A Saturday Evening of Ideal Love

advertisement
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23,1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 12
A Saturday Evening of Ideal Love
i n t r o d u c t i o n lor her a n d she well conveyed the
j u s t - t . w a k e n e d - f r o m - s e v e r a l - h o i . r s - n a p look
by Michele Ann Kantor
Saturday nights here at the State University are
traditionally k n o w n as the weekend evenings when
those students remaining on campus search desperately for entertainment, group for s o m e diversion from calculus and analytic geometry. Red,
yellow, and blue sloppily written rexographed signs
seen taped o n pillars draw us t o the Lecture Centers
for s o m e often good movie—viewing. Others, more
courageous perhaps, are attracted to the brightly—lit
Performing Arts Center (contrasting sharply with
the Saturday night darkness of the Library at t h e
other end of the Podium) to see what cultural
p u r s u i t s are-awaiting eager audiences.
The title " P o r n o g r a p h i c P l a y " served as a m p l e
enough bait, necessitating t h e t u r n i n g a w a y of
crowds at both t h e 7 : 3 0 and 9 : 0 0 p.m. performances at the S t u d i o T h e a t r e last S a t u r d a y night.
The basic element of the play centers a r o u n d t h e
first sexual e n c o u n t e r of a y o u n g man and w o m a n ,
this is in itself fairly t o u c h y and difficult to handle
theatrically w i t h o u t falling prey t o p o o r taste or the
u t m o s t prudishness, b u t p e r h a p s the s t o r y failed t o
succeed because it was in t o o much of a middle
s t a t e b e t w e e n these t w o .
T h e opening scene was q u i t e good in attracting the'
audience to the little c o m e d y a b o u t to h a p p e n . We
see a b o d y or b o d i e s of some sort .squirming like a
living sack o n a small bed c e n t e r stage. It t u r n s o u t
to be Emily, our virginal h e r o i n e . This was suitable
PORNOGRAPHIC
„ro,enbem
-
consisted of predictable imitations of everybody which
grated on this reviewer's nerve-endings.
T r o m b o n i s t Barry Rogers furnished most of w h a t exc i t e m e n t there was in the first part of the s h o w , b u t
s o m e w h e r e midway through he ran o u t of inspiration (and
riffs), and so he shuffled through his bag of tricks once
again. I would have liked to have seen him whip o u t his
Wagnerian tuba at least once (which he played q u i t e well
last time ' r o u n d ) b u t he d i d n ' t . T r u m p e t e r Handy Breeker,
the former B.S. a n d T ' e r whose past affiliation the Concert
Board evidently h o p e d would h y p e sales gave a decent solo
or t w o hen 1 and t h e r e , whacked percussion now and then,
grimaced on m o r e (ban one occasion as guitarist Hubby
"got it o n , " and in general seemed b o t h artistically and
chemically depressed by what the hand had b e c o m e
T h e i r material, which wus weak to begin with, h a d n ' t
unproved any. Banal lyrics, uninspired tunes, any three
c h o r d s of a n y t h i n g sounded after a while like any three
c h o r d s of a n y t h i n g else (save for o n e n u m b e r in which
they imittated a noisy s w a m p q u i t e well and displayed
s o m e audio-visual h u m o r ) . Their onstage burn or was
perhaps the only bright spot of their show, Lee mimicked
singer Eddie V e r n o n ' s " s o u l f u l " excesses splendidly, and
Eddie returned the favor in a pair of vocal d u e t s of sorts,
in which lie gleefully d r y - h u m p e d the blond bassist provided a good visual image for the whole evening.
When all else failed singer Vernon dipped d e e p into the
" P o w e r of S o u l " bag and, with a little help from t h e
lighting people ( o n e of w h o m n\unl have read the line in
Uniting Stone t h a t claimed t h a t when the lights c o m e on a
ruck-n-roll audience will go berserk and charge the stage in
a frenzy) the p e r f o r m e r s and audience finally lurched t o
the orgasmic finale they'd c o m e for in the first place. It
was all s o m e h o w sad
a onee-promising Dream(s) turned
stale and sour and a Pavloviun audience d e t e r m i n e d t o
e x t r a c t their '.Ml cents w o r t h , going through the m o t i o n s
that are s u p p o s e d to be getting it o n .
Thv ASP
FSA's Cooley Dismisses
Plans for Board Hike
by AI Senia
Last m o n t h the ASP r e p o r t e d
that any chance Robert Cooley
had of getting a hike in b o a r d
rates approved by the FSA Board
of
Directors
had
appreciably
diminished in the face of increased s t u d e n t , administrative,
and even FSA officials' opposition.
Monday
afternoon,
Robert
Cooley dropped his request for a
price hike. T h e move was probably the most significant action
taken al the afternoon FSA meet
ing which lasted over three h o u r s
and yielded few concrete answers
to some often asked q u e s t i o n s .
T h e membership will try again at
a n o t h e r meeting next m o n t h ,
SUNYA
board
students
rates.
Executive
At
will not
last
Director
Monday's
of
FSA
have
to
worry
about
an increase
ESA meeting,
Robert
dropped
his request
hike
in
Cooley,
the
for a
price
...chow
As reported in past issues of the
ASP, the FSA m e m b e r s h i p board
has become so concerned with the
financial situation of the corporation that il balked at superficially
approving the yearly
financial
audit at its annual meeting held in
October.
Instead, the m e m b e r s o p t e d t o
meet jointly with the FSA Board
of Directors in November, ( T h e
Directors have the real c o n t r o l
over FSA priorities and policy
decisions; they meet m o n t h l y . )
This was the meeting held Monday afternoon.
All m e m b e r s of the university
community
had the right t o
a t t e n d . Few did, and this sparked
the first disagreement b e t w e e n t h e
undergraduate
student
representatives and the rest of t h e
membership board.
Hours before the meeting began,
SA President Mike Lampert had
sent a m e m o r a n d u m to President
Bene/.et, w h o is chairman of the
c o r p o r a t i o n ' s Board of Directors.
Lampert c o n t e n d e d that "since
due notice (of the meeting)has n o t
been given . . . I do respectfully
requesi that you (Bene/.et) not
convene t o d a y ' s illegal m e e t i n g
and forthwith set a new date for a
joint meeting of the m e m b e r s and
Board."
L a m p e r t based his a r g u m e n t o n
the fact that last m o n t h , t h e
m e m b e r s h i p passed a m o t i o n t o
o p e n meetings to the university
c o m m u n i t y , tind to give ten days
notice of their meetings.
Chandler Stein, FSA a t t o r n e y ,
denied
L a m p e r t ' s charge
and
claimed that n o t i c e had indeed
been given t h r o u g h news stories
and a graffiti a n n o u n c e m e n t in t h e
ASP.
Discussion
ensued
over
w h e t h e r this c o n s t i t u t e d
"due
n o t i c e " and w h e t h e r the spirit of
last m o n t h ' s m o t i o n had been
violated.
After much bickering, the motion c a m e to a vote with Benezel
observing that "We had, indeed,
not fulfilled the proper spirit (of
last m o n t h ' s m o t i o n ) , " and with
an a d m o n i s h m e n t to see Unit
nothing similar would o c c u r in the
future.
T h e m e m b e r s voted 10-5-2 to
meet, with Bene/.et noting t h a t
"It was u n f o r t u n a t e that faculty
and s t u d e n t s were split on the
v o t e . " (Faculty support carried
the measure.) T h e s t u d e n t s had
suffered their first defeat or the
day.
C00LEYS PROPOSAL
With
the
meeting
officially
u n d e r w a y , m i n u t e s were a p p r o v e d
and a Chairman ( B e n e z e t ) and
President ( J o h n H a r t l e y ) of t h e
C o r p o r a t i o n elected. This was a
virtual c e r t a i n t y , since the by-laws
m a n d a t e their election.
T h e n , R o b e r t Cooley c a m e before the b o a r d to a n n o u n c e t h a t
Arnold C o l o n had been n a m e d the
new b o o k s t o r e manager, a n d to
present p r o p o s a l s to the Directors.
Colon's a p p o i n t m e n t was greeted
with little a r g u m e n t ; his credentials w e r e c h e c k e d t h o r o u g h l y by
m a n a g e m e n t and s t u d e n t s .
Cooley'S proposals and inancial
b r e a k d o w n , however, were a different m a t t e r . He urged t h a t the
Directors d o the following:
Close the P a t r o o n
Room
evenings.
Cloj. (he Colonial Quad cash
line
C o n v e r t the Brubacher snack
bar to a v e n d i n g o p e r a t i o n .
C o n t i n u e the "Special F u n c t i o n s " p a r t of the FSA p r o g r a m .
C o n t i n u e the C a m p u s C e n t e r
Snack Bar and Cafeteria.
C o n t i n u e the B r u b a c h e r and
Husted cafeteria.
Even t h o u g h some of the proposals were in line with s t u d e n t
wishes,
tempers
flared.
The
Directors hud received Cooley's
proposals late Wednesday aftern o o n a n d so had little t i m e to
study
t h e m ; the
membership
board was never given the inform a t i o n at all, even t h o u g h the
purpose of having a c o m b i n e d
meeting was to evaluate C o o l e y ' s
proposals and s t u d y the C a m p u s
Center food o p e r a t i o n .
The undergraduates (and some
grad s t u d e n t s ) w a n t e d the m e e t i n g
recessed t o s t u d y file information,
But Cooley and Hartley c o n t e n ded t h a t action to cut costs needed to be taken i m m e d i a t e l y because of the financial situation of
the c o r p o r a t i o n .
Three Albany Poll Watchers
Charge Voting Violations
by Glenn von
Nostitz
L'hree poll watchers in the City of Albany claimed last week that they observed several violations of
...rosenberg
^ ^ P
Friday, December 3, 1971
State University of New York at Albany
LVIII No
PRELIMINARIES
Campus Center Ballroom Offers Dreams and Nightmares
Dreams, an eight-man jazz-rock ensemble from New
York City, provided, as promised, a " t w o - h o u r jazz-rock
e x p e r i e n c e " S a t u r d a y nigh I at the b a l l r o o m . One could
only wisli t h a t the e x p e r i e n c e had been pleasant, or at
least tolerable. Portions of the fiasco lay b e y o n d the
b a n d ' s abilities to r e m e d y . T h e fabled S U N Y A S o u n d
•System {believed to he North Vietnamese A r m y Surplus)
struck again, pouring generous q u a n t i t i e s of s n a p , crackle,
and acoustic chaos forth on the h u d d l e d masses. This
rendered lead singer Eddie Vernon nearly inaudible until
inspiration struck and, a p p a r e n t l y , a new vocals mike was
fed into the bund's e q u i p m e n t
And (he Ballroom's
low-lying flying-saucer chandeliers and the peculiar slruc
Luro of the r o o m ' s ceiling did their part to help, l o o I am
n o t criticizing the Concert Board tor holding this concert
in the Ballroom
the G y m would have been even worse
and the Palace t o o expensive and half e m p t y , 1 am merely
noting t h a t it seems impossible to find a hall with decent
acoustics in this Stone-d concrete m o n s t r o s i t y .
Unfortunately,
D r e a m s ' performance
matched
I be
quality of the acoustics and of the s o u n d s y s t e m . This
band appears to have changed c o n s i d e r a b l y
for the
worse — since they appeared at the Palace with T o n y
Williams last winter. B a s s i s t — c o - f o u n d e r Doug L u b a h n
has left (replaced by Will Lee) and d r u m m e r Billy C o b h a m
wus n o t with t h e m . Lee and the new d r u m m e r sue mod to
be fairly simplistic get-it-on roeknblue/.eni, and their
stereotypic playing deprived the band of t h e c o n s t a n t l y
shifting r h y t h m i c " t e x t u r e s t h a t formerly u n d e r p i n n e d
their excursions, Bob Mann's guitar, formerly working a
backing role, has (tome to the forefront of their s o u n d
a n o t h e r loss. Mann displayed no style or a p p r o a c h of his
own, His rather long wa-wa-ing lead (he c o p p e d o n e Dunne
Allman solo n o t e for n o t e ) and most of his o t h e r work
%T
E n t e r G r a y , o u r virginal h e r o . T h e dialogue wh.ch
then ensues for a p p r o x i m a t e l y fifty m i n u t e s bet w e e n this pair is an a t t e m p t at realism w h . c h fails.
T h e y b o t h refuse t o d i r e c t l y refer t o the sexual act,
and t h e r e f o r e e x c h a n g e all s o r t s of nonsense vaguely
alluding t o i n t e r c o u r s e . It is c o m i c n o t because it is
c o m i c b u t because it is c o n t r i v e d . T h e i r conversations are simple and artificial. T h e p h o n i n e s s stilts
the actors t o a degree b u t t h e y try very well t o
impress us with the fact t h a t they are b o t h naive
y o u n g i n n o c e n t s , n o t y e t j a d e d , only just learning of
and glimpsing the m o m e n t s of " t r u e love which lie
ahead Tor t h e m . J o s e p h Balfior s d i r e c t i o n aids
R o b i n Sagon and R o b e r t H e b e r t successfully.
A u t h o r William A. F r a n k o n i s is an o b v i o u s idealist
in these s e n t i m e n t a l m a t t e r s . He tells us this most
expressively when Emily laughingly looks at Gray s
p o r n o g r a p h i c p h o t o g r a p h s (which he keeps hidden
under his b e d ) and r e m a r k s on the e m p t y , n o n e m o t i n g faces of the people in the pictures. T o her,
and (I assume) t o F r a n k o n i s , the physical love
w i t h o u t t h e spiritual feeling is n o t h i n g n e s s . As soon
as Gray a n d Emily realize t h e y can love each o t h e r
on an e m o t i o n a l p l a n e , their physical love can
h a p p e n freely and carelessly. S o m e of t h e audience
may b u y this t h e o r y , o t h e r s choose to reject lor
being t o o , t o o neat.
{MTU (PoiQGlSS **$ CCHr.ftA7l/tfiTWI1
During t h e Lime Gray and Emily are " s c r e w i n g " ( G r a y ' s t e r m ) ,
or doing " i f ' (Emily's t e r m ) , an overly " m u s h y " film reminiscent
of s o m e cigarette c o m m e r c i a l is .shown. The- couple happily r o m p s
in a w o o d e d park, e x c h a n g e meaningful glances, unci have
c l o s e - u p s Laken of their faces glowingly alive with the shine of
new love. Maybe we're cynical these days, but. does il really work
this way'.' And all this to the turn 1 of Simon and Garfunkel.
(Would Paul and Art be pleased?)
I also sec this play as male chauvinistic in the way the character
of Emily is p r e s e n t e d ; she is Loo sugarly sweet and submissive in
her a c t i o n s and a t t i t u d e s to Gray's little digs and biting remarks
and is just t o o " c u t e " . T o d a y , 1 think we are all t o o sophistocnted
(although m a y b e il is u n f o r t u n a t e ) to accept a n y t h i n g q u i t e so
simple as a c o n t e n t and h a p p y little love story. In reality, n o such
love s t o r y ex tats, and those w h o d e l u d e themselves into believing
it d o c s are p r o b a b l y only fooling themselves
An interesting little leit motif or pervading t h e m e in this play
was the willful d o o r with a mind of its own which chooses or
chouses n o t to provide e n t r y into Gray's r o o m . This was a useful
prop t e c h n i q u e and the a u t h o r incorporated its getting stuck and
refusing t o o p e n , or flinging itself ajor at the slightest t o u c h , with
the m a t t e r s at hand b e t w e e n Emily and Gray. It was effectively
done.
At the conclusion of this one—act play, the S a t u r d a y night was
still n e w . T h e a u d i e n c e walked out happy because of the
happiness of the s t o r y (forgetting its nun realism and the
inevitability of Gray being drafted and moving t o T o r o n t o and
Emily's forgetting to take her pill). Hut 1 recall Robin Sagon and
R o b e r t l l e h e r t on stage looking good in their u n d e r w e a r and 1
h o p e t o see t h e m again soon (in whatever garb). Then 1 quickly
chose to change cultural genres, and t h u s w o u n d up in the
C a m p u s Center Ballroom involving myself in Dreams. Perhaps I
entered almost r e l u c t a n t l y , yet 1 brightened to the music the
m o m e n t 1 sat d o w n .
by Bill lirinii
Albany Student Press X
voting regulations last election day.
watchers in the eighth and eleventh wards
Harold Berberick, Belle Drew and S t e p h...
e n Villano
were
poll
_
rked, thai distance markers were
t
of the city. A m o n g their charges were were
t h a t cpolling
were before
u n m a rthe
k legal time. Also, they charged
o u n t e d places
and sealed
never posted, and that absentee ballots were co_
the
t h a t a D e m o c r a t i c C o m m i t t e e m a n , Buzz M e l l u g h , distributed campaign literature within ten fe
polling place in the eighth ward, and that Mellugh assisted voters in the voting booth who were clearly n o t
in need of assistance. When Berberick objected to this last violation, Mellugh physically threw him out of
When a n o t h e r o n e of the poll watchers e n t e r e d the polling place, Mellugh insisted that
the polling plat
Unwed and this person was also physically forced out of the polling
only one poll watcher pt p o
place.
nlative from his office was sent to
At this p o i n t , the A t t o r n e y (Jeneral's office was called, and a re pre
to jail for five years if he
the eighth ward. T h e representative allegedly told Mellugh that he would g<
pie the Attorney
c o n t i n u e d to violate the law in which r e s p o n d e d that he " d i d n ' t care how many pe
(ieiieial sends d o w n h e r e , " T h e representative left shortly after this
id
A p p a r e n t l y , violations like these were not limited t o the eighth ;
about one
eleventh wards Drew claims that a friend of hers k n o w
know the
ig l»l •e which is so well hidden that only voters wh<
I"
Demo alic ward leader know where hi vole
the
wit
ick, Drew and Villano weir not the only onej
Bell
1 the polic
is Also mil he scene were election inspectors
VI.'I.lll
lii s t o p tl
Iml .. m d i n g to the poll watchers they did nothii
ar.1 leader
Demo
lltll
(he
ing
'They w e
illegahlip
b o d y g u a r d , " Drew add
1 illiterate" people
blind, h u l i c . p p .
il\
Berberick say thai
jooth lie alleges that Mellugh
lir
Hilled In .sistatiee in the voting I ,.s a ln.spii.dily " Berberick
was, however, offering assistance
ing cordial to the voters " The
c o m m e n t s that Mellugh was merely lie
reportedly
rendered ha« services particularly to
('nmtnitleeiii.ii
continued
on page .1
mmeei vole
and thai
Hills
Berberick, -bo has lived in Albany for only a lew im
the first
ii- was expei ing ,i "very boring clay" al lire [mils 'I'll,i,tl Drew added
;
ei h
Drew bad been poll watchers, ai
n
in
Alh.nn
The
"niil\ heard r u m o r s " about c o r r u p
tnllv reub/.e whiil
stress that they were naive ami did n
\u-\ said thai the
while (lie violations were oecunug
•,-,{ ..iid were able
II the oilier band, were highly experi
l e . n n " w h i l e at the polls
11..ih
HKIIH
|)en
Tl
three poll U
ulral as t h e \ are
,! Drew s . l V thai 111.
,.\ .•hum thai ihe
,h Neve,
., Hepubh
,,• e n e m \ c a m p "
lis "acted
Dishicl A t i o r n e y
ehers huvi talked » n i l cials
cl
i.l H i .
fue, Who lohl ih in II at n.
Arnold I'mskin
ini.es ..i which ih. i . . 1 . i l l . i n s
dtd i>
tinl'nrtunalelN , 111\ will set
tn hopes that tile
.1 have v
\ that he did
„vailabl
i elecleinn das
Despite this v«*.MI'S experien •eh. both
they will be | II watchers H • xl year,
equipped I.' MM rd v i o l a t i o n s ' n eleclm
City
violations
were
HMU-k •
id ih.il they Will I H
of
voting
unmarked,
nod sealed
before
of
regulations
last
distance
markers
that
legal
lime.
