l o y e e s , a group of haul Directors also remain unconvin- working p e o p l e , the Cor pun turn ced. They were so concerned non-profit; and it is our hope tlmt, about the a m o u n t of m o n e t a r y as the sustained program lor .iiinn: loss in the Campus Center food ' h o w we tick' goes o n in ihi operation, that they refused l o coming m o u t h s , L'niveiMi\ fieo-jHi recess and invited Mr. Cooley t o will b e l t e r u n d e r s t a n d our <n ^.m come back on November 29th at zat.ion and Ms cnntriliul imi2::i0 for a butter and fuller expla- their w e l f a r e , " nation. As newly enfranchised ll is o n e of his few wishes i n "coiistituenl members of FSA, being reali/.ed. "ONLY A NIGGER" P H I L A D E L P H I A ( L N S ) - J a m e s R i c h a r d s o n and William Morris, t w o black detectives for t h e Philadelphia Police d e p a r t m e n t , were arrested, humiliated and beaten early this week while trying t o break up a scuffle b e t w e e n three people on the c o r n e r of a West Philadelphia neighborhood. A c c o r d i n g t o their a t t o r n e y , Cecil M o o r e , t h e t w o officers were leaving the Jefferson Club, in West Philly, a b o u t 3 : 1 6 T u e s d a y m o r n i n g . T h e y were off d u t y , and dressed in civilian clothing. " T h e y noticed an a r g u m e n t going on b e t w e e n t w o or t h r e e people on the corner. The two black officers b r o k e t h e a r g u m e n t u p and then a red car drove u p , " said M o o r e . " T h e officer in the red car accosted R i c h a r d s o n , " Moore c o n t i n u e d . " R i c h a r d s o n s h o u t e d , ' I ' m an officer,' and s h o w e d his i d e n t i f i c a t i o n . " " T h e n , five o t h e r officers arrived on the scene including a s e r g e a n t . " T h e officers frisked Richardson and felt his gun. Richardson was insisting he was an officer and showed t h e m his badge and I.D., " s a i d M o o r e , " a n d so did M o r r i s . " " T h e sergeant told the officers t o ' b o o k - e m ' " . Richardson was allowed t o p u t his gun in his a u t o t h a t was parked n e a r b y before entering the meat wagon and being t a k e n to the police s t a t i o n at 55th and Pine streets. " R i c h a r d s o n and Morris t h o u g h t t h a t o n c e t h e y got t o the police s t a t i o n they would the whole m a t t e r cleared u p , " explained M o o r e . According t o their a t t o r n e y , the following events t o o k place: " T h e y were taken to the o p e r a t i o n s desk at 5 5 t h and Pine Streets and then they headed t o w a r d s the p h o n e s t o call their superiors. "Morris m a d e his p h o n e call, b u t when R i c h a r d s o n a t t e m p t e d to, he was grabbed by the s a m e officers w h o were a t 52nd and Spruce Streets. T h e officers told R i c h a r d s o n , ' y o u c a n ' t m a k e a p h o n e call, smart nigger.' " T h e y t h e n t o o k Richardson t o the b a c k , w h e r e t h e y b e a t him with nightsticks and Fists and their feet. " A black corporal at the station house b r o k e t h e beating up and R i c h a r d s o n and Morris were allowed t o go. "Morris w e n t h o m e and Richardson w e n t t o the Philadelphia General Hospital. A r o u n d nine o'clock t h a t s a m e T u e s d a y m o r n i n g , b o t h Richardson and Morris were called into t h e R o u n d - H o u s e (police a d m i n i s t r a t i o n building) t o give s t a t e m e n t s . T h a t ' s when I was c o n t a c t e d by R i c h a r d s o n , " the a t t o r n e y c o n c l u d e d , Moore said t h a t he was filing a federal c o u r t suit against the City of Philadelphia and the S t a t e of Pennsylvania. 62% For Withdrawal N e w York (LNSJ- A few years ago, we would have t h o u g h t it was a misprint By a margin of t h r e e to o n e ( 6 2 % t o 21%) Americans now favor withdrawing all forces from Vietnam by next May "even at the risk of a C o m m u n i s t takeo v e r , " according to the latest liar ris poll. At the same time, they strongly a n d specifically o p p o s e all of t h e half-way alternatives Nixon has up his sleeve: Leaving 50,000 non-combat t r o o p s there— 5 5 % o p p o s e d , 3 2 % «, the world ^e«^V Employees call the Patroon Roo m 'the white elephant of the Campus CenU," in favor. C o n t i n u i n g l o use U.S. b o m b e r s and helicopters57% opposed, 2 3 % in favor. C o n t i n u i n g t o send over $1 billion a year in military aid to the South V i e t n a m e s e - 70% opposed, 1 6% in favor. At t h e s a m e time, a recent s t u d y has revealed that m o r e b o m b s have been d r o p p e d over Indochina during President N i x o n ' s first three years in the White House than during the last t h r e e years of the J o h n s o n A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . ?yS*~ canse e • I <%e'o* and "a faculty dimng club.1' .,,,, SKI EUROP FREE! We are having a con lo^l! A design contest to see who can come up with the wildest, most original design for next year. Sketch something out on a scrap of paper or whatever—you don't have to be an artist to win. Entries will be based strictly on zanniness and frivolity. But get this, super-skier: grand prize winner will be flown to Europe on Scandinavian Airlines or two weeks of skiing, all expenses paid. Remember, your design would include both front and back of TShirt. ^ Contest absolutely closes ''' s j midnight December 3 1 , 'S\* 1971. Send entries to "SALOMON T-Shirt Contest," A & T Ski W Company, 1725 Westlake North, Seattle, Wash. 981 Oa ^ ^ ^ On/ur your 1971 SALOMON T Shirt by sondiny S3 00 along with yo I ^ M M B "''""•' "'filing address and 1 S/urt sue (Small, medium or largo.} to SALOMON SALOMON 1 Shirts. 1725 West lake North, Seattle. Washington 98109 x#x XCW£/MM/$# /MKU/V£S PAGE 5 L y n b r o o k , NY ( L N S ) - T h e s t u d e n t e d i t o r s of t h e L y n b r o o k High School n e w s p a p e r w o n b a c k t h e i r positions and forced t h e school t o back d o w n p n any further c e n s o r s h i p o n g r o u n d s o t h e r than " l i b e l , obscenity and plagiarism." T h e six-person editorial board of the p a p e r , headed by a 17-year .old w o m a n , Phyllis C u r o t t , had been dismissed for insisting o n r e p o r t i n g t h a t t h e school b a n d had decided against participating in any more Memorial Day parades. T h e b a n d m e m b e r s felt t h a t Memorial D a y p a r a d e s h a d implicit political m e a n i n g and t h a t they would r a t h e r play a c o n c e r t on their o w n . T h e s c h o o l a d m i n i s t r a t i o n a p p a r e n t l y felt t h a t a n e w s p a p e r r e p o r t of the b a n d ' s decision had a political m e a n i n g too—one t h a t they could not tolerate. But when t h e s t u d e n t s t h r e a t e n e d a suit and their ACLU lawyer convinced the local Board of Education t h a t t h e s c h o o l would lose the case if it ever went t o c o u r t , their editorial positions were restored and t h e y were given a free h a n d in setting editorial policy in the future. Not So Credible E A S T L A N S I N G Mich. ( L N S ) - N o b o d y believes a n y t h i n g t h e e s t a b l i s h m e n t says these d a y s according t o the University of Michigan's C e n t e r for Political Studies. A recent C e n t e r opinion sampling s h o w s a big d r o p in t h e n u m b e r of adult Americans w h o express a high degree of confidence in t h e Federal G o v e r n m e n t a c c o r d i n g t o T i m e Magazine. In 1 9 6 4 , 6 2 % of t h o s e polled expressed high confidence. In 1 9 7 0 t h e figure was 37%. Dr. Warren Miller, d i r e c t o r of the Center, says the loss of c o n f i d e n c e spread t o o t h e r i n s t i t u t i o n s and leadership t o o . Bankers and financial leaders w e r e well regarded by 6 7 % of the p u b l i c back in 1 9 6 6 b u t with t h e s t o c k m a r k e t s h a k y , jobs scarce and the wage price freeze being m e t with m o r e and m o r e distrust, t h e y have slipped in regard t o 3 6 % in 1 9 7 1 . Psychiatrists have fallen from grace by 16 p o i n t s from a 5 1 % vote of c o n f i d e n c e in '66 t o 3 5 % t o d a y and scientists and technological progress has d i p p e d from 5 6 % to 3 2 % . Of c o u r s e , n o b o d y over trusted advertising execs, b u t in '71 t h e y creashed t o 1 3 % from a previous peak of 2 1 % c o n f i d e n c e . VD on the Rise NEW YORK ( A P ) T h e president of the American Social Health Association said t o d a y t h a t t h e n u m b e r of r e p o r t e d &y phi His cases in the United States increased 15.6 per cent in fiscal 1971 over the previous year. Dr. Bruce Webster also said t h a t reported cases of g o n o r r h e a , which the ASH A had officially declared an e p i d e m i c last year, increased 8.9 per c e n t in the same period. " T h e r e is indeed a VD crisis," Dr. Webster said.emphastzing t h a t t h e A S H A figures were based only o n r e p o r t e d cases. He said an association s t u d y indicated t h a t d o c t o r s report t o public health a u t h o r i t i e s only o n e out of eight cases they treat. His r e m a r k s were in a s t a t e m e n t prepared for a news c o n f e r e n c e . . -_ Till BfT r w N & \ A totlBM timtfTt AH oo vo MMB/rr PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE Vp n nj neff >"S ZlPflR 1>P AUC IBM Sell rtru Typewriter stmve Hmmff. S,,i ciilll nnn in U.'i r Doctoral l>i ssertatlons 1 ,151 111 > i m i l Hill! SlItVIIH Kurt MM.II I.' H.itiis 462-8283 162-1509 *We regretfroInform you your ton was among the lowest caiuatty count fn roctnfr montfia' Bircher on Bench? Earth News Investigative r e p o r t e r s in the P h o e n i x , A r i z o n a , area have u n c o v e r e d d i s t a n t c o n n e c t i o n s b e t w e e n S u p r e m e C o u r t n o m i n e e William R e h n q u i s t a n d t h e J o h n Birch Society—but they have been unable t o find any direct involvement of R e h n q u i s t with t h a t ultra-conservative o r g a n i z a t i o n . N e w s m a n David Lucer, e d i t o r o f t h e w e e k l y " V o i c e of t h e C i t y " in P h o e n i x , has d o c u m e n t e d that R e h n q u i s t was o n e of the principal s p e a k e r s at an " A r i z o n a n s for A m e r i c a " c o n f e r e n c e back in 1958. T h a t c o n f e r e n c e was arranged by Francis Cullen B r o p h y , w h o is n o w a m e m b e r o f the national b o a r d o f d i r e c t o r s o f t h e J o h n Birch S o c i e t y ; a n d o n e o f the o t h e r main speakers t o address t h a t 1958 right-wing c o n f e r e n c e in Phoenix was R o b e r t Welch, founder of the Birch S o c i e t y , Lucer r e p o r t s t h a t o b t a i n i n g b a c k g r o u n d material on R e h n q u i s t from t h e Arizona daily n e w s p a p e r s has been " v e r y difficult." He cited t h e fact that the " A r i z o n a R e p u b l i c , " a n e w s p a p e r k n o w n for its ultra-conservative editorial policy, s u d d e n l y closed d o w n its n e w s p a p e r library on M o n d a y " f o r no reasons which were ever e x p l a i n e d . " Lucer a d d e d t h a t he was able t o persuade the R e p u b l i c ' s e d i t o r t o give him access t o th*» news clips on Rehnquist— only t o find t h a t m a n y o f the n e w s stories, including the 1 9 5 8 s t o r y of his speech t o " A r i zonans for A m e r i c a , " were missing. Lucer, a journalist c a m p a i g n e r for civil rights and civil liberties in the Phoenix area, insists, however, that he has not been able t o clearly d o c u m e n t any direct c o n n e c t i o n b e t w e e n R e n q u i s t a n d the Birch S o c i t y . Said Lucer; "I have talked to Birch m e m b e r s w h o swear they saw Rehnquist at meetings. But when it c o m e s time for t h e m t o m a k e a s w o r n statement...well, they begin t o have s e c o n d t h o u g h t s ; they admit they aren't really s u r e tile m a n they saw at those meetings was R e h n q u i s t . " RehnquisL's possible c o n n e c t i o n t o the Birch Society was originally voiced by former New York Times reported Sidney ZiGtt. Zion is the same n e w s m a n w h o first revealed that Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to the New York T i m e s . R e h n q u i s t , whos«» b a c k g r o u n d is c u r r e n t l y being investigated by t h e Senate Judicial C o m m i t t e e , has s u b m i t t e d a sworn s t a t e m e n t t o that C o m m i t t e e d e n y i n g m e m b e r s h i p in the Birch Society. -J inoiiday -football on T V (guys: $2; girli; $11 BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF twcsdiiy -movie night FUNNY GiRL full length feature and Old Time flicks » « ' « l i l « ' N l l n > • - Q l f " S n i g h t Drinks Yi Price ! Old Time Flicks, again! AMATEUR NIGHT: free drinks lor entertainers! iTower East Cinema i Nov. 19 & 20 7:00 & 10 -157-85831 LC7I Admission: $.75 and $.25 with State Quad Card Ilmrsda.y, h-ida.v, saiiirdu.y -contemporary folk Thursday, Friday, and Saturday: UILL I'OLCIIINSKI KllllflJty -fllCKS OQOin Rerun of Tuesday'! Movie (No Minimum or Cover) plus: "Twofcr Night": TWO DRINKS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! J TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 6 g^lfattlUjy We editorial comment o^ies. J||r YOU EVER PONCEPED DEATH? rve DEVELOPED QUITT A PHILOSOPHY ON TOE V SUBJECT.. ... I FEEL THAT DEATH IS Sbl/l6~ TWIN4 s c II1FJNIT6, &R6AT6I?. TWAM WHAT OuR. ircAE.ee IMTEUJOerJce CAM CC«PREWeWt>. HB REALO/ C*KiM0T ExpLWN. Wanted: Jews of the New Left l o Build a New Society WHAT [JEATH 1 5 - O R How I T Conspiracy! b y Barry Silverberg Opinion Once the University tells you that budget cuts will make y o u r classes larger and the choice m o r e limited, and the 4S" 15% FSA begins d r o p p i n g broad hints a b o u t a meal price hike, it seems almost like a conspi- racy that the State Ed people have c o m e u p with a >\vsk}\n M-VKT plan to jack up SUNY tuition to SI 5 0 0 per year. fkiw. ASP, ma\r 'THAT'S WHAT WE NEED — A GOOD WAR TO KEEP OUR MINDS OFF OUR TROUBLES!' Certainly the plan, as explained in last Friday's has some merits, at least as far as t h e private schools of public New York State are concerned. Non- institutions will be able to lower their rates and SUNY will raise its to a median $ 1 5 0 0 standard Keep Goodman! Dear Sir: In regard to the recent denial of tenure to Assistant Professor David Goodman I as a student at S.U.N.Y.A. would like to express my opinion. I feel that it is imperative that students have a right in the say to the retention or dismissal of faculty. I feel too only the students who take courses taught by that professor are proper judges. As a student in one of Dr. Goodman's classes I feel competent enough in expressing my opinion both fairly and honestly. Professor Goodman's ability as a scholar was judged by his peers to be deficient while his lecturing capability was rated only as competent. I find Professor Goodman's ability as a scholar very much better than many other professors who have received tenure. I also perceive his lecturing capacity as very much above the average. Also the relationship by students and Dr. Goodman is quite close as he is well liked. It is this closeness I feel which carries the most weight in the retention of Dr. Goodman. I hope that you will take this in to consideration and re-evaluate Dr. Goodmun and I hope you will maintain his position in this university as a history Professor. Very truly your», David Skrilow Library, having to do with the markedly increased use of books and other library services during the current year. Although the Librarian, Mr Rutherford Kodgers, speculated at considerable length on the reasons for the increased use, the operative element of his article was the discussion of the actual increase, namely, some 66%. Here we have calculated our increase as approximately 60%. Needless to say, this increase has placed considerable strain upon the operations of the Library, especially of Circulation. Library users are taking out many more books and seem to be returning communications 'rate. Thus a n y o n e who can afford The stark facts of life concerning circulation of materials in the Library are the following: 1. the policy of making personal reserves complicates the check-in of all books and slows it down, since it is necessary to check all cards for possible personal reserves before any books are returned to the shelves; 2. a policy of renewal causes the same problem, since it is patently unfair lo renew a book if there is a personal reserve on it. Under normal staff circumstances, the Library should be able both to renew and to make personal reserves. In the present circumstances, it is hardlv a question of "either or." I would be interested in sampling student opinion on temporary abandonment of both of these services, in the interest of getting the books back on the shelves at the earliest possible moment after their return. With the new double cards, which have been delayed because of the necessity to put them out to bid and to accept the lowest bid, we will be able, ideally at least, lo get a book hack on Ihe shelves within hours after il is returned. 1 say "ideally" because this posits the existence of sufficient staff to gel the books reshelved. However, relieved of the necessity to check every book for possible personal reserve, the circulation staff could devote a much larger percentage of its time to reshelving. The Senate Library Council is about to promulgate a new Circulation Policy, one which was ideated largely in a vacuum and with Utile consultation of the Library staff. Under any circumstances whatsoever, the policy is essentially unworkable; under Ihe present stringent budget situaiton, it will be disastrous not only for the users but for the Library Sincerely yours, J.It. Ashton Direclor of Libraries them more readily than formerly. Our staff has been hit by a number of resignations and illnesses, vacancies which we are unable to fill in the present budget crisis. In fact, it has been recently decreed thai no vacancies present or future will be filled anywhere in the Slate University system. While we occasionally deploy clerical and professional staff from other areas of the Library to help shelve the books, we thereby damage the other operations of the Library, such as catalogue;. This kind of To the Edilor. emergency operation is never In the New York Times o n going lo be satisfactory either to M o n d a y , H November, there was a the users or to the Library staff. article a b o u t the Yale University UK£ rl SL'fflV GftE/- I'flt'T NO we. WELI IT TKSH TH(\tifiov see, .* RACK OF TUTS SC^Ki vie SCtitiFZ •5P TnofOw i 5 MUfrt THE OGSEfi T£0 /-is FKctn Tn£ HO'SPi-Tflt? tlES TtfB Hi^W^fl/ itfrtft/, wriiTe. S f l f ^ u P Library Stress TH£ W0U.