McG Gaining

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McG Gaining
by Glenn von Nostitz
PRINCETON, N.J. AP—The Gallup Poll reports that Democrat
George McGovern is continuing to gain but still remains 23
percentage points behind President Nixon in their race for the
presidency.
McGovern's greatest gains were among manual workers, where he
narrowed Nixon's lead to only 5 points—49 to 44 per cent, the poll
reported Wednesday. In August it was 63 tc 28.
The over-all standings showed Nixon with 59 per cent to 36 per
cent for McGovern, one per cent for other candidates and four per
cent undecided, Gallup said.
The poll, taken from Oct. 13 to 18, was based on questioning 1,220
registered voters.
August was the low point for McGovern in the Gallup poll. A
survey then showed Nixon with 64 per cent to 30 per cent for
McGovern and six per cent either undecided or for other candidates.
McGovern has gained in each Gallup poll since then, Gallup said
the movement of manual workers back toward their traditional
Democratic allegiance explained most of the Democrat's increase.
McGovern has also picked up some strength among Catholics and
under-30 voters, Gallup said, but Nixon continues to lead in all
major population groups except blacks and Jews.
I. Moyer Hunsberger. Terry
Geller. Melvin Bers. Susan Johnson. Richard C. Teevan. Louis T.
Benezet.
All of the above people have
something in common. In some
way or another they are all
involved in the Tight to reinstate
Caroline Waterman of the
2,100 page
•-•port by
McGovern for Pre ..dent Inc. of
Washington, required under a
new federal e'er Lions law shows
Nicholas loaned the McGovern
campaign $200,000 on Sept. 12
a nd Daniel loaned another
$300,000 on Sept. 20.
Together, the Noyes are the
largest single contributors to the
McGovern campaign reported
II
this year.
The young men are among 10
grandchildren of Nicholas H.
Noyes of Indianapolis, H9 year
old retired finance chairman of
KM Lilly whose wife is the granddaughter of the huge drug company's founder.
Noyes, in a telephone interview, s.i id his grandson,
Nicholas, is ;i 25-year'-old gnulu-
The Watergate Chronology
ate of Cornell w'no re I used to
serve in the armed forces during
the Vietnam war and instead put
in two years of government service as a teacher.
Noyes said the other grandson,
Daniel, is 23, a graduate of
Harvard and a congressional inLern.
"I've never talked politics with
the boys," said the grandfather
who gave a reported $18,000 to
president Nixon's campaign in
1968.
Largest contributor in the
early Nixon reports was John J.
Louis Jr., chairman of the Chicago-based Combined Communications Corp. who gave $82,819.
Louis, however, like other big
Nixon donors divided his contributions up among numerous
committees and his over all total
is expected Lo be much higher
when alt reports are in.
While the reports showed the
Nixon campaign relying for almost 50 per cent of its contributions on large donors, the
McGovern reports showed more
than HO per cent of outright
contri but ions are coming from
those giving less than $100.
Republican Attempt to Sabotage 7 2 Elections
WASHINGTON
The General
Accounting Office expects In
make public by the end of tins
month the results of its probe into
charges a Republican "sabotage
squad" sought lo disrupt the
Democratic presidential cam
paign
The investigation was requested
by Hep Wrighl I'alman il) Tex i
after Kepublican members of his
House Banking and Currency
Committee blocked efforts to
question Nixon aides about the
bugging of Democratic I'arty
offices in the Watergate Apart
ments
Patman made his request before
Nixon's appointments secretary,
Dwigbt L. Chapin. was linked to
the affair, but GA0 investigators
are believed to be pursuing this
aspect, also Chapin, whoneesthe
President almost daily, was
named by one figure in the case as
a White House "contact" lor the
undercover campaign
Chapin denied the accusation
Other high officials who have
been linked to the covert opera
Hon, including former Attorney
General John Mitchell and chief
Nixon lund raiser Maurice Stalls
have issued similar denials
('limnology of Sa hula etfrom statements made public
thus far, the chronology ol the
drive to subvert the IU72 election
campaign appears as billows
June, 11)71 - former Treasury
PAGE
SIXTEEN
Department lawyer Donald H
Segrelti allegedly solicits recruits
for "political espionage " Law
yers who turned him down were
assured thai "Nixon knows" and
were promised "big jobs" alter
ins re election
Jan.. 11172 — Harassment dis
rupls Democratic p r i m a r i e s
Campaign materials are forged,
schedules upset, campaign files
stolen Bogus telephone calls
from "Democratic officials" sow
trouble in the McGovern camp
and anger labor leaders
Feb. 21 — Muskie s New Hump
shire campaign is torpedoed by a
letter saying he called French
Canadian voters 'Canucks " This
leads U) Ins vote losing "crying
speech " The letter writer Is
never lound
April :i — A mining company
headed by Nixon's chief Texas
lund raiser sends $100,0011 to
Mexico Most ol it later turns up in
bank account ol Bernard Barker,
arrested in the Watergate bur
glary
April :» - The
laundered"
money comes back from Mexico,
and a Texas oilman carries it to
Washington in a suitcase with
$WK),(HXI more in other secret
Nixon contributions The Admin
islration later drops a plun lo sue
the mining company for pollution
violations
April II — Nixon's Midwest lund
raiser, Kenneth Dahlberg, passes
a $2!>,0OO donation to Stalls,
Nixon's former Secretary of the
Treasury This alBo ends up in the
Barker account The donor later
Behavioral and Social Sciences.
The letter recommends that
Waterman not be given tenure,
and consequently no longer be
allowed to teach at this University.
it is up to Bers to make his
own recommendation by October 31st and then pass the case
on to 1, Moyer Hunsberger, Dean
of the College of Arts and Sci-
she is "above average" in departmental service, having been advisor to Cathexis, Psi Chi, and
chairperson of the Undergraduate Curriculum Committee. In
"service at above the departmental level" Teevan rates her as
below average, since she has
served on no university level
committees.
Teevan admits that "continu-
The Waterman Affair - Third in a Series:
Where the Money is Coming From
WASHINGTON
AP-Two
young heirs to a drug fortune,
grandsons to a secret campaign
contributor to President Nixon,
have loaned more than half a
million dollars to Democratic
presidential candidate George
McGovern.
The two are Nicholas Noyes of
Bloomington, Ind., and his brother, Daniel of Indianapolis,
The Gauntlet
It seemed inevitable that the
Waterman case would surface
again. Three years may be a long
time, but many of the departmental objections to Waterman
survived and are as strong as
ever. But the main reason for the
sudden reappearance of the
Waterman case was the university reauirement that a professor
receives a valuable bank charter
from the government,
Watergate Bugged
May 21 — Security chief James
McCord ol the Nixon reelection
committee slips into the Water
gale with bugging equipment
Monitoring begins from a hotel
across the street Bugging headquarters are visited by While
House aide K Howard Hunt and
by G Gordon l.iddy, counsel to
Nixon s lund raising committee
and a former White House aide
Wirelap logs are delivered to
Nixon's re election headquarters
May 2S - l.iddy and McCord re
connniler
McGovern lor Dresi
dent headquarters in the hope ol
hugging il too l.iddy carries a
pistol in Ins attache case
June IT
McCord. Barker and
three other men are caught in the
Democratic headquarters at
night They have burglar tools,
bugging equipment. walkie
talkies tuned to the re election
committee's ollicial Irequeiicy
and money from lite Barker
account
June 17-22
Republicans re
porledly slu ed records at Nixon
campaign headquarters
June 21
Democratic Parly
files $1 million suit against Nixon
re election committee
June 2.ri Democrats ask Nixon
lo appoint a noil political special
prosecutor lo the Watergate case
He refuses
June ;tll — Disclosure that a pistol
and walkie talkie were lound by
the FBI in lluiil s desk in Ihc President s executive office building
AUiANY STUDENT PRESS
July 1 — Former Attorney
General John Mitchell resigns as
head ol Nixon's re-election com
nnttee, citing Ins wile's personal
wishes She complains about
duly work" involved in his job
July III — Lawyers lor the re
election committee ask the courts
lo delay hearings on the Water
gale raid until alter the election
because they could cause "incal
tillable damage" lo Nixon's cam
of the Watergate affair, and successfully quash it.
Oct. 5 - Chief While House
spokesman Ronald Ziegler repor
tedly told newsman Clark Moltenhoff, himself a former While
House aide, that the Watergate
b u r g l a r s ' money c a m e from
Nixon's re-election committee
He denies the published story
Participant Confesses
Aug. 2 Hugh Sloan, treasurer
ot Nixon's re election committee,
resigns lor personal reasons "
Aug. !i
Slans reportedly tells
Federal investigators he turned
Duhlbcrg's $»,IH)tl over to Sloan
Aug. 211 — The GAO reports II
"apparent and possible" violations ol the campaign spending
law. involving $350,000 in Kepublican lunds, alter probing Bark
er's bank account
Sept. it - Slans,. Sloan, l.iddy,
McCord and Hunt are named
among defendants in the Demo
i rat's damage suit
Sept. 15 - Hunt, l.iddy, McCord.
Barker and the three other men
caught in the Watergate arc in
dieted on charges of burglary,
conspiracy and illegal wire
tupping
Sept. n - While House aide Ken
W Clawson reputedly lold a
Washington reporter he wrote the
"Canuck" letter, but denies il
when the reporter publishes the
story
Oct. :i — Republican members of
Potman's committee vote iinani
mously against an Investigation
Oct. li — Alfred Baldwin, who
monitored the Watergate wiretaps for the Republicans, con
lesses and implicates McCord,
Hunt, l.iddy and others, saying he
was told he was working lor John
Mitchell
(let. Ill - Mitchell, Stans and
Chairman Clark MacGr»gor of
Nixon's reelection campaign
refuse lo testily for Patman's
committee.
Oct. 12 — An order lo extradite
Stans, Sloan and Dahlberg lo
Florida is signed by a Miami
judge He says their testimony,
needed lor Barker's trial on local
charges, "could not be secured
voluntarily "
Oct. 15 - II is revealed thai
Dwigbt 1. Chapin. Nixon's ap
poinlnicnls secretary, has been
linked lo the undercover activities
by California lawyer Lawrence
Young, who was asked by Segrelti
lo participate but refused In an
uffldiivll, Young lold invesli
gutors Segrelti repeatedly named
Chapin as his White House
contact
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
il
Who's In Charge Here?
Psychology Department. This is
the story of that struggle and the
part played by each of the above
persons.
The story began some three
years ago, when Waterman was
"fired" and then suddenly reinstated.
Once again Dr. Waterman is up
for review, and her chances of
getting tenure appear dim. True,
many of her students consider
her the "best"professor in the
department. But that just points
out one of the problems inherent in the tenure system as it
operates at this University; How
important should the student
input be in making tenure decisions?
Which seems to be one of the
central questions in the Waterman case. As Dr. Waterman puts
it, "Who's in charge around
here?"
must undergo tenure review after teaching here for seven years.
If the professor passes the gauntlet of committees and deans
which comprises the tenure review process unscathed, he (or
she) gets tenure and job security.
On the other hand, if the professor is so unlucky as to be
stopped somewhere along the
line, he is officially out the door.
As of this writing it doesn't
appear that Waterman will be
able to successfully run the tenure gauntlet without a lot of
help. She got off to a rather
inauspicious start when her department recommended by a 9
to H vole not to grant her
tenure.
Department Chairman Richard
Teevan was then required to
write a recommendation, or "letter of transmittal" to Melvin
Bers, the Associate Dean for
ences and his Faculty Personnel
Committee.
Teevan's letter of transmittal
reads very matter-of-factly. It is
intentionally written in an impersonal manner and sounds
very objective.
The letter describes Waterman's performance in regard to
the five criteria for tenure and
promotion listed in the Faculty
Handbook master of subject
matter, te, ching effectiveness,
scholarly
ability
university
service, and continuing growth.
Teevan feels that Waterman's
mastery of subject matter is
"about average," but that she is
"below average" in her ability as
a scholar, since she has written
only six articles in five years, "or
little more than an article a
year."
As far as her University service
is concerned, Teevan says that
The Long Road To Peace...
The deadline set by the North Vietnamese as the date to finalize agreement on a peace pact
Tuesday,
Paris time
has passed without a treaty being signed and with Hanoi accusing the United States of "bad
faith" and deliberate stalling. Hie chief Viet Cong negotiator, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Dinh, vowed at a news
conference that the Communists will fight "until total victory" unless the Nixon administration forces
Saigon to accept the U.S.-North Vietnam draft agreement.
Meanwhile, a North Vietnamese broadcast quoted North Vietnam's vice-premier and foreign minister
as saying responsibility for the delay in signing "rests entirely with the U.S. side." He warned that "the
agreement can never he signed to end the war and restore peace in Vietnam if the United Slates does not
stop stalling."
Hut the Viet Cong said they were willing to go ahead with the peace talks later this week. American
officials remained confident an accord would be signed, and soon. Presidential aide Henry Kissinger, who
said a final meeting was necessary to iron out details, was reportedly still in Washington.
Elsewhere, there were these developments in the complex and continuing search for peace:
NliW YORK
The New Yoik Times quoted South Vietnamese foreign minister Iran Van Lam as
saying the North Vietnamese peace plan was unacceptable to Saigon and that his government would nol
accept a cease fire agreement that does not include withdrawal of North Vietnamese forces from the
Smith and reestiiblishinent of the demilitarized /.one.
SAKlOh
Official Saigon radio accused the North Vietnamese of trying to get a quick settlemenl
from President Nixon " in return for a few ballots" and went on to reiterate that any signed American
agreement "would be worthless" unless South Vietnamese President Thieu signed also.
SMI,ON
The National Liberation Front, political arm of the Viet Cong, issued a radio broadcast
appealing lo South Vietnamese people and soldiers and lo the Soviet Union and China lo demand that
the United States sign the agreement and end the fighting.
KAH'iON
Viet Cong forces attacked with increased intensity, launching over one hundred ground
attacks lor the filth straight day, in an apparent move to force the Nixon administration lo sign the
•ase-fire agreement.
Olll.l- Oh TONKIN
The United States removed much of its powerful Seventh Fleet as a gesture of
good will aimed at a cease-lire Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Laird confirmed suspension of all United
Stales air strikes above the twentieth parallel. All off-shore bombardment above the line has also been
piietly hailed
I'l-.KINO
Foreign Minister Chi Pcng.fei of China and Uritish Foreign secretary Sir Alec Douglas
Home agreed their countries were ready to take part in anyinternalionalpeacc conference in Vietnam.
HOSTON
Sen. lidward W. Brooke, R-Mass., commenting on a private briefing by President Nixon
and other top administration officials, said he did not think the cease fire agreement would be signed by
Flection Day.
MUII- Vietnam details on I'ayes '1 and 5.
ing growth', is a "very difficult
thing to assess." After some discussion he arrives at the conclusion that Dr. Waterman's
scholarship "is not up to par for
a tenured position at a University center."
T h e Department Chairman
does admit that Waterman's effectiveness as a teacher is high,
and he rates her as "one of the
best undergraduate teachers in
the department."
Not Everyone Happy
There are a lot of people on
this campus who disagree with
what Teevan's letter of transmittal says about Waterman. Most
of them are students. There are
others, mostly faculty members
and administrators, who do
agree. They don't feel Waterman
has done a very good job. The
students do.
Waterman disputes the contention that her "scholarly ability"
is questionable. While admitting
that she has written only one
article a year, she stresses the
quality of the works and not the
quantity. She claims that the
reviewers didn't look at quality
"closely enough."
Teevan felt that her service on
University Committees was not
adequate, but she claims that her
"readiness" to meet with her
students at any hour and her
"genuine interest" in her students' interests is the "highest
kind" of university service, and
more important than serving on
committees and councils.
Almost everyone so far involved in the Waterman case
agrees that she is a good teacher.
She was a semi-finalist for the
outstanding teacher award last
year. And her student evaluations were extremely favorable.
The evaluations are made on a 1
to 5 level, with one being the
highest and 5 being lowest. The
lowest average score Waterman
ever received was a 1.6, and on
occasion she has earned a 1.0.
continued on page 8
Phone Bill Hike:
Food Fast for Half Way House
by Regina C o l a n g e l o
On W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 1 5 ,
A l b a n y s t u d e n t s will have a n
o p p o r t u n i t y t o d o a great service
t o t h e c o m m u n i t y from which
t h e y a r e o n l y a few blocks rem o v e d . By giving u p s u p p e r on
this night F.S.A. will give t h e
m o n e y t h a t w o u l d n o r m a l l y pay
for food t o a c o m m u n i t y project
— a Half Way H o u s e for prisoners.
It is easy t o forget t h a t a few
blocks a w a y from t h e isolated
A l b a n y S t a t e c a m p u s , p e o p l e are
facing
problems
of drugs,
housing, u n e m p l o y m e n t a n d imp r i s o n m e n t every d a y . O n e a n d a
half y e a r s a g o t h e C o m m u n i t y
Referral C e n t e r was organized
by former S U N Y A s t u d e n t Gord o n V a n Ness in a n effort t o
h e l p his c o m m u n i t y face a n d
solve these p r o b l e m s which had
b e c o m e a w a y of life for the
people in t h e Arbor Hill section
of A l b a n y .
The C o m m u n i t y Referral Center is a c o m p l e t e l y volunteerbased o r g a n i z a t i o n which helps
people of t h e inner city deal
with p r o b l e m s of welfare, education, h e a l t h , drugs, alcoholism
and housing. T h e Center places
its emphasis o n dealing with the
total individual a n d his problems. T h e k e y t o t h e program is
looking a t individual needs a n d
trying t o offer positive solutions
t h a t wilt best serve t h e individual,
In view of t h e existing problems in prison, a new enterprise
was u n d e r t a k e n by t h e Comm u n i t y Referral Center. This
new e n t e r p r i s e , t h e Prison Pro
ject, was developed a n d r u n by
Gordon
V a n Ness a n d Ham
McDowell. Under their direc
tion, t h e project offers liaison
counselling, free legal counselling, free t r a n s p o r t a t i o n t o t h e
Albany C o u n t y Jail a n d S t a l e
Institutions, and communication
b e t ween
inmates a n d their
families, friends a n d e m p l o y e r s
T h e Prison Project has h a d an
80% success r a t e in securing em
p l o y m e n t for former inmates. I t
has also found housing for these
m e n a n d their families, received
assistance for t h e m
through
Social Service, a n d established
social a n d civic events in the
c o m m u n i t y in which they can
get involved.
T h e latest endeavor in the Prison Project is t h e restoration of
an old house a t 67 First Street in
o r d e r t o o p e n a Half Way House
for prisoners a n d former prisoners. It will be an alternative
to incarceration and a preventive
rehabilitation center. Playing t h e
dual role of crime prevention
a n d rehabilitation, t h e Half Way
House will offer t o the potential
offender a n d t h e former inmate
a place t o go for e d u c a t i o n ,
vocational training, c o m m u n i t y
resources, a n d social a n d civic
involvement. A liaison between
the Whitney Y o u n g C o m m u n i t y
Health Center, hospitals in the
area and t h e Half Way House
will provide the men living t h e r e
with medical a n d psychiatrict r e a t m e n t . T h e presence of a
Half Way House in t h e comm u n i t y will precipitate involve
m e n t between c o m m u n i t y members a n d offenders a n d former
offenders.
Perhaps t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t
function of the Half Way House
will be t o offer t o the i n m a t e
j n d former i n m a t e a place t o
acquire knowledge of what t h e
c o m m u n i t y is like.
With this k n o w l e d g e he will he
b e t t e r e q u i p p e d t o a d a p t t o the
c o m m u n i t y a n d t h e life from
which he has been removed for
years. Because these m e n have
been o u t of touch with t h e
c o m m u n i t y for so long and have
often lost all family ties, Lhey
r e t u r n from prison with no o n e
t o rely o n . This often leads Lheni
back t o t h e institution from
which they have been released.
T h e Half Way House will serve
t o function as t h e source which
these former inmates can rely
o n . In t h e long r u n , half w a y
houses of this n a t u r e s h o u l d
succeed in lowering the crime
rate in areas in which they exist
a n d o f f e r t h e former prisoner
a
better
resocialization a n d
a d a p t a t i o n program than t h a t
now offered in state penal institutions.
T h e Half Way House on First
Street will open in November t o
inmates w h o are eligible for
parole within the next six
m o n t h s . Until now, Sam and Gordon have recieved no governm e n t assistance for either the
C o m m u n i t y Referral Center o r
the Prison Project which a r e
both desperately needed by the
Arbor Hill C o m m u n i t y . Assistance is needed in order to make
these ideas a reality and for t h e
survival of these projects.
Sam McDowell, Gordon Van
Ness and the volunteers at the
C o m m u n i t y Referral Center are
putting their ideas into ae'.ion in
order to help their c o m m u n i t y
overcome t h e problems it is
facing. Albany — being our own
c o m m u n i t y for four years of o u r
lives — should be receiving o u r
help in solving these problems.
On Wednesday, November 15,
we will have a chance t o help by
participating in the campus wide
food fast to raise money for the
C o m m u n i t y Referral ('enter and
the Prisoners' Half Way House
In order to get t h e m o n e y
from F.S.A , we need a list of
mean card numbers. Tables will
be set u p at the dinner lines on
each q u a d to lake m e a l card
n u m b e r s the week of October .'JO
t o N o v e m b e r '1.
By giving u p o n e dinner we can
help m a k e possible the prisoners'
Half Way House and give the
m e n in t h e Albany County Jail
and S t a t e Institutions an opport u n i t y never before available t o
t h e m If y o u would like to further help the project, please con
tact G o r d o n or Sam at the
Community
Referral
Center,
'165-70<16.
Bureaucratic Bungle?
