ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

advertisement
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25,1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 16
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
Vol. LIX No 3
State University of New York at Albany
—-»
Friday, January 28, 1972
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"It
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/ ' / ) ( ' CIICIIIV
Kill people,
is IIOl
li'hu shall we lire with
The enemy's
iiiinii' is
'lite
IUIIIIC is iu>
CIICIIIV'S
'i
*****;
i'
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i'J
V&J,.
pCOJ'lc
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then'
"n<^<"r «e
cruelty
conscience
It's IUIIIIC is hatred; It's name is
It jt a group of plhintoms
" r * " >
bitterness
lite enemy wears ii coiit of doctrine
The enemy wears the lalsc front oj freedom
It wears a deceiving
appearance
It sifts our worth
People, oh people have compassion
for the weak
People, oh people have compassion jor the innocent
Have compassion
lor the sellouts
Have compassion
for the cheats
Have compassion
for those who pity us
The enemy's name is unjust
accusation
'The enemy's name is ignorance
It's name is ambition
It's name is jealousy
It's name is jealous
hatred
The enemy is no stranger
It lies here, inside each one
»y
IM•ir
*
'The enemy is ilcsiriug eyes
The enemy is an arrogant head
In it lonely head
In a narrow mind
In the dream oj conquering
People, oh people love people
People, oh people love people
Love people
forever
Love people night and day
Love people as hand in hand
4
M
*'i4
V
"I
""I
'•*
«»aj
is not people
Kill people,
who will tee live with
^
The enemy is no stranger
It lies here i nside each one oj us
'Cf,
CHILDREN'S
SONG
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S/U: IS IT SATISFACTORY?
an in-depth examination....see page 5
several views....see page 8
PAGE 2
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Board of Regents
Propose Tuition Hike
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Assembly Receives Resolution
To Impeach Rockefeller
by H o w a r d Clark
A s s o c i a t e d Press W r i t e r
Albany,
NY
(AP)-The
State
Board
of
suggested W e d n e s d a y an increase in State
Regents
University
by Vicki Zeldin
Capital Correspondant
t u i t i o n b u t w o u l d n o t s a y h o w m u c h o f a n increase
s h o u l d be c o n s i d e r e d .
"That's
up
to
the
State
Universtiy
Board
PAGE 3
Eve was a m e m b e r o f t h e 6 m a n
Attica
of
T r u s t e e s , " said Joseph M c G o v e r n , c h a n c e l l o r o f the
Regents, governing
body
of education
" W e have a d o p t e d a general
The
policy
plan
for higher
as a s t a t e w i d e
education—public
t o increased
and private
tuition
ment
finance
E n d t o Free
end to
University
t h e free
of
New
York.
Buffalo
at the C i t y
no tuition
T h e Regents
would
figure
was
recommended.
City
U n i v e r s i t y ' s p o l i c y o f a d m i t t i n g all high school
retain the
tuition
colleges.
would
No
The tuition
be l o w e r
that
for juniors
on
a
Janet Hood, director of SUNYA Health Service.
sliding
ability
scale
according
to
attending a
p u b l i c c o l l e g e , a n d u p t o $ 1 5 0 0 a y e a r f o r ;i n e e d y
t o a t t e n d a private college
Retention
institution.
of
the City
This
University
differs
recommend aI ion
I hat
from
I he
into Ihi- Slide Uiuversjly
as a s e p a r a t e
Gov
liy Tracy Egun
Rockefeller's
universtiy
be
•1,111,•!
I
.Some C h a g r i n e d l i y P r o p o s a l
"Ideally."
11
Stale
Nyquisl
Regents
Pel
Education
said
in
meeting,
.,
Commissioner
IM-WS
'there
conference
should'!
we have t o be realistic
needs
that
of
t h e college?.,
,III individual
after
lie any
one can in.ike
Ihe
rationale
This
concept
the
d i d not
and Kenneth
policy
gents.
B
statement
They
were
recommendation
approved
particularly
to drop
Regeuls
by
chagrined
"This
>r
Anil
He
wr
the
lleavily
they
said
in a jt*in|
Miirijuaw
statement
'
B
psychedi'lu-s
and
" " ' ' - o i n ' e n i e d . it is
I real a c u t e s y m p t o m s
"
pat it>u is
position,"
n»
I'M
''"
'"""' 'I'"1"
•'
Will,
those
who
pruhli'ins
p o l i c y in
'
as
'
"
|>nssll)l,.
the ('u y I 'nivi-rsil y.
read b y R u b i n
»"'
f'-w
use
P^VC,
,c
s
•"i-tr'^T^ "
in t h e m e e t i n g , " w i l l b e c o n s t r u e d as
yet a n o t h e r instance o f e n c o u r a g i n g higher
Aslterl i f any p u n i t i v e
expeeta
l i o n s a m o n g o u r p o o r a n d d i a d v a n l a g e d and almost
were
•d I h e n e g a t i v e . " Y o u d o n ' t
.
i " n iiiMii
h
t h r o w s o m e b o d y o u i o f school for
a h a d l , S | ) t r i p . " She f i n d s , h o w
McGovern
and
Nyijuisl
said
I be
extension
of
scholar i n c e n t i v e p a y m e n t s t o students w h o plan t o
allend
Ihe
private
colleges
f i s c a l l y pressed
University
would
private
channel
money
institutions
into
The
Stale
is r u n n i n g o u t o f s p a c e , t h e y s a i d ,
while
enrollment
colleges
of 250,000
University
The
private
n o w al
y e a r a n d is s c h e d u l e d
f u l l t i m e students, the Stale
greatest
U n i v e r s i t y UO.IIOO
University
is $ : . 5 n a
t o rise t o $ 7 0 0 i n Hie f a l l o f
T h e average l u i l i o n
al p r i v a t e c o l l e g e s i n I h e
s l a t e is $ 2 1 0 0 a y e a r
"There
inenls,
would
some
some
accoUfitabili!y
requirements,"
lor
who
alioul
question
going
believes
require
Ihe private
lhal
for
drug
o n e o f the
users is l h a l " a s far as i l l e g a l d r u g s
,tn-
concerned
what
come
lliey
they
are
never
which
lo
p a I i e ii I
gel. Therefore.
he
Tin'
12 p a g e
position
colleges
with
eouraged
" t o combine
small
i n s t i t u t i o n s , so t h e y
operating
paper
noted
enrollments
thai
would
private
he
en
o r seek a f f i l i a t i o n w i t h larger
m a y be a b l e t o i n c r e a s e
effectiveness."
Under
q u i s l refused (o n a m e Ihe colleges
questioning,
their
Ny
According
mosl
from
No Do/,
ly
taking
Hood,
rvi<
Hood
each
cited
others
'„
Que
15 .
" „elub
- *" — • - * •
into
methadone
Hood
long
said
term
of
elurn
t h e absence o f a
rehabilitation
only
program
but
for
•hide,]
is
lleailll
n a t u r e N<
the individual
who
S
" " ;
'-"
as
' » > " seventl,
„f
.September,
'" "«'»""t -V-l.th u,,„le
years a M i l n e T h e , ,
"I"'"
" " " "
college,
Schwarl/.bach
currenl
medica»r
roommates
" ' Z
The
University
pusals
furs
lor
Umversilv
new
versily
Senate
session
Ih.s'pas!
A l
< iovernanoe
sei
forth
hv laws
Communiiv
met
in
s
pro
for
Ihe
IJJ7Si,
'"'
:;,'"
V
(.7.1,
to linisb
-I< h l u l ,
"They
,,,',.,1 s o n
school
,o
the
the a i n o u n i
a
special
l h r
t u His
A . I i n m i s l rat i o n
complete
euiitrnl
Umvershy.
nsoflhe
I of the Student Activities Assessment fori
the Spring Semester ore now available in!
rials. T h e y espeel
« • • * . „„,«„,,
l
1
,n,,i
U
'Uiv.iiM e d p l a c e m e n
,
2
courses
2
,
•
•"•
•
V
'' " ' >' " " " l " l l l s
will
be
' ' " M ' , , " " l - " " " l " ' " - a s W , ' l l . , , Milne
" ' " " P l ' l y l o r I h e p o s i l . o n s T h e s i , I t W,ll
' " ' ^ M.lne laeul, '
"'"vers,!,
delegate
y
i
J Z :
,,
purtmenu
„
'
with
mind,
in
making
the
Senate
were
The
Ihe
the
faculty
because
gov
h
Ihe
,,
,.
..
Univ. C o m m u n i t y
government,
•
1.
"J'he r e p o r t
Commission
said,
.»
, .
Represented
therefore
was a p e r s o n a l
l'»ld
'-'"m
injustice
any
lo w,lh
m.-mber
of
the
Universjly c o m m u n i t y the human,
deeenl,
«f
, l
"'
his v o i c e
disposition
which
, l
and democratic
having
l l r
ol
prmlege
recko
I ,n
mailers
l*«s a c o n s i d e r j i h l e
'»^'
To
have
,.o
in
voice
,l
hostages
Ihe
upon
[
•
h.ivr
Jcuikul
' ' " ' l l l i ' l ' i I " •"' I ' l i v i ' l u p i ' W i l l i
lb.- SI.il.-
for
implored
.11...
(ivi'i
"either
here
©
3.
are
of
this
J
all people
Ihe
Majority
backed
•edited
I he
lhal
leader
Kve,
-while
he
hy
serious,
Kings
will
and
mi
t h e earn pus
to
1 !I70. ('rime
reported
crimes
out
II.-r
«
D l U m i l Z l l l 11)11
J
111.' liiiijiiisi-il h v l.lW.s, " I n p r m - u l f
•
i.„
ever
future
element"
Predictor,
Hi.u k a n i l
vvliilr
|iu l i n e s
oiily,
pU-asi-.
i»
l , v
I'll) II 'VIM. Ill III
I»II-II,-I|I.,II,„,
,,f
II,MI
| | S M-VC r;il ( ' u l l l l i - l K ,.M.I
*''"
Hi.- I l i s l , , , ,
I'le,ise
slleil.
ill i n I s i i l i n n i
lliu.se ili.u
iniglil
i;el n s
•
d e l ! fu-in in as sunn as |)iissilile...('l'lie suunei
V i m i l " . ' l i e b e l l e i I lie i liani e ol i;el I iiij. i n . )
' « " ' » . " . ' " / . ' . i l l / / linn
S'/iuiliiiiiv ,(/
•
—
7 Jilt,
The
battle
Albany
campus
Slaters!
for
l i t 71
TORCH- "WeVe here to serve"
w ,„
,.,„,.,, .1
!>-'WiM K I I I I I W . , , , , 1 .
Di'p.MlliH'iil
I I , . ,,,-
1
l" ''' " " > ' H " ' < ' " H I I I I I I | I I T . H I N O I H
residents can expect
Thai
works
t h e meager
Awarding
#
l o a crime per
Oui
wilh Mr Kill n wi Hid
couuter-effoiis
of Security
cussiou by Ihe Senate.
In
when
December,
found
Security
M7 d o o r s u n l o c k e d , h u l i b i s f i g u r e s h o u l d b e
crooks
have
been
changing,
larceny
t o o , in
year
Kepurled
nviscbief
W h y t h a i d e c r e a s e ? W e l l , o n l y t w o e x p l a n a t i o n s are p o s s i b l e :
Mm |>tg l i m e
crime
g r a n d l a r c e n y a n d assault
is t o o i n t i m i d a t i n g o r t h e c r i m i n a l e l e m e n t
of character change
underwent
I n v i e w o f S e c u r i t y ' s arrest
some
and conviction
r e c o r d , I'd say i h e c a m p u s c r o o k has b e c o m e a n i c e r g u y | g i r l ? I
The
campus
apparently
crook
Homh
also
enjoyed
much
threats for December
lu's ahead
clever c r o o k
economic
lor
many
creeps
sense
I can safely
Of
predicl
lhal
that
I'uiure''
rapidly
type
will
hall
Ihe crime
unlocked
So w h a t
flood
suite
N o w , it's simple
the " h o t " goods
increase
even after
Kairhall
ASP Crime Reporter
cease
market,
Too
forcing
t y p e o f c r i m e u n p r o f i t a b l e , l-'or t h i s r e a s o n ,
can be d o n e t o p r o l e c l
I n Peace,
campus
I h e rise i n t h i s t y p e o f c r i m e w i l l l e v e l o f f b y
frisk a l l v i s i t o r s t o y o u r suite
John
mentioned,
in Security's effectiveness
Hut 1 hi- A S P C o m p i l l e r
"ABSURD
would
Predictor
"
y o u a n d y o u r v a l u a b l e s ' ' I'd say g e l
a guard d o g , c h a i n y o u r d o o r , learn j u d o , curr>
mosquito
success,
1 I. hut this
( B o m b threats f o r
will eventually
labeled i h e chances l o r S e c u r i t y ' s i m p r o v e m e n t
yourself
academic
week
As already
of crime
course, d r a m a t i c i m p r o v e m e n t
lo
more
of 7 0 numbered
T h e t y p i c a l c r i m e is o n e w h e r e a
someone's
this
T V ' s a n d stereos
prices d o w n , m a k i n g
ihe
very
into
that
w i l l he
dis
t h e last
i i i c r e a s e t l s u h s l a i l l l a l l y , as d i d r e p o r t s o f
declined
pesly
final
crooks
criiuui.il
serve
lor
O u r resident
Li"> p o i n t s f o r a c r i m e , o n e l o r a p a r k i n g l i c k e l a n d t w o
hurglanes and pell>
I Hi''' tins wi.uiii iii.ii,,. ii„.
*"";"'• " el.,.s..(| ,„ l . i ,„i / „,|„, 1 , i | „ .
again
oul
H] 67
increase.
to
I"' l u l n l l y slul'IVi) l i y Si'iuiiur.s II,
submitted
for a
hat t i e .
compared
\W2
The proposed document
[
floor
1 2 6 2 last y e a r , a rise o f
w a s w o n i n D e c e r n her
c o m e s hack s t r o n g e r t h a n ever
0
1
ihe
thai a
governor
f o r 7(i r e p o r l e d c r i m e s , an o u l s l a n d i n g achieverneiii
What
••
..hi...-
*• euuw Scimhin, wnulil In' IIIIIUIIIIII
m MIU IIIPIIIM'IVI.I, A slum v , , i , . ,,f
ll"' S.'il,,!,. „|,,, w ,.,| „i l i i i ' . ' l n t ' i i l
"
reach
ihe
l i l K l , a s s u m i n g a '2D'"- y e a r l y
the year, h o w e v e r , d o u b l e d , rising l o 77 I
•
3
impeach
has w o n t h e latest
year I h e n - was u o i a single call d u r i n g e x a m
liL' i i - u i r i R ' i ' l ,
obviously
accounted
kind
Aimtlirr
are
l a k e n h g h l l y . s i n c e ii s o b v i o u s o t u c a m p u s c r o o k s d i d m u c h h e l l e r i n
I I I . ' r.-|>r."...|ll.ili..ii
il WII.S DiiKlcqUiilc
( '<
. H' ,I I„InI Im
I I I, ,l,l, „' s„ .
Kve
has s k y r o c k e t e d i n r e c e n l y e a r s a n d , a c c o r d i n g
for I h e years
also r e p o r t s l l i e y
miM'il HII
no
Vole
reported crimes totaled
the ASP C o m p u t e r
Security
•
had
the
"criminal
reports lhal
1:0''; o v e r
ill' Hi.- in.ii I.M.-limi; | i r o l W s l u l l i i l . s .
••
office
il a p p e a r s u n l i k e l y
to
Irai'lmit! pnifcsMoiml), m lln' Sfii
' H" I S
^ .
totally
Uesidents:
Yes,
.s.i.vi'il! lli.il
Yuii .iin'l m ' l l i n u |i.ml D I c u - i l i i , Inn (lit- pis w i l l
w h e n M r . Kve
LATEST SECURITY REPORT:
Dear
•
n
in
and
While i h e charges a n d allegations
move
Governor,
seen
hut we do not
Governor's
made
d i a l e d e q u a l l y . " he said
Assembly
was
s t a t e m e n t o n Kve's r e s o l u t i o n .
stale
must
what
.1 w a s t h e r e
The
We
all
and
in
He claimed
"difference
llusealegoo
' .S'.S'.S'-/.
•
for
system
"show
lhal
Kve..."
not
with
agree..."
,l|,. ;„i(|
r
6.
to
Committee
accordance
was a
there,
5
8
5.
was
James
'
J imiimil), m,i |,:ii.,.||,„l(, s|i»iiiii n..i
4.
heard
u s . " Eve
I he s t a l e
government
.If
l o exist,
Ion
my
opinion
or
the
he was
Assemblyman
Observer
there
g
•
•
•
lhal
studying
" . . m y silence s h o u l d
relied
conduct
wil h
was
t h a t a l l I h e f a c t s w i l l be
Attica
ll.lllH' a m i
l l
2.
the
called
document
he
w h o was also a m e m b e r o f
staled,
danger-
to
the Assembly
a
•
m.'.ii,',-
chamber
thai
for a l o w a w a y , t h e c a m p u s c r o o k s w i n I'.MHJlo 1 (i!HI p o i n t s
I'rillV.sMollrll
Alluiiy.
I'.llll'll
was a most
Assemblyman
people
people
cars
Ihniy
a n d seven p e r
I'mv.'iMlv
.il
thai
slops
to
to
o n t o say t h a t he
incidents a n d that
Kmery
Ins c h a r g e s , " H e s l a t e d , " t h e
buck
Stan-
Kingston
stated
Republican
was m i l i n f o r m e d
lo
to
Seen c i t y r e p o r t s I h e y gave o i l I H i H i t r a f f i c t i c k e t s a n d t o w e d a w a y 2'J.
s l l l d e i l l s , seven p e r
si.,11,
He accused
l l l l O I H ' 11II 111 111-1 . . M i l l ItNlVT I I I l i l t . ' 1 ' h V l ' l u j H ' DM I l i t '
( I ."M' . I" ". l' l (( ( (
y.illl
faculty,
professional staff
IJ.II.-I
M O D I - . - , H I . - I'n-Mili-i
g
•
rent
t w o per cent
J
"•
Administration,
per
leader
Assemblyman
hearing
(iru\
made
his s t a t e m e n t s in regard
Atlica
had been killed a n d t h a t
Ihe
his re-
leader
asked
commissions..."
to kill
his
black
been
minority
and went
tic
ous o n e
Watch
in
inmisii}
per cent
not
al A t -
that
".satisfied w i t h t h e i n t e g r i t y o f t h e
Ihe Gov-
because
situation
for the
resident
representation
" ' Semite will be approximalely
ly nine
that
"expendable,"
Security
i„
Kve,
charger!
plotted
Committee.
committee
stated
Sleingut
clarify
funds
the integrity o f Assemb-
looked into.,."
n,
hi. KIICII i n o i l i n n i
' " •'•"•K'*' l o s u n n m .
All segments of the Universiiv
h
"ll
the
had
"satisfied
siu'ineri l o I h e C o m m i s s i o n l h a l il
T h e proposed
the
by
in
ley
the state o f a l l o w i n g legislators l o
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continued,
w i l l lie r e p r e s e n t e d
Senate.
A.vMii-iiiluin
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taking
medicine
M
<lis.',,.,„„„,,,|
;'"'
Student Association Office by February 14th
hv N e i l
lacully's
" ' " » " • • » - ' . " o l y e a r w i l l see „ e
plot
govern-
Kingston
Observer
hi>
Eve was o n
to collect
him and the other members o f the
havc
arotn.
hy Vicki (imilifli
""' .
diabolic
mosl
i n Ihe annals o f
invihe
live
t h e m . I t isa p u b l i c t
health prol
l e m , a n d n o r e p o r t i n g is niadi i.
police authorities "
7th and 8th Grades Cut To
Aid Experimental College
"
had actually
and
statement,
Assembly
in
and
r a n f o r s o m e '2.U m i n -
Kve i n t i m a t e d
had
were
advantage
h a c k e d Eve's spirit. T h e d e m o c r a -
emotionally
that
people
o f men w h o died
marks
f o r I-his al t h e
utes.