\ C o i P t>e scfr/yos ON rn£ trflTE fl/jsuADiry ~>0 My fV' n a y STr THflt^ ,ny)&* "'f*** 1° TO0F^' „*L8Q l*SU£ PPWft.tfW, *V** 1 W oocto /1ND THE pWSEuMS, "ens ')ND cyRlToftS fiEco/nf fXQflo fW$CN T h e ' r i c h and the middle class get a college education, the poor v get a token EOP above-poverty working class get It's no wonder that it effort, and nothing; came out ol the State Of course, t h a n k s t o t h e immense b u r e a u c r a c y ol the s t a t e , plus the efforts of those legislators still have consciences, this move, like any to the consideration the stage bureaucracy for years. At works in our who least favor, this acting against any change at all from status q u o But how typical it is! The people of this state w h o can least afford to send their kids to college are the first t o get screwed. How many of the w e a l t h y will be disadvantaged tuition at SUNY? by a 200 per cent increase in For that matter, how m a n y send their sons and daughters t o a state school? The and poor student loses, the working people lose, education generally, when the gifted-but-poor are excluded, loses as well. Who gains? Not only the State, but the private schools which all ol friends, and probably most of the State Rocky's Legislature, a t t e n d e d when they were young, seventy years ago. And they'll certainly be pressing the old alumni for some fast aid. All of us had b e t t e r pray that Stale Ed d o e s n ' t take that " a i d " out of the limited funds ol the State University. Albany Student Press Edilor-ln-Chief lorn clingaii News Edilor Advertising Manager vicki zeldin Associate News luliior Jeff rtidgers Assistant Advertising llusiness Manager plnl mark Inimical Editors Arts Editor SUL . Hi****"" sieve timinoff Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor SQUAT rue mete scligson warren wislmrl ™.T Fh\ STATION Tff&fiQ0V£ON WWLe IXM STONED. HOME MOVIE'" (^AVYT) d e b b i e kuemcii A/\an/ of us see the first need to be self—solution. T h e fact of the ghetto (shtett) forced Jews lo accept their position as pariahs in general medieval society. To venture beyond the ghetto gales (yes, Virginia, gates with locks and keys!) was to invite what today would pass for muggings and murder. Is it not understandable why some Jews still feel a sense of paranioaV But the paranoia is being dissolved, as today's generation finds common cause with other persecuted peoples. Many of us see injustice within society, and are attempting to correct il. Perhaps we don't use "fucked" and "fascist" enough in our articles (oops! I mean rhetoric). Indeed, we may be guilty of concern for our brothers in the Soviet Union, before wo are Similarly, one cannot claim appreciation of another's struggle or attempt to gain another's freedom for him ( and with him ) until one has "liberated" oneself first. There'll be no rebuttals from this writer as to inequity within the American state and nation. Yet, the problem seems to lie beyond the materia! freedom of the "oppressed" peoples. For example, what is gained by a demonstration of window-breaking, if the demonstrators' first reaction is lo take the TV sets? The demonstration is against "oppression" supposedly, so why not educate "the people" to reject the very thing they are struggling against competelive materialism. All a demonstration, such as I've just noted, accomplishes, is a change of ownership of the material enfringemerits of our society. The "revolution" implied as necessary from most New Left articles (page 15 of Friday's ASP being no different) can never be accomplished until TV sets are no longer desired by people who need food a lot more. Perhaps, the front-liners of our salvation would do better to aim their investigative geniuses at that problem, rather than in distorting Jewish attempts at self-help. The Jews of SUNYA cannot be neatly categorized and placed in a box with a neatly tied ribbon by any man or woman -- regardless of his or her polemical genius. We are a group of individuals, with individual concerns. We are not all the distasteful bigots that speak of Blacks as "shvartzes." To attempt to categorize us as such, is a betrayal to the cause of "the people" - so readily an absolute for the New Left Jews. Pick Up Pie, ANP MAKES A Your Application Advertising Production alim d. abbey Editor torn r h o d e s gllry robert miiyer Circulation Manager sue nullfis Photography Editors Graffiti Editor sussmuii ,•„„ Exchange Edilor r mark lileofsky Th» Albany Student Jews have always been in the forefront of "causes." Their very presence in such a position often places us in suspicion. What have they got to gain by supporting Blacks, Chicanos, or Indians? Many of the groups we so ardently support question our motives. Their suspicions are real, for they fail to recognize the very reason that places Jews in positions of support. We have been persecuted for centuries and we know what it feels like to be killed, gassed, or tortured. Many of us can still feet the pain of our last generation that died in Hitler's camps. EBB'f imBBP __-- ^ Mf umi H HAIWOU BL/WEWTEIH, W h « I N t TO START titt HQUft Off WTH Tl'f UHHHH* AfTM iimwts FtMltHG lytlTK m FiHf-IWHRmPM AHPANTftMA, MornfUr of iHVtNTioH'.'acb wes AN We f/NALLYiacm tfN To ANOBSCW WtHSTVFfED (OUCH, w ShOfn WOMAN AND n (Ossified Advertising Manager robcrt /.nremba Wire Services Nominations for the Outstanding Teacher Award will be accepted between November 15 and February 15, All members of the University community are invited to submit nominations, including self nominations. Nominations may be anonymous. In order to function affectively, the committee decided that none of its own members may be nominated. Nominations must include more than just a name. They should also mention the courses which the professor teaches that indicate excellence; and they should specify in detail why the nominee should be considered an outstanding teacher. These inputs will help the committee develop guidelines and criteria for selecting winners of the award. All nominations, inquiries and information should be sent to the committee chairman, Terrell Bynum, in Humanities 256. The Outstanding Teacher Awards Committee For centuries, the Jewish people have been "fucked over." I suppose thai places the Jewish oppression {dig that radical talk!) on the same level as the present Third World oppression. Nobody with the least bit of sensitivity denies the unfair standards of American society with regard to the Blacks, the Chicanos, the Indians, or the women of our society, We are all amply aware of the impending doom of our society once each of the divisive factions gets control of guns and oilier weaponry. Then, they'll all be in the position to liberate themselves from the "facist running dogs." y/ actively concerned about their fellows in the Soviet Union; but is it not tatural to solve your home problems first, before you go forth to solve the world's problems? That doesn't mean that some of us don't elect to join other groups in their struggles, but rather than many of us see the first need to be self-solution; then, to add our numbers and influence to the more general struggle. As Ghandi said, one cannot begin a march without the first step! Inula mule John fairhall debbic natansohn To tin? University Community, In ki'epinn with ;i Senate decision last spring the President lias appointed a seven-member Outstanding Teacher Awards Committee. The committee includes lour faculty members: Terrell Bynum, Uoberl 1'Yosl, Helen Horowitz, and Ilyman Kurifz; and three students; Tom LaBnrbera, Phil Prince, and Bert Sapurslein. The committee lias elected Terrell Bynum chairman tor the year. The Outstanding Teacher Award will be a grant of 952,000. Up to two such awards will be given annually lo members of the SUNYA academic staff. The first task facing the committee is the development of a workable and appropriate set of criteria for reaching decisions. In tackling this task, the committee will work closely with all parts of the University community and will also gather information from other colleges where similar awards are given. The procedures of the committee in securing nominations and reaching decisions will be made public throughout the University community. SUNYA is blessed with a mulUtude(of Jewish radicals. In the New Left, expecially, well-informed sources recently reported that there are "many of us in the left who are Jewish and relate to being Jewish (who) would like some of our politics heard above alt the usual drivel and rhetoric that gets thrown in our direction." With such good news, every Jew at SUNYA and in the Albany community should be gratified. Our salvation lies near at hand. The leaders of "the people" are Jews: they relate to being Jews; and they're interested in helping to recreate Jewish social scenes so that we can all take part in the paradise they, the people are going to create. Blessed be the New Left, Creator of our liberated souls and bodies, who bringeth forth our salvation from the imperialist running dogs of capitalism and fascist forces of the state! By God, we are well aware of what a ghetto means to a people, or what slavery means. Let it not be forgotten that we were exiled from our original land for centuries. Our acceptance in various societies has always been conditional. Until America, we could never be sure of when our bodies would be destroyed and our immediate culture eradicated. The medieval lords forced Jews into such occupations as merchants and money-lenders ( a sin in the Roman Catholic doctrine of the time). Now the very forces -- their descendents -that forced many Jews to find survival in those areas, accuse us of such conspiracies. The non-acceptance of the Jew by medieval society makes any claim that Jews sought favor and assimilation, incredible. Manager niaida oringlicr Features Editors Outstanding Teacher radical move, w h e t h e r just or unjust, will probably not get time, communications the Education d e p a r t m e n t ! r ni&M-mys w/irtr money Ffi/om CTHBK fMCESte T u f f TTixf »r room £ 0 uc/ir<OAi T H I S • * I / i f . . £prt WHAT T V I T I 0 " ' 5 „ the $ 1 5 0 0 , plus the usual S1200 per year living expenses, can go to college. PAGE 7 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS wl)0d j c | , „| V ers(iii sieve pollack Prets i i localod in Campui Cantar 3 2 6 o l Iho Slala Unlvarilty o l N a w York at Albany, 1400 Washington Avonuo. Albany, Now —'—ffF=n POH'7 rovLH THUT DIAL LtAVE IT ON, TtitsTATIdN I'M GOltUb IMHE -J? MOTHER mMlli for election to the College of Arts & Sciences Council DUE IN SA OFFICE ON MONDAY, NOV. 22 AT 5 PM York 12203. The ASP Ii partially luiukul by Mandatory Stiiilunt Tax, and can UP IH T^l ftlfl, *i^-r THAT C/I/U r\e Ctvrt&D win/ su*ct*V, N ° ftm-ctiti r op loKic^fc ba reached by dialing 4 6 7 - 2 1 9 0 . The ASP w a i loundad In 1910 by thu Class ol 1918. This newspaper is a member o l thu Colloge Pruss Servico IIIHI thu Associated Pros*. Price lor subscriptions is suvun dullars pur acadumic year. Communications 'toft, sfJa -noruNt* >I9 printed as space pannlts and are Inlormally Imiitod to 300 words. Editorial policy ol the Albany Student Prasa Is determined by the Editorial Board. Only Arts & Sciences advisees are eli TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 8 tocuotk, Proposal For Judicial This proposal Workshop ticipants HAPPY BIRTHDAY GARY!!! For Rent-3 rooms, furnished, heat and hot water provided, carpeted, Delaware, average area, ideal for couple. 4 3 4 - 3 7 5 2 after five. • «••• SQUARE DANCE FRI.NOV. 19 9-12 PM CC BALLROOM One or 2 or 3 roommates wanted for spring and/or summer terms for spacious, clean apartment on Willett St. Mostly girls here, but suit yourself. Please help us go to Hawaii & call Margie or Sandy. 465-3039. ride wanted LET UNCLE HARRY KEEP YOU WARM! R i d * needed to Cortland Nov. 19 or 2 0 . Call Pam 7-3015. Boston Univ. Ski Group- SKI SWITZERLAND- GRINDLEWALD Dec 28-Jan 7. $299 includes-Rouitd Trip via SWISS AIR, Transfers, double occupancy American breakfast and dinners, ski bafp, tips, services, etc. Information 4894)432 Professors: Book orders were due Wanted: Salesman-distributor for John—Don't Albany and other schools within factory tapes. Send name, address kinds, up-to-date. 1/3 cost of and phone. Box 9 1 1 3 Albuquerque, New Mexico. 8 7 1 1 9 . thil Friday, 11/19. Call Linda up for safety. Chick. OVERSEAS D E NTS. George Tirebiter, Betty Job- sions JOBS Australia, FOR community. The intent Africa, etc. All profes- and occupation. $3,000 S. Europe, monthly. $700 to Expenses paid, overtime, m a t i o n - W r i t e , Jobs Overseas, Dept. sightseeing. Free infor- the principles function ride to Mats. Pike exit 13. Friday 1 1 / 1 9 Box 1 5 0 7 1 , San Diego, C A . MEN'S & LADIES'SIZES AVAILABLE HAPPENING SALE M.B.A. University, York wilt be interviewing applicants 22, QUAD) HALL 2nd Floor (STATE Lounge l ( r i g h l s i d e ) b e t w e e n 7- )P.M . and M.S in Programs on November 1971 all day. information WHITMAN New interested fro the Masters in Bus- iness Administration Accounting of Syr- Syracuse, for Morrison at the Bookstore that are over six months old will be destroyed if not Congratulations further' services Service Office on campus. If Your Parents are DIVORCED and one is still single, we wanted in return for services, no necessary. Call need you for some social Research. For further information Typing S65/mo., utilities. 4 3 8 - 3 4 8 7 . 869 2474. done my $2200. Bob '66 Ford work. Fairlano. Best offer. 457-7858. Dolly! which out of the participants administrators Part time job available for Student or adult. FOR S A L E : Used snow tires and wheels 14 in. $10. 4 3 8 - 3 0 5 5 . framework with new and untried systems and theories. It requires the articulation of views at the frontier of thought which may seem heretical to the Les P a u l in Delmar N.Y. WANTED Idlewild Press, 1807 E.Olympic, Los JOBS Call Dennis /. freedom fessor fact 9'/?, 5 must sacrifice-$20. ami Ihe student in the classroom and in hut also of Ihe spun to guaid against of free inquiry. In prejudiced oi capricious whether S A L E : Good Winter Trans- Organizations within the university may be established by members of portation 1957 Chev $100 or best extra offer. Call 434-3513. qualify loi any legal purpose, the aims are leligious. political, educat- ional, economic, S. Africa, etc. All profes- and occupation, $ 7 0 0 to 1968 Corvotto Hardtop. Radials 427-390 Luggage Conv. Rack or social. Association with an inuial organization shall not necessarily disthe university based branch oi chapter YOU'VE SAC IT ALU AttlllUSlR BUSCM, INC . 51 LOUIS related oigaiii/.alioiis shall he open l o am member o f ihe umversiH c o m m u n i t y who is willing lo subsciibc lo Ihe amis of the organizations anil in 438-7976. meel Us stated obligations Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free infor- Box 1 5 0 7 1 , San Diogo, CA. si(\ versity, c. Obstruction or disruption of teaching, research, radio stations operated by university organizations administration, disciplinary or offices. university activities, functions, or of other university premises, to such a degree 4. Freedom to Protest. The right t o peaceful prolesl within the university community must be individuals. Ihe pioieclion of properly, and ihe continuation of the educational process. Orderly -fur S A L E : Woman's ski outfit hat, medium jacket, size 12 pants-$25 call Donna 7-7869. „••„„ ,„„„, Hon, die In laws ol the Umveisiis Senile, nation.i ol ihe ( n i l Service hupln>ees service activities on that the d. failure lo answer without reasonable cause a summons lo appear al a judicial hearing. The individual who is summoned may refuse to appear, but he/she must answer the summons unless reason- protected activities on university premises if there is able cause is shown. no interference with e. Physical abuse, harassment, or intimidation of free passage through areas where members of die university c o m m u n i t y have any the righl lo he. property or at university sponsored or supervised X University Governance. Members of the univercommunity must he free, individually and formulation and on matters person on university owned or supervised functions, or conduct which threatens or endangers Ihe health or safely of any such person. I. Unauthorized entry to or use of uiiiversily of general facilities., property, oi equipment, or removal or and application of insliiiiiional g. (i. Violation comment on 1971 Torch or make suggestions for Association,," th Discipline. It a is charged should be of no disciplinary concern lo the university unless the individual is unable to comply wilh I lie requirements of his particular membership may institute its own proceedings against Ihe offender at any time. 7. Privacy Rights. The university must protect the interest of its members in preservation of Ihe righl of privacy a. The university should not regard itself as the aibitei oi enforcer of the morals of its members where civil oi criminal law is not bioken. or where standaids ol conduct established by Ihe university have not been violated The right ol i"i students JUIIHUIIS .' should give the iiiiiveisit, ihe to consent lo a search ol ,i student's loom police oi oilier 1 ni\cisit\ inteiesl in [he existence .old oh|e i n - , i .j, m i / , in. nu within lb ' i u i i u ' i \ U \ coinmum' should locus on the lollovvrug mallei a \ssociational Identification III • univeisil; nun ii, lenuiie uieiiibeishin lf>i> 1)111 If llUn nnneiM" IC.jlllll' mnliolled K >'. a n t CUUdlllll! luiuf oigaui/alioi Ml) .ILCCSS l u oi use i uuncisil' individuals within 'he oigam/aiion v ' slide h.i i ieqil'-.l I I o' i'l I online- .sxlglied i n.lll.ilile .. in.: aie i • p., . ' i.i. 'h'..' • government otliciab without a ..,..,: t'.'n/illu'is l . n •„.,. , tlic UIUYCIMU • is ifiiicscnlalive see1. i<-s n. ,i sindeiii , ' o , u : i.i ..leI,'inun.- .'nmpliaine „i!' , oMsron, >' Itlii.- Helium lo! e j n l ,i and . . , p.. untitled I when lire occirpnllll • I should lie i| li!,' piupose .,! s a l ! eritn le.is'i'l Wlic .• cutis id\.nice cucunistain'C' In enieigeiH's when' nn tntneut dangei lo III,' s a l e l \ . health, oi piopci \ .i,|..i',e nolne ( onlldeiltialu \ .. 1 K C . M I U , .i..ohled lln' essenliall, '.' HIIVCI . i n Kespe. i H , I M I V confident l.il lelaliou .hip '" ,,,!, e l •' • "M" " i ,• i.lt i",t. i ii.ciiihei J m Se, lion V I li b) dele I M I I V .ii wluvl. nam, ipiiion try those requesting Ihe versity owned or operated property, as described in this publication, and in Ihe university housing brochure, j . Violation of regulations governing the use of alcoholic beverages on campus as described in Ibis publication, k. Possession, use of distribution of narcotic or dangeious drugs, except as expressly permitted by law. I Disorderly conduct or lewd, indecent, or ob- scene conduct or expression on university owned oi controlled properly or at university sponsored or in. failure university ilien to comply olficials dunes wilh ihe directions o f acting in ihe performance o f ( A n y university official directing any untveisih coiiimiinits member to act in accordance w i l h his wishes must identify lumsell upon request I. n. I ailuie l o piesenl a university I . I ' . card when icquesled lo do so In a univeisils official ( A n y i m i u ' i s i h official leqii-siing ident ideal ion l i o m anv uuiveisO', communi' menibei mils' also presenl Ins he. idem ilicm ion iiinui leqties' I i I inline i n bono' .ill contracts wilh and debts In ihe iiiioeisii'. .ni'J i n I hose nuclides wilh which lire Hi an p Violation of m m ci s i i \ policies goveinuii' noiorcycks in VI i regulations use nt automobiles, ihe possession oi use MI other rnoioi vehicles on campus.oi lion ol p a i k i n . regulations published by the nus Seen • t i..e Possess; ,.' ,, ..i MI use o l Ine.ums oi othei ng pm nudgeled facilities, as described in this publication, id. • notices should he give;. " ' p i,.10 M! ali i. .11 ml.l In tions, events on campus, and use o f university in advance :- sought mipioveineni oi 'epaiis ' " iwecn November 19 at 9:30 pm h. Violation of uiiiversily policies or of regula- applicable lau lelaiing to miii H I T• "Ms,HI ihl\ leaie,I , ' n i ' \ shoul.l be allowed v, olio n ! u n c i . , ' , i i Him- .1, ,'\ !,• .•• Wli to properly of a tions governing the registration of student organiza- in Ihe I I Nothing in ihe university lelalionship oi resid hall contract destruction and/or regulated activities privacy lesideuce halls is a value which iniisl be protected en.e and/oi administration i. Violations of rules governing residence in uni- also a violation of a published university regulation, b. Theft university properly is on university premises. within ihe c o m m u n i t y . the university uiidei menibei of Ihe university community while such with an off campus violation ol law, Ihe maltei i: .mimes, the i< line .oul ad.hesse.. .< . n l i . e i , an,! • to a meeting on Friday, of l.uw and University inembei of the university c o m m u n i t y w . i r u n ; HI -illiei state ledeial lecal a i i l l i o r i l v l o do Sen.He I'lOlessiomd Assoc ,.' in CC 305, the Torch office. authorized picketing and other forms of peaceful protest are !>\ 11 ic (iiadualc oi I Indeigiadiiale Sin den I -Vsi.oci • >• statewide pinfessioiial organi/ainuis. piovisinn • •TiT.iiMTiTminii.MMn.iiiMMTiiiiimiMriM.ru, procedures, or other including its public activity can no longer reasonably continue. obligation, retains Ihe righl to assure the safety of Organizations ale , , | l i - cialh iccoginzed accnidiug lo guidelines eslahhslic i FOR h Budweiser. action arising oul of If the violation of law occurs on campus and is .'. Freedom of Association Ihe university community 1972 Torch, should come WHEN M0U SAY knowingly furnishing false information to the uni- academic evaluation ski boots. Size Any club wishing to it's on the tip of your tongue. T university documents, records, or identification; or, from arbitrary disciplinary in the Classroom, freedom ol dis- conference to insure the realization not only of ihe FOR STU Europe, mation-Write, Jobs Overseas, Dept. E6, and its editors and managers must be protected supervision. tin in university privileges. Membership i n all univeiAustralia, as cheating, engaging in property 457-4779. FOR such I lie and protested, ll is the responsibility of the pro- tropics, Dishonesty, fraudulent behavior, forgery, alteration or misuse of the existence ol Ihe university for antho- stamped envelope, Angeles, California 9 0 0 2 1 . 92115. b. duced by university organizations or offices (includ- law on tile fullest sense of the expression is indispensihle lo cussion and expression of views must he encouraged the or criminal property. condition ized. Nordica on of any civil university owned or operated destruction of such property or part thereof, or of Call Scott, 4 5 7 - 4 7 2 6 . overtime, a. Viol All publications pro- defined means for participation by all concerned in buckles. Good condition. Moving to after 4 PM or evenings. monthly. J. Freedom of publication. inteiesl lo die c o m m u n i t y . There must he clearly needs help with household and dri- $3,000 lo familiarize 1 imsclf/herself with these regulations. in anothci context. In short, academic freedom in cerned sions by any individual, group or organization, except as authorized by the president of the university. to the role o f the accused within the context, no mallei how appiopriate they might he $ 7 5 each. Call 4 7 2 6 3 1 9 . America, community. It is the responsibility of the individual policy particular, every ell'orl must he made by all con- ving responsibilities. Call 439-5506 One word best describes the taste of beer... adapted may not be stated as the position of the university lo expiess llieii views on issues ol years left on warrant. Exc. only schedule. Family of Multiple OVERSEAS Approval or disapproval of any policy or position collectively, ua, s DENTS. be followed as set forth in the following pages, of the individual, group, or organization. i l l lei. that would be stilling in ihe university Criterion 4-way spkrs: 6 speakers Include disciplinary action by the university, Procedures will tion ment, imisi not he icsliicled by artificial or arbit- in. reel stereo playback. TransistorSell-$50.00. following actions and/or behavior are ex- university, except to identify the university affilia- ral) in ea. 112 in woofer), yr. old. 4 POETRY The pressly prohibited. Violations may result in official sity be adjusted to accomodate tndivid- logy. pursuit of its educational objectives, or threatens Luxe De Excellent or staff— without express authority from the president of the preserved. The university, in recognizing its legal unite in their mutual search for faculty, the safety of persons and property. group or organization may use the university name which faculty, students, and member-student, insliiiiiional 2-3 afternoons a Sclerosis patient No individual, disapproval from any source of editorial policy or week, from 2-6 PM, but hours can ' Name. ing Ihe student press) must be free of censorship, intellectual giowth. This necessarily means experi- Magnavox 4 track tape recorder. 