"/ made my move, now it's the
phone company's turn. It's like a
chess name. I'm sitting it out,
I'm not planning any moves in
advance." These are the plans, or
non-plans, of Danny. He is the
organizer of the SUNYA
student's movement
protesting
the
New
York
Telephone
Company's
unannounced
raise in
monthly service charges.
When students
originally
contracted for telephone service, the
contract stipulated a $6 monthly
service charge. On receiving their
September
phone
bills,
they
were surprised to see an $8.50
monthly
service
charge
(plus
tax).
Many of those who at
tempted
to call the ph()iu> company for un explanation
of the
change were told to call a special
student sendee number. One student culled the number,
"Every
half hour, almost all day, und it
was ulwuys busy, so I gave up
and paid the hill. "
The purpose of the plmm • bill
boycott
is not completed
, Irur
Danny has the hope that "S
telephone
company
hun-ai
who wasn't informed
iahou
increase)
will notice
,,•..!
something
about it," hn- •'
doubtful.
In the tneanlnn,
waiting game, and tt\ th> i
company \s move,
If
y o it
w o ii ! •:
information
on th.
bill
boycott,
vail
I' •
2 7731, that is. o.s /'•'.'.
phone is still on.
" D o n ' t get yourself into the
box where y o u think thai voting
for McGovern is a referendum of
the anti-war m o v e m e n t . ' '
this Socialist Workers Parly
view was expressed by Fred
Halstead, SWP 190H Presidential
c a n d i d a t e , a t the " F o r u m for
Politics" last Monday evening.
T h e Young Socialist Alliance is
the y o u n g people's faction of
this party t h a t c u r r e n t l y supports Linda J e n n e s s a n d Andrew
Pulley as their presidential and
vice-presidential candidates.
Halstead claimed, after tracing
the origins of U.S. involvement
in Indochina, thai evt-ry Presi
dent h a s been c o r r u p t e d and
made a liar by the influence of
both parly a n d "lug business
lie will say o n e thing in the heal
of tin- election campaign, hut
when tin- actual policy making
comes, he lullows the wishes of
his parly a n d of " b i g huMm-h*"
to maintain the relation* In- has
with llo'fn, according In Hal
Mead.
McGovern has said h e ib for an
end t o t h e war in Vietnam, but
"every single, solitary military
a p p r o p r i a t i o n right d o w n t h e
line, he voted f o r , " stressed Hal
stead, " i t was m o r e i m p o r t a n t t o
maintain p a r t y s t a n d i n g s . "
As the talk progressed, he grew
m o r e a n d m o r e vehement in his
argument againsl s u p p o r t of the
" T h e i m p o r t a n t t h i n g is for
the oppressed t o u n i t e againsl
the o p p r e s s o r s , " he asserted.
" W h a t it boils d o w n t o is the
rich
against
the poor; h i m
against m e . "
Halstead n a m e d some of the
0 [J p r e s s e d
g r o u ps,
women,
blacks, h o m o s e x u a l s , and labor
being his prime examples He
c o n c l u d e d by saying that t o
voice his dispproval of the war.
one should vole fur the SWP
candidates.
According t o the SWP pint
form, " T h e Democratic and lie
publican parties hear joint re
spuusibdily
for the situation
lacing the people of the ('illicit
Statim." T h e " s i t u a t i o n " in
eludes the e c o n o m i c problem*,
the racial tensions, the war the
" e r o s i o n of civil liberties," the
failure to " m e e t I lie needs of
w o m e n , " the ecological prob
1 em, und t h e "unfilled d e m a n d s
of American y o u t h . "
T h e platform also cites exam
pies of c o r r u p t i o n caused, accor
ding t o the p a r l y , by the capi
lalist system. T h e s e include the
Vietnam War, racism, job dis
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
T h e SWP Platform
T h e actual platform of the
party has thirteen [joints
Withdrawal
of all i r o o p s
from Indochina, a bombing halt,
and the abolishment of the
drafl.
Meeting
the
needs
o f the
working people by abolishment
ol all wage control , and em) In
W.M " t h e mosi important cause
ui
i nt l a t i o n , "
"cost ol living
e s c h i u , clauses in .,11 c u u t r a e U
,ocial security p a y m e n t , pen
MOMS, and welfare and u n e m
piijymeni benefits," "organi/.ed
c o m m i t t e e s of the unions .mil
c o n s u m e r groups with the powei
by H e n r y Y e g e r m a n
F r o m a t o p Livingston T o w e r ' s
penthouse,
A $ 2 . 5 0 per p h o n e tntshil-.,
work week with im reduction in
pay, thus opening |obs for the
u n e m p l o y e d , a public workh p r o
grain for I he u n e m p l o y e d , an
" u n c o n d i t i o n a l " right to strike,
"rank-and-file control over all
union affairs," "equal u g h l s in
all jobs for all p e o p l e , " and " a n
i n d e p e n d e n t labor p a r t y . "
Welfare reform by abolishing
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
" F o r the democratic right of
the black people t o control their
own c o m m u n i t i e s , " including a
"crash program with federal,
state and city funds to build new
housing, decent schools , " a
support to husmg if I he corn
munity wants it, the appropriation of funds for e d u c a t i o n ,
and the support ol " t h e right lo
keep arms anil organize them
selves fur self defense "
-Democratic
election
m a k i n g it possible for an\
d i d a l e to get on t h e balloi
the
Bernstein,
Full civil a n d h u m a n
for gay people
(loveiuilieiil
nwnei
hip •
AincMi •
campaign
siippo.n-,
UMI.IIIN
UH ">' •
the V S , \ i Young So. i.ih
b a n c ) oi ol t h e VS,JI' i i
Socialists Im Jemiesh and I'm
have been i n v o k e d in caio •
and
camping
g
A. • MMIM .
Linda Jenness, " T h e N S.II' i
back b o n e
of oui rampYSJP-ers are t h e activists
organizers, the speakers tin
i n b u l o i s of literature i".
campaign."
first heard his uncle's s l u m - w a v e
soon
liiught himself the ncces-
club irunsiiiits from the t o p of
sury
r e q u i r e m e n t s and iccclved
Livingston T o w e r unci thcli an-
his license from the F.C.C.
Ho fiddled
give the club ability In pull In
any pail n1' 111* world.
it und
Tlic uiniiioin
ciillmsiasl
find mil Ibcic ure m a n y lypcs of
in " h a m " uidiu
must be o n e nl Ihe
iiiosl d e d i c a t e d h o b b y i s t s in tlie
world.
In Older In b e c o m e an
n p c i a l n i nl' u h u m uidlo s t a t i o n ,
line must
Hist
lake a rigoious
tcsl given b y the f e d e r a l C o m iiinnieulinils liuicau mi electionit llicniy
anil Mnisc code pin-
licicncy.
II
o n e is grained
,i
the ham is
in own anil u p d a t e a
I laiisinii lei
In speaking In a radio hum y n u
ici clvci
ami aiitcnnn tli.it will penult linn
enjoyment
dtutich
Dr. Arthur Collini
und t h e s a m e diligence of w o r k .
Dr. Collins tolls us. " t h e Import a n t thing is n o t the Initials, b u t
the kind of oducuflonal und selfd e v e l o p m e n t a l skills the s t u d e n t
achieves."
tion prW.o for disgruntled P h D
candidutes. It is m e a n t t o be a
college teaching Degree us t h e
PhD is m e a n t t o be a research
degree. Both degreeB reflect t h e
same high quality of scholarship,
in tins
h o b b y and
Interest Prompts Asian Studies
Asian
help cover t h e s t a t e , T h e w o r k s h o p ul Albuny was the second
little-known
people unci lo leurn w h e r e lhey
such
m u d e un un-
cun get m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n ubout
ihc
tended.
with
b y Vlckl G o t t l i e b
Lust
spring,
American
u
official
publicized
visit
t o Red C h i n a .
differ-
out.
red
:nl fields of Eusl Aslini s t u d i e s .
provide ' c a c h i n g aids in the w a y
II gieal deul of Interest in
of slides, films und t e x t s . He Is
hoping
I n unci
politics.
b e t w e e n high schools and univer-
here
in
Albuny
as
Moscow,
(iciiiumy,
A p p a r e n t l y , the w o r k - s h o p wus
Aitci I'rcsidcnl N i x o n ' s China
Lenningrad,
I l i s t there is ihe ehunee in talk
m i n e infniiniitioii uboul China
sent
in
the win Id.
Us p e o p l e , c u l t u r e , h i s t o r y , gen-
I'gclsinn
Ham
Kuclio is also un excellent
eral w a y of life. T o u c c n m m n -
over 20(1 people w a n t i n g tn at-
r e l u m e d In Peking In gel m i n e
way
In
d a l e these ici|uesls. M i . Ktiun-I
lend.
surprise
maleiiul. He f o u n d the Chinese
Chen,
wus thai uboul bO oi these were
very c o o p e r a t i v e und vciy inter-
juiiloi
ested in what he was doing. He
people
nil nvci
practice
guages, although
liucign
English
univcisal radio language
lanis the
Conver-
ptolessoi
asking I'm
of e c o n o m i c s ,
and M r s . Maltha
Ugclsten, p r o -
And Ihc blggesi
unci
senior
high
from
school
this program
lesidcnt
invited
fin
lo do
the suite, he
relumed
lo tills c o u n t r y
pictorial
maleiiul
l e x i s , b o o k s used b y Ihc Chinese
s t u d e n t s . These
a series of six scminais held from
campus.
Scptemhei
2.S O c t o b e r
31.
lluil lhey had wus that lhey lost
themselves lo teach uboul
ili.ii il In- apolitical.
T h e s e , nuclei
ihc care of Mis.
m o much m o n e y in the C a m p u s
own
nl
General
technology
only
coinplulnl
wllh
and Chinese
in m i n i o n s ol families, 'flic only
I.gelstnn und spoilsmen! b y Ihe
Thcii
students
iiiiwiiiicn nile nl c o n v c i s u t l o n is
to
Chinese
Among
the p r o m i n e n t
guests
he
schools, The program bus been a
nutlnnul
greal
parative
pui In which by-passes ihe
Dining
(he Christmas
seusun
success. T h e second pro-
fir a m p l a n n e d by Mr. C h e n unci
defense,
unci In time of
The w u r k s h o p wus not o p e n lo
Ihe general public, b u t wus especially designed for teachers In
field
w h o don't
of the m e m b e r s ure laugh I the
mense aid, us w h e n lhey partici-
opportunity
rudiments
p a t e d In gelling medicines t o Ihe
Chlnu
l-.C'C. t e s i . They uic laiight by
victims
the president of Ihe club, How-
York state this your.
of the floods
in New
wus u duy-long
workshop
ber 2 5 .
Ihe
East
Aslun
courses
ture, und M o d e r n Chinese Litera-
fumllcs.
natural dlsustcrs can be of im-
In
Eusl Aslun c u r r i c u l u m for high
huve made lusting relationships.
civil
interested
studies. Next semester,
last Wednesduy, O c t o -
servicemen
are licensed o p e r a t o r s , The rest
Stale Education Department,
Hcie ut S U N Y A , s t u d e n t s ulso
ure
In Japanese His-
In providing
ty m e m b e r s , of which uboul hull
Com-
Studies nl New York
Clusslcul
Antaillc
club ulso provides service in the
und
Chlnu
tory,
between
radio
Programs
nn
will be offered
the world and
Besides this the
consultant
on O c t o b e r 2 , t o help develop un
friends
conluct
t h e contact and
held ut
m c m h c i s luivc visited thcli a u d i o
und their
and lluil
tinue and e x p a n d ,
Studies fot ihe Cenlei lot Inler-
undersea cables.
ent
c o o p e r a t i o n wllh China will con-
(ben,
und nihei
their
hopes
al Ihe w o r k s h o p wus M i . Juck
perts
SUNYA
Mr. Chen
blish will b e c o m e more p e r m a n -
c o o k i n g , u n d were given b y exfrom
country,
ihc programs he Is helping esta-
Ceiuci vending machines.
Studies,
457-ROSct und u p h o n e pulch will
UcV All o n e bus In d o Is cull up
SUNYA
the
raphes
Mr. Chen is a formei
of Peking. When
fully and attentively weni in i h c
coin a n y t h i n g l i o m ihe wculhct
nl h i s t o r y , p l a n n e d t w o
Lgolslen
for
received
lhey
unci M r s .
separate programs. T h e liisl was
Icssoi
Asian
requlied
n u l , M i . Chen
HO re-
faith-
sations across ihe nil waves eon-
East
t h e club consists of about thir-
uboul
the success of A l b a n y ' s
program.
l.xpccling
of mall
only
uboul
sponses l o ihc invitations
deul
Mis.
around
s o m e t h i n g people really w a r n e d ,
gicut
link b e t w e e n ships at seu und the
Angola, Chile, Dm-
coordination
visit. S U N Y A begun in icccivc a
the Kudlo Club will serve as a
Yugoslavia,
foi m o r e
sities, und thus wus very excited
well.
MIII will iit'vn sec in a llleiinic
England,
lo
l h e y included lectures on litera-
the
from
like
hopes
t u r e , e c o n o m i c s , e d u c a t i o n und
In
covered u wide variety of topics
places
Mr. C h e n
United
country
nicign s t u d e n t s wit It thcii luini-
wllh
but
worked
S u i t e s . A n d thut interest can be
thiil
i\ piovldlng c n i n m u i i i c a l l o n I'm
lasi milling cnnlucls
are still being
high
o n e ' s needs In the muny
pi.ic i". thai Ihe average pci
main
foi
r e l a t i o n s with China, b u t ii stir-
nil
'Mb ami has b a d
he h a s at-
pluns
schools
College
Apul
Ihut
The
every-
Besides the lun p a n . radio club
I lir club lias been luiiMiiitttng
semlnai
t o meet
scives ihc umveislly c o m m i i n l l y
since
field. T h e lectures covered
topics designed
uciuss the <>
communicate
liusl
Not o n l y did this trip o p e n up
icuiis, nvci Ihc pules .mil I " l.n
lo
experienced
thai are deilvod from Ihc c l u b .
lo
have un
•••udy
und Aslu. It would
about
give
these people u chance In meet
Mi. C h e n ut rived in New York
Chinese
Litera-
schools, colleges und universities
ture.. U n f o r t u n a t e l y , Mrs. Egel-
In the siule. New York Is t h e
Bton, o n e of the p r o g r a m ' s most
first slute to express un Interest
instrumental
In developing
In J a n u a r y . It is the h o p e of
such
a program.
p e o p l e , Is retiring
The pluns for ihe program ure
everyone involved, b o t h
still fluid. Mr. C h e n e x p e c t s t o
und
faculty
visit muny schools und lo hold
stration cun find s o m e o n e w h o
seminars for the universities t o
will a t t e m p t t o replace h e r .
s t u d e n t s , that t h e admini-
PAGE THREE
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
PAGE TWO
Willi
tcniuis, which arc 2 6 0 loci high
/.ll, und Mexico C i t y . Many club
T h e .tu.lenl
tecl his interest in radios when he
radio.
Italy,
Sludcnt I'artKip.ii""1
the c l u b . Howard stur-
radio
allowed
,
Slate
year
A m a t e u r R a d i o Club mlks to t h e
permil by Ihe I'.l'.C
T h e p r o t e c t i o n and e x t '
ol civil liberties instead •
"political trials at a e l u M
[the
V S
government I
l e m p l s Lo silence oppnsM "
rlustiA
A socialist
Albuny
w h o lust
world, T h e Albany S t a t e
powei I ul
"M)is
lion
,nifl
| o h „ coiifronlh
Chicauo.s ,ii eve,\ turn
All end I,, upp,ess,on o |
women, including repeal of all
anli ,il,oiiion laws, free contra
eepnve* on demand, equal ]>.i\
for equal work, " o p e n admission
II institutes of higher Ir.ir
n m g , " and "free quality 'd I hour
child care facilities..."
A support to " t h e d e m a n d s
of American y o u t h , " including
"free education through the uni
versity
level
guaranteed
tohs .., student-faculty control
of e d u c a t i o n , " and the abolish
m e m of all "laws that discrim-
ard
founded
inate against y o u t h . "
—An e n d t o " i n h u m a n m e n t of p r i s o n e r s , ' mclui
" a n e n d lo censorship .•"''
strict ions on mail, hook-.
newspapers All labor lo In .
at union wages Huinan>
m e n t and c o n d i t i o n s foi i!
soners."
liberation
T h e difference b e t w e e n I he
DA a n d Ihe P h D la o n e of
o r i e n t a t i o n , T h e P h D la a research degree...a degree p r o g r a m
w h e r e the c a n d i d a t e ia encouraged to b e c o m e a specialist in
s o m e n e w area of k n o w l e d g e
Subslinitial research work Is re
q u i r e d t o earn a PhD, s o m e t i m e s
lusting us long us thirteen years,
T h e D A on t h e o t h e r h a n d ia
oriented
toward
u college
t e a c h i n g career. While the work
la n o ICHK rigorous t o obtain u
DA, tile direction of the graduate work in p o i n t e d toward research on a n d b r o a d learning
College touching r e q u i r e m e n t s
d e m a n d a high level of scholarship on t h e part of those wishing
In e n t e r t h e profession, y e t seld n m d o they d e m a n d a high
level of touching ability. T h e
CUH tolls us, " I t m u t l e r s profoundly w h e t h e r a c a m p u s is or
is n o t p e r m e a t e d with a care for
teaching...u classroom tuught by
an u n p r e p a r e d teacher leaches
the s t u d e n t neglect of scholars h i p , " T h i s Is w h y the D A is
being d e v e l o p e d ; t o e n c o u r a g e
nnd m a k e o n e as p r e p a r e d as
possible t o teach his subject and
teach If well.
T h e DA is n o t m e a n t t o be u
r e p l a c e m e n t for n o r u consoln-
Ham Club Functional, Fun
all iaxes on incomes under
$10,1)01) a year, with a 1007, lax
on incomes over $'^T>,000 a year,
by making rental rales on apartment a maximum of 10"'' of t h e
family income, by socializing all
medicine, by a consumer-controlled food and drug administration; and by making all public I ransporlation free.
Chicano
a b o u t t e a c h i n g a particular discipline.
An e x a m p l e of a D A candid a t e ' s progression t h r o u g h t h e
program, perhaps at SUNYA,
would b e like this: C a n d i d a t e for
graduate work J o e Qreene has
Just completed either his u n d e r g r a d u a t e w o r k or a masters degree. T h e n , provided t h a t his
field offers a D A , he upplles t o
his d e p u r t m e n t nt t h e g r a d u a t e
evel. if a c c e p t e d , he Is e x p e c t e d
la c o m p l e t e t w o yonrs of graduHe s t u d y a n d u six m o n t h
anchlng I n t e r n s h i p . T h e n h e
directs
his energies
toward
s h o r t - t e r m reseurch of n w i d e
variety w h i c h Is reinted t o t h e
e x p e r i e n c e of teaching In his
discipline. T h e DA p r o g r a m ' s
h o p e Is t o m a k e -loo G r e e n e nn
affective college toucher
r
Party's Program Points and Promise
crimination, wage controls, and
interventurns in nations o t h e r
than Vietnam " t h e Dominican
Republic, Cuba, the Congo,
Korea, and Lebanon "
" T h e r e is no fundamental difference between the Democrats
and the Republicans they are
b o t h commit led l o preserving
capitalist e x p l o i t a t i o n , " claims
the party.
"The question
It thu» n o
longer whether
t h e untvpmlties
HIIIIII c o m m i t themselves t o the
butter p r e p a r a t i o n of college
touchers; t h e o n l y IHHUO in how."
Thin Is the view from which
tin* Council of O r u d u a l e School
in the United Stilton l o o k s from
UH it e x p a n d s roscarcli und do*
v o i o p m e n t of t h e D o c t o r of Arts
degree, n new d e v e l o p m e n t on
the educational scene.
The
Council
of Orndunte
Schools in t h e United Slates
(COS), together with t h e Carnegie Corporation*, IK currently
funding n n d Coordinuling t h e
growth of D o c t o r of Arts degree
programs nl n n u m b e r of universities iicroHH the c o u n t r y . Albany
Stale is o n e of these schools and
it* a c c o m p a n i e d by such notew o r t h y universities ni Illinois,
Michigan. B r o w n . Yale and a
handful of o t h e r s .
At Albany t h e c o o r d i n a t o r of
the D o c t o r of A r U ( D A ) degree
program in Dr. A r t h u r Collins of
tire llumunilios division. Dr
Collins tells ua, " T h e D o c t o r of
Aria program at Albany began in
the fall of 11)71," a n d , " I t was
Ilia o u t - g r o w t h of a planning
grant from t h e Carnegie Corporation which t h e University
applied for, to develop a now
doctoral
program for people
w h o I n t e n d e d t o go t o college
leaching."
The issue involved appears to
center on whether
the phone
company
has the "right
to
change the service charge from
the
original
contracted
fee.
When Danny spoke to the oncampus representative,
he wus
told
that the university
had
made u mistake tin quoting a $6
charge), und the service charge
had been $S.M) alt along. Yet,
thousands of SUNYA
dorm residents signed con true Is with a
monthly
service charge of six
dollars.
A complaint was filed with the
I'uh lie Service
Commission,
which regulates the policies of
public utilities. The
commission
characteristically
up proves
rate
increases, and has not taken any
action on the complaint
at this
time.
Some people who have paid
their bills feel that, "There's no
sense tn yelling about it. Everybody's contract has u clause stating that rates can be changed
without
notice."
Such
senti-
T h e actual D A degree offerings
at S U N Y A a r e In t h e E c o n o m i c s
nnd English d e p a r t m e n t s . O t h e r
d e p a r t m e n t s have s t a r t e d D A
p r o g r a m s , b u t d u e t o a morat o r i u m on n e w g r a d u a t e level
programs
(especially
doctoral
p r o g r a m s ) called by commissioner of E d u c a t i o n N y q u l s t t h e
p r o g r a m s have n o t developed
further. A DA p r o g r a m in Spunish w a s a p p r o v e d by t h e University S e n a t e last your, but It also
con go n o further until the morll o r l u m is lifted. O t h e r departm e n t s are considering DA programs as well.