Mbany
electtotm
wre
daw
never
claimed
\mong
posted,
hist
i
their
and
*ik thai they
observed
•barge* writ- that polling
that
absentee
ballots
we
several
places
counted
PAGE 2
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
PAGE 3
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
University Library
Hard Hit by Freeze
Muskie Gives Views
On Women's Rights
bySibetBulay
S e n a t o r E d m u n d Muskie charged M o n d a y night t h a t President
Nixon has o p p o s e d a n y action t o further t h e cause of w o m e n ' s rights.
Muskie o p e n e d his speech at t h e " F r e e d o m F o r u m " in S c h e n e c t a d y
with t h e usual a n e c d o t e s , and c o m m e n t e d o n M a y o r Lindsay's change
of p a r t y : " Y o u k n o w , whenever I ' m in N e w Y o r k these d a y s 'I'm
asked w h a t I think a b o u t M a y o r Lindsay b e c o m i n g a D e m o c r a t . My
answer is t h a t 1 c a n u n d e r s t a n d w h y . He s u d d e n l y focused o n w h a t
five years of R e p u b l i c a n rule h a s d o n e t o N e w York C i t y . " Muskie
w e n t o n t o say t h a t , " I really think t h a t J o h n m a d e t h e right move. I
think t h a t his political p r o s p e c t s have brightened. A t a b o u t t h e s a m e 9
age Winston Churchill m a d e t h e s a m e m o v e a n d I t h i n k t h a t it w a s
t w e n t y - n i n e years luter that h e b e c a m e p r i m e minister o f G r e a t
Britain."
T h e Senator h a d originally p l a n n e d t o talk a b o u t t h e presidency in
America. He s p o k e , instead, a b o u t w o m e n ' s rights. H e had prepared a
speech o n w o m e n ' s rights t o p r e s e n t before a n exclusively female
a u d i e n c e , b u t changed his mind a n d decided t o p r e s e n t it before o
mixed audience,! as " m o s t w o m e n already u n d e r s t a n d sex discrimination. T h e y live with it every day. But m o s t m e n here a n d e v e r y w h e i e
in American are still n o t truly c o m m i t t e d t o w o m e n ' s rights, n o r d o
they u n d e r s t a n d w h a t t h e w o m e n are talking a b o u t . "
Muskie accused Nixon of n o t only opposing a n y action t o further
t h e cause of w o m e n ' s rights, such as his o p p o s i t i o n t o t h e c o m p r e h e n sive d a y care bill, b u t of refusing t o propose any bills himself: " E i g h t
years after J o h n K e n n e d y a p p o i n t e d t h e first presidential c o m m i s s i o n
o n t h e s t a t u s of w o m e n , Richard Nixon said t h a t t h e D e m o c r a t s had
n o t m o v e d fast enough o r far enough on w o m e n ' s rights. T h e
President was right—we had n o t moved fast e n o u g h . S o Nixon
a p p o i n t e d a n o t h e r task force which reported its findings in 1970. T h e
report was p r i n t e d a n d t h e president has ignored virtually ail of their
r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s . L e t m e say t o y o u that w h a t we urn discussing is
n o t s o m e female fad. It is a f u n d a m e n t a l of the A m e r i c a n a s s u m p t i o n
of equality a m o n g alt those privileged t o live a n d enjoy citizenship in
this c o u n t r y . " Muskie w e n t o n t o say that t h e anwer t o sex
discrimination is n o t m o r e task forces a n d s t u d y c o m m i s s i o n s , since
"if we d o n o t k n o w by n o w what must be d o n e , w e never will."
Instead, Muskie proposes that w o m e n be guaranteed admission t o
publicly s u p p o r t e d higher e d u c a t i o n u n d e r the s a m e standards as m e n ,
a n d t h a t " w e m u s t broaden t h e coverage of t h e equal p a y a n d equal
e m p l o y m e n t acts t o cover every j o b in g o v e r n m e n t and in t h e private
s e c t o r . " He urges t h a t t h e Congress n o t delay b e y o n d this spring
approval of t h e equal rights a m e n d m e n t of t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n : " T h a t
would b e t h e singlemost vital victory t o the cause of w o m e n ' s r i g h t s . "
After sixty m i n u t e s of c h a m p i o n i n g the cause of w o m e n ' s rights, t h e
S e n a t o r tarnished his image as a crusader for w o m e n . When asked h o w
his wife o b t a i n e d h e r rights as an equal in their h o u s e h o l d , he replied,
" B y giving me a b a b y s o n . "
Robert McCabe,
senior living in Cayuga Hall, has been ordered by the Quad Coordinator n>
remove his waterbed from his room. The bed, which weighs 32 pounds per square fool, is
reportedly too heavy, McCabe claims thai a Dean's desk, which weighs at least 100 pounds per
square foot, is more harmful.
ptillack
Student Ordered To Remove
Waterbed That Is "Too Heavy ))
McCabe alleges that a typical was no regulation against such
Dean's desk exerts a force of at beds. F u r t h e r m o r e , h e is "chid
least o n e hundred pounds p e r lenging a n y Dean t o stand trial
square foot. Although McCabe is with m e , " since a Dean's desk
not a physics major, he concludes allegedly weighs m o r e than his
that a Dean's desk is more struc- waterbed. What b o t h e r s McCabe
turally harmful t o a building than m o s t a b o u t his s i t u a t i o n is that a
is his water bed.
n o t e will appear in his transcript
A n o t h e r reason given for t h e folder r e p o r t i n g that disciplinary
removal of his water bed is t h e action was taken against h i m , bul
danger of leakage and the result- n o t specifying w h y this disci
ing water damage. McCabe claims, plinary action was t a k e n . McCabe
however, that his waterbed is will be applying t o graduate
guaranteed for five years, and t h a t schools n e x t semester,
it has a double lining which m a k e s
McCabe says t h a t he enjoys his
it nearly foolproof.
waterbed, and he c o m m e n t s lhat
Even though he is slated t o sleeping o n o n e " i s just like float
appear before the Judicial Board, i n g . " I n d e e d , McCabe is so de
McCabe still refuses to move his voted to his w a t e r b e d t h a t he is
waterbed. Me says that when h e risking
rejection
by graduate
signed his housing c o n t r a c t there schools in o r d e r t o keep it.
by Glenn von Nostitz
Senior R o b e r t McCabe's waterbed is only half-filled and has
d o u b l e linings. Nevertheless, his
Quad C o o r d i n a t o r has ordered
him t o remove it from his room in
Cayuga Hall.
T h e Quad C o o r d i n a t o r reportedly told McCabe thai his bed is
t o o heavy, and he cited t h e figure
of forty-five p o u n d s per square
foot as the m a x i m u m floor load in
the residence halls. McCabe claims
t h a t with his b e d only half-filled,
it weighs only t h i r t y - t w o p o u n d s
per square foot and that he
s h o u l d , c o n s e q u e n t l y , be allowed
to k e e p it.
SUNYA GA Y ALLIANCE
Weekend Activities
Fri. Dec. 3 - a t 8 : 3 0 Jack Baker speaking on Gay Liberation
CC Assembly Hall
Sat. Dec. 4- at 1:00 pm General Rap Session with Jack and Mike
CC Fireside Lounge
at 6:30 pm People's Feast
Bring food if you can, if not, yourself!
Channing Hall (across from Draper Hall)
Underclassmen May Apply
For S/U Grading Exemption
Freshman and s o p h o m o r e stud e n t s desiring exemption
from
S/U grading ("or the Spring 1 0 7 2
semester may n o w apply for A-K
grading.
T h e Undergraduate
Academic
Council at its last meeting passed
a resolution extending S/U grading e x e m p t i o n s to freshmen a n d
s o p h o m o r e students for Spring
"72. This action will he reported
to t h e University Senate at its
December 1 .'i meeting.
Kludents
desiring a grading
e x e m p t i o n may obtain and return
an application for A-E grading al
the University College (ULB :U>).
No action emi he taken on these
p e t i t i o n s until after the December
1 ;l meeting of the Semite,
The Undergraduate
Academic
Council's resolution states that
"should a new undergraduate
grading policy n o t he a d o p t e d for
the Spring '72 semester, t h e Academic S t a n d i n g C o m m i t t e e shall
receive p e t i t i o n s for e x e m p t i o n
for
F r e s h m e n - S o p h o m o r e Sj\.^
grading for t h e Spring
I \)1'1
semester a n d all such p e t i t i o n s
received no I later than J a n u a r y
25, 1972, shall he g r a n t e d . "
The
University
College
will
notify these s t u d e n t s in willing of
their e x e m p t i o n from S / l ' grad
ing. S t u d e n t s w h o are granted the
e x e m p t n i n will not he e x e m p t e d
from S/U grading in course.-.
specifically designated fur S / l '
with live music of 'Thorn'- Dance Donation- $1.50
Channing Hall
I
Once funding p r o b l e m s are resolved, t h e Library
h o p e s to expand over t h e next several years, m a
series of slages. Ashton feels that t h e present
facilities can a c c o m m o d a t e t h e university c o m
t i m m l y for the next five years. Internal reorganization, he feels, whereby shelving and sealing space is
revamped, will tern-portly solve space p r o b l e m s .
Library Director John A shton has reported that the recent budget freeze has necessitated deep
cutbacks in library services, and that there existsan eight day backlog in book reshelving due to
staff cuts. Also contributing to this delay is the manual chech-out system now being used.
pottack
Board Hike Plans Dropped
continued from page I
infers
t h a t t h e o p p o s i t e of
the Directors cast ballots? T h i s
" I ' m getting fed u p with n o t
issue split t h e s t u d e n t s themselves C o o l e y ' s c o n t e n t i o n s . )
knowing
w h a t ' s h a p p e n i n g at
with L a m p e r t arguing t h a t u n d e r
T h e o t h e r proposals were sent
these meetings until they s t a r t , "
the by-laws only t h e d i r e c t o r s back for further s t u d y ; a c o m one s t u d e n t observed, adding that
have power t o m a k e policy d e m i t t e e c o m p o s e d of J o h n Hartley
Cooley h a d been given a m o n t h t o
cisions a n d u n d e r g r a d u a t e s w h o ( a d m i n i s t r a t i o n ) , Dr. Walter Balk
prepare the information. Another
are n o t d i r e c t o r s claiming t h a t ( f a c u l t y ) a n d Carol Hughes (stuc o u n t e r e d H a r t l e y ' s a r g u m e n t by
they would b e " d i s e n f r a n c h i s e d " d e n t ) will e x a m i n e t h e m m o r e
c o n t e n d i n g t h a t " W e could have
and " t h e spirit of t h e actions of closely a n d c o m e back t o t h e
taken action if w e had been given
the last m e e t i n g would b e viom e m b e r s h i p and d i r e c t o r s with
the information a n d knew w h a t
lated."
m o r e information and suggestions.
was going o n . "
Bene net ruled in favor of LamT h e c o m b i n e d m e e t i n g will take
T h e e x c h a n g e grew heated at
pert ( w h o found himself o n t h e place December 15 at 3 : 0 0 a n d
times, as a r g u m e n t s ensued over
same side as t h e a d m i n i s t r a t o r s o n e v e r y o n e in t h e university c o m each of t h e proposals a n d t h e n ,
this particular issue), a n d t h e m u n i t y can a t t e n d . T h e main
w h e t h e r a n y t h i n g ought t o be
Directors, with t h e M e m b e r s h i p discussion will deal with t h e
d o n e at all because of the lack of
Board e n t e r i n g t h e discussion hut
much-disputed
Campus
Center
information.
not voting, decided t o :
food operation which, o d d l y , was
Proposals o n t h e floor included:
(-'lose t h e Colonial Quad cash supposed to be t h e main subject
Accepting Cooley*s suggesline so m o r e business would be of Monday a f t e r n o o n ' s meeting.
tions.
forced u p o n t h e C a m p u s Center
Recessing t h e meeting t o
operations which, Cooley fell, will
study t h e m more fully.
enable t h e C a m p u s ('enter to
Accepting some and rejecting
make a profit, (it lost $ 2 2 2 , 0 0 0
others.
last year).
R e c e n t l y , a group of faculty
Bringing in "outside ac—-Close t h e Brubacher Snack
and graduate level s t u d e n t s a*
countants."
Bar and replace it with a vending
greed t o work, with t h e U p s t a t e
Sending m a n a g e m e n t
hack
o p e r a t i o n , so u n d e r g r a d u a t e stuC o m m u n i t y Service Bureau, an
" t o d o their h o m e w o r k again."
dents would no longer be forced t o
arm of t h e S t a t e Division For
Benezel was in t h e u n f o r t u n a t e
u n d e r w r i t e t h e o p e r a t i o n s ' steady
Y o u t h , in an a t t e m p t t o find
position of having t o mediate t h e
losses.
suitable foster h o m e s for adodisputes.
C o n t i n u e Special F u n c t i o n s
lescent boys and girls. Joseph
which, Cooley claims, runs in t h e (iarbin, a graduate s t u d e n t at
nu:i)i:ii,\ri:
black bul which s o m e under
the School of Social Welfare,
After much debate, it was de- graduates say loses m o n e y . ( T h e
says t h a t many of these b o y s
cided to vote and a new problem students p o i n t t o a 1968 S t a t e of
and girls h a d t o b e placed in
came to the surface: Should the New York audit as evidence; it
training
schools because
they
membership vote, or should only
had e x t r e m e l y poor family situa t i o n s . Most of these children
are between
the ages of 11
and
1 6 , and a b o u t 3 5 % are
black or Puerto Ricitn, Garbin
feels that a University a s large
as S U N Y A should be able t o
p rovide
many
interested a n d
d e d i c a t e d fa miles w h o will be
able t o help. More specific information can be o b t a i n e d b y
calling the Social Services Study Unit of t h e School of Social
Welfare al 172-H26r>.
Help Children
grading
»••»•«••••#•<»••••««
at 9:00 pm Community Dance
by Roy Lewis
T h e ramifications of t h e state-wide b u d g e t freeze
have been felt severely b y all d e p a r t m e n t s of t h e
university c o m m u n i t y . O n e of t h e h a r d e s t h i t areas
has been t h e University Library. In an interview
with J o h n A s h t o n , Director of t h e Library, this
reporter learned some of t h e u n i q u e p r o b j e m s facing
the Library this year.
In light of t h e budget freeze a n d t h e s u b s e q u e n t
forced savings program imposed u p o n this institution, t h e Library has n o free funds this year with
which t o launch a n y n e w buying programs. As
Ashton explained, u n d e r a forced savings s y s t e m ,
libraries in general are always hard hit since t h o s e
funds allocated for t h e p u r p o s e of buying n e w
b o o k s are viewed as " e x c e s s " by t h e state and are
hence c o n s u m e d . Since t h e Library m u s t wait for
the b o o k s t o he published before they spend their
a p p r o p r i a t i o n , they find themselves in a very vulnurable position.
In o t h e r respects, t h e Library is a t t e m p t i n g t o
function normally. F o r e x a m p l e , t h e Library has
retained all journal s u b s c r i p t i o n s for this year in
order t o reserve c o n t i n u i t y with previous purchases.
As A s h t o n p o i n t e d o u t , t h e Library would prefer t o
have c o m p l e t e sets of magazines a n d n o t suspend
any existing s u b s c r i p t i o n s . In a d d i t i o n , o u r b l a n k e t
or approval order has been m a i n t a i n e d o n a par basis
with last year with only a 6% increase t o c o m p e n sate for a rise in costs. T h i s b l a n k e t o r d e r is a
s t a n d i n g order, w h e r e b y all b o o k s p r i n t e d in English
in t h e United States which d e m o n s t r a t e s o m e
positive interest for t h e University C o m m u n i t y are
a u t o m a t i c a l l y purchased a n d received by t h e University Library. Ashton feels t h a t " w e shall n o t be
able t o maintain o u r b l a n k e t order unless m o r e
forced savings are i m p o s e d u p o n u s . "
T h e budget freeze has left the Library w i t h o u t t h e
p r o p e r funds t o buy a sufficient n u m b e r of copies
for t h e reserve r o o m reading shelves. B u t m o r e
i m p o r t a n t , t h e freeze has created serious staffing
p r o b l e m s . T o date, t h e Library has been unable t o
refill a n y j o b vacancies t h a t o c c u r and f u r t h e r m o r e ,
any replacement l o r a s t u d e n t salaried by t e m p o r a r y
funds must be approved by t h e Director of t h e
Budget. Ashton said that n o w h e r e is this m a n - p o w e r
shortage more acutely felt than behind t h e circulation desk. Al present, that staff is operating at only
•\i)"/t of its full capacity a n d at t h e same lime m u s t
a c e o n i m a d a t e a (>()"r increase in t h e general use of
the library facilities. This incongruity lias led t o an
eight -day b a c k u p in t h e reshelving of r e t u r n e d
b o o k s . T h e help shortage behind the desk h a s
slowed Up t h e check-out of h o o k s as well. A s h t o n
p o i n t e d mil thai the c o m p u t e r s y s t e m , e m p l o y e d by
the Library last year, did no I work out favorably
and hence a return t o ;i manual system this yenr was
affected, This manual s y s t e m , Ashton n o t e d , is
transitory. Ashton h o p e s t o place t h e Library on ,i
more responsive c o m p u t e r s y s t e m , o n c e t h e funds
are m a d e available. Yet in any event, this manual
s y s t e m , coupled with a skeleton labor force, has
taxed t h e efficiency of the library o p e r a t i o n .
Chanukkah Party ]
J Sat. December 4, 9 pm
ft
NOTICE *
A meeting of the Members
and Directors of
Faculty-Student Association
Indian Quad U-Lounge
Sun. Dec. 5- at 1:00 pm Gay Activist Alliance of NY
of the State University of
New York at Albany, Inc.
video tapes of •. Albany March
live entertainment by Monolith
Christopher Street Marches
7 Lesbians- David Susskind Show
and others...
admission:
JSC Members • Free
Held in LC 25
ALL ARE INVITED!
Others • 2 5 '
t
EER& POTATO LATKES
M M M M M M M I I I
will be held on Wednesday,
December
15th, 1971 at
3:00 pm in Room 375 of
the Campus Center.
PAGE 4
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1 9 7 1
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
People's Parly
PANTHERS
Earth
News
About 200 delegates from 3 0 s t a t e s left Dallas, Texas yKI„
day (Monday) after a four day c o n v e n t i o n culled to put ;l m i l
ble fourth political party into action.
Early on, the delegates chose the n a m e "People's Party" ,
represent the coalition o f several different fringe parties. Jh°
People's Party is made up of the New P a r t y , the Coalition the
Peace and Freedom Party and several o t h e r , smaller political' f-..
tions.
Two of the men who have been at the forefront of t|„, „ .
party movement were voted t o t o p p o s i t i o n s in the Peuni,,'
Party slate of candidates!. Dr. Benjamin Spock will act as th
stand-in Presidential candidate in the e l e c t i o n s in states when
candidate's name must appear on the ballot. Author Gore Vidai
was selected to the j o b of Secretary of S t a t e .
Seale said the Panthers were
not calling on people t o pick
up guns; he said party m e m bers are being asked t o point
out the oppressiveness of the
American system t o the people
through genuine service
projects. He added that t h e call t o
guns was being advocated b y
those he called " a few defecto r " — a reference to Eldridge
Cleaver w h o heads up the m o r e
militant international faction of
the P a n t h e r Party,
Seale insisted that the Black
P a n t h e r P a r t y ' s free
breakfast
program
has provided
more
c o n c r e t e benefits than is p r o vided by the $1(1 billion s p e n t
through the g o v e r n m e n t ' s war
on poverty.