Hie
Commission
.''*"
the
lies
rebellion
ernor
Governor
this
families
and...used
force..."
the
unnec
U. Senate Convenes To Discuss
New University By-Laws
n
*"'"' '
those
and
deadly
human
Committee
Ihe
He sta-
too many
attempts
been
with un-
force
down
his
The
o f a serious
for
that
"devised
Buffalo Democratic Assemblyman Arthur Eve called for the
impeachment of Governor Nelson Rockefeller at the Assembly. Eve
claimed that the Governor had "devised the most diabolic plot and
lies in the annals of government."
..fxitskowslii
affected
problem
on campus, " W e cannot rehahilit a l e o n c a m p u s . It m u s t be d o n e
in a c l o s e d s i t u a t i o n . "
",'
Applications must be returned to the
'". '
"Basically,"
Moo,
"vvc stress that
tins
main-
In
the
and statements."
At
resolution
"armed
responsibility
speech
Observer
were
lot
was
rhetoric
that
"a
what
heated
tica.
dealy
that
less
lyman Kve."
police
say
h i s feet t e l l i n g t h e A s s e m b l y o f h i s
Governor's feel.
for
to
o n t h e b a c k s o f 1,'J d e a d m e n . "
offi-
had
governor
was
and
m o r e t i m e i n w h i c h l o a t t e m p t an
Attica
by prison
the
t r y i n g t o gain " p o l i t i c a l
all Ihe stories
inmates
on
"impune
laid
o f the
of
Ilia'
described
turned
advocate."
needed
ted
the stale, l i e
Assemblyman's
orderly and peaceful resolution o f
di'slrucl ion
the
receive
had
to
man of compassion," and
went o n t o c l a i m that t h e m i l i t a r y
put l i n g
of
Committee
lies," in
that
"a
went
"They
did not
made
unnecessary
refused a
and others
Observer
claimed
lo ihe uin
'
legislature
govern-
viscioits
from
against
necessary
s i at e .
members
Kingston
as
t h a t his c o m m i t t e e was
charges
The
E v e w a s a m e m b e r o f t h e (J m a n
ampu
' " " " " "
ilitation students
|,
tenence programs.
one example.
!
I „ r 5 days
i
patients
d r u g p r o b l e m s re
is misuse o f
A.',.,,: ,,.,.,,.
from
had
his charge
Attica
Committee,
"mediator
plot
substantiated,
lives..."
nsl d i
tZZ\
i n Hie 10
si udents
for
mile,,
Mouse
t y p e drugs t o o frequent-
Another
tion
lo
common
s i i 11 s
" " Z ,
" " ' " » M area , „ • in A l b a n y O n e
such
p r o e i a m is r u n b y H o n e
l rea I ed
years she lias b e e n here o n e o f t h e
colleges
kills - T h e
Io
willfully
request
essary
en,I,,
l' " l
e no information
,„„ , ,
, ,
" ' " " ^ " " "
I he
b i l l he said he b e l i e v e d
could qualify.
pnvale
relnibilil ..linn
, , r v di'eplv
v
,'
,j
„,
and
Rockefeller's
mi
to
treatment
cials
Coriw
rebellion."
the crisis a n d prevent
111 • -111; IC11
T h e n p a t i e n t s a r e assisted i l l e n t e r iil(! a r e h a b l l i t a l i o u
program in
im
symplomatically
mosl
narcotic addicts
arc t a k i n g
is act u a l l y
must
I
eoiilideniinl and , „ - , / „ , ' ' ' i , ' " " ! "\,
h W p these
many
colleges t o p a r t i c i p a t e in the p r o g r a m , N y q u i s l said.
lll.il
•«
lidded " W I
know
taking.,
in a n d say t h e y
possible
"non-punitive
"I
the
•"« — ••"•"«"....«« siimeii.-iv,'.',;,:'
l l c i l l l W i l l i UN l l n s r u m p u s , I I , , n i l
e x p l a i n e d I h u l I h e h e u l l l i s e r v i c e is
'»
citing
went
Attica
their
p r o b l e m s in t r e a t i n g d r u g
mescaline,
be
fiscal
paranoid
Hood
the State
the stale
those
Hood
o w n b e h a v i o r are m o s l l i a b l e l o be
h a v e an
'J 15,011(1 a n d I h e C i t y
luilion
l!)7.'i
in
ever,
o n d r u g users,
help
I h e e n r o l l m e n t s a r e d r o p p i n g al p r i v a t e c o l l e g e s
Ctirrenlly.
taken
measures
immediately
frustrating those expectations
inmate
us b e l i e v e
from
diabolic
continued,
led l o b e l i e v e
w i l h Ihe
Attica
He
Observer
and
Governor
in the annals o f
contended
was " w r o n j i a n d
the
"...Rockefeller
T h e y d o well .,,•.,,le,„„-.,,,
,,re
, | M , s , , v , ,- I
mlirniat-y is prepared i „ de-tnxit'v
r
111,11 I l i u m
from
about
(In- free l u i l i o n
•,
||V ;
IA
•"""
M a x .1
the other
I'l
1
Hi
sliiilenls
' " l"'r;.""
' " ' " " • " " " • '"">• \''»T
Die m l i r m n r y has seen 15 cases
• *'"•" " t " "
,•,,„,.
III' IIIJllHlt'tl
o f a college
w h o dissented
u
mi
\"sli'i-.l.,y
I"
'"
»y
Wil
m \
ImihlrmK
"As
persuade
Clark,
'I'llill
•il'li'i-
I"-'"
luilion
financial
e d u c a t i o n s h o u l d p a y p a r t Ills c o s t s
Rubin
IMTKMIl.
|)r.
hud never seen s t u d e n t s i i i l i h r l e i l
H „ „ ( | i , ., v ,.,.
•>»
Willi
I lie
the
the benefit
impi
Kwald
Besides
gelling
U n t i l this yi'nr Ihe health service
absorbed
system
for the govern-
t o go t o A t t i c a d u r i n g I h e
direct
lies
fair
on ihe grounds
connection
of
Facility
tion
most
i n m a t e s at
t i m e o f the rebellion, the resolu-
SUNYA Infirmary Offers
Short Term Drug Treatment
tin
t o pay. T h e stale w o u l d pay pari
or all o f t h e t u i t i o n o f a needy student
student
his c o n d u c t
refusal
figures were given.
student's
that
Specifically
and seniors.
—A greatly expanded program o f scholar incentive
payments
impeachment
for freshmen and sophomores
than
the
the
reference
Assemblyman
Eve, called
or's
tional
for undergraduates in public
that
"devised
ment."
by
Committee
claimed
and
Nelson
submitted
Democratic
handling
levels
a
made
unInsfuI...in
graduates w h o apply.
—Two
received
Governor
resolution,
Arthur
policy
Again
of
The
CUNY
tuition
has
Rockefeller.
col-
at the Stale
U n i v e r s i t y , t h e plan i n c l u d e d these e l e m e n t s :
—An
Assembly
r e s o l u t i o n c u l l i n g Tor t h e i m p e a c h -
policy."
was presented
leges. I n a d d i t i o n
The
in the state.
Observer
M A C K , and
T h e c n l e h i s , t h e c a m p u s c r o o k is l i k e a
D D T ( o r i n t h i s case, a g u a r d d o g
) In-
PAGE 4
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1<
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
News Briefs
PROF
FIRED!
T h e Soviet consul-general t o Dacca convoyed his
g o v e r n m e n t ' s decision t o Prime Minister Mujibur
R a h m a n in Tangail, w h e r e he was attending a
c e r e m o n y . President Nikolai V. Podgorny and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin telegraphed Sheik Mujib:
"We c o n v e y to y o u and to the people of Bangladesh
friendly wishes of peace, well-being and success in
c o n s o l i d a t i n g the s t a t e sovereignly of your c o u n t r y ,
in building a peaceful d e m o c r a t i c r e p u b l i c . "
All S t a t e University of New
York at Albany freshmen and
s o p h o m o r e s are graded "satisfact o r y " or " u n s a t i s f a c t o r y "
except...
Nixon's
Proposal
H O N G K O N G A P - R a d i o Hanoi indicated today
t h a t President N i x o n ' s Vietnam peace proposals are
n o t a c c e p t a b l e because they do n o t abandon the
V i e t n a m i z a t i o n p r o g r a m and d o n o t withdraw all
s u p p o r t from President Nguyen Van Thieu.
A l t h o u g h the N o r t h Vietnamese radio did n o t
reject the eight-point plan which Nixon said was
s u b m i t t e d to the C o m m u n i s t s in Paris three m o n t h s
ago, it said they c o n t a i n e d " n o t h i n g n e w , " Hanoi
called again for the United States to accept the
seven-point Viet Cong plan s u b m i t t e d to the Paris
peace talks last July.
election y e a r . "
W A S H I N G T O N AP
President Nixon told Con
gross T h u r s d a y he is d e t e r m i n e d to cut the nation's
u n e m p l o y m e n t rate significantly this year and to
d e e p e n his wage-price c o n t r o l system unlil reasonable price stability is at lainecl.
In his annual E c o n o m i c Report to Capitol Hill,
Nixon put his a d m i n i s t r a t i o n behind forecasts thai
I he jobless rate will d r o p from its present (>. I
percent to f) percent and thai the inflation rate will
subside l o 2 l o .'{ percent by yearend.
" T h e o u t l o o k is bright, but much remains to be
d o n e , " the President said, and the report prepared
by his Council of E c o n o m i c Advisers paralleled that
statement,
Police al Fresno (California)
Slate College I his week confirmed
to newsmen dial the police on the
public college campus keep a file
called the " k n o w n campus radicals" file. Included in the file are
between 200 and .'U)0 photos of
(lie so-called "known
campus
radicals." The photos show individuals on and off campus, participants in a Black Student Union
fashion show, and groups of more
than three people talking and
walking across the central California campus.
Douglas Bambridge, chief of
the campus police told radio
station KZAP-FM in Sacnmiento
that tin? file has been in existence
for a b o u t three years.
WASHINGTON
AP
- Several
relatives
of
American prisoners of war in Vietnam Wednesday
praised President N i x o n ' s peace proposals, calling
t h e m g e n e r o u s and positive. But there was s o m e
d o u b t voiced.
T h e n e x t move in efforts to end the war and win
release of POWs is up to N o r t h Vietnam and the
Viet Cong, agreed four leaders of the National
League of Families of American Prisoners and
Missing in S o u t h e a s t Asia.
State
POUGHKEEPSIE, N Y .
NEW Y O R K AP
A M a n h a t t a n lawyer is suing to
c o m p e l M a y o r J o h n V. Lindsay to refund his salary
for t i m e spend campaigning for the Democratic
presidential n o m i n a t i o n .
T h e lawyer, Churles T h o m a s , cited in .State Sup r e m e C o u r t Wednesday a City Charter section
s t a t i n g t h a t elected officials, e x c e p t councilman,
m u s t d e v o t e their " w h o l e t i m e to duties and shali
n o t engage in a n y o t h e r o c c u p a t i o n , profession or
employment."
Turning to the talks with Kissinger. N i x o n ' s adviser, the •.laleiin1!
continued: "In deciding to unilaterally make p u b l i c the r o n l r n l .• r ih
private meetings that his delegates p r o p o s e d and promised In kef
secrel, Mr. Nixon gave further proof that his udni inisl nil ion w.i ivr
easy to break e n g a g e m e n t s . "
On File
As Lo the secret talks themselves, tile s t a t e m e n t Weill on
' M
public sessions and the private meetings, t h r o u g h Ihe intern
the chief of flic U.S. delegation, and t h r o u g h Ihe U.S. I'
special adviser, Mr. Kissinger, (lie Nixon adniinislr.il
respond to two q u e s t i o n s f u n d a m e n t a l for Ihe ju.st an
peaceful settlement of the Vietnam p r o b l e m :
"I. II refused lo s t o p the Vietnamization of I In
pull
war,
from South Vietnam the totality of U.S. h o o p s
military personnel, a r m a m e n t s and war materials asmilila
well as llinse nl
the other foreign countries ill the U.S. c a m p , lo d i s m a n t l e UN
military bases ill S o u t h Vietnam, and to cease all air and naval
activities as well as other acts of war against the V i e t n a m e s e people in
both zones of Vietnam.
" 2 . It persisted in maintaining the g r o u p of N g u y e n Van Thieu .mil
refused to give up its c o m m i t m e n t to the latter. On the contrary, u
sought by every means to impose on the S o u t h V i e t n a m e s e people the
U.S. created Saigon p u p p e t regime, its so-called ' c o n s t i t u t i o n ' and its
'laws'."
The Viet Cong delegation in Paris said N i x o n ' s speech was "filled
with electoral p r o p a g a n d a . " The Viet Cong added in a slalemenl "ll
sought on one hand to conceal the policy of p r o l o n g a t i o n .mil
.•xtension of the war of aggression followed by his a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , and
on the other hand to c o n t i n u e to avoid a serious response In II"'
legitimate d e m a n d s of the S o u t h Vietnamese p e o p l e . "
The media is
I
H A R R I S U U R C . PA AP
n
conspiracy trial of the Ke P h i l
»U'«r a n t i w a r •iclivij
i
P
Barred
" ' " ' h " Kissinger, b o m b heat t u n n e l s u n d e r certain Wash
»"<l six mgton D C . , buildings, smuggle c o n t r a b a n d ,„ .mil
o u t of the federal prison, and raid dn.fl I
.1
otlices in various cities a r o u n d the nation
A group of .16 men and w o m e n , now sealed in the
i.«|.o»e secrecy on the p r o c e „ d i l : ; s t l 0 n " " * "
"nd
c o u r t r o o m , answer m o r e general q u e s t i o n s Iron, Ihe
J'«lge today before individual e x a m i n a t i o n by law
0nH<irm naftidMo
- ' h e jury
ctbnbega"
"
" d « y yers begins.
u,
v
h
8
n '
B m
nod
' ^
n
newsme,; f;„: r x ::,e ior *«*
v
mu
~t^
:;rerunu!'r
"' i - * - re
U nvoucanp
,ish alh ::!veZ ::^r'-''
L
! ?
,
>
l m
^ m e r a " • o u e s Z i, ,', ' m U " , U L ' " » v " i r " " « in
chambers. ^""""H
P"»P"CLm jurors secretly in
u
Herman said early public-ili™
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1972
by Vicki Zeldin
P A L O ALTO, CALIF. (CPS) In a six to two decision, the
Stanford
University
Advisory
Board has recommended dismissal
of Professor H. Bruce Franklin.
T h e Board unanimously convicted
Franklin of "inciting" people to
o c c u p y the University Computation Center during the invasion
of Laos last year.
btrkh. m, ay Mink, I'm rich. I'mwyrkh"
The Board found Franklin inn o c e n t of disrupting a speech
made by Henry Cabot Lodge at
Stanford last January, while convicting him of interfering with the
orderly dispersal of a crowd outside the Computation Center and
" i n c i t i n g " on the night of Feb. 10
last year.
The Advisory Board, in their
written decision, considered the
possibility of rehabilitation. "We
PARIS AP — The N o r t h Vietnamese have dismissed Preside!
are highly dubious whether reNixon's Indochina speech as a political d o c u m e n t and accused him i
habilitation is a useful concept in breaking a promise by disclosing t h a t H e n r y Kissinger held secrel lull
this case. Professor Franklin's with the Communist delegation t o the Paris p e a c e talks.
a n n o u n c e d convictions about the
This angry reaction by the N o r t h V i e t n a m e s e d e l e g a t i o n Wednesda
guilt of the university (concerning
to Nixon's address was preceded b y an u n f a v o r a b l e c o m m e n t by lit
u n i versity relations with
the North Vietnamese radio. It said t h e r e was " n o t h i n g n e w " in his pla
" m i I i ta ry-industrial
c o m p l e x " ) for setting a deadline for U.S. t r o o p w i t h d r a w a l and new Soul
appear deeply held, and his opVietnamese elections in return for the release of U.S. prisoners of win
position to the institution in its
Neither the s t a t e m e n t nor the North V i e t n a m e s e broadcasl rejeclci
present form seems implacable. Nixon's proposals, however.
Barring a dramatic change in perElsewhere, in the n o n - C o m m u n i s t world, r e a c t i o n t o Nixon s sj
ception he is unlikely to change
>eec|
his c o n d u c t , thus rehabilitation is Tuesday night generally was favorable, a l t h o u g h s o m e U.S. all I'S l|
Asia were cautious. There were expressions of h o p e thai the
likely to fail..."
i*in
would lead to settlement of the war.
Franklin responded to this by
A s t a t e m e n t by the North Vietnamese delegation to the peace
saying, " T h e y are absolutely cori.-ilk*
asserted Nixon made m o r e threats and this was a " b r a z e n rluilleivgi
rect. I will not become a 'liberal'
to the American people. Moreover, it a d d e d , his speech "testified i
fascist like t h e m . "
his perfidious maneuver to deceive the American e l e c t o r a t e in Ih
D A C C A AP — Soviet recognition of Bangladesh is
e x p e c t e d t o s p u r o t h e r nations to join the lineup,
and officials of t h e y o u n g nation expressed great
pleasure t o d a y at M o s c o w ' s move.
T h e latest saga of air piracy began at 6 : , 1 0 p m
Wednesday when Heinrick Von George, 45 and
jobless, c o m m a n d e e r e d u twin-engined propjet as it
a p p r o a c h e d New York's La Ciuardia Airport from
A l b a n y . T h e pilot was forced to land at Westchester
C o u n t y A i r p o r t near White Plains, where the 12
passengers were allowed to d e p l a n e .
T h e m o u n t i n g d r a m a e n d e d II) hours later when
an unidentified FBI agent p o k e d a s h o t g u n into a
g e t a w a y car that von George had ordered at
D u t c h e s s C o u n t y Airport here. The agent was
q u o t e d as saying von George screamed, shirled
b e h i n d the wheel and fired a gun. A retaliatory
•shotgun blast killed him instantly
m
i
hi
- ? . r u ;;r ain,j:bted ::c:^ ™ «
M - e c t a t o r f " T ^ —
« J seats »0
™ver the jury H N ^ S ' *
<»"»M°*
'°
of the Associated Press" U n l j p L T ™ 8 0 " " " ^
InU
«nd the Harrisburg P„tr,ot- C s *"*"
'"»'"»m.l
'—Monr^t0;r;r;"p"""iori7^"»
The -IH-yearold Berrigan, „ self styled revoluti
onary priest, told „ n e w s m a n d u r i n g a courtroom
UI, before federal marshalls s t o p p e d him from
t a k i n g that t h e r e was indeed a discussion anion,;
aome „ r t h o d e f e n d a n t s of a possible kidnapping
t h e r e was n o p l a n n i n g , " be insisted, however
1
hen he a d d e d :
"Part of any discussion, if it ,s t o l„. real is lo
'nvest,g„te the feasibility of i t " nod Berrigan indica
<••' that m e m b e r s ofhis peace m o v e m e n t apparatus
"1 d o n e that. " M i l l i o n , „f „ „ „ » , „ h „ v „ ,,,,,„, k t m t »
«> deas ,,t s o m e time „ r a n o t h e r , " he said ,„ Ihe
brst interview he has given in nearly two years "ll
d o e a n t mean they would act or want t o act. hul
som ; . h " U l d n , t t l l « y think a b o u t it and maybe do
»°™«thlnK a b o u t it „nd oven Invcatlgat., i t ?
Asked w h e t h e r he believed he would win Ihe case.
they had formed pr Jud, , t l " ™ " ? ' d " i m i " "
render an impartial judgment
"'"' ° " U l d " ' "
Berngim „ n , | l h u ( ) l (
. '
n
ad:
U s
l
ri ri|
Plying
to kidnap p , J "
7 . " m " " " 1 » r a c a u i t t „ | TU l L " ' , l u "c l" " » " v of o u r s to gam
'
" '""
" Political trial and gel the
i pnwiaentiiil adviser Henry ZZ
"»u« before the American p e o p l e . "
T h e best, and o n l y , way t o
describe this s c h o o l ' s grading policy is t o say that it is a m a n d a t o r y
s a t i s f a c t o r y / u n s a t i s f a c t o r y system
with e x c e p t i o n s .