T h e DA degree iH un outg r o w t h of t h e dissatisfaction
with t h e relevance of t h e P h D ,
to college teaching. II was first
developed
at Carnegie-Mellon
University In 1 9 8 7 and since baa
received c o n s i d e r a b l e
support
from t h e COB.
by I'nul Michael Slewtirt
ments
are not echoed f>\
dents whose finances are uh
limited and who will hate
difficulty
squeezing
out ,m ,
$2.50 a month.
When info.
that some students
might >i,
able to afford
the nn-r,,,phone
company
represent
said that special
arrangi n
could be made to turn of)
phones of such
student*
Socialist Workers:
major parly candidates. "All
past and present statesmen are
under t h e t h u m b of the SVVP's
c o m m o n e n e m y —big business,"
yelled Halstead, a large m a n ,
heavy-jowled, with grey hair t o
the collar in back and wire rimm e d glasses- t h e kind thai cur
rent styles are copies of.
New Development on the Educational Scene'
by Marcy R o t h e n b e r g
ui was i f
by Nancy Albaugh
Doctor of Arti Degree?
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
from the U.S.—backed pacification program's computers, the
government controlled 90.1 per
cent of the 19.1 million people
at the end of September, with
7.2 per cent in contested areas
and 2 per cent dominated by the
North Vietnamese and Viet
"ong.
These figures represent a progressive improvement since June,
when the Communists' military
campaign peaked out on pacification charts with 557,000
people, almost 3 per cent of the
total, under enemy control.
Although having given back
that one percentage point, the
Communist side is in a far stronger position, strategically and
politically, than it was when the
offensive began March 30.
Some senior allied officials believe that while the enemy military drive did not achieve its
over-all objectives, Hanoi and
the Viet Cong probably are reasonably satisfied with their
gains.
vi cmums ngsrjen.
|"WE'LL CANVASS THE /WALT QW0PS, THE SOCK. HOPS —MARK MV WORDS/
RICHARD NIXON WILL HAVE THE IS-yEAR-OLD VOTE."'
Vietnam's New Map
by Richard Pyle
Associated Press Writer
Saigon AP — With an Indochina cease lire apparently near,
the map of South Vietnam looks
remarkably as it did 10 yearn
ago. Then the Viet Cong insurgents were running wild in tfae
countryside and the Saigon
government was struggling to
keep populated areas under control and highways open.
Today, as then, most of the
850-mile border From the demilitarized zone to the Gulf of Siam
is under the Communist-led
forces' control or is a jungle no
man's land ignored by both sides
Most Areas Open
Major cities, including all M
province capitals, arc firmly in
Saigon government hands, but
around some are concentrations
of enemy forces who harass de
fenders, close roads and propagandize the local people as they
did in the early '(JOs.
Most main highways are open
most of the time, but any one of
these vital lines of communication can he closed at any
moment, almost anywhere.
Around Saigon itself, long-lime
Communist strongholds like the
Iron Triangle, War Zone C, the
Saigon River corridor and the
rubber plantations have again
become operating bases for
enemy forces after a few years
of relative quiet
In Lhe event <il a standstill
cease-fire designed to freeze the
forces of both sides in place at
the moment of the truce, the
question of who controls what is
of crucial importance. To attempt to measure this on a map
is deceptive because of the vast
areas of no contest, and because
the struggle continues to be
more concerned with people
than with land.
Sou(l) Holds Upper Hand
Despite its severe setbacks of
the last seven months and despite the appearance of the map,
the South Vietnamese government still clearly holds the upper
hand
According to the latest figures
_
_
Some also believe that a ceasefire plan tha.1 required the North
Vietnamese to withdraw from
the South, as President Nguyen
Van Thieu has demanded, would
leave a Viet Cong force too weak
to control much of what has
been gained or to resist South
Vietnamese efforts to quietly
take it back.
Communist Stronghold
Areas of strongest Communist
influence are in the northern and
western parts of northernmost
Quang Tri Province and Lhe
mountains that run southward
along the coast and provide sanctuaries for forays into populated
'owlands. This is true despite the
fact the South Vietnamese again
control the provincial capital,
Quang Tri.
In addition, uie Communist
side controls most of the central
highlands region along the LaosCambodia tri border area, most
of the highland provinces of
Konlum, Pleiku and chunks of
Phu Bon and the coastal provinces of Quang Ngai, Binh Dinh
and Phu Yen,
_
_
Areas lost in the early days of
the enemy's spring offensive and
not retaken include the border
areas northwest and north of
Saigon. Although An Loc survived a siege that petered out
after four months, Highway 13
remains a focal point and is still
closed in spots.
In many of these area the
people fled the fighting, creating
a burden of more than a million
new refugees but at the same
time depriving the Communist
side of a large pool of hostages,
propanganda subjects and con
scripted recruits.
Saigon's Stronghold
Saigon's strongest grip remains
in the Mekong Delta, where
about a third of its people live
Communist-led troops con
tinue to hold their long-time
coastal sanctuary in the U Mmh
"Forest of Darkness" and li,:w
been trying to return to iln-n
former base area in the "Sevi-n
Mountains" along the Carnbo
dian border.
In Cambodia itself, recent ol
ficial estimates are that the Com
munist-led forces, primarily local
Khmer Rouge, control about h:'>
per cent of the countryside and
55 percent of the seven million
people.
The situation is similar in sonii'
respects to Vietnam, with the
government holding major cities
and towns and trying to keep its
highways and other lines of com
munication open,
Laos is the most remote, and
at the same time perhaps tInmost complex, of Indochina's
hostility-ridden areas. It has two
wars, one between the royal
government and the North Viet
namese and their Pathei L,u.
i-lients in north-central Laos, ili»'
other along the Ho Chi Mmh
irail-that is essentially an exten
sion of the war in Vietnam.
As much of half of Laos is
controlled or dominated by the
Communist side. Intensity of thf
fighting changes with lb" cea
sons. Nobody knows how main
people live in 1 tos, but the win
affects those hardy tribal MII
ugers living HI the nmiini .MM
more than u does Kivei V u\W\
_
fP
* ®&
a coalition government down to
the hamlet level and which contained no provision for withWASHINGTON AP-Saigon to- drawal of North Vietnamese
day issued its strongest criticism troops from the South.
to date of the U.S.-Hanoi agreeSunday, Vice President Spiro
ment to end the Vietnam war, as T. Agnew and Republican Nathe Nixon administration con- tional Chairman, Sen. Robert
tinued to say the United States Dole of Kansas, both said they
won't be ready to sign the didn't believe a case-fire would
cease-fire by Tuesday as the be agreed to.by Tuesday.
North Vietnamese have demanded.
Dole, in a televised appearance,
Meanwhile, the Viet Cong said said he did not believe the acit is determined to continue the cord would be signed before the
war unless the United States Nov. 7 presidential elections.
Another prominent Republieither dumps South Vietnamese
President Thieu or forces him to can, Sen. Edward W. Brooke of
Massachusetts, commenting on a
accept the agreement.
In a broadcast over the official private briefing by Nixon and
government station, the South top administration officials, also
Vietnamese said "whatever our said today that he did not think
ally's doings," Tbieu '.'will not the case-fire would be signed by
sanction mass suicide by the election day.
people of South Vietnam."
Brooke said, however, the
The broadcast sarcastically re- United States might sign an
ferred to the United States as an agreement even if Thieu refused,
"ally who plays the role of and added that the briefing left
negotiator" and said Thieu him convinced that the United
would not sign an agreement States considered Thieu's objecwhich he believes would result in tions "political rhetoric."
Albany Prison Break
ALBANY, N Y . AP-Three
police agencies, the local district
attorney's office and the state
have begun investigations into
Friday night's massive jailbreak
at the Albany County Jail. Authorities said today that nine of
the ] 2 escapees were still at
large.
One of the escapees was captured Saturday night on a downtown rooftop. The other two
were arrested in their Albany
homes. All surrendered peacefully, officers said.
Th e cou nty jail warden,
Robert Beame, said the prisoners, armed with al least one
knife, overpowered guards inside
the jail, injuring one slightly, and
locked them in a utility closet
The inmates used keys taken
from the guards to make their
way through a series of gates,
they said.
Once outside, the men commandeered a police van and sped
away The van was later found
abandoned on a downtown Al
hany street.
One of the men still at large,
Ronald Miller, 21. of Albany,
was inadvertently released from
the jail five months ago and was
at large for four months. Security conditions at the jail were
sharply criticized in separate reports by an Albany County
grand jury and by the State
Correction Commission.
The commission, which has
supervisory authority over local
jails in the state, assigned two
staff members to the probe of
Friday night's breakout.
Dist. Atty. Arnold Proskin said
he would begin another investigation of the jail, and city, country and stale police also began
investigations.
Captured on a rooftop after
police received a tip Saturday
night was Tyrone Murphy, 16
Later that nigh I police seized
Ronald Phillips, 2.3, al his home,
and Clarence McCary Jr., 17,
was arrested at his home nearby
early Sunday.
Police said the search for the
missing men would continue.
Newswoman Elizabeth Drew's
key question is "Why?"
Each Monday at 7:30 p.m. she
begins her "Thirty Minutes
With..." interview program on
Channel 1 7 over the Public
Broadcasting Service by gently
leading her guest through a statement of position. Then she
smiles and quietly asks: "Why?"
A recent interview with Adm.
Thomas H. Moorer, Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, illustrates this technique:
Mrs. Drew: (Should this country be) number one, militarily?
Adm. Moorer: Number one in
every area. Number one in
sports, number one in industry,
number one militarily, number
one across the board.
Mrs. Drew: Why?
Adm. Morrer: Because- do you
want to be number two?
Such "why?" questions are part
of the implicit bargain Elizabeth
Drew believes she has made with
her audience. The bargain is to
value truth above TV entertainment.
She sees her job as "getting
into the issues and laying them
out" so that her viewers can
draw their own conclusions,
"That's what democracy and
journalism is all about," she says
simply.
Mrs. Drew prepares for interviews by asking herself: "If 1 (as
a viewer) had a half hour with
this person, what would I want
to know?"
She avoids the overtly aggressive questions because she believes this distracts the viewers'
attention from the subject, "Inside Washington" gossip is also
t a b o o on "Thirty Minutes
With..." because Mrs. Drew believes such questions take valuable time from an interview
without shedding light on issues
of national importance
In order to build her instincts
for the right question at the
right time, Mrs. Drew spends as
much time as possible outside
Washington. She reads u lot,
talks to people in other parts of
the country, and listens to her
friends' ideas.
•
^Fireside Lounge, Tuesday, October 31 at 8:00
« M M » , + « » « • • • » * «
<
l
f
FIGHT BACK WITH LEGAL ACTION
TEST. PRIZE!
fUnd-dby.„d«,mux |
f u n d u d hv s t u d u n l
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to nassau
family court j
, . ,_»•,-.v.VV_f_M_f,»^.A*AAAAMMAM->.P_V;
i
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
+ f
RE-ELECT
rwise, $.25
sponsored by campus center governing board
.._-----.,.-.-..-.-.-..-
Democrats split with the "old
tradition'"..."Mr. Nixon will be
almost reelected by default."
Mrs. Drew concentrates on interviewing during the program.
She makes her own incisive observations in the column she
writes as Washington Editor of
The Atlantic Monthly. More
than a year ago, in April, 1971,
she was noting that: "George
McGovern is being underestimated as a candidate. He is a
much tougher man than most
descriptions of him suggest, and
he has done a lot of quiet work
to get his candidacy moving."
This perception is not un
noticed by her audience. According to a New York lawyer:
"Elizabeth Drew...has been a
main source of vital, important
information, presented in levelheaded and non-dogmatic fashShe recalls developing a set of
ion."
questions on the India-Pakistan
A priest in Saint Paul, Minnesituation prior to interviewing
sota, says: "Your characteristic
Defense Secretary Melvin Laird
genius lies in your ability to
and quickly discarding all these
steer a gracious course between
questions upon learning that
being bland and resorting to
massive troop withdrawals from
needling,"
Vietnam had just been anA housewife in Maryland calls
nounced. Mrs. Drew decided on
Mrs, Drew "one of the few great
camera that troop withdrawals
interviewers on television," and
were more important to her
a doctor in New York says "If
audience than the Mid-Eastern
woman's liberation means more
situation.
Drew, then let's get on with it."
She also threw away her preMrs. Drew is conscious that
pared questions on agribusiness
many
women in America are
while interviewing Agriculture
looking
toward her as an examSecretary Earl But/, because she
sensed that food prices had be- ple of professional excellence.
Her mail is filled with testicome a significant issue in the
monial letters from such diverse
nation.
women as San Francisco houseMembers of the working press
wives and the formidable pubare among Mrs. Drew's regular
lisher of Ms., Gloria Steinem.
viewers because news stories
However, her reaction to wohave a history oT breaking unman's liberation is characterisexpectedly on "Thirty Minutes
tically that of the professional
V Lh..." Elizabeth Drew inter
journalist who happens to be a
viev\ may turn up on the front
woman. She seems genuinely
page of the morning paper or as
surprised that "people are taking
part of a "think piece" several
it so seriously that a woman is
months later.
doing this." She believes the fact
that she is a woman is "peripheral" to hei job, but admits that
It was a front page story in
it has become very significant to
May, 1972, when Presidential
many men and women.
speech writer Patrick J. Bu
"After listening to people I am
chanan charged the major netbeginning to believe thai this is a
works with bias and threatened
really
serious issue in this counsome type of anti trust action
try," she says. "It is important
However, it took nine months
and it hits very, very deep."
before the Wall Street Journal
Mrs. Drew wants to continue
realized that in October, 1971,
her "Thirty Minutes With..." inAFL-CIO George Meany told
terviews on the Public BroadElizabeth Drew thai if the
casting Service because she believes commercial television is
doing verj little one-to-one interviewing.
She believes that the real significance of TV public affairs interviewing in contrast to written
interviews is tliat it permits the
audience to draw its own conclusions.
"You can write a profile of a
person, but no matter how well
it is done, that sense of chemistry doesn't come through. The
people are forced to their conclusions through lhe writer's
words."
Of her half-hour profiles, Mrs.
Drew concludes, "I always finish
feeling there could have been
much more—but perhaps that's
the way it should be."
notice of eviction, come to the
u see fit!
MONSTER MAS.
.
Mrs. Drew's questions are chosen very thoughtfully. She believes it is essential to show her
guest's thinking process and not
simply his political reflexes.
"I don't want to get verbal
press releases or non-answers to
questions they obviously can't
answer," she says.
If her guest is a candidate for
office, Mrs. Drew may ask how
this person would change the
country. If the guest is already
in office, her questions focus on
the things that have already been
achieved.
The single-person interview
format of "Thirty Minutes
With..." gives Mrs. Drew a
unique opportunity to follow up
a line of questioning and respond to rapidly-changing news
development.
Off-campus students: if you have received
FREE
OMISSION
nking
One beer
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PAGE FOUR
by Mary Dresser
ARE YOU BEING EVICTED?
| : 0 0 pm til ?
come in c
m
M
m%
by R. Gregory Nokes
Associated Press Writer
The Key Question
* * * ,
CC Ballroo
Bewitching h
ALABAST
apple
I
Saigon Blasts U.S.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE FIVE
Communications
O p i n i o n : The Ways Straight Society Oppresses Gays
r
research on bl-sexusllty, which Is
by Thi 8UNYA Gay Alllanoa
Just really beginning, may help
Moat people today ara 111- aoclety underatand better the
aqulppad to undaritand gaya.
possibilities of wider circles of
Tha attltudaa thty hold ara tha
deep friendship.
product of long yaara of mltlnFurthermore, what literature
formation and mlaaduoatlon. It
there has been dealing with
la time for people throughout
homosexuality that has had wide
tha nation to raaaaaaa their porcirculation has tended to emphation, to replaoa tha myths, and
sise the stereotypes and to exto try to idjuat thalr attltudaa.
plore the darker side of the Oay
Why Are We So Biased?
world. Little sensitive acceptance
Rejection of homosexuals goes
has reached the general public;
back a long, long time. Once
although there Is some change In
coneldered witches, they are
the wind quite recently. Certaincondemned In tha early days of
ly there has been little that
tha Judeo-Ohrlitian era aa an
really helps put down the stereoabomination, sinful wrong. In
types and the myths available to
daya whan survival of the specie*
the concerned counselor.
was In question, opposition to
Some of the Myths
homosexuality Is understandAll Oays are unhappy, promisable. In theae daya of concern
cuous chasers after a substitute
for over-population, the tame
for "the real thing" which has
condemnation Is harder to supeluded thorn because of aome
port.
family disaster that makes the
gay male hate women and the
A second way the straight socigay femalu hate men; homoety deals with homosexuality la
sexual relationships cannot last.
to label It "sick." Supposedly
Because most of what was writthla moves the treatment from
ten until very recently came out
punishment to cure, to therapy;
of the clinic, where those Oays
but history ahows that some
who were unhappy were being
forms of therapy are more puntreated by those professionals
ishment than some punishment.
who labeled them sick, a desoThe medical model helps many
late picture of the homosexual
stralghta be better able to handle
ha* emerged. Only with the dethe notion that there Is such u
velopment of Oay Liberation
thing; It makee the straights feol
have mimy homosexuals dissafer. If heterosexuals cun put
covered not only that they were
homosexuality in a category,
not "the only one" (a plaint
with a label, they can put It with
voicod repeatedly by those now
the other unpleasant diseases
"out"), but also tiiat there are
and try to change the behavior
Oays who ure self-assured, acto conform to their own, the
cept themselves und ure not
straights' way of behaving,
guilt-ridden. The few who have
which by natural assumption is
overcome the pressures of socie"well."
ty are leading the way for the
Another cause of bias in many
many who have felt too opstraights Is their own fear of
pressed to breuk out. And while
their own homosexual feelings.
there are homosexuals who are
All of us have the hormones 01
promiscuous, und like to brag of
both sexes, with or without sex.
their exploits, there ure many
Freud's notion of projecwho are most restrained in their
tion comes through clearly in
sexuul activity. In other words,
much of the hostility thrown on
the homosoxual.
Perhaps the
. .
_„.....„„„.
tha variety of sexuality In Oays
Is just like it Is In the straight
world, 80, too,'are the love
relationships, People seem to
forget the tempestuous love affairs of many hetarosexual teens
when they react to the "fragile
relationships" between homosexuals,
Male homosexuality Is caused
by having a dominant mother
and weak father; Days hate people of the opposite sex; homosexuality Is unnatural; homosexuality Is blo-chemlcal-genellu
In nature (homonally Induced).
Just listing those myths together
shows that the straight world
keeps fishing for causes, but
contradicts Itself. It does not
aoem possible to list the cause,
or causes, of homosexuality For
those who are It, It is natural. No
one In this society would
"choose to be homosexual," In
our oppressive society, unless
very strong feelings inside told
co that thut was the way for co.
(Here "co" Is used to replace the
"soxod" pronouns, his or her,
him or her). The human mule
does not tell his penis what to
react to; It reacts or It doesn't.
The "unnalurul" argument does
not hold when comparisons uro
made across history or across
cultures. Nor Is there any high
correlations between homosexuality und the decline of u society
(there muy be with "decadent"
societies, since by the definition
of straight society, homosexuulity is decudent),
Removing laws against homosexuality would increuse the
number of homosexuals. ThenIs no logic to support this argument; society is never going to
encourage homosexuality, nor
should It (any more thun il
should Insist that all hoterosexu
ul couples huve children). While
legalization might allow some
who ure homosexual to be more
open about their preferences, 11
ni nnot
will
w
ot
change
ohsnga thou
those Inner
Inner feelfeelings which direct us toward our
sexual mates. Since Klnsey'i
figures show over 60 peroent of
males In the States have had at
least one homosexusl contact to
the point of climax, but not
even tho wildest estimates of the
percent of the population that Is
Oay go above 20 percent, It
Boems clear that a single oxparlenco does not make a person
turn homosoxual. Even If "upset, confused adolescents may be
led by well-adjusted Oays to
think 'That must be whut I am,
I'll try It'," as one of my friends
warned the other day, the evidence does not support tholr
taking up homosexuality as a
primary focus of their sexuality
unless there are other factors
Involved besides an uncleur Identity.
Whul Con People Do?
Many people could rid themselves of many of tr air stereotypes und hung-ups by talking
with representatives of the Oay
Liberation groups. They will discover thut they will not be seduced, nor assaulted, nor even
put down. Oays Just want others
to see thoin as human beings,
just like the rest of the world
except for their preference of
sexual partner.
Reud something of "the other
side." Espec-lully recommended
are "20 Questions on Homosexuality," put out by the Ouy
Activists Alliance, 00 Woostcr
Street, New York, New York
10012 Especially uppropriute
for counselors, but good for
pHrents und others, since It deals
primarily with counseling In this
ureu, is Society and the Healthy
Homosexual, by George Welnburg (New York, St. Marlins
Press, 1072).
Attend to the positive developments that huve occurred for the
Ouy world; their recognition us
lending 11 viable ulturnutlve life
style by
by piychl
psychiatric and other
atyl.
health groups; the progross miuln
by liberation groups In getUn«
oppressive laws changed, active,
open campaigning for public office by homosexual candidates.