7 home Wind riddle, call me. Spaceface. d. Use of the University policy affecting university affairs. help wanted Love, the body authorized to approve and allocate funds. Bin these experiments, and these testings of senti- 1971-modal. Now you're legal! Les. Birth week a general structure operate. majority, and may indeed never gain acceptance. with hard-case. $ 3 2 5 . 8 6 1 - 2 3 3 5 . Rich. others. On bus line. Own room. some Gibson | found your butter rolls at Hildegard's. Happy 1 8 t h ! Happy Grad student or woman over 21 Asking call: Maddy 457-4740 or Barry or Phil. needed to share apartment with 3 A M - F M ; 4-speed trans- Sale: Needs for handi- MELLEN would deavor without fear of consequences. mentation capped dorm student. Room and 4 5 7 - 4 3 2 8 after 4 : 0 0 . Ask f o r Arlen W A N T T O GET A W A Y T H I S CHRISTMAS INEXPENSIVE Puerto Rico, Floridn, Freaport Contact Marhi 7-8784. warranty. For 457-4713. housing Vega Hatchback. Original 457-4771. STUDENTS: experience inquire at the Placement such a system The university is in a real sense a laboratory in 1971 mission. Marvelous never be the same). board outline sity must provide an institutional M i t c h - Y o u were great! (WSUA will Roommate by the encourages debate and freedom of intellectual en- Snap shot photo's ordered thru picked up by I Dec. 71. C A L L 7 8 3 - 6 6 1 0 oi c o m e lo UNIVERSITY The School of Management acuse CaM G. which adversely affects the university community's where the freedom of inquiry flourishes, the univer- allergic. Call Gary. 4 6 5 - 9 5 8 9 . 438-3731. RECRUITMENT SYRACUSE community established truth and dissemination of knowledge in a setting for sale still going on today in Bookstore- Freel Kitten needs home. Owner to help with Thanksgiving community may be conditional upon submission of budgets to content. Similar freedom must also be assured any Tea shirts, candles, Posters, blotters dinner. system II' the university is lo succeed in lis pursuil of never diel Girl judicial is to which and to set forth adhere I. R I G H T S O F C O M M U N I T Y MEMBERS 92115. • *••» after 1:00 p.m. Call A l . 4 6 6 3 . the state. of the proposal which this system could of PRCISCOM1NGMI Merola is alive and kicking. ALL upon as the City Tlic aims and purposes of this document to the basic concept of a community money is involved. Approval of requests for funds in terms of within to the regulations and many other items. Hsip-desperate-need i individuals are subject R E C O R D Co-OP. HARVEST Merola is immortal—Merola will $23 as interested STU- ialosky. Rocky Racoco, support the call A i r F o r c e A r c t i c Coats $ 3 2 Ski j a c k e t s 2-7773. 1971. Par- in which all members of the university Double Moira. Judicial various segments of the university, all P.S. K I L L accounting. Rida wanted to Princeton Univ. 12-14, large selection 8-track stereo tapes, ger, jump, representing of the ranged widely Bookstore in order to insure deliv- 07. Dear on February ery by the beginning of next semes- Nov. 71, Please turn them into America, 5 3 0 0 . Or better yet, call M E . Sue. held in the workshop well 8 People's commissioner, Nick Dan- personals is an outgrowth Reform II. University itegulatinus '• us " i explovivcs, such .is f u e w o i k s ; oi pus " in I , " use ol dangerous chemicals except as 'i'.""i ' M I use in class, MI in connection w i t h 'iMl; poiisoieil icse.nvh ,,i other approved SIO I l l , He I Pi en made lo store weapons ,ii Ihe Security Building. Those adhering lo the provisions lot sioiage would not he in violation of this legulalioul. r. Willfully setting fire lo uiiiversily property or dlsciul plmi id Ucl creating.! coiillagialiou 011 univeisily piopeily. '.-•—-,:• f. T o refer III. The Judicial S v s t e m Delegation of Authority: The President. A s a t e c h n i c a l m a t t e r , the University's c h a r t e r usually JUDICIAL PROPOSAL E . O t h e r S t u d e n t Judicial Bodies munity. The b o a r d will consist of 18 (eighteen) m e m b e r s , O t h e r s t u d e n t hearing bodies will b e recognized as requiring university a d j u d i c a t i o n , regardless of addi- of which nine will serve at a n y given t i m e . T h e they tional p e n d i n g a c t i o n (e.g., criminal c o u r t ) , m e m b e r s will w o r k on a r o t a t i n g basis, and t h e basic c o n t r i b u t e significantly to the disciplinary process ratios of m e m b e r s h i p r e p r e s e n t a t i o n w i t h i n the 18 within the university. Organizationally, these boards demonstrate that they are n e e d e d a n d can gives t h e power a n d a u t h o r i t y over tkjs e d u c a t i o n a l g. T o refer t h e c o m p l a i n a n t t o a p p r o p r i a t e courses mission of t h e i n s t i t u t i o n t o a Board of T r u s t e e s . in t a k i n g o t h e r action w h e n the case is considered individuals all w o u l d fall b e l o w the University Hearing Board a n d T h e y , in t u r n , assign certain p o w e r s t o the president b y the c o m p l a i n a n t t o be t o o serious t o be handled times. If necessary, in times of heavy case loads, two w o u l d use the latter as an appeal b o d y . They w o u l d of o n l y w i t h i n the university. b o a r d s of nine each should o p e r a t e s i m u l t a n e o u s l y . deal with cases falling within their areas of jurisdic- O f these 18 m e m b e r s there shall b e : tion the University as the highest administrative h. T o b e the pre-hearing b o d y in a n y serious or officer. H e , in t u r n , assigns e x e c u t i o n of judicial a n d administrative procedures to subordinate officers, It will be presumed that the president will before determination a must formal hearing, or where a be made as to w h e t h e r the selected will remain the same at 12 s t u d e n t s ( 3 graduate a n d 9 e m e r g e n c y case in w h i c h interim action might be necessary faculty, a n d , increasingly, to s t u d e n t s . appointed jointly by Student Association and would mete nut other than official university sanctions (see Section V ) . In cases w h e r e undergraduate) official university sanctions are seen as being a p p r o - and priate, these boards would recommend such action G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t Association t o the University Hearing Board. n o r m a l l y sustain the findings and r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s university s h o u l d be taking action in a court of law 2 teaching faculty chosen by the faculty reached b y a n y hearing or a p p e a l b o a r d s . Question acting with the hearing b o a r d to k e e p the university 2 non-teaching faculty chosen by the faculty o f those findings and r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s might be c o m m u n i t y informed a b o u t the judicial system. 2 classified service personnel chosen by the classi- Law permits, these procedures should also be rather, should a. T h e calendar for hearings shall be fixed by the chairman of the Hearing Board after c o n s u l t a t i o n same act m a y violate b o t h university regulations a n d Civil Service Law. Those found guilty o f m i s c o n d u c t the individuals involved in the proceedings. the laws of oilier j u r i s d i c t i o n s , b o t h the c o u r t s and m a y be subject t o the penalties prescribed in said T h e c h a i r m a n shall have the discretion to alter the the university have the right t o adjudicate s u c h a section. calendar for good cause. T h e dale for the hearing case. This is not d o u b l e j e o p a r d y . Double j e o p a r d y A n y o t h e r faculty or staff m e m b e i of the univer- shall be set no later than three working days after occurs only when the c o u r t s of a given jurisdiction sity c o m m u n i t y f o u n d guilty of m i s c o n d u c t by a Ihe receipt of the referral forms, and the hearing try a person m o r e than once for the s a m e violation. recognixed itself shall take place no later than ten working days such cases, but rather a c o n c e r n for duplication of p u n i s h m e n t s . Unless the interests of c. The charges and evidence shall be presented by president would be e x p e c t e d to return findings and shall representation. q u o r u m , and other procedures. Once a lower b o a i d r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s to the a p p r o p r i a t e b o a r d with full c o m m e n t s o f his o w n as t o a need for reconsidera- d e c i s i o n , in writing, to the appropriate individuals. five w o r k i n g days of receipt have c o m p l e t e d its review and rendered a T h e board will be a p p o i n t e d in April of e a c h year should Hearing The university's c o n c e r n is not d o u b l e j e o p a r d y in after receipt of ihe forms. Board lor approval. Included should be the n a t u r e a. Within the university disciplinary system submit its constitution to the Univeisily the rules of the university shall be m a d e , heard a n d with of ihe b o a r d , jurisdiction, sanctions, m e m b e r s h i p , a case inclusion the m o s t effective w a y o f dealing with the individual(s) involved. Since b . Staff m e m b e r s in t h e classified service of t h e :ivil service: charges of m i s c o n d u c t in violation o f d e t e r m i n e d in a c c o r d a n c e with Section 75 of Ihe Membership within each sub-group should be as In such and be o n focus, the divergent as possible, to afford Ihe greatest s c o p e of themselves. the desiring recognition action b y b o t h the university discip- ber of the university c o m m u n i t y . of the evidence present within fied personnel Procedures: board disciplinary linary s y s t e m a n d the c o u r t s of law. T h e r e p o r t s n o t e d in c and d a b o v e , the Clearing House J. Each PAGE 11 followed in hearing cases involving any o t h e r mem- b . T h e hearings shall be c o n d u c t e d in such a m a n n e r as to do substantial j u s t i c e , and shall not be u n d u l y restricted by rules of procedure or evidence (see Section IV. A 5 ) . e x p e c t e d only when unusual c i r c u m s t a n c e s or new Ihe c o m p l a i n a n t parly, and/or., by a if the univeisily is the is recognized, ihe Cleanng House can begin to refer injured president of Ihe university to serve such a function. peison designated by the unnecessary university hearing b o d y shall be dis- missed, s u s p e n d e d , or censured by the a p p o i n t i n g a u t h o r i t y prescribed in the Policies of the Board of Trustees. Ihe university or of a n y m e m b e r of Ihe university For are implicated in some w a y . prosecution should not lake place should within also avoid the university. T h e employing diverse university channels of all p r o c e d u r e s as recognized above by the university in Ihe adjudication of cases, criteria for due process as o u t l i n e d in Section IV musi a p p l y . IS. The action where there has been essentially one offense, Individual I. The Right if Ihal o n e offense can be h a n d l e d effectively by the to Council A n y individual charged with m i s c o n d u c t has the Univeisily Hearing Board. for for a t e r m beginning in S e p t e m b e r . Each a p p o i n t e d all applicable cases to the new board. Some e x a m university shall member shall serve for one two year term, with one pies of h o a r d s which may want to use this provision d. The Hearing Board may address q u e s t i o n s to b o a r d , a reversal b y the president should rarely, if forward t h e c o m p l e t e d referral forms to the a p p r o - half of the board changing each year. No person w o u l d be traffic violations court, and the hall a n d any p a r l y to Ihe proceedings or to any witnesses ever, occur A record shall be made of all proceedings of the himself. To have an advisor or a lawyer speak for may quadrangle boards. called by either p a r t y or by the board itself. Any hearing, e x c e p t as specified by the chairman (sec a n y parlies c o n c e r n e d w i t h a case would escalate the p a r t y may request the cross Section b. tion, After such reconsideration by the a p p r o p r i a t e ,x t o a university disciplinary system h e a r i n g b o a r d or o t h e r adjudicatory b o d y a n y case Its Purposes A n d Composition A. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 JUDICIAL PROPOSAL PAGE 10 ,<v ; j and should in such cases b e fully such a decision adjudication, includes the need the Clearing House priate hearing b o a r d . explained to the university c o m m m u n i t y . B. Clearing If c. Within three w o r k i n g days of the receipt of all House. 1, C o m p o s i t i o n : In order to assure the effectiveness and efficiency of this g r o u p , the following referral forms House shall noted in 2 b , a b o v e , the forward Clearing the case to the a p p r o p r i a t e hearing board, composition is required: serve for t w o consecutive terms. Provision should also be made in April of each year for one F, The University nine-member The group to serve during the summer question Security Force of the rule and function of the parties. The chairman examination of other may use his discretion and limit the n u m b e r of wilneseses to he heard. at any lime in order to c o n d u c t business. A vote on be followed 111 oidei I'm ihe disciplinary system to require il (see Seclion IV. B.«). incident, interim disciplinary action also requires Ihe participation of be successful basis, depending on the case load, and the basic Director individuals selected all preliminary hearing lo he held as soon as possible times. If necessary, in times of heavy case loads, two alter lliis (See Section WE', part 3K). In instances boards of six each should o p e r a t e s i m u l t a n e o u s l y . where action is taken prior lo a pre-hearing. the b o a r d s . The chairmen should serve 1101 more than Of these I 2 m e m b e r s there shall h e : purpose of the pre-hearing would be lo review ihe o n e yeai in that position. Their responsibilities a i e : 4 students appointed (I graduate jointly by and the same i Student at undergraduate) Association and action and lo decide upon Ihe need 4 . Officers: The IX m e m b e r s will choose Iwo of its membership I'm further adjudication e G r a d u a t e Student Association taken The Clearing House will mil serve as I he ol ihe univeisily healing except procedural i h a l . on responsibility, Ihe security of the chairman, m a i l e r s may be discussed in executive session. Tins record In ! -ie wiih Mm older supervision shall be available under of Ihe chairman h. The chairman sultation wiih shall Ihe lo alter Ihe con- proceedings. guidelines must be follnweil whenever a m e m b e r of w h e i h e i a s u m m a t i o n of o n e 01 mote aspects of the 2 classified service personnel (not including mem- the univeisily case would he helpful lo Ihe b o a i d . bers of the security force) chosen by the classified absence of such a person or group, when adjudica- e. Following up on all cases as necessary violating service personnel tion is seen as necessary by (he Clearing House. II force chosen by representatives the Chief of security Security. will serve as lull voiing These members except in cases related to criminal m a t t e r s brought to the Clearing House asai result of law enforcement may also cosign a referral form, with the knowledge I considered ihe d e a l i n g house shall he lo be acting in ihe name of the uni- Membership within each sub-group should lie as divergent as p o s s i b l c - t r . afford the greatest scope ol representation. h. The Clearing House m e m b e r s will he notified In the president of the univeisily of then a p p o i n t m e n t judicial versity. g r o u p ol individuals i n d e p e n d e n t ol d e a l i n g House I h e secretary shall maintain all referred by ihe Clearing H o u s e . Moth types ol cases wiih shall vat tous chairmen by the adjudicating body 01 Ihe a p p t o p i i a l e c h a n n e l . appropriate for one two-yeai l e r m . with half of ihe m e m b e r s h i p I a lei in beginning appointed member in each category changing each yeai No person may serve loi iwo consecutive terms. Provision should ilso be made in April of each yeai loi one •I Ouoium: At leasl three members musi be ..p. .11 lend.nice comitantly as a inemhei ol ihe Clearing House and .< is needed fi ol .iso Ihe eeplaiicc ol any m e m b e r s 111 5. Ofliceis Ihe University Disciplinary House shall serve the following Clearing functions: a. To distribute referral t o n u s in any individual ' w h o desires to file c o m p l a i n t s oi charges against j university c o m m u n i t y m e m b e r , and to assist thai b . To he the central "clearing h o u s e " loi disciplimatters, to receive releiial II loiiiis. .mil d e t e r m i n e the a p p r o p r i a t e referral m u l e to In addition lodged againsl sltidenl conuiiuiiily appeal leview on appeals i s d e s c i i b e d in Section IV. IKO. In versity offices, lo the chairman ol a d e p a r t m e n t . In a d d i l i o n , the Univeisily Healing Hoard has otigutal to the Uni- hoard c. To review all security l e p o r t s tor warded lo u by the Director ol S e c u r i t y , and to d e t e r m i n e which lm all lowei luiisilkiinn ovei disciplinai) univeisily versity Traffic Appeals C o m m i t t e e community mallets involving all members on iiniveisily- o w n e d 01 o p e i a l e d p i o p e i l y , escepi lot ill .ises handled In .my lowei h o a i d s 01 oil 1.11 e appn university forms ollices, and in d e t e r m i n e which reports warrant univeisily .idpidi :aturn e. I n initiate with Ihe a p p r o p r i a t e nlltce, orgam/a- When violation ol the Rules and Regulations loi ihe Maintenance nl Piibln Oidei has i n c l i n e d , ihe Umveisii) Healing ISoaid shall be the healing body .mil ih.ill lolliiw ihe specil'u p n i c e d u i e s as staled 111 Ihe Rules and Regulations loi ihe healing ol such cases Hon, or individual a n y additional investigation, ni liner er view any aadiln d d i t i o n a l person in onlei lo reach a decision on disposition by the Clearing House ~^jyy0igfaj%i6&m4*** University Appeal Board hems liom liisi lowei lie heard student any incident iiudei levie 2. ('(imposition: In drawing logeihei the repn e n l a l i o n described below, ihe boaid will assemble liona tide cioss-sectiou > l l l ie univetsity com- 2) Hie 1.1 ina\ Ih he u'ferred lo the lm .ippinpriale by ihe University It will also lieai appeals from any souice escepi diction, Because in cases where one of ihe formal H is Ihe final aibilratin in eis nl c a m p u s . 11 should he highly sensitive to 111.11 capable 11 weighing \\K mleiesl ol Ihe peison lias appealed with Ihe mteiests ol ihe inslinl- secllllly officii mas make .III arrest, felony In a .11.'Ii. Ihe case should niisde iiy Clearing House shall 5 iiveisily consist ol students 1 I giaduaie Appeal Board an leigiadiialel "PI* ed |i |\ b\ Stude nl As latum "inlminily In ihe event ihal a --1 convene lo review the ,!;i " lime parameters estabincnlei lished 111 Section INK lite director of security 01 Ins 'esignee should use In- "Hi discretion in deciding peisous (up lo thiee additional pin- Appeal Board I'm specific cases as a iiiajniity ol the boaid deems necessaiy Such additional persons mighl he named il Ihe case. I'm e x a m p l e , l e q u i u s the knowledge" ol an experl 111 a pailiculai area, ot il I He individual lodging insliiuencv witin the appeal 1O11 inilside the univeisily u p m i Ihe qucsimn nl comes l i m n ,, nveisity which is nol adequately tepieseiiled on ihe appeal boaid Qiuiri in, l e n n ol Office, V0I1 ng pioceiluiei pi 1 id in al qiieslimis should follow llu guideline as I'm the Univeisily Healing Boaid and have them made available to the be held jointly. (Excessively huge numbers of I! f I a c i i l l j . si "' lh « dnecloi nl sec-limy jilU'lllySliidem Each ol these r ' - a s "inli e „ llll!itlll ,. lllI)m a m e t h o d lm dc.ilui,' wiHi cunip| m „ t . s coiisliluenls In ill .JSI'S Involving .reams! indiMilu.ils mil Association a(,.|llls| ||k.M cinuplaliils Ile.se groups, the Cleanng House Hill .issisi Ihe imlnUllal wishing lo lodge a i.unplaii ni.uii.e i k Ipprupnate channel |„'i pin suing Ihe pljilil A. I I lie Judicial Ifeating bodies lr before the hearing lawyers, have the bodies. iciglii Such to he advisors, like present during a hearing, bin as in ihe case of lawyers, will not be permitted to speak I'm either c o m p l a i n a n t 01 de- appropriate lo ihe charges I'm which in 0. Publication of Decisions Once a decision has been made by a h e a l i n g b o a i d . ihe lesiills of die proceedings musi he made 2. Self An Incrimination individual has the right at a univeisily he may nol he punished solely loi asserting this fairness and cases ihe iiiipailiahly ol lite In ihe coniplainanl and lo any oiliei conduct peisnns w h o look pail in ihe healing nl ihe case right. seveial healings in oidei lo reduce Ihe nuuibei ol Any ineiuhei i>\ Ihe hearing boaid 01 appeal b o a i d q u e s t i o n s , the individual is asserting Ins right not In cases heard such hnaid may In claiming ihe right to refuse lo answer In leslitic may attach a minority leporl i " ihe final repot 1 ol disclose mini m a l u m which could he used 10 incri- fairness and iinpai nality lo Ihe healing p i o c e d i n e . l Ihe h o a r d . Such miiioiiiy r e p o i l s , along with the m i n a t e himself further. II o n e 01 more oi these individuals desires a pnvaie final l e p o r l . may he used by ihe coinplainnni 01 I. Private and Public healing while Ihe o t h e i ( s ) desires .1 public hearing, d e f e n d a n t 111 developing all appeal. As a general rule, h e a n n g s should be o p e n in any at one lime and 111 oidei Wheie a healing is open lo Ihe public, any Hearings inemhei of ihe univeisily c o m m u n i t y . In asserting being excluded fiom those p o i l i o n s o l ihe healing inliii'sled coiuiniuiily m e m b e r s 01 giniips may view this involving those persons ilesinug ihe closed healing a copy of Ihe decision. I l o w e v e i . 