A l t h o u g h this might seem cont r a d i c t o r y , as far as university
legislation goes, it is n o t . In the
fall of 1069, a m a n d a t o r y S/U
grading s y s t e m for all freshmen
and s o p h o m o r e s was passed by
the University S e n a t e . This academic year the Senate allowed the
C o m m i t t e e on A c a d e m i c S t a n d i n g
to give b l a n k e t e x e m p t i o n s to S/U
grading t o p e t i t i o n i n g s t u d e n t s .
R e a s o n s for E x e m p t i o n s
So w h a t have we got? S/U grading has been in effect for 2'/a
years. A l t h o u g h the system is
m a n d a t o r y , as of last s e m e s t e r
s o m e 8 0 0 e x e m p t i o n s have been
granted. This semester, the first in
which all requests were officially
granted, s o m e 1 0 5 2 p e t i t i o n s have
been received for A-E grading.
H o w did we evolve t o this position? Knrly last year a survey was
c o n d u c t e d lo d e t e r m i n e the effect,
of S/U grading on medical and
d e n t a l school a p p l i c a n t s ' chances
of being a d m i t t e d lo schools. T h e
survey revealed t h a t S/U grading
adversely affected their chances of
acceptance.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
significance of t h e r e m a i n i n g eredentials. Potentially
it would
place far t o o m u c h weight o n
G R E scores. A n o t h e r d e p a r t m e n t
official s t a t e d , " . . . G e n e r a l l y we
"•"> n o t a d m i t s t u d e n t s w h o have
S/U grades in any courses e x c e p t
athletics and arts and crafts. Pass/
fail
transcripts are essentially
worthless for j u d g m e n t s a b o u t
graduate s t u d e n t s a d m i s s i o n s . "
S/U grades were also found t o
have a d e t r i m e n t a l affect u p o n
financial awards decisions according t o t h e s t u d y of S U N Y A departments. The most important
factors in the awards decision
An In-Depth
PAGE 5
s t u d e n t s w e r e : its c o n s e q u e n c e in
later school life 1) g r a d u a t e
s c h o o l , 2) professional s c h o o l , 3)
transfer, t h e s y s t e m did n o t allow
s t u d e n t s t o k n o w w h e r e they
s t o o d in a c o u r s e , s o m e s t u d e n t s
lacked
motivation
t o e x p l o r e academically u n f a m i liar areas, a n d t o s h o w m o r e m o t i vation a n d intellectual c u r i o s i t y ,
Several s t u d i e s at o t h e r s c h o o l s
have s h o w n t h a t s t u d e n t s d o explore m o r e with S/U. O n e s t u d y
because t h e y
s h o w e d t h a t o n e school was losing
O p t i o n a l S/U
were n o t r e w a r d e d with an " A " or
"B"
for w o r k i n g hard a n d / o r
doing well.
S t u d e n t s ideas for m o d i f y i n g the
s y s t e m i n c l u d e d : m a k e S/U grading an o p t i o n , have S/U o n l y in
electives, have S/U for the first
year only. One s t u d e n t proposed a
new s y s t e m t h a t would award a
" D " with o n e c r e d i t , a " C " with
s t u d e n t s w h o liked t o e x p e r i m e n t
and t a k e "cognitive r i s k s " at a
higher r a t i o than t h o s e w h o were
m o s t c o m f o r t a b l e with t r a d i t i o n a l
systems.
Most r e c e n t l y , t h e Undergrad u a t c A c a d e m i c Council a p p r o v e d
the c o n c e p t of an o p t i o n a l four
year S/U s y s t e m . This could t a k e
several forms. O n e could be hav-
T h e American Council o n Education surveyed schools with S/U
s y s t e m s . At o n e university it was
found t h a t m a n y s t u d e n t s tried t o
aim n o higher than a " C " although c o m p e t i t i o n was still pre-
ing a m i x t u r e of S/U and traditionally graded courses each semester. A n o t h e r , a n d t h e seemingly m o s t p o p u l a r , alternative is t o
a | i o w t h e s t u d e n t t o c h o o s e each
Probe:
S/U Embroiled in Controversy
were found t o be grades in t h e
s t u d e n t ' s major followed b y letters of r e c o m m e n d a t i o n . 5 4 % of
the d e p a r t m e n t s indicated t h a t
even if a s t u d e n t has S/U o n l y for
the first t w o years it would have a
negative affect on an a w a r d s decision. If a s t u d e n t has m o r e t h a n
25% of his courses graded S/U he
will have t r o u b l e o b t a i n i n g aid.
S/U grades in a s t u d e n t ' s major
have an even m o r e d e t r i m e n t a l
affect.
A large majority of the s t u d e n t s
here have m o r e than I/-I of their
major c o m p l e t e d before they are
juniors. S o m e s t u d e n t s have as
much as 70%-1 0 0 % of their major
work d o n e by the time they e n t e r
The University of California at
Santa Cruz which has had all
undergraduates
on
a
pass/fail
system for s o m e (I years has considered , | ieir system a success, yet
gives
r It I T g r a d e s
in
all
non n i l " 'uciiirs courses in biology. chetniMry, m a t h , and physics. " J u s t i f i c a t i o n for Ihe letter
grade
o p i u m is thai
Ihe admissions policies of s o m e g r a d u a t e
and professional schools o p e r a t e
to Ihe disadvantage of s t u d e n t s
Willi no letter g r a d e s . " the uiiiversity r e p o r t e d .
Medical and denial schools were
found not to he Ihe only g r a d u a t e
schools thai objected lo S/U grading. Willi.nil Hassler of llle Universily of Indiana in Pennsylvania
c o n d u c t e d a survey of 2'1\ graduate schools and found thai graduate d e a n s preferred letter grades
lo pass/fail grades when reviewing
applical lolls. 21-1 schools wanted
lei let- grades, and 7 ilid n o t .
J
t w o , a " B " with t h r e e credits and
sent. At a n o t h e r school it was
an " A " with four credits. Under
found t h a t o n l y 3 9 % of those
the s y s t e m a s t u d e n t would have
s t u d e n t s eligible to take S/U gradto c o m p l e t e 240 credits. T h u s a
ing did so.
s t u d e n t w h o gets straight " A s "
Alternatives
would need only 60 eourse credits
In view of all this i n f o r m a t i o n ,
to graduate.
w h a t is A l b a n y doing? Early advoTransferring is also made m o r e
cates of the S/U system argue that
difficult by the S/U s y s t e m . Many
the spirit and intent of the 1969
schools indicate that m o r e inforS e n a t e resolution are being subm a t i o n than " S " is needed to
verted by the e x e m p t i o n s g r a n t e d .
evaluate a s t u d e n t ' s p e r f o r m a n c e ,
Others are claiming t h a t t h e exIn response to a letter from this
e m p t i o n s are just d o w n right illereporter t o Syracuse University
gal according t o ihe 1969 bill.
a b o u t the possibility of transferS o m e argue that t h e s y s t e m is
ring t h e r e it was s t a l e d , " S i n c e ,
educationally u n s o u n d . And still
for evaluation, pass credits are not
o t h e r s claim that ihe t h e o r y is
equivalent to letter grades, we
fine, but in practicality the system
would need m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n . . . "
is infeasible.
—E
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INTRO
I M U
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Albany S t u d i e s
their junior year, yet A l b a n y ' s
o w n graduate d e p a r t m e n t s say
S/U grades in a s t u d e n t ' s major
are harmful if he hopes to o b t a i n
admission here.
T h e results o b t a i n e d by this
uirvey would cause o n e to w o n d e r
w h e t h e r or not tire University
Senate of I !)tii) included m e m b e r s
of the graduate depart m e n u at
SUNYA
A survey c o n d u c t e d by Martin
I I n l a n d , assistant dean of t he
university college here, found Ihe
,'IH.IY'V of s t u d e n t s who c o m m e n t
ed lo University College advisors
about S/U grading were o p p o s e d
to it Ki% of I he same sample
were in favor of tin* policy and
coin pel 11 ive admissions s i t u a t i o n . "
the remainder were neutral. In t h e
S o m e S U N Y A g r a d u a t e depart
o p i n i o n of the s t u d e n t s , s o m e of
men! officials s u b m i t t e d written the major advantages of t h e sys
respotiM'h lo 1 in- study as well as tern were it meant less tension
Hi.' sl.tiidanli/.ed responses One and pressure in s o m e courses, it
depart ment representilive staled, allowed s t u d e n t s to fake m o r e
" T h e effect of S/U grades on courses, it gave s t u d e n t s a c h a n c e
c o n s i d e r a t i o n of graduate applica- to adjust t o the university, and
tions is t h a t we have o n e less basis the system allowed for m o r e ex(and an i m p o r t a n t o n e ) for evalu- p e r i m e n t a t i o n . A m o n g the major
ation This inevitably increases the disadvantages m e n t i o n e d by the
Closer lo h o m e , evidence has
been collected indicating thai Albany's own g r a d u a t e d e p a r t m e n t s
d o n ' t like pass/fail grades. According lo the s t u d y by J. Kredricks
Volkwein, assistant dean of grad u a t e studies, " m o s t a p p l i c a n t s t o
graduate
degree
programs
al
SUNY Albany would be well ail
vised lo html ihe n u m b e r ( ,f S/U
type ol' courses In less limn 2-VS
overall, and lo Ihe freshman and
s o p h o m o r e years if possible S'U,
I' I-" in c r e d i t / i m n credit grades in
Ihe s t u d e n t ' s major field or in the
intended field of g r a d u a t e s t u d y
are par i iculai ly damaging in a
allow S/U c o u r s e s only o u t s i d e of
a s t u d e n t ' s major field of s t u d y . A
modified S / U s y s t e m with high
pass, pass, l o w pass, and fail o r
no-credit is still a n o t h e r possible
option.
Some
students
attempting
to
transfer found t h a t they had l o
appeal t o the university t o help
clarify their grades for o t h e r colI e g e s ' admissions
offices.
Although the grading policy s t a l e s
that an " S " is equivalent t o at
least a " C , " some teachers give
" S ' s " for " D " work while o t h e r s
will only give an " S " if ihe stud e n t has d o n e " B " work.
Bruce Oray, Dean of the Univer
isty College, staled t h a t the juniors w h o were c o m i n g off of the
S/U s y s t e m for the first time last
semester seemed t o be able lo
c o p e with the return l o the AE
system with little difficulty.
O t h e r Studies: Pro and Con
Proposals for alternatives t o the
system range from returning from
the A-E s y s t e m lo a system which
would only record the course's
that a s t u d e n t passed. One possible alternative to the S/U system
is Ihe e s t a b l i s h m e n t of an Office
of Evaluation. Under this p r o p o s a l
a s t u d e n t would receive his credits
by passing e x a m i n a t i o n s . While
the proposal was passed by the
U n d e r g r a d u a t e Academic Council
and forwarded to o t h e r c o m m i t tees, it appears that this s y s t e m
has little c h a n c e of final approval.
O n e major obstacle is that the
cost of the plan would be q u i t e
high, and with the university's
fiscal plight it is doubtful that
a n y t h i n g with a "price l a g " will
be passed
Studies of o t h e r schools have
s h o w n t h a t , for the most part,
O t h e r alternatives lo Ihe c u r r e n t
s t u d e n t s like S/U grading. Propon- s y s t e m , while not being actively
e n t s of the system decry the considered n o w , include: S/U grad e t r i m e n t a l effects of l o o m u c h ding with faculty r e c o m m e n d a pressure and
competition
for tions, a limited S/U plan with the
grades. T h e t h e o r y behind S/U n u m b e r of courses graded as such
grading claims t h a t release from being restricted by semester. Ano" g r a d e g r u b b i n g " enables s t u d e n t s ther form of this system is t o
semester w h e t h e r he wants all his
courses graded S/U or A-E. T w o
proposals a d v o c a t i n g this plan
have been d r a w n u p . One of t h e
t w o , a u t h o r e d b y Richard Collier,
a c a d e m i c advisor, university college, w h o was o n e of t h e originators of t h e 1 9 6 9 s y s t e m , calls for
t h e e l i m i n a t i o n of t h e q u a l i t y
p o i n t average and t h e D,E,U,I,W
and X grades would n o t c a r r y
credit t o w a r d s g r a d u a t i o n . T h e
o t h e r , b y R o b e r t Morris, d e a n of
u n d e r g r a d u a t e s t u d i e s , is essentially t h e s a m e as Collier's T h e
major p o i n t of d e p a r t u r e is in t h e
n u m b e r of credits required for a
s t u d e n t t o remain at the univeristy. T h e Collier proposal requires
fewer credits for a c a d e m i c retention than Morris'.
Arguments
A r g u m e n t s against the various
alternatives are n u m e r o u s . F a c u l t y
r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s , while usually a
favored device for evaluation, are
q u i t e impractical, if not impossible ut a university of this size A
mixed S/U and A-E plan by semester has been tried at o t h e r
schools The results have not been
good, it has been found that Ihe
s t u d e n t s lend to "stack off" in
S/U grader! courses and work liar
tier in their letter graded courses.
D a r t m o u t h College had a partial
pass-fa i I sysl e m, a nd did a way
with il terming it " e d u c a t i o n a l l y
u n s o u n d . " Pass/fail advocates contend that a system with high and
low passes is as bad as a traditionally graded s y s t e m .
A r g u m e n t s on the optional S/U
system range from differences in
the meaning of the t e r m " S " lo its
feasibility, Non-traditional grading
p r o p o n e n t s claim that an o p t i o n a l
system would spell the end of t h e
S/U system. T h e y feel that b y
allowing a c h o i c e , s t u d e n t s will
fear p u n i s h m e n t if they opt for
S/U sint-e they could have chosen
the traditionally accepted A-E
system. Therefore s t u d e n t s would
shy away from the S/U system.
What to Do
Whatever decision is made concerning S/U grading at Albany o n e
thing is a p p a r e n t - s o m e t h i n g m u s t
be d o n e . The S/U s y s t e m that is
c u r r e n t l y in use bears no resemblance to the resolution passed by
the Senate in 1 9 6 9 . The system
was conceived in haste. It t o o k
m o n t h s t o c o m p l e t e all aspects of
the system. Questions of a c a d e m i c
h o n o r s and r e t e n t i o n along with
o t h e r s were n o t taken into consideration until after the Senate acted in its " c a r t before the h o r s e "
manner.
Disturbing q u e s t i o n s concerning
graduate admissions and transferring have been raised. As of y e t ,
no one has actually sat d o w n t o
see if the s t u d e n t s ' educational
experiences have been improved
or have decayed u n d e r the new
system. Perhaps it is not the grading system that should be attacked. Changing " A - C " to an " S "
may n o t bo the panecea for t h e
nation's or this university's educational woes.
PAGE 6
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1972
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1972
POW's: Pawns of War
In " T h e
Selling of the P r e s i d e n t , " j o u r n a l i s t
McGinniss
Richard
portrays
campaign
pre-packaged
The
book
because,
intensity
who
press a n d
how
advertising
again,
national elections
and
"Tricky
D i c k " is a t it w i t h all
man
if t h e v
were
not
a n d did not involve such h u m a n
so
year
dangerous
anguish.
bv
the
spring,
North
Madame
Provisionary
Vietnamese.
Birili.
Foreign
Revolutionary
A s L'.irlv
as
last
Minister
of
the
Government
of
South
V i e t n a m , s t a t e d t o t h e w o r l d r h e c o n d i t i o n s for t h e
p r i s o n e r s ' r e l e a s e . All R i c h a r d N i x o n h a d t o d o w a s
to announce
a dace
for c o m p l e t e
American
drawal
from
South
Vietnam
stop
dictate
a
political
arid
settlement
:•> -lie
with
crving
to
Vietnamese
p e o p l e b v p r o p p i n g u p c h a t r m l i t . m d i c t a t o r s h i p in
South
Vietnam
t h e p r e s i d e n t si> g l o r i u i i s l v
labels a
"democracy."
T h e n , t h i s fall, l o u r L m t e d
Beniamm
Wolff,
Rosenthal.
and
North
Robert
Vietnamese
l.etfgett
officials
chat a n n o u n c e m e n t s
would
che
gam
were
;o
was
bv
Lester
pnvarelv
wirh
in P a r i s a m i w c r .
release,
ignored
frustrated
chat they
Halpern,
in, r
,1 a f i r m d a t e
ciie p r i s o n e r s
overture
States Congressmen
Scvm.iur
bv
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line
nice
administrative
cold
withdrawal
Nix o n a n d
again,
the
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four
TU
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indifference
issued a s t a t e m e n t accusing the
KH£ r ^ ^
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president
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A
!N
A&KM6^
a u s T
LITTLE'
of i g n o r i n g c h e p r i s o n e r of w a r issue
The
next
September
pare
when
lor w i t h d r a w a l
it
cue
L
troops
wouhl
Anvl o n c e
fact,
he
-
.veiir
atrnal
and
our
,.tr
freed
V \ . >n
done
gi
r..,i r I,
w r v chin
ssagv
iblv
C,
prol
t h e w a r . H e h a s o tusevl c,. ,v r
b o m b i n g , and stvadfastlv
port
laiitcimicd
for d i e T h i e u r e g i m e .
has a c c u s e d
che
\,>rf/'
Attune.in
In chv. ,.IIIK. br. a t l
I t, rn.ini,
.
t k, - p i n g
w a r g o i n g , bv c o m m i t t i n g
rhv. u n } i r d . m . i M ,
shooting
w ir
Norch
down
American
Viecnames.
airspav,
che p e a s a n t , b e l o w .
pi n, •, rii.tr
iiul ra
Y e s . Mr
\i\
.n. ,. i f , I , ', • ,.. i
a r a t h e r a n n o v ing h a b i r . M I t ic •
The clincher came
Correspondent
nationwide
Norch
linear1.
n
Han
Rather
TV audience
Vietnamese
and
tionarv Government
che
from South
And
a
c v . r a s k e d ch,
Provisioiiarv
Revolu
tor
ot our w i t h d r a w i n g
withdrawal
astonishingly,
particular
matter
said
has been
che
t >rees
discus-
calks...when
t h a t w a s f l o a t e d o u t che N o r c h V i e t n a m e s e cocallv
rejected
it...
I c a n cell v o u w e h a v e p u r s u e d
every
negociable channel..."
That
answer
is an
outright
he. ot c u r s e , and a
r a t h e r a s t o n i s h e d G e o r g e M c G o v e r n t o l d cne m e d i a
chac
knows
calking
"Ic
H simplv
not
crue
it." Mr. M c G o v e r n
abouc
because
hi;
and
che
President
s h o u l d k n o w w.iac
eonversuciori
! is not warn 'hat ;/<.> no
trivthimi, hut stupid, vtnriit
or nnenfortw.it
're/u.vs
Oi-tliHi'ri> again it m <i t/u«">-'.i
:.ne
of our will If the ordularv per.pu
md .Jl'lVred to withdraw >ail
L" • and allied forces i not d-.
of this country
will thai thnn
shall he J sensible pract> -'his fmic
mandmg that the North Vietnam
if thi'v ui\>U'-Maud nntt the purese agree to a simultaneous with
><>•;.'•<• of war :s to , v : <i iatisfuc druwai of their troops) from Viet
fnrv pi'ni-i' Uhi 'hat <uch [j peace
nam if only the> would give us
can he mutnttwwd
>nh bv iron
back our POWs jgre^ to a ceasestunt supervision, •',
fire and agree to abide by interna
'miliary
<i ••>• >ur p> •lonuc and
Lion-aily supervised democratic e
• •s thi*n it!<' mail 'lot ntiai i-nttm
lections
President Thieu even of
'"• wm our
fered to resign i m«>nth before the
stri'i
Hut It:
'
Ur,'r"u'heduied elections No die*' In
rid
.iMsr
,t..',nl we ire .i.sk.'f! to topple the
' l u d e t„ \
South
Vietnamese regime and
ihu.s p.iv- the wajp for a t a k e o v e r
bv 'he Norm
Ph.- North Viet
name-,*' have i word for it, it's
What do
• Norm \
••ailed democracy
'.-uiv (tesir
Do ..hev
Phij, n.ts been the North VietL' S to ,,
..... „
•' deadiin
1.1171
withdraw ii
Hi HllH,]
^
all a l ^ g and
that pe;ice can co
' ; no bones a b o u t , t
rhey !