Be aware of the Increasing resoarch
on
A Never Secret Plan for Ending the War First Addressed to LBJ in '68
diers, both North and South,
who will be killed every month
SUNYA Dept. of Economic!
this win continues. In addition,
there is the tremendous destructThe chief obstacle to peace in
ion of homes, factories, bridges,
Vietnam is lire minority of
highways, crops, croplands, etc,
South Vietnamese whoso lives
which is only pnrtly offset by
and fortunes depend upon our
the new construction we huve
remaining. They don't want us
done or will do to prosecute the
to leave them ut the mercy of
wur
And remember the
tho enemy und oppose negotia-1,000.000 war refugees.
tions that might have Ihul result
Few Americana would be so
Wo feel obligated to them us our
crass or hard-hearted us to argue
ulllus und supporturs whom we
thai the execution or Imprisonmust not leave defenseless Ex
ment of, sey, 50,000 pro
cept for those national und local
American houth Vietnamese by
government officials, H few
a now mitt Imperialist govern
thousand army officers, und
merit would be a cheap price to
thosu civilians who have tuken
puy for avoiding Ihe larger
an active unti-communlst or an
casualties thai uro Inevitable if
ll-Viet Cong stand, we could risk
we continue lire wur It seems
free elections tomorrow. They
much too calculated u trade off,
ure the ones who object to reala substitution of highly probable
istic compromise in raris und
victims of our withdrawal for
don'l wunt facu-lo-fuce talks
>ho chance victims of continued
with tho N.L.F.
combat It srnucks of betrayal,
of dishonor And It Is not necussury.
In I Db-i we ihoughl we could
preserve our influence In SouthWe can buy Ihem off. Wo cun
east Asia by preventing a vole
puy Ihetr truusportution to other
which would pul Ho Chi Mlnh In
countries where they would be
power. Now we realise (even If
safe and give them u guaranteed
we don't say It openly) thut we
annual Income for the rest of
have more to lose than to gain
their lives And this at a cost of
by staying there. We can remain
less than one more yeur of wur,
only at tha cost of 00-100,000
measured In dollars alone, not
military casualties a year, $20-30
counting all the lives saved und
billion annually In war costs, and
other benefits.
the heightened danger of proConsider the arithmetic I t ;
voking World War III. On the would cost less than (,60,000,000
humanitarian side must also be
to fly 60,000 South Vietnamese
mentioned the 100,000 civilian
families half way around the
casualties each year and the world to Europe or tha United
thousands of Vietnamese solStates. Msny would doubtless
by Dr. Robert Pettenglll
PAGE SIX
elect closer destinations This is
considerably loss than we are
currently spending ach duy Ihe
wur continues Cluurly tho trims
porliitiou coat of removing the
millstone would not be exces
sive. Add to it a flu, sum lor
relocation housing suy $10,000
per fumily Tills generous sum
would lotul only half a billion
dollars.
The most expensive purl would
be the lifetime annuity for ouch
fumily head, but even that
would not be us coi'tly us some
might think. The unnuul umounl
und tin- number of persons involved are subject to debute, but
certain po lihillttes cun be sug
gested, Hu pose we begin by
using II hlgi figure, the median
unnuul lllcol
e of American full)
illos today, abuul $0,000 As
suming an average ago of recipi
enta lu be 116, a lifetime annuity
of Ihul sl/.e could be bought
from American Insurance companies based on American ni„r
tallty experience tables for about $176,000. Multiply this by
60,000, on arbitrarily chosen
number of fumily heads who
might be afraid to remain In u
country holding open elections,
• nd tire total Is about
$0,0011,000,000. Raise this 10%
If the uvoruge uge Is only ;io,
reduce It if higher mortullly
rates are assumed. Similar adjustments can be made for a
larger or smaller number of beneficiaries, or for higher or lower
annuity amounts.
Home might quite reasonably
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
suy thut the number of possible
claimants could lie reduced by
letting the wur profiteers lake
cure of themselves from buluncos
already on depo.it in Swiss
Hunks Or we could pul un arbitrary cut-off limit on the wealth
of those eligible for annuities
But this could seem un
American We now pay OASI
annuities to all persons who
reach the uge of (12 or (16 regard
less of their then income or
wealth, provided only that they
have contributed u certain minimum umounl in the past Our
South Vietnamese supporters
rich or poor, limy likewise be
assumed to have uuiile contributions entitling them to un
nuilius without any means leal
being applied
If the administrative details are
not tou great, Mislead of u uni
form annuity for all emigrants
fleeing for their lives, we might
otter
twice then
vious annual
present or pre-
income
This is u
much higher rule thun thut re
colvod by most old uge unnul
lunls in the US , bui It would
sllll be u small price to pay ror
removing this major obstacle to
o cessation „f hosllllil,, A cell
'ng might „« i>|«c«d on such
multiples, suy $10,000. Mosl
people now Burning over $6,000
l>or yeur In South Vietnam ure
probably only temporarily enriched by the war und we should
not reel obligated lo guarantee
them continuing Incomes of that
magnitude.
Furthermore, a msjorlty of the
ponents
to
peace
focus on the cost ami I' -' s1
benefits Thut '» »''>
lulrnosu, these llllnuilo-s be in the for m ol an o "••
itrucl between a icpuun ,
insurance company
I '•'
nuitiinl even though < •'
seem ouster lor ('oitgi ess
proprluto annually -'r!-'
mounts of maybe .'tb'i '"'
lion dollars or so a v i-u
thun one huge annuity |i '
price of $0 to $ID billions
One way of uchiovniu niM1
Imutoly the sumo resuli
over, would be to have oui g
eminent puy for the aim - '
with u speclul Issue ol gov"
ment bonds, the annual inter
und unionization on »"
would he less than a lull1
dollars. The bonds would hi
serial redemptions distributed
us lo match probable lll» exigencies. It Is true that IH"
surunce compunles In this cuu
continued
till I'UH
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
"ii'try l e / t n i - o l l
jnrjy pdlley
ItiiMin-u MitnuKer
AiMMrlatt) ArU Editiir
phii mark
Technical] Editor
SflorU Editor
As
people take m y m o n e y and then
Editor:
a
taxpayer
State
and
SUNYA,
quite
of
an
I
York
alumnus
am
angry
New
concerned
to
learn
of
and
that
Dr.
refuse to spend it wisely; i n d e e d ,
they
insist on wasting it. I pay
for
expensive
ministrators
and
for
the
tenure.
below the academic p o d i u m , yet
me
when
walls of
paint
applied
concerns
the
for ad-
Carol Waterman has been denied
It
to
houses
tunnels
Waterman has
Student Support
7VJ the
Editor
As a concerned resident of t h e
the university lor releasing her in
Albany c o m m u n i t y , I would like
spite of this. The a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
t o express my concern over the
and
Educational
gether and rationally discuss the
system in our Slate
I 1 n i v e r s ! ly
II
has
become
evident
lo me that there is great
student
disapproval
cent
over the re-
release of some of SUNY'.s
professors
It has become p a n i c
ularly rvidenl thut I)r
of y o u r
psychology
has
stremendous
port
I question
Waterman
department
student
the
sup
motives of
the s t u d e n t s should get
l.i urn rriaggm
Kdilixul I'uiff Editor
now, I cannot pay for a quality
education in psychology. Dr.
Waterman is clearly the best
teacher in the Psychology Department — this is substantiated
by her ratings by students which
arc consistently the highest in
the department. Since the Statehas decided to provide a quality
education to all who desire it
through the State University
System, I do not understand
why she who is best qualified to
provide that education is being
fired. I am paying for the education of the people of New
York, aren't I?
Sincerely outraged,
to-
is as i m p o r t a n t to t h e
dents
;is
il
istration
m thai
that
is
to
the
Martin Anwrihaiwr
and s h o u l d
we
arc
preparing
today's
youth to live in this world, when
we are l o o deaf lo listen l o their
Tv
pleas a b o u t channwie, i f
Mrs
('Intuitu
Johnson
tin- SUNYA
Keid
tonight
the
Psychology Department
on
lie
CHIT,
and
be
Room
he
ll„.
..pirn
it deserves
nullum;,
I him. be,-ii hen .it Stan- lor
dents
trill
lb-
forces
I " assume illl'lerelil
limine trans
ponoealiv.-
l.-m-ll ben- several
veals .ill.-i I
personally approached is more
dropped
here
mil
ol
NYC
hoping lo stall
| . , \ cllnlogy a- lli\
lb,'.
inajDi
was
that
I came
Ugaill With
rilalin
reasons
( Ine ol
I I.-Il
tin- direction
Dcpii
ul
'll'-lll
approaches,
more
,ill,i,,.,l three I , n i l .
and
liar, willing t o liive ol bis 111)11'
and
personal a t t e n t i o n
more
importantly,
Perhaps
be
ol'li-n
from
the
speak
his
opemnu
floor
abb-
lo provide Ins s t u d e n t s with
then
II,,.
inspiration
leaned
,|,.,.|
and
insicjH
beard
and
I've
I lie.
.holotv is currently I'uenif!
Willi llllh- Variety r„ clllhus
.In.- I.. . . . . nvei in line .-in
mi c.-.-.u'll ..."I depart
, , . ; , , . . Sadly I I.nil tin
li.
Caiol
slops
fold
two
Waterman
eoiir.se
s h e
u p o n
h e .
a
leaches
similar
Harold
.lasses
,1 Carol W..I...I
i
sorbin,:, and
She
are
is
all
never
to any
a n d
b y
oHell
IILSIStllie,
.0111111111111-111
very
H e r
e n j o y a b l e
luujilv
careful
lib
informative
to
debater
member
lord
of
the
provide
her
All, ol
|i-,\
-li thai is
. .,11,-,;.
level
Holb
have
p s y hoh.liV
lo,l,,\
have
,,,,.
and
r.-M-.-s
!,.,,,,,,,;
Willi
Hie
altitude
open
an.I
is at the cure ol then wo. I|, a ve lie.-II r.-e.-litis
,,,
,,, w e l l I
II.,M.I.]
, |s
the
powers
I'syell. ito|.y
that
oacbes
lo
nil,,.,
,,W ol
ol
Until
With
hull.an
bch.iuiu
.
,,iiiii:uiii|.
i
psychology
llli-
once again without harm if intei
I,.,ml
r nl,,
sin
St
egollablllty assured
investments
'I'l
ill
ru
s.i
that
$ r , : .
ioll.il
$'.!
•ally I L . I
henel'lU
from ending Ihe war
Si.in.- ... tin-. . iiiiiiliy may u p
pose
I Ills.
grouiuk
|H..ll"f.Sll
lli-il
dlingeiMiu
it
on
would
|in-. .-ih-iil
(remember
Ih"
sel
.,
'I'll'-V in-iv
arguiiu-nl.s
foreign
null
ll
fened
regimes
everywhere
si 1111
military
.1
IIII-.I
will
beiiii;
when
carelessly
We
suppression
then
they
seem
play
purposely
I"
World
In-
haul
II
policeman
again and ail el .. Illlllllirj
gesture
i, M .,| 1,, eliminate ibeil dlll'elelll
I. V I'l ball nut can't Will leaders
pe.haps
.mil
ol
, , , , , best
who
Useless
fcoycr
km
or
.„-
.ballen|.;.-s
feels
the
oUlia,;c
bel|l lis
ilepailin.-ul
answers
cullipc
lb.-si- criteria a n
Anyone
•
as
|e
I d u
wiilnie.
Iters,
all
the
best
of
my
individuals
in-
volved in this ease have a c t e d in
was
14-ood faith
and w i t h o u t
malice.
Sititrrely
decision
Huns A
yours,
Pohlsander
Chairman
(.ascoyil"
of
Department
of
Classics
class, Jeff
Bernstein, ran and
won the election
with
promises
of a number of activities planned
the year. A.S of n o w ,
I have seen no use made of these
funds and no campaign promises
fulfilled
I have offered
my own
In ng
lo
intent
over
for
received a "we'll let you
Ihe cl
.11
Our
up
treasury
of
In
the class of '7 1 lived
Ihe confidence
placed in
Ihem liy their fellow class mem-
in
bers
and
.SI.-I n i !)•• Younit
with it
prehidenl
know"
It is ul,out time that the
officers
of
class
$111.1100
its
answer
a
.if
('toss nf
Hu-
II
Ih. -II
clique,
complex
winch
cl
Snol
Himrllthill
!••• suggesting " '
So
far
The Albunv Student I'ress welcomes iriatl from its
readers Communications should be typewritten and
addressed to. lidttonal I'uge Editor, Albany Student I'ress.
SUNYA, Albany. New York 12222 Unless there are
extenuating circumstances, all letters must be signed
as
lor
large
We h o p e
p r e c e d e n t s are cull
i-i-in.-d, we might r e m e m b e r Ihe
ransoming
eaplives
of
the
Hay
$.ril),llll0
al
of
Pigs
per
We
bought off ( ' a s t r o , why not
..ur
way
out
ol
buy
Vietnam
by
paying dollars t o o u r friends, not
11 eneunesV We have opened
..11,
doors lo m o r e than IIIIO.IIOO
trillion,
fleeing
merely
from
way .if life they don'l Ilk"
.all
Americans
1 bjeet
.1
How
lo
lb.-
well heeled l i f e III a l l a l i e n Inlld
1..-I
Congress
„ made
would
refugees,
Maybe less than
likely
..I
1"
the
.small
I
'
real
N..r should we assume
lll.il all would waul l o
lliellllileil Stales
attached
to
most
Ih,.
dollars
1 Oil,000
No o n e will object if
save
because
for
less Hum the cosl of a
year's war
11111,11011 Vietnamese
lb.'ir very lives'
billion
enough
we have so
l.n
11
when the offer
Twenty
In-
..pen door I'm p r o b a b l y less tli-m
fleeing
appropriate
generous a m o u n t
lew takers that
of it
we
I n c i d e n i a l l v . if
executive
brunch
of die
^.veiiinli-nt got us into this war,
here
is a chance
for
the
legis
lative branch to gel us out of ll
come I"
Willi no strings
t h e dollars in then
Consider also t h e various pro
pockets, many might choose 1..
.Misals
go elsewhere
Arab
lor compensating the
refugees
from
Palestine
Allowed 10 return or to stay,
be
flesh that might lead lo violence
uiti.-s
I-A.-II
il>
ul
,
would
Ann-
,
lives
\
.
taxpayer
I
relieve
I l.rw
111 1 uiirsu
popnl
afraid
win
..I
the
nun li
we could get stingy
I'"'t'"n
loreign
ihe
A
Ibc null
programs of
politic.is
w h o are
"ciriiimuiiists" miglit
"ehuupskule"
image
Uncle Sam might seem bard
ol
for
.sonic of us lo live with, b u t the
cut
I II e
tuxes
conscription
slbly
provide
and
11III 1
groups c o u l d
positive
When
Caslro
pos
support
The big spenders will not always
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
look
Cuba, bis folowers
cute
everyone
ovei
did
in
not exe
associated
ibc hated Hulihta regime
Ihey
benefits w o r t h ' '
Hi.
Ihose
so,
I.
save ,. lot
I 1..I11-.1- 1.1 flliauce
Communications
loudly
Ihey
..I
Deans
(/„,,., v
s
" d e f e n s e " budgets
might double ihe number i n
allow tor tin- larger population
ul the nation and for those not
wanting to lake a chance On the
other hand, "in- should reduce
lb,- total for those willing to do
an about face, confess their mis
lakes, and remain in their own
count 1 V rather I hall face even a
bunch
Chimeelloi
Vice I'.csulcl.l
We Would
the mill
Middled will. Ihe cost ..I aliolhel
bu
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
knowledge
I".
pressed by Hie "c.MllllllllllsIs
dlstlirbllll!
different
whether
larv vet
or
both
most
-.I
I'l Ihe
remain
have
credentials seem
I,,.,.,
reproach
'li
cont. from page 6
para
.He
every
llllhnU|{h
did,
von
I do not
To
support
like
current
leopardy
||n„sl,.-r,|'-r
I
The
iiiiniliei
lie is the olllv
who Is able lo pi.-senl
t-'rost
intervene
li, search
final
iiicinli.-rs
dues
guerilla dissidents mid beg us I..
sense
-l.-n
clns-
laid
term
themselves
shell
would
m
,,.„|
win.
I
virtually lb.- sain.- courses lai lib I
shown
Un.-
Hie
al
id
ways
I
Mr.
time t o plan an activity and have
As .. iii'-inli.-.
•7 1
!.0,000
same
to
those who arrived at a
conclusion
with 7 4 Funds
..!
.In-
that
endorse-
students.
that 1
case
nothing is heing il
,-y now hold " l i l y air..ill $.',
lalli.,n 111 gun-riimetil bonds tint
in I t l i r . they held %'1{) billion
I could approach that figure
argue
• li
IV, and . . .
n u t be r e
KI-.-II<II.II
,| Us polentials
.lies her
lll
v.
his
indicate
throughout
A Fistful Of Dollars
gainst
and
students
l b . -Ills, - l i e s
,.....Is
help
department
mount
Will
l"i
lo
la
course,
Ultth
II,.I,.1.1
overturn
untitled Hull
M M-.II
Mill.-, p o - . . . . I s
opportunity
appi
•I'lie
ps\
,-nei,;.-! l.alK
spirit ol change si-ieiilisls declare
I
will
lo .-ue.iui.ige ami vitab/.c
students
I),,.I.
L1K1
work
li-flcclcd
challenge
III..II
demands
,,h,.
ai,v student who approa
holog.V
- | . il.-ilnalloii In Hi'- serious
.,,,ighl
, I,oh,cv
al
are invited
Inn!
in
Nostitz
von
"The
Nothing Done
collected
•mod ..pp
seilous
this
unanimous
has
l>'-"l'l'
aliunde
the
fellow
hard to
ean-llll
inn.-at
Mr.
on
stales
the
mv
.Indents
and
thai
certain
si
I., $ 1 0 llllll.rll
great
considering
lb'-
„, id'-l si. 1111 line
in
or
["acuity can
l o pas.s up
decision
an
work, anil coupled
, MI.,! n-spii-l lo. then
and
in- d
I
l„|
Affair,"
is
I,ill...i
en
Gascoyne
27.
report
/ . . Hi,- 1-lllUir.
eonipe
1 Ieel.
„ , | | ,„•,.,I lo all.nil lo a lll.-aniuu
Ibis
October
in his
iu> s t u d e n t
Tins.
thai
field
Hltll
bun
William V
..11,.l.nls Willi all the l.a'l-- ' b e y
i. | . A - .lis I , , v e l o , H i e i .
of
Nostit/.,
enthusiastic
of
psy
simply
her
slilllenls
up lieii- hi..- Dr.
I!.-id
ten!
opportunilv
1"
problems
SI).- l!ives
s h o c k s
It here
.,vi-|o,ycd
humull
issue
found
Buckley, In- is an avid cuiiserv;.
and si-nsili/e Ihem lo the
crucial
1 believe, was c o n t a i n e d in y o u r
re
(luestions
I've
before
the
ment
el re
p m
lake
and
oppor-
however,
the fact thai Professor
H.OIJ
is
NYU
more inwards do .. minal learn
ni: bappe
it
the
was wrong, especially in view of
•ZyVl al
live and a d e v a s t a t i n g
challenges Ills sill
me
t u n i t y to correct an error which,
strongly
Sri
will
1i
e r r o n e o u s impression. I feel very
Social
following
marks
in
fa
his colleagues in t h e d e p a r t m e n t
grant
and
presidential
will
I'll
ChHlOHrupro E d l l ' i r *
here
"Conservatism"
11,at, like his brolhei
I,, Hi, t-illtui
Editor:
Please
bad
will speak
upcuminu
lion
Cares First for Prestige
To the
c o r r e c t or wrong. This leaves an
Community
Buckley
mail' lilufKky
Pohlsander Feels
Gascoyne Decision Wrong
I he
Reid Buckley
Coming
be h a n d l e d
manner. How can we say
U<i
Exchtinite E'ttior
liuliltihrd Iwica »»*Vly by lt<* Sludtnt
>1y DI Naw ¥01* i l AllM'iy II it lundad by
•V.balltr knov.natBlud.nl I n Ou< alticat
t Can!*', ind ou' |>hon*t * ' • *'Jl 7190 inrl
FiimmH by tin Edllooal Guild
refused to c o m m e n t on
stu-
admin
I
c J l h y qjnei-
issue
It
ij-fl
<;.. ( irniEdii. H
tulti tiblcv
Advert ii>ifiK KHKIHI'I U>
(H'iil)te kjcoipti
»heit4 Khtjnk'elH
ijjiy m«mjrt
I'rctiew Edlltir
hndi deviiond
(•Uuiriod Ail M>n.it!i'
C U I U I H I I O I I MI
To the
ph.,,is
They '•••
H ! $iiXfi!
-
Advrrlliinil Mummer
iffi fortfjOf.
AiwM'iutr AflvcrlihitiM MmiiiKrr
11 (idJ mulf
A«ikli.iil to the AikrrlitinK MiniK'r
mintly allman
ann bunkei
Off-CumpuiNewi Kdlior
tiol) mjyct
A i u Editor
Alumnus Angry at Waterman Decision
liisin
emlgruos would probably
work of some kind liclm. -"
Wo could thou com e,-.,in -.
duce tholr uiinuilius b> -,i\ i
of whut they earned, to '•-'"
reasonable Incentive A ivoly, we could ignore sw< I - lugs entirely and leave im
nulty an unalterable : -'
contract.
There is no doubt ll... '"•'
American taxpayer* w •"••'
joct to paying $0,0110
or lurgor alter live war Inn! -1
ad, forgetting the HI OUI <'.which we bought oil iii• ••'
A w i c i n l e N P W I BdlUtM
lull anna
Psychology
A Fistful of Dollars for our Vietnamese 'Friends'
/£kl
al senia
glenn von n m l i l z
Psychology Today
"heterosexual
swingers" which reveals ihul
many women, brought into contact with each other in such a
context, find they cun enjoy und
appreciate both kinds of sexual
activity! and reullze that so fur It
is the males who huve not been
able as readily to deul with ihli
close juxtaposition with the
same sex.
Recognize thut there mill unreal hazards to being Ouy Jubi
are loat, scorn and ridicule rnlli
on the shoulders; physical nttad
Is not unheard of.