John's
Song
. And did yuu voluntarily accopl o fi.e, hoi meol from lino ..
at nine a.m.. Saptombtr nine, nineteen hun'ert an' -i«,
Earth
News
John Lennon has written a
song
dramatici/inji
the
prediciment
of t h e
Rainbow
People's
Party
chairm a n John Sinclair,
The
Ann
Arbor,
Michigan,
Rainbow
Party
reports
that
L e n n o n has written a threeverse song bused on Sinclair's
marijuana bust and his 9-and-ahalf
to
ten-year
prison
sentence. Sinclair was sentenced t o
prison in Michigan in 1969 al-
ter being convicted
giving
Iwo joints to underci
police
agents,
Part of the song says:
"It ain't fair, J o h n Sincla
In the stir for breathing
" L e t him lie, let him frei
Let
him he like you
and
me,"
L e n n o n ' s song goes on
to
criticize the American government which he says decorates
war heroes for killing while im-
prisoning
free thinkers like
Sinclair for smoking grass
A spokesman for the Rainbow People's Party said it is
not known yet whether Lennon
will
include the song called
" J o h n Sinclair" on his next allium, Other songs on J o h n ' s
ami
Yoko's next record are
one
entitled
"Attica
S t a t e , Attica S t a t e " and another o n e about the Belfast riots
entitled
"The
Luck
of
the
Irish"
.LCVE
MS ALWAYS
' ORIGINAL
^
\
And Iho ring, the symbol ol your special love,
should be original Our tings are designed and
handcralled in the studio workshops ol one
o( the country's leading manufacturers ol
diamond engagement and wedding rings. We
call them "Originals'' because they are
made only in a limited edition.
From Old World Antique to Now Contemporary
we have the style lor you.
And we bring these exquisite rings to you .
direct from the manufacturer . . for as much
as 35% less than you'd normally expect to pay.
Call your campus representative today . . and
see his whole collection. He has a book entitled
"Check List For A Perfect Wedding" lor you
. . just for looking.
tosie Pugliese
in Schenectady
393-5638
AMERICAN CAMPUS SALES ASSOCIATES
payment plan available
PAGE 5
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Earth News
Black Panther Party chairman
Bobby Seale told an audience
at
Stanford
University
last
week that the panther Party is
dropping its "para-military titles" and will concentrate instead on providing free medical
and clothing clinics to serve
the poor,
%
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
Dick ?
T w e l v e
years
ago
when Richard Nixon was VicePresident;
President
Uwight
Eisenhower
had scheduled a
summit conference with Soviet
Premier Nikila Krushchev That
summit
conference
blew
up
when
Soviets shot down an
American spy plane and its pilot over Russia. Now, as President Nixon prepares for another s u m m i t conference, this one
with the leaders of Red China,
it appears that a similar diplomatic disaster could take place.
According to the prestigious
aerospace
journal,
Aviation
Week
and Space
Technology,
" u n m a n n e d U.S.. reconnaissance
flights over mainland China are
continuing despite Nixon Administration
deep
background
leaks t o the press that missions
by drones and Lockheed SR-71
aircraft have been s t o p p e d .
*** NOTICE ***
One of the plans of the People's Party is t o nominate a shadow cabinet as well as a Presidential and Vice-Presidential candi.
date. The party thinks t h e voters s h o u l d know who will | )e i|,f
men advising the President for four years.
According to Lester Perkins of P h o e n i x , a reporter and ddt-.
gate to the convention, t h e People's Party decided to create twi
new major cabinet posts, Secretary of Peace find Secretary uf
The Arts and Culture.
Two positions were also a n n o u n c e d for every cahiivet ml)-,,,,.
for a woman and the o t h e r for a man.
The delegates decided t o meet o n c e again in Florida sburtlv
after the Democratic National C o n v e n t i o n in Miami next s l m .
mer. It is expected that the People's Party will then m.|
boost from dissenchanted, dissatisfied or defecting democrats
Dr. Spock, according t o Perkins, was pushing for S'e« Yuri
Congresswoman Shirley Chissolm as t h e Presidential candidate
Miss Chissolm, however, told the P e o p l e ' s Parly thai she is ,.„,,.
sidering making a serious bid for the White House , ls ,, | j , . m .
ocrat.
Perkins said it was felt at the c o n v e n t i o n that if |„. r I),.,,,,,
cralie hid failed she would c o m e over t o t h e New I'.nu
'|| ,
my own o p i n i o n , " Perkins said, " t h a t unless we |>ft „,„„
like her we will not be considered seriously "
Alaskan Senator Mike Gravel spoke at the Convent
lull
too, is not yet c o m m i t t i n g himself to t h e Pi •oplc's Parts
A People's Party platform was worked on again, as II u
the last convention in July, hut the d o o m : cut still has ii
he finalized.
Capitol or Capitol
Earth
News
Apple Records, Capitol Records and C o l u m b i a lie,-,,ids
have not come to an agreement yet on w h o will dislnbuti
(leorge Harrison Bnngla Desli album, a d o u b l e ..Ilium wind
recorded three m o n t h s ago. T h e p r o c e e d s from I lie c.i
which included artists like Harrison, Bob Dylan, .mil
Russell were supposed lo go t o Pakistani refugees, .i. .in
profits from the album, profits e x p e c t e d In he several Ml
dollars
Harrison said on the Dick Cavelt s h o w last week ili.u
Capitol Records that is holding up t h e distribut
I il
hum, Harrison said t h a t Capitol refuses to distribute the n
al cost
Capitol president Bhaskar Menon i m m e d i a t e l y issued .,
plicated, lengthy statement saying, in essence that llarrism
not know the facts and that Capitol is still living in
things out with Apple and Columbia, which is Dylan's I I
So nobody knows, or will say, when the record will
out, Negotiations are continuing, ' A Capitol executive w,.., asUil
when the record will be distributed and said, "I hone-Ik
answer t h a t , " Harrison says that he would like (.. s
I n eased
in time for Christmas. Columbia R e c o r d s isn't talking
toctys Talk
NEW YORK AP - Gov, Rockefeller w a r n e d Thursday thai
projected $ l.S-billion budget gap for the next 1 .r> montln
to be met through cuts alone il would mean wide-ranging '
lions , n n e u | l n e o u c a t i o r V ) a n d W ( , | f u r t , p r o B r a m s _
The governor also said at a press c o n f e r e n c e that lie » mill
announce his proposed tax package s o m e t i m e this weekend
set a date for a special legislative session on fiscal matters
Rockefeller emphasized t h a t the c u t s he listed w . r e onl\
pothelical, amounting to 5 0 0 million in state-purposes pro!
»nd $1 billion in local assistance
A meeting of the
of State University of
New York al Albany, Inc.
.*Bt«ring
will be held Friday,
December 10 at 3:30
in the Campus Center
Assembly Hall.
WINE!
GO-GO GIRLS!
Saturday, December 4*
Pm 111 I am
DUTCH QUAD F U G ROOM
(For instance,
last year we bought
almost 2!4 million
pounds of Beechwood
strips . . . enough to
fill 67 freight cars.)
Birth Right
ANKtUSm-BUSGH, INC • SI LOUIS
h
9
But it isn't.
Kl'fi'clivi' ulH'fiuilivi' lo ulmriimi
Non pint'il,
mill (timuminnl iniuil
fiTr: mi I'liarm'
IN cMt YtU HAI/CN'T HOTICiH.,,
MINERVA ' ' " i " « » wtii in
" " " • * ' "
rut
IIMHY
ft
ilfii
YOU'VE SAID IT ALL!
LIVE BAND1
BIH!
Beechwood Ageing
could be an
"advertising gimmick.'
Budweiser,
SPONSORED BY DUTCH OUAO HDAHr)
(
NEW Y O R K (LNS) - F o r 17 m o n t h s after h e w e n t u n d e r g r o u n d in April 1970, very little was
heard from H. Rap B r o w n , former chairman of the S t u d e n t Nonviolent C o o r d i n a t i n g C o m m i t t e e
(SNCC) except for his place of h o n o r of the F B I ' s e x p a n d e d m o s t - w a n t e d list. T h e r e were a few £
messages printed in the SNCC paper or o t h e r black papers, t o the effect t h a t he was alive and
well. Then on O c t o b e r 15, four black men were busted while t h e y were t r y i n g t o hold up
M a n h a t t a n ' s Red Carpet L o u n g e , a dark little bar d o w n s o m e steps on 8 5 th Street, in a
p r e d o m i n a t e l y black a n d P u e r t o Rican n e i g h b o r h o o d , Shiny Cadillacs often line the bar's front
c u r b and there is a r u m o r floating a r o u n d that it is a drug d r o p Tor the kids at Brandeis High
School across the street. A few h o u r s after they were in c u s t o d y , the cops claimed they bad H,
R a p Brown in their h a n d s .
For q u i t e a while the man in the Bcllevue hospital prison b e d , w h o was shot twice in the
s t o m a c h , claimed lie was " R o y W i l l i a m s " It wasn't until over a m o n t h later that s u p p o r t e r s of
the man w h o was awaiting a n o t h e r o p e r a t i o n lo repair his gunshot
w o u n d s publicly a n n o u n c e d
that he was H Rap B r o w n .
Al the same press c o n f e r e n c e where these s u p p o r t e r s identified Rap Brown, the formation of
the II Rap Brown A n t i - D o p e Movement was a n n o u n c e d , Nov. 1!1. T h e Movement was sponsored
by a coalition of groups represented by former Georgia representative Julian B o n d ; Fred Meely
of the Nat'l Congress; Mrs
Rosa
Hamilton
of the New York City-wide Welfare Bights
o r g a n i z a t i o n ; Rev Alfred S h a r p t o n of the National Y o u t h Movement, Mamu Amiri Baraka (Loral
J o n e s ) of the C o m m i t t e e for a United Newark; a n d Popi Sharp of the Black Peoples' Unity
Movement of C a m d e n , N..1
goal is the
T h e movement plans t o be a nation-wide c o o r d inat ing group whose " p r i m a r
t'li mi nation of d o p e from lire black c o m m u n i t y by waging an aggressive canipaigi against d o p e ,
d o p e pushers and d o p e s u p p l i e r s . "
eachnm
Black c o m m u n i t i e s have m a d e many a t t e m p t s to stop the flow of d o p e lion
whose
s t o o p s our hallways and our schools. We have also hied t o rid ourselvtjs of I hi
function is the d e s t r u c t i o n of our families by selling d o p e . . .
" T h e r e have been n u m e r o u s incidents of mot hers, fathers, friends and re hit ives wv h o have taken
their so-called
"legitimate"
fronts such as liars,
il upon themselves to drive pushe
res la ura nls, candy and " v a r i e t y " si o n
floi I s h o p s , laundries and cleaning e s t a b l i s h m e n t s out of
t he black area Becau
been alo e in this struggle, the impact of their work lias had
they ha
a limited effect
"We ask the aid and assistance of all sectors of the black c o m m u n i t y - s t u d e n t s , street blocks,
artists, anti-poverty o r g a n i z a t i o n s , housewives and radio and T V personnel t o c o n t a c t the II. Rap
Brown Anti-Dope M o v e m e n t , 3 1 6 W. 2 0 t h Street, New York, New York 1 0 0 1 1 . "
When questioned by reporters, Bond (as acting s p o k e s m a n
for (he g r o u p ) said that the
ant i-dope m o v e m e n t " w o u l d not only have its own surveillance, but its own tribunal and its own
punishment."
lie said t h a t the p u r p o s e of t h e A n t i - D o p e Movement was t o " e l i m i n a t e people dealing in
d o p e . " When questioned further, Bond said they would first use " m o r a l p e r s u a s i o n " and if that
d i d n ' t work, " m o r e forceful deliberate m e a n s . "
And the Red Carpet L o u n g e " " I ' m not willing lo say a n y t h i n g about the Red Carpel L o u n g e , "
said Bond drily. " O r any c a n d y s t o r e , lounge, bar, laundry or cleaning e s t a h l i s h m a n t . T h e black
c o m m u n i t y knows which places are well k n o w n drop-off places for d o p e . "
WHEN YOU SAY
PARTY
Constituent Members of
Faculty-Student Association
Dope Is Death
ID REQUIRED $.50
I
\ I F G Presents:
i
I A Surprise Film Classic
i
I
i
$.50 with tax
$1 without
!
i Saturday, Dec. 4th in LC 18 7:15 & 9.-15 pm
PAGE 6.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, i97l
editorial comment
&&
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1971
PAGE 7
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Frost Wrong
>fcu uicE oti oR 1
OKF c a m p u s , loo
m u S T S£pJD t r ^
Endangered Species
This
newspaper
demands
has long
for m o r e
been
communication
Albany
State. Yet, o n e o f t h e
such
a
stand
start
any
you'll
is t h e
apathy
movement
see
what
in
a t l a r g e , impersonal
from
mean:
forefront of
frustrating
which
away
we
the
t h i n g s about
greets
the
it
status
nobody
Try to
q u o ami
listens,
noboilv
cares.
Another
no
major
one seems
This
also
complaint
to
be willing
frustrates
you're
o n e of
munication,
have
been
we've
communications
Community
Service: Yes
Russian Reply
place
once
to
over
the past
were
an
their
quiet
failure,
much
to
operation
This
ol the
discussed
budget
had
t h e wide
versity
are
someone
will
We
scream
with
"I'm
who
are
deserve
•So
the demand
to those
so p o o r l y
series
lor -
a t t e n d e d . In
species" m
could
umtnhiur
"I tin
examined.
the student
the
nnuli-
hard
lot In
"I'llis
bods,
program
vet Inm
out
shared
to
the
proper
a
busy
feeling
t o us t h a t
ready
right
with
ol
avenue
then
now
mankind
people
complain,
problem,
t o o busy
you've
been
hut no
positivism
at
to
do
to
cuept
win:
pi.on:.
oil
,i
that."
find
tli.it
ihi^ am
lor i
shut
themselves
"'day
one
tune
for
o r ,it least
to
a
ol
the
work
change.
next
in.inv
nun I
n\
Wednesday
News Editorr
"""
r,
"""id" oringher
Editors
Am
Editor
Sports
jeff meters
,
Assistant
Advertising
,,
Business
,,
Manager
Asm,,,,,,
Assistant
Teehnieal
sue wligsun
warren w isliarl
Classified
e
,r0bCrt
i,p<ir,s Editor
Advertising
m e m b a
, ,„ .
Advertising
„
guy sussnnu,
"'**" '""*"
Clr
'"''"'""
sue pallas
Photography
Editor
hditor
.. .
sieve pollack
mark litcnfsky
^'^rinyZl NITT ^
Y
" ^"^ '"
A W V
1400
what
sonleollr
else
assume,
implies
the
tree
diitti lo hold p.nlueiilar assump
lions of leaehine and lo leach
and
lo eheil
up
i ah.nil
leaching in a m a n n e r consistent
with I hose assumption
fn my
opinion
such
freedom
is at
leasl as vital as t h e freedom l o
hold
tiarI icu far
assumptions
about methods for inquiring in-
Beeau.se o l t h e m a i l i n g p r o
lilents
associated
with
the
C h r i s t m a s mail rush, t h e
iter,
—
t fHS
Boitt
• fti.
i o lyric
poet i'v,
invertcbnito
zoology,
British
history, and
the rest.
List e d
below is it simple
three-item open ended opinion
iniire It is consistent wilh my
assumpl ions of teaching I have
used it before and have found
I hat it presents n o p r o b l e m s of
c o m p r e h e n s i o n or of ambiguity,,
It is therefore acceptable lo
me T hope it is acceptable lo
you.
Directions:
llnspond
to t h e
items in a free, h o n e s t , a n d
straight for ward m a n n e r
Replies
are t o be a n o n y m o u s .
1
In your opinion, is 1 his
course trying I o leach y o u anyI hing worth learning?
'2 In y o u r opinion, are you
learning what
the course is
t rying to leach?
It. What suggestions do you
have for improving the course?
Morris Finder
School of E d u c a t i o n
Emergency
To the Editor;
In response lo a let ler by
Sandy Lu! fi in t h e November
1 •!, 1.171 ASP regarding an ambulance
service on c a m p u s .
Hurrah for you
Definitely a campus as big its
ours a n d as " m o d e r n " as ours,
should have an on c a m p u s ambulance service
Albany Stale
has prided itself as being a self
contained c o m m u n i t y wilh all
I he conveniences of ;i sinal'
coininunil v nghl here on campus
There are places for ie
Ireslimeni , i n d e n t e r t a i n m e n t , a
place lo m> when you arc sick
.mil a police force l o protect,
r
THE *
SLAB ^
a place t o s h o p for little o d d s
and ends, a n d if necessary a
place t o get your hair c u t , all
within
fi mi mil es of your
d o r m , just
fabulous isn't it.
But Clod forbid you need an
a m b u l a n c e , this convenience is
only a mere 15 minutes away,
All y o u have lo d o is call security a n d I hey call t h e infirmary, w h o in turn nol ifies one
of I he a m b u l a n c e services in
d o w n town
Albany
Many of
these a m b u l a n c e services have 1
or 2 a m b u l a n c e s , a n d if t h e i r
a m b u l a n c e is already c o m m i t t e d
the infirmary calls t h e second
a m b u l a n c e service on their list:
O n e way lo alleviate this long
process would b e to call t h e
a m b u l a n c e service
yourself
D O N ' T - because the service
will e i t h e r tell y o u lo call t h e
infirmary or they will d o that
themselves, as per inslrucl ions
from t he infirmary, si ill pro
longing their arrival,
Wouldn't it be easier if y o u
could call a n u m b e r , just like
you can call security, lo summon
an a m b u l a n c e , sure it
would, hov ever,
the Student
Health Service doesn't
Admin
istralors al the Health Service
feel it wouldn't
work for a
n umber
of reasons, two of
I hem being, lack of funds, a n d
lack of experienced
personnel
t o man t h e a m b u l a n c e .
In regards lo the problem of
lack of funds, there was no
problem in finding -J7/I00 dollars for a new cabin al DIPPIlvll.l,, I ^! id Ihink m o n e y
could be found for an a m b u lance a n d .-qutpmenl
On t h e
o t h e r stibieei of Irami'd personnel, manv conimunitie- around
i he eoiuiir\ have volunteer ambulance i .\ . which work very
well am! n les.s than I:, MINI*
utes aftei Hie ...Il is taken. I
being an e x - m e m b e r of a volim!<•«•'• fescue squad in a com-
'
A&S Council
T o all Grad S t u d e n t s :
T h e G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t Association has been requested to
hold an election so t h a t graduate s t u d e n t r e p r e s e n t a t i o n on
the Arts a n d Sciences Council
may c o m e a b o u t .
T h e G S A has n o m i n a t e d t h e
following people from t h r o u g h o u t t h e College of Arts a n d
Sciences:
m u n i t y k n o w for a fact t h a t
there are facilities and courses
thai can be la ken in advanced
first
itid, These courses are
Usually given by New York
Science
and math:
Amnan
Stale al n o cost, because in
Hirer/, vige and Dennis S h i b u t ;
the long run il saves t h e stale
Social a n d Behavioral Sciences;
m o n e y . Probably t h e infirmary
Robert
Becker a n d Carolyn
could inst rue! m e m b e r s of a
Levy; H u m a n i t i e s : Pal M c H e n r y
volunteer a m b u l a n c e
corp in
(No n o m i n a t i o n t h u s far for
basic first aid to comfort a
other position,)
person during a trip to t h e
hospital N o b o d y is saying that
Any
additional
nominations
I hone m e m b e r s should be as exmay
be submitted
to Jim
perleucftd as d o c t o r s arfts Menv
M o n k , C C 1 1 6 , L«ave t h e m , in
bers
could
t a k e t h e same
willing,
a t t h e CC I n f o r m a t i o n
course that I he a m b u l a n c e perDesk, N o m i n a t i o n s m u s t be desonnel of Albany mo lor ambulivered by December 8, 1 9 7 1 .
lance or D o c t o r ' s
ambulance
Election will be held in Camtake.
pus Center Main L o b b y from 9
T h e actual workings a n d set
A,M. to 11 A.M. o n D e c e m b e r
up for a volunteer a m b u l a n c e 9, 1 9 7 1 . G r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s encrew on c a m p u s have already
rolled in t h e College of Arts
been worked out and sent l o and Sciences are eligible t o
I be
Student
Health
Service, vote,
but was rejected.