•md democratic - b a c k our POW,
when
heW"1 The , n . , w ^
,iv^ them South Viet**"
•iwondertullv ambiguou.s tern,
McGovern wenc
n „,,,„ .
If che U S
set , U,
'
Vietnamese IJIIIC
he's
with
che
. h o r c l v a l t e r t h e i r , o call
ed " r e j e c t i o n " o t c h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n ' s
Nixon realh
war a n d a d d i n g
,J,
P'-"n
chac
"floater"
.
for
—--id
B
•vouid s i g n a
che
rh . e
and
,i: e 7 r ;r;;
our
il
"' - that
,|eetlun
" ' " c a m p a i g n iJni ,, J, , i l , i L
starting » „ , „
,n i
,
" i d be
J
K
"n and rnavbe then
l',„ II
s
Bu
P<"'cy,a prolonging the
sumption
that
ewmu..
N o r t h Vietnamese would
•i s e t t l e m e n t equitahlt- m
His political insight.-,
to he desired T h e Nurtn Viet
not rung %hort
That h.i. alwa
oecn tth*'ir
positioi
heen
h e i r p.
Why wot
president b-el-n
l\-i,.
•-,-m
I
; l t l > painted himsell
total
i/tyflftrn
f\(£_
HOC
f
V i e t n a m s h o u l d be w o r k e d o u t by near t h e e n d of his s p e e c h , when
Opinion
the different V i e t n a m e s e political he p o i n t e d o u t t h a t if t h e VietT h e flim flam m a n has c o m e on
groups, n o t by o u t s i d e forces. T o n a m e s e d o n o t a c c e p t , t h e U . S .
the t u b e o n c e again t o reassure
put it simply, N i x o n ' s i n t e r n a t i o n - may b e " f o r c e d " t o p r o t e c t its
t h e A m e r i c a n p e o p l e of his search
al c o m m i s s i o n is irrelevant.
security a n d the security of its
for peace. His " P e a c e G e s t u r e " is
T h e U.S. is suffering defeats t r o o p s .
actually a declaration of c o n On J a n u a r y 13, 1 9 7 2 a s p o k e s tinued war, T h e new proposal is t h r o u g h o u t I n r ' o c h i n a at t h e presactually an old p r o p o s a l . It is o n e ent m o m e n t . The l o s s of Long m a n for t h e P . R . G . in Paris told a
Tieng,
the
major
CIA
h
e
a
d
q
u
a
r
t
c o r r e s p o n d e n t of L i b e r a t i o n News
t h a t the N. L. F. has had since last
O c t o b e r , It s h o u l d be o b v i o u s t o ers d r a m a t i c a l l y alters t h e military Service t h a t the massive moveequilibrium
in
n
o
r
t
h
e
r
n
Laos,
On
m e n t of p o p u l a t i o n o u t of t h e
almost a n y o n e t h a t if t h e N . L . F .
18, A m b a s s a d o r Ells- l o r t h e r n m o s t provinces of S o u t h
hasn't a c c e p t e d it in private, they J a n u a r y
w
o
r
t
h
B
u
n
k
e
r
n
o
t
e
d
t
h
a
t
t
h
e
Vietnam had t h e aim of setting u p
will not accept it n o w . T h e reaN . L . F . could launch an offensive i free fire z o n e for t h e d e p l o y sons are s i m p l e .
at will, a n y t i m e b e t w e e n the pre- m e n t of tactical nuclear w e a p o n s .
T o p r e s e n t c o n d i t i o n s accept- sent and the end of the year. T h e
Kissinger has been heard walking
able to the V i e t n a m e s e , Nixon pressure is m o u n t i n g for somo
iroun Washington recently saying
had to d o t w o things: 1) set a d a t e decisive action b y the U.S. militahat the V i e t n a m e s e m u s t have a
for t h e withdrawal of all U.S. ry.
breaking p o i n t .
troops and e q u i p m e n t from VietNixon
speaks
with
forked
How m a n y .times did Nixon say
nam and 2) a b a n d o n t h e Thieu
t o n g u e . He has given t h e N . L . F , a the o t h e r night t h a t he will n o t
regime. He did neither. Thieu may
proposal which t h e y c a n n o t ac- " o v e r t h r o w " t h e Thieu regime?
restgn for a moiith at Nixon's
cept. T h e p u r p o s e can only b e Let us n o t be fooled by a saint of
bidding. But
what about
the
seen as t h e setting of a pretext for peace w h o s u p p o r t s a d i c t a t o r
whole a p p a r a t u s of the regime?
massive new agression againsl the (Ky) w h o o n c e said that his o n l y
What a b o u t V i e t n a m i z a t i o n , the
Viet names* p e o p l e . T h e U.S. is hero was A d o l p h Hitler,
refugee program, forced urbanizanow gradually leaking news of a
T h e world is b e c o m i n g convinced
tion, I he pacification program'.'
new " o f f e n s i v e " in 1 he central that the V i e t n a m e s e p e o p l e will
Are t hesc t he c o n d i t i o n s under
highlands. There is n o indication
never give up their struggle for
which N i x o n e x p e c l s the N.L.K. to
that such an offensive really ex- liberation. But until they win and
surface and pari icipatr in "free
ists. My c o m b i n g these " t h r e a t s " every last U.S. t r o o p s , advisor,
elections""
furthermore,
Vietby the N.L.K. with N i x o n ' s new price of material and dollar is o u t
namese self-determination has alimage as n saint of peace, t h e basis of Vietnam, we must not give u p
ways been a principle of ,ill propois being laid for the justification our vigilance and p r e p a r e d n e s s t o
sals by t h e P.K.U and the N.L.K.
to the American people for such act here in the United S t a t e s .
T h e n a t u r e of the government of
agression
Nixon said as m u c h
unique identity as Ukrainians and
also to proclaim thai the 20th
Century Ukrainian s l u d e n l also
seeks to maintain a s e m b l a n c e of
"ihiiik'
iilum!
tin- kind o / world
yew n\int
in live
individuality as Ukrainian Americans and to work Iowa ids huiiiid work
in. W'liitt i / c vi>// need u> hnoir
to hit fid
man itarianis in e v e r y w h e r e .
Wr,
tliiit iioiid'
lh iiiiind tluil vour tt'dvlwrs
teach
von
the Ukrainian S t u d e n t s of the
Capitol District, risk each Amen*
r.tn li i wil lir.s.s and h o n o r thl.s da> .
tit,it.
Sincerely.
-lo Ann S.i,:.uUr
1
SUN ) ,»i Alba.n
I V I L T K i ' o p o t i s i n , Lite I 9 i l i c e n t u r y
Russian
'(
fh?cLATiChi
rui^i-n.
/5 /nasr M.
of fvP Ci»
Catafo'l
fo / t f r - v r
co t h e
r a n k s ot" t h e
T-:P
, BUT r't i " w w w
I LOOK, ttDSTittf, J ' M ^ IN "IF titiuiL
iktMim
l?v>:~ »', ptre.iOTtc t •
(if ni'Hf u.rn£
-hit-«
I Any AftRiCtHIF M> t,h C0u/lTKY LIH VliT-l
ccrtTFV wthl. IIIMM0 VMM I
- '
; ' DEFBHD 'T.I
1
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?
"}
U- i i'
i.'iQ-.Y
t\^i:iTi6i,-Kr
IS OCCUPIED A w T w
/,"*(".-,'/
ru, ttt*
tHnf£
'
\/.s~\'-
^stU'^y
*ohLD?i
PiHW.
1
home.
t that's s o m e t h ng t h a t c o u l d
.>4t*\iff$-T]L
K
lni nl
OI'INION
,L"I,
faw f
I - £r.
of
'
" " ' sltl(il'"'. I u " n«'"l'
limes to lh.' I'lHlanut'i'incnl ..I
ul lit'l' si ndi'iils.
Undor lh.' proposed system a
I'll.- (iriKlumo Sin.l.'iii A s
eliiril'lealiotl of 111.' powers of varili.in would like I,, lake llns o p - , m s , u , | R . , a l bodies is occumplishpoi'liinuy In express a positive ,,,| . , n d l h l , ,,|iminution of " o i r e "I
" " i.'lal'Ve lo Ihe .ludieial n l i l l l po-ro^al i \ e " becomes a realWorlvshop C o m m i t t . ' e ' s proposal l l v
lor a new e a m p u s wide judicial
ele.iriiiullouse Is sel up lo
A
^>sleln.
(|uiekeii the judicial process. This
I'lie present system is obviously m ilsell' may lie (.•noil|jll lo juslily
,,11'eiiMve and unjust lo the sin- u n a n i m o u s support of the proileiils ol S U N Y A . II is possible ill posed system
the preseill lime for a suiftle ail- There are o t h e r revisions SURininisiraliU' ol'fieial l o aller Ihe (Jested by I lie W o r k s h o p Commitso-called final a l l l b o r i l y ol I h e l e e which will also improve llle
m e m b e r undei-nradilale nidi- present sy.slem. We. i be (ISA. feel
eial liody ll is also possible under Ibal each s l u d e n l . faculty mem
111. preM-lll system for an null- her. and , u f f m e m b e r owe it to
I'ldll.ll lo wail a c o n s i d e r a b l e I bemselves In suppori llle pro
lenulb of lime before he is uranled posal u l l a l l Is now under eon
, ll.-armu. somellines lo the dell'l- Mllel'al loll
l i n u l u i i l i - S l u d e n l Awociitlioii
JW,JK fj„;,T/t>
»r ii
Our Graduates Speak
'b'd- li'CB/'j Yt\f
SiNSHW)
, f>fTWT,HT
IT'S YtflU /
\KitJD
wnjt [V,i,-n TH; I
\CHI!>S ARF. DOWN.. I
" \
lAHKXS,
anarchist.
Cultural A l l a n s ( 'luurniatl
victory
by w i t h d r a w i n g
forces before a pn«;. . u -.•tMe
ment was resolved He now has mi
choice but t o d\±ryr- in • •;•• litmands of the r m - i m simv hi- Masucceeded in totally
dfiniymg
any bargaining powvr we might
t'Ver have had North Vn-fnaiii i>
holding all th.- card- and n>- ii*.
over a barrel They >.-,• ., ptitiiit-.il
and military victory ver\ i in^ ,d
hand
If only Presideni Nivon
realized the r e l e v a n t of what
J a m e s B Rt.sU)n ^
^p,t
p
, u J , fii ^ ^
, ^
[[irt,_
But he'll have plenty
, f " , . , ,u
•-.'
.
rt . l H
~
^ ^
elections' ' *'
"
have been
done m o n t h s ago. Instead. Nixon has J i o s e n
nd
____
h d r a v
*e ' t N
p r i s o n e r ,> t,,r eeecdu . 'TI htie
^o r t h
V i e c n a m e s e d i d nl oo tt rr ee ji ee cr rt rt i ,,..
n s a p p r o a c h, . ..
M c G o v e r n f i n i s h e d bv
publicli
c using
Ni xoii if " d e l a v i n g a
a t t e m p t to end
th
w a r
untli
h
's reelection
vampaign." a
c h a r g e chat
a
' " ^ more and m o r e vahditv
th
"
' - e v u l c n , c builds up
«M>
expect
them
to rn
J'- (heir
mind* and atfrt-e n> •
1- h\ rhe
results of i d e m o c r a t •
The President's • ntir-- \
p r o g r a m w,t.s foundfd
Re-runs
Frunk R o s e n t h a l
a n d i n s t e a d will w i t h d r a w , e n d t h e b o m b i n g ,
i n d bring t h e m
,,,„> ,»
e n d of s u p p o r c
U
North
Oui Resident
following:
under
s i o n a t v a r i o u s t i m e s in c h e P a r i s p e a c e
}
croops
o t all L . S
Vietnam"'"
Nixon,
"...chat
befor,
if chev wiil r e l e a s e t h e P( )W 's
a n d G u a r a n t e e che i a f e t v
if w e sec a d a c e
2 Alien l . i i s \ w ,
tsL',1 Nixon
" H a v e w.
Ooitiion
with
"it would
w i r ' u j r iw
Nixon made clear Tuesday night.
is no They want more than that
"Much more Said the President,
" we offered specifically to agree
to a deadline tor the withdrawal
of all American forces in exchange
for the release of all prisoners of
•v ir .ind d cease fire " Thij offer
rejected We went nven
Mitchell Frost
.uc. In his
t o r che s . n e n ' i r v u i i m
be a l l o w n l
The Nixon Speech
in
A nnnj.irv.linv
lor L o i n p h c .
co ch. b o m b i n g
again.
has
occurred
V|( ( ,oVern
».unc mess.iea.
L . S . sec a d.it>
,r s u p p o r t
jur prN. .tiers
scenario
w o u l d -_'L r che p r i s o n e r ,
d r a w a l a n d an end
che e n d
the
Senator (ieor^t
r!,
to Paris a m i a n t
words,
of
Brothers and Sisters,
We can remain silent no longer,
Perimeter road can be a cold and
lonely place for a hitch-hiker.
R e m e m b e r : T h e person y o u pass
Paul Liebern,*,,,
by may s o m e d a y be y o u ,
S t u d e n t A m b a s s a d o r Program
"I am he, as you are lie, as you
are me, and we are all t o g e t h e r . "
C o m m u n i t y means t o g e t h e r n e s s
and sharing responsibilities.
T o w a r d s a warmer c o m m u n i t y ,
S U N Y A Hitch-hiker Coalition
George Tire-biter, Chairman Dear Sirs,
The m a y o r s of four Capitol District cities—Albany, Cohoos, T r o y ,
and Watervlid—signed proclamations this week de-sifinatinn J a n u ary 29, 1972 as Ukrainian S t u d e n t
To the E d i t o r :
Day in their respective cities. MayFor a good m a n y years, S U N Y A ors Corning, MacDonald, Connalwas f o r t u n a t e in having the Slu- ly, and Cavanaugh received copies
di'iil A m b a s s a d o r Program. T h e of the p r o c l a m a t i o n and letters of
program was entirely s t u d e n t or* i n t r o d u c t i o n from t h e Ukrainian
giinb.e'd, a l t h o u g h financially it S t u d e n t Organization at S U N Y A ,
was of a b r o a d l y based s u p p o r t . through whose efforts Ukrainian
S t u d e n t s had applied t h r o u g h t h e S t u d e n t s can h o n o r their nationalSL'WYA p r o g r a m which was di- ity and culture, J a n u a r y 29, 1972
ri'rlly linked with the E x p e r i m e n t marks the 5 llh anniversary ol' the
in International Living of I'ulncy historic Bailie of Kruly where, in
VI,
I91H, ;J01) y o u n g Ukrainian StuKa,h year the program g n u - dents died in a heroic effort In
rat ill a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 2 , 0 0 0 uf save t heir c o u n t r y from foreign
which $1,01)0 was from S l u d e n l e x p l o i t a t i o n .
Association. This year, SA d,'T h e organization .steadfastly beeided to vole a zero d o n a t i o n , lieves that all Americans need
which leaves [he Ambassador pro- realize and act in face of the
gram will, no beginning treasury, problems of c o n t i n u e d Soviet perf o r Ibis reason, and Ibis reason secution of Ukrainian intellectualone, the S l u d e n l A m b a s s a d o r als. Only when we realize (hat the
("omniillee has. ofeclded mil to problems which today face not
engage in aelivilii-s leading In the only the Ukrainians, but the J e w s .
raising of monies or lo s t u d e m I he ('/cells and oilier minority
interview, ' r h e t ' u m n i l t l e e feels II unuip.s in the Soviet Union arc
Atnci'icn's
problems as well, can
(annul pos,sibl\ raise enough
ne\ wiihoiu the suppori of Si U- we rightfully c o n c l u d e that we ;,...,
peine
s*'t>kirig,
humanitarian pro.
denl A.s.s,,eialion 1'herefore, I he
In lln> Inn.', the Ukrainian
M i n i , n l Anihassaihn program .,l pi.'
Sr.V'i A «ill in, loiiuei ll ant mil' Sunt, ills UIJ.II lo huiioi those her
wishes I,, e a r n I he " l u r c h ' anil <.i< a i n l . n l s ol ! H h tor lh.it
,,,,,1111111 l i e program, please oil' imyirldiui! strui-iil.-s in securmu a
To Save a
Program
T h i s t i m e , t h e i s s u e i n v o l v e s t h e p r i s o n e r s of w a r
held
PAGE 7
Television
me nt 4 5 7 - 8 8 4 1 , M o n d a y t h r o u g h
Wednesday. Plense note that this
program is n o t to be conTuscd
with the I n b o u n d I n t e r n a t i o n a l
S t u d e n t Program and Statu Fair.
T h e r e was never any c o n n e c t i o n .
On Recognizing
Ukrainia
"secret
p l a n s " t o e n d t h e w a r . His e f f o r t s t h i s e l e c t i o n
be comical
this
have
we've c o m e to e x p e c t from the
p l e d g e d t o " B r i n g Us T o g e t h e r " with
would
We,
the bypassed
Joe
accuracy
gains a d d e d significance
once
rolled around,
the
chilling
Communications
M, N i x o n c a p t u r e d the presidency with a
s t a g e d , skillful
year
with
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
a
politically
i d d s
,k..
t h e
expedient
course
and.
t h e b l o o d on h,s h a n d s a n d , . p h o t s
. . . .
t, e e i il n
g s of the fan,,lies ol
, • pt tire J
prisoners of war. Brushing aside the
,jt
thos
families,
Vietnamese
peopl,
lengthening
.,
u u r
t r
"m
«
caliber.
of
well
as
the
lh
I'l m i n i I I . i l l
ill 1 llH'l
V( I! I CM
( I I I I iiiieii
M,lll,|e;e|
U l ,1
V
II I
I .1
,il Cage
•:,. bv
„ , . „ . .ri:v
,
that ,,
even
. iKcrn
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C.iinnus C-nwi 326 at tlir Sf.ue L/e/t-e/.vr. e'A/ew York Jt Albany.
l-iai) W.isli.n./lu,. Arm,,,', AUi.mv. 'V.'H foit. 12222. The ASP nidi
In- n\ic/ird /j) ii'Vpliiinr .11 11,1111 -lb/ J:ilu. The A/bdii, Student
/v.-vs .wz/i.v. i,hi-, to th-- Asso, i.ir.-tl P,,-.,.., Cullt'gt' Pn'ss St-n . ,-. .,nd
LihiiLttitiii A/.-iv.i Se'Wre, ,nxl is r.irt.ii,
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i-d'Unii. I dnnit.il I'ui.c, ul tin- Aih.i-'i I:., Vm Press is den'rinuwd
by th,- Editor„ll BlM'd.
BBGE B
Al&WY STESSOT PRESS
77) e Forum
The Satisiuna-y
Tmmmfcunn-*
prmirnf rjusranr
n » rmer r r i n t r n w - s m . ear j n r a i s m r s n l t n r n i " r
irrrta v a n o p . r r ; n n r i r r » £ fe< ranri o : ttur : m u tt
w » t ones; ujnrc ;r, nmncmu
nrn^n^iwism
tm
program u nna rraar P> mnnm tinuna ahau: In
vuiui i t ?n< studen:
Orynmlh
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to rvhem asadsmu
jr^-nun: a ensaurngt
xtunrr:
CEBiuofj a n c T r n m , . , -,,, ^
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cma!.'} wet: ucanrmiznl'i tr-t
.< rni*» •-' if.ot-i
FRIDAY, JANU
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 9
WOULD YOU Gl E S/U A PASSING GRADE?