Know that the national prniei
slonal association for counseluri,
APOA, has adopted through iu
Senate meeting In Atlantic City,
a resolution calling for the addition of "sexual orientation" In
all antl-dlscrimlnatliin lews That
Is, the Association voted In «up
port the protection ol tinyi,
from discrimination in ,.ii.
housing, etc. Armed witii rim
knowledge, straights can hike
the Initiative in supporting
changes In oppressive ncx ,iw»
Know that It is tin- soi ..-t\ .
oppression that sends tin\~ '-.
help, not their homost-x ... ".
The problem of the Ga\ .« HM
truly that ho or she is limn..
sexual, as ho muy or mas not be
Tho problem is whin society
mukos a person think ol liimsi-il
If he or she does feel hoinn
sexual, While many who emm
with "homosoxuul panic" ilea,
thut one Incident makes one
homosexual), can be reassured,
thoso who come with H irtie
feeling of homosexuality need
help, most often, with iKTeuinig
their sexuality und fitting •< into
u full und rewarding life
Editor-in-chief
New* E d i t o r
with
In fuel,
I 1 q 11 1 d . i l e d
out V
would
Hence
be a tliui-ii
lb.' proposals
lo slay
away,
puy
in
pay
the
Iheni
Un- value ol
property abandoned, pay others
lu
leave
.Jordan
Ihe
The
west
bank
price
of
mi gilt
file
seem
•>,lltll) MIIKI 1 d e p e n d i n g oil who
sleep,
is making the e s l i m a t e ) and Jail
think II 11 small o n e c o m p a r e d lo
ed
a t h u d Mid Kasl War
maybe
2(1,00(1 initially
vioiis enemies
the
Viet
Ihey
more
and
would
Ihe
opinion
as
he
so
vengeful'.'
indifferent
us
rescued
Jews
who
Iheli
If
i
very
Nvcn ll
to
Cuban
or
world
com
miles, Hint makes only fill,000 to
be
ure
North
were twice us resentful
twice
there
Why assume Ihul
Cong
Vietnamese
much
oh
but
neccssa.y,
one
Who knows? We unglil even find
the moral equivalent of wur: not
a cunt for tribute, just 11 guuer
ous handful of dollars for our
troublesome b l e n d s
PAGE SEVEN
PERSONALS
On Sunday, N o v . 1 2 at 1 : 0 0 p . m .
7NTERE5TED
T h e SUNYA
FOLK'
Group
There w i l l be a m a n d a t o r y meeting
GLASSFIED
FOR SALE
The Albany Student Press is
now accepting applications for
the job of Editor-in-Chief for
the year beginning January 1,
1973. Applications are available in Campus Center 326
from 11-4 daily. The deadline
for submitting applications is 5
p.m., Friday, Nov. 3.
Roommate wanted to share apt.
Will
with grad. student. Leave mes-
checkbook
the
come
sage at 472-3290.
guy
looking
at
by—It
the
has
for
ASP
been
Ballot Application
of
Albany
from
condition,
men's
radio,
new
green
snows. Only
paint,
$200.
Call
furry
coat
$20,
Bucksking jacket $ 2 0 . Eveything
in
Mark 2 3 5 - 5 5 9 8 .
winter
excellent
condition.
Call
434-2077.
For
Sale.
1970
Mach
leads
VEACE
F.M. Tuner: T o be used with a
Sales
-
furnished.
Qualified
ivixonomics:
Salary
$50/month.
plus
Earn
ween
$200-$350
785-3340
4
and
per
system. Excellent
season.
fect
Excellent
condition.
value
condition. $25.
Diamond
Engagement
Tuesday
6
House
bet-
Bicycle for sale. Call 4 8 2 - 8 6 9 5 .
ding Rings. 3,000 ring selections
205cm.
students, staff, and faculty. Buy
in all styles at 50% discount to
Head
'360'
skis-$65.
direct
Call K e n - 4 8 9 - 1 6 2 6 .
from
leading
manufac-
turere and Save! 1/2 carat $179 ,
Ski
Boots.
K)
9N.
Kastlnger's
Used
once,
(Golden
extremely
3/4
carat
only $ 2 9 9 . For
free
color folder write: Box 4 2 , Fan-
for
room,
after
rent.
3
large
Attractively
bedrooms,
yard,
family
dishwasher,
Married C'oup/es-part-time job care for other people's children
or homes while on vacation.
Free room and board. Work as
much as you want. Must have
car. One child okay. $100 a
week. Call 355-8395 anytime.
SUNYA.
January
through
summer,
to
June
$250.
Going
Remington
110
or
halrstyler
for
sale.
220
Volt
A.C.
Three
attachments.
$15.
Call
Cathy
SERVICES
457-5636.
Typing
done
my
home.
482-8432.
SEIDENBERG
Stereo
JEWELRY
2 for $1
patches 25c
Training:
S.il
10 g
10 6
Come Ski Solden, Austria
the Albany
cor. No. Lake Ave.
sing,
State
to
4,
1973-January
tation,
meals,
accomodations,
taxes, gratuities,
skibag,
Robert
518-465-3706.
P.O.
party.
Waldman
Box
178
Walter 489-6963.
Ride
Buffalo
DD-SUNYA.
Chess
lessuns
any
or
week-end.
Ride
wanted
Wed.
Nov.
for
1 for
2 to
RPI
from
Welles
left
Chicago. Call
LOST & FOUND
from
United Slates Che-,', Federation
sistrr
too
finds
the book
Geology,"
please
"Phycall
Joanne, 7-5316. Thanks!
L-.irlv.
Found—young brown and black
but it's y o u I want.
terrier wearing green collar. Call
Cornell
277
from
the
bitch
Will
and
the
Student
As-
w i l l be available in
Re-elect
the
President
489-7036.
0650
"<lu».
Found:
charm
Dutch
parking
bracelet
lot.
near
Call
4 72-3526.
Expert. $ 3 / h o u r . Call 482-6019.
Peace
draftees
committee
ol
Center.
who otherwise w o u l d
H e l p those
not be infor
med.Call J i m 4 6 3 2593
madman and me is that I am not
mad.
Pumpkin
coming'
Easter Bunny
speaker
can Association
of Teachers of Ger-
man, Hudson Valley Chapter. N o v 4
Sponsored
by H i " Department of German
G l o r i a Emerson w i l l give a
the indochinese
Culture
and
People"
T h e public
is invited lo at
of
MANDATORY
1 SONG
! LEADERS'
! MEETING
for
If of iff (ti/
Sing
WED. NOV. 1
7:30 pm
LC 4
Veterans
Against
the
bond
money.
by )eny Pans of Ihe S U N Y A f nylish
:jb4l
I hi; iMl(*v<inl
1 .it 4 l b
text,
f r o m Hit;
I ire Sermon, w i l l be o n hand.
Board
Bewitching
Halloween
sounds
by
Ala-
free beer w / c o s t u m a , free apple cider,
donuts, apple d u n k i n g . Dance c o m
w/pn/es.
Beer
$.25. A l l
1 hf
aie Nov
1 7, 3, 6 A
Student
be hem please
, , „ „ ( . -i i t m D m t . n t i KfiM! t CB 30A
, (I -|
,,-,.,
up MMW
I '"
Life
Pollu-
on M o n d a y , Nov. 13 at 1 1 : 1 0
a rn in LC 25 to w h i c h all members
the University
info
Federal
indictments
the Vets in I lor ida
ter Soldier
Investigation"
the Beginning"
.ittamsi
1 wo blur,
and
"Win"Only
Convmsation
,,„
, „„.(
Table
(
i
I
The spine-chilling
horror
story
is
scheduled for showing o n Halloween
as part
o l Albany
r.iiirem
film
Public
,n.iy. .H 'I DO
i.-M.,
Library's
Tuesday
I ,i
I'l/ I
I In-, i|u.i
C o m e be w i t h us. T h e Zen Group
Zazen n i g h t l y at 8 p.m., 3 7 0 - 5 9 5 9 .
liviti y l h i n i i y o n always v-z.ii111-cI
ubo.il pre-med,
but WIMII alrilld
,.,,!..
pre dem '
In -isk
I mi'.
dep.n
.!„
Bleecker
love but it ain't
Bad" has been
cancelled
due to lack
response.
We wish
of
student
Earth
or those w h o haven'1
nell.
Coalition
our
Poetry
Nov
Students
Plll)|)l<)
Willi
Hi! llllHIH-.ll'll
Reading
by
Gary
Snyder
Trick
i|u!»lnnis 'llu'" Hi" I
ward
or Treat
for UNICEF
For
this
information
call
Cathexis presents Dr. Paul R. Patbany Medical College speaking a b o u t
"Children
and the Effect
Influence
on
of
Later
Maternal
Development."
Hall. A n i m p o r t a n t business meeting
will
be held
at 7 : 4 5 p . m . E n t i r e
University i n v i t e d .
Beware of t h e Munchkins
Holy Communion will
Day, Wed N o v
shorties
l&
tonight!
talliesl
call
Audrey 7 - 5 1 9 1 .
SUNYA
a
Protestants:
Gay Alliance
Capitol
District
Saturday
Nov
Chanmng
Hall
invites y o u to
Gay Dance o n
4 t h at 9 p m. i n
(across f r o m
Draper
Hall bus s t o p ) . D o n a t i o n is $1.50 for
dance and b u f f e t
1
T h e ^easf of All Saints is Wed. N o v
COIVfl-S
(Caucus on
13.
Women's
A n y o n e w h o ' s interested please
a l l e n d , 01 call Marianne
162 0831
Assistantships
'73-'74
I Masses w i l l be held at the CC 11 10
a.m..
1 2 . 1 0 p rn
a n d 7 3 0 p m in
R o o m 315 o i ihe Assembly Hall
Play those pinball machines
Bene-
fits Campus Chest '72
A
geneial interest ineetint] w i l l be held
program.
I'-oi
(, in
C Buna, a friend
A n e n d e n . e ,11 Ihis ineiMini] is
f i n .ill ' 7 3 7 4 H A a p p l .
l i should also lie railed ih.n
•. iniisl
be at leasl
junior
m.ii.,.,1 ..nil 4 6 3 3 1 7 8
... . o n . " I "
-,, hniil
I'n.iil S l i n m
Nil
'• 2 0 6 M
AEGIS
ihe So. lal Sciences/general
interest
journal
arui.les
.1 child
mill'
every Wed
oesrlay evening a ! 7 0 0 p m. i n G y m
•/..liint.i.ll ,1S ,1 I.M. I m i . Mll| H i n l l i . i l
in tin) Si'.itii in Head S I . I I I
There ,s coed volleyball
... LC I .... Sunday. N o v I 2 1 h H I /
for
,s n o w accepting
publication.
For
into,
work
six
phone A n d y a l 1 3 4 Ho65
I h.iii' w . l l I n ' a pi-Ill
i.i,
|),..,I
Harold
Any.in
I
I n , Hi,, i i ' i n s l . i l i ' i ,
Miller
as p i o l
" I I'.yi
,i,",li'il please
Vuluhto.il
hoots
per
I n (J.) clerical
week,
Community
»ll " I
for My
hold its first m e e t i n g ,
Claire 7 - 4 5 0 3 .
7. 8 p.m. Assembly H a l l , C a m
salary,
Service,
3-crodits,
l CB 30-A ur
IHOl.
I
1
Blind
Llilinin ,i syll.ilin-, HI w l i " I'l'.l / , H
sk
Society
will
Halloween.
their
pus Center.
appl
I
'
l'
help saue
law. 184 Washington
Ave. o r call 4 6 2 - 5 0 8 3 .
4b/
is n o w i •.'
for t frte cholca
abortion
Interested
mandatory
31.6 auiJin in nn.y4K
Peace Studies
third
to express our
t o those w h o o f f e r e d
Resident
All those interested in w o r k i n g for
I en I yelt of 1M e o n D u t c h Ooad
iv.'.l.il'l" 1 "
. . . , . , , , , , M l . v - I il.H.I
i ,,,- n i l . i - i . i i :>r.'
Champion
Tues. N o v . 7 , 8 p . m . CC Assembly
The p r o d u c t i o n of J o h n Eraser's "It
ain't
msmmsjs w i l l be o n N o v 17 HIH! Dec
development
know
Foil
and current
terson, Professor of Pediatrics at A l -
Nov, 1 MI 6 3 0 p H I in H U 18 Future
Middle
Literature
, ..... „ „ | ..pp.,,a. I,,", '..
MINORS.
Russell
w i l l be a n n o u n c e d . T h e phone n u m -
starring
The Body Snatchor
H.ir manus
National
Robert
repre-
1-3 a n d F r i . f r o m 1 0 - 1 1 . M o r e times
,,„,!.,
MAJORS '&
Council
Hums K.irinll a n d Bela I ugosi w i l l he
been placed y e t , please come to the
l he Comparative
Central
Rights S l u d e m s l w i l l meet . i n Wrnl.,
.it
former
Nov. 6 . Fireside L o u n g e , 7 : 3 0 p.m.
night
previews
series,
Studio of the gym. Featured will be
Spanish
w i l l also b i : vhnwn
F u n d e d b y Student f a x
Flag
w i l l be in the Central Coun-
House o n All Saints
I 'iJMry on Tuesday, Oct 31 at 8 p rn.
hi i f.t 'r-r . . I
Quad
be celebrated at 8 a rn. in Chapel
presented
,,.,., , , , , , ( )
State
cil o f f i c e in CC 3 4 6 on M o n . f r o m
C o m m u n i t y are
Nov, 1st in LC 19 at / 30 p rn He
recent
Co-op,
sentative
the Stars:
in Space and Interstellar
tion,"
combined
with a fencing clinic in the Dance
T h e Lipsky
Record
lime
War, w i l l speak at S U N Y A o n Wed
will speak o n V V A W activities ^ the
every
R o o m , every T h u r s d a y , 6-9 p . m .
thanks
Ser-
i i n . n is the enclosed lounge
LC 3 & 4
groups
in Fireside Lounge. Listen-
Dr. J . M a y o Greenberg w i l l give a
lecture entitled "Between
w i l l spon-
every
ing, D r . A n o l i k ?
f r o m 9 p.m. till ?Ftee admission.Ore
of
Dates of Community
vice Registration
/
f o r u m of the gay c o m m u n i t y
baster. Oct. 31 in t h e CC B a l l r o o m
welcome
NO I I C I
is a w e e k l y
ber is 4 5 7 - 6 5 4 2 .
and The Wasteland
,,..„ hoi . w h o w o n ' t
Vietnam
on M o n .
donations go to U N I C E F
Psychoanalysis
IIH.1 I m i w e w i
lend.
Governing
Party.
Ihy 1 S F hot) is the u i b j w t of a talk
of War on
in Ihe College of Saint Host; Campus
Center
teams and to r e t u r n
petition
p rn in the Humanities I ounye | H U
lecture on "The Impact
meeting
of CC 3 5 6 for l o c a t i o n .
Semiannual meeting of the Ameri-
Department. Wed.. Nov
On Wed.. N o v . 1st at 3 4 5 p.m .
The o n l y d i f f e r e n c e between a
Is the Great
Induction
office,
Check A M I A b u l l e t i n board outside
iheir rights a n d alternatives b y ban
Albany
Association
Oct. 3 0 at 7 : 0 0 t o discuss all-star
o n peace sutdies in
in the CC Assembly Hall
and enlistees
please contact Steve
Captains
Fencers Club
a fencing exhibition
Student
your department
meeting
info call Dan D u n c a n .
of the
sor
Thursday a t 8 p . m . in CC 3 1 5 . A l s o ,
A Commuter
information
CC
Tuesday, 7 , 3 0 in CC 3 7 3 For further
Inform
Council
AM/A
further
kins (472 6297) or members of facul
iy
Gay Alliance
CC 346, 457-6542.
the international, national and local
level.
ding n u t i n f o r m a t i o n leaflets a! the
on
472-8200 or 472-8182.
sical
vou're
Rosenblum,
Lawyer
Barry Rorno, a n a l i n n . i l e n o r c l i i i . i t ' "
Suzanne!
f)17
Private
(Olean)
(Yardville)
sociation
sub-committee
Gerber, Student
heal solutions to these problems on
For
Call Cathy 457-5636.
Whoever
and
SJIJ
Salvadoi
to Trenton
M M t > t l H l l l H I H M «
John f r o m
Albany
4632455
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS
Be a Peace Corps or
VISTA volunteer in Africa.
Asia or here in the U.S.
Teach English as a foreign
language, or work in Health
and agricultural extension
programs. Visit the placement office for more information and an application,
or call (212) 264-7123.
You
quickly
a carrot
Chi-
of
Fit
ihe
Affairs
resolution. Its a i m is lo explore prac
on Tuesday night.
it over
Congrats o n Downstate
Buffalo,
(The Union
Economics!
and conflict
I need you more now, then I
ever d i d . T h i n k
pickle,
with
Ski Club. 12
Zeno,
Sigmund,
1973. Price: $ 3 1 2 : transpor-
Contact:
264 Central Ave.
to
489-6661.
15,
Ft,
Learn
read music. Beginners, advanced.
days—January
MUM
Call
Rich 457-5255.
Voice
earrings
Repair—reasonable.
Sanford
mule.
needed
URPE
Political
the SA o f f i c e , CC 3 4 6 f r o m 7 9 n rn.
love
Ride
Abroad:
by
change
Studies Office (SS 3 7 b ) or l_. Haw
Craigo - H a p p y B i r t h d a y !
RIDE/RIDERS
WANTED
four
Oct, 2 7 , 2 p.m. Ed 120
or
cago, or Cleveland. 11/3 or 11/4,
Students
Roses are red
Call
869-7339.
take
Rotten is Monday,
6.
dryer, washer, 10 minutes from
wood, N.J. 0 7 0 2 3 .
reasonable. 370-0088.
Call
O-
But you made me happy
furnished,
P.M.
in per-
& Wed-
Albany.
B y c o m i n g u p Sundayl-M
489-6661.
$23. Call 489-4306.
of
sented
Radical
462-4813.
month.
stereo amplifier In a component
Two VW winter tires. Used one
south
Can w e
social
T h e SUNYA
national w o m a n fencer A n n O'DonSUNYA
consciousness-raising
A l l people interested i n i n serving o n
approach to the problems of war and
more years? A n open discussion pre
wanted—country
)ust
& POLITICS
peace,
Russ—Happy Birthday!
commission. No high pressure.
Call
I.
$1550-489-2033.
house,
Part-time
U p Femalo, on Monday, Nov. 6 at
Tuesday
Peace Studies is an interdisciplinary
Help Tarkus!
De-
cember on. Please call 472-3684.
call 4 6 3 - 3 1 1 5 any
lot A p p l i c a t i o n deadline is 1 0 ; 3 1 .
Graduate student seekjng small
outskirts
Absentee
t i r m . We'll solve y o u r p r o b l e m . Bal-
Dear Michele,
The Gang
house or 4 room apartment on
the best
7 : 3 0 i n L C 1 . Free with tax, $ . 2 5
N o v . ! at 7;3Q i n LC-4.
Having trouble w i t h y o u r
Get well soon. We miss you!
busline. Call 465-2137.
one of
women's films ever made: Growing
without. Funded by S.A.
Wanted: two girls for apartment
Spring Semester. Own rooms; on
for H o l i d a y Sing,
presents
Liberation
found.
Mark
For Sale: Dependable T V , $ 2 5 ,
Wed.,
Bring identification.
Roommate
For sale: '62 Volkswagen good
of all songleaders
his
please
Women's
people
(..inl.ii t
I' <"'
need a helping hand.
Community
Service. L C B
111 A al 1 ! , / 1HII1.
il.i',., in SS 3 / 0
TOWER EAST CINEMA
OFFICIAL
Allegheny Airlines
helps you beat
the waiting game.
GET IT WITH:
i itnv.-.siiy
ademic
...Mi
i uiii'i)!'
advisement
iiti'ii
iht-v
NOTICE
li.i' hoyuri actfti Sprint). 1973
,u tidiMiiH
.itlviM'r
.in i l i . i w i i.iv, L.irih
umiim
wilt
billow
before
Pre-regis-
t h r alphabetical
.,,.,,,,.•(„ .' published by Ihe D f l u e of
And
i|i,. i l i i i v i ' i s i l y HHljistr.jr. the fust d a y
/ . , - , ; , , . . , , r.. . , „ . AM . 0 , . ' j
I / ^ M - 1 I - , t - r ,-•" .
jj';
h i j i i ' l r j j'., ' j ' . ' . l '.'
SOUL TO
SOUL
November 3 and 4
LC 7 7:30 and 9:30 pm
I
I (.-',1.-1 V ' l '
• ' <'
FOOD FAST
,-,,.,
, • - ' i ) ' ) » ' j l , l .-
','!',
$1.00
FOR
PRISONERS
HALFWAY HOUSE
',
O l i d ' / / . / v ' . ' l l O ' l - ,<
"'J
y to-V ',.,,,
, , , ...
(
All 5<J'
f o n,y A'J in '
Alloyiio", oiv,
v r o|
'J'i O ' l i l - i Mirj,<ji
(jiiln
n>jny A d j l t Ojr.jc
WED., MOV. 15
sign up
on dinner lines
Oct. 30-Nov. 2
without
Short. THREE STOOGES
PAGE EIGHT
),,
invini
ilt.n
e.h-h siutient can
i A-ith IIIHII .mlvist'i prioi to their
,(,iv in d r a w i I.is:, i .mis. students w h o
H / O L . Or b e l AC-i-r
$.50 with state quad card
,
lor lir.iwmi) i in*.-, i aols m Wednesday,
IMuvurnhLH l
ALLEGHENY AIR SYSTEML_
W» hove a lot mora goingforyou.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
,,n. .utv.yitl b-v lha U d i v i ' i s i l y COIIBQH
,,,' uit|i-il 'it IIHU'I w i t h hum atlvistir
v, sunn .is |JOBSihIn
,|IH|
ifuh«l
it'.ii
H is Mii-omrnon
i i i i ' . i p i i o m i r n o n l tit) scha
wm»K
»< .idv.tn.i- ut ihu
-Unit-lit •, m l n .iK'il |)til HKI tin dr.iw
•Nassau-Suffolk
i Students in
10th A. D.