Jim Monk, President
ll's a d a m n shame t o conGrad S t u d e n t Assn.
stantly hear of cases where an
injured person must wait for
IU) t o IS minutes for an a m bulance, as was the case aI the
football
game m e n t i o n e d by
Miss Lutfi, and a n u m b e r of
other incidents
Also lo hear
that on M o n d a y , November 2 2 , To T h e University C o m m u n i t y ,
1!171 a person suffered a heart
As y o u probably all r e m e m b e r ,
at lack in t h e basement of t h e there was a dinner fast o n Nov. 10.
Humanities building, a n d was We received a check for $ 1 7 5 0
dead by t h e I jme t h e a m b u l - from FSA on Friday, Nov. 19.
ance arrived 20 minutes later. I ! This is absolutely unbelieveable,
reaIize t hat you can't win them exceeding any e x p e c t a t i o n s we all
all but wilh an a m b u l a n c e lo- had. T h e money will go to t h e
cated al the infirmary available free breakfast and lunch p r o g r a m
within five t o seven minutes and day care for the children cf
from any pari of this c a m p u s , the north g h e t t o here in Albany as
would sure he a help a n d start planned. We can't thank y o u all
in the right duecl ion
enough
everyone w h o gave u p
To have a proposal rejected his dinner or d o n a t e d m o n e y t o
I mil would benefit the health the center. Special t h a n k s , also, l o
and safely >f all s t u d e n t s , fa- everyone w h o worked wilh us on
cully, staff and visitors al Ibis the fast.
"gieal i n s t i t u t i o n " is completely
If you would like any o t h e r
absurd For this reason I felt I information on Peter J o n e s and
should write this letter hoping his work in I he c o m m u n i t y , or
would like lo c o m e d o w n lo meet
some really neat little p e o p l e ,
please get in t o u c h with us.
Thanks so much again.
Success!
Rhea Garfinkle
Rosemary Colungelo
C O L L C C T / W O .
Foft
j
A
Rec'sfCeiWk-
Mo ;
CLfAAJiMk - i/p
IT
AFT£I«
*
D0f?iH
jMRTY,
The
Exam Schedule
""""*''
run wood
.. ,
Exchange
nf
Manager
etebbie kaemen
,
ftoduclion
''S'"""/;'/'""
'•ramiEditor
Manager
linda miilf,
Editors
sieve uminoff
Edit,,,
would
Manager
pliil mark
debbic natansohn
lint if the form is similar lo
those thill I've seen, il is a dn
bious inslriimenl
II is based
upon no aseertamable theory of
leaehmn, bill on some slercoIliinU
KM, hi,i,: nue.lil
lii lie
like
Ordinary aeadelllie freedom, I
,,
Advertising
vicki zeldin
'I'.i the Isclilur:
I have been informed thai my
sluiletlls are In he ejven a
form to fill (ml 'The purpose,
as I iindei-slaml il, is lu elieil
their npininns about my leaeh
in[>
ll's i m p o r l a n l .
I think,
that such opinions be sought
and elieiled in s o m e reasoned
and reasonable fashion
\T£if\^^
riDs.- A A £
Opinionaire
I vpe
Editnr-In-Cliief
torn ctitigim
News Editor
^—
l'h"M
SOIOIMI
with
ooi
n answers.
Y.
-JC'iClOt
ftf*l> B e r n f c t o tr*'
r
RtP<icfl-re To
T
H i 5 akrm. TH*.»
ieph
Albany Student Press
.
Associate
Mr. Frost doesn't even m e n t i o n
the t h e m e of J a c k ' s article in t h e
ASP. He d o e s n ' t attack arguments, he a t t a c k s people. T h a t is
most anti-intellectual. In closing
we wish t o say even though we are
on the Sweet fire staff it doesn't
mean t h e ASP isn't our paper
Mitch wants t o take t h a t away
from us.
Harry Davis
Speaking for Sweet fire
problems
it
Mr. Frost talks a b o u t anliintellectualism in the new left. T o
support his s t a t e m e n t he uses a lot
of generalities such as the left
wants to politicize (he university.
T h e university is and always has
been political. T h e university has
always been a research center for
govern men I (most often defense)
funded research. Universities also
have a purpose lo help prepare
ymmnsters for a profession or
filling them in jobs. Il is politically, al leasl has a t e n d e n c y of
being supportive of the government, T h e university also provides
political advisors such as Henry
Kissenger. Il is a mistake to say
the l-fi is trying lo politicize the
university
it is already political,
we just want to change the direct
ion.
show?
always
about
example,
program,
John fairliall
(WMMWKS',
is in-
in pern
understanding
lor
he
ol
It s e e m s
too
complain
tie
will
common
points
moder-
everyone
all
Studies
support
Selfishness?
sliou-int;
university.
crunch,
Is t h e m o s t
ol
just
lienezet
''endangered
the
Wednesday,
students
by
access
community
Environmental
the
many
when
the
coining
channels,
b r iloiiijj j
n e w d e v e l o p m e n t s . ,uiJ
with
Forums
have
you'll
which
ami more
become
they
seems to
crisis.
us a s s t r a n g e ,
deed
with com-
the normal
whole
to
about,
that
President
problems,
communication
er, t h a t
problem
as a
responsibility.
talking
you, and
month,
the budget
It s t r i k e s
on
university,
concerned
through
lunini,
talk
recently,
so
a
for
a
I'niuvrsity
vited,
I-;.,,,,,,
rmiures
(EBSI£, RfrtMBER THAT GfOpfS
lilVlM'tiOME 'CftATY DM
a
pen
you've
this
a n d l e a d s diivctk
been
people
to the c o m m u n i t y
About
ates
graduate instruction at the expense of undergraduate students
("Russian Revelation," ASP, Nov.
19. 1971, p. 6) deserve correction.
During my first six weeks at
SUNYA, the Slavic Department
reappraised its Russian undergraduate course offerings and has
submitted extensive program revisions to the Curriculum ComDear Sir.
mittee. An examination of the
I read wilh interest t h e recent
revisions would reveal:
editorial a b o u t the C o m m u n i t y
Service
program at S U N Y A .
1. Next year there will be 2H
Naturally, I can only respond with
Russian
undergraduate
courses
a u t h o r i t y a b o u t the program as it
offerer! by the Department infunctions here at Albany Medical
stead of the IM listed in the 1971-72
Center Hospital. Far from " b a b y thitfvrgraduaiv
iltillelm.
s i t t i n g " o u t in the c o m m u n i t y ,
2. Students enrolled in the rethe s t u d e n t s assigned to us are
We see the program as extending vised initial two-year sequence of
placed in areas where they arc
the academic ctirriculm - helping 101, 102, 201. 202 nl five credits
e x p e c t e d to c o n t r i b u t e . During
to put flesh on the skeleton. We per course will attain the same
the three semesters we have had
expect t h e S U N Y A s t u d e n t s to be level of proficiency al the end of
students
3 5 , then 8 6 , and n o w
serious in their work, mature, three semesters as they currently
71 y o u n g men and women
there
responsible, a n d intelligent. They achieve al the end of four. (The
have, of course, been situations in
have not fallen below o u r expecnew four-course sequence will rewhich a part of the volunteer j o b
tations.
quire almost f>0 percent more
has been filing, answering the
Speaking for o u r hospital, I can instructor time than the old.)
p h o n e , or lab glassware washing.
say tile C o m m u n i t y Service pro,'i. Thi' mini her of classes offered
Even these, however, have been
gram has been mutually beneficial next year on the undergraduate
much needed by o u r hospital,
and illuminating.
level
will re mam approximately
which like all others, does not
Very truly yours, the same as this year (17 per
have unlimited funds to hire all
Mrs. D o r o t h y P. Gallagher semester), while graduate course
the personnel we need- Also, these
Director of Volunteers offerings will be reduced by half
chores d o afford the s t u d e n t a
(from 10 per semester to 5).
chance ' o see how a hospital
I. I personally intend lo set up
functions.
the curriculum lor the Elementary
For most of o u r students, their
Russian course (ft us 101) next Fall
assignments are in their field of
and will participate in the teachinterest, and we try our best to
ing of all sections
give them a real learning situation.
In view of the above facts, each
Chemistry and biology
majors
reader can decide for himself
often work in laboratories learnwhether or not I am c o m m i t t e d lo
ing h o w these disciplines are
the
improvement
of Russian
To T h e Editor,
brought to bear on patient illundergraduate
e d u c a t i o n at
nesses and malfunction tugs. SociAI though
anonymous
letters SUNYA.
ology a n d psychology
majors normally warrant n o reply, the
Alex M. Shane, Chairman
work with patients directly
u n f o u n d e d allegations concerning
Department of Slavic Languages
children, the aged, e m o t i o n a l l y my supposed p r e o c c u p a t i o n with
and Literatures.
if
the
in
to take
we've
those
"buekpassed"
got
favor
up.
disturbed, etc, Most of o u r
C o m m u n i t y Service s t u d e n t s are
pre-meets, a n d many have given
their s y m p a t h y ,
understanding
and intelligence lo handling all
kinds of situations in the Emergency R o o m . Over a year and a
half period, the K, R. has been
"life as it i s " for s o m e 50 students.
By their o w n observations, the
s t u d e n t s have verbalized that their
work a! Albany Medical ('enter
Hospital is: " t h e most relevant
t h i n g , " " t h e best learning experi e n c e , " "what has finally motivated m e , " " a w a y from books and
theory
part of the w o r l d . "
or
that
communication,
to the kinds o f a p a t h y
If
is
' r t c . f l i ' ^ S hOt»-
T o T h e Editor,
In t h e ASP of Friday, Nov. 19,
1971 there was an opinion expressed by Michel) Frost. We feel
compelled lo respond to that
opinion. As m e m b e r s of t h e
Sweet fire staff WP are very .sensitive to the t e n d e n c y of certain
people to a t t r i b u t e Sweet fire to
.lack Schwartz and Jack S c h w a r t z
only. Jack is a m e m b e r of o u r
staff b u t definitely n o t the only
m e m b e r . It is nol -lack's paper.
t h a t t h e staff of t h e A S P will
agree a n d give m e as m u c h
help in persuing this p r o b l e m .
Again I will get all m y inform a t i o n regarding a n o n c a m p u s
a m b u l a n c e service a n d present
it t o t h e S t u d e n t Health Service. If t h e A S P has received
i n y o t h e r c o r r e s p o n d e n c e in regards t o o t h e r c o n c e r n e d p e o ple like Miss Lutfi, I would appreciate y o u forwarding it t o
me.
Thank y o u ,
Barry Bashkoff
Cim,pUS Cen,ef 326
S
"' "'" """
° ' k 12203 The ASP "' " " '
Washmflion Avunuo. Albany, Nuvv
*» "ached bv Hi il Jl p a r t ' a H V funri«<l by Mandatory Student Tax, and can
219
Th8 ASP w
o' 18ia Thi, n . r °
°« '™»««d <" 1916 by the Class
A**ociat*d Pnw. p ^ T ' " m ° m b B r o l , h o C o "°0« P r « » S a n " c e a n d , N
IUb,criptlon,
Communlcrtioni » ! °\
'• «"»•> dollars par academic yea'
300 word. Editor! I P i u l , d n IP * C * P° r m(t« and are informally limited to
Edltori.) Board.
° ' , h " A l f a " n y S , u d f l n ' P r B M «• daterminwJ by ilw
GRAD STUDENT
TAX REFERENDUM
is out!
On display at
will not he mailed out to ,
graduate students until
CC Info desk
January 7, 1972
PAGE 8
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
l^J^tE^A
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1 9 7 1
On Grokking Matakos
by
Andre
major
VickiGekas
Malraux,
literary
times
-
to
happening
of
MUSEE
our
Board
IMAGI-
the
Albany
the
dynamic
as
our
own
modern
artist as he who is no longer in
harmony with his milieu and the
and
Latin
reviews
to
To
offered
sisiers
will
art is in revolt, refusing to ornate
Soul
simply
arc
or to exalt a civilization
whose, values he sees as hollow.
Paul
room,
Kican
external " r e a l i t y " around him. His
Latin
be
be
combo
sets.
Orchestra,
nightly
by
our
lor
Willie
the
and
of
oul
Center
and
sisters
u'
by Bill
Brina
Ball-
'ruin
rapping
Zeppelin
Concert
hrotlv-rs
ranging
1 his cultural
fflOTfi
the
slar-studded
Campus
political
brothers
check
in
University
lasics
SOITlC
"Wolfgang"
trumpeter
series
(he
all
dancing
and
Dec. 4 is a Latin
and
a
in
of
of
"Across-lhe- border"
Fun-lovitve
come
annoucer
sponsoring
entertainment
to
should surely
WSUA
held
and
weekend
combination
are
be
folk-singing
invited
this
Ortiz
P.R.O.L.E.
PAGE 9
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Ha Bailar
SUNY
lo-be-performing
in one of the
defines
IVaya!
Coming
Ramirez,
oeuvres
LE
NAIRE—
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
and
Oh yeah,wow! A new Led Zapiieiin album—Led Zep IV, 1 guess,
Puerto
to
Latin-
ill
worlds
ice
•' has iio
,,.
except
putting the boys down for^ being
o loud nnd metallic. They're
n i l , , nr anything
!,,,,r
Icelandic
'lines
-. • he sleeve noies ' leav y, mail
happening .is 11
i!
even '.irand
your
'There s «ood
and bad in the
promptly dug up his collection o f
I mean, could even FAiot
Led Zep from ihe beginning, from
\ '
Funk could t.-lj
soul
Overcome by this magnificence,
ttUy poets. y'Unow.
Dazed
,u ihat'.'
they
"smoke,"
Man's only worth therefore is in
his
faculty
world
to
create
and
.in artist
successfully
transfers
reality
on
fecundity
canvas.
is
the
an
Kicking
inner
I'M.
is he who
this
His
result
inner
Board
this
Nothing
amid
Making
be finer
than to be in
Asia is a hobby
"artiste
•\merican
has no
longer
him
than
the
"ex-
Oh, well
Ain't
be sitting pretty
that
as we bomb another
ASTERIOS MATAKOS
"answers" in modern art as de-
for law and order.
Oh, we're killing for peace.
We got a lot of bases, and we're fighting
in
our places
As our interests increase.
The Army is dependable, and that am V no lie.
was Nov.
and was sponsored by
the Modern
Tile soldiers arc expendable,
who cares if
2<)-<l in
Greek
the
I'atroon
Studies
Limine
Associatiim.
resolved the conflict -
hut he must still believe in " M a n "
his inner self and his social self;
succeeded
-
individualism
style whos.
not the individual, inner, un-
stable
self
Man's
value
but
the "social
firelight
fiitmv.
and
between
altruism;
and
sung.
Then
uniqueness
fined
lies in his altruistic
vision which lacks the furor of the
ethos, culture, value.
and not in his individualislically-
modern
harmony with Man and with what
in
relation
lo
artist.
Matakos lives
in
that of Classical,
Byzantine, and modern Greece
the
which he does not try lo "strang-
Iremely comforting lo discover an
ulate"
artist who is also a man who has
Having embraced ils best elements
through
his
which
-
above theories. One finds it ex-
pcrsoi
S Mill | |
eg.
the
struggle
self and society
medium
1 .tun
loi
won
I aiin-
then
night,
bel
Irlvistcd
anybody
that
invcnlivf
Song,
Sinatra'!
pliiymjj- I mean, i-vt-ry-
lite
will
3 P.M.
things
will
And
be
home
lo
on WSUA radio, " l e n d e t
follow
U\
IS
up
on
Sunday
Puerto
an
afternoon
ol
•""
l
'•
"Messiah." Eml.-.v
ev
rigj,
I ),.,-,.„,|„.,
''"'•'
lances
will
subtly
conscious.
S
" " I'.'" " ' ''111 nice Hi ,rs Hall ,,,,
Hawk
Slreel
n Alha.H
Th
' h o r n s and orchestra w , l l be ; , „
™ . , h " ' 1 ' " " ' | i " » "l'''"rf«>nl(an.l
'he HP
Play,., will , ,
„,
Arehibald
McLelsh's
PulHzer
Prize-winninj.
drnmn
in
vers,.
". I nd don't forget, kids:
Holiday Sing is cDining!
clmw
TOWER EAST CINEMA
short: B00P-00PA-DOOP
BE
lead
years ago. Thank
by
second story,
ihis
same
Sa.mdav
afternoon
Rican
DC
A
folk
al
I
review
foi
no
P.M. ill
known
story,
should
is
real
Ihe
helpum
Ihein
__
,\i
i
I
in.
Tin-
AND
O'Neil
Mall
I
have thought of such an unusual,
such an inventive title, but the
V
^ " A n
acoustic
Ihe VV.
d {,1
«- , W
material
,.v,,n-r,,r<.,.(.m.es
as "Puerto
Yeah, and there's even some real
Who else could
s
s o m
*
too
ol
of
Tolkien
in
there,
the
brought
' '
the
was
ASP by
down.
spied,
chemical
too.
re-
"Who da
my
passport
to
nirvana snatcl.ed away,
and my ears beat in by screaming
Amazing, isn't i t , how four white
E 1R ish
'
Poetic
blues
invectives
about
plugged
drains
l
"fldieS CoU,d ^
[
^
« » f . } was gonna have to go
primal responses of a mack
outside in the cold an walk five
and
man in the Mississippi of years ago
as the floods come and the levee
I
Thai should silence those foulmouthed critics who are always
creaks and you know it's gonna
break. Didn't I tell ya Ihey got
your brain cells? As if I gave a
damn.
blocks to get some more an didn't
know
what
that
shit
docs to
That is, if earth is imperiled in ihe Fantastic
Four strip, I hen Thor, Iron Man, and the rest
of Ihe Marvel heroes will die along Willi Reed,
Sue.
Johnny, and lien. Keeping in mind this
idea of interaction bel ween characters of different magazines, Roy Thomas, along with t i l l
Kane, use M A R V E L
I'll KM I EH K as a vehicle
lor sliowcasum
Ihe
Warlock,
heller
know .is
Hun
,,l
KANTASTII'
I'illll
numbers
lili
Super-
l.an
S
mil
now.
Ihe
i\
m
(lu.ir-
superiors,
1 ie.ih/e
h.-\,
I errans
n
I'ealure,
.,
[lie
I'.irl
-.-HM.
w,.n I do
lln,„,eh
i',V. The
•Yharaelci
unci-.,,
Inn
Hi.'"!
,i<
apt
llowever
dlrec
l,vH,.l,eri M,
m i s s , „ „ ,-,;,.,,„,, ,
alien.
Maybe
lil.iuel
||.'ROM
lians
.
.,
"'
•m<ll»""-*
'"'
I
II
Kit I
nut
look
ical
'""
Summer Sessions
Special Compact Courses
1"'
olhei
hall
" Is old
,,l
1'
ll
-called
ciesl
Hulk
,l.,r Ihe limb Kvoliiliouarv.