"Most...courses should be A-E.
very worst applicant- h i, .,„.
or 80<S in t h e middle who p r ,
S ' U grades lhal :mp-i],. ...„
the fairest possible d e n
: , ; , ' s. i t
Moreover, S I'
idr
have t h e nm>: rfetr;
on the achievement
dent
whin cir!ithrough
hard
work , n,
which due.-i not .»Jw.iv- .ipp* .•
test score h u t which is 5 -KM c r m c o m m i t a n t of -m i • ••• :n jt
ate study
moved too quickly
into the mandators
stem.
R o b t r l Mortis Dean of L n d e r E n t d u a t t
%iu3xn
i -=rtei=t.f \ ' i i l t w a r
!n any case the >po-,id M* .•
S U t y p e grades in und«Ttfr.id
s t u d y is certain t' > turn- d decisions in most d e p a r t - d e p a r t m e n t s t o n-quin i
a
score from their applii ,in'S y m p a t h y with S L' grading; is
only is little information
probably greater at SL'NVA than
veyed by S L' grade- hi.! r.
•: most colleges without such an
ence letter-- also ,tre n-rjr,.,,
j n d e r g r a d u a t e S U policy F o r
uncritical 7'h»- prrvsurr. inone thing. Albany's policy could
creasing reliance • m '••-• -. i
n o : have bee proposed and imple- c o m e ironiealf\
rr.- nt ed
without
considerable
m a i n n a t i o n a l h .idrn u.-i
up port -Judgments a b o u t
animation* ire UIHI.-I r
t- 'if S U grades, t h e n .
being cultur i ,l!> hi.,., -i
•• than
narrow Mure i m p o " ,;.• •.
.-.* most other universities Even
fectivenes, ,,i ;•>• .,,,.. .
... r o u g h h half t h e SL'NVA re
rly judged b \ hr.w n, .
sD'-ndent.s indicated negative efimprove prediction mil
fects on admuMon financial-award
how Well iht'V Will (h.
de
V s o s t u t Dean of G r a d u a t e Studies
-morris
•^ f.{.
w-v
I, , ;
S e n tee would !»-• ;h'• ei
When all freshmen and s o p h o - „ t i
m^r„.
, ,
nation t o sUUL'est MM
more> are graded c o m p l e t e l y S V
replace (jrade
Willi,
-Vrr,:
.. dilemma
often created besuccess in ur.ifl
-linh
cause admission decisions in most
This d i l e m m a r..
cases must be made on t h e basis
L'r.i(le.> will C u m m u
of t w o or three semesters of letconcept ,,i " i i p . n „
wr graded courses T h e validity of
even .iilnu>.i. .n l.\ In
s-ch .1 limited n u m b e r of letter
to uriulu.it.• , t i , i h i
Tr
is often (| ties
t :<i<-d Cimrses
llkelj p i . . . i l n h ! . .
• uned An admi-ssions c o m m i t t e e
VleW ..!' till" till . : , . , :
experiences little difficulty in act
r.irmt! higher .•ilii.M
:nt! on the very he si .ipphcant.s
view ..! the .-litl. .',.
'Wh*i pr.--.eni high lest M u r r . ,tnd
-\r.-ll.-m n-ferences t go ah*ng
w in their S V gr.tdi-s i and on t h e
"Albany's current grading is anything but fair.
"It should
not be
necessary
S/U should be
optional for any
undergraduate."
pr'-pi-'tr<] \i> dew-fm.ne ' -a ' ^ ' >
achieved throu.^i A k. >>i-, Lgrad.r,
further ,t ha* been diffitult :
rr*andaVor> S L' iystern a iuccjnct
ej CM : r o m s.jpfx>ne" . / •.-.
no bubhiantiai t u t em em o.' : r.advanUtgei of thi* system for t h e student Dat-i have been coiseu*-d
which huggeit that application* for gradual*- and prof ew-.on a.
e d u c a t i o n and financial ajd may n o t be b e n terved b> S L" grading Jr.
a d d i t i o n , m a n y (.tudenLfc have reported a need for more preciw
evaJuation o f their work in course Tnerefore while S U a t t e m p t e d to
baLi&fy legitimate c o n c e r r u in u n d e r g r a d u a t e e d u c a t i o n this institution
m o v e d Loo q u i c k l y into the m a n d a t o r y system
Thift response t o t h e question of t h e week is limited by the following
qualification of t h e term " S / U Grading " This term is understood to
b* u»ed in reference t o u n d e r g r a d u a t e grading on this c a m p u s which
m e a n s t h a t t h e freshman or s o p h o m o r e student is graded S i ' unless
he requests A-E grading and that the junior o r senior student is graded
A-E e x c e p t t h a t faculty grade each u n d e r g r a d u a t e S/U rn an
u n d e r g r a d u a t e court* approved for S L' grading
After many m o n t h s of extensive reading, s t u d y and discussion
including f o n s i d e r a t t o n of national reports and a personal review of
the a b u n d a n t r h e t o r r o r the tonic, it is rn> o p i n i o n that Albany's
c u r r e n t u n d e r g r a u a t e grading s y s t e m , as described above, should be
abolished T o replace it, all s t u d e n t s should be graded A K except in
courses designated S/U by the faculty
T h e s e brief s t a t e m e n t s lead m e t o a d v o c a t e a return t o Afc!grading
with t h e faculty encouraged t o consider designating S/U grading for
courses, w h e r e b y learning and i n s t r u c t i o n are e n h a n c e d .
'•"" A h ' • ' : , - r ^ '•'•-'• A- M.rne
' 7 " ( m ' r i r - » - nd-c--i«i L'ri,de>
•--•-< '• d composite ,,i m i l n> qu«ili
' es flr.d it i. posi.bl^. ! ( , s p i . c i f y
:nese -with some research and
*taim,cal analysis, B> grading
different dimensions of student
performance (e.g . mental acuity,
perseverance, retention of facts!
depth of understanding, etc ) a
useful and fair grad.ng system can
be designed
Before responding to I he "que.v
iii.n " i i h e w e e k " it should Ire
i lear that my response is tin expression of personal opinion and does
not, in any way, represent a .statement on behalf of the University
College
My immediate response t o t h e
question under consideration is
that S/U grading should b e o p tional for any u n d e r g r a d u a t e student in any semester of his or her
enrollment
Underlying this response is my generalized view that
there is a significant p e r c e n t a g e of
students w h o wish t o be graded
on an S/U basis and that t h e r e is
also a significant percentage of
students w h o wish A-E grading.
Also underlying this response is
my belief that the University experience must include ample o p portunities for students t o m a k e
choices about their own lives and
futures.
The deficiencies of S/U grades
are n o where more a p p a r t , n l l h a n
' " l h e ' r s u p p o r t of applications ol
graduate and professional schools
The best available predictor of
success in graduate study is undergraduate grades. a n d most graduate schools and department* rely
heavdy upon g r a Q W , ,„ m a k
judgments a b o u , admissions and
financial awards. A recent survey
»f SUNYA graduate d e p a r t m e n t s
i n d i c i a that more than \a% „ r
S/U grades in t h e undergraduate
Implied by this s y s t e m of o p
major or more than 2fi% S/U lions a n d choices are crucial responsibilities that must be a t t e n d
grade,, overall has „ detrimental
ed t o by b o t h the University and
-""'•'
<>f Ad mission /financial.
the student.
Vicki Z e l d i n , J u n i o r
If this university is l.o have a
s a t i s f a c t o r y / u n s a t i s f a c t o r y grading
system at all, it s h o u l d be an
o p t i o n a l , b y s e m e s t e r , total S/U
system for four years.
Martin H e r i a n d s ,
-.mom*
Assistant Dean of University College
T h e University must, through its
advising a n d informing systems,
apprise s t u d e n t s of the "pros and
c o n s " o f t h e available grading
o p t i o n s S t u d e n t s have I he for*
quisite responsibihlv of availing
themselves of Ihis inl'onniitiua
and making t h e critical dect.-anriK
relating to their own short
long
term
plans
ami
Certainly 11*
faculty and adminislration should
also u n d e r s t a n d these "pros .intl
c o m " and should, in eoneerl with
the s t u d e n t b o d y , siipporl ihti
system
evolves
which
99
T o make a s y s t e m that is supposed t o e n c o u r a g e creativity and
e x p e r i m e n t a t i o n m a n d a t o r y seems
c o n t r a d i c t o r y . A s y s t e m like t h e
one I have a d v o c a t e d would allow
the s t u d e n t t o d e c i d e each semester if he wants all o f his courses
graded S/U o r A-E (this would not
include courses t h a t are always
graded S / U ) d u r i n g his undergraduate years.
Studies have indicated lhat S/U
grading m a y have a d e t r i m e n t a l
affect on s t u d e n t s w h o h o p e t o go
to
graduate
o r professional
-schools. I| h a s yel t o be d e t e r
mined ir S/U actually e n h a n c e s a
student's educational experience
or merely m a k e s it easier for him
to get through s c h o o l .
O t h e r studies indicate lhat a
s y s t e m in which a student can
have some courses graded S/U and
others graded traditionally in t h e
same .semester is u n s o u n d . Stud e n t s tend lo d o more work in
I heir lei ter grad.-d courses and
"sluff off" in their S/U courses,
studies report.
It must also be noted that Alb a n y ' s current system is a n y t h i n g
but consistent a n d a n y t h i n g b u t
fair. T o have a grading system that
the
u n i versity
terms
"mand a t o r y , " y e t a t the same time it
allows s t u d e n t s to petition t o b e
e x e m p t e d from this m a n d a t o r y
system is nol only confusing, b u t
is, q u i t e simply, wrong.
In view of the information revealed by various studies a n d in
order lo provide s t u d e n t s with a
c h a n c e lo d e t e r m i n e h o w t o ap
proach and shape their a c a d e m i c
careers, il is necessary t o change
the curteni " m a n d a t o r y with ex
c e p t i o n s " policy '<» '"i optional by
semester lour year S/U system,
to write
a letter
requesting
grades."
Linda Mule", F r e s h m a n
• .di shaw
I feel t h a t S-U grading s h o u l d
definitely be m a d e o p t i o n a l for till
first a n d second-year s t u d e n t s . A t
this p o i n t , it is kind o f o p t i o n a l
because requests for A through E
grading b y freshmen a n d s o p h o m res are a l m o s t always g r a n t e d .
But I feel t h a t is should n o t b e
necessary
t o write a letter
requesting grades; a b e t t e r s y s t e m
would b e t o have each first a n d
second-year s t u d e n t just check off
on s o m e p r i n t e d form w h e t h e r
they w a n t grades o r pass-fail each
term for four t e r m s , or s o m e t h i n g
similar t o t h a t . This would give
each s t u d e n t an equal o p p o r t u n i t y
to go o n grades, w i t h o u t the fear
t h a t only if he is a pre-med o r a
p r e l a w s t u d e n t will he be given
grades
I think that an S-U grading
s y s t e m is very g o o d , especially for
freshmen, because it takes a l o t
of t h e c o m p e t i t i v e pressure o u t
of classwork a n d , I t h i n k , gives a
s t u d e n t t h e o p p o r t u n i t y t o get as
m u c h o r as little o u t o f a course as
he o r s h e w a n t s , which is w h a t
e d u c a t i o n truly s h o u l d b e . In
s o m e respects, S-U grading might
tend t o m a k e s t u d e n t s work a
little less when it c o m e s to assignm e n t s and tests, b u t this d o e s n ' t
mean t h a t t h e y ' r e n o t learning t h e
material. You can learn a lot m o r e
by simply listening to a professor
and really c o n c e n t r a t i n g o n a lecture, than y o u can by frantically
scribbling d o w n every word he
says a n d n o t really hearing or
leaning a n y t h i n g .
I think it would b e a good idea
t o m a k e either certain courses o r a
certain n u m b e r of courses pass-fail
for freshmen a n d s o p h o m o r e s .
T h i s would b e t h e idea s y s t e m ,
because then s t u d e n t s could take
courses in their major field for
grades ( f o r later e n t r a n c e i n t o
g r a d u a t e schools), and take o t h e r
courses, courses they just w a n t t o
take for n o particular reason, o n a
pass-fail basis. This would take
a w a y a certain a m o u n t of t h e
fears t h a t s t u d e n t s o n pass-fail
grading have, t h a t they will be
d e n i e d admission t o good graduate schools because of a lack of
first and second-year grades; a n d
it would still give t h e m an o p p o r t u n i t y t o take certain n o n - m a j o r
courses piuis-fail.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1972
PAGE 10
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
I
GRAFFITI
Zero
Population
Growth—New
York announces the operation of a
free Abortion
Referral
Service, A n y
INTERESTED FOLK
1
On Jan
31 in LC 1 1 at 8 p m , there
will be a general interest meeting for
.ill people concerned with organizing a
volunteer
ambulance
campus.
service
Information
on
this
about
the
proposal that is now being considered
PEACE & POLITICS
MAJORS & MINORS
PAGE 11
and training w i l l be discussed. Every
woman up to 24 weeks pregnant will
be directed to the doctor, clinic or
hospital that best suits her needs. The
telephone number is 2 1 2 - 1 8 9 - 7 7 9 4 ,
and we ore staffed from 10 to 5,
Monday thru Friday. They are located
at 363 West 57th Street, New York
N.Y. 10019.
onr; is i n v i t e d , this is not l i m n e d t o
ijuys
Mike Tabor is a non Zionist, pro Is
rael
SERVICES
HELP WANTED
Typing - Reasonable rates. Special
attention
to
thesis
papers.
Call
OVERSEAS
JOBS
Australia,
FOR
DENTS.
Hall.
America, Africa etc. All professions
Europe,
FOR SALE
Luxury apartment to share with
STU-
Bruce at 7 - 7 7 9 0 or visit 102 V . C .
HOUSING
$160.
My
For sale: Men's Ski Boots-Plastic
one man. The utmost in comfort.
S.
PERSONALS
Ray 4 5 6 - 6 6 6 7 or 4 5 6 - 6 6 2 7 .
and occupations, $ 7 0 0 to $ 3 , 0 0 0
darling
Steve,
Happy
20th
Nordica Apollo. Worn only Twice.
Birthday! Thanks for being y o u . I
Size 1 1 . List: $ 8 0 . 0 0 . Price $45.
need you. Love, Y o u r Kitten.
sightseeing.
Free
Write, Jobs Overseas, Dept. E6. Box
mo/plus Ut. Available immediately
1 5 0 7 1 , San Diego, Ca. 9 2 1 1 5 .
(close to bus) 4 8 2 - 5 6 3 2 .
To
from
a year
in
level. Call Bobbi 4 8 9 - 3 1 9 6 .
For Sale : 1966 Chevrolet; goad
RIDE WANTED
Female
Near
share
4
bus
bedroom
869-2474.
done
in
my
home
Pete:
THANKS!!
Arty
and
to
the
S58
Oliver
and Sarah
Haven Area. Any weekend call Arty
472 5618
Robert. Best of everything.
The suite.
Diemont
a historian,
hard Martin
case $ 4 0 0 . Guild 12
string $ 3 5 0 . Call Bill 4 8 2 - 0 9 3 0 .
Roamate wanted, own bedroom,
Attention
seeking
Call
faculty
and
Carol
<"
'<»*•''
Vietnam
ators available on rental basis for
your office. Call 4 5 9 7 2 0 0 .
Lip.
sale:
'59
Chevy
Call
luwn
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<n CC
457-4772.
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PY B I R T H D A Y ! ( 1 - 2 8 , 1-29, 1-30)
Love, Randi and Dale
*****
House on Western Ave., near StuyAVON
block
Apt
from
utilities
bedroom,
Drape*,
Veterans
Against
the
Call
On
Aaron
;ind Marcia- Congrats
PETS
Adorable
kittens
PY
BIRTHDAY!!
Lynn,
SUNYA
Draft
,,
, .
need
good
From
Sheila,
ni
rftlOfl
- i o n MTUlk*
p.m , lues
10'
„
n
T h u r s 1 - 5 , 7 - 9 p ITI
1,
/ -
ll»|'l>> l u r l l l c l l l j
hliick.
oninge
and
girl
Dutch, Please call 7 7B39.
iifim,
PARTY:
for apply
Meet
who have been there. Re
freshments. Feb. 1, 7:30 to 1 0 0 0
p.m. PH Bra 129.
lediiiruu. Reasonable. 48'J 6 4 7 3 .
WHY NOT SEND YOUR CLASSIFIED APS
|
'
,,
. r n c ,
The SUNYA
nounced thai
and
with
day he w . l !
""• '
in HU
AMERICAN
SUNYA
new
Judo
Will I
-,,-f,o
the
assistance
staff,
a
Cay
IK; t m
at
ching
(ampus
>d
iii'lhl I .-li
llic
1 .
Gym
vv.llil, l i " II,. Km I ,,',l.',ii D'V
\Uv
of
1
son and 77ft Sanie Sex-An
of Homosexuality,
8pm
R o m n j on
i .ill
hii.Ti-.H-H
prisons
'
1
TELETHON
Sl'ltl'lll
D.ivul
th/AIA'J
March
A',l
Up
.|ti!)l
WE NEED
'72
ll„"I
l 9 7 5
of
and
Science
Tea
the Classes of
A
-
(
§
_
llu.
SttCUIlri
1974
Mi I Of d i a l M HI
(
|(
(
h|
, d l M I , ] [ v ,IH,(,1|M(|,
Mj
|(|
in
(acuity
V.il
I ui",(l,iy, ,il
l,„|l
,
fui
ii I'Ar
Nn .MKIII
|
Any
„.,ii
lull
unity
,1,111,1,1
H 03 in
the Albany
I
I h e Workshop will
I I I ,'ti
admission v e
• I'M
?9
There is no
All area residents who
interested
4,m,nca
sp.-at.-i
/minute
ACES
.'.my
mum)
w - l M i . \'< -"
•'..'
" '• " • ' * -
su
will
",
I
111 s i r n t l . i t
.sfiil
ll.
lis I,"
Softball
.!••
.Lin
1
Design m Roman
hnpt-nal
Osti.r
..
'"• l | V , ' M " " v v ' r l 1 i H l •' ''' H ' ' "
M
" i ' | , i h l •"••••"•"•'•'• ' ' • " • • • " ' '•
I 30.
I HI
,u
HU 29(1 All wimion .-re mvih-tl
:il
,H
/ :i0
Puerto
I veryone
Night
at
free
is invited. Free ad
Refreshments will be served
Cumt; and do your favorite folk
dan. i>
Tau
Beta
Fraternity
invites
the entire Universtiy c o m m u n i t y to an
Open
House. Sunday, Jan. 3D from
2-5
p.m. in Johnson Hall, Colonial
Quad.
Hear
the
Rock
music-ready
known
to
when
mitted
Garden - J e s u s
become
they
Cafeteria at 8 p m
nationally
met
Jesus.
CC
Sponsored by Com-
Reach.
n, invited
lo
Dance at 9 p m Sat . Jan
at Channtng Hall across from Draper
Hall, Sponsored by GLF of
|l rn
llu;
III
cc
BMIUI
Our
GREAT
Rico's
political
status
Speakers include
will
Assembly
man Manuel Ramos, .la. i e l o Marrero
nl Hi.' National Conference o l Chnsl
lans ant J Jews. ti^Ci Soma Marrero of
the P u r - m Rican Soriohsl
Sons
Tri-Cities.
Down!
AMERICAN
THE
LIGHT
WAR.
PaMy.
India Association
,'slii'i
pool
qualification
bralions of 22nd
public
courses will be I n
for
Jan 28 at
A/ban-
Anniversary
of
Re-
Day of India at LC 18 on Sun ,
Jan
30 at
6 30
refreshments
Mr
test
at SUNY at
y heartily invites y n u to a t t e n d cele
P.V,
p.m
St tar
and
Delhi
Indian
Talks by
Indian consul
culture,
Holmes, former
New
Light
music.