11 shall he within validity of public h e a n n g s when Ihey insure obser- ihe powei (See Section IV. U.i) 2. Pre-hearing Disciplinary One ol ihe p i o h l e m s which anses in a univeisily linary aclion. wllould linn he In general, bearing discip- ihe following hold in d c l e t m i n u i g any pie piuiciple healing at Ihe individual's slanis nil campus .should nol alteied escepi when siippmied healing, and lo have ihe powei lo k e e p confidential when c o m m u n i t y m e m b e r s may make c o m p a r i s o n s I m m the public any inl'm illation which 11 feels Will hclween nol special t r e a t m e n t and/01 prejudice are tested. be used piinciples nl in a niaiiiiei consistent the indicia! sysleni cucuinsl.uices which might lead wiih the An e x a m p l e of lo a decison lo cases, and Although public, when healings requests aie possible suspicions generally open 10 ol the for piess coverage by local news hghis 01 electronic nl ihe involved individualist. Public access lo these d i n i n g any healing, public 01 private. healing aclion is seen as healing action, piobahh l a d s could only he ilelninenl In the mdividilal(s) concerned I'cnoilic iinlice should be d l s l n h i i t e d ihioiighout ihe univeisily staling ihe icsulls ol icceiil h e a n n g s . fins i n h u m a t i o n should hegcneial. giving no n a m e s and mils purpose ihe fin types ol cases and ihe icsulls publication of this i n l n i n a l i n n file is lo healing boaid c a n n o t convene within ihe nine paiameieis specified in Section III. II In i l u s i . i s e . pie action would he taken with ihe pie hearing healing ilsell In Recognized Procedures for Adjudication I'liisiiani lo ihe layloi liiw.tlte following peilaiu I acullt m e m b e r s , 01 pnilession.il stall nol in ihe classified seivice ol ihe civil setvici" chaiges ol IIIISI oudiici in violation nl Ihe niles ol ihe univei- be held as soon as possible also lo ihose violations ol he made as In whelliei in addilion lo being l e l e n e d within ihe univeisily disciplniaiy sysleni. J. Double Jeopardy Unl i w l n l action should 1101 pie hide ihe sily shall be made, heaul. accoidance with I'llle D of Pall ol Ihe Boaid ol liuslees and deteiniiued in i t s nl Ihe Policies Ihose found giully ol misconduct may he sushjecl lo dismissal 01 leiiiun.11inn ol slid 01 television recordings cameras, will nol he p e r m i t t e d I h e healing board begins. 1 hen. with the assumpihis in view of one 01 m i n e of ihe following requests 11 (with sufiicienl circumstances: a. Ihe accused requests ll. h. Ihe complainant reason) c d i s i u p l i o n s ol the pinceedings require it. each case he o n l e i e d only when needed lo insure a lau and impartial healing. II is vital that Ihe lights of ('rises a gencial. I he closing of Ihe healings lo ihe public would 111 nl ihe 111d1c1.1l sysleni 7. Other In tion nl an o p e n hearing, ll can proceed lo change nil HI 111 ihe univeisily c m n i n u n i l s .is lo Ihe winkings IIIIICIIOII as ihe prelitnruaiy be aliesled univeisily c o m m u n i t y m e m b e r s may view Ihe judicial process, enli.il i n l o n u a l i o i i related to psychological p r o b l e m s in all cases, e s c e p i when a qiioium nl dial should more icqtie.sls ol icsulls ol ihe being of m i n i s t u d e n t s , In ihe case ol oiii dt.siaplmais system. I lie Cleanng musi is d o n e , when ihe media should be directed 10 Ihe hearing board for A detailed denial nl Ihe ofleit.se. Ihese guidelines p e n justice is acknowledging approval. by names nl witnesses would House would university lestiicl ihe nvailahlity ol iiifiiiniation would he: a lequiie l u i i h e i investigation body ihal the case anses in slilcli testimony reveals highly conliil- person's stains 11'- and he p e i u i i t l e d in make a statement before any decision is made vers stance, being. thai p i e s e n l s a dangei lo his own salely and well In any case wheie pie of ihe healing board lo d e t e r m i n e Ihe validity of motives loi Action disciplinary sysleni is Ihe use ol pie accused I'll Sllldl;eiil ailjiidicaloiy helo As f 11 as ihe T u y | , the available Ihe In deleiiniiialimi Vn«*' rea- in interested s t u d e n t s , w h o would he willing to assisl a coniplainanl 01 d e f e n d a n t in any case which c o m e s icopardi/e healing. civil ni c u n u n a l law. oihei than lelouies, in which a IV DUE I'RWlSS DEFINED assisl lo as as well disciplinary hearing nol in incriminate himself, and Ihe offense, nl the possibility nl pie >" il»' Individual may h u n g ihe lo will a t t e m p t staff available in willing 10 the d e f e n d a n t , with copies should he given Ihe o p p o i i i i n t l y In be inlniineil nl lo Ihe in oidei and violators m a y , in ihe jiidgiiieut of the hearing hoard, leview should be uum.le 'Jin light of precedent sei mallei most k. When two 01 m i n e people are jointly ehaiged by pasl Cleanng House u'otw. House lm l e l e n a i acts, individual has been brought lo ihe hearing. necessaiy 01 al least as possible, the alleged violalm Ihe mallei ui.is "•'biiniglu | „ ,| K . d e a l i n g uioial justifications, motives, and then Board lacully Ihis restriction on lawyers a n d / o r advisors within the hearing ilsell in no way leslricls the right lo counsel and r e p r e s e n t a t i o n outside the heating room. ol sccunly HI his dvsiei •.•fiioi lo a Cleanng House plaint against a s e n n i t s il is testify of add the board during ihe hearings 01 Ihe deliberations l a c u l l y , 01 university propei ly •I In cases wheie a iinnenbiiy cuiiinuiiiiij inemhei to lleaiing file would by he used l o d e t e r m i n e the sanctions wliich are the Ihe eaihesi pnssihle e fairness, persons a attorneys j . The hoard shall write a report containing Ihe 01 lo ihe salely . i n d w e l l Decisions nil .1.1 Mi I" lie taken by l l i e d u e c l m fiuidamenlal charged Univeisily maintain paid decisions of the boaid and Ihe reasons lor those "standing that a review ol m i n i m s n u l l ll the case will be ci'inlinietltby the d e a l i n g House al m i l , ei 2 iiim-leachmg faculty chosen by 1 In• lacully 2 classified set vice peisonuel chose 1 by ihe classilied set vice peisnnnel Any oihei House has cause lo In,Ice .1 2 leaching lacult) chosen by ihe lac a taken the Cleanng and ( i i a d u a l e Sltidenl Association loi otllside Ihe uuiviisiii d | | k - [i lilt case should be decision as In wliell he I'm of permit deietmiuatroji of [he a p p i o p r i a l e s a n c t i o n . the healing will remain a joint one with the public c. If the inliaciioii luiild range in gravity from a enls nl Ihe university c o m m u n i t y Composition. Univeisily action cease Ins activities, and .1 warning has no effect, the healing visional ineinheisl may be added lo Ihe Univeisily reports warrant university adjudication, by 111 i n e m b e i s nl [he ujiiveisil ing Ihe b o a u l s , (lis scope nl illiei than ..svaining .1) it the individual ieln-.es lo identify himscll 01 and should he lepieseulalive ol ihe vaitnus uni- cases or c o m p l a i n t s lo oihei u Hoard then contract ami Ihe Hiylot I aw Ii has no original Hoard. ll shall he ihe highest student I I no aclli Cleanng (appeals musi o n e ol the Inllnvwiif 1. J ions should he taken in ciiii.siillaiion Willi itie inecloi ol security of Ins designee lo concetiiirig sons wiih the same alleged infraction, llieir h e a n n g s will ,r. be a inisdemeanoi 01 less, Ihe standard Ihe Trained, I'endanl. parties 111 the case. oiliei grievance p n i c e d u i e s 111 accord with provisions nl I, N'.iiiue: Ihis boa id exists lo adiudicnlc chnigc those n o t e d in this d o c u m e n t . Ihe Clearing House lo oihei win illy may also refer forwarded Ihe Appeal Boaid) the capacity nl chainii.in I'm one ye.11 httai d in ihe iiidici.il system, It also seises d. To review all incident c o m m u n i c a t i o n m the hllle t o this. the files of ihe hearing boaid and/01 presented to decisoiis. h. II the i n l i . m m In decide whal is best for Ihe accused and for Ihe unreliable i n f o r m a t i o n . Ihe healing b o a i d musi base Any past infractions which are on record within a p p e a r a n c e al a hearing: see Seclion IV, B5. musi be airested al ihe direction of the director of l l e a u n g Boaid hel'me they can go lo the University .mil to r o u t i n g referrals through such heating b o a r d s as any existing grievance c o m m i t t e e , oi Boaid i. No security of his designee, and al the same lime a with any c o i i e s p o n d e u c e re- Appeal Nalme: boards shall be chosen lui inhi the Cleanng House 10 chali ihe meet nigs the Iwo giniips which will o p e i a i e l o u g h o i i i Ihe yeai I he cliaiiiiteu v. ill he lespi silile lui .ill ope 1.11 ions nl I lie CIcal nig House, .111 shall s e n e 111 ('. / 'Diversity Hearing individual in completing the forms, nary healing body c a m p u s bargaining units has already begun is a member of any hearing oi appeal h o a i d r > ' 2. Nature: eunceined ing pieseni .11 all nines in oidei loi ihe d e a l i n g House may seive con- records appeals on student cases limn Ihe University Heal- el, security officer becomes involved uitli that incident: who form loi consideialion by the adjudicating body 01 the summer No mcnihei sccreluty oihei a p p i n p n a l e el lix-rneinhei g r o u p to be available to function dm ing months of any channel .1 case should be l o i w . n d e d with the case 1ele11.1l huh I'm a House lated lo the boards I). I niversily September, yeai the ihe disciplinary system, and shall assist til k n o w n ) on any nl ihe primary p a n i c s lehiled lo each about shall seise the healing boaid and the appeal liuaiil review 01 eosignature and some will be reviewed or ic-ceive equal liealinenl legiilation and report should be tiled with the University Clearing should also be a full-time shall seive ol informed system g. I h e l a d ol pending 01 c o m p l e t e d coin 1 action April community h. Initialing changes in the system as needed There university a. II the iiilrnction is . leurly a felony, the accused univeisily in in I'm g. Acting 'long with the Clearing House, keeping Ihe I Sonic cases will lie i c l e n e d by .111 111d1v1d11.il 01 action. sessions each year new m e m b e r s ol the leleriing b o d y , when a p p r o p r i a t e . In cosigning a r e f e r r a l form, Presenting orientation a coninuiiim is found to he allegedly he I'm legal adversaries 10 use as a " b a t t l e g r o u n d " bin lor m e m b e r s ol Ihe same c o m m u n i t y community. accepiable d. Signing all decisions bility to a n o t h e r hoard member materiality wiih determine, panics and the formal hearing ol Ihe case shall not be recorded. following iclevance Us decision on subslanlial evidence, and only on hearing. The d e h h e i a l i o n s of lite hoard aftei Willi these piinciples in mind, the of intended in onlei 10 preclude ihe u t i h / a i i o n of evidence presented d i n i n g Ihe healing. In keeping I m c e must act in aeciuilance wiih the principles and .' standards Ihe goals ol Ihe univeisily. including Ihe support and use ol its disciplinary system, that maintained the a. Establishing the calendar for hearings c. Writing all decisions or delegating the responsi- ferred over a legal a t m o s p h e r e . The system is n o t lo all parlies al b. Notifying all persons to appear at the healing, including oilier hoard m e m b e r s group I lie this role. Ii m a y . however, serve this function in the university or of within the university c o m m u n i t y is willing lo fulfill the member pari univeisily coiiiniuniti, ie sponsible In ihe president 2. g. A record shall be made of all proceedings al the n enforcing slate laws, ihe Inue is also a 2 non-leaching faculty chosen by the faculty from anolhei sccutilj Evidence in univeisily disciplinary hearings. 11 is suggested referring representatives when lo serve as chairmen of the hearing univeisily 5, Rules of Although rules oi evidence need nol he followed 2 teaching faculty chosen by the faculty 2 body legal trial. Because Ihe hearing is being c o n d u c t e d reason I. or if disruptions of Ihe proceedings I. Right to counsel: See Seclion IV, HI I . While responsible six m e m b e r s ratios of m e m b e r s h i p representation within the 12 will remain n a t u r e of Ihe hearing to s o m e t h i n g a p p r o x i m a t i n g a transcript of the record is requested by either the characteristics associated with Ihe hearing are pre- possible, If it cannot meet within 4H hours of the Ihe written shall be h o m e by the individual making Ihe request. a n y one time. The m e m b e r s will serve on a rotating Willi a within the university by a c o m m u n i t y hearing b o d y , m e m b e r s of which n o more than six will serve at his designee. thai and not in a court of law, the speedy and informal ficient or event preparing an a p p e a l ) . Ihe cost of such a transcript person charged, or by Ihe complainant (with suf- Security the defendant or c o m p l a i n a n t (e.g.. for the p u r p o s e of topic there are some definite principles which must of In e. T h e hearing shall he private if requested by the there are m a n y unanswered questions related to this be taken by the Ig). univeisily security force is of primary concern in i . Q u o r u m : Al leasl six members must he presenl should IVA. represent developing a univeisily disciplinary system. T h o u g h Ihe d e a l i n g House or other hearing or appeal board, action c h o i c e , including a l a w y e r , but he must m e m b e r of Ihe Hearing Board and as a m e m b e r ol" In all severe or e m e r g e n c y cases requiring a d. right t o be advised at the hearing by a n y o n e of his Transcript m o n t h s . No m e m b e r may serve c o n c o m i t a n t l y as a pre-hearing, the Clearing House shall meet as soon as a. The clearing house shall consist of 12 (twelve) •I. The employment 01 such les dlsciplll action as die facts may w a n a i i l including suspension wilhoul pay 01 censure. of c o o p e i a i i n g c o i n n i u n i l y m e m b e r s he preserved. •/. Croup II is Hearings recommended thai g i o u p heanngs he held 111 cases w h e i e a iiunihei of individuals aie involved in Ihe same alleged i n l i a c t i o n , and wheie Ihe facts of involveiiienl aie identical ed iiudei assure O i o u p h e a n n g s aie favor- ihese specific circumstances in order gieaiei nbjectivitty on ihe pan of lo the m e m b e r s of ihe hearing b o a i d . Ihe provision guards against a tendency to use the first case as a precedent 111 hearing the other cases which follow, SSBSB JUDICIAL PROPOSAL PAGE 12 when the facts are basically alike, it also allows all defendants to present their cases, retains fairness to all parties, and retains the context of the incident within which the alleged infraction(s) took plac e. See Section IVA, Ik for additional information. Group hearings by no means predispose the hearing board to render the same judgment for each defendant. Each shall be judged on the facts of his/her particiaption in the incident, and not by the actions of others who were involved. In the case where one or more of the defendant requests a private hearing while the othere desire a public hearing, the public would only be excluded during the testimony or cross-examination of those requesting the private hearing. (See Section IVA, Ik and Section IV, B3). 5. Non-appearance Section lid requires that all parties, inclding the accused, must appear before a hearing board when summoned, or give reasonable cause for their absense, The appearance of the defendant at the hearing in which he is accused, however, is not necessary in order for the proceedings to be fair and in keeping with due process. The only necessary condition for a fair hearing is the opportunity to be heard. This implies that the ppersonlsl involved must be informed of the charges and the possible consequences and has been given the opportunity to attend a hearing, N on a p p e a r a n c e of the defendant should never be caused by the establishment of an inconvenient hearing calendar, Alternative dates should be available. If, within reason, the defendant has been given viable alternatives to the dale of his hearing, and there is still no mutually agreed-upon time and date, the hearing board may proceed to fix the date of the hearing. A three-working day advance notification to the defendant should be issued, along with a statement that the hearing will proceed whether or not the defendant is present. 6. The R(ght of Appeal a . Both defendant and complainant have the right to appeal the decision of a hearing body. b. An appeal of the decision of the hearing board must be submitted to the appeal board within seven calendar days of receipt of the decision of the hearing board. This appeal must be in writing. c. An appeal, when accepted by the appeal board, must be based upon one of the following issues: 1) Questions of procedure at the hearing which involve due process 2) Was the evidence sufficiently strong to justify a decision? 3. Was the sanction imposed in keeping with the gravity of the wrongdoing? 4) Appearance of substantive new evidence related to the case. d. The appeal board may accept the original decision of the hearing board, may reverse the hearing board's decsion and return the case to that board for a further hearing, may reverse the hearing board's decison and dismiss the case, or may reduce the sanctions imposed. They may nol, however, increase the sanctions imposed. If the appeal board accepts the decision of the hearing hoard the matter is deemed final, except thai either party may petition the president of the university for a new healing. In cases where the president grains the petition for a new hearing, he may conduct the hearing himself or designate the individual(s) who will hear the case. The accuse, additionally, has the right to petition the original hearing board lo reopen the case upon discovery ol new evidence. The hearing hoard will judge the sufficiency for the new evidence, and no appeal can be laken for its decision. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 3. Removal from Residences. suspension should he staled in I he notice of such action, as should This sanction may also be conditions lor leadnussion, if any. imposed for a term or with '). Expulsion. Termination of a conditions, and petitions for person's status at the university readmission to Ihe residence halls should be handled in a manner for an indefinite period. Normally the appeal board similar to suspensions, with the Ii. Expulsion and Suspension reviews the written record from appropriate administrative office lixplusion should he used only the hearing board in determining in this case being Ihe Office of in the most serious cases where no whether lo accept the request for Residences. amount of rehabilitation would an appeal, or in actually hearing warrant reconsideration of I he VI. MAINTENANCE OF an appeal. However, the appeal individual's status within the board may ask for an oral CONDUCT RECORDS community. Sanctions such as p r e s e n t a t i o n concerning the "suspension t e r m " and Ihe university's policy of record grounds for appeal, and may also "suspension - conditional" are keeping in disciplinary matters ask for rebuttal statmeiils from recommended in place ol should always he in accord with the heanng hoard. The appeal expulsion in ordei to give the the giavily of Ihe offense, and its Non-appearance does not mean board should invite the chairman gieatesi latitude In ihe individual long leim effect on ihe individual. that the appropriate procedures of the heanng hoard lo he present and [lie inline miprovenienl ol The innvcrsii\ shall provide that need not be followed in hearing at appeal hearings, lo clarify the lus'liei ability to function within iiiimii disciplinary matter:., oi evidence, weighing facts, and actions or decision of the hearing the university maiicis which relate nunc in rendering judgment. In addition, hoard. (', Return to the Community peisoual growth patterns lathei the iron appearance of one parly e. Hearings of lovvei boauls. I he p i net's.-, n ! gain irtg ili.in in deep-rooted personality does not prevent the appearance appealed to the heanng hoard, readnnssion in the univt'isii) aliei Haws will urn |lL. peimanenllv of any olhei individual associated terminate ai the heanng hoard the individual lias completed the iccoulcd, II ,i heanng hodv with the case. Non appeaiancc level letm.s ni a pailicul.il discipliium deieimines ih.r a disciplman (except in violation of Seel ion V. D I S C I P L I N A R Y A C T I O N action is as follows. mallei is ol siifiicieni importance lid) shall not be considered as a I. Expulsion, Readuiissitin must in appeal in ilie individual's valid justification lor the A Sanctions be lequested first lltiough the ollicial lecord, an adequate imposition of disciplinary he a i i ii g h oa id in ol h e ' explanation should lie attached penalties The mosl inipoiianl piinciples adjudicaloiv bod\ which Ins: I lie billowing pmvisions will be which should guide heanng bodies Under the conditions ol 1 111 p o s e e i I lie sail. linn n I lollowei! in Hi,- regulation ol non-appearance, the defendant in choosing sanctions are: l e c o i d s . I:: ease a Relevance lo the gravity ol expulsinn Since am peliiion tni Ciindiui does not admit guilt, noi docs he lelurn would be extianrdinai • involving ineinhei.s ol local the offense. waive his rights to due process sin .