In mis .sue , " \ N11 MEN <ll \ t . l . t U.l
HIM
WAU I I H ' K ' . '
I In, in.,il il ls.,ne weave ,11 III
lor
allium
a
people
lo
Ihe
many
ciinnol
be
is. me I.U.M
II,
, l u ; les.
ulMile,..
enhance
Superman's
is e.irlb.
il
his
efforls
nisi
.is.
in
helps
.,
foreien
were
Ihe things
Ihis
saying,
I lie
accomplished
story
of
Ihe
The
second
bears
out
suffers
from
and
K.ulh. . "
LIKE OK
moments
Ihe main
firsl slorv
MAltVKI.
bill
Man of
b\
MAN""
and
all,
is
once .man, do
MAN"
"MUST
I)
by
Steel does
"normal
, Willi
TIIKHK
welldoiie
,i sin,,,,111
some
Swan
HE
human
A
and
slu k, re lined
esccllenl
"spec,.,I
l')7l
Sl'I'EK
\uderson
Marvel,
"Sl'I'KH
e
GREAT DANE
is
\'alional
and I hope llll'iin
Inline SUPERMAN'S
an
counlry,
cnvunlsl ance
in
copyright
,
say.
story,
acule
Periodical
keep Ibis learn on all
also
by
shor
ss.
i lie
same
Thai's
arlisls,
"When
oil
which
deals
wilb
"1'llK
PRIVATE
t'l.AKK
K E N T " The sloi'y had it s
(Superman Irytue, some tobacco), Inn
storyline i . Mile in , omparisoii lo live
I'KKMIKHK
as l o l . d h
Ihe
lo
Nil
plot,
Dan
I. has al-
S T A N L E Y H. K A P L A N
CENTER-
(212) 336-5300'— §
(516) 5 3 8 - 4 5 5 5 ^ ^ *
noI
l l , inarv-l lulk
slory,
of
ASTONISH
a
of
bringing
llnv
Ins New
as
wasn'l
.aided
h
of
ihe
tamper
in
his old
is
ihai
above,
Marvel
will
a duplicate
heroes
hear
This,
walchinu
live
Ihe
BASKETBALL
nor-
place the Warol
Ihe
Starts
oilier
enure strip,
fuliiie.
Sobel
try our
Bookstore Sale
/(
conalong
outfit
hv llarvev
M
add.
connived
with
as well as the
in
nimbi
of
concerned
earlh, devoid
l
wtlh
Kvolu-
Marvel
crossovers, seemed lo deliberately
on
I
Willi
and sort
High Evolutionary,
note
mentioned
I huh
poorly.
salislied
the
to
Hikings
chose
ilB
Men, back
inieresinm
mally,
"really
the
nilher
like
Also
all
mention
eleiuenls
Looks
Willi
n w i l l u ill
:,,
I'hoioas
clusion
way
of
Adlilll's conil.se
lonnerly-iesolved
lock
I
opposed
p„,!ir„.|,c\
Unl'orlunalcly,
Publications
will
Hl,„e
I,el
..ml
plus of
> Ion
ill
The
„l
id,,pled
mil I liloen.
would,
(Ilia ill la ns
of
since
channel
child.
Superman
large
I'li.M
is
I'llll.DIIOODl
doctor
what
bin
"fellow"
sickly
..iair.,1.
Si,pern,,,11
so.
bun
Ins
American
cure
I'lilneO
.,1
till
•« Mil.in K "
Monday
STEAK-OIT
tlVE OVER WSUA
buy one record
Albany vs. Stony Brook
and get a campus pack free
8:25 pm tomorrow night
(limited
H O I SI R| D I N SANDWICH
I'll Hl'.\ (.'( l/l.S
s( \ / i i v i < \ ; v
minimum 4 luinlu iclies
Hear all the home and away
Albany basketball games on
tee shirts half price
•T d %l A / ©^?U
" t w i n g ?he university
December 6 l h 7'1' & 8 th on:y
commtinitv
i \
- '
m « 3 s j uX^V$S&mVlii$m^KX!V<i^%%^i!to&i!S^%
j
free tie livery
I'll
quantities)
Intercessions
EDUCATIONAL
BETTY BOOP, |
for
Mil'
" Opportunity for n-vit-'w ni P.M
lessons via laim ,n ttn> >'"''•»
ii't cartoon mmp I
quite
Lady, and White Light,even,
n, e
,„
s o f l
original
live
lilriliim
are doing
load
earih,
.is Ihe
reeled by I'.ilnci., it s, ,
P "I
KVKH V K I M l i '!•
Weekends
BUTCH C A S ^ AND THE SUNDANCE KID
coup
I,,
" Preparation lot tusis niinnrtl '
idmissian to <)r.Kiw<iii' ,irm i'i •'>"•
stunnJ schnuli
* Sin and twulvi- ,«'&-iu-n . >•• > <Small groups
• Vnlurninui.iin.uuiuil I. i ' • - • ' '"
DiepriretJ by I'MUTI'I i" 'Mi'
' I osson sclUKJuItt i ,in I*. i.i.'"' ' '
moot iMthvn.ii.il n Is
ROBERT'REWORD'""
' » ,ital
R W L N E W M A N KArTHARINEROSS
could
ya k n o w ! "
M
in
MCAT-DAT-GRE
LSAT- ATGSB
N A T L BDS.
$.50 with tax
I
,1.
I .-in,.,
Still
December 3rd & 4th
Before
sink is plugged up an we need it,
that voice
/(,„•/,• and Roll'.
charge.
beings "
7:30 & 10 pm
I
viewing an album that hasn't even
Maggin and. in Ihe
Universe. (Ireeu
make
type
been
Elliot
ahovenienhoued
U\
the
have
Hod
Denny
SUPERMAN","
IISI'IV
" • ' • » • " <"> <>">•. .-1.1.1(1.11 i,i n „ . " ' • ' ; ' " ' , " " , h " '
' " ' i n "
15th Slreel Lounge „ „ , ( u . ..,._.
MelmoihsTHK UKKAT
Pus, across fro,,, , | „ . „ l ( , . , . ' , . '
' ' A N LIGHT' WAU will
Armory.
'
on Monday through We<
Dec. B-7-H, al 7 111 p ill
Studio Thealre of I lie P A
in LC 7
1 swear
capture those sounds and pull a
;
l „ . .,,
a white,
able! Oh yeah! Dig those
shifting textures thai Bonhum and
.lohn Paul Jones supply. I n t o the
. ,,
,.
,
.
music. Could anyone else sound as
orgasmic,
as write,
as Hobby
will im-M-ui iwo performance.. , , ,
Handel's
"t"«ltiv
tmmigrant
rising up out of my primal sub-
political
much lyrical " I s l a n d " singing and dancing.
Iwo weekend events will he sponsored by
THERE
dians ,,f Ihe
s
The
could even hear Led Zeppelin V
u[
"independcntisla," revolulitvnary sopolitical priMinet, who w i l l he lea-
in
a
classical sense had beet
Choral Son..!,
know whose side
to
by Bruce Bain
laic
ilerum
after
Frank
motherfucker but this! I'nbHiev
SUPERMAN 247
lo
I don't
trust
for
fuck look the DRANO again? The
Sings," doing
of these lasl
'Inn.
whored
on!)
frank
would
rudely
coming
p K O . I . I-:
try
mean,
" ' Bmnxville are lying flat out on
their hacks, squirming around in
'
• , , , -,,
ecstasy to Ihe warm, moist thrills
event
the
anvway
has already produced a f r u i t f u l LP jusl recently re. . . ,,
j
.,
. .,
,
..Li
,,
c
"
n
(,hello
Records, the l i l l e being
Son Los Que Son
mini
THINGS
1
you're
Whoever
Holmes,
been recorded yet, my head was
cover-featured
Iwentielll ceni,,
Sinatra':
say
Jake
be once write for
,ttTf..'
[>t)fi
uch -.inn
oft'' O h ' Him
nmu orimiKiiity 1 What h n i l i : . n ! l \
Bullshit
Jake
didn't
body knows thai .Jimmy Puiie is ,\
hi!
man'.'
of
(you
from
Plain.' Why, I'll bet thai right now
This evening
"MUST
has la
md
one
half Ihe pubescent chickies hack
"before
members who
my
thai
have
bands
played o l l c n
"Cave"
In
The ''.'Pil
the
Saturday
new, is also composed of
Latin
and Ihiil a Balance in ll
Ibis
gteal
Oicheslias,
,M' on :hr-
r-lH'l' JJtll ' I I I '
ippcd i h f • i
S o n " (Orchestra Soul) leai
i
i
n
,
leader-pianis-vocahsl. Paul
'
single
Wrapping
Rico
Both
Those of us who talke d Willi tile
artist could sense thai I Ills man's
inner worl was a Irani)
he has created so rar. He carries in
him a tradition -
negatiely,
othci
icon!
on
CMICCII
combo, ho-
hand, won
a hold
a lilt
at
Iwo
in
I .inn
Kodiigucz
won
heard
is 'hrilhnj! fxp«*ri
Confused
stole
Holmes,
s'lJU
I has
creating
and art. Matakos has a personal
motivated creative force.
easily
in
lured
.1
H
und
correspondent
roost."
top
including
Love."
ien-piece
Pete
nigh!
lealuitiii: : uinpetei-
i -p,oi-.n,-ii
members
rapping by Carlos l-eliciano.
eialist and recently released
"iiBli
his personal experience
life
self.
Mr. Matakos' work should define'
with China.
first, he has integrated
man may have lost all absolutes,
itself
than a
no conflict — or rather who has
After this lengthy introduction,
they die1
that
Matakos
fined above. Yet, the Marxists and
the Sartrian "Marxists" insist that
The list of troops gets shorter as we fight
Ain't
Exhibit
his inner self certainly can find no
funny!
Oh. nothing could be finer
and
The
1-ndaj
ibc besl Carnival
revolutionary
with
The hand
,
,
eased on
for a value higher and outside of
city,
loi
Inn
and
Award"
This band, while
played
Modern man in his frantic grasp
rings.
liumci
Ray
in Panama
"Diplo
Ibis
Ortiz.
for
Life is sunny!
and the CIA ami opium
the
Hcwnh
the world of art — will have more
beautiful than a real flower."
'Hie Army
Rico
>,n
I'niiesia "
reality
put i t : "a flower described is more
Cuddle up, I'II give you quite a number of things,
on
Kaniiuvi.
of
a
weekend
is "i.u
sounds Df "Paul Ortiz and Orchestra
,.,.,,
..
, •
iii
turnm
Willie
Ramirez bnnsell
and
p
ternal" one, and it will have more
lobby
R.ibon
Ricaido
"Bandera,"
identify but those he creates him-
beauty as well; for, as Mallarme
when you 're in l/w China
prize
dynamite
Ballrnom
Willie
llie
first
self. In the final end that world -
money.
,in,l
groups,
any higher values with which to
Indochina
Pony
the pain that accompanies it. The
maudit"
C.C.
me composed
awareness of his inner world but
also of the frighlning solitude of
Jane Fonda and Michael Alaimo sing the following
song done
to the tune of "Nothing
Could lie Finer Than To He In
CaroThe
''"",'''
Morning."
See page -I for the full storv on
Fort
Dixs fabulous
FTA"
show.
'
ihis
I he
jrrangei
artistic
of
off
al
faithful
'.-.S
ti*lB».'*.-««awl
vail
11I2-5587
or
1'«l>k«M»
5 33
i/ Ontario u/ 'lutiison
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 10
classifieds
Dear Marls,
Finally I don't have to hear you
count the days. You're legal. Happy
Birthday)
The Last of the Great Knitters
*****
Wedding Invitations, Prices are l o w
i n Idaho, 100 custom p r i n t e d only
$5.95 q send f o r free catalog and
samples
to Arnold
Agency, 2 0 6
Westlnghouse portable stereo p n - East Main, R o x b u r g , Idaho 8 3 4 4 0 .
ono,
g o o d . $ 3 5 or Best
offer.
*****
Glenn, 457-526U
*****
For Sale: Brand-new gold benrus
watch In case (org.fi $ 4 0 ) , $ 2 2 —
Fine 4-way speaker system. N e w Brand-new US A r m y Overcoat (aCond.
Cost
$ 2 1 2 . Prlae
$ 1 3 0 . p p r o x . sfze 4 0 ) w i t h b u t t o n - I n w o o l
FOR SALE
....
472-6319.
The b*stest of luck t o my favorite Organic Cham, srudent — Hockey Puck.
L, I ' m sure y o u r l o o k i n g through
these ads for a personal f o r your
b i r t h d a y . Well, just t o be different, I'm
not going to p u t one i n . A n d do y o u
k n o w what y o u can d o , y o u can take
your banana and shove It sideways.
lining, $7 - Call 472-8409.
*****
*****
For Sale, Case f o r W r a c k tapes
Cap-Gown-Hood, Ph.D, U N C like
$10.00; Bought for cassettes by m l - n e w , worn once. Size 4 2 . 5*10".
stake. Holds 24 tapes. Call Dave $75
new, sell
$40, Mclntyre,
7-7942.
439-4115 evenings,
*****
*****
Bob,
Hope y o u had ,1 happy day on
thfl 2 n d .
your (rl*nd,
M,iry
To the S t a r Hope
y o u had a happy day.
Y o u ' r e not w o r n out y e t .
Love, Zelda
Head (standard)
sklls, ski boots
For Sale* Gibson 12-string guitar, 6 . (8V2)
with
rack,
poles,
goggles,
mos, o l d , hardly used. $150 or best 4 8 2 - 4 2 4 6 .
offer. 457-4707.
*****
2 brand-new afghan. A u t h e n t i c a l l y
Happy B i r t h d a y t o t h e girl in ZE
Up-right 1 accoustlc ,bass 3/4 size, t u r k l s h . Max), I size 13/14 (beige), o
143.
ther size 39 ( b r o w n ) ,
beautifully
$150.00 "Bob
- - 472-6779.
" " "" - "
embroidered,
genuine
sheopskln.
Lined with goat fur. Call 438-4214
For Sale: Traynor YSR-I a m p and evenings,
YF-10 cabinet, excellent
condition.
List $ 5 5 0 , askings $300. w i l l barCamera-Miranda
Sensorox,
35mm
gain. Call Mike at 438-7561 a f t * r 6.
Happy B i r t h d a y ^ A r n o l d E i f f e l !
SLR-BTL
Meter.
1.8 lens.
Interchangeable prlsmst
Mint
condition
with
135mm
Auto
Sollgor
tele1963 BelAir P/S A / T R / H 51.000
photo $190. Howie 457-5202,
Happy IBlh L y n n and Ellen, f r o m
m, original owner. Exc. Mech. Conyour Wat or bury and Alclcn friends*
d, $200 or Best offer. 465-3157 after 6 p . m .
Anne Mario
The Sandal Snalcher may strike
VW snows mounted/balnaced 2000
Lost-Wedding ring gold w i t h black
mi o l d , $ 5 0 . J o n 482-9087
antiquing.
Reward
Call 457-888 1,
482-6821.
Happy Birthday. Ellen
$ 5 0 0 . Must Sell.
Lost, Man's gold wedding ring on
Monday, N o v . 2 2 , in Men's G y m
Locker r o o m . No questions asked c
Reward, Call 462-0293 w i t h any i n GTO, 1968, 4 speed, 4 0 0 engine,
formation,
I want my marble m a / o l
good
condllion,
reasonable,
882-9253.
Where s m y M.irble Maze'
. M ^na^nn'"""'S""IB
LOST & FOUND
PERSONALS
For Sale: Munarl buckle ski boots.
Ladles size 6'/?. Excellent c o n d i t i o n .
$25 Call: Paul 7-8750.
-Happy
HJK,
Happy minus six m o n t h s . The last
five years have been the greatest!
Lovo y o u forever.
Me.
Happy Birthday
f r o m the family.
Lynn!
*****
*****
Let us hear y o u r gripes and solutions
about p r e r o g i s t i a t l o n . Please call Rich
or J i m 4 5 7 - 8 7 6 1 or Steve 4 5 7 - 8 7 6 0 ,
*****
Dear Car,
I don't
know
h o w I'm getting
P A R T t i m e sales display
work 3
t h e y ' r e y e t , but I'll see y o u t o m o r r o w . By the w a y , were y o u t u t o r e d e v e n i n g s
Saturdays
and Sundays
well last night?
$3.40/hr car necessary. 809-2285 I I - 1 ,
Love, 5-6:30 p m
A^F.
S T U D E N T E M P L O Y M E N T in Yellowstone and all U.S. National Parkds.
Booklet tells whore and h o w to apply.
Send
$2.00 A r n o l d A g e n c y , 206 Eflsl
S K I M T . SNOW SV* days-Jan. 9-14.
$45 I n c l u d i n g T r a n s p o r t a t i o n
f r o m M a i n , R o x b u r g , I d a h o 8 3 4 4 0 . MoneyA l b a n y to V e r m o n t , a c c o m m o d a t i o n s back guarantee.
and 2 moals dally. Rich 4 89-3893
Sponsoied by Recreational DimensiO V F R S E A S JOBS F O R S T U D E N T S
ons.
aiisiraila, Europe, S.America. A f r i c a ,
etc. A l l professions a n d occupations,
$ 7 0 0 t o $ 3 , 0 0 0 m o i l I l i l y . Expenses
T y p i n g done in m y home 869-24 74. paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free infor m a t i o n - W r i t e , Jobs Overseas, Debt.
0 7 . Box 15071, San Diego, CA. g?1 IS
N I G H T A I R P L A N E TRIPS Oriented
to Heads and Others w h o like lights.
Spend 30 Minutes o l your t r i p in
F l i g l i l groups of three $'j.00/person.
Call 2 8 3 - 5 7 2 9 .
SERVICES
BOOKSTOREis taking
applications for
rutoring-Ro
iiiy trouble i
preparing (or
Everett Colman
BOOK RUSH HELP
snnabie i i y o u are hav1 Mathematics a n d / or
math tests. C o n t a c t
.it 465-9564
Jan. 17 thru Jan 28
CASHIERS
BOOKRUNNERS
see John Kot
RIDES WANTED
Need
ride
In r i m i d a .
With
Lynn
Happy
Lc.ivc N Y C
(Bring a copy of your schedule)
-77 34.
Birthday.
HELP WANTED
Birthday
To K B :
Do y o u oven have w e t dreams
love
Need CAsh? We'll pay it (or
erm papers. Highest prices. Will
11 U n i o n un Ihurs., Dec. 16.
P O E T R Y W A N T E D l o r anthology.
Include stamped envelope. I d l e w i l d
Press, 1807 E. O l y m p i c , 1 (is Angeles,
California 9 0 0 2 1 .
THE ASP SPORTS
Models w a n t e d . G o o d looking females for fugure studies a n d fashion
pch o t o g r a p h y .
Call
John
Chow,
i 7-783£
^
Dear Suzle's daughter,
S ince he is at his peak, we
t h o u g h t double p r o t e c t i o n was necessary! Enfoy, sweetheart,
Enjoy!
Happy Birthday *o David's son and
Hank's brother.
Love,
M o t h e r , D o o d y fl. O u c k k
HOUSING
Rent
eight
rt
n 1 shed
apart iner
$160. 4 62-51 13,
F urn 1 shod a p t . for rent. Ex eel lei
location Fuller Road. Great for
persons or y o u n g couple. Ca
t 8 9 - 0 4 ? 0 between | 0 - 5 . '
, Big t w o b e d r o o m a p t . near bus
lute. Available Jan I A n n ,to. Call
438-8680.
For C.iris O n l y : House available (8
bedrooms, living r o o m , d i n i n g r o o m ,
k i t c h e n fa, 3 I U H baths, pannetled
basement
bar, w i l h
washer and
dryei,
Phono
Quilmen
Investors
482-0021.
3 Girls needed for apart men I
bus route 21 1 quail, .'rid Hour.