Reddy,
education
The
League
and
for
Dr
R
Director, U.S.F.F.I .
Films
Land of
Bengal'
and 'Glimpses nf J a m i i u
I.,IV
tin-
Hymns
A i i y u t i i ' in
l.ll I (M.,1,1,
Movie
ill
M.i "iiiin,| In-
season.
-I
III
Volun
Start,
eers
rjfficf,
1 ii .I'i'il
till'
Psychology
ll.Upli'S, L u l l ,
Sltlnf i n n ,
i.nl
"I
Department
Will.II,
Wish
.,!
Lift iiv
Mlh
N n , I'll,
II
8 : 1 !i
"""
.m.i
III
-'"'I'
Point
Sight
Institute
mental
ummertime
M In.Ln .
\\ 1111 11
*,
III
'.,'
i j M H I | l :.l K i n t l
"1
."!
I.-'I
III
'
•
I I ' l l " ' , . --
i.„|
,. ,1 '
Mm
• l.ii
Ul'l
C u l l , H ' M , H l . MIS
,",.,,.,,,,
In.i.l
,1'..IH|
TELETHON
1 S u n.i
Ml,,II
have
.iii,l
i
. u
Conspiracy
in LC
1
$ 75 others
dian
Admission $ 25
Sponsored by
In-
Quad.
"1
I.V
II
Wl
..
will
IIM
Theatre
Council
5nn>mi
(pit's.!
ai list
Essence
Mime
announces
ils
attraction,
the
Troupe
,i
group
ol
ynuni] pur l o i inert, already '"asters <>f
I xperi-
commum ty
iriful
IS
7 30 p m
1 111
/H
Im
'"
M l l l l l ' l . ' S l M l f in 11,11 I I I , | , , , | i l l ' l
.Ill-.W
^l„
Chicago
VI.HI
111 '
l-'M'M.
II.....
1
,1
i
l l , U.-ll
1,(1
'The
Trial' I n . Feb. 4 and Sat.. Feb. 5 al
KM.
nid
yi
" • " " '
un. linn with
-lead
l,
,
Wi >r k.,
-.Ml! h.' , i.,i,i", till ,"
for
,i
Hull
il 4'..' fit 17.1
are needed
w.'i'fi
It vis r n u s l
perlorm
I ri.
u n u s u a l ar I,
no
Jan
|hu
28
at
Ihe
PAC
8
troupe Will
Mam
n rn.
Staije
on
! kkBIS: $1
W/
stiuli'iii ia»., $2 w/imi,
,i
ll.'lll . W i l d
i|.'i • -,t
tiHim
,M,
[.>
-' ' l lit "' 1 ml'i / I CIH
II
OFFICIAL NOTICE
III'.
till
Eight
Wi'il
Camei
,111.1
with
I l n
Pantyhose
I .." I
•'•
• ,111(1
M..n
.'
II"
t-sli'd
ll'ih
II,..,.,„,
"'
5300
Avu'inblv Hall
5fo/i smoking: ,i u .-.iln in ,! |,n„|i.iiii
•
' ^ " ' " ' ^ " • / " " ' ' " ' f ' ' '""'
Dance
i m m ' i n ,in o h n n t a l i o i i SUSMOM M U M .
SCUBA
I'.ill.l.
I •'
I'M
of
Room.
mission,
Community
NlH
AfCha00,QlfKa,
Folk
li
All
, li( „ , . . ,
Quad
?0, also a Peoples Feast at 7pm, Both
M mid
in
Indian
in wiitini) jioeliy .lie
I I'W
'I
tramural
.
, , .
m pre-medical,
pre-dental,
,
and medical technology programs will
^
^
^ ^
, |(nm
. j0
f ^
n 9 : 3 0 P.M.. in HI . ^ H C UIKIIM linn
this i n h i i r n a l n
IIMI| I f " ihc Department of Biological
Sciences win l»
.
| , , ) H M „ , |> ( ., in v
Hnli,ns .nwl
Wi('((|
others.
lii.lt'd In Jlti'lid
6 p m al the (iyrn. He rnaily in swim by
mil•icsird
Ativan, «• „ „ . ! i « n
h
in
iihniiij
s llillllillKl
sili.ii.l
P'I'I
I'•.'
ittomi
|il.iy,iii|
Hoili.
;,l
»•"'
iiict-ts
ll.,- iiinv.'isH,
III
m i l
Mi'inyl
l i , ,pon m
wmi
i" Iii' held
HELP!
H ,'H i , I , i i l u , , | I , . | ,
nl
CII.IIIIT.
|f|(i
kalian-
Band
in I ' A C
inll'.i'Sli'll
'
Marxist—Leninist
Study
Group.
Fust meflling \u.-,
I ,-h i at ' i n .«
Ihe I .tnsidu I mmi|e
lu|«
4/if/-
lor
in be field
ml.' wilh ,i Pni'liy Coffee House
at 7pm
mcetrng
lo
-'-plain
ihe
Albany
MaihHmaiiu St iimce I I M I h.nij Pn>ji*. i
will ho held at / 30 P m on W n l
.
....
. . . . .. ( ( (
|(( _
mu> at up MI in l i t J
12 30- 1 3 0 , March ti, 12 30
April 12, 1 2. May ?, W 3 0
Chapel
lit' fMi.ilrif nn Sal .(.in 29 m CC 375
l'j
all
l.uiy
YOUR
Appraisal
revolution
al
sl,l,|,-l
din
.'.-,„.,
flic A l l i u m c w i l l
anti-imperialist
un
liium,mii'iil Willi li ivill III'
f t finif.il
for
9 p m Sal . Jan. 2 9 . Indian Quad Flay
luMsd.iy evenings at 7 3 0 p.m.
i
accepting
A Judo dBiinmsti<itii)ii
H V I i l k UK) lllfliTs
$.25
III Uuvu Si,, Albany, nn lour succes
SIVM
A n y , m i ' n i l " i " . , i , . , l ,n w i n ) in,! nn tlin
»
Irom
3:00
A n y o n e m|i*'"RtiKl Hi li'arninn a
nl
and
There will be donuts and coffee as
Sigma
bruit
A fits
The charge is $ . 1 0 for Waldon
members
II"
WAR.
'ill's
ion.
luiw
and
tin; uvi-nmy
and mi Man h 22
Majors
'
y
ar
cur-
9^-Tion
and
House 4 8 9 * 5 7 3 .
GREAT
Club is now
Ill / p i n
s.tm Julio
(
weir i MI«'
mfls
CI.ASSIFTK!) FCR.V
THE
Music will be provided by John Simp-
..til
l,',|,,l
I >n 111'
II,i' wn",lliin| iniiill ,,f
mi'inlii't
Camus nn tubmen'f /?/;//U.v Mc-I
12203'
l,„
LIGHT
members
72
i l't-00 W a s h i n g t o n Ave, A l b a n y , : , , Y .
I'llv
.villi
,||,(j
s.'iilv
Ill
Wednesdays,
riiuisil.ivs. He can also
Iii'iliiiinnii I Mb
libl
^ ; „ , Wn,v,,.,,y
To Mathematics
Gay Alliance i,,i', -if.
ihrouyh th-ir olfnrts
India and Pakistan.
.NUVITEO
I
s ii'.idy
I
available f r o m M K o w a i d . H U 309
•IVIPJ.F
,,1,1,1, •
SM.II
••.
mi
Bookstnrn Such honl ; ,v. What Every
Homosexual
Knows
by H u l l Hon-
-feudal,
THROUGH CAMPUS MAIL?
,11)
the
and
Room nl Haininiiiis Bli'ecket Library,
annnun
|
J
li,
LlSt
lit
"'
10
d
;";') / - . s i
>ul
/
in
1:00
dull Depai luii'iii will sponsdi a Poetry
f»SMim ot H K W tumrs w i t h l)r Lam
boil Will lake |il,iir in Wis 2 9 0 (llu
ces Ihe arrival of a gay
information....
..
.,,
•crisis line, beginning M a n Jan 31
...
,
,,
,.,. . „ „ , ,.
We also have an o f t i c e - C C JOB Stop
128 d u r i n g , his s o r n ^ o .
- 5UNYA
discussion
U
sociolinguistics
m
rn.tnint'iDmlnriMHi:
Gay Alliance
meet every Wed
.' I.li.n
minimal
,»n
,
books has boon so! up i-n ih« Campus
DEADLIME
Afuh.in pups. Well brad, excellent
n
Q- mar
' I " . , Mil
llllM.lll
ii
invited in attend
bookstore
incj to study abroad next ye.it
pm
I
be
liiilij on M . I I I I' ,i|i, in tin. Mam Clym
|!ll-l>n Ii.!•<• i»KIf...
grey cat lust outside Schuyujr Hall
people
"I
! Mil
C
Als.,
Hob
by or call 157 / 5 1 6 . / 5 0 8 , / J 1 6 .
7509 between 7 and 9 niqhily
homes. Call 436 4012 lor interview.
H.ilf grown,
•••[,"
nil
(
Counseling Hours:
.
... .
, ...
1-4
Leslie, Marianne, and Ellen
ODDS&ENDS
-.'
l."l
War
to
To Bob, Frank, and Steve, HAP
Came to 184 N Alien off
"•-. ••-
1
Reading
line.
T boy < .
rn
.11 S U N Y A
o
-i
tunduct
M.iM li 21
The SUNYA
Bob
bus
-.[><•* .aiist
he
,,,
21
one
-J63 0065
tpartment
and
Will
',!'I",'1,'"""M'1' k n ' M " 1 '"'"' " , v
""
bilmgualism
and bilingual
education
463829?
2:00
lui'sil'iv. and
m.lli.
Workshop
* * < " » ' " » ;"
Diive
lliiwl ,
n ,.
info call
/IQQ R7«n
p m.,
P R O D U C T S ; Call Gloria
S507month,
mrltided.
„|
Area Peace Center, 727 Madison A v o
Albany, 7 p m Jar, 28 and f u n * I ...
needed to share furOwn
!),..,„„
There will he m ^ ' t i n u s hi'ld at Capital
Mon
463-7960.
Roommate
,>,.,,
(Humanities Lnumie) l u m i A m Q p m
Dear Bob, Frank, and Steve, HAP
vesant Plaza. Call 4 8 2 6883.
nished
An mi
I n s t u d y J h n i . l i l t i i r M vtVH
will
between
ached
.1
I I'll
».„.
V i i l.il
"'"
(or
>" <X :*/!,
iri.if.ii«i
Coalit'on
,.,
i ,,,
Ail mierested arc invited
staff:
Little Lip • Congratulations on
your election, you jjit
"Single"
For
needed
ln
,i,„|
I 1
"" , '" ,l,n "" , "" r '' |,""'""M '" <
315 Topic new constitution.
4 6 3 1904.
Roommate
i,
in
Delmonico 5.5 cubic foot refrigerstudent
,i ,,,.,..• r.,I
Love, the Rest of Suite 703.
472-9056.
G r ii d
lie
fm
is sponsoring a
Jewish
Albany Public I ibrary's Young A
will l*> hold
3 0 at 3 30 P rn
will
NEAR
i.LSI- H I M IV Ki.ul
I,"
Congratulations and Best Wishes.
Robin Street, near Draper, Call Ed,
apartment-mate.
Sunday, Jon
703-1,
lii'iwi'i'ii
no
General membership memine of the
Jewish Students 'Coalition
Martin D-28 Guitar 12 string plus
mill
s i u i l w i f , WMI. m m .
Congratulations to Katherine and
immediately
465-4012.
Mondays .inil
Russian Cluh on Wnd
' •<" I1
i '.'
l u the
mi
Ci.lTi..
mill iito,
advisor
S:0l)
IS
Association
p.m. in the Watorbury Main Lounge.
usual.
Paul Nobes
Luinine
END
tVafden
Coffee House .this Sunday from 8 - 11
ijirls.
Students
THE
rimrii
also need
f'.ituinn
,il p . i , i l " i i i
flu,
will
to Love'
great
Tl>urs
Feb 3 al Hlitii in tlio (X.
Ballroom. Admission freo, all are wol
Carole.
call Lenny: 4 5 7 - 8 7 2 2 .
Apt.
Ride Wanted: Bridgeport or New
Typing
Alternative
we
1 ,11 8l>in in L C 7 Admission
American Jewish Death Trip.
snows; inspected Jan. 1972. $ 4 0 0 ,
Franco
willing to tutor at any undergrad
An
only
I tifthoi info .1!)/ b 0 7 5
rslrue
condition; new brakes, good rubber
Need a French tutor? Student just
returned
on Fob
ableat Chapel House fur laps, J,in 2 9 ,
1pm,
Hie Psy. I.nl.iiiy Chili, is
snoiisonrut a <nw\v'Freedom
Saturday , he's avail
speakers- Sarah Pines, a psychoanalyst
Own room in large apartment $ 5 0
information.
Jew concerned with
Jewish survival.
Women's Liberation
Call Ellen 7-7724.
monthly. Expenses paid, overtime,
Typing, Cheap - Call A l 7-7972.
Diasporist
Cathexis.
WHAT TO DO?
I..,.
Il.„l.i..„,l
III
s|.
l.il
wvr
!-•
H 'i il
In
A l Ill
C u l l . - ,M
W . l l W 1,11
I'm,
mil
'i/.'ii.'
Bn>
1 IIM
Appin .ilinns
'ent assistants
,„
loi
positions as stu-
in the Campus
Center
il,.- summer and hill ol \972
,ow available
in
,iin|iii!i Ci'iner
Hutim
137 ol
Appln.ili
are
the
ns rnusl h r
uhn i l l . ' d by M a n l i 1
a-i i s
6 17
267
"JGCJO
t.o r u n
TODAY'S
THE LAST DAY
•,o rc:i\r\ an f o i l own :
TO REDEEM YOUR
FREE FRENCH FR\
Smokey's friends
don't play with matches.
COVPOHS
AT
Of
J '"OTA!
I
I
I
I
i
i
.am. 1
! Addrv:
l>l
Albany vs. Potsdam
\l>l I M S
1006
I ..i
I.Ii -..las I'.I
'"'
' ' " ' • ' * I'll"-'
• llllli.l\
tt,ll„c,,l,,y
I I
I I I ) II
11 „„
III
llM
Central A v e n u e , Albany
(offer expires January -W. I '17-1
members
evaluations
candidates:
wishing
for
resident
I ists of
candi
dales .HKl evaluation forms are avail
able m the office ot Residences ( A D
129) and should be submitted on or
before
Feb
4
Students wishing to
evaluate H A
candidates should pick
up
from
a
hum
then
quadrangle
secretary or through their R A. Evaluslum Id
be
submitted
to
the
Attention
Students:
Travel
University
9-1!
a.m. IPr programming. Starting
I i-ti.
Allow
/
navel
J
Physician
Shots
See
si in is will
months
loi
weekdays
be
given.
nimpletion
ol
sei res.
/McDonald's
—
assistant
ations
tomorrow at 2:55 pm on
i'(ir
-
and staff
submit
quad secretary on or before Fob. A
•//', r".'
A inn i
'!•
Afternoon
Basketball
faculty
to
WSUA' 640
serving the university community
Will the person who lununht a it)
comnitiiKlution
lot in
versity of
Miami
Oltice ol
Student
loi
the
Law School
Unito the
I ifu on Jan.
20
please mve his name so Ihe f o r m can
be completed,
PAGE 12
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
by Bill Heller
T h e y then totally b l e w the Red
Dragons off the court with a 15-4
s p u r t . As J o s s played great at b o t h
ends of the c o u r t , John Quattrocchi got hot. T r o c h a c c o u n t e d
for t h r e e baskets o n his o w n , b u t
o n c e again it was his excellent
SUNYAC
Standings
Team
Brockport
Buffalo S t a t e
Albany
Geneseo
Potsdam
Cortland
Oswego
Oneonta
New Paltz
Fredonia
Plattsburgh
Won L o s t
5
4
4
2
3
1
1
1
1
0
0
'/a
1
2
2
3
3
Vh
4
4
4%
passing t h a t led t h e way t o a
60-47 advantage. Albany held the
thirteen p o i n t lead till 2 : 3 0 , when
b o t h c o a c h e s went t o t h e b e n c h .
Down 6 4 - 6 1 , O n e o n t a scored six
straight p o i n t s , b u t it was m u c h
t o o little and much t o o late.
...poltact;
Willis Might Quit!
NEW YORK AP - Willis Reed, the (if
Ill c e n t e r w h o led the New
York Knicks to t h e NBA c h a m p i o n s h i p I wo years ago, is having su
m u c h t r o u b l e with an Kiting left leu, that he painfully speculates, "I
might never be b a c k . "
Reed was e x p e c t e d t o r e t u r n l<> work out with the Knicks
Wednesday b u t a m e e t i n g with team d o c t o r Andrew Patterson
canceled that a p p o i n t m e n t . It was decided his left knee would not
s t a n d up to the p o u n d i n g it would be required to take
Reed, the K n i c k s ' answer lo superstar c e n t e r s such as Kareeni Abdul
J a b b a r and Wilt C h a m b e r l a i n , has mil played in .'Id games dating back
to Nov. I 1. And while he was o p t i m i s t i c until n o w , the t o n e of his
c o m m e n t s has c h a n g e d .
" W e ' r e going lo t a k e a few days
to think a b o u t w h a t t o d o . Maylx>
c o n t i n u e the t h e r a p y . Maylx- surgery. T h e y d o n ' t k n o w , " R e e d
explained.
" T h e y , the fans, have just goi t o
forget about me until I'm actually
o u t there again. But w h o knows?
Willis Reed might never b e b a c k . "
So, at 29, R e e d ' s career is
definitely in j e o p a r d y , a n d his
t e a m m a t e s realize it, a l t h o u g h
they remain hopeful.
"We'll just have l o go ahead
w i t h o u t h i m , " said Jerry Lucas,
w h o has taken over R e e d ' s post at
c e n t e r . " T h e r e ' s a l w a y s been the
h o p e in the hack of o u r m i n d s
that he'll c o m e hack • t h e r e still
by John Fairhall
In the J.V. game, the little
Danes scored their first win of the
year, 6 0 - 5 6 , as Mel.Brown hit for
d o u b l e figures
..pollack
ASP SPORTS
A b b e y Road w««««'&s«»='a«cie«oGc<sos/s«oocoacc»5i5«osc«c«<5^^
The Lonely Athlete
'*tttttt&??zttttrs>s*^^
Alan D. Abbey
T h e ideal person is the one w h o
functions best alone, singly, individually. Even t h o u g h man has
always tried lo s u r r o u n d himself
with o t h e r s of his kind, he has
always been alone. Look i n t o
yourself. Can you truly say t h a t
there is even o n e person w h o
knows you totally; inside and
out'.'
S p o r t s has long been analogous
lo life itself, and it is n o t surprising t o find the s a m e loneliness
and singularity present in life,
existing in sport.
T h e r e are certain athletes in
certain
sports
that
exemplify
these c o n d i t i o n s , and it is n o t
surprising lo find t h e m in some of
the leasl watched and m o s t neglected sports. Perhaps t h o s e
running alone o u t on a track, or wrestling in a g y m ,
or swimming in an e m p t y pool are all slighted
because they t o o achingly remind o n e of one's o w n
loneliness.
T h e m o s l popular sports, w o r l d w i d e , are those
involving t h e mosl t e a m w o r k , and interplay between individuals who meld into a single e n t i t y .
Basketball. Soccer. Hockey. F o o t b a l l . All these
sports require interaction between men or w o m e n .
Societies have long striven to c o o p e r a t e and work as
well together as does a c h a m p i o n s h i p h o c k e y t e a m .