• h ) provision u , ,[|J b.ngaiiinic unit', eoulia.li.il h. Relevance lo the aten " ' He simply implies by his absence n dnijiiU in- in.i.ie b.' the .igu'cmcii'. in, :!;, m, inli'iiaiicc ..: ami Ins negative answei to the acl r -v j t) in ..ii' uiitsrail, es ii K l i i ' h ..-. i i K s b a ' i il ,i . r . | i i i . nci.rred l i e ie-1 summons thai >ie .vill " •>! tin n f t o i w \ I .1 >1 ' i l ' . , I ' l l g ,.(•, .';.,!, Jence halls, pa-King !••: el I participate in the lieaung poice.:. iiijiiilain ii' i e••• i. 'o.ali n. i he foil..-*,1 ,. saru:i ,,,,., , R . -h, In doing s", lie does ml >>>M- ilu ' I U i « l " , .... i k J i ,!,h .' , ,, „ ' , i :g!i' i'» ,!p|i<:n! I based on iitficial univei i.i', saiicliui. .- nu'l ;x: •' . i peisons 111" ,i lik-ly !" ol lecoids cmi.sl.'hig .,: all il„ may he .i>ed by llie lie.ring boaol l l l a d e q l l d . j ill p r . - C - v , -'* s e v e n t y •v'i else ,i-in|iclenl ludgiueiil iwei official iicilenal which lias been j.,d by il., appeal hi ai !. h.'Ji o I p u II1 :vli Hi e n ' , i -' .H. r i' neiilioii loi leadmissioii. 1 he assembled .lining the heanng ,-l rum appearance ) ;.J lie -i . . nol tio'iu' yinclit'ii* whuli <J/>;7I .1. en' ol 11.e group *lu,b e a e b •use. I b e s e l e . i d s will I-.,lose the nglil 1 • i t i n ;:; • .' faculty ur..i st:ijj .ire mil tit i< 'iisiosed the sanciion should cany destroyed two calendar years al lei Section 11', A ,'. the proceedings e n t r y in his/her record of hcaring(s) may do so by appealing to the board which maintains this record. E. Except with ihe prior writ ten consent to the person involved, no information in any such record may be released lo any individual or group other than anolhei hearing body or individual within the university which, who is concerned with healing a case in which the individual is accused ol a violation. Individuals oi groups concerned with hearing a case where a witness or a coniplainanl in a loi inn case is now the accused will be denied access In the records "I the loinici case I'. Il, as ,i icsuli ol ihe heanng of a case, tin- bcai mg hodv determines thai some icioi,! should be placed in Ihe individual s pcimanciii hie II,,. delei iiiiii.ilinn tmis! be in wiiiuie as pai I ol the ilc, ision mi Ihe , .i.. The inloiiiiaiion would llien h scul u, Ihe appiopnate dean vice president In inclusion n n permanent hie Individuals i whom disciphnai; action did '<• include the placemenl il a ic,,, : ol Hie ease in iin- pei nianeii! Ii' should lie coiisidcied as lm\ ine. ; lis. iplm.in ,-n ,] i, Him ii , "! "slvnv,, % Tannlt Open Tournament invited in the community. N o v . 1 9 , 20, and 2 1 at Men's G y m . Registration at CC information desk. ft The & INTERESTED FOLK Wed. Fencing Club will meet this Nov. 17th 7 : 3 0 , and Sat. Nov. 20th 1 0 : 0 0 A . M . in the Dance Studio. New members welcome. MAJORS, MINORS Join the SUN ALLIANCE-group YA GAY rap sessions-Wed. Nov. 17, 8 : 0 0 P.M. HU-B-39. Closets Meeting of Women's Caucus for faculty Thurs. Nov. 18th, at 1:00 P.M. in CC-373. are lonely places. ATTENTION SENIORS: If y o u are interested in other cultures, foreign languages, Eng. and education, and in putting it all together to teach minority students or overseas, consider the TESL Master's' Program. Mary Leue Director of the Albany Elamtntray Free School and corratpondant with A. S. Nalll (Summerhill), John Holt, and Jon Kozol will speak Wednesday, Nov. 17 at 8:30 in the basement lounge of OnondagaOneida. i n * i •———— •MM Tibia sponsored by Chinese Club. Everyone PAGE 13 See Miss Joan Schulz, Prof, of Eng. at Back by popular demand! on W R P I . and Mrs. Gloria De Sole, a Mary and Richard speak on the Gay Prof, at Skidmore Revolution. Tonight. Listen in! guest speakers of the Albany Population Richard Light E D 124, or Ruth Blackburn ED-112. SUNYA Growth College Chapter Zero o n Nov. Women's Alliance meets every Ave, 2nd floor. Come out and join us. colloquiem Humanities with Prof. J. Paris, former- ly of S U N Y A , speafcm* o n Beyond" HU-354. and the pres. ed. of Change "Structuralism and Wed. Nov. 17, 7 P.M. in GO-GO GIRL COMPETITION for Dutch Quad dance on Sat., Dec. 4. T o audition and for further info, call: T o m at 7-3382. On Thurs. held o n "Nuclear Logic of the Nov. 18, at Deterrents Arms Race." and the Dr. J . Knight of S U N Y A ' s Pol. Sci. Dept. will speak. Respondents will be Brig. Gen'l F. Higgins, and Fr. S. Stalanos. Thursday Attention, poetry lovers! Come and hear three young poets • Dave Mitchell, Roberta Singer, and Gil Williams who will all be reading from their works Wednesday, Nov 17th at 8 PM in Room 76 of the School of Library and Information Science. evening, Chapel House, 8 P.M., a forum will be Student discussion in S C - 1 9 at 8 P.M. Cathexis the Psychology Club, is presenting Children of the Silent Night about Perkins Institute and Can I Come Back Tomorrow? (about behavior mod.) on Tuesday, Nov. 16 at 8 PM in LC 1. Possibility of trip to Perkins Institute will be discussed. Funded by S.A. "I put a lot of bread into a down payment on my new car And I'm not going to blow it!' '" Recital will take place every from 12:00-1:00 in the Recital Hall of the PAC. "The Sign of the Cross" an early Cecil B. DeMille extravaganza, will be shown at Harmanus Bleecker Library, 19 Dove Street, on Thursday, November 18 at 8 : 0 0 P M . The firm stars Charles Laughton, Claudette Colbert, and Fredric March. Like all Library activities, the movie is free and open to all the public. Contests in billiards, bowling, bridge, chess and table tennis, sponsored by the Association of College Unions ( A C U ) , will take place from Monday, November 29 through Saturday, December 4, 1 9 7 1 . Registration forms for each Bvent may be obtained at the Campus Center information desk until November 26. The following persons will be in charge of administering the different areas of competition; Lee Battes, Chess, 4 8 9 - 6 7 5 1 ; Daryl Hendery, Billiards, 783-6676; Paul Schiffan, Table Tennis, 4 8 9 - 4 1 2 4 ; Nelson Swart, Bowling, 4 5 7 - 6 3 1 4 ; T o m Trifon, Bridge, 4 5 7 - 4 6 6 4 . There is ;i one dollar (S1.00) fee for each participant in the area of bridge, billiards, and table tennis. Bowling entrants must purchase an A.B.C. or W.I.B.C. collegiate membership card for S.50. Students will be paired for competition and participants will be notified by oach tournament director. Winners will be eligible to compete in the Region II contest hosted by SUC Oswego, February 10-12, 1972. OFFICIAL NOTICE . You worked hard for that new car of yours. N o w all you've got to do is take care of it Part of it's using the right gasoline. Amoco©. The type most new car owner manuals recommend. Amoco is specially formulated for your new car's antipollution engine. Made to help it run better, longer. A n d Amoco can double the hie of your tail pipe and muffler compared to fully leaded gasolines, spark plugs last longer, too Amoco Super Premium gives you all tfiese benefits plus better mileage than other premiums. It's the only antipollution premium gasoline you can buy. Thai's one reason w h y more new car buyers switch to Amoco and other gasolines at American than any other brand. So n o w that you've got that new car, use the gasoline you can count on. e s , e p l ' .i l b . . ' .,,II,.„,,„, TlL.itiH a l U ' l a i i n i , ni , o l ' c g , ie,.ilv .. le.'.liliiluiii loi I'XIeiisive ila;n.,g leiuoval from residence*). Or a ft Co unte/fng Hours Mon. 11-4:30;T. 2-4:30;Wed-11-4, 7-9; T h . 1-4:30, 7-9; or by special appointment. First Ski Club meeting Wed., Nov. 17 in LC 2 at 8 : 0 0 P M . Dues ($2.50) will be collected. Tuesday nite at 9. 184 Washington The Philosophy PEACE & POLITICS WHAT TO DO? will be 17. The public is invited to attend the Gay International Forum is having a reception f o r all students who are interested in studying abroad next year or next summer . If this is Y O U come to H U 3 5 4 • the faculty lounge third floor of the humanities building on Tues. Nov 16 at 7 : 3 0 and talk to students who have just come back from G E R M A N Y , F R A N C E , S P A I N , I T A L Y . . . A l l students who have taken part in these programs are also urged to attend. Coffee and doughnuts will be served. So don't forgetl Tues. Nov 16 at 7 : 3 0 in H U 3 5 4 . You've got a new car. We've got a new car gasoline. UIIIWIMIN - I i - ilillll.li X .„ Il-ii A TTCN TION-Butineu Students. Phi Beta Lambda It working for you I We need your supportl Join m at our next meeting. Thurs. Nov. 18, at 7:30 P.M., BA-119. For further information, Stove-7-526l. GV 1. Admonition. An oral state- TO: JUDICIAL WORKSHOP STEERING COMMITTEE ment to the offender that he has [I I am in favor of the proposal as written, violated a university rule. ll I am not in favor of the proposal 2. Censure. Written reprimand 11 I would be in favor of the proposal if it included the following: for v i o l a t i o n of specific (Please write all comments either below or on a separate sheet regulations, including note of the of paper and bring this form and additional comments to the possibility that more severe Campus Center where a drop-box has been provided.) disciplinary action could occur in the eventofconfirmed violation of any other university regulation. The censure should contain a specific period during which the censure is in effect, 3 . Disciplinary Probation. Exclusion from participation in privileges or activities as set forth in the notice of disciplinary p r o b a t i o n . The length of probation should be stated in the The document is long and, therefore, tends not to be conducive notice of such action. to a careful review. Please take the time to read and react! The deadline for comments is MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22ND. 4. Disciplinary removal from A box will be placed at the information desk of the Campus residences. Exclusion from the Center for responses. In addition, this form is provided. residence halls for a specified amount of time. This action will involve forfeiture of all room primary weight with Ihe person or the specific sanctions imposed as a persons who would then review result of the hearing of a and/or board charges. particular case have beeen met 5. Restitution. Reimbursement Ihe application for readmission. ( i . e . , if an individual is 2. Suspension,. for damage to or misappropriation a. Term: The individual is reprimanded on 1/1/70, his/her of university property or of properly under university automically leadmissable by the files will be destroyed on 1/1/72,. If administration and/or supervision, proper authority to the first a person is placed on probation or of property of a member of the regular s e m e s t e r after Ihe for two years, his/her records will university community while such completion of his/her term of he destroyed two years after ihose property is on university premises. suspension. No disciplinary review two years of probation have been ful filled I. (>. Disciplinary hold on records is needed. B. It shall be the function of Ihe b. Conditional: The board which and/or right to register for classes. Action laken as an assurance thai suspended ihe individual must chairman of each hearing body lo ihe petition for maintain the records related lo other conditions of disciplinary r e v i e w readmission. This peliiion should his/her heanng body, and lo action arc met. 7. Incorporation of notice of contain evidence supplied by lire authorize then use ('. There shall be nothing in an any official sanction into the individual that he had fulfilled the academic transcript and/oi the conditions of the suspension, II a individual's record of hearing(s) official sanction into the academic simple majority of Ihe hoard which he/she has nol seen, ud transcript and/or the official agrees thai Ihe conditions have each person shall have access lo personnel folder of the individual. been met, they would authorize his/her own record (subject lo H. Suspension, Exclusion from the readmission. The petition for reasonable regulations as to tunc, classes and oilier privileges or readmission would al this point place, and supervision I. D. Any person wishing lo activities as set forth in the notice then be Healed as any other challenge Ihe accuracy of any of suspension. The length of peliiion for readmission, ALBANY STUDENT PRESS You expect more from American and you get it.™« ATTENTION STUDENT TEACHERS FOR 1972-73: In order for you to student teach in any quarter of 1972-73, you must register in the student teaching office. You may register on any of the days assigned for your discipline. Please note the dates below and remember to register in Room ED 3 3 2 or +++. The office will lie open from 9 : 0 0 A . M . to 4 : 0 0 P.M. oach day. As you come to register be prepared to declare a semester for your student teaching and a geographic area other than the capital district to which you would be able to go. Bocause of the groat number of student teachers for tins next year, it is necessary that a largo percentage will have to student teach away from the Albany area. You must be ready to make this commitment, therefore, do not make any arrangements concerning apartments or leases until you are sure of your teaching assignment. E N G L I S H - N o v . 29, 3 0 , & Dec. 1, 1 9 7 1 . SO C I A L S T U D I E S - D o c , 2, 3, & 6. BUSINESS E D U C A T I O N - D e c . 7 & 8. M A T H E M A T I C S - D e c . 9. L A N G U A G E S - D e c . 10 & 13. S C I E N C E Dec. 14 & 16. SPEECH P A T H O L O G Y - D e c . 16 8. 17. Teacher Education students in the junior year abroad programs should inform the Student Teaching Office of their plans prior to the second semester of their junior year. Director of Housing Fisher and Chief of Security Williams w i l l be In the Colonial Quad. U-Lounge on Tuesday, Nov. 16 at 7 : 3 0 PM Come air your gripes to them in person. •••)•• PAGE 14 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1971 CONCERNS TABLE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENTPRESS PAGE 15 THE ASP SPORTS Booters Finish Dismal Season; Hoopsters to Stan Dumped 6-3 by New Paltz «<*«™»* & « « appears t o have t h e inside track at center. T h e forward p r o b l e m will p r o b The biggest question facing Albany seems to play too conserBasketball coach Dr. R i c h a r d ably be solved by Werner Kolln vative. Perhaps a m o r e wide o p e n ( 6 ' 4 " ) , a r e t u r n i n g l e t t e r m a n , and Sauers, is, " C a n this year's t e a m style of play would greatly aid match the excellence of last s o p h o m o r e s Reggie S m i t h ( 6 ' 2 " ) , A l b a n y ' s meek offense. It is y e a r ' s ? " Dr, Sauers, starting his and Byron Miller ( 6 ' 2 " ) . Smith h o p e d that the 3 goals last Satur- 17th year as A l b a n y basketball and Miller b o t h averaged over 10 day was a start for m o r e offensive c o a c h , will have his work cut o u t p o i n t s for the freshman t e a m last punch next year. For Coach for him, First of all, the '70»*71 year. J u n i o r l e t t e r m a n Dave WelSchieffelin, he has a great deal of Great Danes a c c u m u l a t e d an im- chons (6*2") is a good bet for the work to d o t o build the soccer pressive 17-5 record t h a t led t o o t h e r guard. their being rated fifth in the final Sauers feels t h a t the t e a m t h a t team into a c o n t e n d e r , N e w York S t a t e College Division gets the m o s t good s h o t s will win poll. This included winning Ihe ballgames. T o m a k e sure that the last 10 games in a row. Add t o team will d o this,he will e m p l o y t h a t , the loss of four starters, and such tactics as an aggressive man you can perceive the s i t u a t i o n . to man defense, a full c o u r t zone Missing from this year's edition press, and a set offense allowing a lot of two on t w o plays and of Ihe H o o p s t e r s will he cocaptains .lack .Jordan ( 15.8 requiring the players to think on average) and Alan He id (1 1.7) at their o w n , " T h e players will have forward, center Steve S h e e h a n to think quickly on their feel, and react q u i c k l y / ' A l t h o u g h there is (9 0) and guard .Jim Masterson (9.5). Thai leaves Captain J o h n a lack of big r e b o u n d e r s t o initiate Qual Irocchi, at guard, as the only Ihe fast break, Dr. Sauers will still have his team r u n n i n g . r e t u r n i n g starter, This year's schedule is a tough II owever, Qua! Irocchi brings with the roughest comwith him some i m p r e s s i v e one, statistics. As a s o p h o m o r e last petition likely to c o m e from Hartyear, he averaged 13,7 p o i n t s a wick, Brock p o r t , and S U N Y at This year's team is game, and scored over 20 p o i n t s Buffalo. in four games, With four s t a r t i n g y o u n g , with only three seniors, b e r t h s o p e n , this is how it looks and a little green, b u t is t h e t y p e so far. Don J o s s ( 6 ' 3 " ) , w h o of team that will improve game by started a few games last year, game by Bill Heller Wed & Thur, November 17 & 18 10 am to 2 pm Campus Center Lobby BRING YOUR QUESTIONS ON ANY AREA OF CAMPUS LIFE by Bruce Maggin The Albany Great Dane Soccer learn c o n c l u d e d a disastrous soc cer season last S a t u r d a y , as they lost Lo New PalU 6-3. The Danes s h o w e d s o m e sustained offense for t h e first time in a while. This was only t h e second time this season A l b a n y scored three or m o r e goals. F o r Albany, Carlos Alvarez scored twice, finishing t h e season With five goals, and George Keleshian scored once. New Paltz's b" goals were scored by six different players as they tallied four limes in the first half. This game left Albany with a record of l-,r> in SONY c o n f e r e n c e play. The Booters finished Ihe season with an overall i cord of 2-1), This set an Albany record of m o s t losses in o n e season surpassing last year's record eight losses The Danes record over the last decade is a measly .'Id-Mi, with only une winning seuson. On* of the reasons for this m e d i o c r i t y is Albany's lack of recruiting, Albany awards no scholarships to soccer players and all t h e players must meet the a c a d e m i c s t a n d a r d s of the university. Coach Bill Schieffelin said that he lost a few boys w h o could have played with the soccer t e a m but t h e y could not meet the a c a d e m i c requirement to be a c c e p t e d . In order to improve the soccer t< l am, t hi' coaching staff must convince quality soccer players lo c o m e in • Residence Halls Student Activities Parking Facilities T h e major p r o b l e m thai m u s t be c o r r e c t e d for n e x t season is Alb a n y ' s lack of offense. T h e Danes scored a meager 14 goals this season and were s h u t o u t ;i times. T h e o p p o s i t i o n scored 32 goals. The Great Dane Soccer ream stands a r o u n d after a final game loss t o New Paltz, 6-3, which gratefully e n d e d a poor season . . chow JV Booters Upset Army Cadets, 6-4 by S t u a r t Shalat Food Service Albany next year. Also s o m e players from t h e J u n i o r Varsity m u s t be found t o play with the Varsity learn. In only their third year of play, the Albany S t a l e J V. Soccer team ended their season on a winning note and with a winning record with a s h a t t e r i n g upset of the West Point Cadets by a score of 5-1 at West Point Wednesday. Coach Don Pro/.ik's team, which has had s t u n n i n g offense Ibis year posting thirty o n e goals in ten games, surprised the physically strong Army d e f e n s e , and he gave the Pups a (> 1 record • Security • Maintenance ad nauseum The scoring gol u n d e r w a y for Albany with I went y-five seconds left in the first period off Ihe fool of Mick Walker, the first <»f hi* four goals in the game T h e Dane Pups took a 2-0 lead into the hall' with a score in the second period In the beginning of the third period Army c a m e back strong, but the S t a t e defense held. Al 16:25, and just I wo m i n u t e s later at lH;Hfi, Walker pul the game almost out of reach, 1-0. T h e Cadets came back part of the way twenty-five s e c o n d s of the fourth q u a r t e r , with a goal, but again the Albany defense lightened up and at 1 0 : 2 3 Mario I*'leurant scored on an assist from Walker to end the scoring and the game. T h r o u g h o u t Ihe season the Dane Pups saw fine offensive performances form their front line. Outstanding at left wing was I.eon Sedefian (soph.) with four goals and twelve assists. Leading scorer was Edtiardo O r d o n e z wilh eight goals and I wo assists. Forget a Winning Season: Danes Blanked 3-0 by HVCC by Bill Heller T h e Great Dane defense was up to the challenge, but for the second straight week, it was t h e Albany offense t h a t was the main cause for what should have been an i m p o r t a n t win Albany c o m p l e t e l y shut off the highly t o u t e d H u d s o n Valley Comm u n i t y College's passing a t t a c k , but s u c c u m b e d to their own miscues and an early field goal, l o be edged 3 0., T h e win e n d e d HVCC's season al 7-2, and left Albany 3 1, going into their last game, h o m e against Pace, this S a t u r d a y What, turned oul to be the winning s c o r e was the result of one of six Albany turnovers, as Steve Slagen picked off a Bill Flanagan aerial, and r e t u r n e d il t o ihe Dane 2 9 . Albany held on their 1 1, hul !