ELECT
STUART
LEVINE
l assemblyman
PAGE NINE
=r^2=2fi2£5SS3!
Judge Dembitz: Qualified and Running
by Paul Maalinoff
Judge N i n e t t e D e m b i U la t h e
first w o m a n c a n d i d a t e for the
New Y o r k S t a t e C o u r t of Appeal! w h i c h , aa alio explained to
a {roup of S U N Y A a t u d e n U laat
Friday a f t e r n o o n , haa preacnled
some apeclal p r o h l e m a . " T h u
concern la t h a t It puta w o m e n In
a m o r e a u t h o r i t a t i v e role in the
legal a y a t e m . " aald Judge Dembitz, She haa b e e n asked t o
ihow, In h e r worda — "a serious
interest, n o t Juat a s k i r t . " Her
serloua intereat, ahe m a i n t a i n s ,
should be a s s u m e d from her
rocord,
The C o u r t of Appeals Is the
highest c o u r t In N e w York S t a t e
It Interprets t h e S t a t e C o n s u l
ullun a n d h a n d l e s cases from the
lower c o u r t a . A sprinkling of
women can be found o n the
lower c o u r t s in New York Stute,
but n o n e on t h e 3 5 - m e m b e r
Intermediate c o u r t nor o n the
7-member C o u r t of Appeals. T h e
Women's M o v e m e n t has expressed a desire for m o r e w o m e n to
hold positions of a u t h o r i t y
Rockefeller h a d at o n e lime
said t h a t t h e t i m e has ended
when m e n a l o n e s h o u l d »u on
the C o u r t of Appeals. However
when throe vacancies a p p e a r e d
on the C o u r t for the election
ilus year, t h e R e p u b l i c a n Party
those t h r e e m e n . A faction of
tin- D e m o c r a t i c Party decided to
support a w o m u n , and Judge
Dembitz was asked because of
her high
qualifications as u
I
judge,
Waterman
Over t h e paat five year* her
evaluation.* huve averaged 1.2.
But i o far It seemB t h a t o t h e r
criteria, numoly scholarly ability
and university service, outweigh
the s t u d e n t evaluations in the
eyed of her fellow faculty member* w h o v o t e d against giving her
either t e n u r e or p r o m o t i o n .
According t o W a t e r m a n , the
mtiue in " t h e ritfhta of s t u d e n t * to
«et their m o n e y ' s w o r t h - »*>
well as their p a r e n t s w h o often
puy their t u i t i o n and the la"
payers w h o s u p p o r t the school
She feels t h a t s t u d e n t * should
have a l o u d e r voice in decisions
or this n a t u r e " b e c a u s e il i*
s t u d e n t s w h o have lo accept the
c o n s e q u e n c e s . " Adds Dr Water
man:
"The
administration
doesn't pay our salaries, you do.
They are y o u r e m p l o y e e s . "
W a t e r m a n feels it is i n e q u i t a b l e
that she must be subjected to
s t u d e n t e v a l u a t i o n s while, she
chums, m a n y o t h e r professors in
Ihe Psychology D e p a r t m e n t havi
not. T h e r e is a rule stipulatliH
that all professors must underyt
s t u d e n t e v a l u a t i o n every semes
tor, and Waterman m a i n t a i n '
lhal there ure several professon
who have managed lo oscupe ih-ii
requirement.
Bhe Is also disturbed nt the
way In w h i c h the d e p a r t m e n t a l
voting was c o n d u c t e d . T h e voles
Cor p r o m o t i o n und itinuru were
.akun s e p a r a t e l y , with iho t e n u r e
!i I AIIM S I M A W H l HIIY Mil I
«. m i l l II 11AI. I i AI I I A v o i r ,
A P P l I WINI
Ml MINI
' , I AIIM
&NAIUHAI
Mi 101 a 1 0
Anlioch
Review und.Yeu York
Timet
Presently she is a Family
Court Judge
Nanette Dembitz went on to
talk a b o u t the fact that while
she has all of these qualifi
cations, the New York Stale Bar
Association has declared her un
qualified to be a judge on the
Court of Appeals while the other
six candidates (all men I have
been determined qualified She
explained that she was uiven a
sole interview with two elderly
gentlemen They asked tier how
she, its a h o m e m a k e r could go to
where the Court of Appeals
exists
I'M someone who has
spent over 3fj years of her life
working with the legal system, u
was an unusual and surprising
question
Tin- Stale liar Association has
mil explained the reus,ins lor Us
derision Neither have they ol
lereil her n hearing ID prove her
qualification,
Judge
Demon/
said that the City of New Yor«
Bur Aasoriaiion, a mghly res
.'ote being taken first. She feels
thai she mighl have aloud a
belter chance of being recommended for tenure if ihe promo
Lion vole had been taken firm
The negative vote on ihe tenure
issue prejudiced the opinions uf
the faculty members when u
came in voting on p r o m o t i o n .
she chums
Who'-, Hot V
I he Waterman CUM* -teem* to
In- generating considerable con
tmve-rsy nut unl\ among her
s t u d e n U , but among prulensors
in her department Thu. reporter
heard one profehsoi arguing with
Wuterrnan about >l letter thai
had appeared in the Mhans Sin
dr,,i /Ve«N The letter ilaimed
that Waterman ih ihe " b e h t "
prulVhhiM in die d e p a r t m e n t , .1
claim which ihe dissenting pn>
lessor heatedly denied Referring
In ih.' AS!' letter, lie lull! Water
man lhal, "This i* why. \ ou gel
in trouble around hi
il
thai Wnlerinan hai
gelling ' ' •'
••1 tnnn
111
Hut Waternt
hat (.he hus stayed ..lout Iroin
he student movt'iiirni imp port
ng her Man\ ol he. stmlem*
iav«. been mam... g '..Meson ihe
hnner lines colterl r,^ Mgiuilures
in pel 1111 HID w Inch 'A ;il ihen be
.irusented in ihe proper authori
.it* a* eviner.ee in Waterman's
faViii
Mil! she lien.en hHVIIlg a
direct hand in operai mis ol this
Three years ago
«'
Wale
j i u c h diecuaeion o n liberal « .
strict
constructionist
judfta.
Judge D e m b i t z said, "If liberal
c o n s t r u c t i o n i s t m e a n s exploring
the actual Impact of law o n the
h u m a n being and o n lives, t h e n
you w o u l d have t o call m e liberal. But it s h o u l d n o t be considered a liberal p o i n t of view
but r a t h e r a rational point of
view."
pected organization , h a s found
her qualified.
In reply t o the q u e s t i o n — " h a s
your
feminist
consciousness
been raised as a result of y o u r
c a m p a i n g ? " Dembitz said that she
had
In reply to the q u e s t i o n —
"has your feminist consciousness
been raised as as result of your
c a m p a i g n ? " Dembitz said that she
had to answer yes. At a meeting
with a Bar Association of a
smaller city in New York Stale,
one man asked - " H o w could
you get along with six strong
minded m e n ' ' " "Until I got into
ihe situation (of the c a m p a i g n ) ,
I wasn't conscious of how much
of this a t t i t u d e r e m a i n e d . " She
felt thai once she had her job as
a t t o r n e y and then Family Court
Judge, sex did not play a role
But now that she n seeking a
new role, she is seen as an
intrusion in a m a l e - d o m i n a t e d
To illustrate, J u d g e D e m b i U
cited an e x a m p l e of a case of a
25-year old male w h o s e o n l y
disqualification lo w o r k with the
F B I is a record of arrest w h e n
he was 13 years old Although
he was never declared guilty, the
arrest remains o n his record T h e
courts hsve previously ruled that
it is n o t necessary for the arrest
record of sjuvenile t o be cleared
in the case of a decision of not
guilty. This is because, in the
American s y s t e m , o n e is innocent
until
proven
guilty
Therefore because no guilt was
d e t e r m i n e d , a record of arrest
should have no bearing on the
individual But J u d g e D e m b i t z
p o m u out what s h o u l d be and
what is are s o m e t i m e s two separate things The courts s h o u l d
look at what is — at the social
impact of a ruling T h e F B 1
will not hire Ihis man because of
.i juvenile record of urresi The
courts
should,
according
to
N a n e t t e Dembitz. recognize that
this doe* happen and change I U
previous ruling lo o n e where the
recent a p p o i n t m e n t s to Ihe Sup
reme Court, there has been
activity
Judge Dembitz s p o k e also of
a n o t h e r obstacle in her c a m p a i n g
[he facl lhal she has not been
planning tor years to run for
four', of Appeals
"Being a
' g r e e n h o r n ' in politics is a disadvantage
She has not been active in pontics and often does
not know Ihe right p e o p l e or
have the 'right c o n n e c t i o n s
Dembitz then guided her talk
lo discuss her belief lhal a ;udge
musi ix' socially aware
"An
understanding of '.he impact of
law in a social situation is imperative for a judge Since Nixon's
had no s t u d e n t s on it. Since then
three S t u d e n t s - t w o undergraduates and a graduate - have
been appointed, bringing the
tola) m e m b e r s h i p up to nine,
But Hunsberger is not b o u n d to
the C o m m i t t e e ' s r e c o m m e n d a tion.
Thev'll Do it Every Time
So after three years ihe greal
gummy
fungus
called
the
" W a t e r m a n case" has once again
c o m e alive
Apparently three
years ha* not been long enough
iu disguise many of the personality conflicts, grudges, and m o r e
sub* Unlive objections
against
the controversial Assistant Professor And if she should receive
t e n u r e this year W a t e r m a n says
thai " T h e y ' l l be ai 11 again next
S. ear
Terry Geller is o n e of the
s t u d e n t s in the forefront of the
fight to reinstate W a t e r m a n , He
feels that even if W a t e r m a n is
given tenure, " t h e y ' l l be back
for more next year " C o m m e n t *
Geller " T h e y ' v e always w a n t e d
to get nd of her and siill d o . "
Other s t u d e n t s have expressed
dismay that the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
could " t h i n k that they could get
iiwuy with this a* soon u* we
turn our back* " Hiey call it an
"insult to our intelligence
man was ihrealetied with a loss
uf continuing a p p o i n t m e n t , students collected some 16U0 signatures, which they claim were
instrumental in convincing the
administration to reverse Us original decision iu fire her, But the
situation today is m a r k e d l y different from three years ago, and
whether ihe page* of s t u d e n t
signatures will have a decisive
effer: on 'die final o u t c o m e li
t'uestionabte
For one thing t h e r e is 1
Mover Hunsberger T h r e e years
ago Hunsberger was an administrator ut the I ' t m e r s i u uf Mauar h u s e t t s . I oday he is Dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences
iit-re at S l ' N Y A A large n u m b e r
ol s t u d e n t s and faculty m e m b e r s
see him and his F a c u l t y Personnel C o m m i t t e e o> a roadblock
f(n many tenure casus
nil tenure cases in the College
u! Art* and Sciences must cross
his desk He is " a d v i s e d " by the
Km ults Personnel C o m m i t lee,
hut he is not b o u n d by the
c o m m i t t e e ' s decision According
•ti various 'acuity m e m b e r s in\ n \ e d tii tenure fl-^h Is. it I"
Hunsberger
who
wields
the
greatest influence on t e n u r e de
cisions
the tea) power, thev
1 latin, rests in Ins h a n d s
Thus ihe Fucultv.
Personnel
Com mi l lee s report as well as
It u nsberger's
recommendation
will provide the acid tust for
Caroline Waterman
I 'nlil n few w eeks ago ihe
Faculty
Pen. mine I C o m m i t t e e
Whatever the final decision on
ihe Waterman case may be, the
s t u d e n t supporlers want to prevent
any
"openly
forceful
a c t i o n s " such as those used
CAMPUS
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
beliefs w i t h further e x a m p l e s
R e c e n t l y t h e r e waa a case b e f o r e
t h e C o u r t of A p p e a l s c o n c e r n i n g
s t u d e n t v o t i n g in their c a m p u s
t o w n . T h e ruling was t h a t stud e n t s m a y v o t e o n l y in their
h o m e t o w n s . T h e reality of this
decision, D e m b i U felt, was t o
impede t h e right of a s t u d e n t t o
v o t e T h e e m p h a s i s s h o u l d be o n
increasing
t h e suffrage.
The
Federal C o u r t ruled In accordance with Judge D e m b l u a beliefs.
D e m b i U ' a laat e x a m p l e of t h e
necessity for a Judge t o be a w a r e
of the social c o n s e q u e n c e s of a
ruling c o n c e r n e d a n o t h e r C o u r t
of Appeals case T h e C o u r t ruled
t h a t Medicaid c o u l d not be used
tor a b o r t i o n s
Judge DembiU
said that t h e actual result of this
decision is l h a l t h e p o o r can not
get a b o r t i o n s while the rich can
Againtn this case, the Federal
Court reversed t h e decision
The discussion was b r o u g h t to
a close a N a n e t t e D e m b i U departed for a n o t h e r speaking engagement T h e S U N Y A student*
left with a high respect and greal
admiration
for
this w o m a n
Wishes for electoral success were
e x t e n d e d as the s t u d e n t s walked
out New York S l a t e will now
have to wait until the November
election lo see if i u will have it*
first w o m a n judge — Judge
Nanette D e m b i t z - on the Court
of Appeals
during t h e Jerry Wagner c o n t r o versy a few y e a n back. T h e
s t u d e n u e m p h a s i s e t h a i they
will " w o r k within the s y s t e m . "
After going to Hunsberger'*
c o m m i t t e e and Hunsberger, himself, the case goes t o the Council
on P r o m o t i o n s and T e n u r e and
then u l t i m a t e l y
to President
Louis T. B e n e t c i w h o gives the
decision final approval and sends
Waterman a letter of regret if
tenure is d e n i e d .
Waterman feels dial there is
lilile she can actively do at this
lime to further her cause She
say* that it " w o u l d be highly
i n a p p r o p r i a t e for her to ask student*, lo d o a n y t h i n g "
Determination
So for now it is mostly a
matter of " w a i t and see." Meanwhile the s t u d e n t s will be busy
org m u t i n g s u p p o r t They claim
that they will keep pressing the
case " u n t i l Waterman is finally
reinstated." They sound determined.
No less d e t e r m i n e d is Caroline
Waterman,
herself.
Going
through t e n u r e review can be u
long,
grueling,
and
nervewracking experience But Proles
sor W a t e r m a n baa been t h r o u g h
it before, and she k n o w s the
ropes. She is not to be taken
lightly.
needs money lor A.V, equipment
needs money lor lioi lunch
CHEST
S f l l A W i l l HICi
I'Ai II OMNIA
needs money for BASIC SCHOOL SUPPLIKS
1972
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
I
A
MUDS YOUR HELP!
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE TEN
arreet r e c o r d s of (juvenile are
destroyed.
Judge D e m b i U illustrated h e r
Hl.Al) STAKT
Get it together.
IIUUNI
Among these qualification are
an undergraduate degree from
University of Michigan and a law
degree
from
Columbia
Law
School. She has spent over 30
years as a practicing a t t o r n e y ,
specializing in appeals, which are
the kind of cases that go up to
the Court of Appeals. She has
worked with the New York Civil
Liberties Union and the Legal
Aid Society Her writings have
appeared In such publications as
The Nation, Cotumbte
Low re
view,
Cornell
Law
Quarterly.
PAGE ELEVEN
Albany Symphony Plays Again
//
"A Separate Peace
by Andy Palley
by Teresa Madaffari
A few years ago John Knowles created a microcosmic world in the
boys' school of Devon. Outside the struggle was World War II; inside
the struggle was that of maturing adolescence. Knowles wrote a
sensitive novel about the relationship of two young boys at the
pivotal moment in their growth into men, Larry Pierce has clomped
heavy-footed on this delicate framework and has almost destroyed
it.
Cashing in on the current wave of nostalgic cinema (Last Picture
Show, Summer of '42) is not a fault. A Separate Peace cries out for a
sensitive film interpretaion, it is surprising that it was not made into
a film long bqfore. But the material must be cautiously and subtlely
developed, like the two main characters themselves, the story must
grow through its adolescent stage and not spring from child to man
in one reel.
Peercc continually introduces intriguing themes and then drops
them without adequate development or explanation. There is a hint
of homosexuality between the two boys, then we see no more of it.
There is no development or subtlely in the interpretation of I e
characters of the boys, one jumps from introvert into full blown
psychotic with little explanation.
This is Peerce's main fault in his direction of the movie a lack of
understanding, a lack of finesse thai shows forethought and marks a
successful director. The audience is not gradually made aware ol
theme or purpose, it is shown in a rather heavy-handed didactic
manner. Characters are types and one or two dimensional al
best the intellect, the class bully, the introvert, Ih-1 jock When he
does attempt to introduce another facet into a characlei he does n
in the same heavy-handed, obvious manner, we then have the
tormented intellect, the good-natured jock, etc.
How much of this can be directly attributed lo Peerce's direction is
difficult lo decipher. In order lo capture a realistic inlcipietation he
has chosen two non-actors for the leading roles Whelhei 01 not lliis
is a good idea differs with the film and those chosen, bin in this case,
with these people, it was a definite mistake. At limes il is painful to
watch Heyl and Stevenson agonizing ovei inleipielalmii ol I lien
roles, and failing; at other limes H is ludicrous, bin most of the lime
il is simply boring
Il is easy, however, lo sil hack and ignore Ihe glaimg deficiencies
ol interpretation and skill and simply sympathize wiili a seninncni.il
view ol adolescence. But sympathy is not what is called lot
here empathy is. To Knowles. eveiy individual must make a
separate peace with himself and the wotld. and whelhei this is done
on a battlefield in Central liuiope wiili a teal enemy in on a playing
field al a boys' school with an imagined one. H is a crucial step in
human development and must he taken Peercc may have ciealed a
passable film bill by sknling Ihe issue he has robbed il of any unpad
and woilh that il might have had.
Album Bag
Souther, Geils & Best of Redding
by Bill Brina
First a l b u m s
by
unknown
artists are generally bad news,
but a most happy exception to
t h a t rule is the d e b u t effort of
John David Souther (Asylum SD
5 0 5 5 ) . J o h n ' s got a high, lones o m e voice t h a t c a p t u r e s the
c o u n t r y - h o n k feeling a l m o s t per
fectly, he's got s o m e fine material ( m o s t l y his o w n ) to work
with, a n d he gets mellow, carefully crafted s u p p o r t from sidem e n Glenn Frey (guitar), Bryan
Garofalo (bass), a n d Gary Mallaber ( d r u m s ) . T h e r e ' s a s t r o n g
r e s e m b l a n c e in feel Lo the Eagles
a l b u m , a n d Eagle Glenn F r e y ' s
presence as guitarist 2nd ar
ranger—is p r o m i n e n t , h u t J o h n
David is a b e t t e r singer than any
of the Eagles a r e , and bis material avoids t h e c o w b o y punk
p o s t u r i n g t h a t m a d e the Eagles'
a l b u m offensive. " R u n Like a
T h i e f " might have potential as a
single, but all the songs here
s t a n d on their o w n . For a newc o m e r , it's an impressive set, and
if y o u ' r e into this kind of music,
it's well w o r t h y o u r while
I've been waiting for a live J
Geils a l b u m for s o m e t i m e now,
so Full House
(Atlantic KD
7211 ) hit my t u r n t a b l e t h e m o
merit I laid h a n d s on it. Unfort u n a t e l y , il d i d n ' t prove to he
the definitive a l b u m il should
have been. T h e production is Uie
real p r o b l e m ; the sound is thin,
tinny, d i s t o r t e d and lacking in
university concert board presents
presence t o a degree t h a t robs
t h e p e r f o r m a n c e s of the slamb a n d i m p a c t t h e y m u s t have
h a d . J. is a n o t o r i o u s l y h a r d man
t o work with in s e t t i n g u p the
s o u n d (any n u m b e r of good
s o u n d m e n will grind their teeth
a n d clench their fists at the mere
m e n t i o n of his n a m e , a n d they
have good reason t o ) , so the
p r o d u c e r s c a n ' t be faulted (for
o n c e ) . Despite t h a t , the a l b u m
does have its m o m e n t s . Steve
Bladd's d r u m m i n g is excellent
throughout,
J.'s
guitar
on
"Homework"
stings,
Magic
Dicky blows s o m e mean h a r p on
"Serve You Right to Suffer" and
" W h a m m e r J a m m e r , " a n d Pete
Wolf is a s h o w u n t o himself- He
c a n ' t sing but that d o e s n ' t matter; h e g r u n t s , h o w l s , m o a n s , and
jives non s t o p ; at o n e point ann o u n c i n g " T a k e off y o u r false
teeth, Mama...I just wanna suck
on y o u r g u m s ! "
J. Geils freaks will u n d o u b t e d
ly pick up o n this o n e , and
probably q u i t e a few o t h e r s will
as well. To m a k e the a l b u m the
band is capable of,
though,
t h e y ' r e going t o need a p r o d u c e r
w h o b o t h u n d e r s t a n d s t h e band
and can control Geils. J. Geils,
meet Dave E d m u n d (the ex
gangster British h a r d - r o c k e r w h o
did such an excellent j o b on his
o w n a l b u m and on FoghaL's
d e b u t this y e a r ) ; after the blood
stops flu wing, s o m e really fine
funk might c o m e o u t .