To me, however, the sports of the individual, the
loner, are t o me the m o s l exciting, because they
p r e s e n t man in his m o s t elemental form, alone,
J a m e s (Jang
Prophets
APA
Ebony
EEP
TKO
Soul 1 lusllers
Nads
STB
EOP
pollack
L E A G U E II A
Won
Lost
(i
(i
0
0
1
TEAM
7:30
I Monday, January 31
CC Assembly Hall
Won
Los
li
5
II
1
The Dead
Zoomcrs
Bells
Zoo C o m m u t e r s
Blue Meanies
Zoe
Coronas
(1DX
Kid Delmar
;i
:i
•1
'i
;i
o
o
1
1
II
•)
presents:
Seance on a Weit
Afternoon
tVMAMM
G
7:15 & 9:15
$.25 with tax
LC 25
$.75 w/o tax
funded by student tax
Assuming thill the food doesn't
suffer in the short trip between
commissary and q u a d , then unpal
atable meals m u s t be blamed on
New
Hampshire.
March
7
(API Muskie of Maine is a sure
winner on h o m e ferrilory in New
Enutand; the q u e s t i o n here is how
Die. lie refuses to set any percenlaec goal, although he acknowledges the size of the victory
will d e t e r m i n e its significance.
Defeat in New Hampshire would
he a disaster his candidacy probably could not survive.
1
1
}
1
1
j
1
The Who
Gametes
M.illsi-h
r.
AI'A
Ueliincy Hall
Embryo
BPS
McGovern Pushing
WE NEED YOUR HELP
McGovern has a stronc. New
Hampshire organization, has been
campairminn the slate lor m o n t h s ,
and hopes t o finish a respectable
second. His principal o p p o s i t i o n ,
and the man he must b e a t , is
Yorty, a maverick Democrat with
conservative backing. T h e Los
Angeles Mayor has the s u p p o r t of
the Manchester Union-Leader, the
stale's d o m i n a n t newspaper, and
widely regarded by New Hampshire politicians :.s capable of d e livering 2(1 per c e n t of the vote.
The C o m m u n i t y Service Bureau is responsible for the welfare of
youngsters w h o have been in S l a t e Training Schools. Coming from
poor family b a c k g r o u n d s , those children can h e helped thrmiRh
the generosity of i n t e r e s t e d , d e d i c a t e d , and qualified families who
can make a difference in the life of a child.
More specific i n f o r m a t i o n can be obtained by calling the Social
Services S t u d y Unit o r the School uf Social Welfare ai 172-H2tfo.
PLEASE H E L P !
tfpkaHuu for eonhmcB astManh no* mlbkhl
0
1
1
1
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2
1
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1
The League I (jame b e t w e e n
the J a m e s Gun/i and the Pro
phcls will h e p l a y e d in t h e gym
at 6 : 3 0 p . m . o n F e b r u a r y i)
before t h e varsity game with
Hamilton.
specialty: getting t h e most and
best for the least a m o u n t of m o n L'yWhile he's been here the operation has e x p a n d e d e n o r m o u s l y
and he believes a great m a n y
innovations have been i n t r o d u c e d
in recent years. T h e c o n t i n e n t a l
breakfast, deliline, salad bar, unlimited iee cream, a n d m u l t i p l e
meal plans were n o t in effect
several years ago. A p p a r e n t l y , t h e
S U N Y A s t u d e n t s of y e s t e r y e a r
had to rough it foodwise.
"We have a good r e p u t a t i o n . . . "
F i n k e believes our F o o d Service
is doing a good job, and said, " W e
have a good r e p u t a t i o n . . . in this
kind of business " Many o t h e r
schools, he slales, arc not up In
Interested undergraduate students are invited to apply fori
positions as conference assistants for the 1972 Summer.
Planning Conference. Applications for these positions are,
now available in the Office of Student Life, CainpusJ
Center Room 130. The positions will involve a maximum j
time commitment of June 18 through August 18, 1972.,
Assistants will receive a salary of $500, plus room anci|
board for the entire conference period. Applications must J
n be submitted by Monday, February 14, 1972 in order t o j
l be considered. For further information about Summer,
u
• ~» vAJnaiuurBu. ror runner _information
„*»
I .. n«»"»'
a n t i m l ^ i l T f f i r f—
t S t•!
I Planning Conference, plan to attend a general interest,
} meeting at 8 P. M. on January 30, in Lecture Center 7.
j
Hai-Ike
is entered
in
New
Hampshire, loo, claiming he will
win Nobody shares that judgment.
Florida, March 14; Everybody
is entered in a race Humphrey
hopes will slow Muskie.
Early pedis show Wallace narrowly lending the field, with
H u m p h r e y and Muskie close behind. A l o p Florida D e m o c r a t said
his sampling of c o u r t h o u s e politicians in the conservative n o r t h
where Wallace is strongest indicate
the Alabama governor may lose a
substantial c h u n k of votes t o
Jackson,
leaving
Muskie
and
H u m p h r e y to battle for t o p s p o t .
Humphrey,
hanking on
his
standing with elderly voters and
with blacks, said he would consider it a victory if he ran ahead of
Muskie even if Wallace finished
first.
Humphrey Strong
Muskie strategists consider t h a t
You Asked For ItHOT SUBS
1,. is
1
Richard Finke, commissary chi:f
the level S U N Y A s t u d e n t s s u p p o s edly enjoy. A l t h o u g h F i n k e believes S U N Y A s t u d e n t s are relatively well off, t h e search for
i m p r o v e m e n t s goes on. There is a
test k i t c h e n , and us a large business, the c o m m i s s a r y
receives
s a m p l e p r o d u c t s from m a n y com p a n i e s . One such sample is soybean (vegetable) p r o t e i n , a canned
p r o d u c t that can be mixed with
m e a t . F i n k e says vegetable p r o t e i n
is a c o m i n g idea - and m e n t i o n e d
t h a t the Burger King W h o p p e r is
called a w h o p p e r because it isn't
all h a m b u r g e r - it's 2 0 % s o y b e a n
protein. However, he assured this
reporter ( and I saw real, red
h a m b u r g e r patties} that o u r burgers are all m e a l . Of course, soybeans are a c o m i n g idea, but lei's
leave thai t o t h e class of *H2.
Primaries Last Hope
For Democratic Long Shots
Summer Planning Conference 1972 j
i;
Won
Jan. 28
Finke believes thai
students
have nol given strong voice to
their grievances. The q u a d food
c o m m i t t e e s yield some input , b u t
still, Finke stales that " c o m m u n i cation is our biggest p r o b l e m . "
Complaints are acknowledged and
sometimes result in menu changes.
The Friday and Saturday night
menus • meals which m a n y students have k n o w n lo be inferior •
have been s t r e n g t h e n e d , or so
Finke claims.
Finke has had long experience in
the SUNYA food business. He was
a chef in Brnhachcr Hall in 1950,
then lefl the school l o work in
resort and holel food o p e r a t i o n s
lie came hack in I * J Ti TJ and after a
short si in I as chef he began his
rise in I-he FSA administrative
ranks He calls himself a " h o r s e
t r a d e r " and considers b u y i n g his
:i
:i
I
i
TKAM
switchboard
Menu Changes
Butchers, Bakers..Prepare Food
Possibly the answer is that these individuals
recognize their own isolation from o t h e r s , and have,
if not c o n q u e r e d il. began to search for t h e answer
in individual, single, sole, personal, lonely, pursuits.
L E A G U E ll-B
* 5300 *
As Finke says, reading A l b a n y
State is like feeding a small city.
The four q u a d s a n d t h e C a m p u s
Center operations feed
about
15-20,000 p o u n d s of hamburger
are needed for one week at this
c a m p u s ; and 1200 cases of cereal
a m o n t h . But these incredible
figures d o n o t mean that students
m u s t suffer low quality food or
poorly prepared meals, in fact,
Finke says that there is no excuse
for a lousy meal; he insists he
orders only the finest quality
food.
of only caring for the t e a m ' s well-being, hut
individuals are far m o r e observable on these t e a m s .
The desire for individual a c c o m p l i s h m e n t is over
whelmingly present,
A q u e s t i o n remains: why does a person go m i l lor
such a sport?Wluit sets him a p a r t from his fellow
humans?
LEAGUE 1
\\
PAGE 13
the chefs. This is a point e m p h a sized hy F i n k e . If the chicken
J o e s n ' t taste right, it's n o t the
fault of t h e Nebraska p r o d u c e r o r
the commissary, it's a result of
bad cooking. Moreover, it is the'
responsibility of the chefs to have
enough of the main dish on h a n d .
If the menu says there is a c h o i c e
between steak and liver, then y o u
have a right t o complain. A stud e n t who consistently eats late
should not have l o c a l veal cutlets
as a subs! il lite tor a main dish t h a t
is in short supply. Finke tells
students lo complain directly t o
the chef or t o the i\uad food
committee,
An individual sees l o o m u c h of
himself in i, cross c o u n t r y r u n n e r
or lone loOO-mcler s w i m m e r lo
c o m f o r t a b l y enjoy the s p o r t . One
also finds the t e a m consciousness
so prevalent (and so necessary) in
a football
team
almost
nonexistent on a track t e a m . T h e
usual lip-service is paid t o the wish
AMIA Hoop
TEAM
The chicken y o u e a t a t d i n n e r
probably c o m e s from
Omaha,
Nebraska. So says R i c h a r d F i n k o ,
the man who b u y s y o u r food,
with your m o n e y , at t h e F S A
commissary.
Finkc decides n o t o n l y which
food to buy, b u t also p r e p a r e s the
day-to-day m e n u b y w h i c h y o u
live. Finke runs t h e massive c o m missary o p e r a t i o n t h a t supplies
the school with a p p r o x i m a t e l y
$2,000,000 w o r t h of food each
year. Almost all t h e food t h e
quads use is t r u c k e d from the
commissary. M e a t is c u t , h a m b u r ger potties are m a c h i n e s h a p e d ,
rolls a n d b r e a k f a s t
and dessert,
donuts are b a k e d . Vast a m o u n t s
of food are s t a c k e d , s t o r e d and
prepared in the d r a b w h i t e Service
building nearest t o S t u y v e s a n t Plaza.
10,000 Pounds of Beef
15,000 m o u t h s . Thus, FSA orders, when possible, directly from
food p r o d u c e r s and meat pacl.t..,,
from places even farther away
than O m a h a , Nebraska. FSA must
o r d e r t r u c k l o a d s of meat to feed a
campus
that
consumes
3500
p o u n d s of beef for one roast beef
dinner. T o insure a ready supply,
between
5,0011 and
10,000
p o u n d s of beef arc kepi frozen.
5 0 - 8 0 , 0 0 0 p o u n d s of turkey may
also be in freezers - t u r k e y must
be ordered in the fall when it is
c h e a p e s t , and stored for the coming year.
against a n o t h e r single m a n .
Most p e o p l e would like lo see
themselves as part of a successful
a t h l e t i c t e a m . T h e pressures upon
an individual, especially in t o d a y ' s
high
pressure
societies,
are
e n o r m o u s . T h e urge t o dissolve
oneself
in a collective
consciousness is very strong. S o m e
eastern religions p r o m i s e this, b u t
only after d e a t h . S p o r t s is p e r h a p s
the o n l y escape available on e a r t h .
..pollack
ORIENTATION SESSION
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FSA Runs Food Factory
John Quattrocchi played his
usual all-round game as he scored
16 (game high), had seven assists,
and pulled d o w n five rebounds.
Don Joss played a helluva game,
scoring 13 p o i n t s , all in t h e second half, and registering four
steals. B o t h Bob Rossi and T o n y
Tedesco
showed
why
Coach
Sauers has so m u c h confidence in
his b e n c h . Rossi played a very
s t e a d y s e c o n d half, and Tedesco's
q u i c k n e s s was impressive in the
closing m i n u t e s .
GB
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0
1
1
2
2
2
3
4
3
4
JANUARY 28, 1972
Commissary:
Substitutes Push Danes Past Oneonta
T h e Great Danes stretched their
season record t o 1 0 - 3 , their league
record t o 4 1, and their h o m e
win streak t o 14, as they whipped
Oneonta, 6 4 - 5 7 . T h e last t i m e the
Danes lost at h o m e was o n J a n u a r y 2 3 , 1 9 7 1 t o Marist.
Albany opened up quickly t o an
11-6 edge in the first six m i n u t e s ,
but then literally fell asleep. T h r e e
layups off fast b r e a k s paved a 10
p o i n t run by t h e Red Dragons
from O n e o n t a , as t h e y t o o k a
16-11 lead. O n e o n t a m a i n t a i n e d
t h e lead for the rest of the half;
b u t failed t o c o m p l e t e l y take advantage of A l b a n y ' s u n u s u a l l y
s l o p p y play, and f o u n d themselves
up by just t h r e e at halftime,
31-28.
T h e Danes opened u p the seco n d half with five t u r n o v e r s and
fell b e h i n d 3 7 - 3 2 w i t h 1 7 : 3 0 t o
go in the game. T h i s s e n t Coach
Sauers t o his b e n c h , as he b r o u g h t
in Don Joss and B o b Rossi. Joss
p r o m p t l y hit t w o field goals and
Rossi scored o n a fast b r e a k t o
close O n e o n t a ' s lead t o 41-40,
w i t h 1 3 : 0 0 left. Werner Kolln's
basket p u t t h e Danes in front for
good 4 2 - 4 1 , b u t at t h e 1 1 : 0 0
m a r k t h e Danes led by j u s t t w o ,
45-43.
FRIDAY,
Moat Ball
$.80
Popporoni with Sauce
$.85
Italian Sausage with Sauce
$.85
Italian Sausage
I
with Friod Poppers
$.95
Italian Sausage
with Sauco Hi Friod Poppors
Vonl & Poppors
$1.00
Lindsay's Chances
Lindsay will happily settle for
15 per c e n t of the vote and a
finish ahead of McGovern.
- Illinois, March 2 1 : This is a big
o n e for Muskie. He faces McC a r t h y in a presidential preference
poll he is sure t o win; it is the
c o n t e s t for 170 delegate votes
t h a t offer the significant test.
Muskie lieutenants h o p e to c o m a
away with 100 or more,
McGovern is Muskie's Illinois
rival, fielding delegates in most
districts. H u m p h r e y is skipping
Illinois.
Muskie needs a substantial victory in Illinois, n o t only for the
delegates, b u t t o o v e r c o m e the
psychological impact of the setback his strategists fear in Florida.
$.99
WALTS SUBMARINES
j
j
j
in be H real possibility. T h a t ' s why
H u m p h r e y is calling the vote "a
national primury in a very real
s e n s e , " while Muskie is saying t h a t
the o u t c o m e could he so fragm e n t e d as to be meaningless.
More than any o t h e r c a n d i d a t e ,
J a c k s o n needs a big Florida showing to keep going. T h e e n t r y of
Wallace has c o m p l i c a t e d t h e pict u r e , and made J a c k s o n ' s job
h a r d e r . But if the Washington
s e n a t o r runs p o o r l y , it will call
into q u e s t i o n the basis of his
entire campaign, i.e. t h a t the
D e m o c r a t s can defeat President
Nixon only by luring back millions of conservative D e m o c r a t s
w h o are d i s e n c h a n t e d with t h e
p a r t y ' s liberalism.
283 ONTARIO STREET
AtJBANX
PHONE; 489-7545
Become a delegate to a national convention. The procedure is
complicated, but here is still
time. Call the ASP (7-2190) and
ask John or Bub for information.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 2 8 , 1 9 7 2
PAGE 14
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
by Andy I'illley
ability
by Michael
o f a certain piece o f music
lei a p p e a l d i r e c t l y
to the
The m o s t e v i d e n t i l e m s i n " S o m e l i m e s a ( i r e a l N o t i o n " are size a n d
power. T h e r e ' s t h e O r e g o n
on
oar eyes get t r e a t e d t o a g o o d a m o u n t o f i l . T h e forest is n n i d e u p o f
t h e l-'M d i a l , o r , i n t h e case o f f o r e i g n l a n d s , h e a r d d o w n al t h e
b e e r h a l l . I n a n y case, e a c h d i f f e r e n t
with
there's a scene o f a t u g b o a t
potency
of
and a n o t h e r , a n d s l i d
Us m u s i c a l
orchestration'.' The catchy
statement'.'
T h e sheer
pnvvei
id
heard
I
can't
possibly
iheni
.ill
I
h a l f o f t h e m , b u t I have h e a i d the m o s l i m p o i l a H l
But see, these a r e n ' t
with the m o t t o
lecnnlings.
Ihcic
ilsell
questions, almost
W i t h regards
play
in
nine'.'
as i m p o i l a u l
l u t h e u i c h e s l i a . d o Ihey
(Icncrally.
do
Ihey
play
over
play
T h e Great L u d w i g V a n !
phis MIL;
l u g e l h e i ' ' D o ibex
well'.' A e s t h e t i c s
set (S I 5.0(1 u i s o l . b i n y o u ' l l have i h e m o s l d e f i n i t i v e r e c o r d i n g s 1 I
a s i d e , .ill
B e e l b u v e n evei
l e c u u l s . w i t h I h e e x c e p t i o n u l I h e l e w classic p c i l o i n i n t i c e s . n n i s l pass
these tests. W h e n y o u h a v e t o s p e n d y o u i w e e k l y heel m o n e y
l u buy a
be-on
iccorded
by
lhal
many
nichcxlias
on
many
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And
lead
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ALAN ARKIN
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TOWER EAST CINEMA
J a n . 2 8 81 2 9
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lb.
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are m a n y a s p e c t s l u a l e c o i d r n g w h i c h c a n h e t e c u g n i / e d h \ a i i v n t i e .
f i l e o v e i - a l l s u i i i u l u l I h e disc is a g u u d e \ a m p l e
m e n , t h e s e are t h e S t a m p e r s , a e l a n
give a i n c h , " a n d then- life style , s „ , „ . „ |
union calls f o r a g e n e r a l s t r i k e , t h e y
operation, t h o u g h
d u e s u n e l i s t e n I'm i n i i i c h e s l r a l m u s i c '
We ,,h
there i s . " T h e y ' r e s u c h a n i n d i v i d u a l i s t i c g r o u p o f f o l k s t h i i l w h e n t h e
t w e l v e o r s o , a n d w i l l t i j t o g i v e Ihe b s l c u c i .1 I a n c i i m p a i i x o i i
T o begin w i t h , what
ordinary
"Never
"Eatin' and d r i n k i n ' a n d screvvin' a n d w o r k i n ' and sleepin
haven't
1
...And Trivia
I h e r i v e r , al least t w o
challenging t h e w i l d e r n e s s .
l e c i r i d i u g s o l the 5III
discuss
and on d o w n
shake o u r heads a n d a r e f i l l e d w i t h p r i d e al M a n p u l l i n g such a l o a d .
Us
available t h r o u g h stores a n d r e c o r d c l u b s , a c h o i c e u n e q u a l l e d m the
repertoire.
another,
more b u n d l e s , a l o t o f w o o d , a l l p u l l e d b y t h i s p u n y t u g b o a t
f o u r - n o t e t h e m e . ' P r o b a b l y a l l u l these a n d
m o r e . I n a n y case, t h e r e a r e ove'i l i m y d i f f e r e n t
symphonic
p u l l i n g s o m e t i e d u p logs d o w n t h e r i v e r ;
the camera t r a c k s d o w n t h e l e n g t h o f I h e l o g s , a n d t h e r e ' s o n e b u n d l e ,
Symphony.
W h a t is t h e r e a b o u t B e e t h o v e n ' s 5 r h l h a l is l i k e d b y i h e w o r l d over'.'
The
w o o d s , c o u n t l e s s acres o f g r e e n e r y , a n d
trees, w h i c h a r c a l l m a j e s t i c , i m p r e s s i v e , l a r g e , a n d p l e n t i f u l . A n d t h e n
p e r s o n w i l l have h i s m h e i o w n
l e w e x c e p t i o n s , first, f o r e m o s t , a m i forever being
Beethoven's l i l ' l h
HERBERT B
Lippman
e m o t i o n s is u n i v e r s a l l y t r u e . U s u a l l y it is a t r i t e , l i t t l e d i l l y p i c k e d u p
special tune
PAGE 15
Of Great
Notions...
Beethoven's Fifth
The
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 2 8 , 1 9 7 2
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D)
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Bill
of
a n d J a m e s 11.