*'red Kiel or booted a 26—yard field goal to make it 3-0, just before the first q u a r t e r e n d e d , T h e rest of tin* game was a m u l t i t u d e of offensive drives, by b o t h teams, t h a t always fell s h o r t . T h e Great Dane defense held on its 3-1 twice, its 3 0 , 8 , and 15 yard line, on five different occasions. On the o t h e r h a n d , Albany missed no less than four golden o p p o r t u n i t i e s to get on the s c o r e b o a r d , T h e Danes fumbled twice, deep in H u d s o n Valley t e r r i t o r y . In t h e first q u a r t e r , they lost t h e ball on the HV 25 and in the last period, they gave it up on the e n e m y 3 1 . T h e y also ran o u t of d o w n s on the HV 26, late in the game, and Vinnie Pierce missed a 15 yard field goal, just before h»lftime. A look a t the stats reveals that b o t h passing a t t a c k s were anemic. T h e Albany s e c o n d a r y caused m a n y d r o p p e d balls by their ferocious h i t t i n g . However, the Danes were even worse in t h e air. T h e y c o m p l e t e d 1-15, for 50 yards and had three i n t e r c e p t i o n s . Garvin Payne's HG yards for 23 carries led the Great Danes. T h e game was the lowest point t o t a l for Hudson Valley all season, a n d it m a r k e d Albany .a first s h u t o u t since last year. O n c e again, a credit to the Dane defense, and as far as the Albany offense.... Harriers Do Well in College Champs The Albany Harriers ran Iwenty-second i" a field of fifty one learns, S a t u r d a y , in Ihe an- nual NCAA College Division Cross Country Championships, The l o p six men on the team flew I Kvanston, 111. I o i ui against over 100 other c o m p e from small colleges all ove tit the c o u n t r y . T h e h a c k was fast and Ihe air •lear and cold, ,nui Ihe Harriers -ave a respectable showing in the BUSSES WILL BE RUNNING BETWEEN SUNYA AND NEW YORK CITY large field. Albany's t o p finisher was Scott Abercrombie who finished l l l t h . F r e s h m a n star Brian Quinn was n e x t , 137th. I)l ''1111* Hatkett came across } , M ^ 1 . A l , , ' , r h ' m / h m h e d Larry F r e d e r i c k . J o h n Koch wns next and Bill Sorel after him. ac' c o u n t i n g for t h e entire Albany contingent. T h e individual w i n n e r was Bill Flack of N o r t h Dakota S t a t e , and the team victor was California State al Fullerton, , | u , D i m e Harriers, Yl.sUir(illv m m u s Brj.)M Q u i m i i f o r n o k n o w n reason, c o m p e t e d in the K'-IA C h a m p i o n s h i p s at Van Corllandt p -j, Bronx. pBaoaaBOBa«3BOBPaBMMqaH^ T I C K E T HOURS W I L L BE: (sold across from check cashing) Monday I I-1 Wednesday I I-1 Tuesday 10-12:30 Thursday 10-2 Friday 9-12 Busses leave from the circle at 4 pm on Fridays Busses leave NYC at 4 pm on Sundays sponsored by Campus Center Governing Board Inferfrafernify Council presents The Official Albany State Football Team Films narrated by head coach, Robert Ford This week- The Siena Game of Oct. 25 Wednesday, Nov. 17 at 7:00 pm in LC 1 'iclvurtisemant advertisement advertisement admission frit TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 16 TUESDAY* NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Thoughts on Trends I... P . by Steve U! Hirsch|_ by Mike Igoe Judging by the rapidity that area are played many times over in films are coming and going lately various area show places. Mr. Stoonce the sudden shift in the well cited the eight week run of subject material prevailing from Klute at the Madison and the fact week to weeTt, it would seem that that Klute enjoyed runs in several theater owners are conducting an other area theaters as an example. experiment to determine what In regard to the type of movies kind of market they're catering being produced, once again it to. seems that the general public is Two weeks ago the film fare largely responsible. For when consisted primarily of mature au- there is a major response to a dience, sex-geared films such as certain type of film, movie comHow to Succeed with Sex, Ginger, panies rush to make imitations of The Minx, The Female, and even a the successful product. As Associfew horror thrillers: Let's Scare ated Press drama writer William Jessica to Death, I Drink Your Glover put it, "there are countless Blood, and / Eat Your Skin. Last numbers of unreleased ' Easy Riweek the offerings leaned more ders' rotting away in the can." towards a general audience. West Thus, we can make ourselves felt Side Story, Plaza Suite, Love on the type of movies we want to Story, Doctor Zhiuago, Walk- see by not patronizing inferior about, Cactus Flower, and Patton quality films. You might be infell into this category. A glance at clined to say to yourself , "What the theater pages this week reveals can I do? I'm just one person." a mixed slate of presentations. However, if we all take this view, This observation might bring to the effect can be substantial. This mind some questions concerning has already been evidenced by the the cinema. Why is it that some large grosses of Love Story at the movies which you'd like to see box office. Here people have take off when they've just arrived clearly indicated they want a rein town? Why do others that have turn to more conventional movies been shown for umpteen numbers and less sexual slop. Also, the of times seem to linger on? What major Hollywood film companies determines the caliber of the have announced they won't be flicks? A -closer look behind the making any more X movies, at scenes discloses that many factors least not for the present. are involved. Some local theater Even on a local level here in managers rendered a variety of Albany, the public mood has incomments on the whys of what fluenced the policies of some of viewers see. the theaters. A theater manager Mr. Arthur Bowell manager of who wished to remain anonymous the Fox Colonie Theater explain- claimed poor response in this area ed that'his movie house, part of a helped to clean out the sex marknational chain, carried first run ets here. The manager of the Tri movies as a rule. He pointed out City Twin Drive In, Mr. Rfipp, that the class of these shows was firmly stated that his theater will determined by public response. not show uitv X-rated movies or as Mr. Mr. Bowell added that publicity stowell p u L it, "by comparison will always make a film whether it nationwide. Albany is a much be excellent or of a very poor different city." A fact to which quality. "Many sex films got as far i ' m s u r e Mr. Goodmun will agree as they did because they received so much publicity. 1 Am Curious BROTHERS AND SISTERS My Arts Department and myself (Yellow) is a good example of would like to take this opporthis. It got a tremendous response tunity to offer a very definite throughout the country." invitation to the Brothers and Mrs. Betty Turnbell manager of Sisters of this University comthe Cinema 7 in Latham agrees munity. that publicity determines how long a show will stay. Mrs. TurnWe invite you to help us mold bell claimed that publicity, partic- an Arts Department which is reularly word of mouth, helped to presentative of what kids on this make hits of films that played campus can relate to. there such as Bob & Carol <fc Ted We need movie reviewers, record & Alice, Kama Sutra, and their reviewers, theater and dance recurrent hit, The Summer of *</2. viewers. We'll help you learn what Mr. George Stowell manager of to look for; we just need kids who the Madison Theater said that a want to work. big response to a particular film If you think you want to, stop helps to explain why some films by the ASP Office sometime. Attention by Robert Verini THE TOTAL FILM-MAKER (Random House) is a book by and about Jerry Lewis the moviemaker, but is most interesting in the insights it gives into Jerry Lewis the man. Culled from lectures he gave while teaching a film course at U.S.C. (which certainly gives one pause) the book is sloppy and poorly organized, repetitious and often incoherent; nevertheless it is a useful look at a little boy who truly never grew up. I personally can't abide Lewis. While I applaud his efforts as a humanitarian, and not having met the man I know nothing of his off-screen personality (although as with Streisand one can make some good guesses); nevertheless his The films I find by and large dreadful: as funny as the proverbial crutch. To be sure he has his good moments—the first half hour of THE ERRAND BOY is, I think, as funny as anything ever put on celluloid—but both his acting and directing have a depressing air of familiarity about them, as if we've seen it all before, and done better. Moreover, all of the Lewis efforts I've seen (and I shudder at their number) seem to degenerate into a kind of desperate, ultrahysterical slapstick in which Lewis begs for a laugh in much the same way a dispossessed, goldfish screams for water. Ultimately this provokes acute embarrassment rather than prolonged laughter. Lewis doesn't seem to think so. Only once in his 20ft pages does he come close to admitting that he has "made some bad comedy and even then he blames it on too many broad facial expressions (if only the answer were as simple as that!). What's more surprising is that many critics, especially in Europe, don't think so either—I refer of course to the autcur school of criticism. (For those unfamiliar, I will discuss the auteur critics in a later article; for the moment let me say that they Fraternities CENTRAL BEER & SODA CORP. 1330 Central Ave. 459 - 3483 around the corner from campus I RooIBwelt (below Fuller Road) £ ^ ^ ^ A DAY SINGLI * P ^ H • Slb.uuDuuoii' 1 1 M $ 3 00 fur • ^ ^ ^ Get into it o n tho East Sidu, the best location in the city You're w i t h i n w a l k i n g distance of IOMIOUS shops, boutiques, popular East Side pubs, the U N , the M o m Library. Mus eums and those great l i t t l e res taurunts f r o m every c o u n t r y in the w o r l d . - keg beer in stock Bud • Bal - Piels - Schaefer - Carling HOTEL Attention Sororities Subjective nooks and crannies of sound stages to pick up knowledge. (What costly delays this practice caused is not mentioned). Lewis works hard at his craft, believes in it, and honestly feels he has something to say in his films. This is, I imagine, the feeling of most directors; and it is refreshing to hear it spoken so directly and with such emotion. In the arts, dedication, beliei", and hard work are absolutely essential. Lewis swears by all three, so in this respect, at least, I must admire him. It would take one far better versed in psychology than I to completely fathom Jerry Lewis's self-portrait in his book. I do feel, however, that he was undoubtedly born sixty years too late. He and his art are anachronisms, throwbacks to the days when a pie in the face was a novelty and uncontrolled s l a p s t i c k the rage. Anachronisms, when they are people, tend to be rather pathetic; and patronizing as it may seem I can't help but feel sad when I of a complex, intense, egomaniacal individual whose compulsion for learning all there is to know is at once admirable and terrifying, Occasionally he displays ignorance phenominal for think of Lewis' career, seeing how one who has been in show busi- so much love, care, and just plain ness so long. He says: "Some time he puts in to produce films directors have wonderful tricks that most people, it seems, find and devices for pulling per- generally worthless. For all its formances. Norman Taurog is an tidbits of information, THE expert. When he wanted to make TOTAL FILM-MAKER is hardly me cry, he'd take me into a corner the last word on the subject of and ask me to think about what moviemaking; yet it's probably would happen if my little boy was the last word on Lewis, who may hit by a truck." Tricks and devices have told us more about himself indeed! Relating part of a scene to than he ever suspected--or wanted one's own feelings and experi- us to know. ences is one of the fundamental precepts of acting, as the most inexperienced performer knows. Earlier in the book he seems to pride himself on his ignorance {he GONE WITH THE WIND(M-G-M defensively states that he is going /Selznick): Still the best enterto use a word™"humanities"— tainment buy in town, GWTW has wrong deliberately, "no matter a sweep and passion about it that what the word purists say," when few films before or since have it would be just as easy to find a equalled. Despite three directors, synonym) and then displays a thirty-five scriptwriters, and kind of reverse snobbism: "I'm myriad filming problems, the getlinn, (in my films) to those who movie has great cohesion, and the probably don't have the mentality progression of (he characters is to understand what the hell A logical, light, and helieveable. MAN FOR ALL SEASONS is all Viven Leigh's accomplished perabout." N.B. If any reader could formance as Scarlett is a triumph, not figure out whal that film was as is Gable's swaggering Uhett; but all about, please let me know. I'll don't overlook the work of Olivia dellavilland, Hat tie Mi-Daniel, and be stunned. Thomas Mitchell, among many Bui its I say, Lewis does have a oI hers, all of whom are percompulsion to learn. He mentions fection, One added delight: watch how, when he was merely acting, for the full-length portrait over he could never he found for the mantel in Rhetl and Scarlet! 's shooting, always looking through mansion in Pail Two Filmgoer person m m o m Thankiomng Day Rottrvs now lot an Duelling holiday m New York tap equipment available are of the violent opinion that every film must have the mark of an "author," that is, one who is in total artistic control). French critics have twice voted Lewis Best Foreign Director of the Year, which really says more about those critics than it does about Lewis. What I do want to emphasize is that one's opinion of Jerry Lewis is not irrelevant to an appreciation of his book. THE TOTAL FILMMAKER, besides presenting many practical details involved in the production of a movie (his chapter on financing is particularly interesting), raises serious, fascinating questions about the mentality of those before and behind the camera, Lewis, of course, in particular. The impression of the author which the book, inadvertently or not, leaves with the reader is that For (Biervaiiuni call FREE 800-522-6449 New York Slate 600-22) 2690 All nflior States Madnon Avtmuu & 45ih Strum New York, N Y 10017 A H E A L V Y HOTEL CLASSIFIED ADS PRODUCE RESULTS U ~ The two nuns in the front row were rather surprised to find Marcello painting a scantily clad model instead of the Red Sea There's no doubt about it, La Boheme in the Frank Corsaro version presented this weekend by Capital Artists, puts those members of the audience used to more traditional performances in minor shock The Corsaro version updates the story from 1830 to 1919, and makes those loveable young male chauvanists Rudolfo, Marcello, Colline and Schaunard, Americans in Paris post World War I. For those uninitiated to the joys and frustrations of opera it makes a fine primer; the four lads dnnk, wench and rip-off their landlord in true contemporary style. When the Corsaro version is done well as it was in Lake George this summer, it is tremendously enjoyable. Unfortunately the Capital Artists production was only mediocre. Joan Spain was pathetically un-vivacious as the grand C. T. Musetta. She sang well enough bu. she had all the vibrancy of a dead fish. Schaunard, as played by David Aldrich, acted poorly and sang weakly. He jus. did no. come across as a young World War I veteran. You go, the feeling he might have spent the war as a colonel forced to latrine duty. The chorus lo put it by Steve Aminoff derer. This break featured folks going into the mildly, was terrible. They were off key and out of phase with audience with offerings of ladles filled with water. Some truly innovative theatrical techniques were conductor Kurt Saffir more than they were correct. They loo were The mood was supposed to be one of relief, and the employed in the Experimental Theatre's fine prolifeless. kids who brought you water looked friendly. But duction of Tennessee Williams' The Purification. the lighting was kept at the same dimly-lit level, and Director W.C. Doscher included a brief note on the violin player was playing sounds which were not Now that 1 have played the venous-spilling critic, let me mention what was being done with this play in the program. any more happy than the mood of just a few some of the good. Theodore Morrill was an excellent Rudolfo He explains,"What you are seeing tonight is the minutes before. A little more consistency of mood professional in every way. He even aclcd like he meant il Eileen Hush' culmination of six weeks work with the theatre might have done to make things seem m o r e as Mimt was equally as fine. Acts III and IV, which are mostly Mimi techniques of Konstanten Staniscauski and Jerzy "together." and Rudolfo, were excellent. Also, SUNYA's Joel Acosli of Captain Grotowski." Hood fame, made his debut as Benoil, ihe horny landlord Hoel had I found the type of theatre that was used (the The performances were good. Robert Chanin second floor Lab Theatre in the PAC) to be a very the best baritone voice in the company, and once they gel away Iron, effective instrument. Granted, the room looks more knew exactly when to turn the energy on and off. Ihe "let's give Ihe kid a break" altitude evident in Ihe program he'll His ability to be restrained yet definitive in his like a vacant warehouse than a theatre in the emotions provided a sense of "believability" which be one of their biggest assets. traditional sense of the word. But this type of is so important. Even during the vivacious oratorios The Capital Artists should be commended foi [heir efforts lo bring atmosphere can lend a communal feeling which can of Alan Herman's portrayal of Rossania, I found my be invaluable in terms of giving the audience a sense attention drawn to Bob. Alan's acting was alive, and opera lo the people; there is no question about ih.,1. The addition of a of unity with the production. good orchestra, however, does not make the company. The producworked. I just wish he'd learn how to "die" a little I found some of the effects, though, to be poorly better. tion was entertaining, and Ihe Iwo romantic leads good enough hut Ihought out and somewhat inconsistent. The plot, for God's sake, gel rid of thai chorus. All in all, Experimental theatre is a nice thing to ideally, allowed for a break in the intensity in the do on weekends. 1 have a feeling a lot of people will formof some music and merriment sandwiched into start getting into it on a regular basis. I hope so, tlie confrontation of a man with his lover's muranyway. Some really fine things can happen there. OCTOUI-R 2<>, I170. OR. "HAPPY BIRTHDAY' K l l l l ) . Tltis city might not he clean, hut it sure is noisy, the very air is alive with violence and would il, perhaps, sound paranoid shouldi.startle the world with silence and speak into the void ...nothing' This place might mil he cheerful, but it sure is cold. Ihe cold clap of winter wind., against my window, .pain rallies... against my hrain...haiilcs against a feeling of increasing failure . oj unceasing failure., a numbness... nothing Spiro blows Ins bubble nun Ho,k\ w„/,> his thumb A its,'. .lib tin i •night no! h, hut I sure mi n by CaruM LAST DAYS The Class of '72 has been invited to recommend speakers for For 7 2 this year's Commencement ceremony. Senior Yearbook Portraits Monday, November 15 10-2 II you have something to show, tell, or sell • advertise il in the Classified Section of the Albany Student Press. Every Tuesday and Friday your ad will circulate to over 10,000 people. Classified forms are available at the Campus Center Info Desk, Library, and all four Uptown Quads, or by writing: Classified Dept,, Campus Center 334, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, N. Y. 12203. PAGE 17 Suggestion boxes will be set up at the Campus Center Information Desk, and in the Library Entrance from November 15th—23rd for this purpose. Anyone within the University community should feel free to make suggestions. 3-7 The ballot form below is provided for your convenience. Tuesday, November 16 9-11 12-6 PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN IN CC 305. Suggested Commencement Speaker PAGE 18 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 A Continual Saga: 'Great Gate Rip-Off by Steve Salant This activity should n o t be taken lightly. Its causes range from s t u d e n t p r a n k s to malicious d e s t r u c t i o n . T h e Colonial Quad gate, according to security, was completely; d e s t r o y e d by an axe or a crowbar. The two gates (Colonial and S t a t e ) have been broken a p p r o x i m a t e l y 40 times much t o the d i s m a y of security and t o the e x p e n s e of s t u d e n t s . T h e charge to a s t u d e n t w h o breaks a gate is $40.DO. The following is reprinted from bllowine renrinteH the August 26 issue of the Wash ington Park Spirit: Save this picture! It may be a classic! This is a rare shot of a still intact mechanical gate. "There is no end, no beginning. There is only the infinite passion of life." -FELLINI An ALBERTO CRIMALDI Production FELLINI SATYRJCON (English Subtillii) November 19 & 20 7:30 & 10 in LC 18 only 50c w/tax and ID $1.00 w/out Ticket Sales: albany Nov. 19 10-3 in L cc Lobby State cinema , solomon Academic Calendars Discussed T h e 1972-7.'