*****
Once every few years an artist
c o m e s along w h o s e power and
influence c h a n g e s t h e public's
musical taste with the sheer
drive and vitality of his art. Such
a man was O t i s Redding, more
than any man before or since, he
defined soul because he was
soul, When he first surfaced in
t h e early sixties, he was cons i d e r e d t o o e a r t h y t o be e x p o s e d
to the A m e r i c a n mass a u d i e n c e ,
so p r o d u c e r Phil Walden b r o u g h t
him t o E u r o p e , which has always
been a h e a d of America in picking u p on t h e best in A m e r i c a n
black m u s i c , w h e r e h e literally
m e s m e r i z e d t h e C o n t i n e n t with
t h e p o w e r , drive, and c o n t r o l of
his singing. As the u n d e r g r o u n d
s t a r t e d to suface here, Otis ret u r n e d a n d began to m e e t with
m o r e a n d m o r e e n t h u s i a s t i c rec e p t i o n s , c u l m i n a t i n g in his incredible
performance
at
the
M o n t e r e y P o p Festival. S h o r t l y
thereafter,
tragedy s t r u c k his
private plane crashed on t h e way
to a s h o w , a n d Otis, just tin the
verge of a b r e a k t h r o u g h that
would have m a d e his n a m e a
h o u s e h o l d expression, was dead.
All of which brings us t o The
Hist
<>( Otis
Redttinfi
(SD
- H O I ) , just released by A t c o
A t l a n t i c . A l m o s t any a l b u m p u t
oni bv Otis could qualify as
"the best;"' I've never heard a bad
track by h i m , a n d ' ' v e never
heard o n e t h a t didn't have some
special h o o k to catch a n d hold
t h e listener, so y o u really c a n ' t
go wrung buying any (or even
all) of bis releases, but A t c o did
a fine j o b a n y w a y in selecting
" t h e best of the b e s t " for Ibis
set. I would have made a couple
of changes I'd have put in the
" L i v e at t h e W h i s k e y " version of
" I Can'I T u r n You L o o s e " in
p r e f e r e n c e t o t h e s t u d i o c u t , and
s o m e t h i n g off
the Monterey
tapes s h o u l d have been included,
b u t these are m i n o r quibbles. If
y o u d o n ' t have a full Otis Red
ding collection already, this is
(be place Lo start.
November 5th
SUNYA Gym
Doors open at 9 pm
$2.50 with tax and ID
student fax
PAGE TWELVE
At a t i m e when collegiate film
studies have been curtailed be
cause of e c o n o m i c pressures on
the curriculum,
an
unusual
o p p o r t u n i t y is being oflVri'd In
s t u d e n t s a r o u n d t h e c o u n t r y lo
study film for a t e r m at tin- (!r»v
Film Atelier in lloiisieli Kails,
New York. T h e Atelier, a m u b i l "
film p r o d u c i n g a n d .studs unil
which has engaged in pruji-els HI
lus, Greece a n d in Iiril.ssel.s. Is
now working o u t o l their rect-nl
ly c o m p l e t e barn s t u d i o m-.ii 111"'
Vermont b o r d e r
Ihe oichesh.i did not sound holed though They
played as well as any could expect them lo play
They piz/.icaloed. then legaioed. then pluased to
peilcciion There was no lighting ovei the heal in
ihe lopsided second movement wall/ Il sounded
giacclul and cultured. Ihe thud movement was
busk, all hough il might have been a hit too husk for
the strings ihe biasscs couldn't covet up all the
mistakes in Ihe runs
Again. Conducloi llegyi seemed lo have Ihe light
appioaeh lo ihe music, although who's lo say what's
light 01 riot Ihe symphony made sense to ibis
listener, and that's wlial counts
in ;i program that is ilesigneil lo
lneilil.Oe Ihe Irarisfcr ol college
eredlts Paul (tray bull headed
film depart menu, ,,l Pennington
College in Vermonl and al Ihe
I'niver.Mle dll Nouv.'iUl Monde in
Haul.' Nemlii/. SwiUcilaml be
lure
founding
Ihe
Al.'bei
I e l . m e III
.1 R e v i e w
I ' l ' D H ) tor
, U M I S during which lime he
ediled
Ihe well I
wn
Film
Tin
,1
lb.-
.lints
ol
t ]I 111 III..1,11
ink,II,;
Wllb
Ih.
,,|
modioli
\\B
\ theatre council presents:
= City Conlor Acting Co.
( F o i m c i l s , the julli.ild
and by -shooting then own ( a r e
fully
constructed
exercises
A m o n g Ihe current projects al Ihe
Atelier are .1 work based on till'
uteris ol
the fumed
Polish
psychiatrist, H I)
l.amg, and
ilber by ,1 Pulil/.er l'11/.c uu
llvor T h e emphasis behind all
studies is Ihe realization of ;i
film by Ihe s i m u l t a n e o u s work
mg our ol its aesthetic and
leelinieiil p r o b l e m s
I'llls
Alele
Ailing < o i
The money we spend
on Vietnam could
clean op the Hudson.
i Thurs. November 2 -1 . S. A.
| Friday, November 3 \
School for Scandal
Help America.
§ Final Performance: Nov. 4 |
The Hostage
Help Untell The War. Bern 903. F.D.H. Station, New York. N.V. 10022
lie
•...,- Coiiliiliuimg Kduoi „| ih,
It is now possible lor <• >11"H'
s t u d e n t s to .study I'ihiun.il, me
lull lime I'or o n e or
ii-mi
\
All Performances - 8:30 pm in PAC
: Main Theatre All Seats $3 per show, $1
„
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
I he contrasts. Ihe llowmg melodies all were just
beautiful llegyi forgot Ihal he conducted Firebird
so divly. and guided the Rachmaninoff with a full
Romantic sound Ihe famous melody al Valuation
IS was definitely a high poinl of Ihe evening.
After the inteimissiou. n was all Tsehaikovsky. Of
course, everyone was enthralled al Ihe lilting
phrases, Ihe Russian ilis 1 Inns. Ihe envigoraling
march, and ihe deathly silence at ihe end. Like
clockwork, Ihe audience buisl into applause after
Ihe third movement, and sal for seconds upon
seconds of unci tiaiiquihty allei ihe fourth moveinenl II I sound cynical, il is because I've had my
fill of Ihe Tschaikowky mystique, and am bored by
almost everything lie wrote
S in three performartces-
Write your Congressman today.
$5.00 with ID
Mr. Cockrell's mastery of the work was evident at
every turn even where lie forgot a transitory
passage in ihe cadenza. He wenl back ovei il twice
lound his was. and weui on. leaving his mistake
cloaked in secrecy. Almost nobody knew Ihal I here
was anything amiss al all!
Atelier's Film Study Program
;
Jim Dawson •• Mary Travers
in a blanket concert
I used to call il blind luck whenever the Albany
Symphony played a cancer! and made music al Ihe
same time. Sometimes they were great bin they
were always inconsistent. Now. I am happy to
announce, they are beginning lo move away from
Ihe old inconsistencies into a higliei form ol
playing, where most conerts are good and jusl a lew
are "flat."
Last Saturday's concert al ihe Palace Thealei was
well-conceived and well-execuied II was designed.
by its program, to pack Ihe house h'indki) Cockiell
(Ihe piano soloist thai night I can usually bung a
good-sized crowd all by himself, hut in lliis case lie
was helped by Stravinsky's Firebird and Ischai
kowsky's Palhetique .Symphony
The Firebird opened Ihe evening Ihe ecnc pas
sages in Ihe first few bars went vei\ well the
trombones shrouding I lie rumbling bass lines in
mystery. Phrasing, something uiosi people peiceive
bul don't talk about, was even ihnniglioui The
only problem Willi Ihe first Iwo movements "I ihe
suite, as I saw them, was thai Conducloi Julius
llegyi's interpretation was decidedly unemotional
He conducted Firebird as one would conduct latei
Stravinsky, even though Firebird is a post-toinaiilic
work. The over-all sound was crisp, not lush A
matter for personal tastes. I suppose.
But why, after such beautiful plaxiug. did Ihe
orchestra lose iheii concenlratioii dining ihe third
movement [The Infernal Dame nj A»n,' KasuheiY'
The Dance was sloppy and full of mistakes and I
especially missed the bassoon lulls al No I J You
see, Ihe audience doesn'l know wliai ihe lulls are
like until they hear Ihem! Win leave ilicni our 1
Other lhan Ihal. the Dance weni In so ("asi ih.it one
wasn't even sure one lieaul H al all What exciting
music!
After the Dance, everything wenl well again I he
bassoon solo sounded scaled, bul the horn passage
after il was exquisite The finale was done well
most conductors add Ivnrpani sloi/andos into the
parts, but llegyi decided not to do so | here weie
othei things about the performance lo quibble with.
but, on the whole, it went over very well.
With Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of
Paganini came Findlay Cockrell and a new sense of
purpose. THe orchestra played as if they were really
interested in the music. Cockrell played with a sense
id' style of which only few are capable. The piano he
played on sounded a hit muddy, and should have
been miked, but Ihe "devilish" effects of the music
came through.
loin
sled
eolieeiiniiji
iiluiin.,
nexl
term
should write ihe Gray Film
Aiebei, I' l) Box Hi :•_, Penning
ion Vermonl I).ri2lll
Guy-Wells Band
by Kevin Daniels
T h e Guy-Wells Blues Band has
a history of Blues Hoots which is
as m u c h a part of urban blues as
any o t h e r band in Chicago today.
Their
r o o t s are
wellestablished but, u n f o r t u n a t e l y ,
the city of Chicago d o e s n ' t provide a s t r o n g source of i n c o m e
for their resident artists. So w h a t
now is h a p p e n i n g is t h a t the
b e t t e r k n o w n of these, u r b a n
artists are corning out o n t o the
college circuit. Quite on contrast
from t h e nite-club circuit, t h e
college p a t r o n a g e , I'or the m o s t
part, is " n e o " , but " p s e u d o "
blues freaks, w h o c l a m o r for t h e
" T r u e Blues.'' Since the m o n e y
is right, the artists come o u t and
play, but often t h e e n d o r s e m e n t
of " B o o g i e " by the audience is
so out of place that it really is an
outright s h a m e . T h i s was clearly
Ihe case last S a t u r d a y when the
(luy Wells hand a p p e a r e d . N o t e
no special guest arlisls w e r e
present, and Buddy <iuy said
that he knew of no a t t e m p t to
o b t a i n o n e ( c o n t r a r y to p o s t e d
a d v e r t i s e m e n t s ) . Some people
will d o a n y t h i n g to sell a ticket.
1'or ihe first t i m e in all m y
e x p e r i e n c e with the (luy -Wells
band, they com promised their
FESTIVAL PRESENTS
jPROCOL HARUM
STEELEYE SPAN i
also
TIR-NA-NOG
Thursday, November 2 n d 7 pm
PALACE THEATRE - ALBANY
11ted (bul respectable) number of ticket) at i 4 . ' j 0
•
When gone, .01 Inkc-ts will be V J 'JO
No I lassie Willi Reserved bedlv Sit Wbere You L i k e !
,
*
Tickets now on mile ut Palace Theatre und Vun Curlers Music in J
Altuniy Music Shuck Troy Hteruo Sound, Schneetady Luthum t
Music Itur, Crystal Mansion, Saratoga.
j>
j Tickets availablo in Campus Center Lobby,
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 1 , 1972
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Dally from 11 to 2 {
talents t o the e x t e n t of actually
playing Jimi Hendrix and B u d d y
Miles tunes. Never before had
they d o n e this. A d m i t t e d l y , j
talk with Buddy Guy had h i n
saying, "...well, s o m e people
always like to dance, so t h a t ' s
w h a t we gave t h e m . " Yes sir,
you did, b u t you copped o u t ,
B u d d y . For what you gave t h e m
was n o t blues, bul funky trash
t h a t c a m e off like a very bad
imitation of " s t a r v a t i o n bluesfreak
prices." The
unknowledgeable a u d i e n c e , as e x p e c t e d ,
loved it,*-until they, t o o , began
to see what was h a p p e n i n g , and
t h e y , t o o , walked o u t disgusted.
F o r t u n a t e l y e n o u g h , we did
see a few good blues n u m b e r s
presented. Most notably, t h e
song " S w e e t H o m e C h i c a g o "
was q u i t e good, featuring the
excellent vocals and h a r p playing
oT J u n i o r Wells. We were aiso
treated to versions of " G o t My
Mojo W o r k i n ' , " " S t o r m y Mond a y , " " I t ' s My F a u l t , " and
" ( l o o d Morning, Little School
girl '•
Besides having (iuy on lead
•uilar and Wells a c c o m p a n y i n g ,
me of the three sidemen was
Philip G u y , B u d d y ' s y o u n g e r
b r o t h e r , on second guitar, and
we could see very plainly just
h o w strong y o u n g Philip's blues
roots were. For Buddy
and
J u n i o r were never tin stage when
the so-called " d a n c e m u s i c " was
played by Philip and (he rest of
the hand. F o r t u n a t e l y , Guy a n d
Wells w o u l d n ' t lower themselves
In the level of " h a s h " musicians,
though, in c o m p a r i s o n , this conceit lai fioni equalled their last
appea
re up here al Saratoga,
Let s h o p e for m u c h b e l t e r
things from Ihe Guv Wells Band,
LARGE NATIONAL
COMPANY SEEKS ONE
AREA REPRESENTATIVE. SALARY OPEN.
SENIOR OR POSTGRADUATE STUDENT
PREFERRED.
CONTACT ROBERT
WENGER- 489-4300,
- .»••••••••••••••••••••
PAGE THIRTEEN
Gridders Swim to 28-0 Victory
Booters Win Battle
by Mike lgoe
For The Cellar
by Nathan Salant
Thla paat S a t u r d a y aaw t h e
b a t t l e f o r t h e cellar b e t w e e n
Albany'a D a n e a and Potsdam's
B e a n , a n d , aa If t o prove their
cellar filling qualifications, b o t h
played m l a e r i b l y , O n t h e w h o l e ,
Albany played a better game,
b u t It w a s P o t s d a m w h o p u t
t h r e e In t h e n e t , t o o u r big l e r o .
O n c e again It was a caae of
missed o p p o r t u n i t i e s , aub p a r
play by several key playera, crucial m i n o r Injuries, a n d O e n r g e
Kelethlan being ejected from t h e
game for t h e s e c o n d straight
time.
T h e gome began with an already h o b b l e d J o h n T h a y e r In
t h e Net for t h e Danes, b u t
T h a y e r was rr.-ln]ured on n grout
s a v e end had to leave t h e game
In favor of Steve Corlsen after
o n l y t w o m i n u t e s of play had
elapsed. T h e Danes c a m e o u t
flat, a n d P o t s d a m scored a goal
on a c o r n e r k l c k early In t h e
g a m e . After t h e goal, a p a t c h e d
u p J o h n T h a y e r reentered the
g a m e , b u t P o t s d a m c o n t i n u e d to
c o n t r o l the mid-field area, and
t h e D a n e s ]ust could n o t p u t it
together.
After a s e c o n d goal was scored,
t h e Danes mysteriously c a m e
alive; something
which
has
characterized
their play
this
A driving rain a n d a football
field w h i c h s e e m e d like an overgrown m u d p u d d l e s e t t h e stage
S a t u r d a y as t h e A l b a n y football
team literally s w a m b y Pace
26-0.
C o n d i t i o n s were s o bad lhaL
the G r e a t D a n e s d e c i d e d to kickoff r a t h e r t h a n receive a l t h o u g h
t h e y w o n t h e toss.
It was a g o o d m o v e o n t h e part
of t h e D a n e s since t h e wind
would h a v e b e e n agianst t h e
Pace k i c k e r a n d . t h e forcefulness
of t h e rain might have given
Albany players a h a r d
time
fielding.
As it t u r n e d o u t , t h e decision
proved t o be an a d v a n t a g e to t h e
Gridders.
T h e A l b a n y d e f e n s e , which is
f a s t b e c o m i n g a legend in its
time, p r e v e n t e d t h e S e t t e r s from
doing a n y t h i n g with their first
possession of t h e g a m e .
When t h e Danes got t h e ball,
they d i d n ' t fare a n y b e t t e r on
the slippery surface and had to
turn t h e ball over to t h e Setters.
O n c e again S t a t e ' s defensive unit
w e n t t o w o r k a n d Pace c o u l d n ' t
pick u p a first d o w n
b o a r d s , and a P o t s d a m goal.
T h e n a m e of t h e game Is scoring, and t h e Danes Just ore n o t
d o i n g Just t h a t , despite o u t s h o o t i n g their o p p o n e n t s b y a
24-11 margin.
T w o players p r e v e n t e d a reol
r o u t of o u r d r c u t (7) D a n e s Mark S o l a n o and Cliff Walzer.
Cliff bus been o u r second m o a t
c o n s i s t e n t player this year, a n d
has heen d o i n g an o u t s t a n d i n g
Job on t h e wing. As for Mark, he
played his greatest game ever. Me
was all over t h e field, bentlng
e v e r y o n e to t h e boll, keeping his
man
from
t o u c h i n g It, and
s l i d i n g o t h e r s o u t If t h e y hud
the ball. These t w o guys p l a y e d
their guts o u t , h u t ull to n o uvail,
as Larry Herzou hud his first
m e d i o c r e g a m e of t h e season,
und
the teum
followed
bis
exumple.
year, S u d d e n l y , A l b a n y began t o
k e e p p l a y o n P o t s d a m ' s aide,
J u a t w h e n thlnga l o o k e d m u c h
brighter for t h e Danea, Oeorge
Keleahlun m e t t h e m u d , c a m e u p
fighting, a n d w a s c o n s e q u e n t l y
elected f r o m t h e game, This n o t
only t o o k o n e of o u r better
offensive
p l a y e r s o u t of t h e
g a m e , b u t also d e m o r a l i z e d the
t e a m . T h e half e n d e d with t h e
D a n e s d o w n 2-0,
T h e D a n e s c a m e o u t of t h e
half t i m e h u d d l e with a sustained rush at t h e P o t s d a m goal.
F o r the first 10 m i n u t e s of the
s e c o n d half, t h e b a l l stayed on
the P o t s d a m half of t h e field.
Albany
d o m i n a t e d play, b u t
missed s h o t s were t h e whole
atory. Five limes definite goals
were
m i s s e d : Carlos
Alvarez
missed u b r e a k a w a y ; l-lerzog had
the whole not t o s h o o t at, b u t
hit t h e goalie instead, etc. At
o n e point, Leon Sedeflan dribbled t h r o u g h half t h e P o t s d a m
team, o n l y to have his beautiful
centering pass b o t c h e d u p In
front of t h e net,
T h e regular season Is over, b u t
It cun be m o r e than salvaged by
a win in Albany. Pan s u p p o r t
will be on absolute m u s t If Albany Is to sweep. Because t h e
c o m p e t i t i o n is really n o t t h a t
good, we have at. least a fifty per
c e n t c h a n c e of winning. With
y o u r help, t h e t e a m will win.
R e m e m b e r , this team r e p r e s e n t s
your school.
T h e D a n e s ' d o m i n a t i o n of play
s u o n e n d e d , a n d a see-saw buttle
d e v e l o p e d ; o n e which saw several Albany rushes go by the
J o h n Bertuzzi c a m e on and not
the Danes moving.
McCoy Allister a n d Marvin Per
ry ran hard t h r o u g h t h e muck to
pick u p good y a r d a g e and advance t h e s q u a d .
In fact, on o n e play Allister
Joel Schensul - little Spud'
by Rich Yutiku
Wrestling, J V H o o p , a n d Varsity
Baseball.
Despite
his
size,
he
Is
Joel's
the
The
latter
"specialties."
are
"Special-
WEEKEND SCHEDULES
FRIDAY
Lv, SUNY
4:00 PM
Ar. N.Y.C.
7:10 I'M
SUNDAY
Lv. N.Y.C.
4:15 PM
Ar. SUNY
7:25 PM
Terry Wllbert
Slud.nl Auuo.
Phone 487 6843
EYHOUND
PAGE FOURTEEN
bo glvon
crodlt
soccer ure going on at t h e same
broken
jured. T h a t Is p r o b a b l y t h e first
time, Joel will a t t e n d t h e base-
k n e e , and " s e w " t o g e t h e r s o m e
and
part
of
his " t i m e
ball game.
torn
ligaments. Joel
assistant. Hope y o u guys D O N ' T
Job;
to
rind
long
hours
With Biology us a major,
Joel
status of an Injury, Incurred by
h o p e s t h a t he can a t t e n d Medical
an a t h l e t e . He, refers t o
JOEL
School nfter receiving a degree ot
S C H E N S U L , a s o p h o m o r e from
Albany Stuto. His desire to at-
B r o o k l y n , und his j o b is junior
t e n d Med. school got h i m where
trainer u n d e r
he
the
"SPUD"
direction
Kruznn
of
The
is t o d a y .
endure
His willingness
s p o r t s t h a i Joel w o r k s with a r e :
und t h e k n o w l e d g e Joel bus at-
Lacrosse,
tained
Soccer,
Football,
from
S P U D , has earned
University Directory
*
*
fix o
itnd
mend
a
dislocated
has s p e n t
o l o t of
his
Ing s o m e recognition
Helfand, also a s t u d e n t trulner,
Jack
Koelmol,
a
hove o BUSY yoor.