PAGE 16
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28,1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Armies of the Night
to Rise Again
"SEE YOU IN
bitter negotiations among the
longshoremen, Rohr Aircraft Assemblage and the United Farm
Workers t o name a few. Unemp l o y m e n t is reaching epidemic
proportions fed by lay-offs and
firings, and the welfare system is
The Republican Party is coming incapable of responding adequatet o San D i e g o c o m p l e t e with Rich- iy.
ard N i x o n , Spiro A g n e w , John
Mitchell and Billy Graham. Est
imates o f the number of people
w h o will c o m e t o demonstrate
DISSATISFIED
their dissatisfaction
with
the
Grand Old Party, range from the
The youth population is dissatSan Diego Police Department's
isfied, partly because of constant
100,000
to
Jerry
Rubin's
police
harrassment and
dope
1 , 0 0 0 . - 0 0 0 . While the city is prebusts. The dissatisfaction is beparing for the Republicans' c o m coming more and more organized.
fort, the San Diego Convention
Women's
Centers,
Women's
Coalition is preparing t o coordiStudy Groups, and Women's Caunate the demonstrators into an
cuses have proliferated in the last
effective political force.
few years. Electoral evidence of
the effectiveness of the local women's movement is shown by the
fact that o n e of the strong conCONVENTION 72
tenders in the recent mayorial
primary was a woman.
The local Welfare Rights ChapTo b e c o m e the host city for the
ter is growing and is noticeably
c o n v e n t i o n San Diego had t o
unappreciative of the State's Govc o m e up with $1.5 million for the
ernor. (Reagon has been leading
initial bid, $ 8 0 0 , 0 0 0 in cash. San
attempts to cut bach on welfare).
Diego almost dropped o u t of t h e
Black and Chicano papers have
bidding until Nixon sent a semiincreased their circulation and im-public m e m o t o Bob Pinch saying
pact, and many Third World Stu"Let's put San Diego back into
dent and Labor Organizations
the running." Bob Wilson, Nixon
have formed. The Pala Indians
crony and San Diego congresshave taken nearby Escondido to
man, came t o the rescue at this
court
over water rights.
point by securing $ 4 0 0 , 0 0 0 from
A strong GI movement has devS h e n t o n Hotels Inc. Sheraton has
eloped in San Diego and is cont w o hotels in San Diego and a
stantly in the news protesting
third under construction (all of
unfair regulations and conditions.
which would benefit from an inGI's regularly speak out against
flux o f conventioneers). The state
their role in the war and civilian
GOP c o m m i t t e e came up with
support for them is growing. The
$ 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 t o round o u t the bid.
recent 'Stop the Constellation
The m o n e y doesn't s t o p there.
Vote', in which the overwhelming
At this point estimates for the
majority voted for the Consteltotal cost of the convention are
lation not t o sail for Vietnam
running at about $ 5 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 . This
duty, showed h o w much it has
includes $ 9 0 0 , 0 0 0 requested from
grown already.
the Federal Government for riot
SAN DIEGO"
On October 3, a meeting between movement groups took
place at the DOOR (a San Diego
underground paper) House to discuss what could be done. This
meeting was the first of many that
led to the formation of the San
Diego
Convention
Coalition.
There was nothing really concrete
to discuss at that first meeting, or
so it seemed. N o one really had
any idea what the convention
meant--how much would have t o
be d o n e and what could be accomplished.
T h e Community Congress, and
association of liberal service- oriented groups, many of which receive c o u n t y funding, announced
that t h e y were planning a convention of alternative cultures and
life styles t o coincide with the
Republican Convention. Its purposes would be t o parallel and
ignore the Republicans and t o be
"constructive instead of destructive." Spokespeople for the idea
talked a b o u t a national organization coming out of the alternative convention.
They
said
that
the convention would show
the real*
problems to the world
One person w h o spotm tur cne
idea said that a lot o f the needs o f
the alternative conven tion had
been decided o n but that setting
the m o o d and tenor of the event
might perhaps be left to the
groups at this meeting.
U N I T E D IN OPPOSITION
People at the meeting were
s o m e w h a t overwhelmed by this
proposal. Beyond the fact that
everyone there was united in opposition t o Nixon and the Republicans, there were many different
political positions represented and
none of those had been discussed.
equipment and training.
While C. Arnolt Smith (a close
friend of Nixon's and his largest
campaign contributor in '68) and
Pete Wilson, the new Mayor and
While San Diego's p o w e r struc- one of the "bright new faces" of
the
Republican Party, try t o presture is gloating over the future
convention dollars that they hope ent San Diego as a sleepy, conservt o bring into '.he restaurant, hotel ative paradise, the city has a growand tourist business, the local ing movement t o contradict this
population faces worsening eco- picture.
This growing movement was as
nomic realities.
San Diego's e c o n o m y boomed frustrated and confused as everyduring the early 60's with its huge one else in San Diego when the
defense plants, but n o w , with news broke that the convention
fewer and fewer large defense was coming here. It was clear to
contracts, the city faces e c o n o m i c the movement that n o o n e wanted
crisis. San Diego has been the a replay of Chicago, yet people
scene of many labor disputes dur- wanted to effectively show the
ing the last year. Many working world that t h e Republicans d o n ' t
people are becoming increasingly represent t h e A m e r i c a n people
unhappy with their j o b s and their and t o evict Richard Nixon from
wages. There have been strikes or the White House.
THE CITY
Will
those
Convention?
who
tried
to
stop
the
war stop
the
Republican
Most of the groups there wanted
t o confront the Republicans in
some way, not ignore them.
People became very wary of the
alternative convention idea when
they found o u t t h a t only one
meeting of the Community Congress had been held t o discuss
it.
As m o r e ideas were talked a b o u t
it b e c a m e a p p a r e n t that a lot of
political discussion would have t o
take place if t h e individual groups
were t o act as a g r o u p to create a
successful united front against the
Republican C o n v e n t i o n .
It was decided t h a t the groups
would m e e t again in two weeks,
giving e v e r y o n e t i m e to talk
a m o n g themselves and
decide
w h e t h e r or not they would want
t o work with o t h e r groups a r o u n d
the c o n v e n t i o n .
At t h e second meeting it seemed
as t h o u g h the c o n c e p t of any type
of coalition was d o o m e d before il
got off t h e ground. Essentially,
what h a p p e n e d was a four hour
d e b a t e b e t w e e n p r o and con alternative c o n v e n t i o n forces. Il was
finally decided by a 13-3-3 vote to
go to the C o m m u n i t y Congress
a n d ask t h e m n o t to hold the
alternative c o n v e n i t o n
at the
same l i m e
as the Republican
one.
T h e discussion before the vole
revealed a total lack of together*
ness in politics or direction. T h e
d iseussion
referred
to
manipulation by the city of the alternative convention.
Ovc ra 11,
there were no c o n s i s t e n t argum e n t s for or against t h e alter-
Vol. LIX, No. 4
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
State University of New York at Albany
Tuesday, February 1, 1972
Will the veterans of Chicago and Washington return to the streets?
native convention, o n l y vague
charges and fears. S o m e of these
fears proved true in the ensuing
meeting with the Community
Congress. It turned o u t that Com
munity Congress hadn't officially
sent a n y o n e t o the convention
meetings and t h e
alternative
c o n v e n t i o n at that t i m e was still
o n l y a proposal. It was decided
that if the C o m m u n i t y Congress
and The Coalition (in its form at
that time) would ever work together it would have t o be a slow
evolving progress.
WHO IS
THE COALITION
The San Diego Convention Coalition seems t o be the best hope
for San Diego in '72 not to be a
replay of Chicago '68. In Chicago,
there was n o real leadership or
planning a m o n g local
people.
Almost all negotiations and publicity were handled by national
leaders who relied on a small
segment of the radical c o m m u n i t y
to handle the massive amounts of
work involved in putting on
demonstrations and the ill-fated
Festival o f Life. In direct contrast
to that, the Coaliton has developed into a broad-based organization with a local orientation.
R o o m has been left for national
figures on the steering committee,
but the bulk of people involved
will be from San Diego.
The Coaliton includes people
from six underground papers, women's and Third World groups,
representatives from the National
Lawyers Guild, four groups of GI
counselors and organizers, students, and people from a variety
of other c o m m u n i t y and social
change organizations.
Because the people in the Coaltion are local people, they are
interested in not only confronting
the Republicans but also living in
San Diego after the Republicans
leave town.
THE POLITICS
OF THE COALITION
O n e key area of discussion within t h e Coalition has been over the
issue of h o w t o build a strong
radical m o v e m e n t that c a n n o t be
absorbed or c o - o p t e d by the Dem o c r a t i c Party. Fears were voiced
by m a n y m e m b e r s that, because
the Coalition was focussing o n the
Republican strategy and policies,
this focus could be used by the
D e m o c r a t i c Party to build their
o w n base. A l t h o u g h the q u e s t i o n
has n o t been totally resolved in
the minds of m a n y people, the
Coalition
emerged
with
four
p o i n t s trial t h e y fell will help
p r e v e n t being a b s o r b e d or co•opted by the D e m o c r a t i c Party.
T h e four p o i n t s that the group
settled on a r e :
l.)Building the b r o a d e s t possible Cotillion to non violently
a n d o p e n l y o p p o s e t h e Repub-
lican Party leadership. The Coalition had agreed t o and is making special efforts t o include
individuals and organizations representing Third World people,
w o m e n , GIs and Veterans, working people, the unemployed, gay
people, students, and alienated
youths.
2.)In the Coalition and in all
Coalition projects, members have
agreed t o struggle against all forms
of d o m i n a t i o n based o n race, sex
or class exploitation.
3.)The Coalition is working to
establish contacts with groups
throughout the United
States,
especially in t h e W e s t e r n r e g i o n
4.)The members of the Coalition have agreed t o discuss and
resolve all disagreements internally. N o group in the Coalition is
b o u n d t o p a r t i c i p a t e in t h e
actions of the whole Coalition,
but all have agreed not to publicly
oppose the decisions of the coalition or participating group.
JUST A BEGINNING
The Coalition is considering the
possibility of publishing a daily
newspaper during the convention
activitis.
Members o f the Coalition have
taken great pains to stress that all
of th ideas being discussed for the
convention are, at this time, only
tentative. They say that they
w e l c o m e ideas and input from
organizations and individuals from
all over the country.
One member of the Coalition,
who asked not t o be identified,
summed up what seems t o be the
feeling throughout the movement
in San Diego, "We do not want
just another anti-war action, but
we'll be working t o construct a
1 i fe -sustaining organization
of
people across t h e c o u n t r y , and
particularly p e o p l e in San Diego
who want to change their p r e s e n t
c i r c u m s t a n c e s . While we fuel tha
actions in San Diego will have
national and i n t e r n a t i o n a l implications. Members of the coalition have a c o m m i t m e n t t o the
people of San Diego. We live here.
We work here. We are close t o t h e
people here. We'll be here after
the c o n v e n t i o n . "
LNS
Regents Proposes $900
Tuition Fee for 1974
by Vicki Zcldiu
Capitol Correspondant
Do you think it's w o r t h $ 9 0 0
to go to S U N Y A ? Evidently the
New York S t a t e Board of R e g e n t s
docs.
"Regarding
both S U N Y unci
C U N Y , the Regents r e c o m m e n d
financing the e n r o l l m e n t g r o w t h
lo which they are c o m m i t t e d by
increased t u i t i o n , " according l<> a
R e g e n t s position p a p e r e n l i l l e d
" t-'inancing
Higher
Education
N e r d s in the Decade A h e a d . "
T h e n'puri went on to indicate
that a s t u d e n t a t t e n d i n g a public
institution whose family's net taxable income was below $ 9 , 0 0 0
would have his t u i t i o n fully covered by scholarship aid. Under the
two year phase
in formula presented in the 1*2 pa^e " S t a t e m e n t
of Policy a n d Proposed A c t i o n , "
public school t u i t i o n aid was listed as $ 6 0 0 for next year and $ 9 0 0
for the year after. If this is indeed
i n t e n d e d to indicate a p r o p o s e d
hike in S U N Y t u i t i o n then the
system could expect to receive
s o m e $7 million in revenue a n d
s t u d e n t s could e x p e c t a $ 5 0 tuition increase. If a d o p t e d , the plan
w o u l d mean t h a t t h e city university s y s t e m would have a t u i t i o n
charge for the first time in its
history.
N o o n e at the E d u c a t i o n Departm e n t could specifically p i n p o i n t
w h a t the t u i t i o n might be for n e x t
year, b u t an increase is r e c o m m e n ded in this r e p o r t . A s p o k e s m a n
for t h e d e p a r t m e n t stressed t h a t
Regents d o n o t set tuition since
that is the d u t y of the S U N Y
Trustees.
Last year the S U N Y Board of
S t u s t e e s a p p r o v e d a tuition hike
to $ 7 0 0 for S e p t e m b e r 1 9 7 3 , b u t
the s t a t e ' s c o n t i n u e d fiscal plight
seems to all but m a n d a t e at least a
tuition hike, if n o t o t h e r increases, s o o n e r .
^m.^r'~JinmSSSSSi\,^-mm.Z.
dents during
their
first
two
Private Schools
years...and the benefits
would
This r e p o r t did n o t seem t o back
d r o p to H0% the t h i r d year and
the m u c h discussed tuition equal60%
in the fourth y e a r , " the
ization plans. These s c h e m e s call
report slated. A c c o r d i n g to Boyer,
for the s a m e t u i t i o n rate at private
the differences in charges are refand p u b l i c s c h o o l s with t h e s t a t e
lective of the differences in cost
closing the gap b e t w e e n the standof educating lower a n d u p p e r diviard fee and what the university
sion s t u d e n t s . T h e Regents p a p e r
would actually charge. This plan is
cites the goal of " . . . p r o v i d i n g
an a t t e m p t to aid t h e financially
fumbling private i n s t i t u t i o n s while e v e r y hi|>;h s c h o o l g r a d u j :i t e w i t h
alleviating the o v e r c r o w d i n g at the acet's IS I I I p o s t - s e c o n d a r y e d u c a c h e a p e r public s c h o o l s . Specula- lion ( i l l 1 e r m s he c a n a l l ' t e d a n d
lions on actual fees have ranged mule r eu n d i t i o n s w h i c h p r o v i d e
from $70(1 to as m u c h as $1 500. hun w i l h a r e a s o n a b l e c|t alH'e o f
as a r e a s o n
Higher Fees for Upperclassmcn
T h e Regents proposal calls for
higher t u i t i o n fees for juniors and
seniors than for u n d e r c l a s s m e n .
T h i s is also backed by S U N Y
Chancellor Ernest Boyer according to earlier r e p o r t s . " F u l l scholar incentive p a y m e n t s would be
available t o u n d e r g r a d u a t e stu
/tfEHKHB&Y "*.<-'
..,tf2EEEBliY " m - -
/ai£HK£m\ . . ~ m « : .
m o r e efficient use of p l a n t and
e d u c a tional
facilities
between
public and private s c h o o l s in the
same geographic region and rec o m m e n d e d t h a t t h e boards receive $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 from the s t a t e for
next year.
T h e Regents also e n d o r s e d the
c o n c e p t of a time s h o r t e n e d baccalaureate degree, as a means to
»•&'_*»—•" ~3EEH$$8Sb.^m*
JOHN HAMILTON FAIRHALL
14 WESTMINSTER COURT
NEW ROCHELLE, N . Y. 10801
DAY
San Diego Coalition
may be contacted at:
PO Box 8627
San Diego, Calif.,
92102
lul-
the difT h e R e g e n t s ' report
instead
seems t o expect at least a $1 fJOU I'erenl rut.l's.
Th. • R eg e n t s c a l l e d l o i a n i n luil ion charge for private school's,
hut calls for greater c o o p e r a t i o n erejt.s e t o 1 0 , 5 0 0 f r e s h m a !i p l a c e s
b e t w e e n public and private insti- by i10-80 i n o r d e r l o n •ah/.e a
t u t i o n s t h r o u g h regional i/a tion. l u l l • . p p o i ' t u n i t y p r o g r a m . h i o r " F o r private i n s t i t u t i o n s , the Re- del- 1 o ac Ilieve l l u s g o a l . the Regents r e c o m m e n d an increased Ri'llts call. ' d f o r i n c r e a s e d i o o p e r a s c h e d u l e of scholar incentive pay- i ion h e l w 'een t h e p u b l i c ;i n d p r i m e n t s . . . , " it was r e p o r t e d . A stu- v n l e w h o . ols. T h e y c i t e d ; i s u r v e y
d e n t from a family with a net c o n d u c t e d by the C o m m i s s i o n o n
taxable
income
under
$.'1000 Independent Colleges that sugwould receive $ 1 2 0 0 in aid next gests that private i n s t i t u t i o n s have
year and $ 1 5 0 0 the year alter. the capacity lo a d m i t 15,00(1 addT h e aid wouIcl be based o n a itional first-time freshmen each
sliding scale diminishing t o $ 0 for year between 197 1-5. T h e aid
a s t u d e n t whose family i n c o m e formula devised by the R e g e n t s
for the private i n s t i t u t i o n s is estiwas $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 or u p .
m a t e d to enable an increase in
T h e play also calls u p o n the
their freshman class o f 1 0 , 0 0 0 .
private i n s t i t u t i o n s to provide
Cooperation between Public and
scholarships equal to a t least 1/3
of the scholar incentive p a y m e n t
Private S c h o o l s
for s t u d e n t s from families with
T h e Regents: p o s i t i o n p a p e r
net taxable incomes of $ 9 0 0 0 or stressed the need for c o o p e r a t i o n
less. Under this play t h e n , a stu- b e t w e e n the public and private
d e n t from this i n c o m e bracket institutions within a region. They
w o u l d receive $ 1 2 0 0 in aid n e x t advocated the e s t a b l i s h m e n t of
year.
Regional Boards to c o o r d i n a t e the
NATIONAL Cl BANK of
0 WESTCHESTER
TOWER OfFICE
NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y.
10801
E3
•:0 E 13««0 I 5 ? i :
'f - * " ' ' - . \nmn.vrmpi _ » « . ^
A L I N C O L N FIRST
BANK
«BBEEi"'i,a7 E"'
WVXSSUWi, nSJtr
flMBBBgBi
Students
will
not
hurry
to
the
bursar's
office
in
1974.
...chow
increase
public
and
private
s c h o o l s ' efficiency.
They
also
called for o t h e r c o s t saving measures for s t u d e n t s . T h e y advocated t h e granting of full c o u r s e
credit for all college-level c r e d i t
work c o m p l e t e d by transfer stud e n t s at an i n s t i t u t i o n a c c r e d i t e d
by a recognized regional or national a c c r e d i t i n g i n s t i t u t i o n , provided t h a t s t u d e n t s m e e t the established course r e q u i r e m e n t s in his
major.
T h e y also called for granting
recognition of college level work
accomplished
through
independ e n t s t u d y or o t h e r m e a n s a n d
validated t h r o u g h recognized college level proficiency e x a m s or
testing p r o g r a m s c o n n e c t e d to the
institution.
7ttG23iBBU. . " »
T h e R e g e n t s called u p o n university a d m i n i s t r a t o r s t o seek " n e c e s sary e c o n o m i e s , " and d i r e c t e d t h e
i n s t i t u t i o n s t o halt the spiraling
cost of e d u c a t i o n by striving t o
increase efficiency.
T h e r e p o r t indicated the S t a t e
E d u c a t i o n D e p a r t m e n t had already taken s t e p s t o deal with t h e
financial crisis t h r e a t e n i n g t o overt a k e the s t a t e ' s e d u c a t i o n a l facilities. T h e y cited the imposed o n e
y e a r m o r a t o r i u m o n all n e w doctoral p r o g r a m s and the d e p a r t m e n t ' s r e e v a l u a t i o n of the professional r e q u i r e m e n t s for t e a c h e r
certification as a t t e m p t s t o increase efficiency by w e e d i n g o u t
unnecessary courses and d e t e r m i n ing the cost-effectiveness a n d value of the p r o g r a m s .
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