! calendar was the focus of a meeting held an h o u r prior to special University Senate meeting M o n d a y afternoon. S e n a t o r s and o t h e r interested p e r s o n s a t t e n d i n g discussed the various internal and external cons t r a i n t s u p o n calendar preparation, three m o d e l s for the fall semester and four models for the spring semester ware presented, Calendar p r e p a r a t i o n is restricted by "internal parameters" ranging from t h e effect on the quality of the a c a d e m i c program to deadlines for adding and d r o p ping c o u r s e s t o d a t e s for o p e n i n g a n d closing residences t o various a d m i n i s t r a t i v e considerations,, T h e c h a n c e l l o r ' s m a n d a t e d 30-week ins t r u c t i o n period for an a c a d e m i c year is o n e of the e x t e r n a l con- SUNY Budget in Trouble Rome. Before Christ. After Fellini. PAGE 19 Environment Exploited by Ad-men's Eco-Pornography A new s t u d e n t activity is sweeping the c a m p u s . No, it's n o t m u m b l y p e g o r t i d d l y w i n k s . It entails breaking d o w n a n d collecting the electric gates located o n S t a t e and Colonial Q u a d s . This is what is k n o w n as " T h e G r e a t G a t e Rip-off." Although the gates are usually up d u r i n g the night and on w e e k e n d s , s t u d e n t s often t a k e it u p o n themselves to facilitate their e n t r a n c e d u r i n g the day. A g r o u p of s t u d e n t s will pull the gate until it snaps. This is legally classified as criminal mischief and its c o n s e q u e n c e s could be a jail s e n t e n c e or a fine. Security feels t h a t it is n o t necessary to impose such harsh penalties for this action and it generally will m a k e t h e s t u d e n t j u s t pay for the d a m a g e . Only once was a s t u d e n t arrested, and this occurred because he allegedly s t a r t e d t o harrass the officers who caught him. S t u d e n t s w h o p a r t i c i p a t e in this activity m a y n o t always pick up the gates and bring t h e m h o m e , b u t passersby will often t a k e t h e m . S t u d e n t s often consider t h e m a " t r o p h y " and feel that t h e y will add a little life t o their o t h e r w i s e " d r a b " r o o m s . T h e " G r e a t Gate Rip-off" is n o t just limited t o s t u d e n t s . Truck drivers making deliveries t o the university like t o play this game. T h e i r reasons can only be guessed at as e x p e d i e n c y . ALBANY STUDENT PRESS c o n t i n u e d from page J a m o n g staff; t o improve the ale x t e r n a l sources such as the Delocation of space and staff assignp a r t m e n t of Health, E d u c a t i o n m e n t s ; t o begin a cut hack and and Welfare in Washington and modification of existing p r o g r a m s ; from private sources like the Carand t o offer no new faculty negie F o u n d a t i o n , openings for 1972. " A p p a r e n t l y E n r o l l m e n t Figures no program will be h e l l e r off in the future than at p r e s e n t , " said T h e current, e n r o l l m e n t here is Sirolkin. i;i,90r> s t u d e n t s , b y a h e a d - c o u n t . Sirotkin referred In a letter from This figure c o m p a r e s with a Sep* President Bene/.el lo SUNY Chan- I e m b e r 1970 head-count of cellor Ernest Boycr calling for an i;t,lM0, Full lime e n r o l l m e n t curincrease in interdisciplinary pro- rently lists 1 2 , 2 0 0 s t u d e n t s , c o m grams, including e n v i r o n m e n t a l pared with a 1970 l<TK of I 1, 197 s t u d i e s , an increase that Sirotkin Ksliniiiled 1972 figures set the noted probably will not be h e a d - c o u n t al I I,9:i5, bul thai allowed, n u m b e r may be later revised T h e O t h e r proposals within SUNY for this university include a three- figure is based u p o n the assumpyear b a c h e l o r ' s degree, being re- tion that 1,000 freshmen and 9 0 0 transfers will e n t e r next year. T h e viewed by the Undergraduate 1972 total breaks d o w n into Academic Council and d u e for 9, llifi u n d e r g r a d u a t e s and 5,500 flit u re Sena Ie consideration. g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s , a net increase S u p p o r t for the three-year proof H00 g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s . gram will have t o c o m e from NEED A RIDE? NEED RIDERS? s t r a i n t s , as are the policy of no e x a m s , registrations or c o n v o c a tions on major religious h o l y d a y s ; public o p i n i o n of a m o n t h - l o n g Intersession in a tight b u d g e t y e a r ; and the a d o p t i o n by various o t h e r colleges of the plan that e n d s the fall semester before Chrislmas. T w o of the fall semester m o d e l s s u s p e n d classes on S e p t . 18 for Yom Kippur. O n e of t h e t w o m o d e l s s h o r t e n s the e x a m i n a t i o n period to five days t o c o m p e n s a t e for [he holiday, and the o t h e r schedules on S e p t . 5 , t h e M o n d a y classes s u s p e n d e d Sept. IH. T h e th i rd f al I m o d e l el i mi nates susp e n d e d classes for any religious holiday., T h e first model for the spring semester includes a I h ret-week winter recess and classes suspended for .ludeo-Christian holy days in a second spring recess Spring plan no 2 has a four-week w i n t e r recess and includes religious o b s e r vance a l t e r 12 weeks of classes. T h e I hiril spring plan would require the Chancellor's approval lo end before the m a n d a t e d May 1T>, a four-week winter recess and a spring recess eight weeks into the semester T h e spring recess would not c o i n c i d e with religious holy days. T h e fourth spring plan also requires the Chancellor's permission lo end tin May 5, t e r m e d " h a r d to o b t a i n ; " a three-week winter recess and the s a m e t y p e of spring recess as in spring plan no, .'I. T h e third plan calls for classes ending May 12, a date that mighl secure Chancellor B o y e r ' s approval more easily t h a n May fi„ Food Protest Petition Out by Evelyn K u t i The Classified Section of the Albany Student Press offers you the chance to get where you're going! Petit ions calling for a rechan neling of KSA funds for increased s t u d e n t benefit have gone up o n Indian Quad. Lee ( i a m c l s k y , o n e of the s t u d e n t s involved in I he petitioning, when t|ueried as lo why t he pel ilions had gone up replied,"Well, because of hunger for o n e I lung " Posted on I hi' way to the dining area [he p e t i t i o n calls fur five specific actions lo be taken on behalf of all s t u d e n t s w h o con tract with KSA: I } s t u d e n t repres e n t a t i o n in planning the m e n u , 2} seconds on all meals; ,'() fresh fruits and vegetables, I) sand wiches on S u n d a y nights, a n d ; 5) r e s t i t u t i o n for u n e a t e n meals Gamelsky coiil i n u e d , " T h a l 's not all t h o u g h . The basic idea is I hat KSA if making a profit when the m o n e y should be going back It) the s t u d e n t s . T h e y ' r e balancing their o w n h o o k s . " T h e petitions will remain up until next T h u r s d a y morning. fiv>m '"'" » c o r p o r a t i o n s and industry. T h e r e are m a n y c o m p a n i e s w h o uses of language t h a t s h o u l d deare slowly a c c e p t i n g their public scribe critical ecological issues. Eby Mark Plaal responsibilities and have seriously cology, as defined by Webster, is begun cleaning up„ H o w e v e r , t h a t b r a n c h of science c o n c e r n e d " E c o - P o r n o g r a p h y " is not a picmost super-corporations spend with t h e interrelationships of ortorial m a g a z i n e w h o s e features exm o r e m o n e y and time o n their PR ganisms and their e n v i r o n m e n t . Its ploit m e n a n d w o m e n in ail sorts than on their pollution a b a t e m e n t m e a n i n g s h o u l d be taken far m o r e of Kama S u t r a p o s i t i o n s . It d o e s seriously t h a n the media w o u l d equipment. not c o m e t h r o u g h the mail in a often have us t h i n k , plain b r o w n e n v e l o p e with a SweConsider the television c o m m e r E c o - p o r n o g r a p h y has not escaped dish s t a m p in the u p p e r right h a n d cial whose n a r r a t o r broadcasts, criticism from the business c o m corner. N o r d o d i r t y old m e n " W e struck oil in Alaska, 2 0 0 m u n i n i t y , Malcolm S. F o r b e s , snicker and d r o o l over it for miles n o r t h of the Artie Circle, president of F o r b e s Magazine athours. N o w men are working ihere 24 tacted t h e use of e c o - p o r n o g r a p h y h o u r s a day, seven days a week.,. E c o - p o r n o g r a p h y is all a r o u n d in an editorial entitled " N o R o o m We're there because o u r dealers us everyday, I c a n D e h e a r d on on the B a n d w a g o n , " are in y o u r local n e i g h b o r h o o d the r a d i o , s e e n o n T,V.; in c o m "...With such a s t a m p e d e to He's so i m p o r t a n t to us t h a t we'll mercials, a n d in magazines. Y e t b o a r d t h e anti-pollution bandgo the ends of t h e earth to keep there are n o little-Victorian old wagon, s o m e p e o p l e are falling off him supplied with p r o d u c t s t o ladies p r o t e c t i n g y o u n g i n n o c e n t s in their a t t e m p t s t o climb on, t a k e care of y o u r car„" No menfrom such s m u t and garbage. falling flat o n their faces in front tion is made of the planned AlasThe t e r m e c o - p o r n o g r a p h y m a y of the w h e e l s , " kan pipeline or the damage t o the be familiar t o m a n y b u t it is hard J e r r y M a n d e r , president of a San ecology of the Alaskan wilderness to define. A f t e r m a n y years of Franciscan advertising agency, if such a pipeline is built. G e t t i n g reading p o r n o g r a p h y , a p e r s o n can prepared a p o r t f o l i o of E c o the p r o d u c t to dealers is given usually recognize h a r d - c o r e o b p o r n o g r a p h y to a c c o m p n a y an arprimary i m p o r t a n c e in this c o m scenity and t h a t which has social ticle in Scanlans M o n t h l y . S o m e mercial, and the e n v i r o n m e n t a l significance,, However, if o n e m a y of his selections included: S t a n d threat to Alaska is ignored. combine a little Webster ( e c o l o g y ) ard Oil's " A n n o u n c i n g t h e m o s t and the S u p r e m e C o u r t ( p o r n o Many p r o d u c t s themselves have long a w a i t e d gasoline d e v e l o p graphy) t h e result is " t h e exploitataken an ecological bent. Lowm e n t in h i s t o r y ; " Shell's " L a s t tion and misuse of e n v i r o n m e n t a l p h o s p h a t e detergents have all but year we saved a lot of fish from A P - A $ 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 fine was imRepresenting Anaconda were issuer and t e r m s . " d r o w n i n g . A n d made a lot of kids flooded the amrket in the rush to vice p r e s i d e n t William Riley; sech a p p y ; " H u m b l e Oil's " T h i s bird posed y e s t e r d a y u p o n t h e Anasave the environment. S o m e lowE c o - p o r n o g r a p h y can be found conda Wire and C a b l e C o m p a n y retary H. R o b e r t L i m m e r ; and s a n c t u a r y is an oil field;" Bethlep h o s p h a t e detergents will actually in any media used by business and hem Steel's " W h a t in the world for 1 0 0 unlawful discharges of lawyer D o n a l d L. D e m i n g . clean y o u r clothes. Others, such as corporations t o advertise their c o p p e r and o t h e r wastes into t h e (iocs a forester do at B e t h l e h e m * ***** the now infamous ECOLO-G deproducts. Bill-boards, o n e t y p e of H u d s o n River from its plant at S t e e l ; " 'WestinghouMf's 'VWre tergent can be harmful to clothes media, are t h e m s e l v e s environEarth News Hasti ngs-on-H u d s o n , New York. p r o v i d i n g electricity t h r o u g n and h u m a n s , ECOLO-G (promentally degrading,, T h e y m u s t Federal Judge Thomas F, clean, safe, nuclear p o w e r ; " and The Council on Economic n o u n c e d ecology) came on the attract a t t e n t i o n a n d be read Clorels " D o y o u share t o Clean Croake fined the c o m p a n y , which Priorities released u r e p o r t which m a r k e t soon after the first Earth quickly t o be an effective adverthe Air with a little help from pleaded guilty last Sept. 27 to a revealed t h a t m a n y ad cluims b y Day, Sales zoomed as houswives tising m e d i u m . T a s t e is usually the CtoretSu" 100-count indictment alleging major m a n u f a c t u r e r s are false o r could now do their part for the last criteria c o n s i d e r e d in creating spills five days a week from J a n . '1 i misleading. e n v i r o n m e n t , This was fine until it these m a s t e r p i e c e s of American A recent survey at S A L E S MAN- to May 2*1 from its Westchester The Council on Economic was discovered that ECOLO-G art. The Lark " S T O P SMOGA G E M E N T , a m a r k e t i n g maga c o u n t y mill, Priorities ( C E P ) is a n o n - p r o f i t GING" bill-board featured in T h e was almost one-half salt, did not -cine, asked, " D o e s Ecology S e l l ? " A special a n t i - p o l l u t i o n grand o r g a n i z a t i o n , similar t o Ralph clean clothes very well and caused Spirit t w o issues ago is a prime The results revealed that c o m p a n jury, filing charges S e p t . 8, alleged N a d e r ' s o r g a n i z a t i o n s . Earlier this skin rashes. example of e c o - p o r n o g r a p h y . Anies vying t o paint their p r o d u c t s infractions of the Federal Refuse year C E P released an extensive other e x a m p l e is found in the Trash Mashers are a n o t h e r line into ecological s a i n t h o o d often Act of 1 8 9 9 . s t u d y on t h e p a p e r i n d u s t r y , exAtlantic-Richfield bill-board feaof p r o d u c t s which are advertised end up as m a r t y r s . C o m p a n y officials told t h e judge plaining h o w p o l l u t i n g t h a t partituring a scenic p h o t o g r a p h y with as a solution to an environmental Advertisers and m a r k e t i n g m e n last S e p t . 27 t h a t the plant had cular i n d u s t r y is. the heading, " H o w t o help keep problem,, In reality, this tine of have a c o m m o n unofficial slogan, remedied t h e situation in compliT h e r e p o r t reveals t h a t t h e America b e a u t f u l . . 0 " ' p r o d u c t s does more harm than " I f it. sells my p r o d u c t , use i t . " ance with New York State anti- major p o l l u t e r s d o m o s t " e n v i r o n good. The spray used t o de With increasing awareness of the A more familiar advertising mepollution standards. mental a d v e r t i s i n g . " T h a t is, C E P -orierize the garbage when come n v i r o n m e n t , fewer p e o p l e have dium, television, has been used W i t h o u t further i n t e r p r e t a t i o n , found t h a t t h e c o m p a n i e s with pressed, prevents food from deaccepted eco"pornography as particularly by large c o r p o r a t i o n s J u d g e C r o a k e told c o m p a n y offi- the worse p o l l u t i o n records s p e n d composing naturally. Cans and truth.. T h e waste land which is for PR c o m m e r c i a l s . PR, or Public cials: " T h i s c a n n o t be c o n s i d e r e d m o r e m o n e y o n advertising e i t h e r bottles are crushed together, and e c o - p o r n o g r a p h y will disappear if Relations, can be defined in t w o part of the overhead of a business. disclaiming p o l l u t i o n c o m p l a i n t s it does not sell p r o d u c t s , and it is ways, R can describe p r o g r a m s cannot be recycled or reused., T h a t is m y t h i n k i n g , and I have or claiming t h a t the c o m p a n i e s not now selling p r o d u c t s . Locally, eco-pornography exixts that inform t h e public of c o n t r i given it very serious considera- d o n ' t p o l l u t e m o r e than the lesser in a b u n d a n c e , One radio station in butions t o social causes and teh T h e c o n s u m e r ' - s advised t o difte o n . " polluters. Particular, WPTR, has a nastyhabit acceptance of responsibility in ferentiate b e t w e e n truthful adverU n d e r t h e law, fines ranging up T h e CEP report cites m a n y speof using the word " e c o l o g y " belika matters by large c o r p o r a t i o n s 1 ising claims and the n o t solo $ 2 , 5 0 0 for each violation could cific cast's, a m o n g t h e m the adverfore the lime (Ecology NOW time seeking to i m p r o v e their public iruthful. T h e t h e o r y of c o n s u m e r be imposed. Croake set $ 2 , 0 0 0 for tising d o n e by botli Ford M o t o r i s . . ) , a practice completely withimage. PR can also describe pro sovereignty may often seem m o r e each, o r d e r i n g t h e c o m p a n y to C o m p a n y and General M o t o r s . out significance T h e r e is a differ* grams designed to eamoflage enmyth than fact. However, the pay by Dee. 1. Both GM and Ford, a c c o r d i n g t o ' 'tween the o v e r u s e ol vironmental a b u s e by I be largt isiinu r will finally decide what the r e p o r t , advertise that t h e y wo (I mis' '" " v " l ' ' iar*e r o t m l e r culture term a nid d the is sold by what h e buys. have r e d u c e d pollution e m m i s i o n s from 6n p e r c e n t to NO p e r c e n t o n 1971 cars. CEP, however, cites a California s t u d y which shows t h a t 7.r) p e r c e n t of the 1971 cars o n the road failed lo meet t h a t criteria. " F o r d claims that a u t o emission comprises o n l y .'19 percent of total air p o l l u t i o n , " CEP says. " Y e t t'F.P shows a u t o pollution impact on urban areas is over 7!S percent." The report aiso stales "The images --re.iled by generalized claims .ire not consistent with those conveyed by specifics in the ne.vs." CKP says thai this leads t o ii "frustrating conflict which in light of the growing U.S. c o n c e r n over the c o n d i t i o n of o u r environm e n t . . . m a y n o t be t o l e r a t e d m u c h longer." Industry Lags In Anti-pollution Fight university concert board presents A 2 H our Jazz-Rock Experience featuring Randy Brecker, formerly of B, S & T Sat. November 20 is on saH-: 10 am - 2 pm in CC Lobio 8 pm 99c with student tax and ID $2.50 w/out 11) or proof of IH years r e q u i r e d hmded l by student i, i r i s IVEDDING KINGS [\KltlNt.S WAICH AND ItWELKV RtFAIKING § tax ° 0 0 0 W O e o e a e o & G o o o c . o e w e O C M X W > * > I i « " . - :«co-&c«asct>..r3o-.300cc)casae!G«oocsce.c>c.oo I nisi in M lo vu sii orsrs j -H TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 20 Albany Student Press X The ASP ^ ^ ^ ^ P Vol. LVIII No. 55 JEFF BECK G R O U P : Rough and Ready (Epic 3 0 9 7 3 ) After being immobilized for t w o years by a motorcycle accident, Jeff Beck, former lead guitar o f the Yardbirds and the Jeff Beck Group (with R o d Stewart) has formed a new band that includes a black singer. Jeff Beck playing soul-rock music? Yeah, it hit m e kind of funny at first. Since Beck is noted for his flaming egotism and a desire t o lay down as much guitar as possible (which was fine within the c o n t e x t o f his other groups) it seemed rather unlikely that he would adapt t o t h e n e w sound. But yes, h e does a d a p t . There is still enough of t h e m o s t unpredictable, s t a c c a t o guitar in rock, b u t Beck docs n o t Ret carried away with himself, a n d adds much t o the m o o d of each soup,. Ironically, vocals d o n o t play a large role in the proceedings. B o b T e n c h has a pretty good voice and he excells in " I ' v e Been U s e d , " "Clot t h e F e e l i n g , " a n d " S h o r t Business" but his range is rather weak a n d h e has t r o u b l e handling <>ve ballads like " J o d y . " Perhaps this is the reason his vocals are staioned rather far in t h e b a c k g r o u n d . " G o t t h e F e e l i n g " shows off t h e new Beck. It h a s a typical soul opening with Beck grinding o u t some notes o n wuh-wah pedal. O v e r d u b b i n g of guitar and p i a n o is used extensively so a s m o o t h , c o m p l e t e feeling is o b t a i n e d . A variety of s o u n d s by Beck fills in any e m p t y spaces. Max Middlet o n , w h o s p e n t m a n y years playing classical piano, combines many unusual n o t e s t o p r o d u c e an exotic solo with a touch of latin flavor. The r h y t h m section of bass player Clive C h a m a n a n d d r u m m e r Cozy Powell, p r o b a b l y t h e most essential p a r t of soul music supplies a lot of p u n c h . An auspicious start. " S i t u a t i o n " has an intro b u i l d u p that gives Beck plenty of opportunity t o e x p l o d e b u t h e surprises with a soft, legato line t h a t leads right into t h e o p e n i n g verse. Later on, his fuzzy guitar solo is contrasted with t h e velvet touch of Middleton o n electric piano. Don't e x p e c t a n o t h e r " R i c e P u d d i n g " or " B e c k ' s Bolero" from t h e H:25 i n s t r u m e n t a l " R a y n e s Park B l u e s , " which in spite of it's misleading title is a jazz piece. T h e t h e m e takes t o o long in unfolding a n d there is l o o much wasted space, though by n o means c a n t h e song h e called filler material for t h e r e are plenty of idsas, t h e p r o b l e m is that t h e y ' r e too sketchy. State University of New York at Albany Senate Charged With Corruption by B o b R o s e n b l u m "Rough and Ready' ."iay n o t be what y o u e x p e c t b u t it d o e s n ' t intend t o b e . If y o u give it a little time, y o u could be pleasantly surprised. S o Jeff Beck has soul. What do y o u know? Eric Graeber by Bill Brina Electric Hot Tuna. "FIRST PULL UP, THEN PULL DOWN" (Recorded live) RCA LSP4S50 Jorma Kuuhoncn, electric guitar and meats: Jack Casady, electric bass; Papa John Creach. electric violin; Will Scarlett, harmonica; Sammy Piazza, drums. Jack a n d J o r m a a r e at it again. First t i m e 'round t h e y fooled us with an a l b u m of stunningly exe c u t e d a c o u s t i c blues w h e n w e ' d e x p e c t e d a rock jam set. T h i s t i m e 'round they give us w h a t we first looked for, plus some e x t r a goodies. Papa J o h n Creach, t h e veteran ( 5 3 years o l d ) black electric violinist we saw here when t h e Airplane n e w in last full, is a b o a r d , and S a m m y Piazza, a get-it-on rock a n d roll d r u m m e r if there