ELECTION '72
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7
I
coverage of the National, State
J
and Local Contests available in
from the CC Information Desk
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
First, last W e d n e s d a y , t h e Al
bany team was d e s t r o y e d in a
dual
meet
at Colgate. T h e
Harriers, d i s a p p o i n t e d in (heir
performance
were vowing to
avenge t h e d e f e a t at their o w n
invitational. T o add fuel to the
fire,
the
Albany
team
was
nipped for t h i r d place last year
by o n e point, by Colgate. This
year's Albany teum, said to be
the best ever, was s h o o t i n g to
change things,
T h e Danes failed t h o u g h , us
they
f i nished
fourth
again,
nipped by o n e p o i n t by Colgate
It was a d i s a p p o i n t i n g perforin
mice. T h e Albany team was tin
scored m o r e point* In league and
playoff
play than any o t h e r
player In t h e t o u r n a m e n t . T h e
league WHS (I I reeled by D.J.,
residence
director, and funded
by Bluto Quad Program Council
complete and up to the minute
pick up their book across
Albany t e a m a t n high e m o t i o n a l
peak t h r o u g h t h e r e m a i n d e r of
this season and next season.
man
Tower,
runner-up
Ira
Rahlnowit
m i H u w f f i » "i A n t h o n y Hull,
sporUmmwhlp,
Hlewiirt
BallUH
Illl)
I1M W i l l i
I J i - l l l i r t of
ill
Fdmlmnn 'I
id
.....ilman
' l oiiwi'r
w e r , mid
and hi
highest
Kcorur Ui
wn
ho
o
scorer
io ('Union
u u m o n Mclntryit
ivicunrye. w
5
with your R.A.
There is a rivalry brewing be
tween t h e c r o s s - c o u n t r y learns
of Colgate and A l b a n y and after
the events of last week, it will be
an intense o n e . T h e rivalry
should be e n o u g h t o carry the
graduate
Service will presents the most
Resident students check
by Ken A r d u i n o
a r e : Alex
WSUA News and United News
*
Off-campus students may
ankle,
to
The
One-On-One
Basketball
T o u r n a m e n t WUN hold on the
S u i t ' Quadrangle. II began the
second
week of school und
I wont y-I w o residents on t h e
ipind participated In the* content.
T h e con. Urn I run a b o u t a m o n t h
and a hull when 1 ouch player
piny eel I h r e " league gumen and
llnal piIIyiif 1'ii. Awiirdu went Ui
winner U e n r g e M o o r e of East-
!
is ready for distribution
heen
One-On-One
to
315 h o u r s / w e e k of work
has
Bruce C u m m i n g s b r o k e u p
a n o t h e r p o t e n t i a l Pace s c o r e .
C u m m i n g s picked u p a fumble
d e e p in Albany t e r r i t o r y and
raced ahead 77 y a r d s before he
was s t o p p e d .
L a t e in t h e game t h e Setters
had a n o t h e r c h a n c e to prevent a
s h u t o u t . On a kickoff r e t u r n
Pace's B o b Malsagarian nearly
got free b u t Ken T h o m a s m a d e a
saving tackle. T i m e expired before the S e t t e r s were able to
score.
Earlier in t h e q u a r t e r , T h o m a s
tackled Pace's Gerry O w e n s for a
safety.
for his
efforts at his post. O t h e r s dosorv-
athlete ( o p p o n e n t or o t h e r ) In-
Convenient connecting
schedules to ill America
and back again.
should
J o e l ' s m o s t difficult tasks us a
moved u p to t h e o n e yard line
b u t fumbled a n d A l b a n y ' s Rich
Sabilia recovered.
Reserve
quarterback
Gordy
Kuppcrstein t h e n engineered a
touchdown on a quarterback
keeper.
" f r e e " time at Ills Job, a n d ho
trainer,
1972 73
VOUR
UJHttlS
lookoroom
and
o u t (quickly) the
baseball
a place a t t h e
"treatment center,"
ties"
Charles
L6TUSB€
him
Il was probably for t h e best,
though, because it was a miserable day thai would have cancelled a game ol any o t h e r sport
In the third period Albany
added to their point spread with
n :SI yard field goal from Fuller.
The Albany defense consistently
thwarted the Pace attack but the
offense had some trouble Willi
the pour conditions.
Ironically, Pace's defense c a m e
up with s o m e key plays by
slipping and sliding i n t o t h e right
places
By t h e time the fourth period
came, ( l o a c h Ford was already
making n u m e r o u s s u b s t i t u t i o n s ,
Ford tried out many different
offensive and defensive c o m b i n a tions.
It was in this period that t h e
Sellers posed their o n l y scoring
threats of the c o n t e s t
Pace
Post Wins; Colgate Nips Albany For Third
quickest mull afoot—If he sees an
consuming"
meaning—if
two
collected five extra yards with
four Pace defenders on his back.
T h e n Noel Walker, making his
first start of t h e season, caught a
Bertuzzi p i t c h o u t and splashed
ahead 28 yards for a t o u c h d o w n .
Mark Fuller's conversion kick
gave Albany a 7-0 lead which
lasted i n t o t h e second q u a r t e r .
T h e Setters e x p e r i e n c e d m o r e
difficulty
p e n e t r a t i n g in t h e
second period. Their farthest advancement was to their o w n 15
where they p r o m p t l y fumbled.
Bertuzzi mixed u p t h e running
game a m o n g Allister, Walker,
Perry, and himself and t h e Danes
c o n t i n u e d to charge forward.
Finally, Perry c a p p e d t h e drive
by sweeping to his left to score.
Mark F u l l e r a d d e d t h e
kick.
S t a t e grabbed a 11-0 lead which
help up until halflime and was
never challenged by t h e Sellers
from here on.
T h e first half of play seemed to
be unusually short. A p p a r e n t l y
the officials maintained a running clock no m a t t e r what t h e
situation.
this area.
able |u duplicate lllcii' pasl pt'l1
formanres
for
the
second
straight
meet
Only
Vtivnie
Heda, Carlo ( V r u b i n o "»d J o h n
Stanton ran ch.se io their best
times
Nick
DeMarco who was given
ibe "Albans
Uunner of the
Meet" award, ran well despite
m i n o r s winch has kepi him I'runi
prat-lie*- on and off tor the last
two weeks Nick, despite Ills in
in,,,-,, finished twenty fourth
The nice itself was a collection
ot great runners and great teams
Tom Fleming nl Patterson Slate
had finished high in the past two
m u t a t i o n a l s lie came into (Ills
meet as a favorite ami with a
shot to break Ibe record J o e
Kukanshegi/a of Siena, was also
a strong favorite
The Invitational received » shot
Hi the arm with live arrival of
Post I'osl hud lold the " T u n e s
I ' n i o n " thai H n \ would
be
coming but ih.A nevei officials
withdrew. Their arrival m a d e t h e
Invitational o n e of t h e t o u g h e s t
tests for the Albany team. Post
became ibe favorite, with Albany, Colgate and Syracuse all
contenders.
ill,. si ail, il was obvious
n..i linn wi Ml I'd Ui record
ami in. W l ' l l l 11 :'f at Ihi' siimi'
rt'i ord h. dri l i o n Sum
|)1H'
ItSfl ran whrn 1 1' Si'l 111 ' course
r i ' i ' o al I I 1070 Sn'iia's Hukan
•slu'H /.a s ay I'd a I'i'W yar Is back.
liilh W l ' l l liy llir ',' I'osl unners.
All)! ny's Lop 1 wii runners Viiinn'
Reel atu Jim Shradi'r wi re buck
Ml I'i Ululi and sr\ ruth ri'.s pecfive
Hi.- iitlli-r
runners
lv
Inn , in II e pack ind Al
WIT!
b»n> hoi m lui i chami ionship
Al
[ml
Kukanshegi/a made up m o s t of
the ground at t h e t w o mile mark
and the race looked like a t w o
Ilnternational Students'Association's
T
! e° MONTREAL
I
|
Leaves Friday, Nov. 17 at 5 pm
| from the Circle and Sayles Inter- |
I national House. Returns Nov. 19
|
STARTING AT 8:30 pm
L.n, .. ELECTION NIGHT
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
| $17.00 covers travel and lodging
|/w.,n.y Sign Up Now In CC 329
"-Tmi'i
i'iin iiOCTOBER
iinmm
TUESDAY,
i FT
31, m
1972
•
-——J
man race. Heda had n o t gained
enough to be in c o n t e n t i o n und
it was d o u b t f u l he could m a k e
his favorite m o v e at t h e t h r e e
mile mark t o win. At that m a r k ,
il was Fleming w h o pulled a w a y
and the only d o u b t was if he was
going to break t h e record.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Heda was still seventh with a
little m o r e t h a n a half mile to go
but it did not m a t t e r for t h e
Albany team.
Post bad just
aboul w r a p p e d u p t h e chain
pionship,
and
Syracuse
was
easily in s e c o n d . T h e b a t t l e was
for third. Heda m a d e bis m o v e
passing t w o r u n n e r s t o finish
fifth with J i m Shrader n i n t h .
Both m e n w e r e well b e h i n d T o m
Fleming, w h o ran t h e third fastest time ever on t h e Albany
course, b u t b o t h m e n were
ahead of t h e t o p Colgate r u n n e r .
Four Colgate r u n n e r s finished
ahead of A l b a n y ' s third r u n n e r
Nick DcMarco, w h o if h e a l t h y
might have been able to sprint
past t h e m in t h e s t r e t c h . Bill
Sorel finished 3 1 s t and Carlo
C h e r u b i n o finished 3 3 r d ; b o t h
b e h i n d t h e fifth place Colgate
runner.
A disappointed Albany learn,
runs in t h e Upstate Char l e a m
ships, next week with t h e I C ^ A ' s
and hopefully the NCAA afterward. The team will try to regain
its o u t s t a n d i n g form.
In the J r . College Invitational,
the
favorite
Johnson
and
W a l e s won with un o u t s t a n d i n g
team p e r f o r m a n c e . T h e p l a u d i t s
of t h e c r o w d , t h o u g h , went to
J o h n T h o r p of Orange C o u n t y .
His time was t h e fastest run on
the Jr, College c o u r s e . Colgate
won its s e c o n d medal by winning t h e J . V . race convincingly,
by sweeping the t o p five positions. Albany finished seven of
eight teams.
dlihaw
UNiVERS
wmwm
sin m~i^S
ALBANY
I stake my
3Sin1972
in large part on
theenergy,the
wisdom and the
conscience of
young Americans."
FSA Faced With Hard Times
by Al Senia
OPEN LETTER TO THE STUDENTS
OF NEW YORK STATE
In a very few days the American people will select either Richard Nixon or
myself to be President for the next four years
Yet many people have grown so
suspicious of government and so cynical toward politicians that they believe
the choice doesn't make any difference.
They are wrong. It makes a difference to the people of Southeast Asia. For
them it is the difference between four more years of ruthless bombing, burning
villages and terrified children and an immediate end to these scenes of horror.
It makes a difference to our prisoners of war- the difference between four
more years of agonizing captivity and the freedom that will come only when this
war is finally over.
Unfortunately, it no longer makes any difference to the 20,000 American
soldiers who have returned from this madness not in glory, but in death, since
Richard Nixon took office on a pledge of peace. For them his secret plan for
peace will remain a secret always.
I will end this war immediately.
Richard Nixon has not and will not.
It makes a difference to the millions who languish in poverty in the richest
nation of the world. It makes a difference to their children who may be
condemned to another generation of empty stomachs, wretched health and broken
dreams. It is the difference between compassion and neglect.
I will commit whatever it takes to give every American the chance for a
full life. Richard Nixon has not and will not.
And it makes a difference to all of us who look to the Supreme Court for
justice. Richard Nixon's appointments to the Court have demonstrated his
contempt for our nation's Constitution. Two of his nominees were so poorly
qualified that the Senate refused to confirm them. Yet Justices Rehnquist,
Powell, Blackmun and Burger will be with us for the rest of my life and for
a major part of yours.
I will nominate Supreme Court justices worthy of the position,
has not and will not.
Richard Nixon
During the debate over the California delegation at the Democratic Convention,
Assemblyman Willie Brown of California electrified the delegates with his plea:
"Give us back our delegation."
As this campaign comes to a close, 1 say to the wiretappers and the warmongers
and the powerful private interests that have seized control of our government:
"Give us back our country."
I am asking for your help in these final days. Without it I cannot win.
With it 1 definitely can. 1 stake my hopes on November 7th in large part on
your energy, your wisdom and your conscience.
incorely,
^^Z^-<^-<-"^A^frW
George McGovern
To work a t SUNY Albany c a l l :
PAGE SIXTEEN
463-7224.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
I t Eaal Fllly.ihlid Slrtei
Ntw York. Now York 10022
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
Vice President John Hartley: "We have a serious situation.'
The Waterman Affair
The financial walls are closing
i n on Faculty-Student Association.
Losses are extensive. Sales are
d o w n . Operating cash is shrinking. Bank loans are hard to come
by. A n d if first quarter results
are any indication, FSA is not
goi ng to h ave a " brea k-e ve n "
year - something the corporation desperately needs to stave
o f f bankruptcy - unless some
very drastic steps arc taken.
The remedial measures, aimed
at cutting FSA loses and increases income, may include:
— A rise in the cost of mandatory dorm meal contracts.
— I n s t i t u t i o n of mandatory
summer board contracts.
— Institution of mandatory
graduate student
hoard contracts.
— A n increiise in the coast of
cashing a check from 1 5 cents to
20 cents.
— Partial or complete closure
o f the Campus Center Cafeteria
and Putroon Room and conversion of Campus Center food
operations to "partial vending."
Students Meet Hunsberger
by Glenn von Nostitz
Several students heading the
fight to reinstate Psychology
Professor Caroline
Waterman
met w i t h I. Moyer Hunsberger,
Dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences yesterday afternoon.
The students presented Hunsberger with a list of some 2300
student signatures on petitions
supporting Waterman in her
quest for tenure.
T h e students presented the
petitions as evidence to be used
when the Waterman case reaches
Hunsberger and his Faculty Personnel Committee sometime in
the near future.
After being presented with
the petitions, Deun Hunsberger
commented that, " I'm not impressed by numbers, but by substantive arguments." He then
went on to explain that he felt it
"doesn't make any difference
how many signatures you get"
since alot of students may have
signed the petitions because they
"were jumping on a cause."
By "subs tun I ive arguments"
Hunsberger apparently
meant
direct student testimonials and
letters explaining exactly why
they were supporting Waterman.
He (lid add thai hi* will " l a k e
careful consideration of student
Views
Write lo leevan
The bludenU collected the
2,'ili() signatures during an mien
sive loin day campaign, coupled
Willi a letter writing campaign
urging students to write to
SUNY Chancellor Krnesl Uoyer,
legislators, Hunsberger and high
university officials concerning
the Waterman case
Hunsberger felt that the stu
dents cause could better he ser
vud by writing to Psychology
Department Chairman Itichard
Teevaii, instead of the adminis t r a t o r . He fuels thai most of
the evidence in the case is evaluated by the Psychology Department itself and that the students
should consequently concentrate
their efforts on the departmental
l«ve).
T h e students pointed o u t that
the Psychology Department has
already reached a decision on
the Waterman case, recommending she be denied tenure by a
9-8 vote, and that "going back
t o the department" would not
be worthwhile. Hunsberger responded that the students were
" j u m p i n g t o conclusions" because they assume that the departmental
recommendation
cannot be revoked.
Throughout the meeting both
Hunsberger and the students
were extremely cordial. Hunsberger paused occasionally to
recite anecdotes of his old college days and to tell about his
seven children, all of w h o m
"have been students."
The Arts and Sciences dean
repeatedly emphasised that he
was unable to comment on the
specifics of the case as he had
not yet studied it in sufficient
detail. He claims that he has " n o
value judgements on this case
yet."
The Dean stated any " c o n
erete" comments now would ser
ve (inly to prejudice the views of
the members of various re
viewing committees and admini
slralors who must handle the
ease He added thai the "news
paper p u b l i c i t y , " such as thai in
the ASP, only creates i
• pre
judlces
Student Terry Gelle) asked
Hunsberger how import tin I ^1 u
elenl input will he in the case,
especially when compared I o
other criteria such as university
service and scholarly ability
The Dean responded
thai
there is " n o f o r m u l a " for deter
mining how important the stu
dent input should he, hut that
he "looks at everything" when
considering u tenure case. He
uddod that, " I t all depends •• and
y o u ' l l never preBS me towurds
more of an answer than that."
The concerned students told
Hunsberger thttt they Ihought
WuLerman is the "beat instuctor '
in the entire Psychology Department, but Hunsberger remained
unpersuaded. He wanted to
know how they could "move
this." He asked them whether
t h e y have any " concrete
evidence" showing that this is
so.
The students attempted to
supply some of this " c o n c r e t e "
evidence. They cited the student
evaluation forms, pointing out
that Dr. Waterman receive'' ner
feci scores twice. But J.iu.nsherger thought this was n o t
"substantial enough" since, " I
think students are rather easy on
evaluating professors," a remark
which hrought immediate signs
of
d isagreernent
from
the
students. He added that, " I ' v e
seen very few harsh indictments
of professors by students."
The students then attempted
to give Hunsberger evidence
more to his liking. One girl, who
had bad Waterman for two
courses, said that she was " a l ways
alive and
enthusiastic
about the course w o r k " and that
she was the "most inspiring"
professor she has ever had. A n
other student claimed that "She
(Waterman | made us work very
hard, il was no! any easy A
Other students cited examples o|
Waterman's personal and sincere
interest in her students
Confidentiality
Neai Ihe t-iu\ of the meeting
Terry deller usked Hunshergei il
ii would he possible lor .students
10 he present al Kacull V I1 ft
sonnel Committee meeting when
11 decided Hie Waterman case
Hunsberger emphatically
ans
wered " n o " and quickly pointed
>ut that there are already three
.siudents on the committee. " I
wan! t o make a perfectly clear
that personnel decision must be
completely confidential," the
Dean added.
What finally came out of the
one and a half hour was a
decision by the students to meet
w ith
Psychololy
Department
Chairman Hichard Teuvun as
soon us possible. The students
seemed generally disappointed
w i t h the final outcome o f the
parley.
— A n end to the subsidation
of dorm director meals.
— A n end t o support o f Infirmary meals.
— A l i m i t to the amount of
money available through the
FSA loan service.
The various measures were
presented
for
discussion
by
Faculty-Student
Association
Acting Director Norbert Zahm
at the semi-annual meeting of
the corporate membership help
Monday afternoon in the administration building, Zahm was
emphatic in letting everyone
know - especially reporters that none of the proposals had
actually been instituted. In fact,
he did not even want to go on
record as supporting any one of
them specifically, preferring to
let the Board of Directors make
the unpopular choice.
Zahm said he was merely presenting the package as a possible
means o f improving the financial
position of the corporation.
"These are merely
alternulives,"
he explained. " A t this
point they are not specific recommendations from the management."
I l will lie up to the Board of
Directors -• a group of ten composed of faculty, students and
administration - to study the
"alternatives" and come u p w i t h
specific recommendations. But it
seems likely that some of the
alternatives Zahm drew up will
become
reality
very
soon,
though
perhaps in modified
form. Discussion at Monday's
meeting centered around the
deteriorating financial position
of FSA and immediate fiscal
constraint emerged as the most
immediate likely course.
"We have a serious situation,"
observed
Vice-President
John
Hartley, who was chairing the
meeting in President Bene/.et's
absence. "We had a bad year last
year and we are doing worse."
He indicated "serious a t t e n t i o n "
would have to be taken by the
Board of Directors by the first
of the new year.
Complicating the financial
picture is the increasing reluctancy of area banks to grant
lines of credit to FSA -- money
the corporation needs to pay off
debts, meet costs, and keep out
of bankruptcy.
The net w o r t h o f the corporalion
decreased
by
some
$200,000 last year and the decreasing figure is an indicator t o
the banks of a steadily worseni ng
financial
situation.
Net
worth is similar l o collateral for
a loan and such a dramatic decrease in the figure, when viewed
in the context of decreasing sales
and steady losses, results in a
diminishing bank credit line.
FSA management had d i f f i eulty
securing
the
needed
$(500,000 credit line this year
but were eventually successlul
alter arduous negotiating sessions. " F o r t u n a t e l y , "
Hartley
told the board, " w e had a
friendly b a n k . " B u t even so,
FSA must pay a service charge
above the usual interest rate,
send the bank m o n t h l y budget
reports and renegotiate the loan
in A p r i l rather than October.
This is evidence that the corporation is considered a poor
credit risk.
A n d it is no wonder. FSA
came out in the red again last
year.
The
f i n a l loss was
$123,000, an improvement on
the $217,000 loss o f a year
before but extensive
Hartley explained that the
point has been reached where
the corporation can not absorb
any more losses and still receive
credit from local banks. That is
why FSA management is placing
such an important emphasis on
ending the year o n , at the very
least, a break even point.
Unfortunately, they may noL
gel it. The first quarter audit is
complete and it offers little hope
for improvement. Food service
and bookstore sales are down
and profits for the period are
appreciably less than at this time
last year. Overall, FSA losses are
running substantially higher at
confirmed an pane ,'J
Cons on Campus ?
Acting on a lip from a "usually reliable source," Albany and Slati
ilici* brought their search fur eight escaped prisoners from Albany
ounty Jail to the campus yesterday afternoon.
A b o u t u dozen city and stale police, split into three teams and
•com pan led by a security officer, cordoned off Delancey and
CI inton Halls on Colonial Quad and conducted a room-by-room
arch.
They found nothing
A .-.ci urity official described student reaction to the unprecedenI search as "very cooperative." T h e n ' were no incidents.
The huntil lor
for the escapes
escapees began s h o i t h aflej three o'clock and
ted about twenty minutes, accordi
spokesman for security
te .search climaxed a week that bus
A Friday nghl i ape from the i.nl and a stop l l lln campus by
Ihe inmates,
The finding ol a .set of keys to Albany County Jail by a S U N Y A
student Wednesday afternoon near Stale l j u a d .
Daily visits to campus by city police
The tip to police yesterday.
The spokesman claimed that security was alerted to the upcoming
raid only a short time before it actually occurred and that a brief
strategy session wab held by city, slate, and security officials to map
out the actual logistics of the search. He discounted student rumors
of a " d r u g bust" by saying that security played a role in convincing
state and local police " n o t t o go looking for drugs."
Albany and Slute police had no comment.
No police spokesmen would say whether local police might return
to campus for subsequent searches.
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