R o o m , n a i i'
warHod:
$55 m o M i l . p l u s h i l l
Call 4 6 L
.86.
l i t *
O n
hn
and
ne,
-(>'
R o n n i nriato
IKII i d i want n d
for
cappod
di Mill
S In deiii
R o n tn
;i n i l
b o a r d 11
etiirn
for '.IMV- i c e s , n o o x perlenco
lOLOSSil I V .
II
4
'
j
/
4 328
d
after
4 : 00, ,
Ask
(01
A i Ion r11 1' 1 M l .
Roommate
needed Male.
3 bedroom,
nice
mostly
furnished
$ 7 0 , 4 8 2 - 3 0 2 0 . Keep t r y i n g .
Own
room.
&:«
Super
Detail's
Sal.
1
or
2
girls
1 lean,
wp,H u m s
1. Call AW- i-.TO
cheap.
F«
4.IB.B.Ji!i
dlrtnei-
needed
tu
.ipartnient.
shai-IIIIWII-
10.
Needed.
[$t.(.,'inontl
1 all
<••
< all
-Hi
Mai v
•.luil.nt
*ilh
baby
bedroom
Call
by Bill
Heller
The A l b a n y b a s k e t b a l l season
kicked
off on a sour
note
Wednesday
night, as Williams
held on t o a lead t h e y h a d
sustained t h e entire gume t o
defeat t h e D a n e s . T h e differences b e t w e e n a t o u g h loss a n d a
good win b e c o m e e v i d e n t upon
examination
of t h e statistics,
Williams o u t s h o t A l b a n y from
the field, and foul line, a n d o u t r e bounded the D a n e s . Despite the
s t a t s , t h e game
w a s almost
pulled o u t b y a d e t e r m i n e d Albany team, b u t t h e time just
ran o u t .
Will iams t o o k
an early H
point
lead
a n d held
il for
three-fourths of Lhe first half,
threatening
to bust
it
wide
open. In doing this, they relied
on inside s h o o t i n g ,
good rehounding
and a l t e r n a t i n g defenses
that
bottled
up the
Danes
T o solve
his board
problems, coach Suiters substituted B o b Curtiss. Curtiss played
aggressively at b o t h e n d s ;nul
gave Albany offensive r e b o u n d
ing, which helped k e e p the deficit u n d e r 10 p o i n t s
With Curtiss doing t h e job inside, and J o h n Q u a l t r o c c h i and
Byron Miller hitting from t h e
outside,
the score closed t o
34-30 just before the half. T h e
Danes then gave a perfect exa m p l e of h o w to hold for the
last shot, as reserve guard B o b
Rosse canned a jumper with 2
seconds left, t o close the gap
t o 2,
T h e second half started out
fairly
even, but Williams regained the lead -15-38 by dominating
the offensive
boards.
The
culprit
was center Les
Ellison, as he came alive for
Williams with 8 quick points,
and helped provide his teammales with 2 or ,'i shots at I he
basket at a lime At the other
end of the c o u r t , Albany was
get t i n g
just
o n e shot, and
livings began t o loo k d i m , as
Williams
tipped
it to tiit-.VJ
wilh 7:1 h l o go in lhe game
But then Sailers made ; k e y
move. He broughl back Dave
Welchons ( w h o had I fouls),
Byron Miller ( w h o had g r o w n
cold), and Curtiss. All t h r e e
c o n t r i b u t e d , but the bif: m a n
was Q u a l l r o c e h i
" T r o c h " hit
several importa ni jumpers, a n d
with ;i:fil) left, the score was
1)6-62.
December 4*h
T w o baskets were e x c h a n g e d ,
and
t h e Danes found
themselves with
the ball,
trailing
70-66 with 1:38 t o g o , T h e y
hurried
down court,
shot,
missed, b u t with inspirational
rebounding, managed 5 or 6 att e m p t s at the h o o p t o no avail, Kenny Bate m a d e a free
throw for Williams with 30 seconds lert, t o m a k e it 7 1 - 6 6 .
Miller came right back for t h e
Danes, hitting a j u m p e r t e n
seconds
l a t e r . T h e clincher
came on the i n b o u n d play, as
Bate dribbled the length of t h e
court (through a fierce Albany
press) and neatly passed off t o
a wide open Small for a n easy
lay-up t o make it 7 3 - 6 8 .
in
Opinion:
tickets: $5.00
now available at:
Music Shack in Troy
Van Curler's in Albany
Drome Sound at Mohawk Mall
11
dm' m
i.iiiiiiiiv
rial, desire
renl
H I . ' M l t:»6
jI1*i
Holiday Sing
T h e seventh annual Albany
Quadrangular Wrestling T o u r n a m e n t will launch t h e D a n e s '
1971-72 m a t campaign Saturday. T h e t o u r n e y , which begins
at 1 p . m . in t h e G y m , features
the s a m e four teams as last year,
when Union t o p p e d Albany,
Williams, and D a r t m o u t h .
Albany has eight lettermen
returning from last winter's 9-2
team a n d c o a c h J o e Garcia is
looking for a n o t h e r successful
season. P r o b a b l e e n t r a n t s for
Spectator Code Bad
by Alan D. Abbey
Recently, the Collegiate Commissioners Association, which is
c o m p o s e d of representatives from all the major conferences, passed an
e d i r l . a S p e c t a t o r ' s Guidelines, which is s u p p o s e d t o discourage
u n s p o r t s m a n l i k e c o n d u c t and p r o m o t e good behavior at sports events,
mainly basketball.
Dr. Alfred Werner, director of Athletics, and t h e Albany coaches,
w h o l e h e a r t e d l y support t h e measure, and e m p h a s i z e t h e fact that in
the past, Albany crowds, while being partisan, have n o t been abusive
Inwards the o p p o s i t i o n .
No disagreement is proposed t o Dr. Werner's s t a t e m e n t thai Albany
c r o w d s have been good s p o r t s . However, t h e one t h i n g college s p o r t s
does not need is more rules. College sports, in the final e s t i m a t i o n , is
(or should be a n y w a y ) played for fun, b u t t o o many rules tend t o
hinder a good lime, and fun can also be legislated against, a n d t a k e n
away. This seems t o be the p u r p o s e of the college sports hierarchy.
There are so many rules. Il seems that the rulemakers are e n a m o r e d
with just imposing rules on people.
.Superficially, t h e spectator c o d e seems mild enough, b u t enforcement is left u p t o t h e officials. T h e h o m e t e a m is responsible for the
crowd, a n d for flagrant violations, technical fouls are t o be imposed.
We would h o p e that the rule will
not be used as a club over t h e
head of the h o m e team by t h e
officials.
December 1 2 * at 7 pm
in the SUNVA Gym
:all - l b / - t i l H I .
DOM McLEAM
The QxLtfang&r
'A MEDIC AM PIE'
Ttiesonc^The Album
on United Artists Recoftkf'feipes
in
%
*&
nth.
Available Doc.
Apartments
and Houses A mailable]
Spring
Semester
Inutilities accepted for tall sum, also
Write :Quailmen Investors, I n c .
PC) Box Bfi76, A c a d e m y S t a t i o n
Albany, New York 1 220H
FOR R E N T : House Available
Manning Boulevurd
For Girls Only!
(may be rented
separately)
* H Bed r o o m a
* ;i B a t h r o o m
* Living Room
* Dining Hoorn
* Kitchen and a half
* Paneled Bar
* Washer a n d Drier in
basement
Aviiilahlt) lor SuconiJ Suiniisliii
Cull 4 B 2 - 0 0 2 1 , mk for Mike.
the Great C a n e s in t h e t o u r n a m e n t a r e T o m Hull, 1 1 8 l b s . ;
J o h n L u t z , o r R e x Cary, 1 2 6 ;
D o n M a r r o n e , 1 3 4 ; L a r r y Mims,
142;
Phil Mims, 1 5 0 ; J i m
Nightingale, 1 5 8 ; Cliff Wess,
1 6 7 ; Jim F o y , or T o m H o r n ,
1 7 7 ; Al Mercer, 1 9 0 ; a n d R u d y
Vido, heavyweight. L u t z is a
defending tourney champion.
Hull (9-0-1) a n d Phil Mims
(9-0-2) b e c a m e t h e s c h o o l ' s
sixth a n d seventh u n d e f e a t e d
wrestlers in 16 years last season.
7:00 & 10:30 pm
Ailment Brothers
J. Geils Blues Band
sli.ii.'
Wrestling Begins Saturday
A disappointing loss, but for
the Danes, Q u a t l r o e c h i
hit for
IS and made some excellent
passes as he played floor general
for t h e Albany
attack,
Byron Miller displayed a fine
so ft t o u c h in lying f< > r ga m e
honors with H) Also o n t h e
positive side was Curl iss's allaround
performance
and a
solid lew m i n u t e s b y s u b s t i t u t e
center Kick Lawless. T h e n e x t
game for the Danes is S a t u r d a y
night, here, vs. Stony B r o o k .
'1 1 1 - / l » ' i .
w..int*u
It,nt>,11 .1 .1 M i - I ' M l , ' .
Bk "•'•'• • 0 .
Hoopsters Open Season With Loss
at Hudson Valley Community College
irijSgSii.^.ia'
PAGE 11
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Wanted: E q u i p m e n t f o r lOg. fish
t a n k ( p u m p , l a m p , etc.) a male p u p p y
for froe. E d u a r d o 7-4994.
Ride Wauled to
Dec.
15, and/or
436-7822.
1966 Pontlac Catalina, 338 c v . V B .
power B&s, 4 new tires, 2 studded
snows, good transportation - cheap.
Call Howie 457-7799.
For Sale: 1970 Rosslngol Strains,
2 7 0 c m with Merker clestomot heel
simplex
D L t o e . Originally
$230.
Price $100 or best offer.
Gregg
465-2538.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
• T h e Way Things Happen****' — (
b e a u t i f u l p o e m . W h o sent It?
a
Holidays
Are
For
Children"
All University Reception following
in the Campus Center Ballroom
In
t h e in t e r e s ! of good
sportsmanship
the m e m b e r s
of the Eastern College Athlet ic C o n ference
recommend
the following code for college
students unci o t h e r s p e c t a t o r s
in the c o n d u c t of their intercollegiate basketball p r o g r a m :
1. T h e h o m e college, as
host, should e n c o u r a g e courtesy t o w a r d the visiting college's
players, coaches, and
s t u d e n t s ; a n d t o th* game officials a n d o t h e r spectators.
2. U n s p o r t s m a n l i k e behavior,
such as booing, should be
discouraged,
3 . Silence should be maintained during all free t h r o w
attempts.
•I„ T h e use of noise makers
t h a t interfere with t h e proper
game
administration
should
be burred.
.rt.
E n I h u si a s t i c
cheering
should
be encouraged us a
11 a d i lionul
purl
of college
basketball.
The wish here is t h a t the spectator c o d e be quickly a n d quietly
forgotten, and c r o w d s be left t o
their o w n j u d g e m e n t c o n c e r n i n g
their c o n d u c t , a n d left ulone t o
enjoy themselves.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
PAGE 12
PAGE 13
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
I
graffiti
«»ll^«<Ml#ll#ll»l»l»l»»»iyi»l»l»W»«»»»»»H^II»»»ll^
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Telethon needs talkers/
you
want
to
help
Please call if
out
in
selling,
phones, etc.,etc.,etc. Call M a r y 7-5178
or Linda 7-4398.
VWWWWWWWVWVWVWVWWWftWS
PEACE & POLITICS
Mock
Democratic
& INTERESTED
Convention-'72
Colonial Quad Board members are
sponsored by RPA Dept. Delegates for
looking
various stale delegations still needed.
esled
Any
Assistant
student
is
eligible.
TOI^.
Sunday,
for
in
Colonial
helping
residents
interview
Candidates
(or
DEGREE
inter
CANDIDATES:
1972-All
Resident
next
OFFICIAL NOTICE
senior
and
May
graduate
stu
dents e x p e c t i n g to graduate and re
year
cniwj a d i p l o m a in May 72 M U S T t i l , ,
Dec.5. 2 P.M. for spectators, 1 P.M.
Interested residents can sign up in the
a Degree A p p l i c a t i o n w i t h ihe
for delegates. CC Assembly Hall.
dinner line on Monday and Tuesday.
strar's Office
Dec. 6 and 7.
no laii'i
than
Regi-
F-ebruary
1 1. preferably by February
I
Diplo
ma Fee of $ 1 3 0 0 , w i l l be accepted ai
If
you
Jewish
think
it's about
time that
workshops
were set
Identity
Check
Cashing,
anytime prioi
up and y o u warn to work in t h e m ,
Go-Go
contact the JDL at 157 8 9 3 4 . Hope
Girls Wanted
f u l l y w i t h your help we'll (jut a series
most
call T o m . ,n 7 3382,
calnniiid girl
I n
The Fnglish Dept, w i l l present
Draft
Counseling
Hours
Mori,
11-4:30, Tue, 2-4 3D, 7 9, W w l , 1 1 A.
Thur
1 4 30, 7 9. Or by special an
fjnintmwit.
Still
Alive.
flusiriiilly
and
yunr righl-i
union
nl
brjbt
Auhert
PYE
l<n
the
workers
steering
committee
Service
Stu-
have your Ion-,
inrl handed " i
lo ! CR 3 0 A , by Dei
/
Remind you.
iigunr y advisors thai . «u giades ninsl
All
lo
attend
.mil
IK:
in by
Abl
4801
(jet.
i oinplainis,
Regents
id
Oncslton*.
Scholarship
Incentive
v. >i< e
CaU
Checks
and
Im
Scholar
the I ail
1971
Semesicr are available in Ihe R u i v e .
ideas or
H M , e. RA B19 boiwcon itie hours ol
opinions.
withnul
I"
meeting
6. 7 30 >J M . I A 218
well rime
Community
Hemembt."
and paper;, c o m p l i e d
Alvin
'ead'mg and
M o n d a y . Dei
erivirontnenlal
Join U M I W W . One \m\
all
Poetry
HI J 3 5 4 .
Hurler
rngaid to race crowd, color, s<;*
on Black
IfM l o r e . Tuns. Dei . 1 al 8 (KJ P.M. in
orij,irn/i' in
collectively
but
information
Attention
Union
Centei,
h o p e f u l l y before A p r i l l i . 1972.
dents!
Joe Hill's
Campus
aiaduation,
p a r t y o n Dec. A. Ten dollar p n / e tor
of programs started.
rjrrids, i|i.nK, msina tors
in
to
r
lot D u t c h Quad
H :tll A . M . and 4 P.M.
l)<m'\
m o u r n , orqanl/e.
A b rahiirn
Joshua
I now
Arthur
Schlesinger
hnhall of Senator
will
speak
(\,nn<r
on
Jewish
Heschel
of
content,
man/
will
wel I
books
of
Heianse
be speak mg al
e r t a d y . A bos w i l l be leaving f r o m Ihe
c i r r i , . |ru all those inieiesK'd in jjuintj.
Re t l m r r a l 7 OOP M
by NDC»
Creative
MAJORS, MINORS
Philosophy
soon
be
Undergrads:
Iiiken
on
night
a vine w i l l
(enure
Ruborl Garvin and Mr
SALE
Sliabbat
Service
bf'rslnp
mailed
lor
Mr
by
Leonard
tiei
HUGE REDUCTIONS
ON ALL STOCK
Zetetiks
Club)
SUNYA
(undergmd
piewrtis P i o l
Chance
and
day. Dei
(j dl -1 P M
mi
Mon
in I IU :jb4
Gay Alliance
Tonitelll
Sal
presents
1 . al
I 00.
I
Ihe
Jack
K,
The
University
lit l i n e (iv Mrfjtii I l a m p i o n , M.D
9, H I M , / P M , Hro AIM
danut
ciiwmhln
riHllil, Dm
hand
llmli
al
CI
mini
Dai
Hall
and
I Paraphernalia
To
I Special Lot of Jeans
|
\
Dei
I,iv
.Hid
American
Studies
A
ni'i'd
da alternative
Jewish
life
pattirns
is lull liv many nl ns M.IYIM:
lurlhi'l
V'llhnnl
liee
in
(|iilliiu,
larujlcd
Ini
Caluruna
Circuit
1 . U \>
il
/
All
II is
siudenii
In
stall nl Za-Char. a Journal of Jewish
Tltought
tart Ki'li al / -l(,Si( Wi-
in
J00a 1ml visiiors ate
Political
laalnrirHi Ken
I'M
in Mm CC
CCGH
in
M7/.,lainn<j
I C .'A
House
Cnliim D a
riond i i ' p n r t i ' i s . W l i l i ' i s . t'fliti iis.tvinsls
lint innsllv V'"H
Indian
Ouad
|in;si:nls
Joseph
Fennunore,
Pianist. Sunday. Dm
V
PAC In U'ls m i sain in PAC hasirtnni.l
l l i i i i s i l a y and I 'nl.iy I ?. Sat. 1 I
Dnad Assn
l a - S ?!r. SONY
In
$ SO. Sllldl-'ins $1 00
t'.iniinnml.
%,'.(III I in
Ah/ SdOli
Science
Association
nlhly r
'linifM
I b: I i , / ill I' M . ( V il'-l
lay
11 a'in w i l l Im i Campus
Forum
iln
lintlii'i
VVml . Im, H al i P M I I I [In Pal
I mil
I n.itn
... I r I \« i n > „ i i l l ,11
nl.an
Innmls
il
I
m .
ilia photography
exhibit . .11
i I in.
M l . al Ilia Hiaissnlanr I
i . ( '..,,
.a
PI
Um A i l s ( III!) '
a '.I
Im. )
tiaplis liy I nniianl I
laimll.i
HUM Dm
EVERYTHING MUST GO!
\
Saturday-10 til 6 <
|
\
I
286 LARK ST. Albany \
Alpha
Kappa
Delta,
Sociology
honorary
society, w i l l have i ntm*Tint|
Wei J Dei H, al / [ill I' M in M i l .".Hi
lo inih.ile new memllUis, ami to «
anil msia
fin.M r, Itndetui.itls Wllh
It) his oi m
ii So) . a :H) n u n in
MI. .mil lotal in- mvil.id lo l o m i i s a l
Ihe, rneehmi I or m l , n rnal loll, . o n h n !
Aileen H . K O I I . 489 1)198 or
Depl
llni|,iinin.| n i n i I,..in l i m n , is i|nilii|
t . tjn a Workshop in Innovative
Jewish
Theater
lh
win
..I
Um (I
nn
».,.,,I . . . p m i i i i n n l a l I I . . a. nnil ...|,.a
i i ' i n i ' w i l l l». an aswl
liili.n",liid'
Kan / ' I I I S J
SUNYA
Chinese
Pies al«« i o l Ihe
N\ A w i l l speak atto.
Need tor
Teachor Preparation
Reforms m l ' i '
Assernhiy I I ill .,l / j(] I' M. o n M i n i
d.iy, I'e,
NY.S I f\
i,
.-,,,
„ • .,i i..
Club
w
,.•..!
twu Chinese films w i t h I milisti .nl.
Illllis nn Sun . Dn. '• I I ' I I I I J I . I I I M M ' a!
.' P M. ' Um Poliln Wil,.' at 4 P M ..
I C III $.WI Willi l a - . aid '11 00
.nh..is.
«
Yonko. it Mexican
Barrett,
I t *
(Otlil.
So,
gDebbie:
Catharine
Sal
De.
(,, in I C ! and
MIljUIHKl
i in
Admission
Sil|i|lctil tin' I.i.al i|M,,d I
Only $3.00
!
j
4651912
ihe •„,!
:jOP M
V i l l i and v
50% off;
first come, first served
Chop
Undergraduate
much, much more
EVERYTHING REDUCED!
I daily-noon til 8 pm
!