ever was o n e , replaced t h e succession of lackluster drummers (Spenee, D r y d e n , a n d C o v i n g t o n ) t h a t Jack a n d J o r m a have had with t h e m . Oh...and for laughs they d i d n ' t p u t t h e a l b u m title o n the cover ( i t ' s in small p r i n t o n the side), so this L P is t h e o n e with t h e yellow a n d aqua swirly design o n t h e cover, O K ? It's a fine piece of work. T h e p r e d o m i n a n t flavors a r e jazzy and bluesy, w i t h traces of o k l l i m e swing fading in and oul as t h e musicians jam on. J o r m a ' s vocal's are, well, t h e r e . His voice w o n ' t make you forget a n y b o d y ' s b u t his style a n d inflection a r e excellent for this type of music a n d he delivers t h e drivingly urgent yet Tightness is t h e main quality of s o m e h o w distant sense of longing " S h o r t Business" a n d " I ' v e Been that makes "Been So L o n g " and Used." T h e latter o p e n s with an " C o m e Back, B a b y " s m o l d e r and eerie s y n c o p a t e d beat b u t then b u r n . Scarlett is an intriguingly quickly straightens o u t into t h e inventive harp player a n d Papa main t h e m e . T e n c h , d r o w n i n g in John plays a jazzy, bluesy e l e c t r i c pain, is a t his best here. violin t h a t often s o u n d s like a T h e last t w o songs on the a l b u m reed. Jack backs J o r m a steadily point o u t s o m e weaknesses in t h e and S a m m y keeps ' e m r o c k i n . group's format. " N e w Ways Train Basically, t h o u g h , t h e s h o w boT r a i n " utilizes ideas from Traffic. longs t o J o r m a . His influence has J a m e s Gang, a n d Buddy Miles c o n t i n u e d t o be himself, a n d lie is w i t h o u t having a personality of its not averse t o c o p p i n g figures from o w n . T h e c o n s t a n t switches in his o w n earlier work. Little echoes I,, are a little hard l o take a n d of J o r m a -inn e m b e l l i s h m e n t of o l d for all t h e music layeel d o w n , Airplane s t a n d a r d s a b o u n d , b u t t h e r e is very little a c c o m p l i s h e d . Ihi' musical c o n t e x t us different. If y o u ' r e looking for m e l o d y a n d " J o d y " underlines t h e lack o l h a r m o n y a n d old-fashioned songs good material al h a n d . Still, t h e you w o n ' t euro t o o m u c h for this music is s t r o n g e n o u g h l o leap a n y disc, b u t ir y o u can get your head hurdles. M i d d l e l o n ' s magic c a r p e t ride electric p i a n o solo t h a t ends into some really crisp playing it's t h e r e t o love. the album is sheer genious. He „teals t h e spotlight from Beck. by Eric Graeber The PENTANGLE's new album " R e f l e c t i o n " (Reprise 6-163), is b y far t h e best allium by this English folk jazz group since their initial disc a b o u t t w o a n d a half years ago. " T r y lo relax and let y o u r mind run f r e e " says Bert Jansch in " H e l p i n g H a n d " a n d this is t h e overall p h i l o s o p h y of the a l b u m , o n e of t h e mosl relaxing of t h e year. With t w o of England's finest a c o u s t i c guitarists in Bert Jansch and J o h n l l e n b o u r n and t w o very c o m p e t e n t vocalists (Jansch and J a c q u i McShee), t h e only surprise is t h a t it t o o k this long for PENT A N G L E t o record t h e i r definitive a l b u m . Where in previous outings, Jansch and Renbourn rought each o t h e r in t h e guitar solos, here they meld their styles i n t o a tasty s o u n d . I n s t r u m e n t s that u p until t h e last a l b u m were n o t s y n o m o u s with t h e group, namely sitars, banjos, harp, and electric guitars are utilized t o achieve a m o r e c o m p l e t e s o u n d . T h e material deals m o r e with t h e American folk idiom than previously, so t h a t even an overw o r k e d s o n g like"Will T h e Circle Be U n b r o k e n ? " gets n e w life pumped into it. T h r o u g h o u t , Jansch is al t h e t o p o r his form, and McShee's sweet voice is as helpful as b u t t e r o n h o t toast. Showing remarkable consist e n c y , each c u t is a b o u t as good as the n e x t , with t h e 11 m i n u t e finale " R e f l e c t i o n " t h e s t a n d o u t if only for t h e fliudity it displays d u r i n g it's long life. McShee's voice, backed u p lightly by Jansch is likely t o send shivers d o w n y o u r spine. UlL uincutcu: it I'IV by Jeff Burger S O M E T I M E S 1 J U S T F E E L LIKE S M I L I N ' , Butterfield Blues Band, Elektra E K S 7 ! ) 0 I 3 . Butterfield fans, gel ready this is p r o b a b l y t h e best of their seven albums. If y o u ' v e followed this hand, y o u k n o w that they've constantly e x p e r i m e n t e d : Iwo a l b u m s were into Chicago blues, then there was t h e a d d i t i o n of brass, the e x p e r i m e n t a t i o n with jazz, Eastern s o u n d s , and at times a merger with rock. T h i s new a l b u m defies a n y such c a t e g o r i z a t i o n ; it s e e m s , rather, like t h e logical conclusion o f all the previous material. Everything t h a t has been learned has been m e r g e d here-jazz, folk, blues, p o p , a n d rock are i n c o r p o r a t e d into a s m o o t h and natural synthesis. A n d a b a c k - u p c h o r u s t h a t includes Merry " G i m m e S h e l t e r " C l a y t o n is the perfect c o m p l i m e n t t o t h e b a n d . Butterfield shares t h e spotlight, even m o r e than usual, with t h e o t h e r m e m b e r s of his g r o u p . As h e said in a recent interview: " I d o n ' t w a n t t o play all t h e solos o n all the songs; I w a n t s o m e o t h e r folks t o play. I've g o t s o m e cats t h a i can really p l a y ! " You'll feel like smiline. T. R e x , "Electric Warrior" Reprise 6 4 6 6 When T . R E X played here last year they were p a t h e t i c a l l y inept. Of c o u r s e , a n y g r o u p would have been a l e t d o w n after t h e speeding fury of J O H N N Y W I N T E R A N D b u t Marc Bolan's gooey pretentiousness a n d p h o n y havingsucha g o o d t i m e a t t i t u d e fell just a b i t s h o r t of b e i n g a good stage act. I was q u i t e prepared t o dislike the new T . R E X a l b u m " E l e c t r i c Warr i o r " (Reprise 6 1 6 6 ) b u t believe it or n o t , it's n o t b a d . N o world s h o c k e r b y a n y means, b u t a d e c e n t a l b u m . If y o u can a c c e p t Bolan's magical lyrics of cosmic oneness as a goof then y o u will p r o b a b l y enjoy t h e music t h a t a c c o m p a n i e s it, A typical Bolan lyric: " B e n e a t h t h e b e b o p m o o n / 1 want t o c r o o n with y o u / B e n e a t h the M a m h o Sun/I g o t t o be t h e one with y o u " o r : " S h a l l o w a r e the actions of t h e children of m e n / F o g g e d was their vision since the ages b e g a n / a n d lost like a lion in t h e c a n y o n s of s m o k e / G i r l i l ' s no j o k e . " When t h e lyrics degene r a t e into triteness, t h e music is just that m u c h belter t o c o m p e n sate. In a d d i t i o n , the siring arr a n g e m e n t s and t h e s a x o p h o n e work of Ian McDonald of KING C R I M S O N fame fills in a n y loose cracks in t h e foundation. " G e t It On (Band A G o n g ) " which was a hit o n t h e charts in England hut fizzled in t h e Slates is tin- best of t h e lot b u t t h e electric " R i p O f f isn't far behind Bolan, w h o was a famous folk singer for m a n y years in Kngland, is generally heller off when he plays a c o u s t i c , hut h e seems t o k n o w his limits as an electric guitarist a n d hardly ever overdoes anything T h e key l o whether y o u will like T . R E X or m i l is w h e t h e r y o u like Bolan's voice. I despised it in c o n c e r t h u t il d o e s n ' t b o t h e r m e at al) on record. Chuck Mangione has been a r o u n d for q u i t e a while. T h e fact t h a t h e has n o w m a d e an a l b u m t h a t has a c t u a l l y , in p a r t , received s o m e airtime c a n n o t b e interp r e t e d a s a n i n d i c a t i o n t h a t Mangione has just n o w b e c o m e a good musician. I r e m e m b e r picking u p an old a l b u m b y t h e J a z z B r o t h e r s , with Sal Nistico o n t e n o r , C h u c k ' s brother on piano, R o y McCurdy—who later joined C a n n o n ball Adderley—on d r u m s , a n d a less prominent c a t , Vinney Rugiero, o r s o m e t h i n g , o n bass. Chuck was already playing real nice t r u m p e t , creating an original style which fit c o m f o r t a b l y between Miles Davis and Dizzy Gil lespic. Sal Nistico was n o t as flashy then b u t played a nice Sonny Rollins influenced l e n o r . T h e g r o u p was called t h e Jazz Brothers, a n d they originated o u l of R o c h e s t e r , a n d were "disc o v e r e d " b y Cannonball Adder ley, w h o h a d a large part in signing t h e m u p with Riverside, a now defunct jazz label. Chuck was d o i n g s o m e nice writing t h e n , so when T h e Jazz Brothers b r o k e up C h u c k was given t h e o p p o r t u n i t y l o write s o m e Charts for Maynard Ferguson. He also played a n d w r o t e for A r t Blakey. After starving in New York h e returned t o R o c h e s t e r , t a u g h t at E a s t m a n , a n d just k e p t growing musically. He was i n t o c o m p o sition so he naturally gravitated t o w a r d s classical music. Being y o u n g h e learned t o a p p r e c i a t e rock a n d folk. Meanwhile h e was playing jazz a t t h e c l u b s in t h e area, a n d sitting in when he could. Sitting in has always been part of his lire. As a kid his father had him sit in with s o m e of t h e greats w h o c a m e a r o u n d l o play. F a t h e r Mangione would also get t h e musicians t o visit t h e h o u s e , have s o m e t h i n g t o e a t ( a n d d r i n k ) and blow till all h o u r s of t h e night. Dizzy Gillespie was s o impressed by C h u c k ' s playing t h a t h e gave him o n e o r his u p d o h o r n s . Chuck used il o n his first record d a l e . So Chuck Mangione's past led l o do t h e r a t h e r r e m a r k a b l e concert thai ; r e c o r d e d o n Friends and Love (Mercury SRM 2 u 0 ( l ) This d o u b l e allium is an ambitious project, and p r e s e n t s s o m e rare m o m e n t * in A m e r i c a n c o m positional music He s o m e h o w b r o u g h t together classical, folk, rock, I ' S W , a n d jazz, e l e m e n t s and welded t h e m e n t e r t a i n i n g whole T h e p e r f o r m i n g g r o u p c o m e s complete Willi t h e R o c h e s t e r Philharmonic Orchestra, a n d folk singers Bat McGrath and Dan P o l l e r , and various jazz musicians. Chuck plays I w o beautiful solos lhal are a s t u d y in e c o n o m y , a n d as fresh as t h e falling s n o w Gerry Neiwood plays s o m e nice, insinuating hues o n t h e s o p r a n o , h u t I would have liked l o see him given more space Marvin Stamili d o e s n ' t q u i t e live u p t o his repu t a l i o n concerning himself m o r e with t h e h y s l r i o m c s of shrill high n o t e n o n playing than with any thing musical A more c o m p l e t e musical a n n o t a t i o n lakes m o r e r o o m than 1 have, h u t suffice il l o say this is o n e exceedingly c o m polling piece of work lhal is screaming t o he heard, and Ihere is s o m e t h i n g in il t o satisfy a n y musical taste h u d . Friday, November 19, 1971 by Glenn von Nostitz At a capitolipress c o n f e r e n c e W e d n e s d a y , Albert Loftus, former aide t o S t a t e S e n a t o r Walter Langley, r e f u t e d charges m a d e by S e n a t e Secretary Albert A b r a m s t h a t his revelation of d o w n s t a t e c o r r u p t i o n are " u n t r u e " a n d " i m p l a u s i b l e . " Last week Loftus claimed t h a t A b r a m s s e n t h i m t o Brooklyn t o work o n t h e campaign o f l N a t h a n i e l H e n d r i c k s , a Republican w h o was . r u n n i n g in a special election against i n c u m b e n t S e n a t o r F e r r o . L o f t u s said t h a t h e was o n t h e Senate payroll at t h e time, as was D o m i n o c Robortella, a legislative assistant w h o a c c o m p a n i e d h i m . T h e y were given t h e keys t o s t a t e car N o . 9 9 9 , and L o f t u s said t h a t h e personally helped load Senate office supplies into t h e car a n d delivered t h e m t o Hendrick's h e a d q u a r t e r s a t t h e Bossert H o t e l in B r o o k l y n . T h e y also had t h e use of a s l a t e credit card. Assisting o n the campaign were fifty m e m b e r s of t h e S U N Y A Young R e p u b l i c a n s Club, w h o paid for t h e i r o w n t r a n s p o r t a t i o n a n d a c c o m m o d a t i o n s in Brooklyn in o r d e r t o d i s t r i b u t e campaign literature d o o r - t o - d o o r . T h e s t u d e n t s were c o o r d i n a t e d by six professional politicians from t h e S e n a t e . Whether they were o n t h e Senate payrool at t h e time is n o t k n o w n . Despite t h e alleged use of Senate funds and supplies, a n d t h e help of Albany S t a t e s t u d e n t s , Hendricks still lost. In refuting A b r a m ' s charges, Loftus said t h a t he " h a s p r o o f " t o back u p all his charges, a n d he a n n o u n c e d t h a t he is d e m a n d i n g a p u b l i c At a recent capitol press conference, Albert Loftus, former aide, t o Senator Langley, refuted charges investigation of t h e alleged c o r r u p t i o n . S o far, Loftus h a s been made b y the Senate Secretary that his revelation o f downstate corruption are "untrue" and "implausible". unsuccessful in o b t a i n i n g such an investigation. He went t o R e ..rosenberfi publican District A t t o r n e y Arnold P r o s k i n ' s office, b u t Proskin " w a s o u t of t o w n , visiting Disney World." O n e of Proskin's aides told h i m t h a t , " W e c a n n o t c o n d u c t an investigation into y o u r charges d u e t o a m a n p o w e r s h o r t a g e . " Loftus then w e n t t o A t t o r n e y General Lefkowitx's office, a n d was informed t h e r e t h a t :they could n o t investigate his charges unless o r d e r e d t o b y t h e Governor. Still u n d i s m a y e d , Loftus w e n t t o t h e G o v e r n o r ' s office, and was received by William D e m i n o , an assistant counsel. D e m i n o , Loftus says, told him t o go back t o Proskin's office a n d " t r y again." Loftus adds, tongue in c h e e k , t h a t h e received t h e " r u n - a r o u n d " because all of t h e by Ferris E n o c k a definite plan for at least use all t h e resources open t o a n y officials h e saw a r e R e p u b l i c a n s . o t h e r S U N Y s t u d e n t , in this way, m o n t h l y meetings b e t w e e n t h e Empire S t a t e College, a n e w R e s p o n d i n g t o a q u e s t i o n a b o u t t h e involvement of S U N Y A I h e y benefit from the new t w o . In these o n e - t o - o n e evaludivision of t h e S U N Y s y s t e m , direction of t h e program and t h e s t u d e n t s , Loftus said t h a t t h e campaign material distributed b y t h e offers its s t u d e n t s t h e c h a n c e t o ation sessions, t h e e m p h a s i s is students " c o u l d have b e e n " printed illegally, meaning t h a t Senate traditional facilities associated placed o n s t u d e n t self-evaluation define e d u c a t i o n in their o w n funds were used. with a college. terms. In this school t h e emphasis of his work. When t h e c o n t r a c t " A l t h o u g h t h e a m o u n t of m o n e y involved in this c r i m e m a y b e has been successfully c o m p l e t e d is o n a c c o m p l i s h m e n t r a t h e r than s m a l l , " Loftus s a y s ' " c r i m e s are c o m m i t t e d all t h e time in t h e S t a t e and evaluated, t h e s t u d e n t starts tradition and r e q u i r e m e n t s . What started o u t as an idea has Legislature." He w e n t o n t o say t h a t s u c h c o r r u p t i o n is n o t limited t o the process all over again with his now flourished into a working d o w n s t a t e , and that in t h e 1970 elections, several i n c u m b e n t u p s t a t e T h e sc hooi o p e r a tes o u t of choice o f m e n t o r a n d t i m e ar- e x p e r i m e n t . Support a n d enRepublicans were assisted b y Senate funds. " T h e s e c r i m e s , " ho "learning c e n t e r s " located in r a n g e m e n t . T h e s t u d e n t h a s t h e couragement h a s c o m e from t h e concludes, " a d d u p t o several h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d l d o l l a r s " stolen from m a n y parts of t h e s t a t e . This o p t i o n of waiting awhile before faculty involved t o t h e c o m m u n the people of this s t a t e by their lawmakers, " n o - c a m p u s " idea was initiated signing a n o t h e r c o n t r a c t . ities housing t h e learning centers. Loftus doesn't place all t h e b l a m e for S e n a t e c o r r u p t i o n o n for b o t h t h e convenience of t h e Publicity has just begun t o pick Secretary Abrams. He says that it is " t h e majority party u n d e r t h e S t u d e n t s pursue their individual u p , b u t by August 1071 t h e r e s t u d e n t a n d t h e state, T h e studirection of Earl B r y d g e s " w h o run t h e Senate and w h o m u s t b e p r o g r a m s in t h r e e basic m o d e s of were already 5 , 0 0 0 queries from d e n t s is not restricted t o class" b r o u g h t t o j u s t i c e " . Loftus p r o p o s e s t o d o this himself if an learning; t h e discipline m o d e , t h e s t u d e n t s asking if Empire College r o o m s in his e d u c a t i o n a l endeainvestigation of his charges is n o t begun s o o n . As a last resort, h e plans p r o b l e m m o d e and t h e e x p e r i e n c e was t h e college for t h e m . If y o u ' r e vors while I he s l a t e feels n o strain t o challenge Abrams in a " c o u r t of law". He claims t h a t h e will n o t let m o d e . T h e discipline m o d e is interested, as is Bob DiNun/.io, on its b u d g e t and is ahle t o this issue fade away. m o s t similar t o straight college o n e s t u d e n t a c c o m m o d a t e t h e increasing n u m enrolled at t h e Finally, Loftus says t h a t he has i n f o r m a t i o n o n t h e corrupt practices tradition. T h e s t u d e n t will conber of college s t u d e n t s . college, in an " a l t e r n a t e a p p r o a c h of several o t h e r legislators, and that this is t h e result, " w h e n c e n t r a t e o n a particular field of to e d u c a t i o n w h i c h at it's most Republicans remain in p o w e r t o o l o n g . " s t u d y such as English or History. Working t o satisfy t h e needs of idealistic form will provide an Loftus, w h o is only 19, worked o n t h e campaign of Republican A p r o g r a m following t h e p r o b l e m an e x p e c t e d 10,000 s t u d e n t s , infinite n u m b e r of learning m o d e s S e n a t o r Walter Langley last year, and w a s a p p o i n t e d as an aide to him m o d e will p r o b a b l y b e , as I he learning c e n t e r s will h e o p e n i n g in in progress t o w u r d a g o a l " , then after t h e election. He says t h a t Langley paid him a salary of $ 1 2 5 a catalogue slates, " a major social al! regions of t h e state by 197;!. Empire S t a t e College is for y o u . week. Loftus was reportedly fired by Langley. issue or a c o m p r e h e n s i v e unit of T h e first c e n t e r was o p e n e d in s t u d y which draws upon diverse O c t o b e r in Saratoga Springs a n d kinds of skills and k n o w l e d g e . . . " serves as h e a d q u a r t e r s for t h e colT h e e x p e r i e n c e m o d e allows t h e lege. Albany's center, which s u t d e n t t h e m o s t freedom from o p e n e d o n N o v e m b e r H in r o o m regular college r o u t i n e . T h e e m 01 1 in t h e basement of Draper phasis u n d e r this t y p e of s l u d y Hall, will be followed b y t h e will b e o n action in t h e form of opening of a center in Manhattan " o n - t h e - j o b e x p e r i e n c e s of volunnext week. teer activities." All oilier reading ami s t u d y i n g will help t o suppleA c c e p t a n c e into t h e program is nienl and explain t h e s t u d e n t ' s based on desire and sincerity. Ap(lav t o d a y experiences. plicants with these qualities un- Empire State College Offers Alternative to Classrooms accepted o n a first collie, first served basis. Alter a brief orien Many people e n c u m b e r e d with tat ion w h e r e I he p h i l o s o p h y of job a n d family c o m m i t m e n t s find the college is discussed, each stuEmpire College able t o s u p p l y d e n t hi assigned a m e n t o r v 'ho them with t h e e d u c a t i o n t h e y meets with t h e s t u d e n t at o n e of might never have had t h e c h a n c e the centers lo help develop a to gel. Any experiences they bring meaningful p a t h t o t h e a t t a i n m e n t to t h e college is considered of his goal, A " c o n t r a c t , " or plan toward " c r e d i t " for their " d e gree." of s t u d y e o n ten I and length, is d r a w n u p in t h e first of those meetings, T h e contract usually alCollege and high school s t u d e n t s lows an e x p l o r a t o r y period of disconraged with current formal several weeks before t h e student institutions of higher learning are settles o n a definite goal, offered this o p p o r t u n i t y t o take their e d u c a t i o n entirely into their own hands, All s t u d e n t s enrolled T h e c o n t r a c t generally lusts bein t h e p r o g r a m a r e m e m b e r s of tween u m o n t h a n d u year a n d specifies obligations of b o t h t h e the S U N Y c o m m u n i t y , pay t h e same t u i t i o n , a n d a r e entitled l o s t u d e n t a n d t h e m e n t o r , including The first center of Empire Stale College was opened in Saratoga Springs; Albany's center is located in Draper Hall. ESC offers an "alternative approach to education" without classrooms. ...alvertton