Mon
wind
1 , al
rta
Gititioiy IV( | . w i l l be shown .it -I 10
I'.M
wil
llvii
ilynn
M M , Pork
I'M
Band
if ,>ric|Hlal wurks (nl
•uslahlisliod i|i,m|is' ( a l l B a n / / 40!i(l
60% off \
Concert
|iri".i'i!l , n : i n i i i ! i
al 9 0(1 P.M. C ' l l l m i t i n i l v D a n e Willi
Win $1 1)0.
Pre-med-pre-dent
Society
presents:
The Doctor and the Draft. a f i l m and
Ihe
will
3 ill 3
All are
Jack
iln's I nasi anil
a m i s s I r u n i Diafiui Hall
(iiiblir is welcome.
!
of Renaissance Music
in CC Assembly Hall
Dm
Al'.n. al I) 1(1 I ' M
Walt Garddiscn.s
Responsibility
A program
IK; presented n n Friday. Due
M i k « -iimiuial rail in lire sidu I nimcjH
Philosophy
sing Kirn, mis M o n o d ' s bestselling bonk
60% off
60% off
be
I ' M . in the PAC Recital Hall
Coffee
To
not
w H r n m n Admission is Irm
them
Baker
I Shirts
will
WHAT TO DO?
Rosenthal
h v e r y o n e is invited.
in -is soon as possible.
50% off
lor referendum
out u n t i l Jan 7. 1972
The
Kenneth Stum
recommendation*, in H / I
To
i an!
Ihe service w i l l be Suviei
Student representatives are (|atheiin()
| Shoes and Boots
problems
Christinas
this I riday
at Chapel House al ? 30,
afterwards
f)ii
Sweaters and Vests To
mailing
ihe
Jewi y. A sensilivily session w i l l be run
going out of business
To
Hit-
with
exchange'., the grado.He student ITIWH
Sponsored
Ihemu of
Dress Bells
,»f
associated
McGov«m
on Dec. 9, 8 P.M. in [ C /
bpttpVII
nbor
Swissair is
sorry to
inform you that
after February 1,
your parents
can afford
to ski the Alps
Muthiri'
P
HAPPYA BIRTHDAY!! E
Love,
-^
ahnnl
Id
man w l m Inai In-, . I n n linw I i lil.lv
ilia vi..tin w i l l hi' sl'i'wn ai I C i n
Sal Iln. .1 al .' P M '|. '.0 l.a a i l . i l l
a n d 1, SS Im Chili
Peace Studies
ami .1.1 .1.
U J JUl-JUUUU Ji JUUU Jt DJiJl JUUD
Film
Progrten
'
.mil I.
.. >•• .
Please don't blame it all on us. But after February 1,
anybody of any age can fly to the Alps for almost youth fare
prices.
What used to cost them $.180, will cost J250. Which
means a lot of people that wouldn't think of coming over,
arc going to be coming over. But they won't be coming
until February, and until they arrive, there's plenty of seats
on the planes, plenty of room on the lifts, plenty of beds in
the hotels and plenty of young Europeans on the slopes.
From $250 Swissair will fly you to Zurich or Geneva, the
closest you can get to the Swiss, French, Italian or Austrian
Alps without actually landing on one.
We want you to take your January vacation in resorts like
Andcrmatt, Davos, St. Moritz, Chamonix, Zermatt.. .
Fvcryday we'll be bringing in students from all over the U.S.
for one last Alpine blast.
Besides the skiing there's skating, riding, sunning,
snowmobiling, climbing, tobogganing, dancing, swimming,
even gambling. All with people your own age, if not your
own country. (An American is as exciting to the Swiss,
French, and Italians as they arc to you.)
If you'd like to be part of all this, write Swissait for more
information ind write dad for J250.
±
Swissair
608 Fifth Ave.
New York, N.Y. 10020
Get me to the Alps before Feb. 1.
Please send your "Youth on Skis" brochure.
Name
School
Address
City
if
State
Zip
J
PAGE 14
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
Recycling: "Valuable" Junk
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1971
T h e c o n s t a n t increase in per
capita
generation
of
solid
waste, stimulated b y p r o d u c t i o n
g r o w t h and coupled w i t h a rapidly increasing p o p u l a t i o n conc e n t r a t e d in urban areas, is responsible for the n a t i o n ' s present
environmental
crisis. Increased d e m a n d
and the increased p r o d u c t i o n t o m e e t it
are the basic causes of increased p o l l u t i o n . This is confirmed b y the fact t h a t the
real o u t p u t of goods a n d services in t h e U . S . ' Has grown as
m u c h since 1 9 5 0 as it grew in
the
entire period
from
the
landing of t h e Pilgrims up t o
I960.
FVTVREJUNK
T o add fuel t o the fire - or
waste t o the pile • consider
that a similar growth period is
predicted
between
1970
and
198-0,
which
can
easily
be
translated i n t o m o r e junk cars,
cans, b o t t l e s , plastics, fly ash,
and
paper
products.
If
the
present
production
of
solid
waste is n o t m a n a g e d , w h a t of
t h e future?
Solid waste falls i n t o t h r e e
m ajor
source
categories. T h e
first is u r b a n refuse, which includes
domestic,
commercial,
m u n i c i p a l , a n d industrial waste
p r o d u c t s ; t h e second
category
contains
t h e . mineral
waste
which results from mining and
mineral
processing
operations;
and t h e last, agricultural waste,
includes farming, animal, a n d
crop waste.
Photographers:
Have a picture you thjnk
is worth having in the yearbook ?
Submit it and it
may be published.
You
may be paid.
Ron Simmons
7-2116
of a Vietnam Vet
by AI Senia
The red hair rests carelessly o n
his s h o u l d e r s . T h e beard is full.
The tie-dyed shirt, bell b o t t o m s
and bare feet could belong to any
street person.
A further b r e a k d o w n of urban refuse s h o w s t h a t the nation generates a b o u t 4 0 0 million t o n s each year. This includes 60 billion cans, 36 billion bottles, 58 million t o n s of
paper and paper p r o d u c t s , 4
million tons of plastics, over 1
million a b a n d o n e d a u t o m o b i l e s ,
m o u n t a i n s of d e m o l i t i o n debris,
180 million tires, and countless
millions of t o n s of refrigerators,
stoves, T V sets, and. the like items. T h e c o s t t o collect and
dispose of urban solid waste a"
lone is a b o u t $6 billion annually. Where d o e s it all go? Ab o u t half is b u r n e d in s o m e
manner, and t h e o t h e r half is
buried in landfills a n d d u m p s ,
with the values it c o n t a i n s lost
forever D
MINERAL
But R o n Podlaski, 25, is n o t just
anyone. F o r t w o years ago, R o n
was a Sergeant in the U.S. Green
Berets. A n d n o w , after a painful
radicalization, he is a regional
co-ordinator for " V i e t n a m Veterans Against the W a r . "
Would you
believe
this barret
average-sized steer generates ab o u t 10 t o n s of solid waste
each year.
WASTE
HUMAN WASTE
T h e second c a t e g o r y , mineral
waste, is larger - a b o u t 1„7 billion tons each year D T h e prod u c t i o n of 1 ton of c o p p e r results in a b o u t
5 0 0 t o n s of
waste earth a n d rock„ A d d i t i o n ally, a past a c c u m u l a t i o n of ab o u t 2.'t billion tons of mineral
waste is scattered
across t h e
nation.
T h e final category, agricultural
waste, is even more a w e s o m e over 2 billion t o n s a n n u a l l y including
farming,
slaughterhouse, and an i ma I waste, An
F u r t h e r m o r e , over 100 lb of
solid waste daily is g e n e r a t e d
for every m a n , w o m a n ,
and
child in the country,, By 1 9 8 0 ,
this is e x p e c t e d to increase t o
150 lb per day.
T h e i m p o r t a n c e of s e c o n d a r y
metals
which represent
the
o n l y growing metal resource can best b e assessed by comparing the gross p r o d u c t i o n of
major metals with q u a n t i t i e s reclaimed from s e c o n d a r y s o u r c e s .
A c c o r d i n g to p r o d u c t i o n estiooocooooooooooooooooooooopooo OOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOf
Indian Quad Presents
Concert Pianist
JOSEPH FENNIMORE
for more information call:
Sunday, December 5th - 7 p.m.
7-8884
is
valuable?
mates ( o n an a n n u a l basis ), over 5 0 % o f t h e lead, 4 0 % of
t h e c o p p e r , 4 5 % of t h e iron
and steel, and 2 5 % of t h e zinc
and a l u m i n u m m a d e available
for
new
products
last
year
were
derived
from
secondary
sources.
These figures are indeed impressive, b u t the a m o u n t s of
metals still being wasted are
equally
impressive.
Annually
discarded in municipal
dumps
are 11 million t o n s of ferrous
metals and over 1 million tons
of n on ferrous metals, including
c o pper,
alu mi nu m,
(in,
lead,
and zinc. An e s t i m a t e d 12 million j u n k cars still remain t o
be reclaimed from a u t o graveyards across the n a t i o n . In add it i o n ,
automotive
scrappHge
has n o w reached a rale thai
can
provide over
10 million
Ions of ferrous and a ha 1 f mi Ilion Ion of n on ferrous metals
annually
Nearly 4 0 0 , 0 0 0 t o n s
of a l u m i n u m was used for manufacturing cans, lids, and caps
in
H170; o n l y a small per
cent a ge of I his was reclaimed
CONTINUED PAGE 16
Main Theater - PAC
(b & w picture preferred, larger than 5 x 7 )
FREE SCHOOL
"I w e n t i n t o the army t o be
i m p o r t a n t , " he explains. "I was
like Norman N o b o d y . Well, I had to
be s o m e b o d y . 1 had to s t a n d
out...I w a n t e d to go see w h a t it
was all a b o u t , win s o m e medals,
and look g o o d . "
f
So Ron went d o w n to his draft
board, enlisted, volunteered for
the U.S. Special Forces and di...y
in Southeast Asia, and braved the
rigors of basic training. Unfortunately, h e possessed a police
record, a fact his superiors overlooked until the last m o m e n t .
Upon c o m p l e t i n g his training,
they denied him clearance because
he was t h o u g h t to be a security
risk.
Ron Podlaski is not one to be
easily o u t d o n e . He w r o t e to Congressmen; badgered his superiors,
"I'm not going t o spend the rest
of my days in the Special F o r c e s
picking u p pine cones at F o r t
Bragg," he told t h e m . Under the
pressure, t h e a r m y relented.
I m m e d i a t e l y , he volunteered for
duty in a special o p e r a t i o n s group
assigned the task of crossing the
Laotian b o r d e r and c o n d u c t i n g
hit-and-run aids, a m b u s h e s and
spying o p e r a t i o n s on suspected
North V i e t n a m e s e base camps.
This, back in 19GH, when the
Pentagon was still insisting that
U.S. t r o o p s were observing Laos'
status as a neutral c o u n t r y .
T o his lasting a m a z e m e n t , R o n
received t o p secruily clearance in
record time. It took only t w e n t y
four hours. " T h a t ' s why I d o n ' t
mind telling you this stuff," lie
[PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE!
IBM Sclectric
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Specializing
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Doctoral
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Fast, Dependable Sorvn a
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462-6283
462-1509;
NOTICE TO OFFICERS OF THE FOLLOWING GROUPS:
ALBANY LAB BAND
PSI CHI
says, the usually sullen face breaking o u t into a boyish grin. " I
figure if they were stupid enough
to give t o p security clearance in
only t w e n t y - f o u r hours to someo n e like me with a police record,
they deserve any of the consequences."
For the next ten m o n t h s , until
early 1969, he served in the Laotian c o u n t r y s i d e with a six man
team out of radio c o n t a c t for long
periods and s u r r o u n d e d by N o r t h
Vietnamese. "We planted sensory
devices... it was an intelligence
t h i n g . " It was also the first time
Podlaski was t o be confronted
with d e a t h . "I was scared, really
scared. It wasn't just being afraid
of dying. But I realized I had
never really lived...Combat didn't
prove you were a man...The real
thing, the reality of it. was that
when I died, I had to look hack
and see if I had ever lived."
This realization, placed against
the c o n t e x t of what was happening in Southeast Asia, proved to
he the first crack in a previously
solid middle class consciousness.
"I was o n a hate trip in Vietnam
for ten m o n t h s . I learned to hate
Vietnamese. Then I c a m e back
here trying to love e v e r y b o d y and
I fucking c a n ' t d o it...I c a n ' t relate
to this s c u m m y society we live in,
to
the
whole
profit
motive
thing..."
" I ' m totally, totally living in the
wrong c o u n t r y . I c a n ' t relate to
the people or the culture. I c a n ' t
see loving material things t h a t
c a n ' t love you b a c k . "
U p o n his return, he was arrested
(for, of all things, driving with a
faulty muffler) and his c o u r t
a p p e a r a n c e provided a further
spark. "I c o u l d n ' t relate to having
a loud muffler when I had just
killed p e o p l e (in N a m ) . I keep
trying to tell t h e m t h a i . "
Now, Ron c o n c e n t r a t e s all of his
energies into s l o p p i n g a w . . .
which he volunteered t o serve. I L
hasn't had a regular j o b in Iwo
years ("I d o n ' t feel c o m f o r t a b l e
with m o r e than forty cents in my
p o c k e t " ) and hopes to obtain a
pension from the g o v e r n m e n t o n
mental grounds.
All in all, Ron Podlaski did not
tike what he saw. He did not lake
" T h e guy I lived with said t o
part in s o m e of the sensational
me: 'In all h o n e s t y , y o u ' r e wacatrocities o t h e r s had c o m m i t t e d
ky.' And I am. I'm crazy. So if I
("We were loo busy for that sort
can convince the govern men I to
of s t u f f " ) , hul his testimony at
give me s o m e m o n e y , what the
last s u m m e r ' s Winter Soldiers In- hell, I'll take i t . "
vestigation in Garden City, Long
What remains now for Ron PodIsalnd c o n c e r n i n g the mutilated
bodies, burned villages and mur- laski, ex-Green Beret, is an altered
reality and an almost general cravdered prisoners thai he saw as a
ing to find some peace of mind.
c o m m o n sight mirrored his moral
d i s e n c h a n t m e n t . It is a m e m o r y T h e c o m b a t medals ( V i e t n a m
he prefers not In dwell on. He Campaign and Service Medals;
offer's, instead, a casual dismissal: National Defense Medal; Bronze
Star) were tossed away in Wash"II was the whole 'gook-thing'
ington last spring during the nayou've heard so much about, "
tional veterans p r o t e s l . They have
After serving the ten m o n t h s , he
been replaced, it seems, by a
took a resl-and-reerenlion leave in
feeling of alienation. Perhaps his
Australia and, in effect, went
work co-ordinating peace marA.W.O.L., refusing to follow any
ches, performing street theatre
additional orders. His superiors and working in p o o r black neigh
pre I ended no! to notice because b o r h o o d s will restore s o m e balhe had served four m o n t h s be- ance. But it seems unlikely. Bey o n d the average and, in R o n ' s hind his w o r d s lurks a wisdom that
words, " t h e y figured il got to
is unnerving to find in s o m e o n e so
young.
He speaks with harshness of I he
11 w a s
a summary
more
" T h e peace
prophetic than a n y o n e in the peace m o v e m e n t :
Green Berets would probably care m o v e m e n t is the largest threat to
to believe. He came h o m e to keeping Ihe war going. It's set up
AI her! son, Long Island Iron bled, just like the g o v e r n m e n t with
leaders w h o are egotistical has
disillusioned, and with his con
lards; w h o don't relate to their
scioiisness unalterably changed.
people. Just tike o u r p r e s i d e n t . " A
ALBANY TRANSNATIONAL FORUM
INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
REVUE
ALPHA KAPPA DELTA
KAPPA MU EPSILON
STUDENT FACULTY FOR
ALPHA PHI GAMMA
KARATE CLUB
ALPHA THETAMU
LIBRARY STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
AM YISRAEL
LOGOSPOPULARI
SUPPRESSION
CHEMISTRY CLUB
L'HUMANISTE
TORPEDO
DEBATE SOCIETY
MU LAMBDA ALPHA
TRYADS
DIRECTORY
NEW LEFT ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
UNITED FARMWORKERS
DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION
NEW REPUBLICAN FRONT
presents
VETERANS ASSOCIATION
ECONOMICS CLUB
NEWMAN ASSOCIATION
YOUNG CONSERVATIVES
FOLKCLUb
PI GAMMA MU
YOUNG SOCIALIST ALLIANCE
A DOUBLE FEATURE
FOR ONLY $.75!
• • •
* •
• • • • • • • * • •
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
• • •
•
Because these groups have not recorded officers in the Student Association office, if you are an officer of any of the above groups, please
come to the Student Association office, Campus Center 346, not later than 5 p.m., Monday, December 6, 1971. All of the above groups
and their members are warned that each group's recognition is subject to revocation if no officer responds.
Pursuant In Section VI, Pfotoduro 101 Oriinnl/allunal HULU
until bill n l?.2 1).
scocccoeccocooooooooccococococococccoocoocos
Mith.iul A. Lamport
Prositlont
Slutlont Association
pause. " T h e r e are t o o many personal h a n g - u p s . "
Nevertheless, he is optimistic. It
is c o u c h e d , but if still remains.
"If you believe in p e a c e , " Ron
Podlaski claims, " y o u should find
the m o s t meaningful thing you
can do, even if it's an individual
thing...helping Ihe poor is working
for peace, l o o . "
" R i g h t now, y o u n g people are
nice...the junior-high school kids
are nicer. T h e e l e m e n t a r y shcool
kids are even nicer. And their kids
are gonna be beautiful. And t h a t ' s
the only h o p e we h a v e . "
As for himself, R o n Podlaski
still has a way to travel. One can
easily relate to his t h o u g h t s . " T h e
only thing we have in this world is
each o t h e r , " he observes. "We've
got to learn to recognize each
other and I'm finding that a difficult thing to d o in this culture.
But I have never been happier
with myself than right now. I'm
happy just living my life the way I
want to d o i t . "
He has aspirations for the ful u r e ; is eager to live in the m o u n -
tains and get involved in a " d e c e n t
c o m m u n a l t h i n g " where he can
live, relate, and grow with others.
T h e strain of the past few years is
showing and, in any event, Ron is
scarcely an organization man.
"I d o n ' t like being tied d o w n , "
he confesses. That goes for any
organization, even this o n e (Vietnam V e t s ) . "
And now he is nearly finished.
" Y o u n o w , " he says, " i t ' s n o t
Vietnam t h a t makes us c o m m i t
these war crimes. We're d e h u m a n ized when we go over there...We
go there having the framework of
an animal, Vietnam just brings it
out, that's all."
" M o s t people in this c o u n t r y ,
given the same circumstances and
excuses, would do the s a m e
thing."
T h e conclusion o n e draws in
clear: Ron, like many others, will
soon he leaving this society to try
to build s o m e t h i n g better.
He is silent now, fingering the
bracelet that was given to him by
Montagnard tribesmen. A sardonic
smile crosses his lips. "Tell t h e m
o n e more thing before you leave"
he says, offering an existential
s u m m a r y thai speaks for so many
other people's personal experi
ences beside his own.
STUDENT SCIENCE JOURNAL
PI MU EPSILON
•
PAGE 15
The Odyssey
Means New Products
Reprinted
from
Environmental
Science and T e c h n o l o g y Vok 5,
No,
7, by permission
of the american
Chemical
Society,
The
article,
by Charles Bt
Kenahan,
appeared
in July,
1971.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
"Tell them thai I believe man is
just t o o smarl for his own fucking
Friday at 6:45 & 10:45 in LC 1 8
Saturday at 7:30 in LC 25
(BREWSTER McCLOUD SHOWN FIRST)
n few s e a t s left for S a l .
most left for Fri.
Tickets on Sale
T o d a y until .1 in the CC Lobby
$ . 7 5 with tax unci ID;
$1.25 without
iiB Woll Road, Albany, N.Y.
Nmtliwiiy Exil2E, [6181 469-8110
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 16
Job Bias Revealed:
Albany Student Press
Job Discrimination Fought
at SUNYA
by John Fairhall
An ASP Feature
This university is energetically
seeking t o hire, for th»- first
t i m e , Blacks, o t h e r
minority
group
members, and women.
P r o m p t e d b y a federal government
study done
here
last
April, t h e university has imp l e m e n t e d an "Affirmative Action P r o g r a m " t o break a pattern of j o b discrimination
T h e s t u d y m a d e by t h e Dep a r t m e n t of Health, E d u c a t i o n ,
and Welfare uncovered 2-1 specific instances of j o b discrimination.
F o r example, as of
Fall, 1 9 7 0 , of 2,241 full-time
employees
in all categories,
2 , 1 3 5 were white. Discrimination in terms of t e n u r e , p r o m o tion, and salary was also docum e n t e d (as of J u n e , 1 9 7 1 ) :
—'13 percent of the faculty
has t e n u r e ; minority group faculty m e m b e r s , however, comprise less than o n e percent of
the t e n u r e d faculty.
—There is only one m i n o r i t y
group m e m b e r in a position of
assistant dean or higher.
—Women make up 18 percent
of t h e total faculty a n d are
found mainly in t h e lower level
positions of instructor a n d assistant professor,
—There is a marked p a t t e r n
of salary differentials b e t w e e n
men a n d w o m e n in nearly all
j o b classifications on t h e facult y . F o r e x a m p l e , all male full
professors are higher paid than
women.
T h e Af fi rmative Action Program is i n t e n d e d t o increase rapidly t h e n u m b e r , of m i n o r i t y
members and w o m e n employed,
(Minority m e m b e r s are defined
as Spanish-surnamed,
American
Indian,
Afro-American
and
Oriental.) T h e vice presidents
of M a n a g e m e n t a n d Planning,
University Affairs, and Academic Affairs oversee most of the
hiring that this university does.
T h e y have been asked to submit their plans for hiring minority m e m b e r s a n d women during
t h e coming
five
years,
Th«se plans are t h e critical part
of t h e university's program t o
e n d discrimination in employment,
PLANS ANNOUNCED
J o h n Hartley, Vice President
for Management a n d Planning,
has a n n o u n c e d a policy of o n e to-one hiring of minorities, affecting all of the administrative
staff. This means t h a t for every
w h ite ( n o n - m i n o r i t y
member)
hired, a minority group member is hired.
T h e guidelines for t h e Office
of S t u d e n t Affairs ( t h e largest
e m p l o y e r in the University Affairs division), u n d e r Dean Neil
Brown,
state that
no
fewer
t h a n o n e of every three new
and vacant positions be filled
with m i n o r i t y m e m b e r s . Additionally,
o n e of every
three
positions is t o b e filled by a
woman.
The ASP
Dr, Philip Sirotkin, Vice Presid e n t for A c a d e m i c Affairs, has
stated that on the academic
side t h e r e will be a n e t gain of
ten
minority
members and
w o m e n in t h e next a c a d e m i c
year.
(Another
area
of university
employment
is the
FacultyS t u d e n t Association, b u t Director R o b e r t Cooley has been
unavailable for c o m m e n t . )
T h e Affirmative Action P r o
gram is under the direction of
Vice President Hartley, b u t the
p r o g r a m ' s actual a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
is
in
the
hands
of
Leon
Calhoun w h o is directing t h e
Office of Equal E m p l o y e metit
O p p o r t u n i t y , Calhoun is going
t o make sure that past mistakes are n o t repeated. He will
help recruit minority m e m b e r s
and w o m e n as c a n d i d a t e s for
jobs t o , in his words, " c o u n t e r
the excuse that m i n o r i t y members can not be f o u n d " His
office will review new job app o i n t m e n Is ma de
to ensure
than an honest effort is being
made t o hire minority m e m b e r s
and w o m e n . Violations of t h e
program will he brought t o the
a t t e n t i o n of Hartley.
BUDGET CRISIS
T h e severe budget crisis we
are e x p e r i e n c i n g has hurt t h e
p r o g r a m . Lack of funds prevents t h e creation of new positons
which
could
he
filled
easily
by minority
members
and
w tun e n .
A c e o rding
to
Calhoun,
"Attrition
represents
the o n l y d e p e n d a b l e action t o
get minorities i n . " T h a t m e a n s
minority members and women
will have to wait for people to
retire or transfer
to another
school (or be fired).
So t h e i n t r o d u c t i o n of m o r e
w o m e n , Blacks, P u e r t o Ricans,
and o t h e r s to our university
will proceed slowly, T h e budget,
crisis explains t h a t . But the
budget crisis does n o t explain
Vol. LVIII, No. 58
State University of New York at Albany
Tuesday, December 7, 1971
S/U Hurts Grad Applicants
by Vicki /cldin
Leon Calhoun,
Director,
Office
of Equal Employment
Opportunity
,., pollack
why (he university did n o t act
in any recent years t o break
up an obvious
situation of disc r i m i n a t i o n . Calhoun has seen
" n o evidence of a review of
hiring p r a c t i c e s " until n o w , despite a policy of equal e m p l o y ment
opportunity
that
supposedly had been in operation.
Calhoun also believes that d o u
hie standards have been used
to exclude m i n o r i t y m e m b e r s :
" T h e y (deans, o t h e r university
officials) have insisted on highly qualified m i n o r i t y m e m b e r s
w i t h o u t any consideration for
modifying
the
qualifications."
In of tier words, it has been
easy t o bend t h e requirement
a particular j o b positio.
when a white c a n d i d a t e was
u n d e r consideration but n o t so
for a Black.
WILL IT WORK?
Discrimination is s o m e forms
may still c o n t i n u e despite
the
strong c o m m i t m e n t outlined in
the proposals of t h e vice presidents,
Their
plans
mean a
greater
number
of
minority
m e m b e r s and women will be
hired, b u t discrimination in the
practices governing t e n u r e , prom o t i o n , and salary m a y n o t be
corrected
so readily.
Deparl-
m LMII
c h a ir m e n
will
not
necessarily w a n t to admit thii I
they treated Blacks a n d women
unfairly,
Particular deans and
faculty
members
m a y regard
Sirotkill's plan t o gel ten additional
minority
m e m b e r s and
women
hired
as interference.
T h e r e is no guarenlee t h a t minority
members
and
women
will find their way info the
higher j o b levels T h e termination of several t e a c h e r s ' contracts
during
t h e past
year
d e m o n s t r a t e s also that gran I ing
t e n u r e is not such an objective
p r o c e d u r e as t o preclude the
possibility of discrimination In
a d d i t i o n , those cases of inequities in salary will n o t he speedily r e m e d i e d , either, d u e t o the
budget crisis.
Even
if inequality
in the
p r o c e d u r e s covering t e n u r e , p r o motion,
and salary
continue.
Affirmative
Action can w o r k .
T h e hiring plans for the next
five years represent a strong rl'fort t o change the white male
oriented
pattern
of e m p l o y m e n t . T h e yea r-by-year increase
in t h e e m p l o y m e n t of m i n o r i t y
m e m b e r s and w o m e n will be
the major yardstick b y which
Affirmative Action is measured.
In C a l h o u n ' s o p i n i o n , if n o une xpected obstacles occur.
Affirmative Action will be effecl-
S/U grades effect an applicant's c h a n c e ol admission l o an Albany S t a l e graduate program as well
as his c h a n c e of receiving a financial award b o m the
depart men I
According t o a recent survey of t h e Hi departm e n t s offering graduate degree programs at Albany,
" m o s t a p p l i c a n t s to most graduate programs a I
SUNY Albany would be well-advised lo limil the
n u m b e r of S/U t y p e courses to less than 25"; overall
and t o t he freshmen a n d s o p h o m o r e years if
possible S/U, P / F , o r credit/non-credit grades in the
s t u d e n t s major field or in I he in I ended field of
graduale s t u d y are pari icularly damaging in a
competitive admissions si I n a t i o n . "
T h e survey, c o n d u c t e d hy .I.Kredricks Volkwein,
assistant dean of G r a d u a t e Si iidies here, received
usable responses from -12 oil I of Ihe 16 d e p a r t m e n t s
thai he polled this fall
Findings indicated thai " t h e most import an)
factor in b o t h t h e admission and the financial award
decision is t h e grades earned m i he sludenl 's
u n d e r g r a d u a t e major " T h e next most i m p o r t a n l
factor in the admissions decision was found lo he
the s t u d e n t ' s overall grades and his letters of
l e c o n i m c n d a l i o n . T h e niosl important factors m the
financial awards decision were found to he tirade-.
in I h e s l u d e n l ' s overall grades and his letters ol
r e c o i n m e n d a l ion. The most import.ml factors in I he
financial awards decision were found to be grades in
tin- s t u d e u l ' s niii|oi followed hy letters ol recommendation
As (he proporiioil ol S I grades increase on ,,
s i m l e n i ' s iransi-ripl, S(i'; ol I lit- dcp.in m e n u rc[Kirled that i h e \ rely more heavih on standardized
lesl scores in making admission-, (I.TIM.IIIS, f o r i he
fill;inci.il awards decision, recomnieildal ion I d l e r s
followed hy lesl scores and Mien "he 1 ( u.ihl\ ol the
u n d e r g r a d u a t e school ol ihe applicant are ranked
accordingly as Ihe niosl i m p o r l a n t .
More than 2 5 ' , of S/U grades on ,,n a p p l i c a n t ' s
iranscripl is likely l o have a negative effect on an
admission decision. An even m o r e serioti.s problem is
presented by i h e sludent will) S/U in he. ma|or.
According to lie- report, ,i sludent with 25 ol his
major's grades as SfV causes 5 5 ' . of t h e dcparl
m e n u l o respond negatively. If a sludent had l\'A%
of bis major guided S/U, 7 ti"r of Ihe graduate
d e p a r t m e n t s here stated that il would have a
negative effect on his a p p l i c a t i o n , Regarding overall
grades, 6 2 % of ihe d e p a r t m e n t s indicate that 2 5 %
S/U has n o effect, but as m u c h as XV" S/U has 5 6 %
of the dcparl menls r e a d i n g negatively a c c o r d i n g t o
Volkwein's (allies. 5 5 " ; of ihe programs r e s p o n d i n g
staled thai c o m p l e t e S/U grades in i h e freshman or
s o p h o m o r e years, like the current program here,
would have n o e f f e c l on Ihe admission decision, and
17'V indicated that it would have a negative effect,
financial awards decisions are likely to he negatively effected if an applicant has more than 2 5 % of
his grades as S/U, a n d S/U grades in his major are
even more likely In have a d e t r i m e n t a l effect. When
the first l wo years of u n d e r g r a d u a t e s i u d y are S/U,
a lino si half of t he programs mdicale t hat such
grades have n o effect o n t he financial award
decision, hul 5 1'. indicate a negative effect,
Along wilh live s t a n d a r d i z e d answers requested hy
Volkwein's si u d y . several d e p a r t m e n t s sub mi I ted
written responses. O n e d c p a r t n i e n l official s l a t e d , "
. we place greal i m p o r t a n c e on t h e grade point
average a n d would he seriously h a m p e r e d in o u r
evaluations by t h e absence of letter or numerical
grades, I feel certain lhal we would tend t o by-pass
students having S/[^ grades in I'aVor of those whose
credentials m o r e readily lend themselves to interpretation " Anolliei SUNYA graduate d e p a r l i n e n l
repn-senlal ivc responded Ihiisly," .In processing admissions we will noi hoi her wilh I hose w h o pieseii I
all or , substantial .n
mi of N/U. T h e pool ol
those w h o run presenl evidence of ability is l o o
large ' Anolhei
(lop,
lent respondent
slated,
"The elT.-cl ol S/U' grades oil consider;! I I on of
gradual*- ippllcatloiis is that we have one less basis
land an inlporlaiit o n e ) lor evaluation Tills die d ! . i r 11 \ increase., || l { . signit'ic.un
1' Ihe remaining
credentials. Pol eiiliall.V, it would place far l o o much
we,gin on UKK s c o r e s " T w o o t h e r SUNYA
graduate d e p a r t m e n t at I missions representatives tell
S U grading Was a mistake jw^ one .si at ed,".,.( ienei.dU we will noi admit s t u d e n t s w h o have ^/V
grades in any courses except athletics and arts and
'•rafts. Pass Mail transcripts are esseti Dally worthless
for imlgmenls aboul g r a d u a t e stiiilcnl admissions , l
"a junk automobile weighing 3600 pounds could yield . . . 2500 pounds of steel,
500 pounds of cast iron, 32 pounds of copper, 51 pounds of aluminum . . ."
Even trash paper has recycling value.
benjamin
"Junk" Continued from page 14
Thrown away each year in city d u m p s is
25,000 ions of (in in luv-coated steel cans,
which is equivalent l o I he a m o u n t of tin salvaged from all other s e c o n d a r y sources. These
are just a few o p p o r t u n t l ies
T h e Department of the Interior's Bureau of
Mines has always considered waste p r o d u c t s and
scrap generated by the mineral and metals industry and t lie c o n s u m i n g public .is potential
resources. In the business of reclaiming values
from metal and m i n e r a l based b y - p r o d u c t s for over 110 years, the bureau lias been a pioneer in
I lie field of s e c o n d a r y metals recovery and solid
waste research.
Another problem t o which the b u r e a u ' s Salt
Lake City, lit all, research center has been devoting a considerable research effort
is junk
car . AI thou i>h discarded a u t o h u l k s c o n s t i t u t e
only it small tract ion of (he waste disposal
problem in terms of t o n n a g e , they are higher in
metal values than most waste materials.
As ,1 resull of recent research by the b u r e a u ,
pracl ical mid e c o n o m i c m e t h o d s have been de-
veloped
for dismantling junk a u t o m o b i l e s t o
p r o d u c e high -quality scrap. All c o m p o n e n t s of
I ii scrap a u t o m o b i l e s procured from auto-wrecking yards, scrap processors, a n d insurance sal
vagi' firms - cars m a n u f a c t u r e d b e t w e e n 19ft1
and 111 (If) - were dismanl led, separated into various
components,
and analyzed.
Alternative
means and m e t h o d s of si ripping a n d dismanl ling
I he cars were e m p l o y e d t o d e t e r m i n e t h e fastest
and most practical technique, Derived from I hi'
information o b t a i n e d , a representative junk a u t o
mobile weighing 11600 lb could yield approximately 2500 lb of steel, 5 0 0 lb of cast iron,
;12 lb' of c o p p e r , 5 1 lb of zinc, 51 lb ol' alum i n u m , and 20 lb of lead . The.s remaining 100
lb consisted of noumelallics
In a cooperative effort
with
the Wasaleh
Metal and Salvage Co (Salt Lake City, Utah),
the bureau developed, c o n s t r u c t e d , and is preienl ly operating a pracl ical, smokeletifc pink car
incinerator. 11 is relal ively inexpensive and can
efficiently process as many as HO cars MI an
eight-hour period
Also, the c o m b u s t i o n gases
an' smokeless and meet or exceed most clean
air standards.
T h e new incinerator's principle aU ruction is its
$22,000 construction
cost
(roughly
one-tenth
the cost of smokeless models now commercially
available | .mil , relatively low operat ing cos! of
about $2 per car T h e mcineraloi has stimulated Wide internal a m o n g scrap processors whose
open-air burning pi act ices are being increasingly
restricted. Al least nine scrap car processors are
c o n s t r u c t i n g a u t o incinerators which are based
on the bureau design
T h e bureau has also been active in reclaiming
values from mining, metallurgical, chemical, and
industrial processing o p e r a t i o n s This work not
only includes salvage and reuse, but also stabilizing nonusable mineral waste,
West Virginia University, u n d e r a bureau giant,
developed a process p r o d u c i n g rock wool insulation from coal ash slag, a waste product from
coal fired
central
power
plants.
Commercially
competitive structural c o n c r e t e blocks also have
hi
fabricated from the power plant fly ash.
Processes have been developed hy bureau sci
enl isls to convert asbestos mining waste, phosphorus furnace slags, and mine ami mill tailings
into raw materials lor inanufacl ure of wall t lie
and bricks
The bureau is working on recovering and reusing Waste materials thai are being elected 111
t he slack gases generated by the minerals and
metal industries during smelting and chemical
processing. Good progress is heme, made by removing these wasieniiilerials m a form thai will
permit then recycling and reuse
l! is not inconceivable thai the present-day
mine
tailing d u m p s , municipal landfills, and
pink car graveyards may be looked upon in Ihe
I ui ure ,ih "man-in.uic m i n e s " loi mi nerals whose
natural ores have heen depleted or remain in
deposits thai can be mined only al grealei cost
I ban required lor recycling waste. T h e Bureau
of Mines considers solid waste as resources mil
ol place
and is simply trying In put il back
where il belongs.
Inside the ASP
S/U No Good...
AlthiiUKll S l ' N Y A
has ri'i|lnri'tl
S.l1 unicli'!, fur .ill IVi-shmrn and
suplliuimrrs. il li'l'rnl KlU(f.V I''
vi'iili'd 111 HI 111'' ( >i."lu.iL> S c h o o l s
luw I.Mik Iras I'nviiritbly <
ppli
run IK Willi S/U Kiiulcs Ulan those
whii wi'ii' urailfd A Iv Si'i' (ralji' I
Gay Marriage...
The firs I "legally m a r r i e d " gay
couple spoke here Kriday m,.|,,
Jack Maker and Mike McOonnel
wen- married by a Methodist, mini
s(er, hul a court has n o w in
validated Uic marriage. They plan
lo take their case to t h e S u p r e m e
Court, siucy Bakei is in favor ol
giving homosexual couples ihe
same privileges as hclerosex llal
couples lie wants Ihe S u p r e m e
Court to legalize lioinosexiial miir
nage, See page 2
[New Registration ?
Alter long, heated d e b a t e , ('en
hill Council passed a resolution
Thursday nighl urging the a d m u u
st ration to make pre-registial ion
for upper classmen Tile p r o b l e m
seems lo he thai juniors and se
Uiois have hern closed out of
courses they need for graduation
In his president's report, Mike
l.ampcrl explained i h e Kxeciltive
Senate ConimilU'e's proposed cal
e n d a r lor neM > ear See page .1
The Latest War...
The Indian Army is pressing
ground attack in both Kasl and
West Pakistan, a n d Pakistani war
planes have struck al Indian air
fields India has ol finally recog
m / e d Hangla Dcsli, and Pakistan
has formally broken relations wilh
New Delhi See page 5
Alumni To Help...
As s l a t e e d u c a t i o n funds shrink,
the role of S U N Y A ' S Alumni Associal ion must grow larger, T h e
Alumni Association's Hoard of Directors has formed a steering c o m
m i l l e r lo set up an alumni fund
which m a y help lo lake Ihe hurl
on I of ihe budget squeeze See
page 1 I.
A Ton of Paper...
First Victory...
T h e (lym was p a c k e d and (he
final score was close in S a t u r d a y ' s
h o m e game against S t o n y Brook,
I m p o r t a n t in ihe game was ,\l
hany \ lough defense and S t o n y
Brook's poor foul shooting See
page 'l
T h e Kn vi ion men la I Koruin has
been active in many ecology p r o
lects recently, >HM\ Ihe luteal in
volve.s waste
paper
recycling
Waste paper c o n s t i t u t e s almost
one half of all trash, and they
claim lhal SUNYA generates a ton
of waste paper a day This semes
ler three s t u d e n t s h a w formulated
a way of eliminating this waste
See page I 2
Viva Latin Weekend!
—see centerfold
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